Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Nov. 26, 1952, edition 1 / Page 1
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+WEATHER+ Coudv with showers and turn ing cooler west portion. Cloudy and colder tonight, preceded by brief showers east portion. With “Prestone” Anti-Freeze You’re set, you’re safe, you’re sure. VOLUME II ***■3l I IS I t lij FALCON THANKSGIVING OFFERING Shown is part of the foodstuffs contributed by the Churches of the Pentecostal Holiness denomination as a Thanksgiving offering for the orphanage at Falcon The donations this year were so large they were placed in the big auditorium, instead of in the smaller structure where they usually are placed. In the fore ground is Rev. W. Eddie Morris, Superintendant of the Conference conferring with officials as they look over the huge ingathering. The food and clothing were brought to Falcon yesterday by a caravan of about 150 cars and trucks. (Daily Record photo by Louis Dearborn). * Record Offering At Falcon Harnett Expecting Quiet Thanksgiving Indications today pointed to a quiet Thanksgiving observ ance in Dunn and throughout Harnett and the surround ing area. Several churches have scheduled deliveries, except special delivery, special Thanksgiving services. RECORD TO PUBLISH As usual, the feature of the day The Daily Record yill publish as for most people will be a Thanks- usual. giving feast with turkey furnishing Corporal Rommie Williamson the centerpiece. ' Sheriff Bill Sabnon and Police Most business firms atAi practice Chief Alton. Cobb today joined in l ally all Tdvemmental, offices zfifr tg^pyga be closed. There will be no mail exercise extreme caution. Rural Mail Boxes Destroyed In Area Dunn Postmaster Ralph Wade warned today that some body, possibly pranksters, is inviting trouble with Uncle Sam for tearing down rural mail boxes. The postmaster reported that approximately 25 mail boxes have been torn down on Dunn, Route 3 and about a dozen on Dunn, Route 2. This, reminded the Dunn Post Office official, is a Federal crime and the guilty persons, if caught Barbour Acquitted On Assault Charge L. C. Barbour, Sr. manager of | the River View Flying Service at Erwin, yesterday was acquited in 1 Harnett Recorder’s Court of as sault on Charles McLamb, Jr., a mateur pilot and automobile seat cover salesman. The fracas between the two late Sunday afternoon, October 12, in the shelter adjoining the filling I station at the airfield resulted in three charges against Barbour, for mer foreman of the Harnett Coun ty grand jury and retired Erwin ‘Dunn, Linden Farm Youths Win Awards RALEIGH—Three young North Carolinians have been named win- 1 ners of sectional awards in 4-H Club work for 1952, L. R* Harr 111 State 1 4-H leader for State College’s Agri cultural Extension Service, an nounced today. Each of the youths will be given a free trip to the National 4-H Club Congress in Chicago, November 30- December 4. William Harris. 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Harris of Route 4, Green ville. is one of 16 winners in coll and water conservation, sponsored Jay Firestone Tire and Rubber Com ) Harris has carried a soil and water conservation project for two - years, was county winner for two years, district winner tor two years, and State soil conservation demonstra tion winner in 1950. He was a dele gate to the National Club Congress in 1950 and was topped into the TELEPHONES: 3117 - 3118 - 3119 , and convicted, would be subject to both fine and imprisonment. STARTED HALLOWEEN At first, the crime was attributed to Halloween pranksters since that was the first time destruction of boxes was reported. However, Mr. i Continued on Page Two I I Cotton Mill employee. McLamb swore out warrants charging Barbour with public drunkenness, illegal sale of beer and assault with a pistol. BEER CHARGE DROPPED Barbour was acquited of the as -1 sault and public drunkenness | charges, and a nol pros was taken i as to the sale of illegal beer. He was represented by the law firm 1 of Wilson and Johnson. ! In counter charges heard at the I (Continued on page two) State 4-H Honor Club in 1952. 