Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Aug. 21, 1953, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO BULLETINS FREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea IIP North Korean civi lians dug up bodies of American prisoners and stripped them of clothing, a liberated prisoner said today. “We would bury the bodies in the daytime and at night you could see the Koreans digging up the bodies,” said Sgt. Carl .1. Bass, 22, Inkster, Mich. “It was easy to see because they were dressed in white.” 1 LOS ANGELES IIP) Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy arrives u here today to press his investigation into alleged Com munist intiltration of the Government Printing Office after ,i disclosing Senate investigators were “trying to establish” whether Soviet agents slipped hydrogen bomb secrets to -'Russia. ,r ” PARIS (IP/ More than half of France’s 2,000,000 stri n kers started returning to their jobs today under an agree v. ment between the government ancj non-Communist unions. MANILA (IP Brig. Gen Carlos P. Romula announced tonight he is withdrawing from tfie November presidential contest and merging his forces with those of former De fensc Secretary Kamon Magsaysay. DENVER (IP President Eisenhower was scheduled to leave today for Pine, Colo., in the mountains and a day long trout stream outing sandwiched into a week of solemn ... foreign developments, a flying trip to New York and weighty meetings with top administration leaders. „ WASHINGTON (IP The Defense Department today <> made public the names of 43 more Amreicans —all Army r; men—reported by the Communists to have died while in v Korean prison camps. It was the sixth such list issued by the department, which emphacized that the Communist •‘ reports have not been varified. WASHINGTON (IP High-ranking admirals said to t day Navy Secretary Robert B. Anderson will have to is- I sue explicit written orders if he expects to end segregation • of civilian workers at Southern naval bases. They said the | new anti segregation policy, which Anderson proclaimed i verbally yesterday, will have little practical effect unless it I is backed up by an actual directive spelling out the steps ] to be taken by base commander. No such directive has j been issued. : . CHICAGO (IP —An optical device equipped with a ■ light and mirrors permits doctors to peer inside their I: patients’ abdomen t for signs of disease, three Des Moines, la., doctors reported today. They SaitLthe “peritoneoscope” has shown itself to be valuable, in the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer invol | ving organs in the abdominal cavities. RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil IIP Michael O’Brien, the S 20th Century “Man’ without a country” resigned him iself today to spending a lot more time at sea. . O’Brjfitty-58, who shuttled for more than 10 months a board'the llafig Kong to Macao Ferry, was refused admit tance to,.lsrazd yesterday when he arrived aboard the | French-finer Bretagne. . j TUCSON, Ariz. (IP —.Wreckage scattered across the desert for nearly a square mne showed today where a B -50 Strategic' Air Command bomber crashed and exploded Two members of the 12-ntan crew were killed and two others seriously injured yesterday when the bomber spun into the desert 40 miles north of here. MARQUETTE, Mich. (IP Fourteen teenagers of socially prominent parents in Michigan, Illinois and New York were found safe Thursday after being lost in the Huron Mountains for 36 hours. Other than being cold hungry and frightened, the 10 girls and four boys were none the worse for their experience. They were without food for 24 hours. NOBTHFIELD, Mass. (IP William C. Bullitt, former ambassador to Russia, believes that Russia may be ready to risk all-out war with the United States three years hence. In an address here last night, Bullitt said the Uni ted States is in its 24th hour of decision and must seize the initiative soon in its dealings with Russia if its’wants to avoid destruction. GRENOBLE, France (IP A French Alpinist who slip ped and dangled all night in a crevasse on 12,361-foot Ba teau Peak Froze to death today before rescurers battling a raging storm could reach him. BALLATER, Scotland (IP A radiant Princess Mar garet received