Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / July 23, 1951, edition 1 / Page 1
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* St. “^lllTwin^ 7 '"twed • —— VDIJJME I , REDS MAY BACK DOWN ON TROOPS ISSUE TWUA Seeking TO Oust Rieve . In Biiion Fight NEW YORK (W— Emil Rieve president oT the huge Textile Work ers Union of America CIO, refused comment today on a full-fledged revolt against his leadership which was started when 400 insurgent members pledged SIOO,OOO to a war chest. A spokesman in his office, how ever, said the movement “indicat -1 ed a desire to split the union" and likened it to it similar revolt among tfee textile workers when the CIO was organised in 1937. LED BY BALDANZI The insurgent leaders, claiming to represent at least one third of the, membership, were led by George Baldanzl, the union's exec utive vice president. They declared that Rieve had used his appointive power to set up a handpicked "to talitarian organization." The group declared that at the union’s next biennial convention to be held in Cleveland in April, it toould urge that Rieve be stripped of his right to name salaried un ion officials. Pefaln Dies On lie D'Yeu ILK D’YEU, France—Oß—Form er Marshall Henri Philippe Retain, World War I Idol of France and disgraced traitor of World War 11, dl <*Uh «Ue today on this barren Atlantic island. exile. fttt family will arrange a Catholic funeral for him here and he will be buried In the nail is land cemetery. His family will select his burial clothes and without doubt will choose the uniform he disgraced— that of a marshal of France. On his chest will be France's highest decoration, the Medals Militaire. Between the time he defeated the Germans at Verdun in 1918—for which he was called the ‘‘hero of Verdun”—and the days he became the symbol of French defeat by collaborating with the Germans as head of Vichy, he was idolized by France. Petain died at 9:23 an. 3:22 am. EST today in a hospital room into which a cheap black coffin had al ready been moved by guards. YOUNG RESIGNS The Rev. D. D. Young, porter of the Bunn level Baptist Church for the part year, tendered his res ignation yesterday morning. He recently observed his first ann iversary at the large Bunnlevel Church. Mr. Yeaag win assume the past orate of the First Baptist Chwreh at New Bedford, Va. on September HOG MARKETS RALEIGH— ffl -Beg Mar kets: Washington: slightly stronger at SUM for good and choice 199-249 lb. barrows and gilts. BiMirtTT* Limberton tsd Fayetteville* Steady at 22.25. *■ R/weevTSOTii w (BM y •• , Dean and Greenville: Slightly stronger at RK Reeky Meant: Steady at '!■ flHifbh xi mi fa on the basis of pro ial representative. J «! • i ji7 * , , V'||f m* Bath %tmv& TELEPHONES: 3117 - 8118 -~JIIB ~ ▼Li j ft n ,NT V ~ .° ne *L th ® hor * k * t# *29*" her * during the horse show scheduled to “9*“ I *J* **•* M* l ? shown above being driven by the owner, Mrs. W. A. Atwater of Burlington. Thie hone wll be shewn In the fine harness horse division. The horse show, set for Aug. 19-11, wfll he sponsored by the Dunn Lions Club. Greater Defense Program Is Needed, HST Tells Congress Local Man's Motor Kb Mrs. John A. Monroe, 79, of 11* Ellington St., Fayetteville, mother of L. A. Monroe, prominent Dunn business man, died In Hlghsmith Hospital there Sunday night about 11:1$ o’clock. She had been 111 for the past five weeks and critically ill for the past week. Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon at 3 o’clock ot the Camp Ground Methodist Church In Fayetteville and burial will be in the church cemetery. Mrs. Monroe, the former Mary Lillie King, was a native of Bladen County, daughter of the late J. O. D Ring and Susan Jane Johnson King. She had resided In Fayetteville for many years and was a member of a pioneer and widely-known Fay etteviUe family. Her husband, who died five years ago, was clerk of the Cumberland County Recorder’s Court. Surviving are one ton. L. A. Mon roe of Dunn; two daughters. Miss Mary Bell Monroe and Mrs. E. O. Brisson, both of Fayetteville; one sister, Mrs. R. H. Owen of Fay etteville; five grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. HST MAY ACCEPT WASHINGTON— m —Pres* Mcnt Truman pnoklnd taeny to giro “careful consideration’’ to an invltatibo to speak Oct. IS hi Winston-Salem, N. C, at the ground-breaking far Wake Farert College’s art# eampaa ’ Wake Forest President Hat eld W. Tribble said Mr. Tru man shewed cordial interest” when the invitation was a ; wstad. :^ WASHINGTON Os) Presi dent Truman told Congress today that we may have "to raise our sights” and undertake a still great er defense program whether there Is peace or continued war In Korn, ■ -.