1 Marjorie L. Jackson, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Jackson of Route 1. Dunn (Sampson County), is ohe of eight sectional winners who will receive free trips for work in frozen foods, sponsored by Inter national Harvester Company. She has been a 4-H member for six years and has carried a frozen foods proj ect most of the time. For the past three years she has been both countv and district winner. Johnnie Tew, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Tew of Rt 1, Linden is one of 12 sectional winners in entomology, sponsored by Hercules Powder Company. Tew has been in 4-H work for six years and has com pleted 47 projects. He attended the National Club Congress last year as State cotton winner. This year he war district winner in cotton, i leadership, achievement, and ento i mology. (Eh? JUailij Jitmrfr The Falcon Orphanage at Falcon has much to be thankful for this Thanks giving—the biggest offering in the history of the institu tion. Gifts of food, clothing and money poured into Falcon yesterday as a caravan of about 150 cars and trucks brought the annual Thanks giving offerings from the churches in the Pentecostal Holiness Con ference to the orphanage there. There was over $7,000 in cash and about SIO,OOO in goods. Churches throughout three states went all-out this year in their ef fort to secure needed items, and this year's offerings proved '.the larcpse exgL -Jlaiallv thf dotations but this year when it became ob vious that the small building would not hold it all, it was placed in the larger auditorium. Churches of seven Pentecostal Conferences sent representatives bearing gifts. These conferences are: Eastern Virginia, Virginia. Western North Carolina. North Car (Continued on Page Eight) Federal Agents Take Five Men Five defendants were facing trial in U. S. District Court today fol lowing a raid on a whiskey still in Western Harnett County. * Charged with violating Federal whiskey laws are: Kermit Lee Bro wer, 29, James T. Cameron. 22 and James Wilber Brower, 23, all of Cameron, Route 2: James A Peterson, 19, of Vass, Route 2, and James T. Jones, 19, of Manchester. Route 1. The defendants, all Negroes, were given a preliminary hearing be fore U. S. Commissioner T. L. Hon at Fayetteville and released un der SSOO bond for trial at the next term of Federal Court in Ra leigh. I During the raid, conducted ir I Johnsonville Township. Federa’ I agents destroyed a 250-gallon still poured out 16 gallons of non-tax- I paid whiskey and seized two auto ! mobiles. Cumberland Countq ABC offic ers assisted the Federal agents with the raid. Burglars, Bears Consume Turkey CHICAGO (IP) Police said to day burglars took 22 live turkevs, 16 dressed turkeys, 450 pounds of chicken, and a quantity of eggs from a poultry market here in a pre-Thanksgiving raid. ROSSVILLE, Kan. (W Mr. and Mrs. 17. R. Zeller have a firudge against what they believe to be a neurotic bear. Instead of hibernating during the current blizzard, as all good bears should, they said the ani mal entered their farm and ate a pre-Thanksgiving dinner of 18 turkeys. •MARKETS* EGGS AND POULTRY RALEIGH (lit Central Nortt Carolina live poultry: Fryers anc broilers steady, supplies adequate demand fair. Heavy hens steady supplies fully adequate, demand fair. Prices at farm up to 10 am today: Fryers or vrollers 2*4-2 pounds 32, heavy hens 24-26. RALEIGH EGGS: Steady, rec eipts about adequate, demand good (Continued on page two) .