Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / March 19, 1952, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE FOUR — t)unn High's Honor Roll Is Announced . i" Principal A. B. Johnson of Dunn Right-qehool today announced the tMitor roll for the third six-weeks period 9 1 the year: , sth Grade: Miss Owen: Bonnie BarefQdt, Faye Lockamy, Joyce Po teat, Betsy Sue Tart. . Mis. Ryals: Linda Raynor, Judy Wheatag*;' , MrSi-nYarijorough: Jimmy Peay, Beckj“jo Cannady. Mary Gail Tart. BethJwilson, Edward E. Johnson, 6th« Grade: Miss Barrett: Betsy ByejWTMary Sue Dalrymple, Gale Barn&udt. Judy Wood, Douglas Her»ea~Pope. Mtarculp: Judy Barefoot, San dra-Blackley, Barbara Keene, Joyce | Poperdoseph Campbell, Jimmy Tart, JerrjCStilkins, Benny Wood. Miss Horton: Kay Black, Jovce tlarrSson. Betty Anne Lee, Carolyn Jerry Byrd, Joseph Nor ris, Billy' Thornton. 7th-Grade: Mrs. Barefoot: Car olyn ■ Gardner, Rita McLean, Ruth Dare~Tbrt; John Dalrymple, Jr. Mila Smith: Frances Carroll, Faye Lee, -Clarence MeLamb. Mrs. Waggoner: Linda Hardee, Gra<2 Jackson, Carol Pope, Angela Tart_Nola Mae Vann. IthOrade: Mrs. Ausley: Jean En nis, Ibid Strickland. . MW Ausley: Elizabeth Lewis, Al ice Stewart, Bobby Johnson, Mm. Stbwart: Laura Belle Carr, Virgßiia Turlington. Stlf Grade: Mr. Cheek: Shelby Jeftn Fowler, Patricia Johnson, Peg gy Kirby, Patricia Lanier, Mary Whitrfiead. > DaVis: Renee Byrd, Betty Parker, Alice Prince, Donald Jackson. Mrs. Myers: Faye Dawson, Caro- FOR SALE I .vffi art acting as agents for the sale of lots in the i "JsJjjies-Guy Sub-division on the northwest side of jj '’Wnn. These lots are desirable for building or in ' (Prices and terms quoted upon request.) I * .C. J. Hanna and Son, Inc. ; PHONE 3125 - 3126 DUNN NO MORE ORDINANCE WORRIES! NO MESSY GARBAGE CANS. NO' RACKS TO BUILD - - r It 9 * Purdie 9 s Answer r : To All Your Garbage Problems— -9s j sink and^B m DISPOSALL 1 .1 B ' j •. —■_ m ~r. - B BS * 1 IliF’ V* «»> m j M 1 ■ Dkv S2O DELIVERS I It 1 THE DISPOSALU-tn.n.c, No m,Mt messy *art»gc«v«T again! C £ Di.poaall* shroil tood wait id* I B' / I \ I coU wiaca cunra rt lon *• dna! I / I ttWHilTl \ ) / O Drop food into >uik drain opening jgBfMTT f• t*** pro«.-irt Twiaop cover» ON iKEIiM.? J I V * •Tmon dw cold-water faucet. 1 TWi eCC NO MOU GAS OAG t! 1] J THE SINK— Pm U inch double dra,aboard not is tbe ton word in eOrieoCT *P J bnca complements the f*e . s rad reH^Tpor^MdA^p. 1 |E|>IWW ...04 ■nwiwi 1 i lyn Parker, Betty Lou Reaves, An nie Sue Lanier. 10th Grade: Mr. Braswell: Linda Aycock, Annette Barefoot, Patricia Norris, Betty Ann Tart, Mary Lou Westbrook, Katherine White. Mrs. Pridgen: Joyce Alphin, Mar tha Butler, Billie Jean Jernigan, Frances Pope, Marie Smith, Betty Lou Wilson . Mrs. Thompson: Frances Altman, Patricia Butler, Joan Jernigan, Bar bara Norris, Daphne Parker. 11th Grade: Miss Clifford: Betty Jean Barefoot, Rebecca Anne Lee. 12th Grade: Mrs. Dixon: Rita Fleishman. Mary Lou Lee, Lola Mae Reeves, Pat Snipes, Mary Williams. Shirley Wilson, Billie Temple, Joyce Ivey, Britt Dorman, Claude Pope. Man Owing Over 2 Million Is Sought ST. LOUIS rtP) Robert L. Knet zer, who launched a ’’new used” car business in an Illinois alfalfa i field ahd wound up owing $2,500,000 was sought by the FBI today after he gave the slip to two bailiffs. Knetzer disappeared from a ho tel here while on a "vacation” from a jail cell to try to raise SBO,OOO Reeded to free himself from a con tempt of court sentence. Knetzer came into public promin ence shortly after the war when he opened a "new-used” car business near Jerseyville, 111., when new cars were difficult to get. He sold the cars at list prices or below. BIG DOWN PAYMENTS He asked SI,OOO down payment and the rest on delivery and for a while did deliver. But it appeared Henry Wallace Threatens To Sue President SOUTH SALEM, N. Y. (If) Henry A. Wallace, former secre tary of commerce under President Truman, said today that if Mr. Truman names him as the “Mr. X” of his diary “I shall charge him with deliberate character as sassination... to make money” and “build political prestige.” Wallace made the charge In a statement following