Radio Station Building Begins Construction of Ray CWMBins1 aao watt radio nation, WBMA. is progressing today or property scar the extreme end of Ann Street ; extended and the Lennoxville t Road, Beaufort. i Permission to build and operate ' was granted Mr Cumins' Thurs ' day by the Federal Communica tions Commission v While WBMA has been granted . 24-hour operating privileges, it will probably operate irom sun rise until midnight, according to ? Mr Cummins WMBL. Morehead : City has daytime - operating pri vileges. ; , The station's frequency is 1400 kilocycles, the standard receiver tuning frequency used by more stations than any other. The radio tower will rise ISO feet. "You can expect the unexpected from WBMA which should be in operation about Jan. 1," Mr. Cum mins said. "We'll never fall into the easy rut of doing the same old things in the same old messy way, day after day. WBMA will be running, not sitting." Attends Conference Bobby Mann, Newport, was one of 22 East Carolina College stu dents who attended the weekend North Carolina Student Methodist Conference at Salisbury. > AILOW AMP IE (LEAIANa WWI PASSING .... and k?p your car In taU-driyinf condition at oil limosl Beaufort Officer, Sheriff Investigate Break-In Officer Mack Wade of the Beau fort Police Department and Sheriff Hugh Salter investigated a Sunday night break in at Tommy Fitter*! store. Live Oak and Ann Street, Beaufort. The break-in was discovered by Mrs. Piner. Entry was made through the front door by break ing off the bicycle type lock. Finger print photos were made. Only a few pennies were report ed missing. OTTLED IN BOND M> ? i miihukt nnnitmi lOO PROOF 6 YEARS OLD STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY < Jl Ul Hht 11111(9 IN MM ?? I. 0. MIMCI1TS SMS. INC., PISflltEtS. PHIL AO [I HI*. H C&D (Continued from Page 1) report "for information" and /urn it over to Beverly Snow, chief engineer of the Water Resources Division, for the uae of such in tor mat ion aa may prove of vrflue in another water survey now under way. The Council of State recently provided $24,000 from the Contin gency and Emergency Fund to make a factual survey of the state's water'resources. The new survey is intended to provide the basis for arguments before the coming Gen eral Assembly for adoption of a modern water code for North Caro lina. The committee action was not taken to mean the ports survey has been put on the shelf so far as C&D Is concerned, but that infor mation contained in it will be avail able should the Marine Council de cide to take its fight on to the Gen eral Assembly or to such legis lators as are interested. Mr. Holland submitted a report to C&D Director Ben E Douglas : listing damages of $1,327,134 in I 12 coastal counties and said he be j lieved% the report to be about 75 per cent complete. All told, Hol land said, the damage total will be at least $1,750,000. Worst in Brunswick I Fishermen suffered worst in Brunswick, where their losses were estimated at $459,340, of which Mr. Holland said, about $300,000 was sustained by the menhaden fishery alone. Brunswick's shrimping in dustry had about a 30 to 35 per cent loss, he said, and the propor tion will be much higher than that if v_ry many of the shrimp boats which were washed up high and dry cannot be refloated. The report showed $293,211 loss to fishermen in Carteret, $210,005 in Onslow, $163,426 in Chowan, $57,880 in New Hanover and $54, 355 in Beaufort. Losses in other counties were put as follows: Ber tie. $24,100; Dare. $2,250; Hyde, $8,457; Pamlico. $28,400; Pender, $22,560; and Washington, $3,150. Nine other counties in the 21-coun tv commercial fishing area sustain ed only slight losses, Mr. Holland said. Mr. Holland said the losses in cluded boats, nets, fishing gear, docks, piers, boat houses and fish houses. A number of fishermen were wiped out completely and a few lost their homes as well as their fishing equipment. Although the fishermen will be eligible for three per cent loans from the Small Business Adminis tration, Mr. Holland said that many of those hurt the Worst are so old '?they probably couldn't get back into bu sines*, without a direct grant* Camp 188, Wotdmen of the World, will hold a barbecue supper Nov. 5 at 6:30 p.m. at their hall*, east of the new Camp Glenn school. Come in and take the wheel I of the easiest driving pickup In the