Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / May 16, 1951, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO B* 1!1 DUNN, N- CL Bpv Published by RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY I f NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE ELIHOMAS P. CLARK CO.; INC. |*£- Branch Office* Ip Rv«y Wat City. fc : v, ~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES 11 B7 CARRIER: St cents per week; RU per year in advance; ft for six months, 93 fee three f Di IQWNI NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND ON RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: 9MB pr I ~,■>•■■ yewißM fee dp months; $2 for three month. o9t#-nATE: RJt per j*w in advance; $5 for six months, 93 for three months. i At 811 East Canary Street ESiterecfcat second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, N. C., w{der the laws of Congress, Act of March 3, 1879. \ Sfcrery afternoon, Monday through Friday Neil - Deserved Honor JThe Daily Record extends heartiest congratulations t nßrfC. B. Codrington, local Negro physician, for the v ellafesgfrved recognition given him by the Rocky Mount Medical Academy. Last Sunday afternoon, the Academy awarded the ijfun physician a beautiful plaque “in grateful recognition dt 38 years of faithful service to his fellow man.” ] Jfc, was a fitting tribute to Dr. Codrington. He has served both his profession and ids community well. He ifas earned for himself a reputation as a man who lives i§) Jb' the ideals of his profession and also as the sort of csvie“f& , der who stands for and promotes those things which help make a better community. I Mayor Ralph E. Hanna made a very appropriate little Bbeech in presenting the trophy to Dr. Codrington and m the high esteem in which the physician is held. T Tljb citizens of Dunn join Mayor Hannf in this tri- itlarWheot Recommended For foastal Plain iRALEfCTH, Although mosaic <Rsea9e< INb been found in a few Alas SR and Atlas 66 wheat fields lg the-Estate, these varieties are sßßWßUßßghended for planting in Plain and Piedmont extension plant' dis ease specialist at State Collegia, explains that Atlas has better rust and mildew resistance than .any other varieties of wheat adapted to North Carolina. It also has good winter hardiness and pro duces good yields. “fidnoe rust and mildew are the greatest' threats to wheat, Atlas wHßST'Tsekp, Thorne, and Chan- that are resistant tcrayfetc.-are pot resistant to rust awEaSu&B* and Are recommend fields known to be in ■ mosaic or where rnos- loss.” thinks soma mjHySfs-Lhave perhaps become un d\*6t-OORcerned about the appear a9we~j»fj mosaic in Atlas. One rea sdlftox, this concern, he says, may 'VfVr* Funeral Directory * M Lettie M. Game, 79, of Simitbfield, died Sunday morning arouifd 9:30. Funeral service were held Tttbsd»y...at 3 p.m. at Pine Level Free Will Holiness Church, The Rev, X C. Blanton, pastor of- the Rev. A. C. Wheeler of Wilmington and the Rev. J. Q. Crocker of pine Level. Burial tfjtSih the Crocker family cemetery near Selma. She had been I FLOWERS HAVE ■ ALWAYS BEEN A SftlAt -«** tA W nßtll if&'&'W' dSSmOffl&L •' In Your BZ4 4 Hour oi Need gjg » DUNN, N. P. “ - A.k.U.c. S.rvlc. Dial 2077 I IME OF SORBtIW I |be the confusion of mosaic with I the general yellowing and firing of the lower leaves of the wheat plant, a condition caused by a ; number of factors, including Wea- I ther and fertilizer deficiency. I Wells points out that Atlas is i not the only variety affected by |mos ai e. Hardired, Purplestraw, j Redheart, Car Ala. Coastal, and Coker’s 47-27 are also known to be susceptible to the disease, j Since there is no evidence that Jwh ea t mosaic is transmitted I through the seed, the presence of the disease does net affect seed, I certification. It is, however trans ! mitted through the soil. Fields known to be infected should not jbe used for wheat production for a . number of years unless a re sistant variety is grown. Mosaic is more prevalent on clay soil of the Piedmont than on sandy soils of the Coastal Plain. UMTS Briefs | (Continued From Paje One) I of many license ar/s based on pop ulation. Merchants in towns where 1 the population has passed from one | bracket to another will have larger fees this year. If the town has decreased in population the fee will | be less. I a resident of Pine Level for about ! 