Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Dec. 13, 1965, edition 1 / Page 1
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t » id cooler, tonight Lews lower to middle 30s mountains ranging to middle 40s along coast. Generally fair and a little cooler most of state Tuesday. U TELEPHONE 89L311'. — Mtt-lUg 1“ ■ MANN FILM LABORATORY ,SSLc5£rHAM Road WINSTON SALEM, N. C. DUNN, N. C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 13, 1985 L v - : p 4't. ;h-■: -if?* Red Cross Drive Is Underway Across Harnett Harnett county's Red Cross Chap ter began a campaign Thursday that, it is hoped, will ultimately raise $8,000 in Harnett. Barney Miller, personnel director of Erwin Mills, will head the drivt in the county that is scheduled for next March. But drive officials gathered Thursday at luncheon at Porter’s to start laying the groundwork for the drive. Dr. H. D. Mabe, of Erwin, Har nett Red Cross Chairman, presided and introduced Robert Hadley, for mer Dunnite and an official of the Carolina Power and Light Comp any. Hadley is Volunteer Regional Fund Chairman for the Red Cross. Harnett Chairman Miller also spoke. Hadley outlined plans and sug gestions for the drive in March and urged everyone to cooperate with the campaign. State officials of the organization also attended the meeting as well as volunteers from other parts of Harnett. Each area of the county will re ceive a Quota to raise from the $8,000 goal for the overall drive in the countv. This to be announced la$er by Fund Drive Chairman Mil lerY Mrs. Grace Swain, executive di rector of Hw Chapter heke gave a resume of die various work the charter had been doing and said CONTINUED on page > Buddy House, 51 §es Today ' •^jKepry Cleveland (Buddy) House, Of Route 4, Dunn, died this rirtrplng tyv Betsy Johnson Mem arial Hospital. t was the son or the late John * tT and Martha Stancll House. He a member of Sansom Presby terian Church apd has been em ployed by Godwin Buildlns- Supply Co, for aonroximatelv 13 years. He also operated House’s Grocery on Route 4. Funeral services will be held Wed nesday at 3:00 ri.m. from Sansom preobvterian Church with the Rev. Alien Smvth. pastor, assisted by Rev. Charge Sessotns officiating. Burial will be In Devotional Gar dens. Surviving are his wife. Mrs. Harel Ivev House: two sons. George H. and Connie both of the home: one dansfiter. Mrs. Martha Bvrd of Benson- th-ee half brothers. Fllsa Rouse of Route 5. Dunn. Allen of Diinn and John M. House of Greens ho-o- four sisters. Mra. Vennle B. West of Dunn. Mrs. Millie Stewart of Dodwin, Mrs. Sarah Ellen Norris of Route 1. Dunn, snd Mrs. C. W. peefleld of Tar Veora.s. Nev. The hodv will remain «t Cro marfle Funeral Home until 4 Pjn. Tuesday and then he taken to his home. M9. PH FY HFPlT Jack Riley of Raleigh, vice presi dent of Carolina Power and Light Co., visited relatives and friends here Wednesday. AUTO IN WHICH JOYCE BRADSHER WAS KILLED Daily Record Photo by T. M. Stewart Four Others Injured Lillington Teenager Killed Sixteen-year-old Joyce Bradsher, i of Lillington, daughter of Mrs. Am- j brose Bradsher was killed in a' two - car collision on N. C. 210 i seven miles south of Lulington early i Saturday evening. Four others were hospitalized fol lowing the crash, which totally de Farm Bureau Chief Raps Trend Claims LBJ Would Ruin Free Market CHICAGO (UPI) - The president of the American Farm Bureau Fed eration said Monday the Johnson administration is out to “wreck” the free market system. Charles B. Shuman told the fed eration’s 47th ajihual meeting, “the market price system ... is being systematically destroyed by the dumping of government surplus stocks to depress prices.” He said the “market wrecking in tent of the administration” was evi (Continued on Page Five) Near Wayne Ave. School Sampson Youth Dies In Cycle Accident i William Howard Byrd, 19, of Rt. 5, Dunn, was found dead Sunday