\ * k DUNN, N. C., WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 26, 1952 Rogers Gets U. S. Legal Post Churches Plan Special Rites For Holiday Churches throughout the Dunn-Erwin area will hold special services tonight and tomorrow in .commemoration of Thanksgiving. Most of the services will be marked by j special offerings for the or- i phanages supported by these j churches. | At the Divine Street Methodist j Church there will be a special Thanksgiving Eve service tonight | at 7:30 with W C. Fowler in char- ' ge. Rev. J. W. Lineberger an- j nounced. A special offering will be made for Methodist Orphanage. At Glad Tidings Church tonight at 7:30, the regular mid-week ser vices Will be services of Thanks giving. according to the pastor. Rev. A. A. Amerine. SUNRISE SERVICE A sunrise Thanksgiving Service will be held tomorrow morning at 7:00 a. m. at the First Baptist Church, the pastor. Rev. E. P. Russell said. At the Gospel Tabernacle the usual prayer meeting held on Thursday night at 7:30 will be a service of Thanksgiving instead, the pastor, Rev. Bane T. Under wood said. In Erwin all of the churches will combine in a Thanksgiving service at the First Baptist Church with the sermon being delivered by Rev. R. W. Tedder, pastor of the Erwin Church of God. The services are under the direction of the Erwin Ministerial Association and Rev. Forest Maxwell is the host pastor. IfIWOIL Rape Charge Following a preliminary hearing yestqrday in Harnett Recorder’s Court, Judge M. O. Lee found probable cause against Archie Ma son, charged with rape of Lenoia Norris on November 19. Mason, who is married to a sis ter of the prosecuting witness, is in jail in default of $5,000 bond. Testimony of Mrs. Jasper Norris, mother of the prosecpAilng wit ness is that her daughter is 30 years ofd, of sub-normal mentality and cannot read or write. The alleged crime took place, she testified, when she went to a doctor’s office and left Lenoia alone in the house with Mason. In other cases probable cause was found against Jesse Bill Rag land, young Negro charged with breaking and entering Walter Tuc (Continued on page two) Campbell To Help Church Leaders President Leslie Campbell of Campbell College an nounces that the College is prepared to help church lead ers in this area through in-service training for choir di rectors, accompanists, Sunday School teachers, and other church leaders interested in learning how to do more ef fective work in their local churches. In cooDeration with the Rural Church Department of the North Carolina State Convention. Rev. Henry E. Walden, Jr., Secretary, Campbell College is invitine pas tors and lay leaders of Bantist I Churches in this area of the State 1 to attend a special meeting at the | College on December 5. The Rev. Mr. Walden will open the program with a message a) the regular chapel services at 10:0(* a.m. A Panel Discussion will fol low at the Buie’s Creek Baptist Church on “The Needs for In-Ser vice Training for Present Church Leaders.” Apoearing .on this pane’ to present what Campbell Collet*? has to offer in the field of adult education will be the 'following members of the College facultv President Campbell: Dr. Percy Q Langston, Department of Religious BHMTIIVS BUFFALO, N. Y. (IP)— Plans to build a $23,000,000 plant at Hopewell, Va., were announced today by the National Aniline division of Allied Chemical & Dye Corp. CHARLESTON, S. C. (IP)— Charleston’s famous gardens will begin their winter season tomorrow with camellias and bright berries as their wintertime attractions. ' NEW YORK (V)— The United States Steel Corp. has an (OnttotA Ob rage Two) ft's Thanksgiving In Korea They Huddle In Cold Trenches By ROBERT UDICK :IP) Staff Corres ponde n t SEOyL, Korea, Thurs. (IP)— Icy-cold weather and a lull in the fighting ushered in Thanksgiving Day today for American Gls huddled in the 155-mile Korean battle trenches and foxholes along front. The last major activity was a tre- > mendous U. N. aerial attack yes- : terday on a sprawling Communist | supply and troop center in eastern Korea. American fighter-bombers hurled tons of bombs and flaming jellied gasoline on the target, touch ing off huge fires and explosions THEY’LL GET TURKEY As the ground war simmered to scattered patrol actions. Gls looked forward eagerly to the traditions' Thanksgiving fare of hot turkey, dressing, cranberry sauce and pump kin pie. The dinner was