Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / June 30, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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rW EAT HER* ’ Partly cloudy, rather hot and humid today, tonight and Wednes day with scattered thundershow ers. VOLUMN I East Germans Defy Reds, Launch New Campaign Dunn Stores Offering Unusual Values For Bargain Days '■ T"; -rs •' ’ *flj fftiSrann it i miili T • f ~ v ■Kjw . % Hipi ' - - m jii , , > -1 - ‘ s mIM x ' task • • - v§ v -Wm " XJ MA-,, <X . ? ’:f --i ' -' * 1 - -| f, ’ . *.* —1 jjt*' ’ Hu ... HP RONS CHARLOTTE’S MERCHANDISE MART - pictured here at his desk I# EarJ Mahone, Jr. or Charlotte, formerly of Dtrow, who has beau named manager of Charlotte’s new 84M.M0 Radio Center, a modernistic merchandise mart He was selected log the post because of his experience and ability in promoting trade shows. Mr. Mahone, a Dunn High graduate, is the aan of Mr. and Mrs. Earl H. Mahone, Sr. of Ddnn. For a picture of the Radio Center, see,page two. Earl Mahone, Jr. Managing Fabulous $400,000 Project Last Minute News Shorts V I Moscow OR The o f f I e I s 1 Communist newspaper Pravds dis closed today that a ‘Teach trading syndicate” has .been .ipccaUttng illegally in the little blood-sucking creatures used in. Russia for treat ment of souse illnesses. The news paper said the gang has been op erating between Baku and Moscow and had netted Hs managers 1,- 000,MS rubles of private profit in the past six years. WIMBLEDON Eng. B! V h V. S. tennis parent, led by Mau reen Little Mo Connolly of Saa- Diego, Calif., swept into the women’s singles semifinals of the Wimbledon tournament today and sssursl America of,the champion ship for the 10th straight year. Doris ttwf of Cofjkl Gables, Fla. <riontmOf« 'mm pare tors) Dunn Weed Market To Open August 20 RALEIGH. ». 0. (If) The first of the fields Jwrii nnl r 111 ml tobacco aucthm markets will open in Just two and a half weeks, the board of governors of the Bright Belt Warehouse Assn, deckled here TUh|>oMd adopted 19 to 8 recom mendations of a new IS-man in dustry-wide committee for the op ening dates. Moat of the dissenting votes came from the North and The Georgia-Florida belt opens July W. the Border Belt Aug. 3, ‘ \ ' ,4 f> Dunns City-Wide Bargain Days Will Begin Thursday '< , ■ 3te JJaiig TELEPHONES: 3117 - 3118 -311 ft By EMERY WISTER (Special to Uie Record) CHARLOTTE A former Dunn boy is running the show in the newest and most fabulous promotion enter prise in North Carolina. He is manager of Charlotte’s new MOO,OOO Radio Center, a fancy mer chandise mart and display hall just opened in the Queen City As manager he is right hand man to George Patterson, who owns It. Mr. Patterson arranged for the fi nancing, then built the structure. IN CHARLOTTE FIVE TEARS Mr. Mahone, who came here five years ago, was elected for his posi tion because of his experience In assisting with trade shows. The trade shows, the displays of new clothing, are conducted in Charlotte several times each year. Manufacturers of Men’s, women's and children’s wear bring In sam ples of their newest creations and display them for hundreds of re '•nmluueS «• MW »w*> VI ■ change' by a warehouse sales com mittee if it be deemed necessary. COULD BE CHANGED , : ‘ Opening dates could also be changed by the sales committee If market conditions make it advis able but it could only be done n the advice of the new Industry committee. . v Association President Fred Roy ster of Raleigh said the formation of the new committee 1* “one of i the best forward slept the indua : V? DUNN, N. C., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 30, 1953 Meeting Held By Red Cross The executive board of the Dunn-Brwin Chapter of the Am erican Red Cross last night heard the report of the nominating com mittee who had been selected at a prior meeting to select a slate of officers for the coming y«ir Only the committee for Jhe Dunn sector of the ChaDiar :e --ported and the nominees for tm, Erwin sector will be presented later this week to Mrs. G.ace Swain, executive secretary. The list of chairmen and co-chairmen for th.r entire Chapter will be announced as soon as it is complete. Mrs Swain said. Members of the nommitliu; com mittee for Dunn are Rn»pii Wade. Earl Mahone, Earl Jones and Mis. Bob Warren. V , \ For the Erwin Branch of the Chapter the nominating' Sommit tee included Z. E. Matthews, chair man. Mike Crawford, Mrs. James Adams, Mrs. E. Q. Purcell an« (Continued en Vase 81 Man Overthrown From Wagon Dies Anthony R»» Hull Nwi» f*r mer of henr LHUngton. who wns .