morning about 9: SO on the Wayne Elementary School grounds here. Byrd, who was a senior at Mid way High School in Sampson Coun ty, apparently drove his Honda mo torcycle at a high rate of speed down a dead-end street and struck a 2-foot embankment. The impact threw him on the school grounds which adjoin the dead-end street. Harnett County Coroner Paul Drew ruled the death accidental and said the youth died instantly as a result of a fractured skull. He plac ed the time of death between mid night and 2 turn. ' ’ 5 •' Byrd’s brother, Primrose, was killed in an automobile accident be tween Benson and Meadow School in February of this year. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2:00 p.m, from St. John’s Holiness Church between Newton Grove and Goldsboro. Rev. J. D. Eddins of Mount Olive and Rev. Hubert Shirley of Goldsboro will of ficiate and interment will be in the Denning cemetery near the home. Surviving young Byrd are his mo ther and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Enlow of Route 5; two sisters, Mrs. Ray Langston of Mount Olive and Mrs. Bobby Bass of Dunn; his maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs., ^Hubert Lee of Route 8, Mount Oliver, tite paternal grandmother. Mrs. Menza Register of Route 5, Dunn. .»■*.. During Big Roundup fn Atlanta . 165 Moonshiners ATLANTA (UFI) — Liquor agents /«_A.S_ nitafrtct nwiru “Operation Dryup” against moon shiners hit Atlanta in a big way to day as warrants were sworn out agniiM* i®5 persons accused of sell '"FederS1 officials had con centrated their campaign, which he «n Oct. 25, mostly in rural Norft J Georgia but today beg« massive f arrests here as a result of se»fcrai A. weeks of undercover work. The halls and waiting rooms in Pulton and DeKalb counties’ jails were overflowing as relatives ac companied by bondsihen showed up to get people out of ML Eighty-five federal, state and lp-. cal agents began the roundup at i I' a, m: and by day warrants were was apprehended as" She "l I Robert P. Lane, supervisor in charge of enforcement of the Al ep^ mx| Tobacco Tax Unit of the Treasury Department, said bis a fents ..easily purchased moonshine from “ghot , houses” .and “speak-. e#fy»*'; th»WS Jhe -rpast ,i; \ several „4le d^Hepily in ntvak s,” U/*, gakL “The, operators ■ of the^ :)#»*#> ' (ContlhUjed an Pgge.llye) moiished both cars. In fair condition late Saturday night at Highsmitb-Rainey Mem. Hospital in Fayetteville were Viv ian Dean, 16, of Lillington; Linde Ann McDonald, 16, of Route 1, Bunnlevel; Bobby Wicker, 15, of Lillington; and Paul Salmon, 27, of Route 1, Bunnlevel. State Highwav t-strolman John L. Dunkley said 1965 model car in which the teenagers were riding driven by Vivian Dean, started to make a left him off N. C. 210, and was struck in the right side by a northbound car operated by Salmon. Patrolman Dunkley said the Sal mon car literally tore its way through the Dean car, then over turned and went another 215 feet. He said marks indicated Salmon pulled his car onto the shoulder of the road in an attempt to avoid the collision. He said Salmon, who was alone in his car, apparently was speeding. Dunkley said late Saturday his in vestigation of the accident is not yet complete, and that no charges have been made. Salmon was thrown from his car after the initial impact, Dunk ley said. All four of the survivors suffered (Continued on Page Five) But Only With Terms Freeing South Viet Nam I * PARIS (UPI- - Secretary of State Dean Rusk today sent word to Communist China that the United States is ready to talk peace in iTiet Nam but only on terms which ♦ill guarantee the independence qnd territorial integrity of South ffet Nam. %usk briefed the new American hthhassador to Poland, John A. Gronouski, on what he should say ♦hen he meets with Red China’s envoy in Warsaw Wednesday. It mill be Gronouski’s first session With the Chinese ambassador in the