Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / May 1, 1952, edition 1 / Page 1
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+WEATHER* NORTH CAROLINA Fair and continued warm today,'tonight and Friday. Highest today 80 to 85. VOLUME il Reds Rioting in Tokyo; 500' Injured TOKYO (IP) Communist led rioters shouting “go home Americans!’’ terroriz ed Tokyo on this third day of Japanese independence in l wild outburst of violence that killed two persons and injured more than 500. inclu ding scores of Americans. Surging Mav Day throngs esti mated from 260,000 to higher than 350,000 rnmpaeed through the streets after listening to violent anti-Ameriean sneeches bv Com munist leaders. They burned auto mobiles, stoned and clubbed Amer icans and other foreigners and amashed pipte glass windows; Norman Thomas, American Soci alist leader visitine here, called it a “minor dress rehearsal for revo lution.” He called off an attempted speech when the crowd began to get nut of hand. en nnarv mob hurled two Ameri can sailors in to the imperial palace moat and stoned them as thev struveled in the water. They crawled out with the crowd leer ing and shoving them. The wife of one was mauled. Seven American newspapermen were intered by stones and clubs. A medical eornsman said an American ambv.’ance was over turned. Scores of American civil ians and servicemen took shelter Inside the Dai Ichi Building, head quarters of the American forces, and other government offices. Police arrested 60 rioters in Tokvo and 68 in other parts of Japan. Thev said one policeman and one rioter were killed and near ly 300 demonstrators and about 240 policemen injured. In the downtown Meiji Park where the rioting began 20.000 .unionists and Communists sparked the demonstration that called in thousands of others May Day cele brants including students, laborers and assorted rabble-rousers. Tpgy paraded through downtown (Continued On ?a*r two) M®r Held In Theft An.AWOL soldier from Camp Ed wards, Mass., was further detained by Judge H. Paul Strickland in Dunn Recorder’s. Court this mor ning, when he was bound over to Superior court on charges of lar (Continued on Pace Two) Ingraham Picked For Naval ROTS A Dunn youth is among five Tar Heel College Students who have been notified of their selection for enrollment in the Naval Reserve Officer Candidate Program. Among the five is Jackson Reid Ingraham son- of Mrs. T. N. Ingra ham of Dunn whose selection was announced today by Lt. Cmdr. Grover C. Godwin, Inspector-In structor, Naval Reserve, in Raleigh. The candidates will receive two summers of Naval Training during their college years and be com missioned as Ensigns in the Naval Reserve upon graduation from col- | lege. The 1952 summer training will, be conducted at Long Beach,-Cali fornia. * r | Ingraham, who attended Dunn' High School and then served in the ] . Navy, ; is now a student at Atlantic' Christian College lit Wilson. Harnett County Has 78 At Wake Forest WAKE FOREST, Eighteen Harnett County students are num bered among the approximately 1700 men and women enrolled at Wake Forest College this year. Right are, from Dunn, three f .*s ,T > Erwin, two from Angler, two from LiUington. two from Buie's Creek, ami one from Copts. ' Os the group five are freshmen, four are sophomores, four are juniors, and five are seniors. Representing Dunn are Jame* West, Jr., soil of Mr. and Mrs. James West; William Elmore. son of Mr. and Mrs. P, W. Elmore; Horace Barefoot, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. ' R. Barefoot; Mayo Waggoner, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. I. Waggoner;; itoreuft Tart, son of Mr., and Mm. B. A. Tart: Bart Farthing, son of Mt. snd Mr. J. 8. Farthing; Riohard **«•«. aw of ***£•<>. Warren; and Shirley Wooten, "gp Os Off «* K-O j. A. - 3119 Bank Robbery Suspects Are Questioned E v B A I Br AT SAFETY COUNCIL MEETING A program of safety was outlined at the meeting of the Har nett County Safety Council at LiUington last Pictured are some of the officials participating. In the photo are, left to right; front row. Dr. Glenn L. Hooper, president of the Harnett Council; Vestal Taylor, president of the Cumberland