PAGE TWO ia Anglo-Egyptian treaty talks spread throughout the garrston.A Bitish military spokesman said all defense measures and security precautions are being taken and Jeave tor troops has been curtailed. He said armed escorts have been detailed for vehicles. •— ft?, WACO, Tex. (IB Bulldozers and power shoyels bit deeper today into the ruins of buildings flattened by a death-dealing tornado, and one crew broke through to a basement fined with bloody water. The bodies of at least 99 Victims of Monday’s twister ha? been recovered, 81 here and nine at San Angelo, Tex. Another man was kill ed Tuesday when a tornado hit a church at Colfax, I*. The Red Cross said 50 persons were missing in Waco. H§r WASHINGTON tiff) A Senate subcommittee has completed its hearings on television and radio legislation 'hi baseball, but may need a couple of weeks to prepare a V.. report, Chairman Edwin C. Johnson (D-Colo.) said today. BR ... ......—— V* _;-y- 4 . BUENOS AIRES OP) A government order today prevented the three American press associations from dis tributing news from abroad to their client newspapers and radio stations in Argentina. A Post Office Department §k order issued Tuesday deprived the United Press, Associated > Press and International News Service of radio facilities for ; receiving news from abroad. ' I JACKSON, Miss. A pretty X-ray technician has i been indicted for larceny on charges she swindled a hos pital of $10,900 in Mood donor payments with tile innocent * aid of her boy friends. Deputies went today to the Colum bia, Miss., home of Monde Helen Hood to return her here v for arraignment. W sT*. - -/?' ‘ ■ WASHtNGIFON - (IP) President Eisenhower will ' cruise on Chesapeake Bay this weekend after a speech at (? William and Mary College at Williamsburg, Va. It will be I*-, hit second Mid Bast use of the yacht Williamsburg, which § he is giving up as an economy gesture. / , ' ' ¥ WASHINGTON (o*> The Democratic National hi-. Committee announced today that former Vice President Alben W. Barkley and 14 other Democrats will take part r ih an “extensive speaking” program in nine states during the next several weeks. j WASHINGTON HP The tidelands oil Mil, center r of the biggest free-for-all fight of the 83rd Congress, was ex ' r pected to win final approval today with littte more than a ripple of debate. The House was set to endorse the Senate’s Hf 1 version rather than press for its-own so that the legisla tion can be shipped to the White House before nightfall | ftp President Eisenhower’s promised signature. " * PARIS m U. S. Gens. Matthew B. Ridgway and Allred M. Gruenther agreed today that there has been no letup tit the Russian threat to Europe, and said American r atomic weapons wfll he available in case of war. Ridgway, St retiring filled supreme commander in Europe, and Gruen ; ther, who has been chosen to take his place, expessed their - Sp v HANOI, tado China OT) French paratroopers I' wiped out in enemy company in an air-sdpported drive If ihipiij. deep into Communist positions near the French '* stronghold MS the PBane des Jarres in Laos, it was an m- *' c L_ 1 ■ gjf BLOOMINGTON, Ind. lff! A “more or less open |2 door policy” towad newsmen prevails at the White House M} l today, according to Merriman Smith, United Press White P'vJWfise: nbWto, Sntith, who addressed the annual Sigma Hpieita CM gridiron banquet at Indiana University last, the Eisenhower administration seemed to be f £ making a “genuine effort” to keep the nation informed p about the President. JBjjj *42v... * ' i"* 1- ~ ■ "■ K 2 JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (IP>- Former President 21-«H»ry Truman said yesterday that he “sincerely hoped and pxayed” that Americans would get behind President y ElWjnhdwqg’s foreign policy as a means of keeping peace Mr. Truman talked government, something he has -V avoided wince leaving the White House. But it was non r ' partisan, and he declined to “hang A prominent Presbyterian, he has served as a deacon and as chainhan of the board of the First Presbyterian Church here, and ha« held various other positions of honor. . A staunch, lifelong Democrat, Mr. Henderson is now serving his sec ond term as Harnett County Coro ner. '; • ruy , tn addition to directing the fur niture company, he also owns and operates Quinn Furniture Company and the Community Mutual Burial Association, both 'progressive and growing business institutions. Mr. Henderson married Hie for mer Miss Rena BoHes of Fitzgerald. Ga. They have two sens, Bobby Henderson, a student at Oak Ridge Military Academy, and Jimmy, a student in the Dunn ■ sfchools. Mrs Henderson is also active in the women* affairs of the town Lucas lost h * riarg val ued at $55. tt was snatched from his hand to the struggle^and^ could pea. oraevm anot&fcT tm tnc - rc* pail* record, Atanfa Hfith y Aii* * 1 i mart) (Jitirtftk ATLANTA dfl Two -Negroes I were elected today to minor public! offices here, the flntf time Negroes 1 have been in tha city government | since days. ! , The Negroes ran for places on the city executive committee which han dles election machinery on The local level much as.iiatlonal party organ izations run presidential elections. | Austin T. Walden. Negro lawyer and state head of the National As sociation for the’ Advancement ot Colored People, was unopposedsfor one of two places on £he commit tee from the prTdomlnanUy-Negro, Third Ward. 1 Miles Amos, a