Tri» Os Edenton Tfeams Victorious P 3. ■ »T KLiTsOODWIN Edenton’s Aces, Acelets and Jayvees took games from Scot land Neck in an Albemarle Conference triple-header played in the John A. Holmes High gymnasium Tuesday night. the Aces, playing well-round ?* ed basketball for the second f straight night, upset the favored • Scots 48-37. The Acelets pow ered their way to a 45-22 victory I and the Junior Aces came! through 40-31. i The Aces started strong and! bounced out in front 15-7 at the ' first quarter halt. Then the Scots stormed from behind to a 23-19 half-time advantage. At the end of the third quarter the Aces had tied things up at 31-31. With two minutes showing on , the dock, the Aces were in front by a point, and during the . inal time the locals poured on \he coals to win easily. Johnny Phillips scored 17 points to keep up his standing at ihe head of the Aces’ point department. But the turn, of the tide came with Jerry Tolley getting 11, Bryant Griffin 7. Bobby Stokely 6, Fred Britton 5 and Bill . Goodwin 2. The Acelets had little trouble j containing the Scots’ impotent i offense. Guards Norman Blan- ' chard, Ida Camperi and Mary ' Ann Hare continued their fine ! job on defense. Scotland Neck ! made only eight points during the first half and 14 in the final two periods, Sara Relfe Smith took the j night’s scoring honors with 22 markers. Mary Ann Overton connected for 10, Beverly Mor gan 7 and Barbara Layton, Frances Swain and Sue Bunch 2 each. The Junior Aces won their third contest of the year behind ! ■Richard, Hbllowell’s 18 points. Wayne Griffin bagged 5, Mac Wright, Dickie Cobb and Jimmy Dail 4 each, Cecil Fry and Joe Mitchener 2 apiece and Billy Bont wright 1. The Aces and Acelets will be at home Friday night against Plymouth’s Panthers, and will hit the road next Tuesday at Hertford. Officers Destroy Two More Stills , Two more liquor stills were discovered and destroyed by of- ! ficers Sunday. ; The first still was a 55-gallon i outfit found four miles east of ( Edenton on Route 32 opposite Impala Sport Coupe one Os Chevy's 18 fresh-minted models for '6O. See The Dinah Shore Chevy Show in color Sundays. NBC TV... the Pat Boone Chevy Showroom weekly, ABC-TV. ;T ' . • •••■ - •• • , ;.;^^^ r y^ l ]l^y r rrTM|)^||fff jrr"fi r ■ ; £'?> " ’• i jj ■MNHHgaflffifcSrajan |KMBRgSt«KoEi&- f 'ffif J * - <■ .!■ ' ,:' '1 Factories are turning out more new Chevrolets every day. More proud new Chevy owners taking to the road. Now's the time to see your dealer for fast delivery and a favorable deal! The pickings couldn’t be better. All 18 of Chevrolet’s sizzling new models for ’6O are now rolling off the assem bly lines again—in greater numbers than ever before. Your dealer’s waiting with all the details, including a long bstof pluses that will prove to you the only way to buy a car for less titan this low-priced Chevy is to buy a lot less car: Roomier Body by Rsber-with a 25% i .1 •*r ' • - * Now—fast delivery, favorable deals! See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer. jeorge Chevrolet Company, Inc. PHONE 2138 §&¥ 4;V > iv WOQ N. Broad Street Edenton, N. L. # Dealer’* Franchise No. 869 MWBsfriimw-** ito \ ™ • HL Wr fjß ll HELPING HANDS - National Guardsmen are usually among the first volunteers at the scene of a disaster. Training programs under tough Army standards help keep Guardsmen ready for any sort of emergency. These National Guard troops are en route from scene of an air crash* Army National Guard “Most Ready” Militia Forces in U. S. History f. “Training is the measure of a unit’s ability to carry out a given mission,” says Major Gen eral Clayton P. Kerr, a Texan who is currently assigned as the Assistant Chief for Army, Na tional Guard Bureau. General Kerr, who commanded an ar- mored division] prior to his Pen tagon assign-1 ment, points out j that training is the pay-off that has enabled the I National Guard] to earn its rep utation as a ready reserve| force in every sense of the word. General Kerr, who supervises administration and training of the Army National Guard’s 4,500 1 company-size units and 400,000: officers and men, emphasizes the j current mobilization readiness of; . the present-day Guard. “The Na tional Guard,” he says, “has al-; ready attained the highest degree : of mobilization readiness ever: reached in peacetime by a re-; serve force of the United States.” i i This advanced training status: stems largely from the fact that,; since October, 1958, all of the; elements of the Army Guard have been fully engaged in unit training, learning to function as • an effective military team the base property. The still was still hot from operation the night before. Destroyed included the still, j 500 gallons of fermenting mash.! a 55-gallon doubler, 20-gallon doubler, a copper coil and a copper condenser. Officers participating in the smaller transmission tunnel for more foot room. Pride-pleasing style— combines good looks with good sense. New Economy Turbo-Fire VB— gets up to 10% more miles on a gallon. Widest choice of engines and trans missioas—no other car gives you a choice of 24 power teams to satisfy the most finicky driving foot. Hi-Thrift 6— the ’6O version of the through application of platoon . and company tactics. “Good platoons and good com panies” General Kerr remarks, i "make up the backbone of good armies.” At the same time that it got ■ out of the “basic training bus ! iness” and moved into unit train ] ing the Army Guard took two additional steps designed to keep Guardsmen abreast of their coun terparts in the Active Army. First, there was a reorgan ization of the Army National Guard along the so-called “pen tomic” lines. This involved a revamping of the Guard’s 21 in fantry