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The High Point Enterprise from High Point, North Carolina • Page 30

Location:
High Point, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
30
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Colifornian loc Is Winner Of Derby ATLANTIC CITY. A Mrs. Frances S. Bora, a pretty little woman who looks as if she have seeing out of en airplane. Saturday named winner of the Powder-Puff Derby.

It was the sixth win for the I.ons Beach. resident in the 15 year history ol the transcontinental air raee for women. However, this was the first time she ha; won flying alone. Mrs. Bera finished the San Diogo to Atlantic City trek Friday, a little more than an hour before the twice-extended end of the race.

However, it took computer operators all night to complete tabulation of the and the results were not made official until after a meeting of the pilots Saturday morning. The i is not determined by finishes the race first, but by the amount of flying time required considering the capability of the eircraft. Mrs. Bera, 36. an instructor and charter pilot in Long Beach, was the Powder-Puff Derby for the i i It was only second i has made the i alone.

Here is the i i a list of the top i i a i 1. Mrs. Francis S. Bera. Lone Besch.

Calif. 2. Alicen Sounders. KI Cajou. 9 Point EnUrprite, Sunday, July 1961 Holland FAMILY Supported Brothers Receive' By Governmnt Posts Board of Conserva-' SALISBURY.

(AP) Dr.gro leaders nave persistent tion and Development will Edward Duncan, presi-(demands a a en jJ er1 eir asked at its meeting at Wrights- dent of Livingstone College a lawyer entered Jville Beach July 23-25 to reappoint and his bro ther. John E. ment service a a messenW'ior t. 0. Holland as state usnenes recently nom i na ted as District the Interior Department in 1934.

mimissioner. comm ss oneri 3 1 A Democrat, he has been record- This was announced Saturday membm of a distinguished Ne-'er of deeds for the District of by CD Director Hargrove Bowles ro since 1952. Before get- Dr. Sam also was taped recently for a high government ting that post, he was an attorney for the Bituminous Coal Commis- post, member of the North ion a government agency, and lina State Welfare Board. Their late father was a colbge teacher, and their mother is a retired school teacher who lives for the Office of Price Administration and the Housing and Home Finance Agency.

sister, JMlss Julia B. Duncan. Jr. He made the announcement after opponents of Holland failed to appear at a hearing before Eric W. Rodgers of Scotland Neck, chairman of the CD Board's Commercial Fisheries Committee.

Bowles said he will make the recommendation to the board that Holland be reappointed. He confirmed Friday he had received petitions. which contained about service. principal in Concord, N.C. names, asking that Holland not i Sam, the oldest brother, a Another brother.

Joseph C. Dun- be reappointed to the post he hasi na iiv'e of Madisonville, be-; can is a principal in Yancey. held 1953. jcame president of Livingstone in Bowles said he wrote the peti- 1958 after 12 years as state super- :k.uiAM itav-iici wuu i i i in Salisbury. Of their (1S registrar of Livingstone Ccl seven children, five are in edu-j- cational work and two in govern-! Brother Fred D.

Duncan is a tioners suggesting that they show up at the hearing here Saturday and voice their reasons for opposing Holland or to write him letters. None did. he added. 1 i Around 100 commerc.al fishermen attended the hearing here. Earl Ilollon of Vandemere.

A sister, Mrs. Elizabeth D. visor of Negro high schools in North Carolina. Previously he had been a Koontz, a specral education teacher in Salisbury, recently was elected secretary of the in BIRTHDAYS ON SAME DAY a i and June Douglas, West Charles Casanova. 8 fright), looks left out in this pic- on July 18.

Others, left to right, are Johnny and Ricky, raim Beach. Fia. ture. He's the only one of the four children of Mr. and Patsy, all of whom will celebrate their birthdavs 3.

Irene Leverton. Nortn Holly- a Mrs. i a Casanova, of Stat.esville nnt hnrn TnPsHav ident of the North Carolina Fish-, eries Association, Beaufort a TM wood, and Tecklar Kauf-j man. Pacific Palisades, Calif. 4.

Mrs. Frances Miller. Columbia. S.C. and Miss Sylvia RoLh.

Glencoe, ID. 5. Mrs. Pauline Glasson and Mrs. Lena Jackson, both of Corpus Tex.

and Mrs. Richard Casanova, of Statesville, not born Tuesday. William H. Potter and others Rodgers they hoped Holland) would be reappointed. i Council for Education.

