Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Feb. 10, 1953, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO OPS said “keen competition” among bottlte cap man giwwtiirers should “prevent any substantial, increase in i PHILADELPHIA IIP) Burglars added insult to in | Jury Monday when they stole $2,300 from the office safe at piiagen’s Hardware store. They used tools found on the gppore’s counters to crack the safe. MILWAUKEE, Wis. (IT Harry L. Wilcox, marriage license clerk at the Milwaukee County courthouse, said to - day there is a practical reason for young couples to marry on Valentine’s Day. “Each year on Feb. 14 the husband can buy his wife a box of candy and kill two birds with one stone." E|l CHICAGO UP) A woman sweet-talked a robber into putting his gun away, then fouled his hold-up attempt. The robber agreed to pocket his weapon so a customer entering the store wouldn’t be startled. Then Mrs. Jessie • Branch, the grocer, grabbed her own pistol and, fired five ; times. She missed. The gunman fired two shots in return g| before fleeing. He also missed. SALEM, Ore. (IP) State prison officials said today they capitulated to demands made by 32 desperate con victs in order to end a riot and win freedom for five guards held hostage in a dungeon-like isolation ward. The tough, trouble-ma King prisoners demanded that they be given t: definite sentences to the isolation ward instead of the in definite terms they were serving. MIAMI, Fla. (IP) Police today charged James H. Car man, 47 with scalping his wife Bartha Mae, 37, in a bloody brawl at their apartment. The woman died of her wound. Officers saia they found the woman dying at the foot of a stair in the apartment house, while Carman sat on a P second-floor porch with his six-month-old baby in his arms, ■fife ■ WASHINGTON (IP/ Personal income of American in § 1952 totaled $268,500,000 a gain of $14,000,000,000 over | 1951, the Commerce Department reported today The summary showed income for the year increased in every major classification except one. Farm owners had | an aggregate income of approximately $15,000,000,000, p down about $500,000,000 from 1951. TEL AVIV, Israel UP) A bomb exploded at the Soviet legation Monday night, injuring the wife of the minister and two other legation members. It was the most serious anti-Soviet incident since the I anti Semitic purges started in Communist countries. li * PORTSMOUTH, Va. UP/ Police held for questioning t today a former mental patient they said fits a girl’s pen ciled description of the assaillant who wounded her and kil- H lad her escort at a lover’s lane. The 51-year-old suspect was tfrested test night after the girl, 15-year-old Margar | *1 HoHowell, became conscious enough to write a descript- Bpfiw of the attacker. His name was not disclosed. _ TOKYO UP) One North Korean Communist was kil led and 38 others were injured yesterday in a prisoner of p war riot on Kqje Island, the Far East {command announ ; ced today. No U. N. troops entered the compound to break EMP the demonstration were hurt, although 13 of the pris- Hpners were seriously injured. Bmp .- NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (IP/ Four policemen go before a judge today to answer charges that they practic p burglary on the side. Police Chief K. R. Hodgkmson said ; regutar officers and one former member of the force ffp*d comessed to committing 13 burglaries in the past six ROME (BP/ Former King Farouk of Egypt, who plan ®ed a gala party at his villa tomorrow nignt to celeorate 13* 33ra birthday, has cancelled the affair arid will give Up* $3,000 he intended to spend on it to flood victims in anc * Great Britain, a household spoke;- KK CHICAGO UP) The Illinois Liquor Control Commis- I son today entered the investigation of an alleged plot by ynobsters to push Budweiser Beer out of the IPBteagd market, arid police waited for a list of 200 bar ■peps who stopped buying the brew. m.