PAGE TWO BULLETINS (Continued from page one)) by film producer Walter Wagner nine days ago, was out f the hospital today but uftable to talk about the Oxrfer -BTH ARMY HQ., Korea 00 The United States has Host 506 planes since the Korean war started and 14, -a record - | have been shot down in the last week, it was announced MEINERSEN, Germany (10 Four bandits who robbed a railroad station cashbox dressed as Santa Clauses were caught by police today after an exchange of pistol shots. BOSTON Iff) A bitter inter-union dispute, which al ready has resulted in a brief longshoremen’s strike here threatened today to shut off the port of Boston indefin itely to American cargo ships. ASTORIA, Ore. Iff) A marine survey firm official said today that flames and carbon monoxide within the white hot steel hull of the Danish motorship Erria will keep boarding parties from (learning the fate of 11 persons be lieved on the ship until at least tomorrow. * WASHINGTON (IP) The Defense Department said to day the traditional turkey dinner will be served on Christ mas to military personnel around the world. ATAMI, Japan iff) A pair of young Japanese lovers blew themselves to death today with a stick of dynamite in a hotel room. The girl’s diary indicated her mother ob jected to her marrying her unemployed lover. WASHINGTON (ff) —Telephone companies were told to day they must decide for themselves whether to cut off service UP establishments they believe are being used for gambling purposes. WASHINGTON (ff) Mrs. Alva Dawson, wife of presi dential assistant Donald S- Dawson and a key figure hi a Senate investigation of influence wthin the RFC. has left her job at the Reconstruction Finance Corp., it Was learned today. WASHINGTON (ff) House tax investigators believed today they have laid the groundwork for contempt action against Henry W. Grunewald, who lias been linked to dtl alleged $500,000 shakedown attempt. NORTH BERGEN, N. J. (ff) A middlte-aged couple who lived together as brother and sister for 40 years, began life as husband and wife today. George H. Wickham, 58, and hhuadopted sister. Isabel, climaxed a 30-year friend ship in a simnle church wedding. • - v ~ CHICAGO (ff) Joseph Short, White House press secre , tary, charged todav that criticism of President Truman’s {■formation securffy order by a professional journalism | fraternity was a “detestable slander.” Inited Nations General Assembly to- Christmas holiday with a record of re to thaW the cold war. - Augusta National Goflf Club offic ii today that Gen. Dwight D. Eisen •vations at the swank establishment (dent Truman sent a special fchrfst ay to members of the U. S. armed 'ar East. Vice President Alben W. Barkley being made to have British Prime irchiH address a joint session of Con — Police said today they believe - or someone like that” swiped brass m the headquarters o! five foreign er Japanese embassy. XATES CfiNTEK, turn (ff) A 74-year-old man was held here today on charges that he ended a breakfast table argument about his allowance by cutting his wife’s throat. liHSBOP. Calif, (ff) Authorities theorised today that a JHftr that carried Swedish pilot Erik Ovgard to his death Spikeup” in the turbulent air currents which prevail in (V) The National Labor Relations mSei today ordered the Montgomery, A a Adertiser Co. H|tiiii!Sdscouragu>g membership of Its employes in the Newspaper Guild CIO Sfe&SHINGTON (IP) President Truman today appointed KpdPlLloyd and David E. Bell, both now working in the gCjSDris special counseS, to $15,000-a-year jobs as ad- HhSrBNGTON iff) The Navv announced todav that lIiCgFC Director William E. Willett has resigned, es- from his SIIBOO-a-year job on the staff «flßKt£retary of Nary Francis P. Whitehair. •' '■ •—— SSSStoIST MARINES, Korea (IP) Marine helicopters | tare ready to take Christmas to the Leathernecks in the foxholes of the cruel East Korean mountains