jNrtu iimi-(Zlrattrti (Hotmlg Puliltr ftibror}! The NEW BERN I PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE HEART OP ^ ’*«TERM NORTH VOLUME 13 NEW BERN, N. C., FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1970 NUMBER 2 Everybody Is a soft touch for something, and our strongest weakness is any kid who hap pens to be out trying to sell the Grit. Invariably, when he ap proaches us we see in him the little boy we used to be. And, to this very day it is palnfpl to remember the disdainful looks and curt refusals you had to endure before someone came along who was willing to part with a nickel. Close to 50 years ago the du rable Williamsport weekly was much bulkier than the edition that now sells tor three times the original price. There were several sections, and as an added inducement the purchas er got a colorful portrait of a President or somebody else quite important. Here was a newspaper that had everything. Covered rath er promptly with words and photograjrtis were all the'cur rent events of national scope, and to seed in tor good measure were pictures of two - headed cows, cats mothering a litter of orphaned puppies, and sundry other freakish things in the realm of nature. There was a special section devoted to fiction, and full page of poems old and new- Editor ials were pertinent ^ timely, and the comic f^ips were slanted to appeal to children from eight to eighty. A nickel in those days looked as big as a country biscuit to the lads we grew up with, and was as hard to come by as a tour leaf clover on a brick street. Apparently, adults didn't have too many of them either. This or else lust about ev erybody we tried to sell the Grit too was tighter than a gir dle two sizes too small at the conclusion of a second helping of stewed chicken, with a towl of butter beans as a side dish. Peddling Cloverlne salve or flower seeds to the neighbors was a picnic compared to dis posing of a dozen copies of the Grit. Before you got rid of the ' last wrinkled copy you were certain to trudge all over town. Included on the beat we staked out was the Union Station at the corner of Queen and Hancock streets. Counting the curious loafers who congregated to see who was coming to town on a train or leaving, you could fig ure on soliciting a lot of tolks there. Untortunately, train passen gers didn’t exhibit the slightest Interest In reading, maybe be cause of the cinders In their eyes. As tor the loiterers, they were there to see the sights. Including the ankles of mounting or dismounting feminine trav elers. Later, with our typical lack of Juvenile shrewdness, we start ed peddling the Literary Digest. This publication was even hard er to sell than the Grit. For one thing. It cost a whole dime, and its appeal was aimed at Intel- lecturals. We discovered that there weren't many Intellectuals in New Bern. And besides, the individuals who qualified were dime squeezers with moths snoozing In their pocketbooks. Folks with brains, we learned, weren't free spenders. No doubt about It, the Llter- (Contlnued on page 8) A LITTLE QIRL’S WONDER — As our thoughts turn, on Good Friday, to One Who publicly professed His love for children, this unposed portrait of a two year old pensively studying a flower holds more than ordinary appeal. Rhonda Michelle Caton, daughter of the Gary Catons of Route 1, New Bern, and grand daughter and great granddaughter of two of our valued Mirror subscribers, Mollie Stallings and Mollie Rountree, is not alone in her appreciation of bless ings on us by God. When she is older, and capable of fuller comprehension, she will learn of and marvel at the greatest of all gifts from Heaven, the gentle Man of Galilee, Who died In agony that others might have life everlasting. The glorious revelation of an empty tomb remains the greatest news story the world has ever known. He is risen, and man has cause to be Joyful.