+WEATHER+ Cloudy and continued warm with scattered afternoon and evening thuadenhewen tonight and Sat- » ssrday. • / VOLUME 1 Reds Seen Abandoning Iron Triangle' Area Red Battalions Resist Allies Below Chorwon TOKYO, June ft—(lP)—Bat tered Chinese Reds were re ported starting to pull out of the central Korean “iron triangle” today, but their screening forces still fought back fiercely in some sec tors. Eighth Army forces assaulting the last offense line before Chorwon. southwest anchor of the "Iron triangle” reported stiff re sistance by three enemy battal ions—2.soo to 3,000 men—south west of the city and one battalion due south. Southeast of Chorwon, however, UN columns made a general ad vance of 1,000 to 2.000 yards and sent tank patrols stabbing up to three miles farther north against only light opposiUon. Farther east. Allld forces punch ed out gains of up to 1,000 yards against heavy, stubborn resistance from two enemy regiments—s,ooo to 3,000 men—above Hwachon on the approaches to Xumhwa, south east anchor of the "iron triangle.” Shell Chorwon, Highway UN artillery shelled both bomb ed-out Chorwon and the key later al road running east northeast to Kumhwa along the base of the tri angle. The bombardment came on the heels of one of the heaviest night air attacks of the war on the tri angular plateau where the Reds until recently were massing 200,000 pi 1 niwt men for a new offensive*- . Twelve *-*9 Superfortresses ajid li B-2fl llaht tmmhera - scattered more than l MO tone of bombs ovSr the strategic build-*up area in a dusk-todawn saturation raid. The Air Foroe estimated the bomba, timed to explode just be fore they hit the ground, hurled 9,000,000 steel fragments into the (Continued on Page 8) Contractor Gets $381,000 Worth Os Business In Week O. W. Godwin, Dunn contractor, has been awarded contracts for $301,000 worth of construction dur ing the past week, it was disclosed here this morning. The prominent Dunn builder was awarded contracts for a city school addition in Hertford Coun try, at $60,000; a high school build ing at Creedmore in Granville County, at 8171,000; the Joe Tolar High School building in Granville County, at $128,000; and a State contract for repairing and remodel ing the gpirt Carolina Training School at Rocky Mount, at $28,000. Already, Mr. Godwin Is working on other contracts totaling $17,- 191,800.00. He Is one of the State’s biggest contractors. Mr. Godwin did more than a half million dollars worth of con struction work for schools In Har nett right after the war, and now has contracts for about that much more work in Harnett. Among projects which Mr. God win has underway are: Dunn High School addition, $80,000; Maple Grove Indian School, completed. $38,000; Har nett County Training School ad dition. $27,500; Mt. Olive school. $194,000; Bt. Paul, $128,000; two school projects ta Lenoir totaling $308,000; two Skate buildings at the Casbwell Training School at Kinston, $870,000; a project at Windfall in Perquimans County, $212,000; a school at Snow Hill, $115,000; a school in Halifax, $76,- 000. .. V. Mr. Godwin has completed or ' (Continued On Page Throe) Hogs wilt to worth * ioUtf to wlbwb tailing hirhertmarko* $*!«•«■ a H pretafata tar ovary hog lag day. Bwaryinutg is m roaniimn ror . . .1, laeatlua TELEPHONES: 3117 - 3118 - 3119 Acheson Testifies Americans Held In China Face Danger . WASHINGTON, June B—(lP)—Secretary of State Dean Acheson said today that 30 Americans are being held in Communist China under “very dangerous and very del icate” conditions and that the State Department is try ing to get them home. Acheson made this disclosure In his seventh day of testimony be fore the Senate committee inves tigating Oen. Douglas MacArthur’s recall from the Far Bast. It was brought out by questions as to the origin of a 1949 telegram criti cizing the Chiang. Kai-Shek re gime and opposing further U. S. aid to the Chinese Nationalists. When the telegram was put into the committee record this week, it was presented as the 1949 views of the American Chamber of Com merce in an unidentified Chinese city. C OF C MAN IN