Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Nov. 12, 1951, edition 1 / Page 1
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'^WEATHERS SOUTH CAROUNA lncreasing doodiness today followed by ood slderable cloudiness tonight aad to- Blprrow. Occasional light rain In wist tonight and over northeast pwtton tomorrow. Warmer tonight VOI.UMEU UN ACCUSES REDS IMF NUT WANTING TRUCE , iiu. nuais AM) A FEW OF THE DIGNITARIES Dunn’s five McLamb brothers Friday night played host to an estimated 5,000 people at a fish fry staged' In Buck Currin’s Big-4 Warehouse. It was the biggest event of Its kind ever held here and one of the most unusual affairs of Its kind ever held anywhere in the country. They threw the big party, which featured fine food and outstanding talent. Just to say “Thank You” to their customers. Left to right are Mayor Ralph E. Hanna, A. M. (Mince) McLamb, president of McLamb Machinery Co., Inc. BUI McLamb, vice president in charge BERVING THREE AT A TIKuB A staff of If was kept busy Friday night serving at the big fish fry staged by the five McLamb brothers. This picture shows/three lines being served simultaneously. Thousands At McLamb Fish Fry When the, five McLamb brothers of Dunn throw a party, it’s no private affair. Neither is it any small func tion. It’s the biggest thing that happens in this sec tion from one of their parties to the next. in fact, it’s a four-county event and one of the most unusual events held anywhere In America. A crowd estimated from 3.000- 6,000 people flocked to Dunn from every direction Friday night to at tend the fish fry given by Bill. Clarence end Mince MoLamb of MoLamb Machine; Co., Inc, and F, N. and M. O. McLamb. operator* of the McLamb Plumbing ft Heat ing Co.. McLamb Supply Co. and McLamb Flour and Feed Mill. They enjoyed as good a plate, of . fish aa has ever been served, heard music by the famous Bailey Broth (Oentinned on page twe) Achievement Event Proves Big Success Harriett Presrijr, Raleigh radio commentator, in an address on Friday night at the Angler adbra, told home demonstration dub mem bye that useful adult Use today ifcpima reason, resourcefulness uj of which Mbs. Joe Stewart h presi- StWealaxS? TELEPHONES: 8117 - 3118 - 3119 McLamb Is Nations No . I Tractor Firm The McLamb Machinery Co., Inc. of Dunn, local International Har vester dealer, has just achieved a nation-wide sales record. D. R. Kirk of Charlotte, general manager of the North Carolina and South Carolina Division, announced here Friday that the local firm had won a State and ndtion-wlde contest to become the largest in ternational Harvester.tractor dealer In the entire United Stats*. - WINB TRIP TO MEXICO As a reward for this honor. Clar ence 8. McLamb, vice president and general spies manager of the company, has received a free trip Fear Club, to the choral director abd the pianist is Mrs. W. j. fat ten, Jr., or Kipling. The soloist was Mrs. O. I. Calcote of Mount Plaeah and the quartet was oom oosed of Mrs. Ywelle Horton, Cape Fear; Mrs Arthur Qgopa, Cape Fear: Mrs. R. C. Price. Jr, Antler: and Mrs David Campbell, Good Wxt Bailtt B ttmb of advertising and parts sM secretary-treasurer; M. O. McLamb, official of McLamb Supply, MoLamb Plumbing and Heating and McLamb Flour and Foed Mill; Cart Gourch, popular Raleigh radio commentator; Clarence McLamb, vice president and general sales manager; Manager Joe McCnllers of the Dunn Chamber of Com? merce; and F. N. McLamb, who operates the plumbing and heating, supply firm, flour and feed. mill with his brother, M. O. This picture was made as tbe group chatted in the warehouse during the big fish fry. (Daily Record photo by T. M. Stewart). And the multitude who attended declared no better fish was ever served anywhere. to Mexico City and a new S2O hat. This Is the second consecutive' year that the McLambs have won this honor, which means that the company not only to the largest tractor dealer In America but In the world. According to latest fig , uree, International to the world’s i largest producer or farm equip ment. PRAISED BT OFFICIAL In making the announcement, Mr. Kirk offered high praises tor the . three brothers Mince McLamb. [ president of the company. Clar . enjte McLamb. vice president and general sales manscer. and Bin McLamb, vice nrestdent, secretarV treasurer and. advertising and parts manager. ■ /•» ; < ; » "Thb wrfUunb brothers.” dfcctor ed Mr. Kirk. “hot only Have