- HITBURG, Germany (IB A U.S. A£r Force C-119 IPytag Boxcar” transport crashed about 15 miles north jg Bltburg today, killing all five crew members. A spokes ■pjtfor tne 12tn Air Force said the plane was on a **rou- HPe” ferry mission from Rhine-Main Air Base to Bitburg. STATE NEWS gggSREENSBORO (If) A Charlott; pWpCttican was partially succession y«stji«*y in his light to keep offi ftg*s from forfeiting the entire lIMbOO bond he put up for convic operator f. D. (George) iSB&Hh. feypenor Court Judge J. c. BathSEUl ordered $2,500 of the bona , forfeited because Smith was 25', BUI Busaey - |j|j|ter plane crashed. C. Gibson today that their father shot their mother to death early today. Gibson said the children were awakened by their parents quarreling. He said Lonnie Moravln, 50, shot his wife with a shotgun, the blast striking her in the neck. Moravln fled and Is being sought on a murder charge. Gibson said. | JUST RECEIVED | NICE SHIPMENT OF ’ ] | EXTRA FINE MILES j | Some medium, some large. These are some es the ! I fnujrt , mules we have ever received. Well broke. Now | j being sold for cash or terms to meet the convenience ■ I We also have several used one-horse and two-1 j We also sell VC Fertiliser, Soda and Lime. Also | i j \ SEE LOUIS BAER AT | I - 4V . ,i. 4 . - . 4 . | II Aiiin Dnai I auaa(aal# PAmnanii I i LOUIS Dues LllifMliSl vOiliUfiliv * w * r" J I L.... r tttnm, N. c. ■ | Is Discbarced Private First Class Bart Grey , Jackson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Liston A. Jackson, Route 1, Dunn, a mem ber of the Ss4th Military Police Company stationed here, has been recently released from active ser vice with the U. S. Army. Pfc. Jackson has served with the 354 M. Pi Co. since February 1951, i during which time he served with the unit overseas in Thule, Green lapd. Pfc. .Jackson prior to entering the service was employed on his father’s' farm in Dunn, N. C. Driver Freed (Continued From Page ' One) this work can be done safely is by blosking off the street when the men are working.” Rocell David Godwin, Negro am bulance driver, charged with failing to yield right-of-way, drew the court’s ire, although he was found not' guilty of the charges. Judge Strickland told the defendant that he thought the law allowing extra right in the matter of speed, should be revised by the legislature. NO LIABILITY It developed, too, during the trial, that the DafTord Funeral Home, owner of the ambulance, had no liability insurance on the vehicle. The state took a nol pros in the case of Jessie Johnson; charged with assault. M. A. Byrd, charged with drunk enness. drew an unusually heavy fine for this offense, $25 and costs with a 30-day suspended sentence. On another charge of drunken driv ing, he drew 90 days, suspended 12 months on payment of SIOO and cost with license revocation recommen ded. Clarence Morgan, charged with non-support, was given six months, suspended on payment of costs, on condition that he pay sls weekly for the support of his children. The remaining cases in the doc ket, prosecuted bv Solicitor J. Shep ard Bryan, involved public drunk enness and the offenders escaped with suspended sentences and fines. IKE URGES SCOUTS NEW YORK IW President Eisenhower, in his first message as honorary president of the Boy Scouts of . America, today urged the nation’s 3,200,000 scouts to live up to the scout oath as their part in making America strong and the world peaceful. Tlie message, on the occasion of Boy Scout Week, celebrating the organization’s 43rd birthday, was released by scout headquarters here. Thirteen scouts will call on Mr. Eisenhower in Washington Monday. “This birthday message is ad dressed to every scout and leader in the Boy Scouts of America,” the President’s message said. “I urge you all to Uve up to the high ideals for which scouting Stands your duty as patriotic citizens. “If you will follow the scout oath. America will be better able to meet its full responsibility in cooperation with other nations in j maintaining peace on earth.” ' The scout oath is: “On my honor I will do my best to do my 1 duty to God and my country, and to obey the scout law; to help other people at all times; to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight.” Attention (Continued from page one) the training and work will start in temporary quarters during the construction of a modem air-con ditioned building. You will be paid during the training period. After you have completed training you will receive an exc|sUecjt weekly salary. Markets COTTON NEW YORK (IP) Cotton futures prices at 1 p. m. BBT today: New York March 32.70; Kay 33.07; New Orleans March 