PROGRESS SENTINEL Editorial, bos in ess oefici and printin? slant. Kbnansville. N. C. MURPHY L. CARR. editor RUTH P. GRADY. manadins editor Entered At The Post Office Kenansville. N. C.. as second class mattkr TELEPHONE ? Kknansvillb. Day ess.tin _ Nioht sss-siai A Duplin County Journal, devoted to the relioioos. material, educational f economic and agricultural development of Duplin County. A SUBSCRIPTION RATES Duplin and adjoinino Counties Elsewhere In North Carolina s Mos. Year 6 Mos. Year t si ts i IO t.ES 4.SD ? I Tab s ii Tak .ot is a i.si s.si t.sa s.ss I Outside North Carolina 6 Mos year i m J SCRIPTURE FOR THE WEEK: The light of the body is the eye: therefore when thine eye is single, the whole body also is full of light. - Luke 11:34. THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK: It is the eyes of other people that ruin us. If all but myself were blind. I should neither want a fine house nor fine furniture. Benjamin Franklin. Safety, Sanity and the Fourth It wasn't too many years ago when fire works were a real problem in this country. Kids were losing fingers, hands and eyes during the supposedly happy days of their summer vacations. Rallying under the battle cry, "Have a safe and sane Fourth of July." parents, edu cators. civic leaders and elective officials finally curbed the fireworks problem. But the need for safe and sane Fourth has not diminished. Motorists and pedes trians are literally driving and walking then* selves to death over the Independence Day celebration. The North Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles pin pointing these two holiday accident problems, makes two suggestions which we think make a lot of sense. One is pretty simple. Learn to walk right. That means crossing streets only at intersections. Watching for turning cars at corners. Obeying traffic signs and signals. Never dashing into the street from between parked cars. The second suggestion is to cut dows on speedy drivW. Last year, a third of the holidays deaths/..ame from excessive speed. A safe speed must include such factors as road conditions, condition of traffic, the condition of the car, the weather and visi bility and the condition of the driver him self. Safe drivers, says the vehicles agency, slow down even below the speed limit when conditions aren't ideal. Reduced speed and alert walking-tws very sane keys to Fourth of July safety. These are the ways we can free oup selves from the tyranny of accidents. , A good thought for Independence Day. Dan Moore's Big Victory Ends Lon&,_Hard Campaign , i k ? We offer our congratulations to Judge Dan K. Moore and to his supporters all over North Carolina. He ran a steady race and won a mag nificent victory, carrying 93 of the 100 counties against L. Richardson Preyer and piling up a majority in the Piedmont to go with his overwhelming margins in the East and the West. The total vote was surprisingly large, reflecting the intense interest in a number of key issues generated by the two candi dates. In the first primary, the three mapor Democratic candidates for the governorship had a combined total of 714,410 votes. Sat urday's vote total jumped to 781,689 instead of decreasing, us many observers had fore cast. The division of the vote indicated that I. Beverly Lake's supporters followed him faithfully when he joined forces with Moore and Lake together got 62 per cent of the vote in the first primary. Moore alone gath ered in 61 per cent Saturday. ? ? ? It was a crushing disappointment for Preyer, who resigned a federal judgeship to seek the nomination, and for Gov. Terry San ford, who backed Preyer privately dur ing the early stages of the campaign and publicly at the end. Both Sanford and Preyer pledged their support to Moore when he runs against Republican Robert Gavin in November - an early move to bring the progressive and conservative wings of the Democratic Party together against the com mon enemy. On the eve of the second primary, Judge Moore promised to work for "the most dy namic. the mast comprehensive program ever set forth for improving education in North Carolina." He also called for an ex panded plan of industrial development, an accelerated program of highway construc tion and maintenance, a 14-point program to increase farm income, a special tobacco re search program, a hold-the-line policy on taxes and legal interest rates, and "sensible race relations arrived at without force or disobedience by extremists on either side." If he carries out that pledge, he can count on the backing