PAGE TWO BULLETINS i Continued tram par* 1) lai Stevenson during the election campaign,’’ he said. He admitted, however, he voted for Ike because “I couldn't go back on my relatives.” NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. HP) Police had no trouble in solving a false fire alarm case here Wednesday. When police and firemen arrived at the call box they noticed fresh footprints in the snow and followed them to a near by building. Edward Brustowicz, 31. and Carl Erickson, 30, were found hiding in the basement. The two men denied turning in the false alarm, but when their shoes fit the prints they were taken to court and sentenced to 6 months on disorderly conduct charges. PEMBERTON, Minn. (IP) This town isn't big enough for a private liquor store, it was learned today. Villagers voted to license a private dealer but found that no matter where the store might be located, it would be too close to the village school. The law requires liquor stores to be at least 1,500 feet from a school. There isn't that much room in Pemberton. TROY. N. Y. l3lllll Johnson. Mrs. Johnson, 58, died of a heart ailment in her hotel suite here yes terday. Friends said she had been planning another Afri can safari. Between 1912 and his ueath in a plane crash in 1937>, the Johnsons explored the jungles of Africa and the cannibal islands of tne South Pacific, photographing wild animals and wild peoples from the ground and the air. COLUMBIA, S. C. (IP' Families and sweethearts kept a far fiung vigil last night for news of 37 Korean war veterans from five Southeastern states aboard a missing chartered airliner. Aboard the C-46, one of nine planes bringing the men to Ft. Jackson near here for discharge or reassignment after furloughs, were soldiers from the Carolinas, Georgia, Florida and Alabama. . HONOLULU 'IP' Evangelist Billy Graham, recovered from a bout with influenze contracted on his recent tour of Korea, was to leave for the mainland tonight. Graham was held up here on his way back from Korea and spent a week at Waikiki Beach hotel recovering his health. He said he also used the time to start writing a book about his Korean tour. ISSAQUAH, Wash. (IP) Disaster crews searched for seven bodies today in a 10-foot crater dug by a four-motor Flying Tiger Airline plane that crashed and burned Wed nesday night in a driving rainstorm. The ill-fated C-51 midnight. The plane was headed for Seattle, Wash., whew burned furiously in a field of ankle-deep mud long after it evidently caught one wing on nearby Squak Mountain and plunged to earth on the farm cl' Vincent Herlehy 2 1 -; mi es south of here. Ike Assured (Continued from page one) that Korea offers no targets “worthy" of atomic treatment. But the Atomic Energy Commis sion is busily stockpiling weapons which it says are specifically de signed for use on the battlefield against troops. They are ' tactical" A-weapons as contrasted with the strategic A-bomb tailored for big city targets. Most members of the joint Con greslonal committee qualified their remarks on A- bombs in NEW BRITISH ENVOY ARRIVES mm Jmg 1. Ijr K ;■ ii ..-■a- JBk. * 1; §&‘ Imsk ** /mm SIR ROGER MARINS, new British Ambassador to the United States, poses vfdb Lady MakinS as they reach New York aboard the liner Queen Mary. Lady Makins is the former Alice Davis, daughter of the late Dwight F. Davis, donor of the Davis Cup in tennis. (International) Korea with tile statement that the issue is up to the military. Markets (Continued from page one) 18.75-19.00. Rocky Mount: Steady at 13.75. COTTON NEW YORK 'IP) - Cotton fu tures pries at 11 a .in. EST todav: New . York March 33.32: May 33.88; New Orler ns March 33.30; Ma\ 33.86. Umstead (Continued from page one) ing to become elementary teachers, where a shortage of train- j | ed personnel now exists. ! Umstead spotlighted the need ; 1 for better treatment and care of •. j mentally ill patients in state in- j j stitutions. describing the need so j urgent that it can be met ad- j equately only by the proceeds of a , state bond issue. “We call the institution at Kin ston the Caswell Training School.” he said. "It is and has been a do- j tention home for feebleminded j men and women, and there they | stay through the years. There has I never been a place which has even been called a training school for feebleminded children of the Negro race. There is not sufficient room in our institutions for the adults | who need attention." He declared that we have work ed at it in a piece-meal fashion long enough. We must make every effort to cure both children and adults, where such is within the capacity of medical science, and sufficient medical personnel must be provided. These peopje have no spokesman except those whose hearts have been touched by the condition of those affected by this program.” HIGHLIGHTS Here are highlights of pther major views and recommendations presented by Governor Umstead: Roads A task never finished, the state must continually main tain, improve and build roads. New study should be made of present road revenues to determine what, if anything, can be done to in crease current revenues