Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Aug. 18, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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+WEATHER* NORTH CAROLINA Partly cloudy with moderate temperature* Tuesday awl Wednesday. Scattered thundershowers eastern and south ern portion. VOLUME 3 UN Rejects . u f I Ynrfiffl \* i >r .'JJPF 1 < {■r I jKIkJ F I ~‘ - |g^H v f : /JH \ * . j! n \ « jjggllrv ~ ' ,4f /^ I# ~ M ' ■*« **»■ Fayette iHptffl of Srwto look at m picture of their«on, William V.. If r : ■ l * I Reds Return Erwin Soldier; Family Happy And Exdted I ' ♦Concert Group Plans Meeting i The directors of the Campbell I |v College Concert Association will L meet on August 34 to set up final 1 P- „ plans for the coming concert sea l eon, C. W. Hart. Director of the ■ Association said today. . I . ‘ K-< At the same time it was announ- \ P~ oed that the association would give P' Its ftrst concert on October 13. E; when the Chanticleers Male Quar- 1 Ei : -tet will give a performance in the auditorium here at Campbell Col- Tickets will go on sale for the It season In the next few weeks. There will JSe six (6) programs to t.| he given by the association this W. They include: October 13, Chant icleer Male Quartet; December 8, Lennon Had Desire . To Serve In Senate * ' Ks‘.,. / By JOHN SIKES - ' ,f CHAPTER SIX r The senatorial bee has been buzzing in the thoughts . Sf Alton A. Lennon, now in his first few weeks as United | States Senator since his appointment July 10, almost Pljjßa the day he left Wake Forest College in June, 1929. ..... I v itha senatorial bee has been bux * ' slug in the thoughts of Alton ben jiWn. now to hto first few weeks as ■milted States Senator since his lygfjune, 1939. gPFpolltciaUy. I've been thinking a | w?toTS? IS®:'? -* •• • -’a ■ Kngg&p ; : y ■: . TELEPHONES: 1117 . 1118 ■ I Grass Roots Opera production of “La Boheme” in English; the an nual Christmas Festival at Camp bell at a date yet to be announced; Feburary 9, 1954, Nelson and Neal. . Australian, American two piano ' team; March l, 1964, presentation of Shakespear’s “Two Gentlemen j «rs Verona” by the famed Barter Theater of Virginia; and Mareh 9 the General Platoff Don Cossack MMe Choras and Dancers. Tickets will be available from various community chairmen in this am. whose names will be re leased in the near future, or checks may be sent to Mrs. B. H. Laos ter, Treasurer, Campbell Ooltoge Con cert Association and tickets will be mailed Immediately. by-step, laborious stages. From the County level to the State level and thro, maybe , via the Lower House i »j^«s ! ' tantamount to election to Ms over <&hv 3 ttiln, Jtatttcft. Plan To Invite Reds To Conference • . >-'■ ■■ r - By CARL CONNER r Record Staff Writer After two years of waiting, the telegram that brought the news that ‘‘Your son has been returned to military control in Korea and will be Tetumed to the U. S. by surface transportation at an early date," came as good news to sfr. and Mrs. Fayette Stogsdlll of Erwin. The televram arrived this mor ning around 8 a. m. Mr. and Mrs. EtogadiU had waited night and day, listening to the radio, to get tome word of what had h&poened to their son, William V. Btogs dill. On November 1. 1951, the Stogs dllls had received a telegram which began “We regret to in fom you .. ” "Their son had been missing in action since May 18. 1951. Tht telegram stated he was misslnp from servios while in combat near Hang-Yi. The days and months that followed were tense ones. \■* V REENLISTED IN 1959 Bill first served in the army to 1948. He received his basic train ‘ng at Ft Hood, Texas. He was honorably discharged in 1949, but re-enlisted in 1969 and received his basic training this time at Ft. Knox, Ky. The neighbors all remembered Bill as a high school student, and when he returned from service te make a round of the community and greet his friends. •; - He wss bom on June 7. 1930. and attended Brwln High School. He stopped school to work to the mills In Erwin While sn e»n oioyee there, he was to Spinning room number 5. thit tin# on. hi* Barents 1 .... DUNN, N. C., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 18, 1953 — *—• I Mossadegh Puts Price On Head Os Gen. Zahedi ■ TEHRAN, Iran, OP) Premier Mohammed Mos sadegh today put a price on the head of Gen. Fazollah Zahedi, who, has renewed his defiant claims that the flee ing shah of Iran named him the legal head of the Iranian government. Mossadegh’s military government which put dogfn a weekend at tempt by Zahedi the shah’s imperial guards to overthrow the premier, offered 100,000 rialg (about $3,000) for information leading to Zahedi's capture. The long-time foe of the prem ier was said to have taken refuge in South Iran With the Kgtiar: tribe, whose chief is the father in-law of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi. SHAH ARRIVEB Meanwhile, the shah and his beautiful Empress Soroya arrived in Rome by plane today to be gin anew in along with, ousted King FaroUk of Egypt. The shah and the empress fied from