of the Preyer voters in November. * ? ? Veteran legislator Clifton Blue ran a better race for the lieutenant governorship than he did in the first primary, but it was not enough to overtake the popular Robert Scott, son of the late W. Kerr Scott. It is no secret that many leaders of the conservative wing of the Democratic Party had hoped to cut short Scott'i political career at its very outset. But the magic of the family name and his own political charm brought Scott the nomination by a narrow J 371.606 to 356,400 margin. ^ In losing the valued services of Blue, North Carolina gains an interesting young political leader who undoubtedly will be a contender for higher office at some time in the future. ? ? ? It has been a long campaign and a bitter one and we suspect that all North Carolin ians who participated will be happy to turn their attention to other things for a while. ?The Charlotte Observer. Mostly A Conversation Piece Now that the Russians have attacked the topless bathing suit, the only patriotic thing for American women to do, we suppose, is to come out in it en masse. But we think the topless suit is destined to fee more talked about than seen for sever First, the habits of dress or oi undress in any society are difficult to change. True, brassieres are now popular among the un biusking native women of remote Pacific is lands. But M seems they wear them around Second, though American men may aee nothing wrong with the suit, American wo men are not so much deterred by what men may see and say as they are by what other women may see and say. Third, in most places, the thing is against the law. So the Russians are due for a disap pointment. The topless bathing suit, even is this day of increasing decay of our national fiber ? as a measured by the number of topless bathing suits?is not likely to proceed apace. ? From The Winston-Salem Journal ll fat *** Ik Tr?ie noflis oj?J Ife The Mountain Mo" Ijlfc T?f cnAm?r>i SENATOR SAM ERVIN ? * / I The flurry of comments which surround ed North Carolina Agricultural problems as the gubernatorial primary ended needs to be put in perspective. I have always been conscious of the im portance of agriculture to the economy of North Carolina. I have voted and fought for every measure to make the lives of those who live on Atrk farfcis more abundant My ?r support of farm programs began when 1 took the oath of office as a United States Senator. It has continued unceasingly since then. In March of this year, I successfully led the fight for the tobacco farmer against the Williams Amendment to the Cotton Wheat Bill which would have eliminated to bacco from the Federal agricultural pro gram. I have repeatedly battled for tobacco farmers, cotton growers, textile workers and their employers to iron out difficult export problems which have been of concern for years. I have supported all phases of re search which would benefit our agricultural program and particularly cancer reseach. As I view it, the most serious problem for the tobacco growers, the tobacco worker, and the tobacco industry arises out of the Feder al l^ade Commission's order, issued last weet. which specifies that every container in which cigarettes are sold to the consum ing public must bear a label reciting that cigarette smoking is dangerous to health and may cause death from cancer and other diseases. I respectfully submit that the ruling of the Federal Trade Commission is unfair and unjust and should be forthwith contested by the tobacco companies in the Federal courts. This ruling asserts as a fact something which has been established by adequate proof or reliable medical research. Hie next logical step in this battle would be to con test the FTC ruling in the courts. If this ruling is not annulled by the courts, I shall seek to obtain a satisfactory legislative solu tion. Much has been said pbout the Georgia tobacco case and its effect upon the price support program. That case does not chal ^ lenge the Federal statutes which set up the tobacco program, nor does it challenge the price-support system, nor is it an attack on the validity of this program. The three Georgia tobacco growers who sued the Sec retary of Agriculture sought greater bene fits under the program than the order ef the Secretary would have permitted. Hie growers' contention was that the Secretary had no valid reason to order a 10% cut in acreage allotments for Type 14 tobacco The court order enjoining the Secretary from en forcement of his order has been stayed until the matter can be