Council; Colonel Everett of the Highway Safety Division; back row, C. H. Hood, Superintendant of Transportation for Harnett schools; Superintendant of Schools. G. T. Proffitt; School Board chairman, S. G. Thomas, and Corporal Rommie Williamson, head of the Harnett County Highway Patrol. (Daily Record photo by T. M. Stewart). City Mail Extended Dunn Post Office officials | will meet Friday night with citizens who live between Dunn and the old Wilson Lucas place, two miles out tending the city mail carrier service to that thickly-pop ulated section, it was an nounced this morning Postmaster Ralph Wade. The meeting will be held at 7:30 o'clock In the Riverside Presby terian Church. Postmaster Wade has favored ex tension of this service for some time and the meeting is being held with citizens in order to secure complete statistical information to furnish to the Post Office Depart ment )n Washington. If annroved, a mounted city car rier will be added to the Dunn Post office staff so that, mail will be delivered .to these homes each dav Just as mall is delivered in side the city limits. The route would extend two miles out on the Erwin highway. Coy Lucas and Belvln Strickland arc heading the citizens, group which is working to secure this service. Mr. Strickland estimated todav tha,t there are anDroxlmatelv 100 hoiisec in the new deyeinnment. OTHER SECTIONS. TOO Postmaster Wade said todav that he also wants to include the Npw T.ntinier develonmpnt on the Erwin hi»hwnv General Lee Avenue, and the -Fairfield Circle development In the northwest section of the town in the new set-un. Citizens on the Erwin high wav I are now served bv the Route 3 i carrier. J. H. Allred, who has the | 10-oest route from Dunn. I Mr. Wade pointed out today that , Mr. Allred now carries Just about . twice as much mall as any other | rural carrier and the route is now (Continued On Page two) son of Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Maxwell; Willie Pate. Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. WilUe Pate; and Elmer Mc- Caskill, son of Mrs. J. A. McCasklll Lillington has. Leon Neill Fuqupy son of Mrs. J. N. Fuqua;; and WPiiam Morgan, son of Mr., and) Mrs. j. H. Morgan.;. 1 Angler is represented bv Fabian I Morgan, son of Mr, and Mrs. P. L.| Morgan, and George S. Turner, Jr.,’ son of Mr. and Mrs. 0/8. Turner. , From Buie’s Creek are Nancy’ Marshbanks. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Marshbanks, and Archie Lynch, son of' Ml*; and Mrs. A. X. Lynch. - Coats has Evangeline Steward daughter of Mr and Mrs. H. C. Stewart. - /'i**. : West, Barefoot. Farthing, and (Eh? flaihj ttntfr I Service May Be To New Sections Olive Wont Name ■ ff ih i i ilff^ supporters of Gubernatorial Candidate Hu bei; Olive have decided against naming a county Aiaatftrger, it was announced here this morning by Fred S. Byerly, one of the local leaders. .The decision was reached he said, at a meeting of a delegation of-Harnett leaders with Judge Olive and Dr. Roy Earp, his State cam paign manager, at State headquar ters in Raleigh last Friday night. Mr. Byerly said it was an enthus iastic meeting, attended by about 20 leading citizens from all sections of the county. Also attending from Dunn was Woodrow Hill, local News and Observer circulation- agent. Among those from lillineton at the meeting were Archie Taylor and Venable Baegett. /• ,Mr. Byerlv said todav that the group decided it would be best not to name a county manager And that 1 all Olive sunporters would work j diligently and cooperatively to see i Jurors Decide When A Nudist Is Reallv Nude DETROIT (IP The courtroom of Federal Judge Frank Picard ! returned to more humdrum mat ters todav after three davs of | debate on “when is a nudist | ni'Ac?” The answer seemed to he; when she’s not wearing her sun suit. A Jury nf seven women and five' men decided vesterday that Mien Edith Chnrch had been wearing enlv her birth da <’ milt 'whe." a detaehment pf d-wtv 1 eHerift* and state troonm-s burst ill. on her and IT fellow sunbath es four vears aro.’, ptenrd l hen threw out her S6MO* dameve suit lor fa's* ar rest. He ruled thii arr~d for in decent dxaasure, was leva I Miss Church. ■ 42-veer-nld Manme. 