Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / March 6, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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. •■ ' today and tonight. Satftrday eon sideraUc rlowdlnf turning colder. Tent* eat, yea’re safe, yen’re VOLUMN 3 STEWARTS PLANE IS REPORTED SIGHTED Throngs Wait In Cold In Red Square To Pay Respects To Leader PHOTO AS A YOUNG MAN (two photos, left above), the cobbler’s son became a devoted follower of Nicolai Lenin with whom he is shown (right, above) and finally replaced him as Russia’s ruler when Lenin died in 1024. After the exile of Leon Trotsky, he ruled* unchallenged, his likeness appearing from time to time in the world’s press in photos like those below. * ■ o'V’ I Hm H * H / * \ J / •: Vehicle Bill FaHs To Pass ► Grou|i In Senate RALEIGH (W A Senate committee adjourned with out voting on a motor ve hicles Inspection bill today after reporters refused to leave the meeting when Chairman James H. Fou Bailey, moved for, a closed ~ session. , I’ Bailey said be did not think the votes at the committee members on the “highly-controvertua” bill should be made public before the bill reaches the Senate floor. Author of the inspection meas ure', Bailey bad predicted tax ad vance that his committee would approve the bill at today’s meeting But when it came up for consid eration, Bailey made a motion from the chair that the committee go in -4> to closed session. The motion car rier!, but reporters kept their seats. Bailey then asked for a motion to adjourn, and the meeting broke up. Bailey explained his action to new stolen later, saying he did not believe committee members should be Subjected to possible “embarrass ment” by having their vote in com mittee made public. Other members of the Judiciary Committee declined immediate com vs ANNUAL CHECK-UP Bailey’s Inspection measure would revive motor vehicles inspec tion under a proposal which calls (Conthwed a* page twel -- - - ■■■ .v’Tr^r-r ——— ? —. • . Hudson To Compete s In Pistol , Tourmyi XeTwill 0 pJS3& I ' fWtr' ' *L . y_V;4 TELEPHONES: 4117 • 4118 - 3119 ' i I HI• HL M pipr Board Sets Dates ! For City Election ' ' The forthcoming city election took up a good portion of the time at ths regular meeting of the Dunn City Coun cil last night. Registrar and judges were appointed, filing dates set, and the date, for the primary and the general election fixed. A. N. Hudson was namfed as reg- April Ist and the deadline for fil istrar to replace Joe Creel. Robert trig will be at noon on Saturday. Draughon and Tommy Harrall were April 11th. All filing wii] be done at renamed as-Judges. The books Will the office of City Clerk Charles bt open from March 3#ths until Storey. April 18th, with the lateir date set Commissioner R. O. Tart jokingly os Challenge bay. J. suggested a filing fee that might Candidates may start filing on (Caattoned On Page Six) Plenty Os Weapons In Assault Cases An assortment of weapons In cluding knives, coke bottles, an ] iron bit! 1 , and as a climax, a shot gun, figured In the argument be tween George Arthur Hall and Aaron Hall and Alfred Tart, ac cording to their teettsOony in Re corder’s Court yesterday morning. Tart testified tbatfce sought the Hall brothers to ppogsgr Ifa*r rob bery of an elderly meat and threaten to notify polios U they rfeueed to return the money. Wtp* wn« of the boys hit him with a coke bottle, he said he left the men*. On his return, he- nriated. Aaron intercepted him and forced him to stop by standing tn the road. He ton State. ,They were with him in Dunn to- She Path) fleon-d If Mr ■ . accused Aaron of advancing upon him with an Iron bar, while his (Continued on page seven) GREGORY HAS FLU Harnett Representative Carson Gregory missed a session of the State Leglslatare yesterday. ■Bat he had good reason, the Harnett to lon b confined to Ms home with lafluenia. Gardner's Dairy Has New Product Gardner’s Dairy Products, Inc., of Dunn has added a new product. Manager James Surles announced today that Gardner's Is now mak ing delicious new creamed cottage cheese. As a special introductory offer, the cottage cheese is being sold in the beautiful and sparkling Bascal Aluminum tumblers In all the bril- U< YouH find this new Gardner’s Series rEKtogythat the Item is prov- A. Mm mM MmumsdSF, DUNN, N. C., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 6, 1953 Thousands View Body As Stalin Awaits Funeral By HENRY SHAPIRO - United Press Staff CorresDondent ; MOSCOW RP) Moscow’s millions swarmed to the cen ter of the city today to view the body of Josef Stalin as it lay in state awaiting the greatest funeral in Russian history. The streets were black with sorrowful people, weeping and mur muring prayers. They stretched in lines two miles long, 50 