sent to the front in insulated containers to keep it hot for the shivering soldiers, who had to eat it right away. Other wise. it turned into a hard-icy mass | in the bitter Korean weather. United Press correspondent Vic- 1 tor Kendrick reported that a ful’ | moon shone over drifting wisps of overcast during the night along the central front, where the battle for SniDer Hill has raged for 42 days. THANKSGIVING MESSAGES U. N. Commander Ggn, Mark Clark and Bth Armv commander Gen. James A. Van Fleet took time out from preparing for President elect Eisenhower's visit to Kor?:i to issue Thanksgiving messages to their soldiers. / In Tokyo, Clark reminded the they still hawe. much 1> ™tTlSWfWfl’for, despite the war. He said America’s strength and courage, its high moral determin ation and the preservation of its dignity, freedom and rights as hu man beings were their blessings. “As we solemnly give thanks for these blessings, let us also pray that our determination and our faith shall never falter,” he said. Van Fleet, in Seoul, said tha* Americans at home were thankfu l that loved ones in Korea have been snared. At the same time, he said, their tears “will be shed for those of us who have gone to a better world, the men who gave their lives that we might live in free dom.” “Let us be thankful todav that we are still free to celebrate this Thanksgiving Day,“ he said, i Yesterday’s air attack was car ried out by Air Force and Marine fighter-bombers on a vast Red cen ter southwest of Wonsan, an im portant east coast port. Education: Professor David Smith Head of the Music Department: Rev. Weldon Johnson. College Chap lain and Pastor of Buies Creek Baptist Church. In connection with I this panel discussion the pastors J and laymen present will have an I opportunity to express to the Col lege faculty and administration the type of 'training church learj-rs | feel is most needed. At the close I I of the morning session Campbell College will serve lunch to the visiting pastors and laymen in the educational building of the church “A Good Church Budget” will 1 1 be the subject for the afternoon ■ panel. The Rev. W. Shelley Caudle nastor of Waccamaw and Western r Prong Baptist Churches near Lake Waccamaw, will address the group j on “How to Initiate a Good Church : i 'Continued On Pare two' i ■t MONEY FOR PHONE SURVEY Mrs. James Coate is shown ofening the letters received by the Dunn Chamber o( Commerce in. response to the requst foe funds to make a survey of the tel .(■nhuoe. situation to detgrmi* yvhetlwr j nhuesjt for an mcrease In phone rates Is justified. 75nfV a’Mtaall proportlod of the- * letters mailed out have been returned, so far, however, according to Chamber Manager Norman Suttles, and he urges those who plan to do so at once so that Dunn may raise its quota. (Daily Record photo by Louis Dearborn). Midwest Is Hit By Blizzard ; 12 Dead OMAHA, Neb. (IP)— A prairie blizzard, blown by winds of up to 76-miles per hour, turned*, the sprawling territory from the Texas Panhandle to the Minnesota like country into a frozen, glistening wasteland today and killed at least a dozen persons. The storm caused the death of four persons in Nebraska alone. And the choking snow and treacher ous ice ’ were likely to cause more fatalities. The stinging snow, driven almost horizontally by the gusty wind, will probably slow Thanksgiving travel to a crawl, even with the big rotary snowplows biting through the drifts. TRANSPORTATION PARALYZED Bus, rail, auto and air travel was completely paralyzed in Ne braska? and throughout much of the Midwest. Hundreds, perhaps thou sands, of motorists were trapped in their cars or in little wayside towns. . . '■ ••' 4 t V ,'■* i ■■«(•» .!■»■■ ~ , s . * • .-?’*«Pf opS-:w : S;.SA . I . - JlfeWyK Hr. lS^H|; ! !pSl»:ji^js:J;|teiidpp : VkV ■s^Mfr^Hk...