northern Iran to Baghdad, Iraq, af ter failure of an attempted coup against Mossadegh. Zahedi needled Mossadegh b y breaking several days’ silence to Issue a new declaration claiming he is the legal premier by vlrttie of a regal appointment . The Iranian people, who had blown .psi steam in a! aeries of wild demonstrations in which statues of the slah were shattered and de manch^made <mstrations were banned to the capital. Iranian Foreign Minister Huss ein Faterai said the govemmedt would not yield to the “yankee go home” cries of the mobs. Mitchell Calls Party Meeting WASHINGTON (W Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell today Issued a formal call for a meeting of the Democratic National Committee to Chicago Sept. 15. The committee meeting, first since hurt November's election, will be held in connection with a two day Democratic rally to welcome Adlal R. Stevenson home from his world tour- 1™ party’s *1952 stand ardbesrer will make a nationwide •Continued On Ram pi BULLETINS WASHINGTON UP) Chairman W. Sterling Cole (R --NY) of the congressional Atomic Energy .Committee said today the United Btates should plan its defeiupp the as sumption that Russia has been “successfuMn developing an H-bomb.-“To assume otherwise would be. foolhardy,” he said i$ a copyrighted interview with the weekly maga zine U. S. News & World Report. \ RABAT, French Morrocco of> The natiepaiist sultan of Morrocco retained his powers through French interces sion today but appealed soy Ikelp from the outside world” against France. “Already there O bloodshed and violence in aH the cities of Morocco between Hie armed farces of France and unarmed people” Sultan Sidi Mohammed Ben YoufiMt said. . :v-- ' ; ; ~ •; " - FREEDQM VILLAGE, Korea (IF>— Cenunun lsts refused to let the inspect cnihp No. 2 and brought out handpicked ouestkm instead, a returning prisoner + Record Roundup + ' -■ ” - * ; OPEN ALL DAT WEDNESDAY Chairman Dave Ktupneli of the He flyJojfcwTork wSLesday where Y , l v - %' w* . ;sfy; j :\. ' t ’-A 4 fll ... j. V . ■’ ■ ■ S '^sT* E i T K . n . Mttw. k«, bmwht tte Tim Mhm to PknUn tt.r.hou. get ° ® nn * 8 ' ® oor Santier; J. E. Godwin, sales man a- Heavy Damage Done By Hal In Western Harnett V "y ... .?*( ; Fined SI,SH Aubrey Wrench of Go<firia, : Route I was given finee totaling $1,500 in city court at Fayettorille after be was convicted of transporting a bout 4* fkuß Jars fllfcd wsth VMtoeg whiskey and (frivlng > motor vehicle after revocation of license. Wrench was arreted by Cum berland County ABC officers and Fayetteville city police officers on the night of Ahguet 4 near Van story Street aftto; a short chase which ended when lie allegedly a bandoned his 1949 Whiskey-laden vehicle pnd took to the buehes. City Jurtoe Coy Brewer fined him $1,250 for the whlekey and $250 for the unlicensed driving. He paid hie court fines at the close of the trial but court of ficials said he bad ten days to which to 'appeal to Superior Court if he ahoujd decide to db so. ‘ }A yj| - , FIVE CENTB PER COPY Ekgerly awaited rains drenched hpt, dry Harnett within th« county's owh bor dera, left a two mile path of flattened tobacco stalks and rows strewn with hail-ridden leaves in the Raven Rock, Kipling and Neill’s Creek communities. Weather disturbances faded to materialise on Saturday to Barnett County as “Barbara,” the first maj or hurricane of the season, careen ing Northward spent Itself to the sea off the New England coast after hitting the Carolina coast on Thursday night tad Friday. ' A severe. bHotrlcal storm on Sunday iMiiaftb. m. preceded the hall storin' fspsi Harvey O’Quton, Mamers merchant reported started in that vicinity. “I watched the doudb form which carried toe hail,” reported O’Quinn. He Said the brunt of the haU feU to the Cummings neighborhood, site of some of the beet tobacco crops In the county. O’Quinn lost about half of his 13 acres of tobacco. > In contrast to drought-affected areas, tobacco to the'Raven Rock, Kipling and Neill’s Creek sections have been little hurt by lack of rain and estimates of hail loams, therefore, were correspondingly high, due .to the type of leaf dam aged. W PER CENT LOSE Willard Cummings, Lllltogtoa. Route 3 reported he had ten acres of tobacco where the damage was estimated at around 90 per cent of the crop. In two acres he collected over 300 sticks of damaged leaves, and thrill wen also many broken atoms, forerunners of lost leaves. W. T. Wester of the Raven Rock community reported 15 acres dam aged as h gh as 99 percent. Most of bit tobacco, • ho said, had boon primed twice, some three times, ”1 have been told by many that this was the best tobaoeo to this section,” Wester said. "We have not suffered for rain as ha vs so many of our neighbors. It seeme tiie bail hit one mite in either direction of this farm.” "I had the best crop in several years and look at .tt now,” commen ted Worth Cummings whom 12 acres of tobaoeo aRo was hard hit D. Collins said be ribbed up enough leaves fit rows to fill 300 stick* and wasn’t counting his in jured stalks. .