RICHMOND, Va. (ff) A federal district court jury here JJHfcgnp scnooi icicflcr irom « irun »or rdusing 10 nuc in n 5|L, - , ■ , i .in' . .. HalMm Mart nOIHMy nfISS To Draw Crowd Plans were completed for the sacred and solemn ceremonies Which w<U take place at the Sacred heart Catholic Church for Christ mas. The regular Mass for the , Fourth Sunday of Advent win be offered tomorrow, December 23 at 9 a. m Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament Will follow the Monday, December 24 being the Vigil of Christmas, The Holy Sac rifice of the Mass will be offered at 7:30 a. m. Confessions will be heard for the members of the Cath olic congregation on Monday even ing from 7:30 until 3:30 p. m. CAROL SINGING The singing of the Christmas , Carols will take place in the ; Church beginning at 11:30 Christ mas Eve, to which the entire pub lie of the area is invited.. At 11:55 ' the ceremonies connected with the , placing of the statue of the Infant Babe in the erected Crib will take place with special prayers. The < Holy Sacrifice of the Mass will be #tn at 12.01 A. M. Christmas Mora— pig. December 25. A special Christ bias sermon will be delivered dur ing the Mass by Father Francis A. McCarthy, local Pastor. The mem bers of the Cathdlic Church will receive Holy Communion during the Mass. ■ On Christmas morning there will be two other Masses offered, one beginning st 7:01 a. m. and the ■cond at 7;25 a. ill. ■'An invitation is cordially ertend -46 to the non-Catholics of Barnett County to attend these ceremon- Locol Churches (Continued from ftafe SM» theme “O dome Let Us Adore HIM" I Solving around the Chfisttttas ' i pry. The traditional carols WJU bt sung and the service will cUttm* 1 Mth the serving of the Lord’* Sup j*r. The pastor invites anyone whq OHO, to attend. .At the Divine Street Methodist Church, Hev. Joyce V. Early Will deliver a Christmas sermon Sun day at 11:00 a. m. on the subject *When Truth Comes Alive”. This , Will also be membership Sunday ‘ abd new members will be received at the close of the sendee. . ? GIFTS FOR NEEDY the Sunday School hour, i children of die congregation win , present a Christmas program. Whße Christmas and candle -lighting ser- be held at 7:30 p. m. Gifts mil be received for the needs at ’ this time At the conclusion of!the , Service the Youth Fellowship groups JrtU jotojtedlsr grout* {or . At the First Baptist Church Rev. j B. P. Russell wOl speak on the topic, “Vdhat Others Saw In the ” Birth of Christ”, during the morn ing worship service Sunday. A ‘ Service Sunday night will be held 6:30 p. m. The last presentation of the living tableau will start St jiOO Monday night. - Rev. R. E. Moore, Little River Associational Missionary will take (Re pulpit for the Sunday morn<Ag service at the Second Baptist Church here, it was f.unounced by the pastor, Rev. E. C. Keller, Night service Sunday will be at 7130 p. m. , At Hood Memorial Christian Church Dr. Cuthrell win speak oh "What WUI You Do With Jesus’.’ dhring the morning service. There ‘ Will be appropriate music by the , adult choir and the youth choir , WiU render a selection. •; A. special midnight service wUi , be conducted at St. Stephens j, episcopal Church in Erwin by Rev.' I. Harding Hughes, Chaplain Os It Mary’s College in Raleigh, be ginning at 11:30 p. m. Mon. This service wUI conclude with Holy PAGEANT SLATED fXOn Sunday a pageant of the , Nativity win be presented at the . Ing service, and the Sunday i il win have its Christmas cele- \ in in the Parish Houee at i p. m.v Sunday. Father Francis McCarthy invites : the public of the area to a special Christmas Midnight Maaa to be held it Sacred Heart Catholic Church on Monday night. The services Wil begin with the tinging Os Christ mas Carols at 11:30 p. m. Bogs Church will pre- : T “Chimes of the Bcdy iurag: ends a cordial invita- | public <for this service, < at 7:30 p. m. ecial events aw slated ! rches throughout this inters of all church#* ng church attmdsnnr. : arch plans for capadtv mat ISSN! Os §g m Sealrt ■ ft#. t&em t-* i;*Merry Chi 111 ** j & denffi t. try fftUr American' 4'.v ..iMy V< ■ ■ _'!»;■.