long-standing and so far unproduc tive dialogue between the two coun tries at their only official point of eontact. Rusk talked to Gronouski short ly before he met with high French tfficials to underline the determin ation of the United States to see the battle through in Southeast Asia. Because of the delicate French el ection situation, Rusk was not hav ing his usual NATO-week meeting with President Charles de Gaulle. However, Rusk’s views were re layed to the campaigning chief of State by Premier Georges Pompidou bnd Foreign Secretary Maurice fcouve de Murville whom Rusk con ferred with in separate meetings at their offices. •Lillington Mon Dies Today M. D. Lanier, 69 of Lillington, died in Veterans Hospital in Fay etteville early this morning after a lenghty illness. He was a life long residnt of Harnett County, veteran of World War I, and served as postmaster of the Lillington Past Office for 20 years prior to his retirement in 1962. He was a charter member of the Lillington Fire Dept., and was a member of the department for the past 30 years. He was the son of the lat* Harnett Sheriff J. B. and Sarah Abernathy Lanier. Funeral services will be conduct ed at the Lillington Methodist Ch urch of which he was a member at 3 o’clock Tuesday afternoon with Rev. Franklin Grill, pastor, assisted by the Rev. Don Bowen officiating. Burial will follow in the Westview Memorial Gardens in Lillington. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Rosa Belle Bethune Lanier; one daughter, Mrs. Johnnv Smith of Belmont; CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 Dunn Banker Receives Honor Godwin Named Shriner Of Year Thirty eight year old banker, Er mon Godwin, Jr., has been named ‘‘“Dunn Shriner of the Year” for the second successive year. The honor was presented to God win at the Dunn Srine Club’s an nual Ladies Night-Christmas Party at Chicora Country Club. Bruce Boyette, Chief Rabban, of Sudan Temple made the presentation. Under the leadership of Godwin, who has been president of the Dunn Shrine Club for the past year and has been re-elected to the post for 1966, the club now has 128 members. Among the projects the club, un der Godwin, carried out this past year and which Godwin was active in promoting, were the sale of Con federate hats and flags during the observance of the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Averasboro. The First Annual Dunn Shrine Chib Horse Show at A1 Wullenwaber's 4-W Farm was sponsored by the local .Shrine Club, with Godwin as Chairman; sponsorship of Eddie Crabtree as a Shrine Bowl player for Nbrth Carolina; participation in paintitfe of the Girl Scout budding located at Camp AJice; and a num (Continued on Pate Fife) Slain Woman Is Unidentified Harnett County officers today were attempting to learn the iden tity of a murdered Negro woman whose mutilated body was found in a creek near Kiplng. Officers said the killer’s method closely reserribkd the slaying last year of another woman, Lula Ry als of Holly Springs. Both bodies had been mutilated stabbed and slashed in a similar manner. The Ri’als case is still un BODY OF SLAIN WOMAN If you know her, notify the Sheriff Long Court Battle Expected Adams Will Trial Begins In Harnett Efforts to break a will which de creased from 25 per cent to 15 per cent a bequeath to the Southern Baptist Foreign Missions Board and disinherited four heirs here in Dunn will get under way in Superio Court at Lillington today. Mrs. Mary Lynn Upchurch, Mrs. Walter Jones, Mrs. M. F. Hodges and the children of the late W. D. Holland are contest ing a purported will which left them out entirely. The Dunn people are represented by Attys. Ray Dunn, New Bern, N. C„ Senator Robert Morgan and Archie Taylor of Lil lington. The firm of McLeod and McLeod and D. K. Stewart are representing the other side. About 50 to 75 witnesses are ex pected to appear in behalf of the Dunn people. Trial may last all week. Estimated value of estate in ques tion is $200,000.00. N. C. Rape-Slayer Wins Round High Court Gives Hearing To Davis WASHINGTON' (UPI) ■ Supreme Court granted a today for Elmer Davis Jr., facing execution in North for the 1959 rape-murder — Hie hearing a Negro Carolina of a 78 ^■ear-old Charlotte white woman. The court will her the case sometime this term and decide it ater by written opinion. (Continued on Page Five) solved!. ?’