to deter mine what, if anything, can be done to increase current revenues for a long-range primary oad building program. Also recommended that number of highway divisions and highway commissioners be increased from 10 to 15. Highway safety Recommend ed a common sense, effective me chanical inspection law for all motor vehicles, and a drivers’ training program for every public high school. Agriculture Continue improve ment in agriculture, and endeavor to raise the average per capita in come of farm people in North Caro lina. Urged a broad, coordinated farm program for state, with em phasis on soil conservation and agricultural research. Conservation and development— Bring in new industries and en courage expansion of present in dustries to provide more employ ment, more per capita income. and more tax revenues. Encourage fur ther development of seafood in dustry. Develop trade for new state I ports at Morehead City and Wil mington, Continue sound promo tion of North Carolina attractions for tourists. Give further stiqly to elimination of stream pollution. MINIMUM WAGE Labor Recommended that : state have a minimum wage law. i Stated that every citizen has right to work and to go to work when- i ever his job may be. and that laws must be enforced to protect every citizen in his right to go to wort unmolested by anyone. ! Prisoners and paroles Re- j [ quested that further study be given j possible separation of prison svstem : ! from highway commission. Suggest ed that General Assembly create j Paroles Commission of three cora i mmissioners to give more atten- I tion to the affairs now handled by J one commissioner. ] Refrendum on liquor Believes sale of intoxicating liquor by state is a moral question and should be I treated as such. Favors a refren dum on question for the people. Taxes Appropriations appear : to equal revenues, with no provision for normal increases in existing j state services. Does not favor, how i ever, new taxes or increased rates, ■ but suggested close study of situa tion by General Assembly. Oidsmobile (Continued from page one) al equipment. GM. power steering again will be available as an effort- saving accessory at extra cost, as j will the Autronic Eye, the amazing j automatic headlight dimmer which ! was introduced in 1952. Oidsmobile again will be pro duced in three attractive lines the Classic "98". the Super "88" and the Deluxe “88". Hydra-Matic 1 Super Drive is optional equipment on all three 1953 series. Mr. Lee expressed the hope today that all the citizens of this section ■ will take the opportunity to see ■ and inspect the beautiful new Oidsmobile models at Lee Motors I of Dunn. ; The 1953 all-new Super "83” of | fers an exciting new lineup of "power” features! 1 Among them are a magnificent I new "Rocket" Engine, a high-pow ered, higher-compression, higher - voltage "Rocket” Engine a "Rocket” to top all "Rockets.” .... New Pedal-Ease Power Brakes, with a low, light-pressure pedal for safer, faster, 40 per cent easier stops. It also offers new power styling, long, graceful lines, bqld new front end. brilliant new chrome trim, GM power steering to help you park, turn and maneuver with 80 per cent less effort. Hydramatic super drive for quick, sure delivery of new "Rocket" engine power. New power-ride chassis -r- for new smoothness and roadability. Among other new features arc Frigidaire car conditioning, autro nic-eye. luxurious new interiors. Plus the widest selection of colors, nsidc and dbt, in Oidsmobile his tory. You won’t want to miss seeing the lew Olds. THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C — —r, F ON DISPLAY TOMORROW Shown is one of the many models of the new Oidsmobile which will go on display at the showrooms of Lee Motors tomorrow for tile first time. The new models combine some of the latest advancements in auto design, and must lie seen to be appreciated. Returns From Rio mmm _ ■ I Sill jjfl UNITED MINE Workers President John L. Lewis is shown aboard the S.S. Argentina as the vessel ar rived in New York from Brazil. The beetle-browed union boss has bten attending a labor convention in Rio de Janeiro. ( International) Lovett (Continued from page one) Services Committee. TENSK SITUATION Committee Chairman Dewey Short (R-Mo.) said Lovett told the com mittee at its ciosed-door session that the world situation is as tense as ever and that "this is no time to relax" our defense buna; p. Lovett's view appeared at. odds with statements by Mi-. Truman and Winston Churchill that pros pects for peace have improved. Lovett, in outlining a series of proposed revisions in laws controll ing the defense department and the Army. Navy and Air Force, told the President: "One of the great hazards to na tional security lies in the auoarent inadequacy of ‘existing legislation to protect this country against trait ors spies and blabbermouths. "This problem is rot one peculiar to the Department of Defense, and perhaps matters of this gene:al sort WHERE BLAST KILLED 56 IN CHILE - ■ A GROUP OF WORKMEN stand amidst the wreckage of a building in Valparaiso, Chile, in which twenty tons of dynamite