0.. piano teacher cla'm ed the arrest had east her hu (Conthmed Oh Page two' North barnima live rml j try;, Frvers ngid about steady, supojjes plentiful, denv-nd f(Hr to .good, ifteaw hens rteodv to one cent weaker, supplies olentiful. demand fair Prices paid producers FOB farm: Fryers and broilers 36. tome reported offered at 24. Heavy hens mostly 23. few 22 Eggs; Bteadv. supplies plentiful, DUNN, N C., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 1, 1952 i that Harnett gives Judge Olive a big majority in the primary. Mr. Byerly pointed out that a county manager is always a target and,that it is difficult in any cam paign to name a manager pleasing to everybody. LET IT UP TO GROUP According to Mr. Byerly, Dr. Earp left the matter of whether or not LEFT IT UP TO GROUP ((Joutinurd Ou Page Two' Young Couple Flog Son; Hang Him From Rafter TAMPA. Fla. (IP) Police said they would file murder charges to day against an expectant mother and her young husband, who con fessed they flogged her four-year old son and hanged him from a bathroom rafter. John Cliffe, 2T, and his wife. Al | ice 28, told Deputy Sheriff Ern ; est Culbreath the little boy “mis behaved and- wet the bed.” “The kid was just uncontrolla ble,” the mother said. “He was BULLETINS LE HAVRE, France (IP) The May Day holiday prevented the Flying Enterprise 11, captained by Kurt Carlsen, from entering port today because tugboat com manders took the day off. Enroute from Houston. Tex., with a wheat cargo, she anchored outside the harbor and will be brought into port tomorrow morning. WASHINGTON (IP) The Chamber, of Commerce of the United States says President Truman’s seizure of the steel industry violated “fundamental constitutional guarantees” of private ownership of property. WASHINGTON (IP The number of civilian em ployes in government increased by 8,154 from February to a total of 2,539, 045 in March, a congressional com* i (Continued On Page two) Reynolds Says Wife Fondled By. DipJonJkt i MIAMI irn Tobacco raiUlon , aire Richard J. Reynolds II charg ' ed today in a divorce suit that his wife, an ex-chorua girl, was “kiss , ed and fondled” in her Paris hotel i room by Dominican diplomat For- ReynoMs.nsked it divorce from his Mrs. Mer*-””* O’Brien custody of their two Nearly Million Workers Now Out On Strikes ' By UNITED PRESS Strikes bv 860,000 workers today crippled the steel, oil. communications, transport ation, construction and util ities industries. Temporary control of the steel industry was handed back to the | government by the split decision of a nine-man appeals court in ! Washington. t The ne v t move was un to Steel- > workers President Philip Murray. | If he refused’ voluntarily to call, back his 650.000 striking steelwork- \ ers, the government said it would : seek an injunction forcing him to | do so. A pessimistic attitude shrouded negotiations in the strike of some 90,000 oil workers as supplies, es pecially gasoline, showed the first signs of becoming short. The coalitiion of 22 AFL, CIO and independent unions stuck firmly by their demands for a 25-cent hour ly wage increase plus higher swing and graveyard shift differentials. OIL BARGAINING A scattering of “improved" of ficers were reported at the widely scattered oil bargaining sites. Some were as high as 15 cents an hour, but the union turned them down. On other strike fronts, 40,000 lum ber workers in the Pacific North west went on strike against 700 logging and sawmill operators in Washington, Oregon, Idaho. North ern California and Western Mon (Continued on Page Two) Cpngressman Dprn ■■lei J A i • ; Congressman WHHamJenntngs Bryan Dorn of GstenWfod, 8. C. < Is without oppoaitioß far mom-. . ination in South Carolina’s Sec ond District, according to United ] Press reports today. . One of the outstanding political 1 leaders of South Carolina, Mr. . Bryan Dorn is the husband of the former Miss Millie Johnson of Coats, daughter of Mr. and, Mrs. Joe Johnson. Mr. Bryan Dorn, who frequent ly visits in iCoats and Dunn, is prominently mentioned as a can didate for both Governor and U. S. Senator in future South Caro lina elections. < This will be his third term in