30 years and a member of the i Free Will Baptist Holiness Church 3 few 17 years. Mrs. Minnie Plesants, 72, of ■. Angler Rt. 1, died of a heart at -3 tack at 8:50 p. m. Monday. Fun 't eral arrangements are incomplete ) at this time. QUINN'S FUNERAL HOME 24-HOUR SERVICE PHONE 3306 211 W. HARNETT ST, DUNN, N. C. These Days £ekcbkif JANUARY U AND 13 General Douglas MacArthur threw many more bombshells in his testimony before the Senate committee than was at first ap parent. Only the most careiul reading of tne record brings out the points at issue. General Mac- Arthur ma-kiMi much of a program for action prepared by the Joint Chiefs of Btaff on Jan. 12. Tne ideas and purpose' in that docu ment showed mat he and tne joint Chiefs of Btaff were in full agreement. This program, as Gen eral MacArthur read it, is as fol lows: "Continue and intensify now an economic blockadfe of trade with China. “Prepare now to impose a Naval blockade of China and place it into effect as soon as our position in Korea is stabilized or when we have evacuated Korea, and de pending upon circumstances then obtaining. "Remove now amr restrictions an air reconnaissance of China ooastal areas and of Manchuria. “Remove now the restrictions on operation of the Chinese Nation alist forces and give such logistic •import to those forces as will con tribute effective operations against the Communists.” Now, let us go back to Jan. 11. On that day, a new fivepoint “cease-fire plan” was supported by the United States but criticized by Soviet Russia. This plan, in+ eluded these five provisions: 1. An immediate cease-fire with safeguards against use of the truce “as a screen for mounting a new offensive.” 2. Action during the truce on a permanent Korean peace. 3. Exit of “non-Korean” forces by “appropriate stages.” 4. U. N. -Approved administra tion of Korea during the truce. 5. Creation of a U. N. agency, in cluding the U. S„ Russia, Brltian, and Red China, to settle ®fcr Eastern isenes. including future and Chinese representation in U. N. If we compare these two state ments. one day apart, the question must arise as to whether the State Department knew what the Joint Chiefs of Staff were doing, or vice versa. For the Joint Chiefs of Staff were planning to blockade China while the State Department was planning to get Boviet China into the ' United Nations. The Joint Chiefs were planning to work with Nationalist China while the State Department was plan ning to ditch Nationalist China. The cease-fire plan was passed on Jan. 1?, 50 to 7. On January 15, Senator East land ihtroduced a resolution for the United States to ' withdraw from the United Rations if Soviet China were seated and that Presi dent Truman be directed to de fend Formosa. Senator Taft call ed the cease-fire plan “the most complete surrender to which the U. S. has ever agreed ” Chou En-Lai of Soviet China countered with the following pro posals: 1. It should be assumed on both sides that all “foreign” troops will be withdrawn from Korea. (He did not specify whether this would cover Chinese “volunteers”.) Ne gotations for the withdrawal should begun “so that the war ih Korea may hr brought t 6 a speedy end.* 2. The negotstlora “must In clude tbe withdrawal qf U. S. turned forces from Taiwan (For mosa) and the Taiwan Strait and Far Eastern related problems.” 3. Participants in the negotia tions should be Red China, Russia, U. S., Britain, France, India and Egypt. “The rightful place” of Red China as a U. N. member “should be established as from the begin ning of the seven-nation confer ince.” y , . it 4. The conference should be bald in Red rmina So here we have the full results of the Stats Department policy of appeasement, which ran counter not only to General MacArthur’s tZTt? line. IJhgr THE DAILY EZCOgP, PCS!*, S C m \lsOjf joe jj “Would you folks be interested in tickets to the Fire men’s Ball?” MEN AND MAIDS, AND STUFF Charles E. Wilson's defense mobilization ass't Sidney Weinberg fighting off a gall bladder operation Prime Minister Attlee’s .son, Martin, now dating Ann O’Lqary.. Sgt. Alvin York’s cousin, Sgt. James York, back home from Korea, told Detroit newspapermen: “I’n Korea, us infantrymen get tired of going back and forth through the same towns”....Broadway doubts that the five-year sentence of ex-Water Commissioner Jim Moran will stand up.. Congressman Adam Clay ton Powell’s dad seriously ill at Sydenham Hospital Cornel Wilde dating Jean Walace James Hilton making his first trip to Europe in 15 years Marjorie Dillon, Elizabeth Taylor’s stand-in, and Dr. Hal Sink tying the knot June 21. Tyron Power, planning in from Europe today, will wait for Linda, en route by ship, because of her condition. After the Josh Logan party, they’ll go to the coast, where Ty starts a flicker for Zanucks on the 18th Paulette Goddard and Erich Maria Remarque a nightly El Morocco twosome.... Ida Lupino and Hugh O’Brien an Item Sir Malcolm Campbell’s son, Donald, and his missus have split Julius