-.. v <--i -2 in the Kipling ana the hail st^ck^r both prides pfh^b a toUe on either aids, m an ami TJJiEjhjH. Neill *i Creek ,img ■ t mgl r^Au ’ —7 * Os J2M.9N FLORAL PARK, N. Y. «! A bandit, warning that “anyone who moves la. a dead one,” cleaned out the vaults of toe Franklin Nation al Bank here today of an esti mated 9200,000. The gunmen seized the bank's cashier and assistant manager, Eric Gronwell, shortly after 8 a ' m. as Gronwell was leaving his ' home at Bellmore, N. Y. “I know all about you. Let’s go to the bank,” Gronwall quoted tto bandit. . • Gronwall was forced into his c* , and when they arrived at the ban I a guard opened the door for Gror ■ well. The bandit entered with bin "This is a stick-up and there . a to be no fooling,’’ the gur old three employes alread ingoing to be fast. We an ■tog to the vault and any one who moves Is a dead one.” I HORDED INTO VAULT i Nassau County Chief of Detec tiVes Stuyvesant Pinnell said th three employes and Gronwall wer herded into the vault where th bank’s cash was being sorted to urn by tellers. After questioning the employes PinneU said the loot must have , been close to $299,090. The bandit fled with the cash forcing Gronwall to accompapy hlm. He was met outside the bank by an accomplice, polioe reported They fled in Gronwall’s car And later dumped him out on a park way across the county line in New York City. FBI agents sealed entrances to the bank as they started an in vestigation. Search Abandoned For Jernigan Body Search has been abandoned for the body of Houston Jernigan, prominent 46-year-old Dunn merchant who was - drowned during the hurricane last Thursday at Mights- ’ trille Beach and members of the family today were gnu ahead with plans for a memorial service. - ; '£SSS| j&fgsrjss THE RECORD GETS RESULTS Russia's Demand Defeated By Vote Os 34 To 9 UNITED NATIONS, N. Y . (IP) The United Hattons Political Committee today rejected a Russian demand that Communist China and North Korea be invited here for discussions on setting up the Far Eastern political conference. The 60-nation committee took two separate votes on the demand made by Soviet Delegate Andrei Y Vishinsky. It beat down, 34 to 18 with ' abstentions, a motion to reconsidet a p.evious decision not to invite North Korea, and then voted 34 to 14 with 9 abstentions against extending an invitation to Red China. VISHINSKY RAISES ISSUE Vyshinsky raised also the ques tion of ousting Nationalist Chim from the U. N. in favor of the Chi' nese Communists, but said he woult wait until next September’s regu lar assembly session to demand act ion on this question. ■“The present session,” Vishin. sky said, “must consider a questior In which the Korean people anc the Chinese people are vitally In terested. Consideration of toll question without their participa- • tion, we believe, would be inad missable.” , The United States promptly op posed the Russian demand. “We are still convinced,” U. S Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. told the committee, "that there is no reason why this committee should hear North Korea nor the ather aggressors, the chine— Com munists . . . They wifi be con tacted when the time comes to ar jpjlgq 4be time and ptorir of tiw ihnferrooe. That will be the time to hear them.” Vishinsky said the Chinese and North Korean Reds “pmst pafti lpate in these sittings, sinee to ’heir absence no success is likely to a solution of this question.” RUSSIA HAS PLAN It was repo’ted that the Rus lans had submitted their own pro posal for setting up the Fer Ea*t ’ro Conference. The plan was un derstood to provide for represen tation of non-belligerent countries, which wss not provided for to he reso'i tion sponsored before the tssembly by the countries that 'ought the Korean war'lor the U. N. The Soviet measure also was ild to suggest that the Far Bast *n parley should not be limited ily to discussion of. the Korean pace settlement but should In ode questions of wider scope. j Last Minute News Shorts DENVER m President Eisen- called a eenferegee iere Thursday of Agriculture De artment officials, farm organise ion leaders and state draught re lief chairmen from eight Swrtfs vestorn state, te review jhe fed eral drought relief program and plan for the future. WASHINGTON 9R The Inter lor Department today spelled out a new federal power policy design. ponsibility of local WWWMI. The department uaM the new pul ley wiU be based on the “part nership” principle stressed by Pres- . ) «• H4otM># 99* MMBF ItMM . , ■. : the barricade in face of a 65-mil# ‘ wind and started fishing. ! Mr. Aman said Mr, Jernigan an- . | parently sUpped or mi MWa v he bent forward to at* out hts J i line. He was able to swim bad I most to the pier but an l>-fooif|| wave washed him out to sea. Amsn said the weather did a* sr i to be particularly rough when §** 2 I climbed ever the bstrrtoMie orate •: Urn dangerous pi*. NO. 178
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Aug. 18, 1953, edition 1
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