WEEK END!NG AUGUST 30, 131*1 miminr . .... -™-« —— -w —*- ’’T'l •< fIS?- - • _ WJ»— *?£■■. aHKaH«|HB|W^KMKB^ffi.- ' aSraml'maßßr igSfejfc, Wtimt a JisliKHr '**&&&!& mBS&xW& >mWm' myK waK&j ffimi '■-'■•■•••' |> \S : \, Mb MV' Vfln J | ' |Emmm| ; f jSsSili •**«*-. **»?§Tr&.v ' I*' ]Km. wraggQjnjWroil^Mft 1 - sPs* 1 ' Ifflß jaJI wBPa 4 ,*Jli I ftWHUya jrfjfijH Wk fflj STRIKE FIGHT . Memoirs of rival CIO and AFL unions fight at the Allls-Chalmers plant **♦«. Terre Haute, Ind. Photographer of this pMurr «-a* later smacked on the head «*bh * r!,,b JZ dem, the melee. Ftght began when AFL workers tried to go back to work off of strike *nd CIO worker* tried to stop them, . . . *^o'o3C‘JSt>o , ><'fCc>‘?(?X>'o<>OC i '>C : '''C-<'-o'OC‘C<)SC , 'Ct^0 3 I j YOUR SCRIBE ||3fc' | By FREDRICK L. BURNS ■ ~»^^^:<‘Aooaoc^wox^o'oc‘OC'C>i>^ooox>'^oo^ FAYETTEVILLE - Motni" rs oC ■the Hfipini: Hand CL'o ot *"_u' : I Bapti’-t C'hH'ch mr! Tuesday ni :Jv j,- j;,.s x.n', nf' Mr. t-nfl •■'“'■ ' Jame r n' l ' 1 ’ - ' ■ ! ; *° lh< ‘‘‘ y( cr»ile»?- iiifint!ii v picrtin„ Th‘ PVt’in.; '••• , - in I. K' /«p M ': I ; . ,1. f■ ci .- Mi E.IIh Bcth.'-x Prayer •=■:, .-.'rfn-fd W '•!■ Eli*.* o-gvlor, i" 1 !' *•"' '-;tii t v viacura j,( ♦hr et inure ■■•.•• an. "’ Mich •.*•" tak* n bom • .Mania' ■ '„’3 ; l' i ; rr \r-rl h> A' l 1 •’< .•'!' '- Bai l'-.e. »XP I. ~.n • . '■<•;. Inlly <•••- > !. : , n H ill- Re-. .1 T. Sim y.jon \i -. ~ sis nd 'A ■' H^'*’ in J-’ ns" •' . uni} tin' i-’i'i-ip. Mrs F,l!n Bethea pr< isl- d '. .'r t!ic hu-iri.' inn and ranri'ii* lr - )■ • .i . ■•( : veeri'-n.; At Hi-' -lose o' Ihc h‘s nr n>- J.ICH- i 'id a! ian x ■ ’-: ••■'« Vith tm a' pi i .'Tin, iT-ari - chianor- tbrovsho* • ■ ■ pod. TORT RK 'G<; GLIMS Sergeant John T Odom was n-e v. cekcnd sue it of Sergeant arm Ms. .Ipse-c Odom at TC-T93-A-2. •§■ an* Odom's h.ime A in Cftve land. Ohio. M’s:-. Mary Altec VPen *> »isit ing in the home of S ana Mrs. CirSHit S’.ittle. 110 'IF >tvt t I HO?!K lV|fr»nt Offierr. Ijriir- E bltnmi-j. Nrci ice Batter-. us. p*. A. Bn. Hai hist returned t« Fort Bragg alter six weeks of «*f Vnit Administration School *at Fort Benjamin ilarnsuxs, Indiana. ?!«' completed the course with top honors. Mrs, Beatrice Kirk Is home after t period of long illness #t the r. s. Arm?- Hospital, Fort Bragg. Mrs, Kirk resides with her daughter. Mrs. Hen* ry E. Simms, Mrs, Elsie Snttle reeenWy re turned from Johnstown. Pe»n rSmaT 1 ttJO 86 Proof ft* SmfttftHT WMtMCEYt !M THIS etOOWCT AW < YfAKS OK MOW ' t Br-igH ....is lb..- dinno'. .:u>'>! ot Mr. and Mv; ; . F. 1 B'nnr Mr.'. Margie Baldwin nm .n --ii"s ill at her home on Ellis street. Mrs. Annie T mjng has returned 1« Nert v J'OUllJ} id;, .. V.tci , urn recently m the If £. Arm; h<: pile!. Fort Btagc. Mss. .js.-k ~ i is the form, i Mi s Rtstl' yj i ft v Miss Doris Vilkerson. org.nmst Sp, an: Metropolitan AMS Zion Cmircit i ■< pa!tent in Hidh-tPiiH Ko'pital, .) . i '-aSin.' I. pe.ry h 8? mum erj to thf cit \ after I •>.••» ••• *f. * in .V,i.’,hin:: i tnn, Id C. nod sylvanl-a. where -hr visits <1 her in-laws and I o- *-ngeles. Cali . fnrni.i H hrff '.hr Visited her j parents, , Sergeant and Mrs. Douglas Addison have recently return ; ed home from New ,tcr«ey, They w< re visiting their reln . lives ihcre. Lieutenant Amos ar ,1 wife ha\r returned from ti-irgia 1 he- ere residing ai T( -125- |t !, spring Take Area BINGO—SPRING TAKE NCO , Sci'S’-anl James SpffK or. Fort Era;:? - F.la.