PAGE TWO
]k_
PHJIJLETVNS
(Onnttaue* From H|t One)
' HkilV farmer sfrur of the “Grand Old Oprv" at Nashville,
and well-known radio entertainer, died today in a
I obesity. He was 32 and weighed
— (UP) Atlaantic Pact leaders have ahan-
H|W ns 1° Set a single German soldier available for
■K- Ilwight D. Eisenhower’s army before 1953 at the
authoritative sources said today
jjpl|ELGßAl>lK, Yugoslavia. (UP) Search by air and
; for a 17. S. Air Force plane and its four-man
Mitdt’dldlned to cover five countries today.
/»*#*<*• * i 4 ■
1 , WASHINGTON. (UP) The US. A-bomb has scored
I victory in Korea without ever leaving this coun-
I!l jflfrf- “ hps forced the Reds to abandon the massed man
w&tifOactics with which they came cUtee to overwhelming
SfiStwlyred United TNations forces.
pSjPAHTS. (UP) Russia’s long boycott of United
General Trygve Lie seemed ending to
y JtWASNINGTON. (UP) House tax investigators
■ Ailitodifß they will be “badly handicapped” in open hear
s tnjfs starting Monday if President Truman fails to make
available Justice Department tax filtes.
>. KEYWEST, Fla. (UP) Chief Justice Fred M. Vin
jap flies hack to Washington today after two days with
| Jpreaident Truman and talks that may influence the 1952
|A«Bt#*l picture.
I jr -
IKL '"’TONKERS, N. Y- (UP) Police looked today for an
the public incenerator. It has $17,600 worth
ISof jewels inside.
\ Pa. (UP) A thirteen-hour absence
frena home by Nancy Welsh, 13, was Mamed today an a
[ “hotair” movie which so scared the girl she was afraid to
| gp ham*?She said she spent the night with a girl friend,
returning- home when she heard a radio broadcast which
her missing.
iPWIySHG KONG. (UP) A Peiping radio broadcast
I land .today that North Korea had cabled to the United Na
:V fan an allegation that Allied forces had killed or starved
to death?t7,6ie Chinese and North Korean war prisoners.
! LOSPANGELES. (UP) Police and FBI agents in
i | vestigated today a report that a pouch of confidential mili
tfry infesmation was stoßen from an Air Force officer in a
I; arid Row bar. • ’
| 1 TER AN. —■ (UP) Thousands of Iranians gave Pre
: mier jflohommed Mossadegh a thunderous ovation upon his
j return "By air today from a visit to' the United States and
WASHINGTON. (UP) Some administration of
: ficials iaire conceding privately today that President Tru
p:-. vrttTfaD to win Senate approval for his nomination
! el Gen. Mnrk W. Clark to be American ambassador to the
' •
PARIS. (UP) A United Nations committee voted
fe ever Russia's protest today to put a special watch on the
I enpmsrve Balkans because of the aggressive enmity of the
1 Rwiet Hoc toward Yugoslavia.
If McAfeESTER, OMa. (UP) A kindly judge today
H*S expected to suspend a five-year sentence he passed
SBi * W-year-old bandit because he was “impressed” with
I behavior during a one-night stay in the peni
l WASHINGTON. (UP) The government’s new
Of living; index is expected to show only a fractional
|P «* prices—but enough to give more than 1,666,066 CIO
■blelfHbeis a one cent an hear wage raise.
Hr. iJONDON- (UP) The Ministry of Food anaounc-
W today that the bacon ration will be raised to four ounces
Hr RMfc instead of three beginning Dec. 2.
NEW YORK. (UP) Four investigations were
«ee e» e eeaee see man mmummmmmmmmmmmy
QUINN’S
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BRINGING IN THE SHEAVES This might weil be the title of this picture token ot Folcon, os
| those bi the 105 vehicle caravan carried in the contributions madte by churchoo in the Pentecostal.
Holiness Conference as a Thanksgiving offering for Falcon Orphanage. As fast as a group of cats and
trucks, smiiar to those in the picture could be unloaded, others took their places at the rear door
of the old auditorium. When the unloading' was completed, all the floor space in the building was
cohered. (Daily Record photo by Louis Dearborn).
1 ■ E : a. i I
Ridgway Says He's
Set For Anything
i
BTH ARMY HQ, Korea.—
(UP) Gen. Matthew B.
; Ridgway said today his for
ces “are ready for anything”
l the Communists may throw
at them if the truce by
Christmas” effort fails.
The supreme United Nations com
mander made his defiant statement
. during a visit to front-line units in
western Korea, where the Com
munists have been hammering in
futile attacks for more than a week.