publication of a biography of Mr. Truman by Wil liam Hillman. In the diary Mr. Truman said: “Mr. X is a pacifist 100 per cent. He wants us to disband our armed forces, give Russia our atomic secrets and trust a bunch of ad venturers in the Kremlin polit bureau. I do not understand a ’dreamer’ like that. The German- American Bund under Fritz Kuhn was not half so dangerous ” WIRES PRESIDENT Wallace said he had challenged Mr. Truman by telegram at Key West, Fla., to say whether he Wallace was the mysterious Mr. X in the diary. He said he had received a "no comment” reply from presidential secretary Joseph Short. “If Mr. Truman ever admits Mr. X is I,” Wallace said. "I shall charge him with the same delibe rate charcter assassination which he finds so despicable in others.” IN COATS Mr. and Mrs. Joe Young and son visited Mrs. Young's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Turlington in Coats Sunday. VISIT MRS. HAIRE Mr. and Mrs. K. M. Wood visited Mr. Wood’s mother, Mrs. Herbert Haire in Apex Sunday afternoon. FROM BENSON Mrs. Mary K Willis of Benson spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Owen Willis in Dunn. that he was merely buying the cars on the open market, paying stan dard prices. It was later charged that he had been using down pay ments from earlier customers to buy the cars. Deliveries began to fall behind orders and his customers demand ed their money back. The beautiful dream was shattered in 1948 and bankruptcy proceedings ensuded. Court records showed that Knet zer owes roughly $2,500,000 to cred itors in several states. thkdjultaaooap.mum am III■» i be H H NEW PUMP GOES INTO OPERATION Shown is the new pump recently purchased from the Dillon Supply Company which went into action for the first time Monday morning. Inspecting the apparatus before its start are, left to right; City Manager O. O. Manning; Mayor pro-tern R. G. Tart; Commls • sioner J. V. Bass; Ed Anderson of the Dillon Company; City Clerk, Charles Storey. Water Plant Superintendant Eddice King; and Robert Crotts, mechanic who made the installation. Shortly after the picture was taken, Mr. Tart threw the switch starting the big 2,300 volt motor on its first run. (Daily Record photo by Louis Dearborn). Joseph Norris Wins Infantryman Badge WITH THE 45TH INFANTRY DIVISION IN KOREA.—Pvt. Joseph M. Norris, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Norris, Route 4 Dunn, N. C„ has won the Combat Infantryman Badge, symbol of the front line fighting man, while serving in Ko fea with the 45th Infantry Divi sion. The badge shows a tiny Revolu tionary War flintlock rifle mounted against a blue rectangle which is surrounded by a wreath; The Oklahoma National Guard Division left the U. S. early in 1951 and trained extensively on the Japanese island of Hokkaido before it was committed to Korea in De cember. Private Norris, a rifleman in Company F of the 180th Infantry Regiment, entered the Army in January 1950 and joined the 45th Division in December 1951. Miss Kellems Again Refuses To Pay. Taxes STONINGTON, Conn. (W Vlv refused today to pay the new soc ial security tax on self-employed persons and recruited four other small employers to join her tax strike. Miss Kellems, who owns a cable grip factory here, sent a letter to Secretary of the Treasury John W Snyder with her income tax return, pointing out that she had not in cluded the $Bl due for the new tax She told Snyder that she carried “adequate insurance” and did not wish "further coverage.” SUGGESTS INDICTMENT “It will clarify the whole matter if you will please indict me and let me submit this law to the Su preme Court, in the traditional Am erican manner, in order to test its constitutionality,” she told Snyder in the letter. Miss Kellems made public sim ilar letters to Snyder written by four others. Because they are their own boss, the small business owners, are re- ■ quired to pay their own social se curity taxes by means of the self employment tax. They are supposed to deduct social security taxes from their employes’ wages, too. BELIEVED ILLEGAL “The reason for not paying is because we believe this law to be unconstitutional,” one wrote. “For