a spray of white orchids for her 23rd birth day today but kept secret the name of her admirer. The box of orchids was among many packages that arrived for the princess at Balmoral Castle. She was reported smiling and happy after receiving gifts and congratu lations. ’ LANCASTER, S. C. (IP Rep. James P. Richards (D --SC) has turned down a position on President Eisenhower’s foreign economic policy commission. Richards said here he could not do justice to the du ties required of a commission member while also serv ing as a delegate to the United Nations General Assembly. WASHINGTON (IP Deputy Public Printer Phillip L. Cole today took issue with Sen Joseph R. McCarthy’s charges Os “lax” security measures at the Government Printing Office and challenged the “credibility” of test imony before McCarthy’s Senate investigating subcommit tee. Cole told news conference he knowe of no secret gov ernment documents having been stolen from the big gov ernment plant, as charged in testimony before tike subcom mittee. nary. At a Shakesperean play there • In* role. SAW MIAMI SIGHTS - Miss Wllla Mae Jeffriee, supervisor ol Harnett OOUBty Negro schools, starting her fall work this year, had kind words for the hospitality of Miami, Fla. That was the con .-va&tion -city -for the the which Miss Jeffries attended as an uffical delegate from N. C.'s Ne gro teachers. She took time opt from summer school to attend the June convention. ARRESTS?-Arrests In Dunn dur ing tfce pact 34 hours include. John Calvin Leak. M. of MS X. ra vine Street, far careless and rpca less driving, and Earnest Edward McDowell, also It. of 30? N. Samp son Avenue, for careless and reck- S? ettevlUe next Tuesday night whese i they win meet the Fayetteville IS jwt | SOFTBALL CHAMP HONORED The Catholic Men’s club of Dunn last night staged a hamburger fry honoring the Veterans of Foreign. Wars Softball Team, of which Father Francis McCarthy was the pit cher-ond the star pitcher «f the entire league. Mctured left to right are, front row, Billy Barefoot, Father McCarthy, Corbett Hartley, Fulton Fairdoth, Coach Pete Shell and BlUy Bayles; Back row. BiU Stanch, Manager Don Melcher, Harry Thompson, Doc (Corbett, Billy Wade, BiU Thompson and C. F. (Reeky) Ingraham. (Daily Record Photo) Harnett Man Invents New Tobacco Looper That Works Cyrus' McNeill, Broadway, Route j, 1 doesn't claim he is the only in- I ventor in the nation who has put | his brains to work on the problem ; of making an automatic tobacco | j looper. . - L I But the well known I-imettli County farmer and Upper Little River township constable after seven years of work has deve loped a field looper which can string a stick of tobacco in a minute and it is cheap to operate. At present, two commercial com panies after watering McNeill's looper in action want to build the machine. I. R. Williams of Dunn is , MeNeiU’s attorney representing his patent interests in a venture which if successful on a wholesale scale, would bring fame and fortune to the inventor. Chief advantage of the looper is that with the machine in tho field it eliminates all, help at the barn, now one of the chief seasonal expenses of the tobacco fanner. I FOUR MEN RUN IT Four men run the looper which is mounted on wheels and operated with two small air cooled motors McNeill built his looper from old automobile parts and other old ma chinery. Some few new parts and special castings were necessary to fit his specifications. The model is self-propelled and driven from the rear. Low slung seat on each side at the front enable a man to prime tobacco' while seated. Leaves are fed to the machine by hand, but all walking and back breaking labor is elimi nated. The looper can be adjusted to place any amount of tobacco desired on the sticks. Since his looper can crop two rows of tobacco at a time, McNeill’s custom is to plant every other row four feet wide, giving the machine plenty of room for maneuver. Mc- Neill insists his-machine does l?ss damage to the leaves than an a verage mule. And if the looper is sold commer cially “old dobbin," may soon be a thing of the . past on the tobacco farm. The average mule these days vacation on the farm until the to girls at 7:30. SCOUTER TO SPEAK—Dunn Ro tariahs will meet tonight at 6:30 o’clock at Johnson’s