heard upon its merits. A 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling is expect-' ed sometime in the late fall. I am hopeful that the Court will hold that there was no valid ground for the original issuance of the injunction. As 1 have sought to indicate all along, the matter now resides in the courts where it should be determined by that bran ch of government. Should that court render a decision which adversely affects the toba cco program, then it will become a matter for consideration by the Congress. I shall be standing shoulder to shoulder with the North Carolina Congresisonal Delegation to promote useful legislation in that event. I wish to assure the people of North Carolina that I plan to continue my unceas ing efforts to promote the best interests of our State, and that includes the welfare of our farmers. Bible Facts Of Interest By: E1U V. Prldgen By: Ell? V. Pridgen "Mathew: Salvation For The Outcast" Matthew 9:9 "And as Jesus passed forth from thence, he saw a man, named Matthew, styling at the receipt of cus tom: and he sayeth unto him Follow me. And he arose and followed him." "Matthew the tax collector" The writer of the first Gospel included this descriptive term after his own name. "In all this world, it is not what we take up but what we give up, that makes us rich," Henry Ward Beecher wrote a hund red years ago. When a tax col lector named Matthew gave up a lucrative position to follow Jesus. Matthew's name was Levi, and his name was chang ed to Matthew (gift of God' when he became a disciple of V Capernaum, and his business was, to collect taxes from the firsherman who brough fish to Capernaum, and possibly from the traveling merchandts of Damascus who passed thro ugh the city. There were two counts a gainst tax collectors, accord ing to the Jews. They were working for Romans ? hated masters of Palestine, so they were traitors. They were un just. Usually tax collecting was "fanned out", the Collector held responsible for a stated sum and permited to keep all he could collect above that sum Only greed would lead to a Jew to become a publican, the usual run of collectors were crooked and cruel. , Converted Matthew had tal ent to consecrate abilities nec essary. He could write, he know the Old Testament his- . tor. All that Matthew was that day, when Jesus called him from his collection booth held, for consecration service. His Gospel alone would justify his call. He could introduce his friends to Jesus Through Matthew, Jesus would be known as Friend of , : mL?XJQr ICIrth corrocf pKiiall/ ?rf* pencil. AM mn at liuMainJ 1. Ha'i father of throe on "Bo nanza." IMwrri Adwnt. Lorna Brtww. tnM Jim on. 1. Ha'i "Mr. ?" an Bit papular "Hozal" iKow. Don Doforo. MU Dm. an no-il won woviof a 3. Romantic coHepe tan lor an day >1 "Innltior Wjuill " nm Mfnniwr ?? vt Boat McClura. Bator Polk. 4. Ha wen toon in "The Mining Bank of Bapart X. Hanpordlnfc." Rkhonl C#w99 J#fm McOlvff* 3. Ha'i a regular an ika "Today" ?how. Prank Borfcar. Prank Blair* Proiili Wssfwi ?uo) aa ? i 'mao lyn ? J (MMO|A ?WH?HI ? { tiapiM ?ojojoq aaaa?? lade Pete From ur tlhi yum DEAR MISTER EDITOR The fellers at the country store Saturday night was mak ing some big decisions on a number of important items. First off, Ed DooUttle ask fer the floor to make a few re marks about the kind of mail service we was now gitting from them folks in Washing ton. lie reported he had went to town Saturday afternoon to buy a stamp and the dad-ber ned window was closed. Ed is mighty touchy about the these matters when the Democrats was in power. Under the Re publicans he would call it real economy. Anyhow, he allowed as how any Guvernment business that would cut back the service and raise rates at the same time was in mighty pore shape. He was of the opinion that with the volume of mail gitting big ger and bigger they had ought to go on a >4- hour base in stead of shutting down more and more. Clem Webster agreed with Ed, claimed if the public coul dn't make a phone call on Sun days or after midnight the Congress would meet in spec ial session and take over the telephone business. Clem fig gered if private enterpirse could run the railroads and telephone business under Guv ernment regulations, it could run the mail business the same way. It was voted unanimous, Mis ter Editor, to put the U. S. Post Office up fer sale. 1 Josh Clodhopper said he was I reading where a farmer in i South Carolina had wrote to President Johnson asking to git i put on the poverty handout, said he was $19,458, in debt and