* “. jjfrjft | |hrcat of a cripntfn* ftes) ftrtte, SSrtji&iM U «eeMl pu* I* tiffi ifie Jfcadlotked steel waft dispute «w to ||He vvafc SMPWfpvon ooxni. iftr* iruroan ww icpuiiui rtady io maw swiftly. -• ** •*' ajLji-' , & 1 | « 188 DAILY RECORD. DUNN. R, «. ■ -w- ■ i.easiAi | ■ ■ | ( Faittifaf fttpore •RpO Bethlehem and id- the nearby Christian village of Bet Jalla. ho tels and monasteries were ftUed The devout win converge on Bethlehem Ip. two lines, over roads that are roughly parallel. Because of the troubled Situation, the tra ditional rout! still is open only to diplomatic and consular officials and United Nations personnel. The first two miMs run through Israeli territory. Afl others—clergymen ’as well as Ay worshippers—will travel over a makeshift route through Jordan territory, twice the distance of the original route. It passes through the Jordan-held Old City of Jeru salem. skirts its walls, passes the Garden of Gethsemane and winds along the slopes of the Mount of | Olives. From Bethany the crude road passes through wild country and skirts the Israeli frontier settle ment of Ramat Rachel in a wide semi-circle. In Bethlehem itself, quiet pre vailed. The little town where the Saviour was bom was bypassed by the bitter fighting of three and a .half years ago. MIDNIGHT MASS Catholics plan to hold high pon tifical mass at midnight in the Church of St. Catherine, part of a group of structures comprising the Church of the Nativity. Amid sacred musk and the voices of choir boys, Fstriirch Alberto Gori wllMpreslde at tfMS^Psrvicta. ettfudnU lij Jerusalem services frill be held in all ffanan ahd Greek Cath olic, Maronite, Anglican Aha other Protestant churches and chapels. fkltiftayrti tfutfm w ImiIHI (Continued tram page pit; counties stopped more than 184 H motorist* in a campaign to Hold down the traffic toll. Police issued 2,488 citations and 1,809 warnings. In Burlington, La., a nonschad uled airliner made an emergency landing and slammed nose first Into a snowbank. None of the 75 passengers and crewmen was "Sge SNOW IN DETROIT The Detroit city councd) made a special *300,000 appropriation for ■iow removal. The city already - had spedt *4*2,000, more than half here for 388 .motorist* tftoo wtrji caught in the snow atinalefMa; 111. He struggled through hip-dsep drifts three-quarters of a mile to a fgrmhouae where be telephoned state police for help. Police guided the motorists oh toot and in mer gency vehicles to town where resi st. thew open their doors tor New York, which enjoyed unsea sonably mild weather the past two days, was expected to fed the full force of the cold wave later today. RUSH (N NEW YOltK The City’s terminals Were, crow ded with incoming anp outgoing travelers. Incoming-trains were de layed as much as 6 1-2 hours. The Chicago and North Western Railway terminal at Chicago was crowded through the night with traveles who tried to catnap mi benches, windowsills and even on stairways. As a result, ’’rosident’’ tramps were forced to spend the : night on the streets ih two-below sero cold. Dear junta strolla. Don’t forget my baby bro thel; and my big sister who Is twelve years old. And be good to isasss Linda Gail Westbrook - HcMJse 225 otre "* ’ ' Dear Santa. :■ : » I am a ltttie gfrl t and a half years old. and my name is Vicky Please don’t fMget him uid dU My parents are Mr and Mrs. Dear' Santa. doU, ironing board, and iron, tojgr — —— —' — Ransom Tyndall, convicted of second degree murder, in thi itay. ing of intoxicated patroii of, the restaurant Be operated oh the Dunn -Erwin highway, lias been paroled and will be released in time to spend Christmas with ms family. Tyndall