Krw Srrn-(j!Irati?n CCounfij iCibrarj The NEW BERN 01^ 1^©!^ niBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE HEART OR . 'ASTERN NORTH 'r^rin^ •'''LINA I : St. ^ 5'-nr. j6q VOLUME 16 NEW BERN, N. C. 28560, FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1973 NUMBER 21 Here’s to little old ladies with snowy white hair, eyes full of laughter, and loet dreams to shwe....They smile at strangers who happen their way, and wave to chiidren, excit^ at play. Dozing in rockers, or knitting for hours, puttering around in a wee patch of flowers...They’re facing the sunset, well knovdng that dawn, and morning and high noon are past, dead and gone. But they’re contented to slow down in life, wary of struggling and fed up with strife...So, they step aside while youngsters rush by, age prefers low gear, youth must have high. All over our State you’ll find they’re the same, different only in locale and name....In ttie Land of the Sky, where peaks meet the blue, they live out their days without much ado Those in the Piedmont likewise are serene, and the Coast too can boast of each gracious queen. Who dare to deny that there’s charm to behold, are silver strands inferior to gold?....Do gentle hands lose their tender touch, because the years have claimed so much? No, even as fiddles of ancient design, and dust-gathering bottles of treasured wine...There’s something special and noble and sweet, about the elderly women we meet....You can’t describe it, but you know it is real, a subtle grandeur that you sense and feel. Little old ladies, prim in their lace, etchings by Father Time traced on each face....Often forgotten, and ieft to them selves, with naught for amusement but Memory’s shelves... jSurely, there’s no one more lovely or fair than little old ladies, with lost dreams to share. Yesterday was when the low Wall around the front yard of the home now occupied by Nettie and Paul Cox served as a bench for New Bemians waiting for Callie McCarthy’s trolley cars. Pollock at Metcalf was the intersection where the street car that went from Ghent to Union Station exchanged passengers with the one that bounced along to Riverside. Understandably, it was referred to as the junction. We never pass the comer without recalling the people once seated on the wall, waiting to exchange a nickel for a ride on one of the few trolley cars in North Carolina, then or later. Because some folks aren’t too certain about the two routes taken by the street cars, we’ll tdl it like it was. The trolley frmn Ghent came down Spencer Avenue, continued down Pollock to Middle. Then, tur ning right on Middle it went to South ^nt (now Tryon Palace Drive). Turning left, it went one block to Oaven, up Craven to (|^en, and m to the Derct. The trolley to Riverside left Metcalf and Pollock, and went up Metcalf to New. It turned left it New, and travded to New’s Honest iqjun, if you had your ruthers wouldn't you summer day? Photo by Jack Layne, Chick & Jack's like to be a kid again, if only for a single, golden Studio a' (Continued on page 8)