perateire change tonight and Sat urday. Widely scattered thunder •hewers this evening and again Saturday afternoon. »af*raiE 1 TELEPHONES: 3117 - 3111 - 3119 , DUNN, N. C., FRIDAY AFTEIt&OON. AUGUST W, 1951 ' FIVE CENTS PER COPY NoTlfl JMKp J L ■ “I DON’T USE to be heney about It," National Velvet, one of six King Stables (Greensboro) en tries la the Dunn Horse Show, remarked today, “but I intend to add some more ribbons to this col lection.” National Velvet, a roadster horse, win pull a light four-wheeled wagon in the Lions Chib sponsored dhow tonight at thk high school stadium. He insisted that spectators not confuse! him , fec«t ' Htihels eyeing with pride. (Daily Record photo by T. M. Stewart.) JJliLte RICHMOND. TO Hog market steady. Top 22.50 fop good and choice 180-220 lb. barrows and gUts. Sows under 350 lbs. 18.50; stags under 350 lbs. 15.50. BORDER BELT although «pwmy varied from mar l jLt^ba^nLket^ I Favettteville officials expected : . ■ , ■* i :K \, ■-£ . . r*H -*r.-I A-v --7 ft . , Wxv Bailu, —w- - . -- --- ■ --» --a*- ... . --■■■, Horse Show To Open At Stadium Tonight Everything was in readiness to day for Dunn's first big horse show, to be held tonight and Saturday night in the Dunn ball park under sponsorship of the Dunn Lions Club. Bob and Bill Dillon, managers of the show, announced this morning that a total of 88 horses have been entered in the show and they will compete for a large number of prises. Joe A. Wilkins, Dunn bus iness leader, is the club chairman. Approximately 2,000 tickets for the show have been sold in advance and the sale of approximately an other 1,000 tickets is expected be fore the finals tomorrow night. WILL WIN AUTO One lucky ticket-holder will re ceive a brand new Ford automobile at the drawing oa Saturday night Horses began arriving yesterday morning and some of them today were being exercised in the riding I ring set up. The ball park has been put into first-class condition for the show. Portable stalls are used as stables. Many outstanding features are included both tonight and Satur day night. Among the highlights will be the showing of roadster class horses, drawing two-wheeled sulkies, demonstrations by a num ber of Tennessee walking horses and some of the better five-and three-gaited championship mounts. Tonight has been designated as “Amateur Night” and the show Saturday night will be all-profess lonal. Tonight is also the big night for local entries. Local three-gal ted, flve-galted and pleasure horses, and (Continned On Page Two) 4 Speed Limits Cut During Maneuvers If you are an average person the chances are that you haven’t S2S ■ o “ e « Mn * * w ta Take a mcond look at the next state speed limit sign you pass in the vicinity of LlWn*on and you PaSyjfSm'tt mph, TrucK mph. *! The action was taken sTthi Dodson Named School's Dean The Rev. S. G. Dodson, Jr., edu cational director of Dunn Method ist Church, has been elected dean of the Christian Workers' School for the Dunn sub-district of the Methodist Church. The school will be conducted at the Dunn church Sept. 30 through Oct. 2. The Rev. Mr. Dobson recently received his dean’s certificate from the general beard of education of the Nashville,' Tenn. Methodist Church. A graduate of Elon College, he holds an A.B. degree in Relig ious Education. TO TRAIN WORKERS The purpose of tills Christian Workers’ School is to train workers in the church and to train church school teachers. All Methodists in this area, which includes about 12 churches, are cordially invited to make plans to attend. ~ » Free registration cards will be sent to each pastor in the Dunn Sub-District at a later date. Five courses will be taught with the possibility of a sixth one being (Continued On Page Three) BULLETINS WASHINGTON (OPt) Two dßrk-hoises for the Repub lican presidential nomination agreed today that President Truman was “exactly right’ when he dismissed Gen. 1 Dwight D. Eisenhower as a possible Democratic condidate. . ' WASHINGTON ((IP)) Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R - ! claims have been charged with Communist activities. I WASHINGTON ((IP)) Housing officials said today that construction of the average type of residential house ’ j would be hurt by the government's new building controls. (STfast Kansas City Southern Red Stand On Buffer Zone Blasts ] Hopes Os