abreast, awaiting their chance to honor the man who died at 9:50 p. m. yester day after leading them for 29 years. Stalin’s bod, was taken from the grim walled Kremlin, where he died in his four-room apartment with nnembecs of his family and govern ment around his bed. to the great Hall of Columns of the Trade Un ion Building five minutes’ walk away. ' The body ‘ lay' in an open bier oh top of a black-frame catafalque. I| was clad In Stalin’s marshal’s Uniform, with only one of his in numerable decorations on the breast. It was the decoration of the “Hero of Socialist Labor.” Wreaths of fresh flowers almost smothered the catafalque. . WAIT IN COLD f Al 4 p. m. (f p. ai, Eat) the doolfc of the building werefthrown oped.„ Men, wofagu*;, childjPn. who hadTwaited toJjf&a tn the biting Ruffling ; jmalque on guard TstdoyMjjnjw'ypf>11 'the branches of tfce armed dwjwtos in full dress UoDtfidt. dke breathing statues. Military orchestras' softly played funeral dirges and other compos itions especially by Stalin's fav orite composers, Glinka and Tschai kovsky. f ** I.r* „ il the body of ovu.-ix s predecessor and the father of communism, rested in 1924. Russia’s people heard of their I Continued on page two) Legislature Today By UNITTD PRESS Senate convenes 10 a. m. House Convenes 11 a. m. Homo Committees: Health 9 a. m. Health Committees: Agriculture 9 a. m. . Judiciary Two 9 a. m. Mental Institutions 9 a. m. Salaries and Fees. 9:30 a. m. Phone 4150 The Dally Record is anxious for an of its dtf subscribers to receive The Record each after noon as soon as possible after it goes to press. Ordinarily, The, Record goes to press at 3:39 o’clock. All city deliveries should be completed by 6:39 o'clock. In the event you have not re ceived delivery Os The Record by. 6:30, you are urgently requested te caU Mr. EoUett, The Record's circulation manager, at 4159, and a copy will be sent te you im mediately. Please do not hesitate to call. We want you to receive your paper promptly. M , *, ' BULLETIN $ SEOUL, Korea OF* The battleship Missouri, defying Red shore batteries for the second day in a row, sailed in to Wonsan harbor today to Mast dune Installations with hex big guns. At the same time, waives of and Marine Panther Jets touched off huge fires and explosions in an attack on a troop concentration south of Wonsan, an east coast port. i WASHINGTON IP Senate military leaders expres sed grave over secret testimony of^ Gen. “very disturbing” picture to the Senate Armed Services i m ■.'**&** & • .a *%&?■'.£>y * ‘^•'^4 '• y taßb '4 , *> . v " m“ ' - ’ ’ 'i - j ,*:-■* , .tv ’xm?.•j&fiaa i ''■ W r ■ J ■>£.**:!-:r\- i ■ H i i ,i' W |r M^^nUßggki i WB WL JH DkTdANIEL IVERSON - ; ' /J Iverson To Begin Revival On Sunday Dr. Daniel Iverson, of Miami Florida, arrives In Dunn tomorrow to begin the “Week of Spiritual Enrichment” at the Flrat Presby terian Church. The first of the series of services will begin at 11:00 Sunday morning and the last will be on Friday evening. Dr. Iverson was for twenty-five years pastor of the Shenandoah March Worst Month For The Red Cross WASHINGTON OP) lf 1 Cross can ease through the ir can stay within ita>budget. March appears to be the Presnell Betts, the comptroller, i says that such things as tornadoes i and floods are expected and there- t fore funds are set aside to take care i of the homeless and needy. It’s the i unexpected that puts the Red Cross 4n the red. : “We work with the government ] weather bureau and generally know i with considerable accuracy how , serious a flood Is going to be,” i Bette says. “More often than not we have field crews on the spot before the flood wateip come.” Last year, March was particular ly bad. Floods and a disastrous tornado at Jucteonla. Ark., occur Presbyterian Church In Miami, resigning his pastorate In 1952 in order to give his full time to evan gelistic work. His success as a min ister Is attensted by the fact that In 1927 he went to Shenandoah Presbyterian Church as its first | pastor and when he resigned, It. had grown to be the largest Presby t Continued on pace two) the American National Red nonth of March, it generally : month of disaster. red. When the wind died down 134 persons were dead In the path of the storm, which covered a wide area around Judsonia, and 1,281 were Injured. “No home'in the small town of Judsonia was left undamaged," Betts says, “and most of them were leveled. We spent $753,000 In Judsonia alone. Money we hadn’t exactly planned on spending.” FLOOD COBT . The floods around Council Bluffs, iConttnoad on pac twa. Top Stock Car Racing Slate Jsß|, >, Ittf VtAHlfti'* : ■ -•-v- ’S'’•£:• FIVE CENTS PER COPY Party Working To Site Os Wreckage; ASHEVILLE, N. C. (IP) A ground rescue party work-£ ed its way through thick forests in an “airplane grave