Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / March 21, 1952, edition 1 / Page 1
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+weAtHte* NORTH CAROLlNA—lncreasing nlnuillnaaa mnndl mariw tadap meajt to. -'•W-Itliongn BH9| WBomt yw* night, showers beginning In thp West portion tonight. Tomwriw showers nnd scattered thunder - storms, windy and mild, MhoM by (osier. VOLUME n Ike FathionNof* j t £ . V;/' ' » J* / ■ « WHtU politicians still expressed surprise over General Eisenhow er’s write-in vote in the Wisconsin primary. Iff*. Francesca Lodge, wife Os the governor of Connecti cut,' furthered the Ike boom by i . .turning, up In New York in the hat , end “monocle" pictured above. . the campaign hat is a light blue faille pillbox beret which cm be I worn off the face or tilted to one t aide, if desired. (fnternatkmel) _____ Current Will Be Shut Off Sunday » In Dunn Section Power will be off Sunday, March 23, IMS, In rural ssmwianiilei and in the Towns of Dunn, Erwin, Wade, Godwin and Falcon from 9:09 A. M. until 6:45 A. *L and 1:30 P. M. until 4:3* P. M. The business district of Dmnn artf*' few Min arena will net jfeta* large] traaafeflhm ate. mr-“- ranadiag community a M percent , increase In avaftaMe dMMnI and arsind Dean completing a large new feeder which wRi be capable es carrying the entire lead. Switohei Imhi jMjgn aapeSfasi**, Them new ttanafenaem ane a \ new Mb way feed % being Instal led to koproVo service to ear 1 eetteesers ta the eeragwnlty and wttl assure adequate and eon thmen service which b. put of the Cf*l program of expansion and improved service. TMt that wu ehaoen when It win effect the fewest and be least inconvenient, afltlnneed H. M. Tyler, DtstHct ) Boyd Says. Ike Should Stick To Soldiering PINETOWN IP! Plgbrnder OI»a' Ray Boyd, a Democratic . preaMentlal rand Hali. took a look I at the poMteal pletdre today and anltfod. Boyd first turned up hta near at the priillinttal primaries. The | New Hampshire race, Wmld, “was The breeder es fine ham Baled that Gen. Bought FtaiUhiwer <i. - • , i. . r ~ • --Li * ' ‘ ■ Aft. «s ».| r>,. ti V*ff * < lffili , ftSf > '■ 1 ijrT/liOiS LSOUDT c. f/fZ6/lS , Wodfif Approve New Bonds W - * » r~ ,77 ' I i» favorable for building. _ A similar vkflf cam© from HAT* fotaMES: 111? . Ml# • 311 b Ridgway Warns Russia May Hit Japan Senator Russell Is Choice Os Southern Stales Editor’s Note: The following dispatch on 800. Richard B. Rumell of Georgia completes a series this newspaper printed recently an candidate* fey the Democratic presidential qomlna tloi.. Russell entered the rare after articles on others were printed. By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correvneudent WASHINGTON <UP) Richard Russell had Just completed one fall term us governor of Georgia When he took his seat in the Unit ed States Senate oh January 12. i 933. aged 35 Years. „ He has been In the B?npte ever since. Russell was the Southern choice for president at the 1948 Democratic national convention. But 1» dW not Join, the tx>|Una statea’ rights Southerners who uitlqintely nominated ,(. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina. Russell-Is the choice of the South' again this year. This time Russell and his supporters probably will bolt if the Democrat* again nomi nate President Truman. That would be a political movement more for midable than Thurmond’s and the states’ righters. Russell’s populari ty extends outside the South. OPPOSES CIVIL RIGHTS His break with the administra tion, however, is on the' Mistering civil rights issue and some other domestic policies. Russell calls Mr. Truman’s program a “civil wrongs” JbilL, Northern minorities would be hobble to RUMPU’S presidential qUfididacy. Russell would go for am form of civil ttebta eotapro- IMPS. Truman wlll not, , Page's sl§er BeHJlYektl utaw pleading guilty go second-degree murder ip the death of, former State Rep. U. 8. P*ge Page form erly aerved as Chief of Police in Dunn. .*£L .