CHINA Under questioning today by Sen. Styles Bridges. R., N. H„ Acheson said the president of the chamber is now in New Fork. But another member is still in bed China, he said, and would be in “gravest” danger if details about the mes sage were released. The telegram was critical of both the Communist and Nationalist re gimes but particularly so of the Nationalist, which it charged with military and political incompet ence. Bridge! agreed with Acheson that the city of origin and the names »f .all persons involved in sentl- W- message should fee kept off the Wade nf ail Gets § months For Traffic Violations Campbell To Open Summer Term Tuesday Plans for the opening of Camp bell College summer school Tues day morning were announced today by A. R. Burkot, dean of the col lege. The program will begin promptly at 9:00 a. m. The prospeoUve student body wjll assemble In the auditorium of the D. Rich Memorial Administration Building for a brief chapel pro gram, at which time they will re ceive instructions for registration. The registration will begin at 10 a. m. and will continue through the day. Classes will begin following reg istration. The summer school will be conducted for a period of 12 weeks, with the closing, date Aug. 39. College courses will be offered In English, mathematics, accounting, foreign languages, biology, secre tarial science, social sctence, music and religion- High school courses will be Offered in English, mathe matics, secretarial science, social science and mush:. Burkot also stated that for convenience to the students the dormitories will be opened Mondap. . N# Week fat- Hite HELENA, Mont 7 A— A pan handler knocked at Mrs. F, D. Jones' door and said he'd like a bite to eat She gave him a taka and told him to clean the yard while ri» Owd bta a handout. arj&Ttr' 1 ‘f.^ '■* , tot ■m ■ J I iKjlj I i m jime j, v tt \Jt . «UH6 Sltep (Ehv B aiitj i Bridges, however, disclosed that ■ the city was taken by the Reds in ■ 1948, well before the message was s sent. In view of that, he said, the i telegram might have been a “for i (Continued on Page 8) ! Dunn Man Injured ! In Flaming Truck i HAMILTON. Ala., June 8—(IB— > A South Carolina man was burn ed to death here yesterday when a big trailer truck loaded with eggs ran off an enbankment In . side the city limits and caught i fire. Samuel G, Page, 34. of Aiken, r S. 0., apparently was asleep in the ‘ assistant driver’s bunk inside the trailer when the flames trapped ' him. Ernest Ray Neighbors, 24, of i Dunn, N. C., the driver, was hospitalized in HaleviUe, Ala., with facial burns and internal i injuries. Highway patrolmen said at least two-thirds of the truck's cargo was t eggs. The trailer was driving to i ward Birmingham oh U. 8. high ■ way 78 when it went out N con t troT a steep, curving t,ttown- - Cleo Moore, 35, of Wade, charged with driving drunk, driving after revocation of license, and resisting arrest, started serving six months on the. toads in Cumberland Coun ty today . Superior Court Judge Clawson L. Williams yesterday ordered that one of the previous six-months senten ces ,glv«n Moore last January be executed. Moore was arrested on May 8 while allegedly operating a motor scooter while under the influence of whiskey and resisting arrest. In January, Moore was fined 8100 and costs and given six months, suspended for one year, on charge of speeding In one case, and six months, suspended for one year and payment of S2OO fine and the condition that he observe good be havior and not operate a vehicle for a period of 18 months. The second judgment carried the provision that the solicitor could order execution of judgment at any time provided Moore was found to be violating the terms of his sentence. Attorney Everette L. Doffermyre of Dunn successfully argued to the court that this judgment was 'not valid, since the law does not con fer such powers on a solicitor. Judge Williams upheld that con tention, but ordered that Moore serve the other six months term. , Trial on the charge of driving the motor scooter while intoxicated was pqstponed. Attorney Jim Nance assisted Mr. Doffermyre