was tried for the slaying of Edward Norris W Stomping the man to death in the driveway at his restaurant. Tyndall told the court that Norris, In a drunken con ■dition, had ordered a gillie to take out and had thrown the food on the floor and cussed Mrs. Tyndall. Angered, the MjtaOrant owner had pushed the map outside, knock ed him to the concrete driveway and beaten and kicked him to death.. Prior to the Incident, Tyn- had enjoyed a good reputa tion, and his friends found the slaying hard to believe. These friends have continually forwarded petitions to Raleigh, and attorney D. C. Wilson, who defend ed Tyndall, said there were more thin s thousand names on the petition that finally Won freedom tor Tyndall. 40 DMd . (Continued from page on*)) pit. He wa* shaking with emotion from what he had sefn below. ,“It looks like, we lost them uU” he said. . . > I The rescuers Worked In teams in the dust-filled dgfkness to bulM a ‘Tire block” aihlgd at Smothehng aj dogged blaae thatj hampered rescue oMrstlons all nigHt. [The badly Injured miners-token] apt were removed to West Frank- 1 Hurt Hospital.. Their fade* were Mack With coal dust blown into the skin by the force of the Mast. RELATIVES BREAK LINES About 25 wives, , mothers sod daughters of the men trapped he ld* broke through police lilies and Made theip way to (he shaft head Where rescue headquarters were set up in the offices of the Chicago, Wilmington and l Franklin Coal Cm., owners of the mine. t They gathered. In s silent, stun ned little group, waiting for word of their menfolk. All had dressed hastily when word raced through the area after the blast. •One woman w*s In her nlght gpwn and a shabby cloth coat. She trembled In the 19-degree temper ature and her gaae never left the doors to the elevator leading down into the Masted -pit. >Rescue teams.-said it.was pos- R stole to work only about two hours lq the choking darkness 'of the mine. Rach^nwn^^^^ Sebtof West Fkankfort, Sd West City were thrown uelon by the explosion. p a crowd of about 2,80 persons Was watching a high school basket ball game when a loud speaker ap peal was broadcast for “i>r. Ben nStt” to report to the mine. The spectators. pUndTuT of the dyne disaster at Centrslla on March 28. 1947 in which 111 men’ Med, were electHfied by the words' sftd Immediately sensed something, About 760 left their seats and followed the physician toward the. Mine. I A crowd estimated hy state police at 3,000 persons, many of . them wives, parents, toothers and, sisters of the men In the mine,) jammed a highway leading to the, buildings which cluster about the mine entrance The mine Is one of the largest In the world and holds the record for! hoisting the greatest tonnage of ooal'to one day of any coal mine; to the world. 4 j Story Os (Cottoned from png* rae»' Record that the hoy must of nec essity use more caution thah other chtoinm Mscausj he must avoid to .. But Jhe Wy U now .able to re enter school, and to engage in play and “fairto normal activity,” the span, barring conudieations, "should be normal ” .The doctors did not minimise but joqffwTat ttoi mL child might not live until Christ mas and that It might be his last UiSM*** * n T other person, he with continued proper trest liM*to'uve *** m * a * ea< *" bUB have be<n strain j *snlstrfkw ~• ' 7 lltot , Stale Miff (C*ntinned from page one)) sent immediately to patrol posts. hAUtttiti « - A.man sßr»r tenced to life imprisonment in 1944 is one Os &« prisoners released hi time to spend Christmas at holhe. Paroles Commissioner T. C. Johnson said today. Johnson said the life term of Charles W. Foster. 