-. v ■ .'—.A < : Mr- Truman’said the world fflttrt tioa it tap* reviewed to deter- Whether tht nation's present goals are high enough. Whatever happens in Korea, he said, the United States must keep its eye on other trouble spots and on Russia, which he accused of trying to “blackmail” the free world into surrendering to communism. MOBILIZATION APPEAL He made a fresh appeal for driv ing ahead with the mobilisation program in his annual mid-year economic report. He had no major new proposals, but he again made requests which Congress has denied so far or has been willing to grant only in part. Truman said that despite the Korean War and the mobilization program, “our economy is stronger now than it was when the defense buildup started.” “Where we go from here depends on the decisions made by the Con gress,' Tie said. “We can drive ahead on the course of the prevnt defense program or we can retreat. The safety and welfare of our country require that .m go ahead.” The president emphasized his be lief that peace In Korea would not 'end the Communist threat to world peace., Truman’s report and an accompanying report of his Eco nomic Council were threatened with warnings that inflation still Is a serious danger to’ the nation. ASK TAX INCREABCE To meet the threat, Truman (Continued On Page Fire) Record Flood Crest Sweeps Toward Gulf Indian Youth Killed In Rivor Is Buried funeral services were held Mon day afternoon for Hubert Good man year-old Cumberland Coun- SU Indian farm youth who was kill aim ost instantly early Sunday afternoon while swlmfning at Gra ham's Bridge, a few miles from f ds DUNN, N. C., MONDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 23, 1951 IReds Hit By ill- j m Jft M||b|W |j| ■ ,«TH ARMY HQ., Korea.-(UP)_ . United Nations planes in 327 sorties , hit Communist communications, i transport bases and airfields today while the ground forces maintained | light contact with the enemy in , patrol actions. Fighters and light bombers, fol lowiny up a 800-sortie attack on Sunday, attacked truck convoys on tMfe highway between Wfcnkan on , the east coast and the North Ko . rean capital; Os .Pyongyang. They left g big supply center aflbme. [ Two road bridges, were cut and ; highway and railroad communica tions were blasted in the enemy ■ build-up area on the central front i where the Reds may be preparinb ' for a doublecross offensive If cease > fire negotiations break down. Jet fighters attacked railroad box ’ cars, fuel dumps, a headquarters ' and an airfield east of Pyongyang. Ah Bth Army communique report ’ ed only light action along the front. Three small enemy probing attacks ; wefe repulsed in the west. In the Kumhwa sector at the ! southeast corner of the old ‘iron ■ triangle,” U. N. forces fought a 1 three-hour engagement at close i range with ah enemy force of “un determined strength,” the com i munique reported, and met mod !, erate resistance. It was Indicated that this fight, like others on the , front, was of small scale. \ Liyht contact also was reported t on the eastern front. > Council Interviews Manager Applicants ?! DunnV city eeWnoi] had re newed hopes today of finding a j i Allied Negotiators Stand By For Ninth UN-Red Truce Meet By Robert C. Miller UP Staff Correspondent : PEACE CAMP, Korea—(lPl—United Nations cease-fire negotiators returned to this base today amid indications that the Reds may back down on their demand for im mediate withdrawal of U. N. troops from Korea. Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy and the four other members of the U. N. negrttating team landed in five helicopters from Seoul to stand by for the ninth truce meeting with . the Communists. The conference was recessed Sat urday until 11 a. m. Wednesday (8 p. m. Tuesday EST) to give the . Reds time to reconsider the Allies’ ,refi*al to make the withdrawal of "U. N. troops from Korea a condition *'pt an armistice. Jdjf agreed to the recess, but said the .U. N. team would be ready to resume the talks sooner if the Conmnunists desired. dpNFBR WITH RIDGWAY Chief U. N. Negotiator Joy and twa other members of the Allied team, Maj. Gen. L. C. Cralgie and Rear Adm. Arleigh Burke, spent the ’ weekend in Tokyo conferring With Supreme U. N. Commander Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway. Mgj. Gen. Henry 1. Hodes and South Korean Maj. Oen. Palk Sun Yupt the other two Allied negotia tors,' remained in'Seoul. The Chinese Communist mouth piece in Hong Kong, the newspaper Ta Rung Pao, suggested that the Communists may withdraw their demand for withdrawal of “for eign” troops from Korea as part of an armistice. jUhough Peiping and Pyongyang, SMjCotnmunUt capitals, remained silent. Ta Kung .Pao indicated the JMMdq,«&tatewi to let tjtajfeeee- BETTER NEWS PROMISED It gaid the troop withdrawal issue should not cause peaalmism and predicted: “Better new* will come after the three-day recess.” Unofficial United Nations circles said tite chances for peaee in Korea iCosttemd on rage II Three Autoists Are Killed In Weekend Highway Wrecks A Harnett County Negro was kill ed near Lillington, a former Dunn school teacher was killed near New ton Grove, and a New Jersey tour ist was killed near Benson In ac cidents which occurred in this sec tion during the weekend. William Shaw, 28* year-old Negro laborer of Lillington, Route 2, was killed Instantly when his 1960 Chev rolet went out of control and over turned on a rural road two miles south'of Lillington Sunday morning about 6:30 o’clock. Patrolman George R. Carroll, Jr., who investigated the wreck,' said the ear apparently went out of con trol according to skidmarks made by It for a distance of 724 feet be fore the machine struck a tree. CAR HITS TREE After striking the tree, the car continued to skid for 122 feet, land ing on its right side on the left aide of the road. Carroll sate Shaw f-ehtecla One R a Baptist and *)<he ether a MatheOet. . THto tost CttjT WMI* when City Conunittioner Ltcfc OMto refuged to vhie for him Yiiunimimi xittt imfl all hoirfl * uSSf yisjy ffrrertl Saturday tight yni tic FIVE CENTS PER COPY Hutaff Offers Free Showers For Soldiers The shower problem of ser vice men has been solved here by Charles D. Hutaff. Sr„ prom inent Dunn business and civic leader and operator of the Dunn Coca Cola Bottling Com pany. Hutaff disclosed this morn ing that he is having eight showers installed in the old Woman’s Club building on W. Divine St. for the free use of service men. The showers will be avail able every day from 4 p. m. until 9 p.m„ beginning Thors day of work. Hutaff said he got the idea several weeks ago. He picked up two soldiers at Lillington one Wednesday afternoon and Sve them a ride to Dunn. They d come to Dunn to take a shower, bat found all of the barber shops closed. The local civic leader figured that showers ought to her avail able to the service men, ee he liiymjtettU aakrtl Army uuth- Permiasion was received this morning. Coteoel Murdoch K. Goodwin, commanding officer es the 443rd, offered high praise for Mr. Hutaffs generosity and his thoughtfulness for the service men. was thrown from the car and his head was crushed when the car overturned. There were no eye witnesses and no passengers in the car. The speed of the vehicle could not be deter mined. Shaw was taken to a funeral home In Shawtown. William Rufus King, 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Xing of New ton Grove, Route 1, was killed in stantly Saturday night about ’ll o’clock when the car in which he was riding alone and a truck crash ed. head-on. The wreck occurred two miles from Newton Grove on the Golds boro highway, according to Dr. J. S. Ayers, Sampson coroner. The truck was returning from South Carolina with a load of water melons and was driven by the own re, Buck X Sturm, 31, of Burkiin, (Continued On Page fire) CAPS GIRARDEAU, Mo.