exploded in the early hours of the New Year, killing 56 persons and injuring 360 others. A mass funeral has been held for the dead, victims of a ’jokester who threw a firecracker into the building. (International Soundphoto) STATE NEWS BRIEFS 1 ASHEVILLE. N. C. OP Author ities today sought filial p oof of | the identity of a linked to , a missing New York man through ' his interest in the works ot author Thomas Wolfe. A faded image of a small boy in an old snapshot taken from the decomposed remains found on a mountainside was recognized by two library workers as that of a frequent reader who registered as the missing New Yorker. RALEIGH Ilf Th? 1953 G?u eral Assembly was asked today to authorize a commission to study and report at this session on til? use of eight television channels al located to North Carolina for edu cational purposes. Gov. William B Umstead said the importance of TV as a media war "ants “the serious obligation of a thorough invcsf.igu- I tion" into its educational uses. ! RALEIGH (IP Wall C. Ewing former state senator convicted in j the fatal beating of his wife, was free today of all parol? restric tions and planned to leave for Cal ifornia where his brother has of fered him a lucrative post. Judge R. Hunt Parker, sitting in Fayetteville, sentenced Ewing to 18- 20 years fo>- manslaughter in 1947 and said "this could will not soon forget the merciless beat’ng sos a 100-nou.nd' woman by her 200-ppund I husband, nor her pathet’.c cries." CHAPEL HILL HP The Mid winter Press Institute will' oner hc-r .ian. 22 under the sponsorship rs the North Carolina Press Assoc iation and in cooperation with the LTn'versitv of North Carolina and D’ go university. DeYaree Pess as sociate edito" of the Saturdav Eve nine Port who calls Asheville hi* ' home, will speak at the opening of the three-day meeting. As standard eouipment. n"w ear* for IP S 3 carry an average of more than 30 light bulbs. might lie more appropriately ii ether agencies of government. ‘■However ... I mention it, . . as I fe°! that it is a subject of car dinai importance and should re ceive prompt attention.” Lovett appealed anew for promp: passage of universal military train -1 j ing legislation. Short already has said, however that the Armed Services: Commit ■ tee will not at this time consldc ! UMT, wh’ch was roundly rejecte; : by the House last year. Mrs. Davis (Contini-ed From Page One) dents of her subdivision are en titled to some consideration from the governing board. “We paid a double fee lor tapping water and sewer lines, and pay for our water at the out-of-town rates," she pointed out. Most of the residents of her sub division are engaged in business in the town of Dunn, she points out, and the town collects tax money from them through these businesses. ACCUSES MAYOR She said that she telephoned Mayor Raiph Hanna after the last board meeting and accused that official of telling her that he would "fix it so you'll never get into town.” However, she added, that may not hold true after May of this year. She scored the policy of the board as short-sighted, and ac cused them of discrimination. 'They spent more than ten thous and dollars on one addition to the city limits,” she declared. Instead of aiding the growth of the town, they are actually holding it back, she said. Until the policy of the board is changed and there is some induce ment offered to bring outlying sub divisions into the city limits, she concluded, she lias no intention of coming in. She even pays weekly to have her garbage and trash hauled away rather than place unsightly re ceptacles in front of her home, she said. How To Become Popular At A Bar BOSTON (ID— The Old Colo- ■ rial Lounge hands customers cards | giving sarcastic advice on “how to humor the bartender.” They read; j "Mumble what you want to j 'drink and be sure and argue when' the wrong drink ii brought. Argue anyway—you might get a free one. , "Put lighted cigarette on the bar •0 that it will burn the wood, as ash trays are mere decorations. “Bang on the bar when you want service—it looks smart and makes you feel tough. “Always be sure to scream after every second drink: ‘Don't the house ever pop?’ “Butt into every conversation so I everyone may know how little you j know. "Ana be damned sure to wear a j pillow in the seat of your pants— | you might need it when you hit the ' pavement.” Neta's Clearance SALE STARTS FRIDAY, JANUARY 9TH. Store closed Thursday getting ready for sale. • A ;iy Doors open Friday at 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. Saturday store will remain open until 9:00 p.m. 9 irita’A Neta Turlington - Benson, N. C. I - ' ' THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 8, 195 1 Transport (Continued from (Wt< .nail for operation over the rugged moun tain country surrounding Hot Springs Beak and nearby Bear Lake. But progress was expected to be ex tremely slow because of heavy snows and blinding mountain clouds If there are no survivors, the toll of nine transport crashes in Alaska and the western states during the past two months will be 276. The twin-engined commando took off from