Krug, former,Secy’s of Interior, showing the town to* honeymooning daughter Marilyn ai*> Charles L, Gre ther TV expansion in England disrupted by war program .. Montgomery Clif and'Judy Balaban still a duet Vanderbilt U. bringing two students to Nashville from each Latin r American country for study and research, has named the project in honor of Tennessean Cordell Hull Recommended: Ed Barrow’s “My Fifty Years In Baseball.” Jim Kahn penned it for Coward- McCann. To turn over his entire 943,M0 gross receipts in London to a Boys Town project there, Bob Hope btd to work it out in advance with U. S. and British revenues Newsreel Audiences applaud President Trumans 67th birthday Prince Sardar Hari Singh Jaag, son pf Maharajah, prefers Marilyn Brett, Arthur Murray staffer MGM biddipu for “Darkness At Noo®’.„, .TenrUs champ Art Larsen atyi .Barbara Lawrence an .item.. Mack Jr. has dough”in “Mike A Wish”.,,.Sir Stafford Cri pi) undergoing treatments from three Swiss specialists.. Irving and Rosie Natcher, TWAing to Europe after his 50th birthday party at Henri £>oule’s....Ed Van Every, whose book on the Police Gazeette was filmed by Zanuck, has pointed the Gazette Liz Scott a lady psychiatrist in her next flicker, with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis as her daffodil patients. HCT School Happenings Some poems by the sth A Grader taught by Mrs. T. O. Satterwhite. My name is Charles Frank Ross I am In the sth Grade A I am going to do better in the future i than I haw'in the past. I want to go 'to college faraway, Because I am going to be a teach er some day. When I hear my name called, > I now that’s for me, And I’ll leave my seat empty In dear old H.C.T. By Charles Ross Once there was a turtle, Who walked upon the earth He went In little puddles, To wash his little self. By Alberta Murphy This little boy likes to run, But he was sitting in the sun, When he saw a little girl, Who had a pretty curl. Her eyes were brown Her hair was black She turned and cajne running t bark. By Freeman Ledbetter, Jr. A Bit of Non-Sense Once there was a snail Who turned Into a whale The people called him Willie Because he was so silly. James A. McNeil . This year the sth Grade A Is going to team the following . LONDON - -Xp Americans the festival of Britain will do anything for a laugh. In fast one hotel owners had to send out out ah SOS. It read “fellows, you pan keep the towels, but please bring back the hoteL” A ;•: : A' C. And amie of thejp really «o aji out for British souvenirs. I heard of one who tried to have a bobby gift wrapped. v By now Fkn A'lamikar figure, around London and all the Ameri cans know me. fevjrff time I go ft* a etroll, they say “here cornea that AJu ftlonir With evprvnnp rlvar her* T drink a lnfc of to a A hot • 1 ' ij . la M cup 3 _ hjii* > things: 1. We are going to learn when to laugh. 2. We are going to be more obe dient. 3. All of us are going to be bet ter boys and girls. 4. We are going to keep our school and grounds clean at all times. 5. We are going to be peace-mak ers this year. 6. We shall try to be ladles and gentlemen at all times. We like our teacher. Our teach er is Mrs. T. O. Satterwhite. 7th Grade A Class News Officers for this school year: President—Thelma Morgan Vice-Pres. Christiiine Clark Secretary—lda M. Bethea Treasurer—Katie M. Russell We are proud of the perfect at tendance record of Mattie Jean Williams. Miss Reatha M. Hamil ton is our teacher. The 6th A Class members are cooperating With the school and their teacher 106%. We have been successful in raising our class quota for the school term of 1950- 51. We have also made other con tributions. The number of students In the 6th A Qrade is 38. There are 22 girls and 16 boys. We are hoping tO do many sue ; cessful things this year with the cooperation of our teacher, Mrs. I I •■■■■■■■■■■■■■■i Mai J WASHINGTON I stUJ think that if some Bolivian politicians went » little easier on the cocaine. 1 they wouldn't chop off each others, heads With axes. What I mean is that when I ■ was in Bolivia a few weeks back, ; I wrote a little essay about dope, politics, and murder in the Pres idential palace. When that was 1 published there was unofficial complaints in official circles. The idea seemed to be that I had in sulted the Bolivian nation. Haw t The headlines indicated that I didn’t go far enough. The toll in Bolivia’s latest presidential elect ion is 10 dead and SO wounded. A mob tossed one Congressional candidate to the ground, lopped off his head, killed two of his children and beat his brother to death. My guess is that cocaine was more at fault than politics. So ’ with no apologies to the diplomats t