*> . J ■ ‘ ’■ i TBe plea came as surprise late yesterday after Sawyer’s at torneys had raised objections’over methods by. whtah they skid a con fession was obtained. Bawyer-took the stand and when asked fay the prosecution to say whether he shot Pag* answered: "Yes, I did." - ■■ ■ ENTERED PLEA , • A pies of guilty to wcond degree murder Was entered and Judge Walter J. Bone of Nashville passed sentence. v ! Defense attorney James Nance pictured Sawyer as a “destitute poverty-stricken” tenant mistreat ed by a wealthy prosperous land lord. He acid Sawyer had beet DTOocung over an uoiur vcuie* m SlU or vraa , A*;;to dpath with eivht bullets from a 3ft eatlber riM I * - : without any further delay., (IJtv ]3 aiiu .y.rr : 4., , T .. T ,-. . HOLDING REVIVAL Pictured arh left to right; Rev. C. tCi Forehand, who ta eenduetlng a revival: at the Gospel Tabernacle; Rev. Bain T. Undrawood, the pastor;* and Mrs. Forehand, who*is providing music f« the services. There will be services each /re- « ! nine at 1:48. (Daily Record photo by V. ML Stewart). " —*—- —-- _-l —*——- —“— ■ —• >B. u' ji / i § •,. i_ • fit n*' : ji On Theft At Grave The State Supreme Court agreed with Ernest Mat thews .that the flowers were taken off his wife’s grave too scon and unlawfully. ■ In <4* 9119 opinions filed Wed - pesdey. the high oourt upheld the > verdict Os the Harnett County Su r perior Court that bfatthews wag : entitled to damagte for “mental suf r faring” after a Harnett florist < • without authority, removed and des- I ttoyel dhe-. floral designs decorat f lng Ids grave. | - Matthews sued the norist. Cath , rjrp Forrest, trading as Angler flor r Ist,' In s civil action charging tres pass, and asking 81,000 in damages The ode was first beard in Har ‘ nett Recorder’s Court and was 4p ' pealed by the defendant to Super ior Oourt where R waa heard at the Octebir. 1951 term. The defendant demurred to Mat ! thews’ complaint on the ground that J it did not state facta sufficient to 1 constitute a cause of action. Her 1 Band was overruled in recorder's : court, superior court and Wednes day the State Supreme Court up • held the lower court's ruling. Judge S. J. Ervin held that “com i pensdting damages guy be award-! -ed a tojswMjuU feough^iia t m«atal suN, iU^j-there’ j lals for such * project* at this Out of the 100 counties in'the DUNN, N. C., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 21, lfl?t faring may not be aoCtaapanled by any physical injury." Matthegm' wife died Nov. 14. 1951, and wgs buried the next day in “the plaintiffs grave lot” in HeUlt Creek Baptist Gnurch in Harnett County. X • • ’* x He raid “at least M beautiful floral designs donated by the plain tiff and friends and relatives of the deceased, were-placed on the tCentimed On Page Two) Steel Strike Now Set For April Bth ; - 4 WASHINGTON « The CIO United Steelworkers postponed their threatened cation wide strike today until April 8, leaving it up to the steel industry to accept or meet a 17 Vi-cent-hourly pay boost and union shop re commended by the Wage Stabilization Board. • vTtoe union’s 170-man wage policy Committee accepted th*. board’s re rcommendations shortly after 2 tEST, but warned U will can ,a strik* [ if an agreement is not reached wiUi J the ateel companies by the nsw dead I The wiife board’s receommeOtta uon. a» I The ttgehrorkers postponed their - hours before - Paftmra gßWStaf 1 .‘SrSSagSSSw crucial issue of steel iwloes. Li r Sri,. ' j -n&raHHf 3f • *•* • -f ■BEk.VT'T'H'-\w... fvn my ■■ ■ I ■ \■ s wVi H ■ | 5,000 Planes, Subs Poised for Action Ii; TbKYO (IP) Gen. Mat , |hew B. Ridgway warned to day that Russia has com i Bleted building a vast mili •; nary force in Siberia and is , for military action f 'Against Japan “at any *■ time.” He said the Soviets have more than 5.000 fighter planes in Siberia and a fleet of submarines in the Japan Sea. s The supreme United Nations com mander told the heads of Japan’s three largest and most influential newspapers of the Russian buildup in Siberia and an Sakhalin Island, Just north of Japan, in an inter view. He saidWapan Communits al ready have begun (Blowing the same pattern that Chinese Reds t:’ marked out for victory over the ‘■’ Nationalists. TRYING TO SEIZE LABOR Communists in Japan are trying ; to seize control of labor unions and and are forming cells adyicatlE Ig violence even* as they | ■ did in China, Ridgway said. ” “This is a manifestation that the alms of the Soviet military power 4 are now directed toward control of Japan,” he said. »■' Ridgway said U. S. troops would , remain in Japan after a peace r treaty for the sole reason “to op pose such Soviet ainbitions and the threat or Soviet military power.” “We have no territorial ambit ions of possessing Japan's tiny country nor any deaire to exercise political rule over Japan,” he said. Ridgway received the newspaper executives kt his Dai-Ichi headquar ters office a few hours as V. Thomas Rites Ire Arranged r Funeral arrangements were com pleted today tor Joaeph J. (Uncle , Joe) Thomas, 93, retired Dunn mer- I chant wpo died Thursday morning t at 12:45 at his home