32.68; May 33.02. i IN RALEIGH ' SATURDAY Mr. Oliver O. Manning and Mr. t R. J. Denny were in Raleigh Sat urday. THE DAILY RECORD,DUNN,N.C. jm jAH m M ggjjHpl Kr * GOODBYE AND CONGRATULATIONS John Weddle, left, manager of Leder Brothers Department Store in Dunn, is shown here as he said “goodbye and congratulations” to Harry Mims, man ager of Leder Brothers’ shoe department who has been transferred to Rockingham to become store manager. (Daily Record Photo). disxdih (fhaiA \ First In A Series Os Informative Articles On Important Health Subjects BY Dr. GERALD JAMES Good Blood, Nerves, And Health “Look to your health; and If you have it, praise God, and value It next to a good conscience; for hptith is the second blessing that we mortals are capable of; a blessing that money cannot buy.”—lsaak Walton. Without normal nerve function we cannot have normal health. Un til this fact Is realized by the masses, millions will be peeking health in vain. The nerve line is J the health line. When anything goes wrong with that line, vital ity is lowered and disease is in vited. In a previous article, the net work of human nerves was shown to be like an electric grid system Over the nerve line flows a.special fcirid of energy whfch aetlVates and regulates every part of the body just &s electricity races over wire! to ‘‘make. the wheels go round.’ In the article mentioned above if was pointed out that pressure o' tension at any point will disturb thf normal work of the nerves anc will, therefore, mark the beginning of ill health. But freedom from pressure anc tension is not enough to assure nor mal nerve function. Nerves are hu man tissue and therefore must b? nourished. Their nourishment t supplied by the blood. Through s vast network of small arteries the blood stream feeds the nerves— Just as If nourishes other parts o' the body—with food materials pick ed up from the stomach and In testines and with cwygen taken from air cells in the lungs. Endlessly this blood stream flows for endlessly the nerves are at work. Day and night the nerve line carry their load of vital energy even to the most remote parts of ! The Storrs-Schaefer M; Stylist ~ is coming February 12th Thursday • 9 tilfl spm ijff|TC^Cllk to present new fabrics STORRS-SCHAEFER flf Be sure to stop in. Get expert . JL | advice on your personal clothes *to look your vers | Hi PRINCE'S iirlqap 11%118 V k \ • * jk ir • \ v mz I Dept. Store \ I \ a fc I ‘ |E. BROAD ST. DUNN, N. C \ iWS/J ' ' I; the body. Even during sleep, al though they are less active, th*; nerves carry on. All through tne night they regulate the heartbeat and keep the lungs and other vital organs working while the body re freshes itself with sleep, Never for a moment during the whole span of life, does the heart cease to beat. The blood, with Its cargo of life-giving food, flows ceaselessly to all body tissues and nerves. In But let us not think that rtierely ft constant supply of blood-la, auff Orient. Normal nerve function de fends on the'Quality of the blood, ts the blood Is deficient in necessary .’itamins and minerals, the serves will be undernourished and there ore will be unable to do their ttrrmal work. The machinery of she rody is run by the nervous system, nrt the nervous system can work efficiently only when it Is supplied vith good, rich blood. This brings us to the very Im portant matter of diet.. The quality es the blood that circulates in our -todies depend)! largely? on £ie kind of food We eat. If she fbpd is poor in quality, the blood will he poor in lualijy. The .body cannot o-odufee good blood fsoov poor food. So, cfcrrect cflet is essential, to the -Manufacture of good, red , blood, which la essential to-normal nerve function, which in turn, is essential to nbrmal health. - f - We are dealing here with the fundamentals of good health. A body) with- «H of Its nerve lanes HOLLYWOOD, Calif. RD Broadway star Shirley Booth, vet eran film actor Gary Cooper afid western thriller "High Noon” I favorites today to win Hollywood’S coveted "Oscars." WASHINGTON (W Secretary of Interior Douglas McKay today designated Fred O. Aandahl to direct the department’s reclama tion bureau until a commissioner is chosen. RALEIGH opt The Senate Roads Committee flashed a quick green light today to a bill to allow Gov. William