Seattle, debarkation port of the homecoming Gl's at 12:50 a m. MST yesterday Its destination ’was Fort Jackson, S. C, where the troops—all enlisted men—were to b? processed and sent to their homes in the Carolinas. Alabama, Georgia and Florida. The plane, one of a pair of C-46’s owned by the Associated Air Trans port Co. of San Antonio, Tex., was part of a 15-ship flight the Army chartered to airlift Korean veterans homeward. Loaded alphabetically all those aboard had names start ing with “H", “J,” c fr "K.” CHECKED IN Pilot Lawrence Crawford check ed in with the CAA ground station at 3:58 a. m. while flying at 13,000 feet over Malad City, in southeast ern Idaho. All was well, he said, and the next report was to be jnade an hour later over Rock Springs, Wyo. It was the craft's last mes sage. , , Residents of shore homes around Bear Lake, on the Utah-Idaho bor der and only a few miles from Wyo- ; ming, said the low-flying plane they , heard between 4:30 and 5 a.m. ap- ; patently was circling. It shook hous es with its roar, awakened a few : sleepers, then droned on to the ; The heavily-forested mountains, with peaks up to 11,000 feet, around Bear Lake were described by Georg" Nelson. Wyoming state aeronautics director, as the “most rugged ter rain possible." The high plateau I between the mountains and Rock Springs is crag-filled and desolate. Doctors (Continued from page one) not show a healthy chest is urged to go to his doctor or to the health department clinic for a second X-ray. When the second film shows suspicious shadows or signs, fur ther clinical and laboratory tests j must be made before a diagnosis of tuberculosis is considered. All physicians in the county are cooperating with this survey and j will be glad to answer any ques tions that might arise. The community X-ray survey which opened on December 10, 1952 and continues through 31, 1953 is sponsored by the Har-j'i nett County Health Dfpai'tnbtqt}, i the Harnett County Tuberculosis Association, and the North Caro- 1 lina State Board of Health. Wreck Victim (Continued From Page One, I • ! car was owned by W. B. Clifton. I Mrs. Clifton, first treated by a , Fuquay physician, is now a patient ■ at the Dunn Hospital. Her injuries i were reported as multiple contus ions, laceration of the left knee and chin. ! Patrolman Ward said the inves t tigation is continuing, pending the coroner’s inquest. He reported that Mrs. Clifton apparently lost control of her car and that the Packard going north, skidded 63 feet on the ' ! right side of the highway, went on I the shoulder on the right side for 94 (sett. came back on the road, went 50 feet at a 45 degree angle to the 1 center of the road where the impact j occurred on the west traffic lane. Date for the inquest has not been | set pending the recovery of those !injured. ' MRS. STEPHEN J. NAZECK, Jr., who before her marriage on r Saturday, December 20, in Omaha, Nebraska, was the former Miss Betty Jean Stone, daughter of ’ Mr. and Mrs. Rotlier M. Stone of Lillington, Route 1, Mr. Nazeck is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nazeck of Omaha. The coup! will reside there. Churchill (Continued from page one) Churchill arranged to go direct ly to the Britisn Embassy after his arrival at 12:30 p. m. aboard Mr. Truman's personal plane, the Independence. Tne 78-year-old statesman wanted to catch a nap at the embassy before his White House call at 4 p. m. DINNER GUEST Mr. Truman was to be Church ill's guest at a dinner at the em bassy tonight. Churchill will fly to Jamaica Friday morning for a two week holiday. Informed sources said there precious little of importance that* the two men could discuss, in sharp contrast with their important Wliiv; House talks here a year ago al most to the day. U. S. Ambassador to Britai Walter S. Gifford informed Ms Truman some time ago that Chur chill did not intend to bring up anj - major international problems on this visit. But, just in case, a short sum mary of the world situation war prepared for the President. He alsc asked Secretary of State Dean Ache- * son, Treasury Secretary John W. Synder and other key advisers to sit on the meeting. In addition’ to the 1945 Pot’sdam ; Conference, Mr. Truman and Chur chill were together at Fulton. Mo., in 1946 where Churchill coined his famous “Iron Curtain” phrase. They met again here in 1946 when Churc | fill! visited this country as a pri , vlte citizen. Their most recent j meeting was here a year ago. Bell Accepts (Continued from page one) He is married to the former Miss Rebecca Hobbs of Mooresville and they have a daughter. Medford, and son, Richard. For the present. Mrs. Bell and the children will remain in Lillington. They are - offering their new home for sale. C. Grayson Biggs has replaced'* Bell in the Turlington office staff. Coroner (Continued From Page One) lie Weaver, Rachel McNeill, Hazel Dean. Zollie Brown and Nancy • Jane McLean. The report is sent to the In stitute of Government by ers throughout the state in older* to aid in their making up of stat istics. Tile majority of the state’s coroners offer this cooperation to the institute. »