Congress. unruly and Woke up Tuesday mor-1 ning with nls bed wet again.” The couple calmly related to authorities how they began beat ing the boy Sunday with a belt after he "misbehaved” in front of their unfinished one-room home at Riverview about 12 miles south of here. USED LIGHT CORD Tuesday, police said,; the Cliffes trussed the boy in a tight Jacket, (Continued On Page Two) sons, aged 3 and 4, oh grcUi that she la unfit to keep them. Reynolds’ suit stated that Rubi rosa, former husband of tobacco heiress Darla Duke, was sesn In Mrs. Reynolds’ Paris hotel room last sumteer while al- X 3 FIVE CENTS PER COPY Race For Governor At Halfway Point BY I.YNN NISBET Record Correspondent RALEIGH There are new signs of enlivened activity I in the current contest between William Umstead and Hu bert Olive for the Democratic nomination for Governor. Similar statements have been made every weekend since earlv March, and mostly they have proven poor prophecy. With less than five, weeks to go it is obvious the race must soon get lively or wind-up as a dud. | Olive headquarters has been shadow-boxing, setting up straw | ■ men and knocking them down with- | | oid creating much interest among | 1 the voters. Umstead has been going { 1 along very milch as he did be(V>-» I l he had announced opposition, pro- I moting his program for the State. I for file most part ignoring his op | ponent’s indirect accusations—and : thus permitting himself to be placed | on the defensive. last week he assumed a more positive attitude and began to carry the fight to the Olive camp. This change has pleased the Umstead folks, and Olive folks say that it proves their barbs have penetrated the Umstead armor. So they profess to like it, too. There is no doubt that up till now Olive has held the offensive and has copped major share of the publicity. He has made no direct accusations against Umstead, but he has hurled charges of unfitness and incompetence against several of Umstead’s acknowledged sup porters. At Roanoke Rapids last Friday Umstead directly charged that Stalin Comes Out 1° L ferfr*r-Jfoops MOSCOW (IP) Premier Josef Stalin reviewed Rus sia’s military and air might today at a May Day parade dedicated to preparedness against Anglo-American “im perialist aggressors.” I Stalin, standing with other polit buro members atop Lenin’s mauso l leum, acknowledged with a vigor - ous. waving of his arm the cheers of some 190,000 spectators, packed into Red Square. It was Stalin’s first public ap pearance since the meeting of Rus sia’s Supreme Soviet parliament last March. He wore a cream colored marshal’s summer uniform. Diplo mats remarked on the springiness of his step as he mounted to the parapet of the mausoleum. While crack military units march ed in review below, several hun dred aircraft roared in formation overhead in an impressive dem onstration commanded by Stalin’s son, Lt. Gen. Vassily Stalin, com mander of the Moscow Air Force Garrison. I MIG-15 jet fighters, twin jet air- I craft, Tupolev four-engined bomb ers and other prize models of the Soviet Air Force flashed by, al most darkening the sky. Erwin Students Form Council ERWIN STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS Shown are the newly elected officers of the stmteM' council at Erwin Schools. Pictured are, left to right; Larry Smith, Vice- President: Geraldine Secretary; Tommy Davis, President; Barbara Hudson, Treasurer; -And Jackie Strickland, at-arms. The stodent council la something new at this school and students add faculty foalJjßjia will prove ah excellent intermediary between these groups ss well as training In iiHlssnsMl ann • obligations. (Dally Record photo by Louis Dearborn). ■>•% t-'Jffy-l Under the leadership of Miss Lula) Shepherd of the faculty, the stu dents of the Erwin School have re-1 ; cenUy organized a student council. I LMerestJn_ kind! Olive is the candidate of the Scott [ political machine, hand-picked to I carry on the policies of the present I admin ■'-t-'ition. | CITES OLIVE’S RECORD I In a letter dated April 25 and addressed to school teachers. M>-s i Annie 11. Swindell of Durham cites Olive’s Voting record against the public schools while he was in