In the air. American Thunder
jets damaged two MIO-15 jet fight
ers in heating back the first Com
munist challenege to American air
supremacy over northwest Korea in
six 'days.
Thirty MiG’s jumped the Thun
cWjets while they were hitting the
enemy railway lines south of Sin
anju in “MIG Alley.” All Thunder
jets returned safely to their bases.:
Other Allied jet formations also
sighted MiG’s during the day, bra
none risked combat. %’
«EE2 : oZ_
started today in the sideswipe-cedisioß of two New York,
New Haven and Hartford passenger trains in a tunnel un
der Park Avenue.
WASHINGTON. (UP) Beth Staate and Defense
Department officials said today that progress of truce
talks in Korea gave real premise that the fighting may be
nearing an end, possibly by Christmas. Both were quick
to point out, however, that hitches could develop.
WASHINGTON. (UP) The Army reported
today that Communist forces in Korea have suffered 1,467,-
46 casualties from start of the war through Nov. 14.
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (UP) Two men clad in
white overalls, one of them armed with an M-l Army rifle,
rubbed the Johnson County National Bank of $62,660 to-
'•> *' - ' . , . ' gdftk
-- • % -'MmHmh'
47; 1-'I '
j Wm ' . I :< w '
THE fi aH .v RECORD, DUNN. N. CL
* *
Only a few hours earlier. 10 B-29
1 night bomhers raked the Commun
ist airfield at Uiju. just south of
the Ya!u River Manchurian border.
KNOCKED OUT TARGET
“We knocked put our target,”
said Lt. William M. Nash of Rcn
kenkoma, N. Y.
Ground fighting simmered down
after Allied infantrymen repulsed
five tank-supported Chinese at
tacks of battalion strength west of
Chcrwon on the west-central front
with flame throwers and bayonets
on Thursday.
Ridgway landed at a forward air
strip Friday minutes after a snow
storm began clearing. Accompanied
my Gen. James A. Van Fleet, com
mander of the Bth Army. Ridgway
rode north by jeep over muddy
roads to visit fighting units.
Asked if U.N. troops were ready
for another winter campaign, he
1 said: .■ ,y
; “They tell me so.” Tnen he stated
jVflaUjMjWe are ready for anything
they hive” ■%.« ~ .
MARINE PRIVATE FIRST
CLASS WOODROW W. THORN
TON of 806 N. Layton Av*., is
on his way hone today after
fighting for almost a year with
the First Marine Division in
Korea.
A former student of Dunn High
School, Thornton also served with
the Leathernecks frees IMS 4
««•. - *:Wmm
_—; —1 j
day and fkd in a 1950 yelllow convertible. ,
CAIRO. Egypt. (UP) Texas oil heir Sheppard
Abdullah King and belly dancer Sarnia Gamal settled
today the important pie-martial issue of who’ll be boss in
their household—it will be Sarnia. /
WASHINGTON. (UP) Russia has notified the
United States that an American reconnaissance plane flew
over Vladivostok recently and that Soviet fighters chased
and fired upon it, reliable sources revealed today.
VATICAN CITY- (UP) Pope Pius XII sees no
fundamental conflict between science and religion. He
told the pontifical academy of science that, in fact, the
“daring genius” of science has proved the very existence
of God. '
MILAN, Italy. (UP) Rain clouds over flood
stricken northern Italy moved away today as the dynamit
ing of canal banks near Rovigo gave temporary relief from
the Po River flood .crest.
..' ' T':* f 1 ' ' 7TZ : 1 ,v — h:
] Sox Office Opens As 6:30
Children Under 12 In Cars Free
i TODAY - SUNDAY ONLY “.
\ ciiuici
\ L j
"South of
Death Vqllav" fIAIME "
I \&\mi 111 W Mll to T j j
I ■ . -JwraijSi, |fllMlTa
II \ PYGMY MONDAY " TURg I
1a ■ VICUUin MONDAY -TUESDAY I
|| It URiMIVV I
ill -\ rT I
Death Cones Te
(Continued From Togo Me)
could prolong Rodney’s life a few
months by using a nitrogen-must
ard compound Upt slows the growth
of cancer cells.. However, it dqes ’
not kill the cells.
Mr. and Mrs. Gale said they
would prefer that their boy die
swiftly rather than suffer any more
agony. He had been in pain for ,
months.
