WEATHER ffpppK; to mint and BtUtrdiy. SfMifftfl showers today. Occasional light Ti’ rain tonight and Saturday. t')LUME 1 ' '- V ' / ••• * . Hi > iVi IV ' t Allies Move Forward Without Resistance Ridgway Pays Visit To Korean Battlefront TOKYO, Saturday, M'ay 5 —(W—-United Nations hold ing forces on the west cen tral Korean front moved their lines forward several miles without interference by the communist army. From tlplr new positions the ON forces sent patrols farther north searching for the Reds. The only enemy they found was a single Chinese soldier wounded four days ago by Allied artillery. The new northward movement was made after Lt. Gen Matthew B. Ridgway paid a flying 21-hour visit to the Korean battlefront and conferred with his commanders there under the wing of an army liason plane. In a frontline interview Ridgway predicted the Reds would strike again and they would be defeated. The only thing they will accomp lish, he said, will be to add more "tens.of thousands... to the bloody price they have been paying.” He also hinted that the United Nations have new tricks of war up their sleeves with which to sur prise the communists. “If the enemy decides to renew his attack, he's going to get more than he reckoned on,” Ridgway | said. \ United Press Correspondent Rich ard Applegate reported the new (Allied advance from the west i Continued op Page Eight) Investigation Set hi SiUYaHLsdJUP x | "*y i wggs VIENNA, AfiPtrla. May 4-UP- The U. S. JHI Soviet commqwders in Vienna opened a joint inves tigation today into the slaying of an American military policeman by two uniformed Soviet officers. A blast from a "burp gun" fir ed by one of the Russians without warning felled MP Cpl. Paul J. Gresen of New York City with seven slugs in his stomach early this morning. He died within min utes. A second American MP, who with Greaen had halted the Rus sians on a Vienna street for a routine check, returned the fire; He said he believed he had wound ed one of the slayers, but both escaped. An Austrian civilian was wounded in the leg by the cross fire. The Communist version of the incident, published in the news paper Der Abend, was that one of the Americans opened fire with a pistol when the two Russians ignored a command to halt. (Jbwund fiapttol ANNUAL—Yen states now have annual iieariong of their general as semb&ek, according to recent re port' of the Council of State Gov ernments. They, are Arizona, Cal achuietts, Michigan W New ’jersey. New York, Rhode Island; mid \ South Carolina. Arizona, Colorado f and Michigan amended their con stitutions last year providing for annual sessions. All the other states have meetings .every two years, unless special sessions are caUed - BUDGETARY— California, Col orado and Maryland limit subject to be considered ateveh yy sees- * Jsaiig Jl tmtb TEU^HONEsam. 3118 . HIT Council Will Study Insurance, Bonding Plans Monday Night The bonding and insuring of Dunn’s S 3 city employes will occupy past qf the city council’s time when they meet Monday night in a regular session in the Municipal build ing. ' ' ■ The tired old topic of a blanket bonding program for the employes will be brought to a head at the meeting, according to the agenda, released today by City Manager R. Thomas Hobbs. Awarding of the contract will be made, with the nod to go to either the National Surety Corp oration, represented by E. B. Cul breth, or the Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, represented by Barbour and Byerly. Descriptions of the coverage obtainable under each type of bond, written by City Attorney I. R. Williams and Attorney Max McLeod, will be read at the council meeting. - Group insurance for the em Williams Withdraws From Race In Coats Retail Merchants Association b AI Cmrfa ns m R(l Mil. unn * fpw s) A Retail Merchants Association has been organised at Goats, with L. E. McKnlght, prominent Coats business leader, as president Os the organization. Ted Malone is vice president; Raymond Ennis is secretary and Massey Dorman is treasurer. A board of directors will be mimed later. The. pupose of the organization is to promote retail trade in Coats. One of the first two aims of the organization is the establishment of a retail credit bureau, And a cooperative advertising program to inform the public of the advantage of trading in Coats. Practically every business firm in Coats has already joined the new association. It is expected that a number of special trade events and other promotions will be'con ducted during the coming mon ths. The association has the enthus iastic support of the citizenship. Meetings of the assoolatldn will be held every third Friday night. Lois Byrd 1$ Honest Girl, Official Says RALEIGH, May 4-Oeorge B. Cherry, superintendent of State public buildings and grounds. Is convinced, he said, that Miss tots Byrd of LUlington “is a good, honest Harnett County girl.” The Cherry remark came as he opened a bulky envelope and two keys fell out. The letter way from Miss Byrd, who gave up hejr here last week as receptionist in the office of Governor W. Kerr Scott A newspaperwoman, , Miss Byrd had agreed to come here only for the duration of' the 1951 General Assembly, Which ended last April 14. One of the two keys Miss Byrd returned to Cherry Was to . .the. governor's office In th» southwest comer of the Ul-year-oW State Capitol; the other was to the womens powder-room^under^the t£ worked on engineering jabs in a PTA and a Lton’sClub Here to Lillington and J know lbef would be gla£to hare you ami Isa. Cherry Among Other students f ~ (Continued On Page Two) | Recessed Council itssian Is Held uproar and commotion of the prtmaiy election Monday blanketed the city council and made a regular bi-weekly session impossible. 