2f. of Gastmj County, wa* commuted to 35-38 years and he Was released oh par ole to titoe to spend the Holidays at Heine after serving the usual one-fourth of his sentence. LA ORANGE, N. C. (IB A pretty blonde who mty have two husbands said, today they are ‘‘completely different" and she would be unable to choose between them without seeing both together. Agnes ttotod Sasser and her sec ond husband arrived here early today to spend Christmas holidays with her In-laws, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Sasser. She said they would go through with plans for a happy family reunion despite the strange twist her life has taken. CHOIR ENTERTAINED Members 01 the choir of the Lil lington Baptist Church were en teftained Informally on Wednesday night at the home of the pastor, the Rev. T. W. Williams and Mrs. Williams. The party followed the Ida Frlrtto Blbl4 Cla« Psted At Christmds^arfy 'Lotas Funeral [TO Be Monday ! Haywood Lucas, 85, retired em ploys* of Erwin Mills, Inc., died ■at Ms home in Erwin Saturday af jtemoon at 1:30 o’eldtk. Be had 'been in 111 health tat sometime.' Funeral services WIM be held. Monday morning- at .ll o'clock. at the Erwin Presbyterian Church. The Rev. R. M. Phillips, pastor «I the church, wUI officiate. Buriat WUI be to the Benson Cemetery. The body will lie to state at She church «>e hour prior to the services '•-¥r. Lucas was a native of Johii stoii County, son of the tote WiL. mt and Betsy Byeh Lucas. He of the community and section. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Irdne Bpak Lucas: three cas of Raleigh, well-known news ifSil nephews. ■ ™ ChilildiM cstqls weipi'fni uid Chmhill •. (C«u Jlh. Hn M« less regvftorly since World War IT began. ! WANTS U. t MONEY } For some time it has been ru mored that the primary purpose of Churchill'S visit to President Tru ' man next month is to get several f mort billions In special aid. .. , Ultimately the 77-yebr-old Prime ) Minister, who remembers well bow . lend-lease kept Britain afloat dur -3 Ing the war, may have to come 1 to that. But his closest associates say it won’t be now. They insist Church- L ill is not going on his first official 3 postwar trip to Washington With 1 hat in hand. a « He may make that clear tonight 3 when he broadcasts to the nation ■. over the BBC network, one of his ■ last public acts before sailing for 1 America a week from today. 5 Ambulance Service PHohe 2077 CROMARTIE FUNERAL HOME -. DUNN, N. C • =S=g f j HATCHER and skini^r ! 111! -liig-JX.. ! sAl£§ m§m» ; W and W - SERVICE ■ • ■ , AMb Comjtictk ■• ''f .:' M HOUR WRECKER SERVICE Talau!#!ah (aLaJislu vtilWHl J I wlww Iw^Ha.' . W>> ? Y 1 6:88 ChrlMßsia^ife‘'i4' r jqls TONIGHT «=» s^toTfton L A‘^ r *« «•« Pre t'M SSTftt Clock • 7JB mSf Revue 7:88 Ramsey Kaye. Show * 7:38 CBS News* 7:88 Restate ot live 1:« PSrry Cease RHew* 71*5 News, Evening Edition 8:88 Video Theatre, “A Child Is 1:88 Ken Murrey Shew • Jpnf 9:B# Wonderful Town * 8:38 Vek* of nrcstede* 9:38 Year Shew of Shews * 8:88. Crusade to the Pacific* . 16:38 Who Rhld That? * MM Lights Oat* . UtM TV Teen Club • 18:88 Studio One* 12:88 Bit Parade * - 11:M Services frem St. John’s f 13:3# News, Final Edition Church. Washington, D. ! sr& fssr* a 12:M In The Park* ’ y. : 3 f 13:31 Kate ftmMi Shew* *’** I I'M Burn* anA AUen* ', . t:M TV CM™ TUESDAY. DECEMBER SB, 1951 I 1:38 One Mail’s Family* 9:3# T*ot Pattern ' ”lhliHN in* I■ w ■ a J -Si ' ’ - .•*f , , llj CHRISTMAS EDITION Stores To Open On Monday Nite un«? to order to give last-mtoute shop pers an opportunity to fill their needs, It was announced today by James aplpes. Chairman ol the Retail Merchant* ComiMttM. i City offices will cloto at noon on MdndSy and wUI remain closed until Thursday mortong. City offices wiU oloee at noon on Monday and wiU remain closed until Thursday morning. County offices wiU close at noon today and will not reopen untU the start of the business day on Thurs day. Therq wUI be no sessions of either Dunn Recorder’s Court nor Harnett County Recorder’s Court until after Chirstinas. The next session of the Dunn Court will be held on Thursday.

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