brought honor M their Company. to their 1 town end.to their, community but to the on thy Slate and to my divi sion. which Includes boh the Caro- lines.” ? In theF tFPtCeUy modest man ner. the McLambs brushed the praise aside and Insisted. "We Just try to do a good Job” NO FIELD SALESMEN The thing that amases Mr. Kirk, as well as other farm machinery dealers who have .hoard about the McLambs. to the fact that McLamb jjjSSttofek Co. have a sta vSpttt ffiSy'at aB. a matter of a trade-in deaL Because of the large volume of tmslnnss they explain that thev lust***t have time to go out DUNN, N. C„ MONDAY AFTEKgpN, NOVEMBER 12, 1951 Heating Firm Wins Award The United States Machine Cor poration announced today that Mc- Lamb Plumbing and Heating-Com pany of Dunn is second-place win ner of a contest conducted among all the dealers in the Bast on in i stallatton of heating units. ' Congratulations were received by F. N. McLamb and M. O. McLamb. partners In tbe operation of Mc- Lamb Plumbing and Heating Com pany, McLamb Supply Company and the McLamb Flour and Feed MUI. The ’ Dunn business firm was started in 1040 and has shown oon* tipuoua growth and progress, it to aqw one »f the largest In this sec 'Conttnued On Pace Four) i v wuueu an rage mx) ,•••• BIJLLETBVS Investigation and Army liMlfence a rents planned to SSSL*SrL # " Hwßnf ygf »>Mtr About pho -1 tographs of defense Tnutaliattons and notes on the atom bomb found in his shed. , HOT SPRINGS, Ga.—(UPl—Gov. Ihwmnvs Talmadre ; of Georgia announced todav that ho will attempt to stir support for Sen. Richard B. Rondl, D., Ga., as Democratic presidential nominee next year. f WASHINGTON,-(UP) Henry Gradv Hedrick, i yesterday heart attack. A native of Da vidson Coua ty! ; I’W* 1 ’ W * ______ ’ "4MMV No progress is Reported ArMeeting : jteUfcjNJOM. Korea W—U. S MaJ. Obn. Henry I. Hodes accused truce negotiators to their fibres today of trying to avoid a full Armiltice settlement. Hodes, chief UW. "representative on the armistice subcommittee seeking to fix a dfase-fire line and buffer tone ,op>ss Korea, bluntly itold “YouSfcrfend to establish a pre sumptlm demarcation line and de mlUtarlmd : zone which will relieve you of, Jay, necessity to settle the remaiaalt Items on the agenda I with Mp and equity. WAff “SPURIOUS LINE" “YoipWant to establish a spurious line ate tone which will provide you gph leisure and freedom to oontinp delaying the conference.” Hodes told newsmen that no pragpeak was made during the, sub comgdttee meeting, which lasted sous hours and 15 minutes. How ever,J|he subcommittee will meet agajmfat Tuesday (9 p.m. COMPROMISE ough stand Indicated be U. N. had made just ft compromise. t. has given up its de le western front city es qee miles south of the si, and Us standing on to base the cease-fire i battleline existing at the'; time an armistice agreement to ready for signing. Tie Communists, on (he other hand, demand that the cease-fire line? be fixed now at the present batUeline. They have added a pro vision that the cease-fire Und would mole wUhtbe battleline up ho tbe B signvfe. but s *S^ %omphHned thls ** Grand Jury Returns Bill In Wake Case Harnett County’s Grand Jury, after IS minutes deliberation, today returned a true bill of murder against James Johnson, accused of the shotgun slaying of Ed Davis, a Fumiay Springs farm overseer following an argument between the two. Johnson, young white tenant farmer, who hss been lodged In Harnett jail without privilege of bond, was arraigned in court to dav and entered a plea of “not guilty.” He will be defended bv Sam Nor ri* of Raleigh and A. R. Taylor of Lltlineton. Johnson’s case was transferred from Wake to Harnett County after a dispute between the two counties over which countv In which the cime occurred. He was originally tailed in Wake and finally the ca«e, was transferred to Harnett, i On request of defense counsel, <a special venire of 50 Jurors was asked and granted. The names will be drawn from the Jurv box at 3:00 n. m. The Jurors must report Tues day morning at 0:30 o’clock. Christmas S*al i Drive Started 1 Solicitation of advance eontrlbn -1 1 t»«* bv the mailing of bond* for l j contribution* to the Harnett Coun •. ty Tuberculosis Astoclatlon to now r = : ' (OMtflwted fm Page «k) : - FTVE CENTS PER COPY The Worry Clinic” Begins Today In The Daily Record The Daily Record today is be ginning publication of “The Worry Clinic,’’ by Dr. George