Early Korean Armistice i More BiiKons Seen For Defense Effort WASHINGTON ((IP)) Defense-conscious House mem- i bers, who only yesterday voted $56,009,000,000 for arms, were expected to spend a few extra billions today. Yesterday’s vote was on a regu lar 'appropriation bill to cover most expenses of the Army, Navy and | Air Force through the fiscal year | that started July 1. The House ap proved the bill 348 to 2 and sent j it to the Senate. House leaders called up today the first erf a series of defense bills not covered in the general apprd priatlon bills‘that will raise this year’s military appropriations al most to World War n, peak levels. AUTHORIZES NEW BASES The bill, which was certain of i Stole To Get Over $l2O Million WASHINGTON. TO The House called up for a vote to day n bill authorising the Army, Navy and Air Force to spend $5,780,000,000 building new bas es and expanding old ones in this country and over tbe world. The bill was assured of pas sage. It was recommended , unanimously by the armed ser vices committee, which spent several weeks working on It. Much of the work Is secret, and is not listed specifically. The listed projects include: North Carolina—sl2o,l43,76o, to he allocated as follows: Army: $62,684,560—Ft. Bragg, $39,843,660; Wilmington ammu nition loading point, $22,805,000; Navy: $37,159,200 Marine 6a tracks, Camp LeJeune, 610, Marine Corps Air facility, r "’’"Ounp LeJeune, $6,291,000; Ma rine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, $15,058,000; Naval Ah Station, Weeksvflle, $1,320,000; Marine Corps auxiliary tending strip, $3,898,000; Air Force: Pope AFB, $20,- 335,000. passage, would authorize the arm ed services to spend $5,768,720,000 expanding bases and building new ones throughout the United States and much of the rest of the world. About $4,600,000,000 of the total construction outlay would be fi nanced this year, with the rest to come in fiscal 1963. Later the House must consider a mulit-billion dollar program of arms aid for the nation’s allies, a. separate outlay to cover the cost Lillington Gets 5 New Teachers Lillington school will have five new teachers this year Principal H. H. Hamilton said today as he announced the list of the faculty. Total number of instructors, 27, will remain the same. wrn remain me same. Newcomers will Include Mrs. Marguerite Steele, Lillington, first ! grade; Miss Virginia Riddle, Rt. 1, St. Pauls, second grade; Miss Betsy Jean Miles, Raleigh, eighth i grade, and Miss Helen Payne Rus i sell, Kinston, Rt. 5, home econo i mics; and Miss Jeanette Atkins, >Cary Rt. 1. commercial, i Other members of the faculty will! ; Include the following: Mrs. Flora i O’Quinn, Lillington, science; Miss Belle Hockaday, Lillington, En ! glish-French; Mrs. Frances Wal i ker, Lillington, Engllsh-Mathema tlcs; Miss Cathryn Creasman, i Swananoa, social science and phy r steal education; J. H. Blachmrv, (Continued On Page Three) of fighting In Korea which is about I 'l $5,000,000,000 a year, and a sup- ; : plemental bill to cover another ex- ! | pected increase In the projected ■ i size of the Air Force. I UP TO $75 BILLION I ‘ All told, these outlays will boost I yesterdry’s $56)000,000,000 appro lContinued on Page 7) Dr. Warren Will Give Sermon At Spring Branch Spring Branch Baptist Chnrch * near Dunn will play host to a possible gubernatorial candidate Aug. 19 when Dr„ Casper Warren, pastor of the j First Baptsit Church of Char ' lotte. returns to preach there. Dr. Warren, a member of the Spring Branch Church since youth, is returning that Sun - day to preach the Homecom ing sermon at the 156-year-old i Harnett church, t He will remain there to lead 1 the evangelistic services twice M daily through the following Fri ?- day. Dr. Warren was a native of * the Spring Branch oomfliun itor, bate later moved to (rtmn. •MENTIONED FORoPOSa Tbe Harnett-born minlttef has keen mentioned as a can didate for the gubernatorial r race in 1952. He Is backed by Christian forces in the Pied mont section of the State. A. E. Lynch, evangelistic singer of Buie’s Creek, will again have charge of the music. . He has been at Spring Branch for similar services perhaps fif teen times. Colon Godwin, local boy who [ last spring began his semin ary training at Furt Worth, Tex., will lead the devotional. Johnson Draughon. clerk, will call the church roll Immediat ely preceding picnic dinner to be served on the chnrch grounds. Throe will be no fa ternoon program. Services through Ang. 24 will be held at 11 a.m. and at 8 p.m. Soring Branch is at pre sent without a nastor. Os its ' several pastors since 1795 Dr. J. A. Campbell served the lonr est pastorate. 