Markets
(Continued From Page One)
poor. Heavy hens 'about "steady,
supply short, demand good. Prices
paid producers FOB farm:’ Fryers
and broilers 25 to mostly 26, over
three lbs. 24. Heavy hens 26 to 29, ,
mostly 26-28. For the week: Fryers •
and broilers steady to slightly ■
weaker. Heavy hens mostly steady.
Eggs steady, 'demand good, sup
plies ample. Prices paid FOB local
grading stations: A large 70, A
medium 58. B large 55, current
collections 52-55.
Dunn Hospital
Patients
ADMISSIONS
Mrs. Lottie H. Oarr, Edgerton St.,
Dunn; Mrs. Thenie T. Lee, Four
Oaks; Miss Ella Frances Pope, Rt.
4, Dunn; Mr. Paul Hobson, Jr., Rt.
1, Godwin; Mrs. Lucerne Neighbors,
Dunn; Mrs. Mary Louis Dorman,
Layton Ave., Dunn.
COLORED
Mary Corbett. Wade; Annie Lou
ise Price, Erwin; Nancy Corbett.
S Wade.
STATE NEWS
BRIEFS
RALEIGH (IF* The State
Motor Carriers Assn, woh first
place in the 1951 national truck
safety contest, the American Truck
ing Assn, of Washington announced
today.
West jefferson iipi The
Federal Power Commission opens
hearings here Tuesday into the pro
posed construction of a hydroelec
tric project to supply the area with
electricity.
HERE FOR VISIT
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smith and son.
Bryan of Greensboro, spent the
weekend here with Mr. and Mrs. S.
Dewey tWhittenton. Dr. and Mrs.
Bill Bingham and children, Ann
and Bill, also were here for Thanks
giving and will remain until Mon
day.
gijfjfi >'-ir \
Friday Afternoon, November **,im
Kidnap Slayer
(Continued From Page One)
ing beside a stove winding his j
watch when the blast ripped I
through a metal Venetian blind on i
'a window, dropping him to the i
floor.
Mrs. Boyd said Miller shouted
for her to bring the car keys to
him. He forced her to drive the
,'amily car a short way. then made
,her get into the trunk.
She said the Negro lay on the
floor in the back of the car as she
drove, saying “if the White folk*
see me riding with you they’ll get
me.” ’
She said the Negro did not molest
her.
The couple -had been married
about a year, and it possibly was
to have been their last Thanks- j
; giving together before he went into
service since he was to have re
• ported to Fort Bragg, N. C., for a
pre-induction physical examination
Dec. 7.
SEEMS PROUD OF IT
Officers said Miller talked freely
of the shooting while being Carried
to jail. “He doesn’t seem to think
it’s any more than taking a bag of
peanuts,” one officer said. “He
seems kind of proud of it. He’s a
mean boy.”
Miller was charged with first
degree murder, and authorities said
they may place kidnaping charges
against him.
Sheriff William Rumley describ
ed Miller as a “bad customer." He
said he told a parole officer last
May “I don’t want him in the
county because he’s going to cause
trouble.”
Boy, 17, Kills
(Continued From Page One)
brush,” he said. ,
The boy instinctively ducked and
the momentum of the bear's charge
carried the huge animal- on past
him. As the bear stopped and turn
ed, the youth shot it twice in the
head, killing it almost instantly,
John said.
The total weight of the bears
came to 1,075. pounds. It took Brad
shaw and a companion all after- i
noon to drag the bears out of the !
woods.
The carcasses are hanging at his
family's small resort near Danbury, I
he said.
Along with the bears he allied j
a 200-pound doe, bringing his total ■
take of 1,275 pounds of game.
TENNESSEE VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Walker of;
Harriman. Tenn., are visiting their ;
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. J. Paul Walker and the family.
New TRY THIS
for CmtDs Cough
For coughs and bronchitis due to eo'.ds
you can now getCreomulsion specially
prepared (tor Cbddßti new took
and bise package and be sure: Re
(1) Your child will like at.
(2) It contains only safe, proven
ingredients.
(3 >- lt contains no narcotics to dis
turb nature’s processes.
(4) It will aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender, inflamed throat and
bronchial membranes, thus relieving
the cough and promoting rest and
sleep. Ask for Creomulsion for Chil
dren in the pink and blue package.
CREOMUCSION
FOR CHILDREN
reßem Cwgks, Cfcesf Cilds, Ante Irmufa
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fuel bills, cuts down on outside noises, adds to
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For Sale 1
I 4
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Oggg |Am FROM DUNN ON 2
Dr. Carter
(Continued Ktm Pag* One)
year. The fall meeetlng was held
s pri n g session will be held In Clin
ton.
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