W. Crane, one of America’s most popular newspaper features. This outstanding feature, re quested by scores of Record read ers, will be found on the Editorial page. It is one of several new na tionally-popular features being add ed by The Record. Dr. Crane, the author, holds five earned college degrees, including an I A. M., Ph. D„ and M. D„ but his j column is written in plain, simple, down-to-earth style read eagerly by those in every walk of life. It Is read dally by more than 50 million people and many newspap ers—lncluding the large metropoli tan dailies—report it Is one of theu biggest-drawing features. HELPS FAMILIES Day after day, week after week, month after month and year after year. Dr. Crane helps families through his newspaper features. He salvages marriages from div orce, shows husbands and wives how to get along better, gives them the reason for misunderstandings and the specific remedies. He explains teen-age problems in simple A.B.C. fashion, and gives the scientific factors In marriage problems and shows how to sell merchandise and how to develop outstanding personalities. He stim ulates people to be better citizens and more successful In life. Dr. Crane to always specific; he to practical, not theoretical. Dr. George W. Crane. PhD., M.D., Judge Crisp Charges Grand Jury jfones Funeral f&mmtln Revival Tent Mrs. Sarah Robinson Godwin Jones, 77, died Sunday at 6:40 p. m. at Her home in Kinston, following gbout eight weeks of iQhess. Funeral service* will be held at 2:00 pi m., Tuesday at the evangel istic tent of her son. the Rev. Reu ben Jones on the Dunn-Newton Grove Highway, conducted by the Rev. ■J. R. Vann of Erwin, assist ed by the Rev. WUlie B. Lewis of Elisabethtown and the Rev. Major Smith In Kinston. Burial will be in the Grove Church Cemetery, Dunn, Route 2, on the Jonesboro road. The body will lie in state at the tent from 1:00 until 2:00 p. m. and will be at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. Almon Byrd at Bunnlevel until taken to the tent. Surviving are: Four sons, the Rev. Henry Jones of Richlands; the Rev. Reuben Jones of Kinston, George Jones of Kinston and Wil lard Jopes of Erwin: three daugh ters, Mrs. Mary Lee Powell of Kins ton. Mrs. Sarah Hubbard of Erwin, (Confined on Page Two) FERC Debated By Governors HOT SPRINGS. Ark. (W Southern governors opened their annual convention today with a de bate on the wcninatve dvll rights issue which highlights the Dixie spht with President Truman. While the off-stage maneuver ing over a “beat Tnunan” move ment for 1093 marked time, the conference turned it* attention to the vexing question of Negro educa tion with nr wftHont segregation. WRIGHT BPKAKB Oov. Fielding L. Wright of Mis- RlsaippL who was the States Rights rice presidential candidate In the Dixie bolt of 194*. opened the issue With the declaration: “Regardless of what others may sav. we in Mississippi are deter mined that the srereeaigd educe tional sin tore -hsh he maintained.” EDITOR a HEARD Rare? 8. Ashmore flerv young executive director of the Arkansas Gaaette. told hte governors in a luncheon speech that: "The high oast of segregation has - -a- XV- mm -a m nwa dock uw ovmu aAwioomwM Os our educational institutions.” Despite their dispute on segrega tion in schools, both agreed that "outside" efforts are retarding the Southland’s own sohitton of the * —— rt.li,* rt—l. The Record J Gets Results 1 i 1 J pff'' DR. GEORGE W. CRANE is recognized as one of the out standing psychologists In America today. His revised text book “Psy chology Applied" has had class room adoptions in over 300 colleges and universities in 46 states of the United States and Canada. Before the War it had been employed as a reference text at the Universities 1 of London, Sorbonne, Leipzig, Mos cow, Rome, Mexico City, Madrid In South Afrifia as weU as South American universities. It has been , translated Into Chinese and Is an- ! Superior Court Judge A. .R. Crisp of Lenoir, making his tint ance on the Harnett Comity bench! ■ today told Jurors, gammoned for V term of criminal court that a good citizen should consider “not what he c* nget, but what he can give” when called on to render Jury ser vice. ‘‘Jurors are the most important part of the court,” Judge Crisp said, as he personally quizzed jurors ask ing to be excused from service. Sixty men and one woman were called for Jury service. Os this number 10 were selected for service on the grand