Earlier in the day. the board science teacher principal and i a Teachers Division of the athletic coach High lNational Education Association at the meeting in Atlantic City, N.J. And another brother. William, is with the Veterans Hospital in the Secondary, an( Cork is actually the dead bark of an evergreen oak tree. It is harvested about every nine years, permitting the to grow Koreans Bootleg Coffee Charles Birthday Is Left Out Of Celebrations The other three Casanova chil-' dren were born in different plac-i es and in different vears.

But STATESVILLE; X.C. (API Xobociy could blame 8-year-old Charles Casanova much if he feels left out of things around his home next Tuesday. I You see. Charles is the only one of Mr. and Mrs.

Richard' SEOLL. South Korea A four children who will A government ban on coffee celebrating a birthday! orinking is turning rcspec'tablcij a Korean tea houses into speakeasies. For the Korean who loves his coffee--and knows comebodv-can still drink a I ercnt they were an born on the same Stuff. I One the first edicts issued i lh by the military on takins over Thc children with the, in a May 16 coup was to'strikc same birthday are Patsy. Ricky' down coffee.

The officers were 3nd hnn preaching austerity and coffee Patsy will celebrate her 16th was considered an unnecessary birthday. Ricky will celebrate his imported luxury. I 4 birthday and Johnny, his Tea house; were forbidden to 12tn birthday, serve it. The government-run How do the three young Casa- Bando Hotel, along with Western- novas feel about sharing their style restaurants, were directed birthday? Johnny doesn't mind. Patsy doesn't like it.

speakeasy of the 20s. A good icky if a i a about it. He nr a i nf believes he would get ents if he didn't have to share his birthday with a brother and a sister. Patsy was born in Statesville July 18, 1945. Ricky was born July 18, 1947.

in Panama. Johnny was born July 18, 1949 in Rochester. N.Y. Charles missed the multiple birthday boat by being born on Feb. 28, 1953.

How do the elder Casanovas feel about having three children whose birthdays fall on the same day? "Well, we usually celebrate together." said Casanova, a geologist. "We usually take a trip together." Mrs. Casanova said that after Patsy and Ricky were born on July 18, she told a friend her next child was also going to be born on July 18. But Mrs. Casanova admits she was surprised when it happened.

'Sailplane' Ace Claims New Mark Pension Costs Man $1.65 FRANKFORT. Ky. (AP)- The i $1.65 which Vernon Mayes of Law- contributed to the State Employees Retirement System apparently makes him eligible for a minimum $430 yearly pension. The attorney general's office said Thursday Mayes was eligible for retirement the day he started work because he was then 75. I Mayes was employed as Senate 'cloakroom keeper at S12 daily during a five-day special legislative session last year.

Since he holds office until he resigns or the 1962 Legislature names a successor, Mayes has not drawn or applied for a pension. IAP wirephotmi lof directors the fisheries association unanimously endorsed Holland for reappointment. The new Commercial Fisheries Committee of the enlarged CD He is a 1927 graduate of Liv- a new la er of bark ingstone, received his master's degree in education from Columbia University in 1932, and his doctorate in education from Cornell University in 1949. He and his wife have two chil- to servL 1 it only to foreigners. Now the Al tea housas have' become a prototype of the U.

tomer. or a friend of the owner, slinks to a back table and gets his brew served in a tea cup. I all very hush-hush. If he's a coffee lover and doesn't know anyone. the Korean orders "neo-cof- fce." This is a concoction made of Chinese herbs.

It looks like coffee, smells a little like it and tastes like Chinese herbs. The same restrictions and ground rules--apply to foreign made whisky. Koreans like whisky tea, nothing more than a cup of tea and a few drops of liquor. Know someone in the tea room and it's worth Scotch or perhaps. a good bourbon.

Foreigners still drink their coffee and foreign liquor in the Bando and the few other places okayed by the Transportation Ministry. But for a few moments it was touch and go. Maj. Gen. Han Shin, the home minister was quoted as savin" this week that the Bando and" the others should 5erve no coffee or nbndomestic booze to anyone After a flurry of activity "from the proprietors, he issued a statement saying he was misquoted, a what he meant was that they shouldn't serve smuggled goods.

Solve A Crime more pres- RAWLIXS. Wyo. A Bob Fisher of Moses Lake. who is gliding across the nation in what he calls a "sailplane." CLOCK-EYED PSYCHOLOGY COALGATE, Okla. the clock in a cafe here stopped at a few minutes past noon, i' was not re-started.