things was gitting worse all the time. The fellers was a greed that anybody with that much credit ought to git out of farming and git into the banking business. Zeke Grubb reported he had saw by the papers where deaths on U. S. Highways hit a alltime high in May. He said he could recollect back 50 year ago when horses was afraid of automobiles and folks was laughing at the horses. He al lowed as how this was more proof they ain't no substitte fer horse sense. It was agreed that just as soon as we git the Post Office sold and git poverty abolished we ought to put on a campaign agin highway slaughter. Bug muimwm on traffic safety and showed the crowd a bottle of pills, all of 'em looking exact alike. They was 331 pills in the bottle and all was harmless except one. and it would kill you dead. When he ask how many in the audience was willing to from A take a chanct and swaller one of the pills, not a hand went up. Them he said many of them was taking the same chanct in their cgr ever day. that one out of ever 331 attempts to beat a traffic light got somebody kil led. As Dean Rusk would say, Mister Editor, it was a very "fruitful" session. Yours truly, U"C>e PCt* ROOF MURAL . . . Modem totic painting by PFC Robert Moultbrop adorns roof of an A-shaped garage at Washing tonviUe, N. Y The 24-ft. moral to done on wood backed tar paper with latex exterior homo potato. I 11 1 I I MMEMBT From Mr*. Thomas P. Patter son, Galax, Virginia: "The other day I sent my steam-dry iron to be repaired and hunted up an al most forgotten electric iron to use. Although this substitute iron had five different settings, for five different temperatures, I felt abused having to use an iron that wouldn't steam?until I remem bered BO years ago. "I remembered that I had to iron my ruffled, full-skirted, tucked, ruffled embroidered dress es with their corresponding three petticoats each with a flat or 'sad' iron. It was made of solid iron and heated on a wood-burn ing 'stove or on the hearth in front of a Are that had burned down to red coals. "Each time I picked up the iron with a thick, padded cloth holder, I had to rub the face of the iron with a rag to clean off the soot and ashes and then rub it over with paraffin to make it iron smoothly. Since washables in those days were heavily starched, the face of the iron would soon be coated with starch and the iron had to be rubbed over a pile of salt U> remove the starch. the Iron cooled: 'I would put it back dh the stoVe or hearth to re-heat and pick up another iron to use. What a treat it would have been to have any old electric iron then. It would have seemed a miracle!" (8oa4 mtrihtiMU to tkU cilui to Tito OM Ttour, Box US. Fr.mkf.rt, Kjr.) ft IWWMWlieMWMIjjH ' V mniTMT mtu an* man fmm nsnavEMs July 3 mark* the beginning of "Dog Day*"?a tern applied by early Greek* and Reman* to the period between July 3 and August 11, when Sirlaa, the Dog Star, reae with the sun. Today the term apptiea to aboet forty days of the hottest season. Jnly 4th is INDEPENDENCE DAT. Levi P. Morton, the American Minister, accepted the Statue of Liberty In Paris, from Count de Lesseps, Jnly 5, ISM. Louis Pasteur inoculated the Srst human being against rabies. July 8, 1885. Tin Srst all-talkie movie, "Lights of New York," was shown in New York City, Jnly f, 1928. Construction began on Boulder Dam, July 7, 1939. The Liberty Bell cracked, July 8, 1S3S. Experimental delivery of air mall by helicopter in metropolitan areas was established, July S, 1944. Zachary Taylor, 12th U.8. president, dies July 9, 1859. Organised ' resistance ended on Sal pan, July 9, 1944. 1 CROSSWORD PUZZLE ^ | 1. Branch of learning 6. Snare ?.Around 10. Piercing tool 12. Roman moon apddess 12. Rent 14. Affix IB. Depart* 17. Tantalum: sym. 12. Pronoun IB. Bowling target 20. Entire 21. Walking ?Uek 22. Vegetable 23 Bounded a street car beU 25. Dull 22. Corrosion an lion 27. Thin 22. An tiered animal 20.a?tef-^ u?sr 22. The shank 24. Opposed BB>nMK10 " 27. Likeness 20. Hard, black 40. Weather <1. WUd oxen: Tibet U. Units of work DOWN 1. Dwell 2. Highway S. Large wine auk 4. Aft of putting on ? Ptajr 5. Stories 0. Regrets T. Moslem title A Braying instruments 9. Garden of Eden dweller 11. Real | estate E 16. Single unit a ft M.Oasj^ for breath 20. An 1 SI. Keg 22. Sound, ? as a donkey 25.A wrinkle 24. Cradleaong 26. Thoughtful 27. Monetary unit: Rum. 29. 8trong wagons 30. Storms 31.1a obligated 33. Strike: al. .34. Suspend 30. Extinct bird: N Z. 38. Disfigure 5?Wr ? JI=-i?=I"iP |=!==jjl=== PUZZLE HO. 81 ?