druggist, and Rod erick Harris, a car salesman, both Negroes, Were running for the oth er Third Ward Committee peyt. A third Negro, Dr. Rufus Clem ent. president of Atlanta Univer sity. Was running against j. H. Landers, a white candidate, for a place on the cltv board of educa tion. That face wts on a cityiwide COP Mms (Continued frees page owe) balance can be achieved by July 1, 1954, the start of the 1955 fis cal year OTHER DEVELOPMENTS Other Developments: Joint chiefs: Adm. Arthur Rad ford’s nomination as chairman, of the Joint Chiefs, of Staff seemed likely to touch-the fuse to a ma jor fight over unification and the administration’s whole military policy. Radford is the man who led the admirals’ revolt against unification in 1949 Tidelands: The controversial tidelands oil bill was expected’ to win final approval today when the House passes file Senate version and sands it to the White House for President Eisenhower’s prom ised signature. Controls: Opponents of standby presidential power to freeze wages and prices for 90 days in an emer gency have rallied around a pro posal of Sen. Harry F. Byrd D- Va. providing for exercise of , the authority only after a declaration of war on or by the United States or after a special congressional go ahead. Jifdl service: Postmaster Gen eral Arthur E. Summerfield said in House Appropriations subcom mittee testimony released today that there is little pressure for resumption of twice-a-day mail ser vice, which would increase the post:office’s annual deficit by about $80,900,000. 83 Dead (Continue* >«■ pan Owe) ers said there were no persons in /their buildings, he said: . S- LOUISIANA HIT Altwister sfftfclt Coifs? Es„ Ust night crumMtng a church and kill ing an elderly Negro woman, Nelly King. About 300 persons had at tended services in the church earl ier in the everting, but only 30 wefa. there when the tornado bore down. PIANO RECITAL ' , Mrs. C. C. Upchurch wifi present her piano pupils in a piano re cital Friday night. May 15th at the Dunn High School Auditorium. The public) is cordially invited to at tend the TfCital. ■ 1 fine on tha second emmt remitt ed. ‘ Frederick Hooker Owens, entered' a guilty plea to driving under the influihee. He ml the court he das Just back from Korea an other Is a 10-foot slide. ..Total cost of the Wide* was more than SBOO and was shared by the two bank ing institutions. The slides are now being erected and will be ready far Use later this week. On behalf of the committee, Chairman Juatesen expressed ap preciation to the two banks for their contribution. Mm Metal (Continued Prom Page Owe) - tea>, pastor of the Pullen Memorial Baptist Chtlrch,-in Raleigh, will of ficiate. Burial will the Friend ship church cemetery. The body will lie in state at the church one hour before the service. Mrs Mc fiall was a member of the Friend ship Baptist Church. She is survived bj* her husband, the Rev. McCall of Bunnlevel, two sons, Vernon McCall of Durham statenlws BRIEFS KINSTON IW A new stumb ling block was thrown up today In the long-disputed enlargement Os the Lenoir Memorial Hospital here. Citizens have approved a bond is sue for part of the 11,047,000 pro ject, but another group took; the case to the State Supreme Court after getting an injunction, to stop : Wf-ka'* / •%', *—/' nnmmWSMtl | im tßmiSmSmmiman mKSMs /^Hhßflf I MSm EEHIm■WBFmm i BSi m J MBHB - il^ ; ' In this g-e refrigerator,. Ii jii 11 111 ' 111II ~"T| iii iwWjpwMor b+tM jm'm * ■ I fiMH 11 IIRM 9 I R F*»OHS G-E DEPENDABILITY! * —mil (I I U G-E sealed-in refrigerating system gives M If i lU y°° year* of dependable service! Men *' BE r£y J tl *« in use 10 yean erkmgeri mi fuK/rf mzM ]| W ' *per *q. ft. of floor apace than in cider modda. i •*; f ILLiiJwJ' H ■■ Mil lull|| lllil' lUllirm B j I - Tiiirtiiiiiiil"- I M J ' 1 J i Hi | ■ I /• / * « ■ Bjßg WK’ 1 I fll C Y ■ l.lfcj ! fIR % -n. <, ,1 . . > - .Jm *• ■ C 1 i ' l i : i wMMM u-me-74 mu v WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 13,1953 ° Ct . 33 66 . RALEIGH W. Central North Fryers or broilers steady, demand | good; heavy hens steady, supplies short In some ar&s, fully adequate in others, demand fair to good. Prices up to 10 a. m. today: rFyers or broilers 3H to 3 lbs 26: heavy hens mostly 26-27, few 28. Eggs steady, supplies about ade quate, demand good. Prices paid producers and handlers FOB local grading stations; A large 53, A me dium 49-50, S large 46-48 IN SMITHWIU) Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Raynor chairman of the Joint Chiefs of *id mum Is* f*n»i si ■■n in ‘ HIE HWIfE lg| vOngt coa Wl ter ad epic new DBlflcAtHm _ asst . g)| -S SOP administration’s military WASHINGTON IW The Unit ed b 1 can ettteten te leave Russia, the QS.4. 1. A -■ - A- ja , SWIC UDpH UDvllll 881 wOQ»y. SAVE i ON YOUR AUTO INSURANCE - i I rates fer geed driver*. 7" j 1 i Dwdsrd, nonassessable protec ♦lea. Prompt, friendly claim , ml - Ewwiiw EDWARD GODWIN • Phone 4491 ’ DUNN, N. C. 1 -sitv j Dunn Office In FCX Rbßdlng 1 I I SMI spent j 24 Hour Rood 1 I fcSSO! And'wrecker S ■ a -. * \ *k oyAkicc rPIUNEJ FAYETTEVILLE HWY.a DDNN..N. C. 1— ■ i M Esppsst porta. p»oa«ne. H. m . oad ducoy, lort to B\l **** than 90 rmira. H >■ Think ol th. wort _ eased..', the money .jffl ' OKS sortdl Poet* imp T ■ | original atmnqth W B too. tea Hot traertsd ■ posts rwplao* ids^f ■ ■ untmotld peats, to Ji % ea to toms porta WPP SSS fbaadnaa AIM uunn rvA w s^ss^tsrsz.