PAGE TWO
BULLETINS
* z t l 'I*. (OMtomaturm* Face ©no ■ ]
rase to think si hlmwM that w»y. And some of the
■UWHsafids oaMtng, kle|lunßt «nd writing congratula-
CAIRO, Egypt.—(lP)—British and Egyptian forces in
Ift -*S*-V*** city <n Tsmailia exchanged fire to-
Jbty allied two bombs were hurled at British vehicles and a
th&d exploded in a residential area. .
St 1 . LOUlS.—<B—Marty Marion, long-time “Mr. Shorf-
U|W£’’ Hi the National League, switched to the American
Lririgwe’today as a coach, and possibly a player, with the
’ CHICAGO.—iIK —Toby, the Aberdeen Angus steer
which won the grand championship of the 52nd annual
international Livestock Expoaftton, was seM at awdUan
today for $6.75 a pound, the lowest price paM lor the
HWprid champion” in three years.
NEW YORK. —(IPi— New York tSty's first foundress air
raid drill' went off better than dvfl detotest eWithdij ex
pected, hut thousands would have keen killed by careless -
p' ness if 3 bomb had really dropped.
- LOS ANGELES.—(IP)—Sen. Bribe* Kefemver, the crime
busting Tennessee Democrat, mid today he has given local
/supporters permission to enter Iris name hi Ike California
presidential primary election Oerit knot. *
NEWARK, N. i.—opi—Federal mediriterß held Bttte
hope today of heading off a strike SotaObday tK 15,0dd Pru
dentiallnsurance Co. agents in $5 states.
HQLL YWOOD.—(IP)—HoteI heir Conrad Nicky Baton,
25, former husband of screen Star lYratofWi Taylor, today
disclosed plans for his marriage to German-kora movie
starlet Countess Betsy von Fidttenherg.
IYASRINGTON.—'IP'—Keith ML Beaty, CkortOtte, N.
C., taxicab flieet operator, will not be caßed for (Rturiiwinf,
by tfie Moose sub-committee investigating tax scandals, it
was announced today.
TOKYO.—(IP)—Gen. Matthew B. BMguny today scaled
down the estimated number of Amtttcan victims Os Gam
rmmist ptrocity deaths to less than <6,OM.
WASHINGTON.—(IP)—So many physicians and dent
ists have “volunteered” for mßtary Baity that Bn armed
services no longer are relying «ta nndtead draft rafts, a (De
fense Department spokesman said today.
WASHINGTON.—(IP)—Sen. Richard M. Nixon demand
ed today that President Truman and Internal WEtoWMb
Commissioner John S. Dunlap “guarantee Immunity from
fipriaaP to any employe “who is willing to expose corrupt
wnnhkihe tar-cofleettng agency.
.yJT __________
WASHINGTON.—HP)—The nation's railroads told a
emergency heard today the fireman's union
Wts rejected a coadxact settlement which has been accept
ed by 90 per cent of all railroad (employes.”
JBtBJOLCJLC.—IP)—The freighter Ponce de Leon, an
"frd-ton-dy atermah line vessel,- headed* fm Hmiohitu today
irmrddaiing-cottonin hCLNpu 5 hold.
i iBfcCWN, Paraguay.——Paraguay officially ended
It* State. of war with Germany yesterday.
*■ ■
..** TEPtflOr,, Argentina.—WU-Twelve persons were killen
and dd-uthers am missing following a Bash flood at this
restrOSam, police said today.
JQ ; JBBHNOS AIRES.—(IP)—-President Juan D. Perm’s gov
eiuawnt will decorate Dr. George T. Pack, noted New York
cancer, specialist at a foreign office ceremony tomorrow.
Bb —IP)—MTs. Sarah A. Swoe is more ex
roach of Christmas than uhe is her
istmas prasonts ore afl bought and
a miniature tree set up, although she
»r her lttSntt birthday tomorrow.
-(lP)—Screen idol dark Gable and his
y Sylvia Ashley, will meet in court
expected to he a hot divorce battle.
if T DAMASCUS, Syria—ftp—Syria’s pro-American ‘‘strong
man,” Col. Adeefc Shiskali, seized control of the nation in
JMt*Wwtag coup today only 24 hours after an anti-Western
government had been formed.
J K ' '
?;» - WASHINGTON.—(IP)—The Senate preparedness sub
eonrmittee charged today that mflftary production is “dan-
Akousljrkehind schedule” because gun* haven’t been get
tag pnoslty aver hotter. Headed fm tightening of civilian
jMW* ajpd fat creation of a ‘‘procurement czar’’ in the De-
to speed the otftpot of aims.