Asked about it, the owner explained tnai pea- pie passing by see the dock, gef hungry, and stop to eat. said he soared as high as 16,200 feet above sea level over southern Idaho and Wyoming Wednesday, and flew 360 miles. He said it was "the best flight I've made in my soaring career." Fisher, who started from Seattle, left Hurley. Idaho Wednesday morning and landed in Rawlins at dusk. He said he had to use an oxygen bottle for four of the eight hours aloft.

The plane has no engine. Board will be asked to act several requests made at theidren. i meeting here. His brother. John born in i One request calls for reinstate- Springfield, 51 years ago iment of a ban on the taking of was nominated President Ken- Isponge crabs and not permitting; 11 6 las W( for the jthe catching of more than 10 ear Post as one cf three mem-.

'cent of such crabs in any of the District of Columbia 'catch. The ban was lifted by the lBoard Commiss.oners. Board at its April meeting' tha alfvthe pop at on i in Sanford VVa hm ton is Negro, and Ne-l Opposition also was voiced to the tsking of crabs by dredge methods on the ground that it damages the crab population and impairs the quality of the meat. The fisheries committee will be asked to keep the herring season open in commercial waters until! May 10 each year instead of nor- maily closing it around April CLIP BOARDS ARCH BOARDS ORDER BOOKS BALL POINT PENS STRING TAGS CECILS OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO. 304 S.

MAIN ST. PHONE 88 2-6121 Magellan's expedition left San Lucar, Spain, on Sept. 20, 1519 and returned to Seville on Sept 8, 1522. The earth's oceans are full of algae, tiny plants on which small, fish feed and large fish then feed; on the smaller ones. Call Us For TFRJUITP rOKlTRrtl I ClvfVII I I FREE INSPECTION--NO OBLIGATION CAROLINA TRI-CITY TERMITE CO.

G. C. Bedford, Owner State License 2GOW Day Phone 88 2-4815, Nights 88 8-4327 430 N. Wrcnn St. There is no proof-positive a TV.

Lnrvi'nore was in ter for the entire two hours, from 7:30 i or that he was even there when his emergency a camc Hp very well a phoned themes- sage in to the theater himself from another place. Abo. according to his story, the message i came in and was announced in the theater at. i): 30. a i called him to (he Midtown Hospital.

If, as he told you. lip found upon riving at the hospital a the message was a mistak? why then did take him so Ion- to a homr-al 30? 'TOO many loopholes in i (ory' Puzzle Solution otm: w. i i amr LIFE is just a BOWL of CHERRIES! systematic savers! The happiest things happen to those who save regularly in a savings account! Their rosiest dreams have a way of coming true, because they have a way (tried, tested ond proved successful) of accumulating what it takes in the way of money. Try this, yourself! is the current dividend rate at which your money earns more money for you in a savings account here. These earnings, compounded regularly, help the totals in your savings account grow faster to dreams-come-true size! or our cus a Downtown Parking Lot on FREE PARKING College Street while transacting business at our office.

PIEDMONT Savings Loan Association ON JULY 10,1920 41 YEARS AGO The High Point Telephone System Was Cut Over To Dial Service IT WAS THE FIRST CITY IN NORTH CAROLINA TO HAVE THE NEW SERVICE The same general principles of a i remain unchanged although many refinements and improvements have been adopted during the intervening years. Not only are local telephone numbers dialed but our operators are able to dial numbers in distant and nearby cities. Places as far away as San Francisco are dialed direct. Following is the notice that appeared in the High Point Enterprise on July 9, 1920: "AUTOMATIC TELEPHONE SYSTEM IN SERVICE SUNDAY TO ALL CITY SUBSCRIBERS When you woke up tomorrow morning, remove your receiver from the hook and if you do not hear the operator say "number please?" you will know that the company has "cut over" to the automatic system. Then, instead of waiting patiently as you have been accustomed to do USE THE DIAL" The invention of the Automatic Telephone System is generally regarded as one of the most important in the entire telephone art.

Second only, perhaps, to the invention of the telephone itself. High Point is glad to have the distinction of being the first city in North Carolina to install the dial system. It was quickly followed by Lexington and Thomasville, and later by Greensboro, Charlotte, Winston Salem, a i and many other cities. Our High Point operators are now dialing numbers as far distant as San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle and Honolulu. NORTH STATE TELEPHONE CO.

SERVING High Point, Thomasville, Randleman and Adjacent Areas.

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About The High Point Enterprise Archive

Pages Available:
148,309
Years Available:
1906-1977