-• |i§ g ■I 'v' ,<H i : Jp 1 CHRISTMAS CHECKS BEING MAILED The Cnmwrdil Bank is a busy place these days attar regular banking hoars. Checks (or the Christmas Club savings that have been deposited this year are being mailed out so the recipients will be «Me to use the money for their Christmas buying. This year is the greatest year since the club was started according to Cashier J. N. Stephenson, with a total of $50,703 being mailed out to some 500 club members. This is about $5,000 more titan was maßfe* §j last year. Shown mailing the checks are; Mrs. Yondrue Nass, Miss Janet Jackson, Mrs. Rosalie Stephen son, Mrs. Addle Young, Mrs. Mary Jones, Mrs. Earl Lever, Mrs. Dennis Farrell and Miss Joyce Watson. .5* (Daily Record photo by Louis Dearborn). FIVE CENTS PER COPY The storm hit the Great Plains I states of Texas. Oklahoma. Kansas, j Nebraska. lowa, the Dakotas and i piled drifts high in Wisconsin and Minnesota. It hurled itself against ,! the mountain states of Colorado, Wyoming and Montana, threatening | stock herds. I A milder snowstorm moved into I Illinois early today, and fore ! casters said snow flurries were likely for much of the state later today. The first fall hit Quincy and the Moline area. It was a “warm” blizzard, with temperatures ranging generally in the 20’s and the snowfall seldom ! heavier than six inches. But the i (Continued on Page Eight) The Daily Record Gets Results NO. 251 Hcey’s Former Investigator k Appointed NEW YORK (IP— Presi dent-elect Dwight D. Eisen hower today selected William P. Rogers of Bethesda, Md., to be deputy attorney gen eral in the new administra tion. Ropers has been chief counsel for : the Senate investigating commifc | tee which turned up influence ped i dling and corruption in the gov ■ eminent. 1 Eisenhower made the s“lection J ! after cc-nfevrin? with Herbert Brcffnell who will be the np'v at torney general. Both Brownell and Rogers were at Eisenhower heud- I quarters today. • Rovers in 1947 was chief counsel | .of the Senate W r ar Investigating * | Committee. In 1948 and 1949 he served as chief counsel for the Sen ate Permanent Investigating Com mittee under Sen. Clyde R. Honey 1 (D-NCI. NATIVE OF NEW YORK Regers is a 30-vear-old native of Norfolk. N. Y. and formerly served I as an assistant district attorney for i New York County, i James C. Hagerty. press secretary ' to the president-elect, emphasized 'Cnntlnneri on n»r- twe) Three Accidents Reported Today | Three accidents, all with com- I paratively light damage, and nine ! involving personal injuries were re | ported today by the Dunn Police i Department. One of the drivers •was charged with drunken driving [in the only arrest resulting from -j thebe oraches, On Saturday afternoon at 2:15, • a 1950 Lincoln, owned by James Robert Bass of Route 2 Dunn was backing out from Henry’s Body Shop, when it struck a 1948 Chevro let. driven by Matthew Hallsdorf of Delmar. N. Y.. who was trav eling south on Clinton. | Damage to the Hallsdorf car was j about S2O and to the Bass car about SIOO. Bass was charged with drunken driving. At 10:30 Saturday night, there was a three-car crash at the Broad Street Railroad crossing, when a 1951 Chevrolet truck, driven by Alga Scott and owned by Silas Whittington Transfer Co., hit two i cars which were waiting for a train to pass. The truck hit the rear of a 1948 Chevrolet, driven by Sherill Ray . Hardison and drove it into the car ahead, a 1948 Chevrolet, driven j by Clandie Alexander Bennett, , Dunn Route 2. Damage to the Ben ' nett car was $10; to the Hardi ' son car $75: and to the truck, $25. Third accident reported was one ’ Monday afternoon at 3:20 on East Cumberland, between a 1946 Ford 5 truck, driven by Horte Daniels and ■ | owned by the town and a 1948 - Chevrolet, driven by Edith Mat r thews Lee, Dunn Route 1. and own i ed by Archie Lee. The truck was making a right i turn into an alley when Mrs. Lee, i i backing from a parking lot into i the alley, hit it in the right side. ; | The truck was undamaged and the Lee car to the extent of about S4O.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Nov. 26, 1952, edition 1
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