-tic Belt; M Rutl-, Clark. Fayetteville Kitchen Ladd’ *: Sergeant E. Crgan. Fort Bragg —• Cigarette. lighter; Mary , Jcffi-c- J ori Bragg Traveling Casr. Mr.-. Chrir-tian, Fayetteville -Hair dryer; Ser grant Claud* Crl;p. For* R- - Panic Set, Sorgeam f Johnson, Fort Bragg -G' awl F'-ire Inajtcr. J ET VINT, BRAGG Sergeant Virgil Miller Iff! recently for Li*tlc Rock, Ar* - - - •' .. 1 ‘ ' ■■■■.. . ,■ . ' ■r & | 1 i ; • « -m I ■ y . ... ; v ._ i « - ■ | x- *ir." ji I i -•« <' i HP ji ■> g s | I .. | B I - ■Gv • i j I | A . ss* ; j ! hm M. Hi P SHAMWJBOmi' CZGAK W*AJ*MER—K«j»h McMlHon, rteML » ! j tons* nhaweropper « ChAttwboochee, Florida, produces over IMft* ***** ft *«» «f «hade.ftrown tohaoeo which It assd m elgar wr»»i»er. A fm-rtp irrigation sysiem navcd the crop t#ik ywwr. Growing &m «MtM»o to th® shade makes the loaves thinner and mom elastic- Dist rict ! ***** *• A- ®***>»Mn dispense* »»r plant and scratched j into the •'•■ fae.' soil. i From now until host is the ‘*ost - par* of the dahha sen on. M’ith j 4 plenty of moi.'-ture, fertility, and; cool nights they will mck- a ra-; . iid growth. This ■• ill mean that; i you v ill hav- to . take them and j lie them up ii 'f)uc.ntl> so Uiat t 'storms will r>«d break the plants! i cwvn ’ Uotv i.sii u-. '.cep dahlia blooms; from w'c-' ft,-., they »rc cut?; ■ in ft-,.- ;•;•') place, nm" v irieties • •'t - than others, if vpa ,; ,i- int ,-a..u : ii> < ijt firiwers. you sl'onid •' ; ■ nic'ties Dial 3ic n- dia, purpose. .Many p <>p!e arivoe.Tte dipping ti . . on icd: in hot %va: i, or searing he v out Pftwr He DIED AY THE ALAMO, PIGMTiN'i POP TWF. PIONEERiNO FREEDOM that HE UY'ED and LWfD. THE KIND OE FREEDOM DAVY CROCKETT AND H(S FELLOW FIONEF-aS <*AVE OUR COUNTRY HELPED LAY THE FOUNDATIONS FOR the FREEDOM WE EAMOV TODAY >N OUR DEMOCRACY- T HE AMERI CAN W A Y P r . T HOU SHALT NOT STEAL - J *4 , / ow. That? | * THAI JU*T h amte£ ib M Wfc«> >—--1 ■*. wf^ : ***' ftof Oifr Covert*ment IS iff The People Tim. CARQUffIAM / Wnehs 7b &e£IT \ | FAYETTEVILLE- DUNN—LILLINGTON I ' ' .1./,I’. 1 ’. • v "* ' . Candidates Who’s Who? ?? ? pfigffa A?, SOME Repunhcan* cry that Elsenhower is a Democrat on *be Republican ticket, so do some I Democrat? complain that Steven son is a'Republican running under : Democratic colors. . Some political correspondant* ! are writing that on domestic pol icies the tenets of Ike and Adlai j are interchangeable While the Democratic politicians are depend* Ing upon Stevenson to whistle-stop ; the nation to the tunc of President I Truman’s artti»Wslt Street, anti j Big Business campaign of 1848, | Edwin A. L.ahey, Chicago Daily : News politic*! analyst, taunts the Democratic stxategists with; this | ijuip: “Scratch Stevenson with a I strike notice and La Salle street ! conies out his pores ” We«>' Though self-taught, with LITTLE rORMAU SCHOOLING, HE'went am cap" to asc OM % An ABLE STATESMAN. ,'S/// 'Y /Vy/ftS/ Lnliisollrri? S vi'MZJzr **.