with the RETURNS FROM KOREA Dpi. Floyd Godwin. Jr., 19-year old Eronse Star veteran of the Mpeean War. returned to his Dunn iMfbie late Thursday night. Cor pora! Godwin went to Korea early In the war with the 38th Division. Hp & the son of Mrs. Thelma God !,Wlb Byrd of 008 W. Harnett St. ■ ■■■■»■■■ ■■ ■■■■-■ DUNN, N. C., FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1951 6 Nations Join British In Hunt For Diplomats LONDON, June B—HP)—A search for two high-tank ing British diplomats spread to six more European coun tries today, but investigat ors believed the missing pair probably were still in France. Donald D. Mac Lean, 38, head of the British Foreign Am erican department, and Guy Bur gess, 40, a specialist on Far East ern affairs, disappeared from their homes here May 25 and were known to have arrived in Paiis three days later. Belief that the two men were still in France centered on two telegrams received by their families yesterday from Paris, The tele grams were signed by the missing men. CHECK CABLES ScoUand Yard authorities asked the cable company to forward the originals of the two messages to check on the handwriting. Con tents of the telegrams were not disclosed, but it was learned the one to Mac Lean’s family wag sign ed with his family nickname. At the same time, however, the Foreign Office asked authorities in Western Germany, Austria, Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Norway to watch for Mac Lean and Burgess in the belief that they might be trying to escape through the Iron Curtain to Russia. Both men were familiar with Anglo-American diplomatic ex changes on such subjects as the Big Four deputies conference in Paris, the North Atlantic Pact, the Korean War and Japanese peace treaty. U. 8. Secretary of State Dean Acheson said in Washington yes terday that it would be a, -serious matter” if the two men proved to be .Russian sympathiasgs.) Neither was known- aa aJßussian sympathizer, however. On< West teen diplomat said Bamju as a { “gnat student at Lenin Sin*- tarxgJ Baffled government * officials (Continued on Fate 8) (hound Capitol SquaM | i By LYNN NISBET RALEIGH CORRESPONDENT FISH The Commercial fish eries committee of the State Board of Conservation and Development went fishing last fall and caught some undersirables in its nets. Main objective was to rewrite the accumulated mass of general and local statutes affectiiig the indus try so as to eliminate duplications and repetitions, and to place many of the local ahd temporary “laws” in province of the ordinance - making power of the C&D Board instead of cluttering up the law books with them. Result was three or fotfr general statutes, in lieu of dozens of special-local acts, thus simplifying administration. Trouble is, the re-writing went too far. Inadvertently, the new acts eliminated several of the revenue producing provisions of the old statutes along with many of the obsolete and duplicative regula tions. As a consequence of that inadvertence, the Department of Conservation and Development, with complete voluntary co-opera tion of certain commercial fisher men, has devised a temporary (Continued an Page 8) State News DJ A |. Briefs CHAPEL HILL, June B.—(UP) Law sStooTta the the race barrier planned today to •eric living quarters in University J. Kenneth Lee, 28-yaar-oid SStatotay I Sdth\a^Bc^l iHtobry Brandis, I or not. Marshall Convinced War In Korea Is No Stalemate wars. ~ * am Wm • mamlilSmm & *** : i mtiM & - y £&■ *** ;«s*y.• * L, J t \£;■ ■Mfiffiiffo); /VL ...;;. -*• DOWN TO EARTH Since heavy rains came this week to drive away the long drought, farmers like J. L. Langley of Dnnn, Rt. 3, shown above, have begun to grub in their fields again. The field of cotton in which Langley Is working didn't suffer badly, but he had to spend Tuesday and Wed nesday resetting some of his 16 acres of tobacco. “The rain sure saved me,” farmer Langley observed happily. (Daily Record Photo by T. M. Stewart.) -!