divisions and six armored j divisions as well as hundreds of nondivisional units to conform to the “new look” of the Army ; itself. Combat support and ser ' vice units were also reorganized 1 to make them better able to car ry out their assigned missions in an atmosphere of convention al or nuclear warfare. During the reorganization pe -1 riod completed by the Nation al Guard a full year ahead of 1 schedule the infantry, artil lery, and armor elements of the Guard _came under the Army’s new Combat Arms Regimental ■ System which provides the means for maintaining the historic con tinuity of traditional regiments. "General George Washington whom we traditionally honor on Muster Day,” says General Kerr, Gen. Kerr ; raid were Sheriff Earl Goodwin, ■I ABC Officer Troy Toppin, Jailer Bertram Byrum, Officer W. F. J Miller, ATO Officers Jack Gas- I kill, Roscoe Tidden and Joe Royster. The second, a copper still, j was found in the Greenfield section and was 50-gallon capa THE CHOWAN HERALD. EDENTON. WORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY. JANUARY 14. 1960. engine that won its class in the latest Mobilgas Economy Run. Coil springs at aH 4 wheels— for the kind of silent, satiny ride you'd expect only in the most expensive makes. Quicker stopping Safety-Master brakes— built with Clievy’s ever faithful dependability, they deliver surer stops with less ■■■““THE! pedal pressure. i "would most certainly be astotm ded. at the modern missile-age - equipment, the morale and pro fessional training level of our 1 up-to-the-Minute Men.” There are reasons why today’s t Guardsman is the best trained - most mobilization ready militia - man in history. All members,of ) the Guard are either veterans j graduates of the Army 6-months - training program, or men who have obtained equivalent expe* - rience through extensive associa* 1 tion with the Guard. - As of this time all new Na i tional Guard recruits without - prior military experience are re -1 quired to spend six months on ’ active duty training. Following > six months of Army training ’ these men return to their home ■ town units. It is estimated that 1 at least 60,000 National Guards* men will undergo six months ; training this year. Much has been said of the mobilization readiness factor. ■ What is mobilization readiness? ; "Each phase of unit training ’ which we accomplish in peace ■ time is a month less required to ! qualify a division for combat ! duty after it has been ordered 1 to active duty,” General Kerr i points out. The Assistant Chief for the . Army National Guard also noted i some of the other factors which i enter into the mobilization read , iness of the Guard. , i city. This still was being moved ■ I from the original site to a ne\y location, with parts found scat i tered about. Taking part in this raid were Sheriff Earl Goodwin. ABC Of ficer Troy Toppin, Jailer Bert ram Byrum and Officer W. F. Miller. Episcopal Vestry Has Full Agenda At the organizational meeting of the vestry of Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church Sunday even ing many important matters were discussed. Foremost was the re-election of Dr. Frank Wood, Senior Warden, and David M. Warren, Junior Warden. Thomas 11, Shepard was re-elected clerk. R. Graham White was re-elected treasurer. The following appointments i were made by the Rev. George] B. Holmes, rector: J. Clarence Leary, Jr., Church School; Clyde S. Adams, ushering; Charles H. Wood, Jr., music; Dr. Edward G. Bond, layman; Thomas B. Wood, memorials; J. Gilliam Wood, canvass and offerings, and Oscar -i lyi Biamline and >fiice or shop, it obligation, |||| lag to a coor* (jfmi raid |j| *£( i iiwoto WHISKf Y, «6 E. Duncan, social relations. W. E. Malone and R. E. Fore hand, Jr., were appointed to the important Parish House Commit tee to serve as co-chairmen for urgently needed additions to present facilities. Other subjects discussed in cluded Theological Education Sunday, January 24, Christian Education and a visit by Miss Maude Cutler, director of religi ous education, Diocesan appor tionment, attendance, and prop erty needs. A congregational meeting is planned for the end of the month and all members of the Parish are urged to be present. Directories Os Area Available At C. Os €. The Chamber of Commerce has | received city directories for eight communities in this area for its reference library. Included are Ahoskie, Jacksonville, Kinston, Norfolk, Suffolk, Tarboro, Wash ington, N. C., and Williamston. The Edenton directory, first pub lished in 1959, is also available. Chamber of Commerce Execu tive Harry Smith, Jr., said the directories are available for ref erence by members and public during office hours. They con tain the latest information avail able on residence, addresses, oc cupatients, telephone numbers and other statistics. The direc tories were supplied bv the Hill **77* luok TO \\ jSI THIS EMBLEM |l|l| WITH CONFIDENCE ! Vs - * t: This is the famous “Reliable . 0 . • Prescriptions” emblem you have seen 1 so prominently displayed in our fine b , | pharmacy. It is your assurance of | *. j quality ingredients, precise ft compounding and uniformly fair prices. So be sure to bring us your Doctor’s prescriptions. VRp Remember, too, that we value your VHp; family patronage. Turn to us for your needs in drugs, health aids and sickroom supplies, HOLLO WELL’S ■ We Deliver Phone 2127 REXALL DRUG STORE !—SECTION OIL PAGE THREE Directory Co„ Richmond, Va., publishers. , . W—. —..iw For Sale Six Room House WITH CAR PORT AND UTILITY ROOM. LOCATED ON LEIGH STREET. LOT SIZE 167'/j BY 67 FT. $6,200.00 Twiddy Insurance & Real Estate, Inc. 103 E. King SL Edenton PHONE 2169 ' :

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