44 and a half 1 years, up to his death in 1934. Wavne Lee is Sunday School superintendent. C. O. Glover, chairman of the deacons, and D. R. Warren, songleader. §■ •, ft 9 Mmtmmm IS ,mmt^i*a^S SCENE FROM FLAT - This picture, mot at a climactic momen t ta ‘ Dear Bath." the first production to be staged by the Dunn Uttbl Theatre, shows all but one of the members es the east. Left to H ght, they are: Linda Aycock (Miriam Wilkins), John ConneMU&H Sea weight), Whylma O’Brien (Mrs. Edith Wilkins), WllHam Browne (Sgt. Chuck Vincent), Sue Strickland (Martha Ennis (Ruth Wilkins), Charles WBHams (Albert Hummer), Lina Ennis (Dora) and Drew Conner (Judge Harry Wilkins), Not shown;:,) Mayo Waggoner, who portrayed Harold Klobbenneyer. Knox fowler directed the comedy, which wae held at Dunn High SottNHB l auditorium Wednesday and Thursday nights. (Daily Record photo by Lewis Studio.) ' J&hL' ~a i ‘ GOING MY WAY? Just to make homesickness more acute, some way in an Army nnlt stationed near Dunn erected this sign post to remind the soldiers how far from home they are. Some, how ever, may have found a home here; the bemused G. I. shown in the picture evidently doesn't care how far Sauk Cntre or Walter . Walla is from Dunn. (Dally Record photo by J. W. Temple, Jr.) J. ' - J J, —. »,, v State Department Loses Aid Authority WASHINGTON. UP) Chair man James P. Richards (D-SC), whose House Foreign Affairs Com mittee voted to strip the State De partment of authority over foreign aid, predicted quick House approv al of the administration's giant global aid program. The committee voted 20 to 0 late last night to put a new super administrator of cabinet status in charge of ail foreign aid, both mili tary and'economic. Such an of ficial would be independent of the State Department. By the same vote, the committee sliced only $651,250,000 from Presi dent Truman’s request for a record $8,500,000,000 to bolster free nations against the threat of Communist aggression. PASSAGE EXPECTED Richards said he-was sure the House would pass the bill in the The Record Gets Results exact amounts favored by the com mittee. The House is scheduled to take up the measure about the mid dle of next week. Actual appro priations would be made at a later date. The committee's action in taking from Secretary of State Dean Ache son any direct part in foreign aid was expected to soothe strong antl- Acheson sentiment among many lawmakers particularly Southern Democrats. Richards, who carries weight with the Southerners, said the pro posed administrator, to be appoint ed by the President, would be “his own boss—and boss of the pro gram.” He would be equal to the head of any executive department, Richards explained, with a cabinet member’s $22„500 annual salary. The biggest committee cuts in 'CuK-uuieti un Page Two) Compromise Is Turned Down By Communist Teem By Earnest Hoberecht UP Staff Correspondent PEACE CAMP, Korea (OP)) Communist negotiators sat in steny silence for two hours and 11 minutes at the resumed cease-fire talks to day. then flatly refused to consider any compromise solution to the deadlock ov er an armistice buffer zone. Tlip Communist stand virtually blasted hopes for an early arrois- ; tice in the Korean war. Rome per- “j sons believed that only an "agree or fight" ultimatuum by the XX. N. would budge the Reds* m A United Nations communique a called chief Communist delegate : Gen. Nam Il's silence “historical and unprecedented”. DISCUSSION REFUSED J He broke it. the communique ; said, only to refuse adamantly to ! discuss: 1. The battle line area as a possible location of the cease- 4 fire line or buffer zone. 2. Any line other than the 38th Parallel as a possible line at military demarcation. 3. Any other item on the mili tary armistice conference agenda. Despite the seemingly hopeless ■ deadlock, the negotiators agreed to meet for a 21st session at 11 a. m. Saturday (8 p. m. Friday EST). The meeting was the first since the U. N. command broke off the negotiations Sunday in protest. ' Re