«t tress In thi Democratic camp o' *r ; Stevenson's objection* to the Civil | I rights ami Taft-Hartley repeal i ( planks in the Democratic platform. | Those moaning the most aren't j the professional politicians bn* real I conscientious New, Dealers toho | recognise in Stevenson a man who j won't compromise his own belief* | to follow a platform. They prob- I ably will stick with Stevenson; | however, because of his great in- ! tegrity, eston though it won’t buckle ' under New Deal stress. _ * • » Stevenson's strategy seems to i be based upon widening the break i in the Republican party while he i is heeling the break in Ms own • party. He is emphasizing the spilt personality of the GOP while play- i ing down the schizophrenia in Hi* ■ party. And he. with Sparkman, j seems to be just the psychiatric I treatment the Democrats needed, j Stevenson will tell the voters that Eisenhower is n nice, fairly liberal fellow, but that in order to get the Old Guard vote he will have to revert to some of the isolation ism and hidebound conservatism of the Old Guard. This will fright en the liberal Republicans and j might even convert some of them j to Stevenson's cause, if he ee chews the New Deal enough. It j will rankle 1h» Old Guard and kill | their enthusiasm for the Repub j lican ticket. It might win a big majority of the independents. One thing the Democratic strate gists overlook—-Ike might use «om* of this "pH* personality business on • Steveniao. at fflis 8Y BROWN LEE YATES j STATE POLICE down in Georgti j have caught a few law-abiding | motorists. The officers thumb these j good drivers to th» curb and give • hem a good talking—-but. it is not th* tongue lashing the drivers rs- ■ pect. Instead, it is part of the Gear gia highway patrol’s policy of stop- j ping safe drivers and commending them on their highway manners. j Caught driving safely near Val* j dosta last week was Dawdle Dell'* j "chainpeen greenhorn,” CoiJard | Green, vacationing >n the south- | land with hi* wife, Blondine, He was sputtering along in hi? j 1930 Ford. not. exceeding 23 m.p.h., driving on. his side of the road, and veering off a straight, tine not one ; iota. Suddenly, the shrill whine of a siren in his left ear forced him ! to ram his brake pedal to the door Neither Collard nor his brakes ar* as quick as they were ir. 1930. so the car continued in motion until ! Collard in confusion turned the front wheels into a ditch. A police ground to a dusty halt beside him. : Blondine screamed A burly patrolman leaped from ; the cruiser. ”1 must compliment : : you on not exceeding 50 m, p. b.,” i he growled politely. Collard felt bet ter. The way his coupe rattled, no ; teMing how fast he had been going, j | "You are not drunk,” sneered the i -op. "Congratulation?, Bud! And ; although it's not very inspiring, stopping a guy. for sticking to hi? ; side of the. road, I must thank you | for driving on the right." j Just then a new car roared part, j doing 90 on the left, side, veering in j j a corkscrew spiral, and leaving a j ! trail of whiskey bottles. The cop ! sighed. "Don't have to worry about, ; those guy* any more since we stop the good drivers now. But I can't utter nothing but compliments, and I got a few choice cur,* words cankering in my cheat.” Bleruiine hadn't recovered from her fright. She begged, "Officer, ! please let u* go. My husband will ' bear * driver’s license soon a* we get heme, I promise.'" A nee light came into the polio«- map's eyes as, he gazed at Collard. *'Y tin dirty, law-breaking skunk!” fee snartod. *‘Welcome to Georgia!” Fsirclofiit Florist m mmtfos m. .„ rAlmevuLt, », c. THE ! 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