W«W B«m Public The NEW BERN ^ weekly -\RT 0P> '▼H Si Per Cv, ^ VOLUME 7 NEW BERN, N. C., FRtDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1965 NUMBER 45 It’s time to stop counting birthdays, if you can remember when Captain Bill Davis was at the helm of one of New Bern’s bouncing street cars, a huge slice of cafe pie was only a dime, and what is nowtheTryon Theatre wasn’t theShowShopor the Kehoe but the Athens. You’re likewise an antique if you recall “Big” Hill sunning ' in front of his establishment on South Front, church groups ped* dling big hominy door to door, and Sunday afternoon loafers gathering on the stone ledge around Basnight’s Hardware at the spot where McLellan’s now stands. Don’t admit being an oldster, however, if you never faced the problem as a barefoot boy of crossing a street newly sur faced with oyster shells. Count yourself young too, and doubly blessed, if you escaped the childhood experience (anutter ly impossible task) of trying to make the legs of your long- handle drawers look less than lumpy in a pair of black cotton stockings. There were a lot of things not so good about the good old days, but folks who met you walking two abreast always stepped aside in single file and gave you your just share of the pavement. They f yen smiled whqn they did it. - “Has" Ro]^, whose daylmig gait would have left the best trotter breathless, sold two cones of homemade ice cream for a nickel at his fruit stand on Broad street. And Sadie Kafer (bless her wonderful heart) made you feel like the most important customer in the world, when you bought a sack of wine candy or rock candy at the bakery. An oldster is a fellow who remembers when riding “around the belt’’ at 20 miles an hour in one of the town’s few autos was considered an outing, and the man didn’t live who could tote $3.00 worth of groceries all the way home. Yesterday was when every pantry shelf had a supply of Octagon soap. Bon Ami and Old Dutch cleanser, and the mir acle drugs in the medicine cab inet were castor oil, calomel, Savodine, Vick’s Vaporub and Carter’s liver pills. Lydia E. Pinkhams and Black Draught were present too. Having to eat light bread in stead of hot biscuits three times a day was sufficient to get any husband a divorce, andnowom- am in the neighborhood would blame him for doing so. Yesterday was also that per iod of human existence when parents went to Sunday school with their kids Instead of dump ing them at the church door and picking them up an hour later. This despite the fact most fath ers and some mothers had to work late on Saturday night. No one can question your cre dentials as an oldster, if you used to balk at paying five dol lars for a pair of dress shoes, and felt solendldly attired in a two-pants outfit with vest in clude that sold for $15 or less. Those were the days when the standard price for the birthday present you took to a kid party was ten cents. Now a child feels disgraced to show up with a gift that costs less than ten times that amount. Speaking of the small fry, nobody whined about not having (Continued from page 6) STATE CHAMPS—^Toni Becton, 11, (born in New Bern) is compliment^ at party in her honor after she and partner, Rose Marie JersOT’s Dowli ^ 11 1. _ daughter of and Sl^ey Junmer, 10, won New »wli^ title in ^Is’ _prep division. Toni, icker Benton (both New Bemians) Uves at Willin^ro, N. J. Her proud grandmothers here are Alma Thicker and Sadie Ben ton. Amazingly, Toni has been bowling only since October.—^Photo by Burlington County WHERE IT COMES FROM—^When our coastal region is proclaimed the Land of Enchanting Waters, the reference isn’t to the potent liquid com that is manu factured in steam stills like this one captured by ABC officers at Harlowe. We’re not pushing temperance propaganda, but the filthy set up seen here may make you think twice before you take your next swig of white lightning. Never inspect a stiU if you’ve got a squeamish stomach.