yard” toward a downed plane which may have been flowiv by a missing Charlotte theater executive. Capt. C. A. Speed of the state highway patrol said the wreckage . had been “definitely identified” as that of a Beechcraft Bonanza, the type flown by Worth Stewart. However, Col. Norman Young of i Civil Air Patrol headquarters at Charlotte cautioned that “we won’t know definitely until the ground party reports.” Speed said the plane was “clearly I visible” from State Highway; 110 four miles south of Canton atop 6,000-foot Cold Mountain. Stewart, wealthy president of a Carolinas theater chain, who has been missing eight days on a flight from Jacksonville, Fla., to Char lotte. Young said the area is a “regular airplane graveyard.” He said there are five wrecked planes in a 10-square-mile area and “we won’t , know definitely whether this is the right one” until the ground party reports. , The CAP launched a search last Saturday and combed Stewart’s route from Florida through coastal Qporgia and South Carolina and into North Carolina. The silver object On Cpld Moun tain was sighted following a report I, from a farmer that, he bad j a plane flying tow (owwte CSSitah ttto: day Stotoaxt > '- a lfctk. JaqiMP|tvlUe.i Highway patrolmen found a spot on the road from which the plane was visible. * (Continued on page owren) CAKE AND PIE SALE Hood Memorial Christian Church will hold a cake and pie sale to morrow, March 7th in the base ment of the church. The sale will start at 16:66. A variety of delicious homemade cakes and ides will be Nash Unveils New Rambler Nash Motors today unveiled its completely new 1953 Rambler series, 1 featuring continental custom design combined with American passenger comfort. The beautiful new line of Ramblers went on display today at Larry's Nash Motors in Dunn. Styled by Plnln Farina, leading European custom body designer, in collaboration with Nash engines) s, the new Rambler line Includes a custom convertible, station wagon, and Country Club hardtop conver tible. Nash dealers throughout the country displayed their new models in their showrooms today. ' “The elegant European styling of the new Nash Rambler line make these cars the most luxurious com pact custom cars in America today,” H. C. Dee*, vice-president In charge of sales, said. "The new models offer traditional Rambler economy, combined with outstanding perfor mance, comfort and ease of hand ling in city traffic and on the 1 highway.” MODERN TREND Doss outlined these modem trends in the 1963 Rambler models: 1. Completely new body design, fOtnttnnmi an Rags Seven) - Big-time racing will come to ]| Harnett County for the first time I and to the State for the lint time I this year Sunday afternoon what I the Oroßd. National Circuit moves I to Harnett Speedway at Spring 11 Lake. f II Twenty - eight top NASCAR I THE RECORD GETS RESULTS Move Launched | To Capitalize f On Stalin Death | WASHINGTON (UV Eisenhower adminisfr&ttaw launched a top secret p(W% chological warefare offeS|a sive against Communism tow day in an effort to capita*® lize on Stalin’s death. * M High- ranking sources revealed the plan was whto-|| ped into shape immediately aftere Moscow announced that Stalin wa#J gravely ill and now is "underway.’j These sources guarded details of! the project. But they revealed it Up designed to “exploit” the confus-S ion and chaos sure to grip the RedW} as a result of the passing of One of th»«bief a* ms BJsermowef aiid policy programs to prepare tion for “any eventuality" ttMtsi might flow from Stalin’s death. ) -I Even without a review, it ifcpjjfl clear the historic shift in Russ power would have major reperrhptgj ions on the nation’s policies, ft»r*| eign and domestic. Among othcra things, it was expected to: v® RESULTS OF SHIFT 1 1. Diminish the chances for any early cut in defense spending, get balancing or tax reducUplOßjH administration will be requlr*4|Sß adopt a “go slow" policy untt|:3jß detects—along with U. S. lIMpM the future course of SovW po^e^S 2. Require a continued defiAfl buildup and foreign aid. A tilHw ranking military officer voiced thg fear that Stalin’s successor, unfitag Stalin, might underestimate AnAm lea’s productive genius and atomic • Continued on Fare t) i Leaders Gomneit An Qtalin Daath vll OldlliS Ilea In i death of Josef Stalinbrought • ernment of the United ' tenders its official condolence* m ! the government of the USSR a§ s the death of . Stalin, prime minster of the QuMjl Harry Truman, former Pi| s dent—“l’m always sorry to .bmKM the passing of any acquatotaness. 5 retary-general-"I have the^hatMj PHOTO NO. 63
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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March 6, 1953, edition 1
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