B. Dmstead to shake up the State Highway Commission and carve the state into as many as 15 highway divisions, five more than now exist. WASHINGTON (til Secretary of Labor Martin P. Durkin has won the support of the CIO and the promise of the nation’s top labor leaders to serve as advisers to his department, it was learned today. ST. LOUIS, Mo. (ID Former President Harry Truman believes hurried demobilization In this coun try after World War n was a prin cipal reason for the cold war with Russia, the St. Louis Post-Dispatcn said today in a copyrited dis patch from Kansas City, Mo. Vt. MEADE, Md. (ID Lt. Col. Melvin B. Voorhees, former Army censor accused of violating its censorship regulations, today lost an attempt to have the charges hgalnst him ruled unconstitutional. Col, Edward J. Kotrich, law offi , cer of the court martial trying Voorhees, reiused to dismiss the live charges. WASHINGTON (ID The Re publican Congress went to work today on legislation to revise the 'x aii-Hartley .Law and a pro-labor Democrat said the situation “does nt look good for labor.” Rep. Roy W. Weir (D-Mlnn j, said a powerful bloc in the House is opposed to an ysignil leant re laxation of Talt-fiartley curbs on unions and will try, instead, to write in more "severe restric tions.” Sheriff Salmon At ; His Office Today ! Sheriff W. E. (Bill) ,Saini*i vis- I itea tus office in tne courthouse to aay tor tne first time since" Janu . ary Ist. Re has been ill for the t intervening time. , The popular Harnett official shook , hand with his many friends around | the courtnouse and was showered with congratulations on being up r sag around again! 1 ayfcg his jtUice,-+>r ' *te>ut .a*, hour,-he declined a de puty's offer of a ride home saying ; "It feels so. good to be out again, 5 I thing I’d rather walk home.” ; open and with its arteries filled witn pure nutritious blood, has high ' natural resistance to disease. In ; such a body disease germs have | little chance. But when nerves are cramped and blood is weak,, resist ance goes down and the body in vites disease. Health is freedom from disease. I It is the cherished possession of . those whose vitality is high. And i vitality is high only when the blood f is rich and the nerves are free. Normal nerve' function can be * assured by correction of any pos , tural distortions and restoring the > mechanical integrity of the human I body. . -t . ' ■ ‘ When the nerve system is work ; ing smoothly, unhampered either i by mental or physical hazards, the ) answer is buoyant health. i THESDAY AFTERNOON,FEBUARY 10,1953 County acMutWM^Club 01 ?U He has held numerous educa tional posts and is also a leader Ui the DMciples of Christ denom ination. He is at present first vice president of the North Carolina Disciples of Christ. Stager Is Fined t Continued from page one) argument that parkier tickets were such minor' matters they were easy to overlook. the judge fined Miss Barton and her husband-manager Wynn Lassner *2,400, the highest fine so far lh the current crackdown on Kew York ticket-hoarders. CROMARTIE HARDWARE g Whether for her or for him-we have ° MrnjJ wonderful selection of Valentine gifts! j <l.9* pop-up $12.95 Cake Cover * TOASTER. Newest type cake tray and cov er. It’s smart, it’s practical, It’s a real beauty toasts 2 slice* low priced! Glass tray is 14” st a time, just right. Adjustable in diameter. Clear plastic oover spud. Polished chrome with is 11” In diameter, 6” high. brown plastic trim. Guaranteed. A IRON G-E This iron saves time and does work no other iron ean do. It is . safe, light weight and easy to Y use. DRILL Complete with Black A Decker jjQ Accessories A fine, sturdy shop tool for all j )jg The kitchen hut tee heaviest jobs. Trigger ■gnmnYl gpesgisssy of a grip switch. With fittings, can 1 dozen uses. A also be quickly converted to 11 W 1 wonderful m grinder, polisher, or buffer. % gift. * V*\ ■ ■ II HBfer,. " Bod er yellow V ■ . colorful plastic With contrast . AA jfc ax : START YOm SAVnf(is # COMMERCIAL BANK Dunn, N. C. Rp j«8" WBMKVVBHMHI QUINTS Funeral Home 24-HOUR SERVICE D PHONE 3306 211 W. HARNETT ST. DUNN, N. C. am tiu hm——si——ii i in iiurn ~r - ;
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Feb. 10, 1953, edition 1
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