lowest priced field ! Horo's what you get with the easiest handling 54 -ton pickup! Outstanding new get-up-and-go . . . new high compression performance . . . extra-easy steering . . . largest effective brake lining area in its field . . . tubeless tires, as standard equipment 1 Now I Better then ever I And now for antra handling oato: now automatic transmission, now ovordrivo, now powor stooring? oach woll worth tho modorato oxtra costl Coma in and drtvo it today I vr-,4 fi/eu/ \ . $1563 .00 ?Dalhnnd looDj. Optioul i ?OMb H any. Frio* a^jM* ?? <te(* wMxMt noMn. Y Mr h?J? h may covor Hm down pay mint. All about our convonfoat term*. PARKER MOTORS 509 ARENDEU. ST Phom 6-3332 - MOREHEAD CITY. N. C. NTERrflTJONAa. TRUCKS Stockholm Sails Saturday, Will Return Here Thursday The M.S. Stockholm. ao? on her* second cruise from Uoreheod Oily, cleared port at 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon and ia now back on schedule' after beintf delayed 24 hours on the first sailing which was scheduM for Oct. II. The Stork holm will retwh her* from Bermuda at 7 a.m. Thursday and sail again for Bermuda at 3 p.m. that day. ~ Eassengers returning from the "maiden'' trip to Havana and Nas sau were cleared by 20 customs personnel by 11 a.m. Saturday. The ship docked at 8 that morning. She sailed with as many aboard as had booked passage on the first cruise. 390. While the Stockholm was in port she was scrubbed town and given a paint touch up. She was also in spected by the Coast Guard and passed with flying colors. Making the inspection were Cmdr. T. A. Berg and Lt. Comdr. Herbert L. Garrison, USCG, Nor folk. They tested water-tight doors, safety devices and observed a life boat drill. The Coast Guard in spection was a routine practice. Ted Davis, manager of the Cham ber of Commerce, said approxi mately ISO of the passengers who left Saturday came to Morehead City Friday and the remainder ar rived Saturday morning. Captain of the Swedish-American liner is J. Nordlander. Airplane Greeters Dress In Old-Fashioned Clothes Bowling Green, Ky. (AP) ? Air plane passengers thuught for a mo ment they had flown straight into thl past. They were greeted by a group of people wearing old-fash ioned clothing and sitting in a 1912 model car. The gals wore high but ton shoes, floppy hats and long dresses. The men sported long mustaches, and the driver was at tired in duster, motoring cap and goggles. The group was composed of rela tives qf Bill Lindsay, one of the passengers arriving home from New York. They wanted to startle him. They did. Deserters Could Form Own Combat Division llilll IJ II . Iij.jiiijji V< By BEM PRICE AP Nrwifntum Writer Washington ? Enough deserters from the U. S. armed forces are walking the streets ? 21,310 of them ? to more than make up a full Army combat division. From 85 to 90 per cent of these de serters will be apprehended soon but there will be others to take their places. - While the number appears large, it is less than 1 per dnt of the armed forces. The desertion picture is not con sidered alarming at the Pentagon. As one official said: "No other armed force in the world can point to such a record. We are not proud of it, but it is some satis- 1 ? Uu nam*?' [action that it is better than any body else's." Still, there ? is for the armed forces the nagging question of why a man deserts. Capt. William R Perl, an Army psychologist at the disciplinary barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kans., wrote in a report on a study of desertions: "In working with military of fenders one is struck by the large numbers of individuals who are at a complete loss to accept and as similate that enlistment and draft are not a private contract result ing in a job which one quits if one does not like it." Perl said AO per cent of the in mates at Leavenworth were there ? / (or da*rtlan nd that It percent at them had ao juvenile criminal record and 95 per cant had never been arretted? coed cieaa kids oa the surface Perl uid that in hit itudiei of deaertion he often ran acroaa tuck expreauaftt u "I dida't Ike it ao I tool off." or "I wasn't paid on time ao 1 quit no pay. ne wort ' The chief rraaan for peacetime deaertien Mlet In large measure, Perl feela. In the puMlc't attitade toward military aerrlce at aome thing unnecessary until immedi ate dancer threatens. At the Pentagon there it eotne reluctance to dlaruat detertion, but one colonel said "Much of our problem comes from men who slmW do not want to terve and Who will do almoht anything to avoid it.