Restaurant and will hear a report from Scout Louis Surles on the recent Boy ■ Scout Jamboree in California. VI urn WTWf «« |L_ • JP#' . I w x WM v\' i r \ jtef.t'i If' % Ik- 'jM r *\m\ 'll*. A ■ -*H li’-. presenting U. W. W. Williford of WilUford's WIMF (D.IW Record Pbob THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. bacco season when mule driven drags'haul the leaves to the barn. Slow talking and dog fancier McNeill doesn't worry about' the fact that some of the best mechan ical brains have tackled and failed on this same problem. He only knows his looper works. Morrison (Continued Front Page One* | the Democratic national convent- j ion last year and made several television appearances i n Adlai l Stevenson’s behalf. Funeral services will be held at 4. n. m. tomorrow at Covenant Presbyterian Church here with burial at Elmwood Cemtery. Services ’ will be conducted by Dr. Warner Hall, pastor of the church; Dr. Ben R. Lacy, president of Un ion Theological Seminary of Rich mond. Va. and Dr. John R. Cun ningham, president of Davidson College, 'Honorary pallbearers will include Umstead, former Gov. R. Grggg Cherry and W. Kerr Scott, and members of the Mecklenburg Coun ty Bar Association. CAME UP HARD WAY Mo rison, whose farmer-father never had enough money to send na boy to college, studied law in a Greensboro law office and was admitted to the bar in 1892. In 1893 he was elected mayor of Rocking ham. He then came to Charloi-j to practice law and made his next venture into state jfolitics in 1920 when he ran for governor, against O. Max Gardner and Robert N. Page. ‘ He defeated Gardner by 9.000 votes in a runoff and took office Jan. 12, 1921. Morison was soon dubbed “the good roads governor” after induc ing the legislature to appropriate $66,000,000 for hard-surfaced roads, an unheard-of amount for that time. He was also the first gov ernor to appoint a Woman to a major post and launched a vig orous c usade against lynching and mob violence. Under his administration, the Genera) Assembly also abolished state ad voldrem taxes and the poll tax as a requirement for vot ing, increased the income tax and appropriated $20,000,000 far health and education. t- Morrison left office m 1925 and in 1928 was elected to the Demo- News Shorts (Continued from page one) wide strikes, cracked wide open today. MARION, Va. (If) Public health officials will begin Virginia's second mass anti-polio outbreak fight with of 6AM | Smyth County children with cam-; ms globulin next Thursday. PEORIA, in. Os) The Amer-1 lean Federation of Teachers today adopted a resolution deploring the appointment of South Carolina Gov. James F. Byrnes as a United States' delegate to the United Nation*. j NEW ORLEANS IW Thijoe ' Navy airmen were picked up <by rescue craft today, two hours after their Martin torpedo bomber crash ed in the Gulf of Mexico. Navy? spokesman said the men were be ing flown'to the Naval Aik Sta tion at New Orleans. None kippern ently suffered injury, authorities! said. DETROIT (V) Delegate! to the AFL International Typographi es! Union convention voted over whelmingly last night to continue the ITU's strategic defense fund. . The fund, used to publish com peting newspapers in areas where ITU printers are on strike, was a topic of heated debate among the 4M delegates. DENVER (VI Bert Andrews, chief Washington correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune, died. cratlc National Committee. He was appointed to the Sen ate by Gov. O. Max Gardner in 1930. the man he had defeated for governor 10 years earlier tc fill the vacancy left by the death of the bite Sen. Lee Overman. Beaten by Reynolds However. Asheville attorney Rob ert Reynolds defeated Him for a full Senate term in 1932. In 1942, he was elected to Con gress as the first representative from the new ,10th District arid ran for the Senate again in 1944 only to be defeated by Hoev. Morrison’s first wife died in 1919, and during his term as governor he married Mrs. Sarah Eeker Watts of Durham, She died in 1961. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Angelta Morrison Harris, and four grandchildren. •• a hospital here today of a heart; aiuuont, White House pirns sec-| retary James C. Hager ty aonoun cto. ■ , . I Andrews, 53, had been heid o-tite , newspaper’s Washington bureau since 1941. He also wee a. mwnber 6f the newspaper*! board of'direc tors. *..