the legislature of 1933. Mrs. Swindell has lona been active in NOF4 af fairs and is presently a member of the board of the Teachers and State Employees Retirement System. There are other confusing ele ments in the unfolding picture in volving charges and counter-charg es among the candidates. In face of the all-out support given Olive by Governor Scott— who publicly said he felt his key appointees should play “on his team” to help him elect his chosen successor—most of the attacks by Olive headquarters have been lev eled at the Scott administration. Latest and bitterest of these as saults was directed at Dr. T. C. Johnson, commissioner of paroles. That was hitting close home at SECRET PLANES ARE SHOWN However, western military ob servers said they doubted the aerial parade included Russia’s latest MIG, Ilyushin and Tupolw models Which win Stalin prizes for 1961 I for their designers. Russia’s newest I aircraft usually are unveiled at the annual air show at Tushino Afrport in mid-summer. Foot soldiers led off the ground units in the hour-long march past the mausloeum. Then came the Soviet Army’s giant tanks, seige gups, rocket launchers and anti aircraft guns in impressive array. The parade ended with thorough bred cavalry galloping through the square to cadence of two military bands some 400 strong. The entire diplomatic corps Was represented in a special section flanking the square. GOVOROV SPEAKS Marshal Leonid Govorov key noted the celebration with an ad (Continued On Page two) I of a student council, its purpose the way It functions and how it I could be Set np in the school. Next l a group, with Beaman Kelly, visited I T «nmr flmnw OnEnnl TYsiatl ■ IMi ■ I Lowes drove scnooi m Durham The Record Gets Results FBI Says All Released After Questioning 9 By LOIS BYRD Record Staff Writer Search for the two-gun robber who held up the First Citizens Bank and Trtjst Company in Angier on Tues day morning and escaped with a shopping bag fitted with $44,050, turned today to Lillington, Harnett coun ty seat, eight miles from the scene of the robbery where one, possibly three suspects, were under questioning. * All the men questioned were from Lillington. William A. Murphy, special agent in charge of the FBI in North and ■ South Carolina, resumed of the investigation this morning."! As late as 11 p. m. Wednesday Murphy told reporters, “the jn vesigating is continuing, and added, “yes, we are staying in Lillington.” Sheriff W. E. Salmon who was closeted with the battery of eight to ten F. B. I. and S. B. I. agent*'in the sheriff’s office from 3 to. 11 p. m. also said, “No comment.” CROWDS GATHER Crowds attracted by the rumor that there might be a break in the case “before midnight” filled the square and milled about the cor ridors. All persons except officers were excluded from the sheriffs office where suspects were ques tioned. Murphy said definitely last night, j “No charges have been preferred; no papers filed.” Jimmy Murchison, slim, dark member of a well known Harnett County family was seen to enter jthe Sheriffs office armmd 3 p. Patrol * - ■jfc e _ t V ( S hWtty Murchison who ImsSHMm blocks of the courthouse served four years in the Navy and is mar ried and the father of two children, one a baby of two weeks. At present he is unemployed but drivns g black Mercury car. Sheriffs deputies said he does not have’any court record. -'./'NjJsgpi CONFERS WITH LAWYER Around 7 p. m. Murchison walked out of thft' Sheriff’s office and across ; i the street to the office of A. R. ' J Taylor junior member of the i firm of Ybung and Taylor. Earlier, James Murchison, father of Jimmy | Murchison, was seen conferring , with Taylor in his office. ’’ Murchison was not accompanied (Continued On Page two) - Bryan Company Changes Hands Bryan Rock and Sand Company, with headquarters in Raleigh, which ■ operates eight large pits in this tCnntlnlMMl an pace Sami student conncß. J" An assembly program «M JmM| at which the group ouUtemt’.l • . suit of their mvest^ NO:H»4
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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May 1, 1952, edition 1
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