those of us who still have confi dence in our own ability to take care of personal security, such *a socialistic thing should not be fore ed upon us. 1 * Miss Kellems’ feud with the In ternal Revenue Bureau dates from 1948 when she refused to deduct in come tax from the pay checks of her employes because “no one has paid me to be a tax collector.” ika Supporters Steal The Show j At, Stpte Event j| iasSSSSEr; ueTran- ‘ " 1 j . IS— M |Mm HI M Ernst Mornuft of fhirtoHc. J •# mnwUmi wiafe* j both Toft aai Eteobowtr _ J Erwin Teen Chaffer By GAIL BYRD Hi ya, Kids! Sorry I didn’t write any “Teen Chattier” last week but I’ll try to write regular from now on. Let’s get bn with the latest news! The Erwin Glee Club went to Raleigh Wednesday to sing. Mrs. Gray, the director of the Glee Club, was ill and could not take the trip. We hope you will soon be well again, Mrs. Gray. Danice Byrd has been absent from school for almost a week. She has been Sick with the flu. Rope you feel better real soon, Janice. Roy Hall, Jr., and Jerry Faye Ryals are still going steady. They look simply adorable together; so keep the good work up. kidst Hirsts a list «f an the steadies: Rat Whitman and Gilbert Smith; Betty Ann Julian and Tommy Da vis; Doris Jean Oldham and Dur wood -Strickland; Geraldine Butler and Pete Gaster; Mary Louise Mi ley and George Wilson Lucas; Gall Byrd and Harold (Brownie). Brown Barbara Lou Benson and Paul Tyndall - - ■ • (CAN YOU IMAGINE? ; Mae Cooper going to school In Dunn and the- ncoming back to. Er win? ’Betty Ann Julian getting a letter from a secret admirer? Gerry Matthews playing the piano and singing “Just Give Me One More Chance”? June Dare Turlington still go tng with 'Oilbert Elderbaum? Marilyn Stienberg writing to mo vie stars and pen pals? Mary Louise Miley still wearing George Lucas’ class ring? Graham West driving a certain •Dunn girls car? : Deane Turlington and Thomas Stewart still going strong? Luck to ya* both. Jessie Suggs wearing R. D. Stewart's class ring? James Paul Barbour engaged to ■ ■ H • a girl from Dunn? Gail Byro receiving letters fom “Brownie” almost every day? I Betty Lou Jackson still running to the post office for a letter from Jackie Whitman. Almost all the Senior girls being married or engaged? “WHAT’S IN A NAME” B. B. Not Buick B. B. Not Oldsmobile B. B. Hudson Jerry Not maid Jerry not cook Jerry Butter Betty not dog Betty not cot Betty Byrd Bobby not farmer Bobby not carpenter Bobby Shepherd Harold not white Harold not blue Harold Brown CAMPBELL COLLEGE Buie’s Creek, N. C, SPECIAL NOTICE Register now for new vocational .!4d|Rt classes in shorthand, typing ttf bookkeeping. NEW CLASSES TO BEGIN MARCH 19 Three nights weekly Monday, Wednesday and Friday 7 to 8 p.m. and 8 to 9 pun. Monthly Rates One course $7.50 Two Courses 10.00 Special JJua Wlonlh! Cool-A-Matic Room Unit ■I 1° t) , WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 19, 1952 Bookmobile Schedule THURSDAY, MARCH 29 Mamers, 9:45-10; Mrs. S. B. Brown’s. 10:10-10:20; Mrs. D. E. Cameron’s, 10:30-10:45; Mrs. J. S. McNeill’s, 10:50-11; Holder’s Store. 11:15-11:30; Mrs. Charlie Harring ton's, 11:40-11:50; Mrs. Angus A. Cameron’s, 12-13:10; Ernest Camp InrtSpMl A Penny Motels** when you buy the NEW 1952 ' Spinnerhtesher Wro-sXr/Action BUY THOR GIVES Washing Action I Unbeatable Hot Water Savings! Controllable ' Washing Time! % Thor-way Overflow Rinsal ids Year Old Weiker fowl iASY TERMS! »H In Action Herat = S22J.S. JOHNSON FURNITURE COMPANY Lucknow Square Dunn, N. C. * bell’s store, 19:20-13:30; Benhaven 1 School, 12:40-1; Olivia Post Office, 1:05-1:90; Ridgeway school, 1;45- 2:15; Johnsonville, Mrs. H. D. Huf fines, 2:25-2:35; Overhills, 2:50-3. FRIDAY, MARCH 21 Buckhorn school, 9:45-10:46; Mrs.. . Claire Whirter’s, 10:50-11; Mrs.o Champium, 11:10-11:20; Mrs. D. R. Senter’s, 11:30-11:40; Duncan, 11:60- 12:20; Mis. L. B. Smith’s, 12:35- 12:45; Kipling, Mrs. S. P. Stone’s, 1-1:10; Mrs. Whit Spence, 1:20- 1:30.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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March 19, 1952, edition 1
10
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