Jury, which 1s also sitting at this term. Clerk Robert Morgan reported that five could not be located, leaving 45 for Jury ser vice. “If you are sick or someone at your home to sick, this court wants to know It” said Judge Crlsn. “These are good exi'iew**. but. to sav vou h«w to look after is *"• wh l ' l )’ almost ovo-v rwsnn ran off“r. It’s not a good p—-»i sp p—. cent in ve-v unusual ease* We oqnt’ onar»*-o tHo court unless we h*”« the lurors.” Nine men excused hv *ho tu'to* were’ James Raynor. Rprin«- La***’ Gerald S. Ma"n Dunn- Arthn- M Pone. Dunn. Route 2: M. Garland Duoree. Anrier. Route, l; a W. Rlancha-d. Dunn- Floyd Johnson. Dunn. Route 2: H. B Llgon Lll llngton: James F. Davis. LUHnsr ton, W** evoosnd so- ’TL.pqHo„ only BARBOUR FOREMAN L. C. Barbour was appointed bv the judge as foreman of the grand Jury. In a brief charge to the grand lurv, intended chiefly for benefit of the new members, *the ludga ex , nlained the duties of the grand Inror and details of procedure in the grand fury room. In addition to examining bills . presented by the solicitor, the Judge pointed out that Jurors swear “true presentment to make" of anv vto (Co it tinned aa Page Seven) Noted Concert Artist | .» ■aw As t v * second Artist Series th* Camp***)! College Concert Aseoctotkm will present Ross Ro«scm at the ’XRfch Memo rial Auditorium, Tuesday, Novem ber 13 at • p. m. Ro«a Pcsasm. the vounv Ameri can baritone ha* been hailed both in America and Europe ak one of NO, 241 ployed in Oriental universities In the native tongue. Dr. Crane took all his college work at Yale and Northwestern Un iversities. For five years he was Research Psychologist under auspices of the National Council of America and the Carnegie Institution of Wash ington, D. C., being located both at George Washington University and also at Smith College. He is the author of two daily newspaper columns called "Case Records of a Psychologist” and “Test Your Horse Sense.” POPULAR SPEAKER He is one of America’s hljnest price public speakers, being in con stant demand to address educa tional, medical, dental as well as advertising and sales conventions. His appearances on public lecture courses such as Town Halls, For ums, etc., always result in sold out houses and return engagements. Dr. Crane is happily married and the father of five children. Because of these facts his lectures dealing with various phases of pesr chology and psychiatry are not Just theories but are chock-full of prac tical aids and proved techniques. I WHEEL AND TIRE STOLEN ' A wheel and tire, left to be re paired at the Supreme Service Station, disappeared soma time Friday night, according to the re port received at the Dunn Police Department. The stolen wheel wife from a 1949 Hudson and contained a white wall tire. ' Small-Fry In Tragic Drama Across Nation BY UNITED PRESS Children—runaway, missing, or phaned and sick—figured in small-, fry dramas across the nation today. The dramas mostly were on the tragic side. The responsibility, of 10 brothers and sisters was suddenly loaded on the shoulders of a 16-year-old Leo nard, Mich., boy by an automokUn accident that killed his parents. , Jerry Moore found himself the “head of toe familv.” ranging in age f-nn\ six to 15 year “Ts t bflvo to wi to —nrk to keep ”* ah t—-ther, I will,” he said <Je 'Th« Mlirrqv Moore. *l, a faetnrv woriw. and hK gift, Joan, w— rillad WohirdeV in a haad-on -nlli-lnn in which four f.«— -ooer* also died. Th-oo fa-ment-H-od kids With 4 yen for life on a Virginia farM warp t.O pf New Vrt>-k riltv hv toelr father, an K—rrmln'—d iron o’orker. Who t-%V- * eied to Portsmouth, Va., io fetch the ■ ir "' O—or— O'Ullan enent e'’anr Op*s he had to nn- their torn fare batik J to the hit; ettv. A newspaper potoe- •muo-ht. their snnper. Ronald. 14. lerov. 10 and Judith, 12 had no de-ire to go back to the Greenwich Villa"* pnartment familv shared with two ghmdpnr ent.s, two sisters, two cousins, two ” dogs, two canaries and a sate* J m«oder. “I want to stay where l ean Mlo a horse whenever I want to,” sa'd. “Son." Quillen said, “to let fM 'd iContinued On Pace. JNni^ —uttfd a reo'-al otoiob drew tioes f—oh' (he nroo*. AttH* tile. H 0 oess Os t.h<« recital, he WSSTMtii 4 hv to* state Ar-e-ican and p—i?iah rones of 43804) a to”- ofto* larver etetre q^|i»
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Nov. 12, 1951, edition 1
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