• thrown, from hie waron by n. inns way team of males, died around 1:S» thh afternoon in the Dana HeaStt c - , . -- .i Bay, eoWortn* from a severe rash on the head and bleeding nenfnsetv. was found along the* ’I avion Read a hoot one half mile ah and Gvadv Rkaa. vaoriag asot* Mists. Who mnoMd an amha -1 tssF. City-Wide Sales Event Will Open itedr At 9 The big sales event will open Thursday morning at 9 o’clock in Dunn stores. Bargain Days will get un derway Thursday morning and continue through Sat urday nigKt, with Dunn merchants cooperating to offer sensational money saving values. It’s a semi-annual event in Dunn, designed to bring new shoppers to this progressive and growing shop ping center to acquaint them with Dunn’s friendly stores. Dave Kimmell. chairman of the Retail Merchants Committee o l the Dunn Chamber of Commerce, sponsoring organzation, said today that everything is in readiness. Stores are well stocked with mer ‘ chandise—much of it ordered es pecially for Bargain Days and prices have been slashed .to pre war days. “Actually, I haven’t seen prices like this since back in the. days of the great depression,” declared one merchant. \ bargains galore Thera will be bargaltudfealore-for tha thrifty shopper not-wiily»on the owning day Thursday but on tbe pfog the event Joir weeks ajnMMb *' y effort is being made to iufte thisWlargain Days event th&Ottgft pgest success, in the history, ofT/he town. Dunn stores will repain open all 'l nßtinnM on f'ufF Two! Many From Here To Attend Meet Dunn will be represented by a delegation of twentv-five at the Int°"national Convention of Jeho vah’s Witnesses, Yankee Stadium, New York city. F. N. McLamb. presiding minister here and head of the delegation, announced to day that the groun will travel by cars to loin more than 125 000 oth-* er witnesses of Jehovah in their 8-day convention opening July 19. Mr. McLamb pointed out that Jehovah’s witnesses are com Inc from everv state in the Union and nearly 100 countries to participate in the largest, religious convention ever to be held in America. Char ter Dianes carrying delegates from Africa. Europe and Latin America, will soon converge on New York. Large delegations from Australia. New Zealand, South Africa, and ffVmMnweA nn Page l< BULLETINS LENOIR (fR State and county health officers mapped a battle to stop the outbreak of polio in Caldwell County todav as Bases reported over the weekend sent Hie year’s ]>olio toll* soaring to 64 for the county. WASHINGTON an The United States Air Force marshalled a fleet of mighty jet warplanes and 2.000 jjnarchin? aihp*n today to pay farewell tribute to Gen. flk»yt Sanford Vandenberg at a mammoth ' retirement review. WASHINGTON OP> Agriculture Penartment officials todav got ready to ship up to $8,000,000 worth' of livestock feed into drought-parched counties of Texas and Oklahoma and Indicated the railroads have agreed $d cut freight rates on the emergency shipments. CHICAGO (IP/ The nation suffered traffic X.-,. • On Fagt twa * * ;+ Record Roundup + FINE, SHOWING—Dunn’s Nation al Guard unit made an excellent showing during the summer en campment completed last week-at Foot McClellan, Alabama, accord ing to First Lieutenant Ed Wade, commander of the unit U. Wade «Aid today that he was mighty * b ® Wln * mad * i’peal outfit. ' - PLANNING BARGAIN DAYS Pictured here are members of the Retail Merchants Committee at the Dunn Chamber of Commerce in charge of arrangements for Dunn’s big City-Wide Bargain Days event. Left to right are, seated, John Weddle, man ager of Leder Brothers; Dave Kimme), manager of The New Louis Baer Department Store; standing, Locke Muse, manager of the A. and P. Store, and Paul Walker, manager of Rose’s. (Dally Recor d Photo). Korean } Spokesman Invjtes • U. S. To Withdraw troops SEOUL, Korea, ;.WdHnes day. (IP) Soutnpiorean leaders turned against Presi dent Eisen&crtoer’s special trouble-shooting envoy to-, day and one of tliem invited, the United States to pull ito t'rooDS out of Korea if it< Wanted to. The truce talks were doubly deadlocked. The Communists indi cated clearly thev would not. accept Gen. Mark -W. Clark’s call for a armistice with or without the suo oort of South Korean President Syngmau Rhee. TALKS BOG DOWN ■ It. was made clear also that the talks between Rhee and Assistant Secretary of‘State Walter S. Rob ertson, the trouble - shooter Mr. Eisenhower sent here to induce Rhee" to accept the armistice, had ,bo<”»ed down. There were open hints in high Korean quarter* that Robertsojf lacked authority. “Tbo many things are being re ferred back to Washington,” one official said. South Korean Foreign Minister i Continued on Page W GOING TO CHICAGO—Two mem J bers of the Dunn Lions Club. CHorge Perry Lee and Sec-etary Eugene Hood, wit] leave Duns tins weekend -for Chicago to attend the annual convention of Lions Inter natlonak They’ll represent' the SPSAEJtR—WBIhun 8. WeUona of FIVE CENTS PER COPY Thousands Receive Polio Vaccinations MONTGOMERY, Ala. (W Thousands of children started through a needle line today in the first community wide attempt to prevent a polio epidemic with gamma globulin. There were some tears and manv brave grin* on the faces of small fry. few of whom realized tha role thev nlawng In man’s effort, to bait the ravages of the mvsterlotis disease that twists sms l ' bod'pa A shirt,less, barefoet litt.U hov o f flv». whose name—Edward Daniel Oriunie—<*ftve atterdanti a start at. one Injection center, was No.