< ' "Too, there comet a time when | guy either can't take Army life any more or aomething hap|>ens at home which. In hit estimation, pro vides an overriding motive. May be hit wife, his mother or tome one dote is sick, or they are hav ing financial troubles Once he gets home, fear of punithmcnt often keeps him away." Apparently fear had tome bear ing during the Korean War too. Detections climbed from 39,071 for the Army in the fiscal year 1950 to fii.m to fteral 1M1 They dMMad M 28.106 in Steal 1852, when the Army announced a policy of shipping deserters to Ko rea and Ml off another 7,700 in fiscal 1983 While a man may be classed as a deaerter. H does not mean that he will be convicted of the charge. Only 1.M1 men, for example, cur rently are serving prison sentences for quitting. A man la In technical desertion in peacetime when he has been ab sent without leave for SO days or more. In combat, however, a man car be considered a deaerter If he Is gone an hour, depending on the circumstances. By and large, sentences for de sertion again depending upon a host of circumstances, rsnge from 30 days to 23 years. Most of the convictions are in the 1 to 3 year bracket. As a rule deserters are appre hended in a surprisingly short time. Since desertion usually Skrries with it a dishonorable discharge, the armed forces seek to rehabili tate their men and restore them to duty. Such a discharge deprives a man of his veterans' rights. It forbids federal employment ever. See DESERTERS, Page 7) NOTICE WATER CUSTOMERS IN BEAUFORT After October 31 Water Bills Will Be Payable At BELL'S DRUG STORE x Front Street CAROLINA WATER CO. ELECTION NOTICE 4 - M**"1 'Uff '*"* " " -* ' ' '*'* * ' " ? . i .. , ./??? " iff ' , i f!* ?? ? ? sr.. :r "Eternal Vigilance is the Price of Liberty" THIS WAS TRUE 2200 YEARS AGO AND IT IS TRUE TODAY The Roman Republic endured for 300 year* as a virile, thriving nation. Then the voters, the so-called thinking voters, quit going to the polls and left the vot ing to the rabble. Unscrupulous generals soon controlled the votes of the rabble and the generals, a succession of them, de clared themselves Emperors. And, as Emperors they en slaved the people, taxed them to near starvation. And the Roman empire fell. ? In more recent times Germany was a confederation of states ruled by kings who followed the will of the people as expressed at the polls. . But, by 1(40, the peoples of the various German - states had fallen into the errors of the Ramans of (Hi other era, and quit voting. Thus it became easy for imperialistic-minded Wil liam I of Prussia to cootce.all the German states into ? single nation dominated by him plane as AiIMm king. Through threat, reprieal and economic pressure Wil liam I raised vast armies^ from Me satellite Oermon states. There was no one to say him Nay. THE PEOPIE HAD FORFEITED THEIR RIGHTS. They forfeited them because they were too lazy, too stupid to vote when they had the privilege to vote. William I stole the two best provinces of Denmark, subjugated Austria by war, marched into France in 1 870 and in 90 days prostrated that nation. From France he collected $600,000 in GOLD. And to this day France has never recovered. After those "triumphs" King William I declared him self EMPEROR WILLIAM I. ? ? William H, unchecked by the will of his people who no longer could vote, and convinced by his generals that he could conquer all of Europe embarked on World War I. Failing in his conquest he whs succeeded by a Re public, which Uko the Reman empire of old, was direct ed by the generals of the army. The Republic was succeeded by Hitler, tool of the ? AN wf |f?v kiww th# story. But are all of you aware that the downfall of Germany can be traced to but one fault? The German peoples long ago failed to vote when they bad the privilege to vote! VOTE The Carteret County Board of Elections it not concerned with HOW you vote. The Carteret County Board of .Elections, assures you of an honest election. 0 ??. What the Board asks you to do, is VOTEI CARTERET COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS PHONf 2-7441 ? ?EAWOtT.N.C. ' ? 1 ? ' ? ' * * ' ? ? * * , " I

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