80 Mayor Ralph Hanna called a recessed meeting at 10:15 a. m.. in the Municipal Building to pass on a request from the Durham and Southern Railway Company to route traffic around the crossing On N. Ellis Ave. for one day. The council granted the request, allowing southbound traffic U> detour byway of N. Orange Ave. and northbound traffic to go via N. McKay Ave. A stipulation was added requir ing the State of North Carolina, which contracted to make the re pairs at the crossing, to make any damage to the detour routes. Before adjourning the brief session. Mayor Hanna advised the commissioners to consider the ad visability of drawing up * contract with the Dunn Schools or the Harnett Board of Education, one of which is expected to request use of the Dunn Armory as a gym nasium during the coming year. Mayor Hanna said he expects that Die council will be approached bn that subject at the regular May Both Lieutenant Norris and iltergeant Denning woe among 77 successful candidate! who were ac fgepted for tte? school, which opens W wrok 4bat they had Qualified lin mental and physical tests given jto some 100 applicants at Fort 4 Bragg Monday. j The two Dunn men were to re | day at 3 p. m. Actual schooling j Acaaptance° n by By the school does FIVE CENTS PER COPY SHr n , . r aSSSt i fjj||* / r ? J ■P 1 ?/ . \Ji m ' jS| :jj|n 1 » ^i^,v.. H j^Mga| iwfe STRAW HAT TIMB—Hat. sgnalher to here and It’s time again itv Shfcp. Judging **T *k face. SklfHllui found list the hat he wanted when thi* picture was made. The at tractive youg lady waiting on him ie Sirs. Charlotte Dawson. Daily Record Photo by T. M. Stewart.) Convention Event Planned For Ladies The ladles, not to be neglected, will have their , hour at the Reserve Officers Association convention, which opens a two-day session here tomorrow morning. A tea will be given for the ladies > attending the convention Saturday afternoon. The affair is scheduled to open at 2:30 p. m. in the American Legion Hut on W. Broad St. . / Wives of local ROA members have been working diligently; to make the tea a success, Joe Mc- Cullers, general convention chair man, said today. In change of the operation will be Mrs; Willard Mixon. J&itertalnment will include a pfcformance by Accordion Vir tuoso John Clccone and a talk by Miss Rachel Clifford, who will speak on her experiences as an officer World War 11. I MoCullers said that the static display of the Army equipment which will be shown in conjunction with the convention will be - open from 12 p. m. on Saturday. In cluded to .the .display which cover the field next to Dunn Armory, will be a tank, howitzers, j a fully-equipped paratrooper and. MggUt full .Army field kitchen and other military pieces. ,1 4ET 11 j . . .~k _ pome Os Averastmro To Be , kef ought Here Memorial Day BB ■ ' ' ■ - .^a-- Plant More < COTTON For Your Country’s Defense, For Your Own Profit, Security. '- Trained Army personnel will be on band to explain the various exhibits. Meddlers stressed that the dance to be given Saturday night at 10 o’clock is not open to the puhtte. He said that the dance is one of the items covered by the $S registration fee each person must pay in order to attend the of the convention. The big day will open tomor row with a paiade down Broad St. at 11 a m. Following that a business sessipn will he ' held at Dunn High School auditorium. The banquet will begin at 7:30 p. m. (Continued On Page Two) Benson Man Dies .In Fall From truck ' FAYETTEVILLE, May CMtfP) ’—A fall from a milk delivery truck killed' Oliver Pleasants of Benson instantly at Ft: Bragg yesterday, police reported today. Officers said Pleasants fell from the door of the truck while it was moving at slow speed and his body ■rolled under the rear wheels. I Pleasants was serving as assist-j [ant driver for a Biltmore Dairies i truck out of Asheville. He was pro-i I (Continued On Page Six) ] The calendar will be truned back j 186 years in Dunn on May 10, 1951. I Preparations have NO. l«f Bombers Kept 5 Miles Inside < Korean Border WASHINGTON, May (IP)—Sen. William F. Know land, R., Cal., disclosed to day that restrictions were placed on Gen. Dougia* MacArthur’s use of American air power “within Korea it self” in fighting the Korean War. The disclosure came, as the Senate Armed Services-Foreign Relations Committee questioned MacArthur for a second day. **, Knowland, the official transcript of the proceedings showed, ob jected to deletion from yesterday’s censored transcript of a teletype message which MacArthur read dealing with restrictions. Without disclosing specifically what the restrictions were. Know land said to the committee that until he hearfi MacArthur read the message yesterday. “I did not understand that there were re strictions within Korea itself, which was under aggression from the Chinese communists,” as well as the ban on bombing supply bases in Manchuria. Knowland suggested that the message should have been para phrased to protect code security, and then released, because it “deals with this question of limitations upon bombing within Korea.” DECISIONS WERE B A FILING Committee Chairman Richard B. Bussell, e, Gav as it ’though wige. Russell. said Konwland cofild confer with the Defenee Depart < oT.lim.cd On Fa,.- *l,e> The official stamp of Iggprov* l has been put on Monday’s THEnary election here with the certiftdMton of the vote by Registrar Joe Oral and Election Judges R. A. DzHm* hon and T. P. HarralL , Thursday City Clerk Charles R. Storey canvassed the vote Waft, certified the following list of edijp didates for the Tuesday generitt election: Ralph Hanna, mayor; L. L. Coats, commissioner. Ward 1; A.' Vernon Bass, commissioner, wralfc n: R. G. Tart, commissioner, Wtsmr III; and B. A. Bracey, commlsatdljflpH Ward IV. Z According to the. offload £a2MR»£ candidates for the mayor's. -'MSm drew the largest vote, with a total of 1,580—a new record ft* an. election in Dunn. ;> Mayor Hanna got TO .“WfMHg! and Herman Neighbors, g years?; PHOTO