* 1 in ,( ne. ; "ChneVs it didn’t hurt a bit.” h“ jsaid after tbe three-nuarter inch sepHip was iabhec 'nto his tenda ♦•aeVsido snd ♦*’» gamma globulin eduirted in*u him. ONf.Y TEMPOF SRY flnetnrs know that. (K> is onlv a te-enersrv oreventive. They hone it will last long ennup-h to b-eak -n fu-the- sn-ead of the malady that has hit, <H) o“mons in Wnnt eernei-v rvninty and caused thref deaths here. Teams of dorters and nurse® he. the lnoculfttlon of an ch’ld ren under 10 vear s of nee at 8 a. m. Anv'euc uarpntg lined no with their children at 18 vaccination “rme-«t!nn Needle” will fake un til Frtdav to comni*t* and by then about so 000 children will have hewn stabbed. 'A” children 1 with last pom*s beginning with A through F were to be Inoculated todav. The do-tors who volunteered their services also passed tha hat to paV fo* another imnortant. article -—, So 000 lolUoons for quick recoveiw of good spirit* among the young sters. Thev worked methodically In as sembly line- fashion. ’MARKETS* HOGS *X‘ds RAJEIGH IW Hog markets; Rock? Mount: 35 cents higher l at 28.00 for good and choice 180- 240 lb. harrows «*»d giHs, ' Siler City, Clinton: 25 cents low i er at 24.75. Tarboro, Near Bern, Jacksonville, Washington, Wilmington, Kinston, ! Lumbertcn, Marion, FayetjlevUle, Florence, Rich Square* Steady at r 24.76. (CiaH-H m Fata » THE RECORD GETS RESULTS HST Has A Big Night, Cancels Morning Stroll NEW YORK IF Night life in the big city can take a lot oat of a fellow. . Mr. Harry 8. Truman, a “tour ist” here, went to a nightclub for dinner last nirht .After that, he and Mrs. Truman and #omr friends went to see the musical "Wonderful Town.” After the show, they went hnck stage to meet Rosalind Russell, the star. They got home rather late. This morning the former presi dent canceled his regular 7 an. walk. "Was he dressed?” reporters asked the hotel man who got the word. "Well, not exactly” was the reply. Scouters Discuss Plans For Finance Plans for the snnual financial drive were the chief order of busi ness at the district meeting of Harnett County Boy Scout leader* at St. Stephen’s Parish House in Erwin last night. Names were pro posed of men to head the campaign in tbe various towns and In the county as s whole. These leaders wm be announced later. Russell McLean, field scout exe cutive for the county, gave a brief report on his experience* at foe school for professional aeoutera at Schlff Scout Reservation, Minden, over foe United Sts,tea and from NO. 141 Speedy Trials, .y Punishment Os ,1 Rioters Pledged | BERLIN (IP) Rebel-, lious East Germans, defying < Russian bayonets and scof- B ting at Communist premised. ■ A launched a new campaign |j of fire and fury against the Reds in Germany today. ~ A large part of Saxony-Anhalt J| province’s coal fields was reported in flames, while workers throughout V Soviet Germany were walking off £ the job and wrecking industrial machinery. In the big cities of the Soviet, j zone, mobs of housewives were gathering outside government build* ings to protest the recent break down in the Red supply system, * screaming: “We want bread for our child-' , rent" , Food critical The food situation in Red Ger- j many has grown critical during the two weeks since revolt flared s in Soviet Berlin and spread acmes the zone. Last week, an East BerlinertS ration can! entitled him to onjy ‘d ' quarter-pound of meat, an appro*!-' -f : mately equal amount of bread, and —if he was lucky—two PMibdfeof fish. B I Many grocers about two ounces of the fish ..vyJCTWB'' v'j Vegetables and ‘unobtainable. If Hunger riots were K? day in Erfurt, Dessa, HaaK Furt-on-Oder, and other* k-*: ‘ coal J Reliable reports wdfSdng how j said the coalfield fireswere set bf r miners who, adoring Communist -SI promises of future benefits, are d«- , manding more pay and better work-| ing conditions right now. Tens of thousands of other work-/ 5 - ers risked mass arrest and sum- i (Continued on Page Eight! .. 'J See I Wednesday’s DAILY RECORD For More Bargain MU “All the traditions of acoutwH • were embedded in the school," II Lean reported. “We were organMjw ;; as a scout troop made up of PM iols, and everything We did wig way It would be conduotad^|9 1
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1953, edition 1
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