«* |# l i«NP»twi»mnwinwira!i Lillington G. I. In Japan Heard “So near and yet so far,” was the reaction Mrs. John A. John son of Lillington had Wednesday night when she heard the voice of her son, S-Sgt. Robert Roy John son, broadcasting from Tokyo. The Lillington man is with the Air Force Medical Corps and has bwn evacuating wounded from the Korean battlefields to Japan. He was one of several soldiers inter viewed in a broadcast originating in Takyo. The news account, dis tributed in this section by WPTF, Raleigh station, was heard by Win ston Hfpter, a neighbor of Mrs. Johnson? who promptly notified her to tune in and she heard most of the interview with her son. TELLS OF WORK Sergeant Johnson said he was feeling fine and before telling (Continued On Page Two) Chamber Secretary Going To England Dunn’s Chamber of Commerce office will be emptier than a pool hall on Sunday morning after the last week in June. As announced, before, Manager Joe McCullers will report to the Army June 27 for 21 months’ duty. The day before that, June 26, Mc- Culiers" secretary, Mrs. Betty Jean Stephenson of Benson, will leave for New York City, where she will catch a ship to join her husband in England. Mrs. Stephenson said today that she and her husband. Robert Louis Stephenson of the U. S. Air Force, will live in Whitney, England, hear Brizenorton Air Force Base, where Private Stephenson is stationed. Although she was alerted to go overseas almost three months ago, Mrs. Stephenson was notified only yesterday that space had been reserved for her aboard the Army transport Darby. The ship is sched uled te sail June 29 from New York City. Mrs. Stephenson said she will leave her Chamber of Commerce job June 28 and will depart from Benson two days later for Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, N. Y., to await the sailing date. The Chamber secretary has held her Job in Dunn since November, Private Stephenson, who volun teered for the Air Force last Sep tember. has been in England since November. He is attached to thte transportation office at the air .Another Benson wupte. Ptc. Paul I the Johnsons whltaafce is in It f A Friendship Cant Be bought, Solon Says VMftSBfIRiTON Rep F Ertri CarlfLumberton is not opti mistic about results to be obtained from the $190,000,000 loan voted by Congress for famine relief in India. The Lumberton congressman was one of five Tar Heel House mem bers who voted against the bill when it came up in the House last week. He said today he was “confident that neither pprsonal friendship nor the friendship of a nation can be purchased with mon ey.” Carlyle added he “hoped” an ex change could be worked out where by the United States could obtain strategic materials in return for the loan but he considered that a “highly uncertain” prospect. Lata Os Money Few persons realfcw, the congress man said, how much money $19,000,000 Is, especially to a coun try like the United States which al ready owes more money than all the other nations combined. “If you divide that amount out on a country basis—and there are about 3,000 countries in the United States—you find that each county would be paying an average of $64,- 000 to provide grain for India,” Carlyle pointed out Explaining his vote against the measure, he said he was “unwilling for the country to borrow to make that loan, especially since we owe more than we can pay in the for seeable future, and since we would have to pay interest on our borrow ing, while it is far from certain that interest would be paid on the (Centlnued On Page Two) Judge Halstead To Preside At June Civil Court Term Superior Court Judge W- I- Hal stead will preside over the firs', week of Harnett’s two-week civil session of court scheduled to open Monday morning, Court Clerk Rob ert Morgan announced today. Judge Q. K. Ntmocks was schedu led to preside over both weeks, but the extension of a case being tried in Wayne County makes it neces sary'tor Judge Nimoeks to return to Wayne next week. This will be the first visit of Judge Halstead to Harnett. He 1$ a special judge appointed by Gov ernor Scott T Unless there are other compllca- Nimocks will be present for the second week of the term in Har- DWt pRE-TRIAL HEARING SET The Record Gets Results FIVE CENTS PER COPY * 