propose to tell here and now all I discovered about life in La Paz. A favorite refresh ment of the natives is the leaf of the cocoa tree, which they sprin kle with lime and chew like gum. This leaf contains a substantial slug of cocaine. In La Paz, the capital and big gest city, are numerous tea shops where those who wear neckties and shoes drop in for frequent cups of mate coca cocida. This is an infusion of the coca leaf, served steaming hot, like tea and usually sweetened with sugar. It is an exceedingly pleasant drink and there is no doubt that it has a narcotic wallop. I tried a couple of cups one afternoon and I know. The tip of my tounge took on a peculiarly numt feeling, but otherwise I never felt so power ful. Or so smart. One more cup of that stuff and I’d probably have run for president, myself. I was staying at the Sucre Pa lace Hotel, known up and down South, America as . the Sucker’s Palace! It 16 a hostelery with ! cracked plaster, little hot water, and live turkeys In a pen outside the kitchen on account of no re frigeration. On the top floor of the Sucker’s Palace lived the president. Some how he felt healthier there than In his own ornately carved palace down the street. No wonder. In 1946 a mob got tired of the president consensus is that he Judge Wilson (Continued From Page OM) president of the Durham Civltan Club in 1940-41, was District Gov ernor of the Carolinas District in 1941-42, and has recently com pleted a two-year term on the Board of Directors. Judge Wilson is a trustee of the Durham Civltan Club, serving on the district panel, and is chair man of the Butner Youth Center project of the club. The Durham Judge, member of a pioneer Dunn family, is wen known in Dunn and has many friends. L. M. Ballentine. Our class offi cers are: Perry Artis, president; Dorothy Thompson, vice- presi dent; Gertrude Leggett, secretary; Vashti Smith, assistant secretary; and Harry Monds, treasurer. Thus far our class is doing nice ly and we are striving hard to keep up the good work. Milton McLean—Reporter 7th Grade B News The 7th Grade B was organized the second week in November with the following students elect ed to serve as officers: Landonia Maynor, president; Frank Bailey, vice-president; Leanna McNeill, secretary; Gladys Fairley, asiss tant secretary; and Bobby Mc- Neil, treasuzer. The dub got off to a good start by the division of the body Into three competitive groups. The names of the leaders and the groups are as follow*: Maxine Gihnorp-Rtd Hot Mae France* Moßilde-Blue Sea* Leanna McNeil-Stagecoach These groups were organized *6 that we could tegin working Üb mediately on our fund drive for this year. Miss T. U is Qgr teacher. - v > •v.v • What other school could I love •T Mere- - - - - •’ * Than Harnett County Training School. • V -.uiw tt* *>» «»« I to. K *>. to see When all the hard day’s work is r , f r . ' ,v - . | but he still was alive So the citizens dragged him to toe flower-etudded park across toe street and hanged him from a lamppost. ~ .- vj A leading who told me the story and showed me the scene (toe pfclace’still is scarred with Rulltt holes) does not drink mate - coca, himself. He considers it the scourge of his otherwise delightful country. He said, and he was proud of it, that Bolivia has had more presidents than any other nation in the world. • ;.*c rsys he stepped hibernating the minute he heard we ware using Atlantic Triple Refined Furnace Oil." Atlantic Furnace Oil Is Triple Refined to Insure ESSSSSSS maximum conversion to heat, and cleaner burn- |jUtyi!n tag. That means a saving on fuel costs and repair bills, too. Keep ahead of this coming jf/i whiter, and call or write us today. ■■MMMng H. P. JOHNSON OIL CO. Distributors DUNN, N. C. . V ’ - ALLEN JOHNSON BENSON, N. C. MATTHEWS OIL CO. LILLINGTON, N. C. ; . I Sub-Distributors ' n “ ' I’lMiim — —— ■ IT. ■■ t~ J. Look how Jpfilr -'tfJ LITTLE J. it Costs! | 19 STModel ONLY Jg- A Few . Cents' ! ftjjnojKb of demnm! WEDNESDAY, HAY 16,. 1951 in exile in Chile. Re dared not return Anotitei VWtor pgi - tenssoro, was exiled in Argentina. ■ He conducted a tong-disft&noe add Fascistic campaign and he got the meet- votes,, Rut apparently net quite eridugn to win. ‘ So the Bolivian Congress pro bably must decide now who will be president next and everybody ; expects more shooting. The tea shops *re buzzing and I personally am glad that I’m no longer in residence at the Sucker’s Palace. Some coca-chewing citizen might take me for a politico.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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May 16, 1951, edition 1
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