—(UP— The highest Mississippi River flood crest in 107 yuan Tolled past this unprotected city today and muddy, wsdir crept unhindered over a ’twb mlle waterfront section. Hftg families whose dwellings, wgre Invaded by the Mississippi Red ther hemes. The river stood at 42 feet at •:J0 a. m. EST. It was expected to remain at about that level dur ingjjhe next two days, then slowly About one-third of the business end stores *f V ’ waters of the" Mississippi at hay. fUrtOore*rareite com * l The Record Gets Results jBL L » LEAVE FOR LONDON MEETING Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Mc- Lamb and daughter, Beiva of Dunn, are pictured here just before they left Saturday for New York, where they will board a plane to attend a world-wide meeting of Jehovah’s Witnesses in London. Mr. McLamb, prominent Dunn business man, is leader of Jehovah’s Witnesses in this section of the Stete. They will be gone a month and also plan to visit Paris, Switzerland and other European countries. (Daily Record photo bW T. ML Stewart.) Navy Chiefs Body Will Be Flown Home NAPLES, Italy— (IS —A special Navy Skymaster will fly thq body of Adm. Forrest P. Sherman, UR. chief of n&val operations, to Wash ington for a hero's burial. The big plane will take off from Naples tomorrow following a simple service aboard the Mt. Olympus, command 'Ship of Adm. Robert B. Carney, commander of the At lantic Pact forces in Southeast Europe. The Skymaster will arrive in Washington at mid-afternoon Wed nesday. Sherman, 54, died of coronary thrombosis in his wife's arms in their hotel suite here yesterday. He had suffere;] two heart " attacks during the day. LAID IN BTATE “The ’flying admiral’s” body, wrapped In an American flag, was taken immediately to the Mt. Olympus and laid in state. Messages of condolence piled up aboard the Mt. Olympus. Among them was one from Generalissimo Francisco Franco bf Spain, with whom Sherman had opened Amte ican-Spanish defense talks a week ago.' ’’ . Mrs. Sherman remained beside her husband’s body for two hours yesterday, then took off for the United States In the plane that was to have taken them both home. "He died just as he lived—forth rifht- and brave,” Mrs. Sherman said. “He died of overwork and (Continued On Page Six) Task Os Quartermaster^ Is Outlined For Rotarians Members of Dunn’s Rotary Club got -a brief but thorough exploita tion of the Army’s- quartermaster operations in this area at their NO. 159 Erwin Churches | Open Center For i Men In Service .] The Erwin Service Men’s Geater, • operated jointly by fete EwSn’;?j churches, was formally opened Saturday night at the Park Cen- ‘ ter' and a large number es seryioe J men were on hand to tnjoy the »' fine facilities offered. If Sponsoring the center,t»hich will be open here Saturday the Baptist. Methodist, Episcopal and Presbyterian churches. The big, well-equipped recrea- ■ tion room is located In the Park Center and a reading and writiagp 4 room is located in the hotel build lng. Outstanding recreatiop aott J entertainment, as well aa faciiltijg \ for reading and writing, are offeowl all service men. COMMITTEE MEMBERS Members Os the general commit- " tee are: Rev. W. M. Catta, ReWfe Forest Maxwell, Rev. D. A Petty, Rev. R. M. Phillips, Mrs p. T. Stutts, Mrs. E. G. PurceU, >iu(»« J. C. Graham, Mrs. T. D* Stephapifc# Mrs. Paul G. Parker, Sr, and MTS, Leonidas Jackson. Members of the Baptist Church, under the direction of Mrs. Jartti - ' son, were in charge SaturdaY atjfflt. I Coni,need On Pagr RMfcßJg games, which win September. wlH at the rate ol TsSmlmL a Most important task will t pivlng three meals a day man in the field forces the control said THREE RATION <l»gg line consistnf A-ration, which to&xij&isT '^nH which is canned;
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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July 23, 1951, edition 1
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