Kb.—HP)—President Truman will have an
mpoiJMlty today to give-his version of the extent to which
Krfpma warfare has subsided in Korea.
?.• " 4 ______ *
;£ Va.—(W—Opponents of a proposed $15,-
MlCAparo-eiectric project in the North Carolina moun
- Wmhwhich would divert Waters as the New River brought
ftepsNtartilery here today, considerably weightier than
——— f
B 5® il *“fc The '* l £* wo <* «to fishing
which sank With a lom of 15 lives said to-
HK would never forget the horror of the screams of
. grades trapped in the forecastle where they were
\
... . mmm*~**m™*" »nd a steel shortage is
Highway Com -
S -‘-STV
JWTS. % ______
‘
Record Photog Kills Mule,
Then Photographs Scene
S WKEGSSBBm ,o%>r
Record Photographer T. M. Ste
wart, always on the scout for good
pictures for The Daily Record, was
■'Johnny-on-the-spot" whe n an
automobile struck a mule and kill- I
ed. the animal last night about 8 i
o’clock, a mile west of Buie’s Creek. :
In fact, it was Stewart’s car that:
Mt the critter.
Stewart said that two mules |
owned by George Gregory of Buie’s '
I'
1
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l ■
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1 S wP'
’ ■ S *'
nv 5
\ THREE INJURED Three persons sufferred minor injuries in the crash shown here which Occurred
at‘the intersection wf Clinton and McKay. A 1941 Buick, driven by Japses F. Hobbs of Erwin, ran into
the .side of a 1947 Cadillac, driven by Gertrude Goodman sufferred bruises and lacerations and her
j com pan ton in the Cadillac received minor bruises (Daily Record photo by i. W. Temple, fr.)
AA M Jr ftif
IVtuIKCTS
(Continued From Page One)
Lumberton, Marlon, Fayetteville,
Florence, Clinton: Steady at 18.26.
Wilson, Goldsboro, Dunn, Smith
flAd: Slightly stronger at 18.25.
COTTON
1 P. M. PRICES
NEW YORK —<tP>— Dec. 43.13;.
March 42:64.
NEW ORLEANS Os) Defc
43.21: March 42.62.
Dear Santa
(Continued From Pu«e One)
skates and some candy and fruit,
t thank you.
Peggy Merle Skipper.
, • Dunn. N. C.
Nov. 28, 1951
HEAR.SANTA CLAUS:
I am writing to .you to let you
know what J. want, you to bring
1 me for Christmas. I want two Hop
ainofe Cassidy guns, a football some
gloves and candy, fruit and nuts.
, Shelton David Tew
J’ * 702 S. Clinton Ave.
1 Dunn. N. C.
■ ‘ Dunn, N. C.
4uak *** shot *“* * eriomMay
■ - *^ ww^K^ir s*lElsl
In mus M dilute M ’
S? -•* ? i ‘ • . r’ -*- i *
• WC. &»2r i.iJft KS irw'>2>a»-i ts • ■ ‘.'UBBfWii.- if * •
THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN. N. a *
Creek ran out in front of him and
when he cut out to miss one of
them he hit the other.
SECOND MULE HIT
About 20 minutes later, the sec- 1
i ond mule was struck by a -car
1 driven by Fred Jones of Erwin. This 1
mule was not killed, however.
Damage to Stewart’s car was es
| timated at about <3OO and dam
age to Jones’ car was minog.
Senator Wherry
(Continued From Page One)
1943 and became GOP floor lead
er in 1949. % ■
Wherry first entered the hospital
Oct, 4 suffering from a persistent
virus infection. The' doctors de
cided on an exploratory operation
, in the course of which they re
moved a non-rnalignant growth
from an intestiae,
Wherry had been ailing for three'
months. His last appearance on the
Sei-ote floor was On Aug. 31<near
ly two irwinths before Congress quit
for She year.
Wherry was elected to the Sen
ate in November. 1942, defeating
the late Sen. George W. Norris,
and was re-elected in 1948.
WAS PROMOTER
Long before he entered the Sen- 1
ate, Wherry was known as ‘‘Light--
rung -Ken” because of his ability
i as a Republican Party promoter,
: master of ceremonies, and salesman
■ of automobiles, implements, real es
! tate and coffins. Be also was a
lawyer and ah undertaker. And
he was a cheer leader at political
conventions and sallies.