3 Dyer Autos Heavily Damaged Donald Dyer, local taxi operator, sustained heavy week end damage to three of a fleet of drive-it yourself autos which he operates in Fayetteville, according to his brother, Joseph E. Dyer, operator of the Fayetteville fleet. Two of the drivers—both soldiers —were sent to the hospital fol lowing wrecks in which Dyer’s cars were involved. Total damage was estimated at $1,600. None of the cars was insured. The trouble started when Step hen Berg, a Fort Bragg soldier, demolished a 1947 Ford converti ble belonging to Dyer near Raleigh. A companion in the car was seriously injured and was admitted, to a hospital for treatment. Saturday night a 1949 Chevro let operated by Asher Grice of Headquarters Battery, 112th Field Artillery Battalion, left the Rae ford Road and smashed into a large pine tree. Grice was severely injured. Dam age to the car was estimated by Joseph Dyer at $595. Sunday night a 1947 Ford coupe operated by the line was almost demolished near Rockingham by Ekrls K. Aaron of the 307th Med ical Company, Fort Bragg. Aaron was later arrested and, committed to 60 days on the roads for careless and reckless driving. versus Excelle Hollingsworth, Mar jorie A. Simmons versus Clarence E. Simmons, W. E. Fisher versus Norah Fisher, Carrie Smith Mc- Lean versus William H. McLean and Janie Faircloth McElveen ver sus Frank McElveen. ' 'l ~ * d Rev. A. J. Butler Dies Suddenly The Rev. Albert J. Butler. 01, of Dunn Rt 3 died suddenly of a heart attack at his home this mor ning. He was a member of one of the oldest families of this Motion, and was prominent in the religious life of the community Funera l arrangements are ifccom- NO. 129 Secretary Pays Mystery Visit j To Battlefront 1 TOKYO, June B—OP)—De fense Secretary George C. Marshall returned here from a mpr ery visit to Korea to night, convinced the Korean War was no more a stale mate than had been the Ber lin blockade where the West ern Allies won a major cold war victory over Russia. In an atmosphere of the great est secrecy, Gen. Marshall arrived in Tokyo from the United .States Friday morning,, visited Bth Asmy Headquarters in Korea.,, and units at the front most of the day, and few back here tonight. Marshall emphasized that he brought no new military directives. (However, in Washington, belief was expressed that Marshall might bt instructing Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, supreme commander, on a "new directive” for military oper ations. Washington r »caUed that Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Army Chief of Staff, told senators May 25 that a “definite new directive** was be ing prepared.) Marshall said his visit was pur ely military and had no connect ion with attempts tq. arrange a cease fire. While in ' Korea, he spoke freely on the war situation. CITES VAN FLEET’B RECORD Asked about the possibility of a (Continued On Page Three) '■>, JAeae j Mils JhinqA UY HOOVER ADAMS LIFE IN FIRST PLACE; TRUE STORY IN SECOND d You’ve probably often wonderod J how much circulation the various i national magazines have in Harnett The Bureau of Advertising, of j which The Daily Record is a mem-f ber, sent us a breakdown on the 7 ; circulation of the 14 leading n»- . tionsl magazines the otherWajSS !t’s no surprise that Life 1 Mag azine leads all the others, With a circulation of 659„ but we were a little surprised to find True Story ; in second place, with SIT. ’ McCall’s ranks third,- the Ladies Httw Journal, * 1 rtf, with 422; Look Is fifth. With wot* ; Time, supposed to be the mobtl informative of all magazines, has only 141 subscribers in all of Harnett County. * , .** Other figures: Saturday- Ruantag ' Post, 193; Woman’s ftbme Ccta-J (Continued oa Pago 1\ Raleigh Minister Will Be Spedbr At Sampson Eve^ RALEIGH, June 8 Dr. Hm3| P Powell, pastor of EdeiW Street Methodist Church in 101 elgh, will speak at the annuMi meeting of the Alderman HiStejKH al Association to be held in ?9n|j auditorium of Franklin 'SHU Km°o>unty. H Frtday. In (^t^ to On %&sr* Method bts To Father-Son Banov* Th* Mcthodhi - jfclfi of Dtvine St. Metitedlri gtag|