here on Bast 1 Broad Street. Mr. Thomas was one of Dunn’s 1 oldest and best known citizens. He - was engaged In the merchantile bus ( iness until his retirement because e of ill health about 15 years ago. He (Cantinned On Page Tarn) strongly they will nQt go along with any proposal which does not aa sure a compensating price increase, and some observers expected the njtadintlwH to bog down again if tltajprice issue ta not settled to the staeknan’s ’satisfaction. > | Mott observers fait that the steet wwßtaarraxeptance of the board’s : rptssninaiMlartona shifted the me ant*Tor settling Me dispute square » FIVE CENTS PER COPY ■■ ■■ —■■■ . ...I- i ...ib sen — _____ * : 4 ~ I n n JBLyykJft - ip : Jr' W B Wm f Wlf IWt ® ' .. : - ' ' ' ' DUNN-HI SENIORS PRESENT PLAY Shown is the cast of the Senior p»y presented last night »f the Dunn High School auditorium. Pictured are, left te right; L. C. Draughon, Annie Merle hidtsb J. K. Adcocx, May Lou Frink, Helen Faircloth, Billie Temple, Rita Fleishman, Harvey Eldridne, Ql therine Stephenson, Tommy Waggoner, Gay Johnson, Claude Pope, Edna Pearl Wood uwdwß Surles. (Daily Record photo by J. W. Temple, Jr.) > i Taft Forces Look To In Wis.; Ike May Returni : W WASHINGTON Os) Sen. Robert A. Taft’s opponents today viewed his withdrawal from the New Jer sey primary as a sign of weakness, but the Ohioan’s supporters retort ed raaj he vM |KOVe Ula istrength Dwight O. Eisenhower for the OOP praudttttial nomination .raid Taft gave their campaign it* third hta beoet when he pulled out of the April 15 New Jersey contest. The general already has swamped Taft in New Hampshire and received an attonishing write-in vole in Min nesota. IKE MAY CAMPAIGN* Eisenhower added to Ids support ers’ jubilation yesterday by saying he ta “re-examining” his past de cisions as a resu!t of Hta Minne sota primary. His statement* indi cated he may come home knd make a personal campaign. , .J - Within the next few weeks, re liable sources in Paris bsttave. he will ask to be relieved as supreme commander of the North Atlantic Pact forces to pave the way for his. return. The period between mid-May and June 1 was reported the most logi cal time. This would bring Eisenhower back to the V h. Just after the tate state primary election and well before the Republican rational convention July 7. BARRED IN MARYLAND The Eisenhower cam j received a minor setback last night when the Maryland attorney general’s office continued On Pngs tail Safely Council Will Hold Meet Harnett County’s new , Jsltjy'j Council, faced with the IHMttB ..•*£&• 1 sss^isssnt « issvti the courtroom i n uahsgtag. ’ «Jhw.ra Principals of the county, schools have particularly been urged to at tend the meeting and bring with, W* _ Baptist Revival Is Set It Dtglll UR Ja—” XL' ■ Revival sttMora win begin Sun- 1 day, March 33, at the morning war- ] ship period in the First Baptist j Church. Monday through Friday, servtees win be bttd at 10:90 A. ,M. -Sunday through Friday servtees will bo hold each evening at 7:30 P. M. D*. j. A- ffilta, a former pastor of tt»e churth, for. some time pastor of the First Baptist Church, Sber-1 min, Texas, atti. Sow pastor of the Tabernacle Baptist Church, Raleigh will be the guest minister. Everyone anxiously awaits the messages of this "great man of God.” Rev. tOd Williams, pastor of the, UlHngton Baptist Church win lead* the music. Mrs. D. C. Woodall of Erwin wm be the organist. The, public is cordially Invited to participate in this series of ser vices. .4 '■ •' ■:>’ One feature of the week will be a “DAY OF PRAYER.” A Prayer Ciodk has been prepared. Members and others are invited to sign the . .V.v : i ’ Leigh And Bogad£ Win Movie Oscars y-A si - HCIMSWjfOOD -W- Humphrey gMpr’irns 1 m Oscar night in one of the biggest upsets in KriiyweM htatory. ? vK' Le^h s^ I cease a twe-ttme Oscar winn*. NO. 75 | Prayer Clock for one (or mseflitap I hour period. i The plan is that each person *t , tending the prayer serftass. _,Wy SSltaSsS r*!k the ttrnrch sanctuary. Soft amn *v**m*W gtvines* of personal add na(ki»l sins. To make confession, repent ance, and intercession hr sfaH-. church, community*. ccuaty, iMßfe ( national, and world Bplrttnaft^ who aim called by oijf seek my face and'turn f£mLJt& wicked ways; then will I ' heaven, and will festive ~Bmh§K and will heal their The public ta invite* to join to this day of .praye#, ! ' ' g| ~ v>rJ> ~t*jC ' v^3[UE
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 21, 1952, edition 1
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