During the first 14 months of
As to be expected, everybody who
passed by yelled, “Hey, Stewart,
; aren’t you going to get a picture
of that?”
[“ But the cameraman was away
: ahead of ’em. He got out and
1 made the picture right after hitting
i the mule.
The owner of the Mule agreed
| to pay for damages to the ve
-1 hides.
Rackley funeral
Held On Thursday
Thomas (Buck) Rackley, 60, of
Goldsboro, brother of Mrs. J. M.
Langston of Lillington, died Tues
day at 9:10 p. m. at Wayne Mem
orial Hospital, after an illness of
four weeks.-
He was a member of the Saulston
Methodist Church. Funeral services
were held at Shumate Funeral
Chapel Thursday at 2 p. m., with
the Rev. R. L. Same, Methodist
minister of La Grange, officiating,
assisted by the Rev. Daniel Schores,
of t£e Wayne Methodist Oircuit.
Interment was in the family cam*
etary near Saulston.
surviving are his wife; a son,
1 Earl Rackley of Goldsboro; a
daughter. Mrs. Virginia Rackley
Dupress, of Newport News, Va.; a
setson, W)ley Dees of Goldsboro;
two stepdaughters, Mrs. Gene
Chamblers, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
and Mrs. Shope Norris, Winston-
Salem; a brother, Blaney Rackley.
Daytona Beach, Fla.; lour slaters,
Mrs, T. R. Vick, Goldsboro; Mrs.
i J. M. Langston, Lilliagton; Mrs.
Lata R. Malone, Daytona Beach
Fla., and Euta Rackley, Lumber
ton. V* r i
World War I he bought mules for
the army’s remount division. The
last six months of that war he was
a naval flying cadet.
— *
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State Briefs
(Continued Front #*l9 Wne)
eluded to the sole. The rambling,
100-room ton, a small meteor house,
furn&Mngß and about 14 hares as
grounds were included.
WINBTON-SALEM (IT) A fed
eral .Jury considered testimony to
day that a drug store here filled
hundreds of ‘fictlttousl’ prescrip
tions for narcotics to satisfy the
craving of drug addicts.
RALEIGH (W -r Directors Os
the North Carolina Agricultural
Foundation met here today for an
annual meeting that President
Thomas J. Pearsall of Rocky
Mount said was “certain to be
the most important meeting ever
held.”
SOUTHERN PINES HR Two
radio stations asked the North Car
olina Association of Broadcasters
today to find out whether high
schools can bar live broadcasts of
athletic contests as Henderson and
Lumberton tried to do in their
Eastern North Carolina AA footbaH
championship game at Fayetteville
Tuesday night.
CHAPEL HILL, N, V. (W
Sen. Robert A. Taft winds un a i
three-day stump tour of North
Carolina today after making a
number of verbal blasts at the
foreign and domestic polioles of tbJ
Truman administration.
Robert A. Taft proposed today to
Greensboro that' the Atlantic Pact
charter be amended to form a
Western United Nations “with
Russia out of it.”
Taft said the U. N. is a “good
forum” but that “something new”
is needed as an effective control on
aggression.
RALEIGH —(W— The State Su
preme Court has again asserted
it rights to Jurisdiction to a tabor
dispute. A decision yesterday up
held fines and contempt convictions
of two men involved in the vio
lence-torn textile strike at Royal
Cotton Mill in Wake Forest last
spring. >
BUXTON. (IP) Officiate said
today there has been little hunting
of the "tov deer” of Cape Hatteras
woods this year, with only one of
the animals reported killed thus
far. .j ‘
RALEIGH. (IP Largest gains
were reported today In the contract
construction industry as the state’s
non-agricultural employment climb-
Fate Os Young
(Continned From Page One)
was 17, and the records showed
lie has spent a long term at Stone
wall Jackson Training School near
Concord.
When it was learned Lennie
would become 16 to March, Su
perior-’Court Judge Chester Morris
ordered the boy’s case remanded
to Juvenile Court.
Hamilton said today he is still
trying to find some sort of bene
where Lennie can be given the
proper care and training. All the
reform schools are crowded, and
there seems, little possibility of get
ting him admitted to one of them
at present, according to Hamilton.
“It's a difficult business trying
to find a place for this boy.” Ham
ilton stated. “He's been in lots of
homes and institutions, and we’d
like to put him into something
like that again. However, It’s hard
to find anyone who will take him,
for although he is a likeable boy,
he has been in a tot of trouble,
and seems unable to tell the dif
ference between right and wrong.