*V - .y. -t WASHINGTON IV) The So viet H-bomb and A-bomb have de stroyed much of the U. 8. atomic stockpile S war-prevention power, informed officials believed today, j LOB ANGELES IV) Senate I majority floor leader William F.i Knewland (R-Cailf.) advocates to day that, if it were possible, RUs-> ala should bo "thrown out' 1 of. the ; United. Notions. CHICAGO (V) Adial E. Stev- I euean, testing at his LlbertyvUle. ; HI. home today after an around the-wntid fact-ftnding tour, gave no hint he would seek the 1956 | Democratic presidential nominat ion. On his • arrival hem yesterday I from New York tho former URnob | governor sold he believed Piesi* ( 'dent Elsenhower was “trying to do I his best” in the White House. j Grunewald (Continued From Page One! were found scattered around the ■ three-room apartment. The 63-year | old mystery man,j whorito- takdn to the hospital on hn ambulance stretcher, refused to talk about the incident even to police. But he was booked on the techhiea) charge of disorderly conduct to allow his MR. FARMER For Top Money Sell Your Tobacco At PLANTER’S WAREHOUSE w nniiiivUiiii *.+ ‘/• • J v VV- ‘ '• H —‘—■—i ikHh upcp n tch DV wf Aft. .*i ’ll ikl WuM.in.iH pep Ffianvfce 1 *• Mi vßcsßWin • to u. tagerton m A I T«wi jk "%"■ ■** »*« 1 m FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST^ Fishbeck Planninm Series Os Sermom With the Rev. Glenn H. Fish- : beck, the minister, the people of Riverside R.esbyterian Church are i searching some of the remarkable statements of the Bible about the return of Jesus Christ. They rec- I agnize that we cannot believe any ! of the dates people have given for these future evehts, because God wisely chose to keep that from us. BUt they are discovering that the Bible reveals much relating to the future program of the Son of Man. These services a:e each night through this week, including Sat urday. from 8 .to 9 p. m., with the final study at 9:45 Sunday morn ing; August 23. Anyone interested is welcome to attend. Sunday night it was seen that Christ will bring peace and jus tice to this aarth which every other means has utterly failed to do. Monday night It was shown that prophetic statements are to be understood literally, and accep ted as accurate, though care should be exercised in interpretation of what Is obviously symbolic. Tues day night several erroneous views were segh to be out of harmony with I Thessalonians 4:14-17. ’ WEDNESDAY’S STUDY The Mudy for Wednesday night makes distinction between the Judgment Seat of Christ which af fects God’s family only, and all other future, judgments. The study for Thursday night is to show that tfoar «U over the world Jews will he brought to Palestine and the nation of -Israel Will enter into great earthly blessings by the sec ond coming of'their Messiah, our Ldrd Jasm, The study for Friday night is. Will The Church Go Through The Great Tribulation. The study for Saturday Light is. Will There Be A Millenium? The congregation is enjoined ife use their Bjbles. ip these studies, ex amine each scripture cited, and see admittance to vhe hospital. In fbW»l. ; apurt at Washington. GrunewaM pleaded guilty last May to contempt of Congress. On June 4, he was fined *I.OOO and given a 90-day suspended jail sentence. He was placed on probation for a year, under terras which specify among other things that he “must live a clean, honest and temperate life." Authorities In the capital said to day they will ehee* the Jersey City incident to determine whether terms of probation were violated. StUt Your Savings CQMMER^j BANK Dunn, N. C. for themselves. QUINN'S Funeral Home 24-HOUR SERVICE PHONE 3306 211 W. HARNETT ST DUNN, N. C 2&e JVelcome JVagoq Hostess SVill Knock on Your Dome with GifU & Greetings’ Irons Friendly Business i \ Neighbors and Yout/ \ Civio and Social f Welters Leaders \ )■ . - On th» occasion of: The Birth of a Baby Sixteenth Birthdaya Engagement Announcements Change of residence Arrivals of Newcomers tteg DUNN, N. C. Sj M Urs. R. J. Denny T 3878 9 '(tfm fit T f!
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Aug. 21, 1953, edition 1
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