~.'K Both bodies were found in a creek and in the same area. The Ryals woman was onlyscant ily-clad and the latest victim was nude when discovered by a farmer Sunday. SBI special agent W. V. O’Daniri of Dunn said the woman had h$en dfsembowled, stabbed in the abtfo men, chest, and legs and her juglar vein severed. He expressed a strong belief the woman may have been murdered by a sex pervert who mutilated the body of Lula Ryals of Hollv Springs in April, 1964. The unidentified woman's body was spotted Sunday at 11 a.m. by a farmer who saw blood stains on the highway pavement and the bridge railing at the exact spot where the other Negro woman’s scantily-clad body was found last year. “This slaving.” said O’Daniel, "is too similar to the Ryals slaying to be coincidental.” The Rvals woman’s bodv had been mutilated, stabbed and her throat slashed in a manner similar to that of the woman whose body was found Sunday. Investigation has not produced a suspect in the slay ing. O’Daniel said. Harnett County Coroner Pad Drew olaced the time ofe the wom an’s death at sometime after mid night Saturday. She was found lying fare down in the stream. Like the Rvals woman, she ap parently had been killed elsewhere and thrown into the stream from the Wdtway. the coroner said O’Danief said the woman w?l3W! about 120-135 pounds and stood about five fact two inches tall Her age was estimated as about 50 vears. She had numerous identiMng marks, including old laceration scars on her l«ft arm and on both tegs below the knees. Her ears were nierced and a birthmark extended from beneath her right arm to her chest. W®r two front teeth "'ere missing, O’DAnipl wM ft*; PH 11TV* nor foofh pnrl IfW'Pr loft t'Wh. Wpr fsl«!A hnrl hern re ppnHv Wrtlit ffwl. i^tr fsKArlff* c TV •vifli flip pcgtgfnwf** of thp St^t<0 Rishoo* To Docid« On HolWav Moot trX **/** \ v rrrv r _ tht ftoj'rt Kic’XAn'* T»’/-rl%f f A •vl^A'fi*Ar' fKoir wntl W <■/> aq| rtn PKri'-f^nc on/I \T/\«n Vnor’c OVP •i>kinX foil r>n PpM*Hf ron» fUrt nnnrn?<vj}n*> *r^«j I»nn4; •**1 4o«m t^nnnrtli fX« Pon *««• F<mm/»ni/*o1 ro/inn?! V<sf}v»n»i pa!iI f^irt nrtnj»lf n’««» in fVn nno*. f«t<iro fn n flonroA oly>liol>mfT ft*** o^^innnna lonf cf of/o- mfit* n<*f nof nu>pf; nn Fn^^v. RfINfiPFMMAM’S FATHFP »•<* I. N. Henderson, 80-year-old fath er of Congressman David jfei * son, died early Friday mbrnin; James Walker Hospital in Will ton. Funeral Services were ducted Sundav at Baptist Church in Legion Official Says LSU Has No Communist Problem ^ HM* Praise Given Solons Who 0 Backed Ban On Commies 2 North Carolina legislators who voted against repeal of the Com munist Speaker Ban law received high praise today from a college professor who urged Legionnaires, these with friends and loved ones fighting in Viet Nam and others to ‘‘remember how your representa tive voted on this issue next spring when you go to vote.” “Vote for those candidates,” he urged, “who had the courage to rep resent the people who elected him and stood the test by standing up for Americanism and against Com munism.’' Dr. A. R. Choppin, is Dean of Chemistry, head of the nuclear phy sics department at Louisiana;!#*^ University and National Vjce Com: mander of tile American Legion. He is in North Carolina for a series of speaking engagements in Faye etteville, Chapel Hill, Charlotte, Hen
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Dec. 13, 1965, edition 1
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