“We have to put him In a place
where he osm be supervised, fog
he has to have a stabilizing in
fluence. A bearding home wouldn’t
do: we’d have to find a aort of
fester home with the night en
vironment."
Hamilton said Lennie has rela
tives hereabouts, but none is wHl
fng to take hlrh at the present.
There is an uncle in Harnett Coun
ty who Is unwilling to take the
bay ttdfore spring, and a sister, Mrs.
Bob Williams of Fuquay, with
whom the boy once spent some
time. However, the. relationship be
tween the txfy and his brother-in
law would cause friction, Hamil
ton said.
His grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. O. Jones of near Vsrina, are
too bid to be taxed with the Job '
of taking care of Lennie, Hamil
ton stated.
Lennie may be suffering from
epilepsy, and doctors are now ex
amining him. In addition, psycho
logical tests have shown him to
be mentally retarded, and training
of the. proper sort is important at
this, stage.
“We’re trying every day to de
something for him,” Hamilton con
tinued. ‘Hut the circumstances
make it doubly difficult. Anyone
1 who has any ideas or suggestions
as to where he could receive the
proper care, or who would be win
ing to take the boy in, is toted
to get in touch with the Domestic
Relations Court here.”
Meanwhile, Lennie remains to
I Jail—and that in itself is an in
| fraction of the taw.
— ■' ■ .
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 29, 1951
African Lion
(Contimtit From Page Cam)
him but I’m not sure.”
But the animal leaped over a six
foot wall at the local county fair
grounds and headed ter RRhom
river. The hunters lost its tracks
there, and figured it had run along
side the river and disappeared to
the underbrush.
A “lion” was first reported sight
eed by fanners a year ago near
Ceresco, Neb., about 50 miles from
Waterloo. It supposedly tamed up
again' Nov. 13 when fanner Joe
Potacka said he saw an “African
lien” stalking through his corn
field.
LIVESTOCK MISSING
That report touched off a search
in a 50-mile areal Farmers told au
thorities some of their livestock was
missing.
But the hunters called off their
bloodhounds knd smugly concluded
it was a missing St. Bernard dog.
Now the hunt is back no—with
guns, planes and bloodhounds.
There have been no reports of
lions escaping from circuses or
zoos hereabouts, and the tempera- j
ARM Wto^oiß
(Contfnaad Pram Pate One)
cast a warning to the Commaqistß
that the “war is not -over yet.”
’’No orders have been issued to
dthe U. N. command line troops to,
stop firing or to adopt a watt and
see attitude’,” the broadcast said.
“They will continue to take the
initiative whenever it benefits then- 1
security, and will continue to use
the full resources at their com
mand to repel any Communist at
tempt to gain ground.”
DRIVEN FROM POSITION
Driven from an advance position
by a Communist attack tate Wed
nesday night Northwest of Yor®-
gu on the Eastern front, the A Hies
counterattacked and reoccupidd it
shortly after midnight.
A second Communist attack at:
4:30 aun. Thursday (again hurled
the Allies back to their main de
fense line. They counter-attacked
at 6:30 am. and finally restored
the position after a five-hour bat
tle.
The Communists also had at
tacked in up to regiment strength
—2,500 men—tagtaweat of Yang
gu Wednesday night.
ed to a total of 948,300 during Oc
tober. it was reported today.
4HI
CENTER VIEW
"comedy CARTOON
FRIDAY
Sunset
Haiilaudml
UVUIv TUI M
CARTOON
2 Shows Nightly
BOX OFFICE OPENB 6dH
«ra»St*rt At^AiidS
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FLOWERS HAVE .
ALWAYS BEEN A \
Hsc fiS M MI2DK,
DEEPEST Ay^fXni'iQN
LEE’S FLORIST l
..1 ■***!. - • ..m 'V*- 1 »'JL , ri
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J CROMARTIE fSMRM HOMI
erne feetoTLOW and another of
WIH -as « commission from Robert
'Hrttbkr,. h *TWtas oil man, for
atetetog FfctiMh to Landau, who
FtoSSer. The on^
*6,000 sale. Rep. Vtobert W. Kean
(R-NJ) commented that tljla seem
ed an “unuaual” conunlsalen, hut
admitted he didn't know much
about the oil businees. Caudle said
he ‘tooojjbt ft was »H Tight.”
tuse recently gna been hovering
near the freezing mark-much be
low the comfortable temperature
for fc .Mon. '
STEWART
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