Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Aug. 27, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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LEATHER* North Carollne—Mestly fair With Httle change In temperature today, tonight and Friday. VOLUME S United States Wins Victory At UN Conference ■■■ ...... . . - WLmm j| i A' JKgm ' ,-/ ~ ££* HK )Mt| Spjf The Dnnn Lions Cl»b tonight will celebrate It* 29th anniversary and will jay honor to «*e charter member* and one ten-year member of the club. Pictured here are those to be t t^r a Utt .. to , ri .* rl ! t .* ft: <*> ro". Raymond L. Cromartie. Jr., George Arthur Jackson, and Mack Ik W i£S? WCt lll f ® Ter ?° r; b ? 4 * < “ ,, rmr ‘ H “* h W. Prince and Ralph Snipes, all charter memberF lK*gr W,lH * *•***- Who will receive a ten-year membOrship certificate. TBbimi Lhhk To C<Ubtate - , 20th Anniversary Tonight p: h ■ Jaycees Hold J Ladies Night i*f Roy Lowe, president of the Dunn g.’l|w|lii. stated this morning that last night* ladles affair was one of the most successful meeting* Lowe pU<t:;'ihat Rl Jaycees, their jf wives ana guest* attended the meeting at "tfitta Cabin on the ? Cape Pear Enter, below Fayette ville. During the business session, pons for the 'Mmptmtln of a Dunn to invite a committee n«h Golds boro to attend a meeting soon to talk about such an organisation President Lowe said that the com mittee will explain the organiza tion and function of a Jaycette Three new members were ln (Continued On Page #Mr> —,— -la,_ — . »Bank Os Llllington Plans f%w Building The Bank of Lillingta& r this year celebrating its 50th anniversary will soon start construction of a handsome new*fcank building due to be cstapteted within 120’days I ***?* n ? W ! j «{ Streets HBsd wttti the Federal Depqst la |r agency Y*\ TELEPHONES: HIT . Illg ■ | Dunn Lions will h«ar Chester l&F*»b of Lawrenceburp, ijiwnaUonal director, former dfc fwwt governor and one of the t«p speakers in Lions tonight at their 20th, anniversary oelebration. Webb will also represent Liohs International in paying tribute to tlw PUHHtJIBb In its anniversary. Mayor IpfPn Hanna will Introduce Mr. Webb. Made M. Jemigan, a former di»- tact governor,.and one of five re maining charter members is Jn charge of making moat of the ar rangements. Working on the program are, Nathan Cannady, Jemigan, and Vice President Jack Jackson, who will preside at tonight’s meeting in the yjhyiffv of President Jesse Capps. ; s ~S«*ea<ii|eCan of Troy, promi nent Lion, and widely-known toast , master, will serve as master of ce remonies for the program. many guests The lions will have as their i guests their ladies, members of va rious other lions clubs in the area, and representatives of other Dunn >C«ui|Du*d on page «v»i %j " ' ' 3-’- "• "* ' ;•> - - '/*(■ ’ r "KAIV-r ;• sSjfi&A (She Bailu, %ttm& DUNN, N. C., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 27, 1953 Shah Receives Ike's Message DENVER IIP) The White House today announced President Eisenhower has sent a message of encouragement to the Shah of Iran in a cable certain to be interpreted as holding promise of American assistance. "In the spirit of the friendliness which has always been the basis for the relations of our two coun tries,” the President cabled .the Shah, “I offer you my sincere fe lcitations on the occasion of you: happy return to your country. . . .’ The President also extended his “continuing good wishes for every success in your effort to promote the prosperity of your people ant to preserve the independence oi Iran* The message was dispatched tc U. S. Ambassador Loy Hendersor In Iran several days ago for relay to the Shah. The White House lasi night received word that the mes sage had been delivreed, Judge Reduces Robbery Charge Judge H. Paul StrtcMand re duced charges against Prince All brooks, Negro, from first degrei burglary to forcible trespassing thi morning in Recorder's Court. Mary Perry charged Allbrook r with brewing down the door- t< I her horflei and. entering on th f night of Augusts 22. v Evidence indicated that Allbrook 1 had been staying at the home, am may have moved by the time o | the alleged trespassing. 1,1 “WOMAN KILLER* J Mary told the Judge that shi [ I was as: aid of Allbrooks because h was nothing but a “woman killer, t Judge Strickland dismissed tb idea that Allbrooks had willful! |R£S€«3l Bhtd beep vMtefrat the home earn - Judge Btrickliutl sentenced All f ) brooks to 90 days in jail, suspend I ImeDt^Ms” l^^^ imrtJi . N&j&i&jkA ,v,. Violence Breaks Out In Phone Workers Strike By UNITED PRESS CIO rubber workers walk ed out at Firestone plants in efight cities today as new violence broke out in Bell Telephone strikes and 8,000 Great Lakes shaman prepar ed for a strike vote. At Paducah, Ky., 1,000 carpen ters set up picket lines at a billion dollar atomic energy project, halt ing construction and throwing 12,- 500 men out of work. m the Fi.estone strike, involving about 25,000 workers, the company was reported unofficially to have offered a 7 % cent hourly “pack, age,” compared to the union’s pared down demand of 10 cents. The walkout hit Firestone's huge Akron, 0., plant and others at Fall River, Mass., Pottstown. Pa.. Des Moines, la., Los Angelies, Calif, Noblesville and Newcastle, Ind., and Memphis, Tenn. Meanwhile, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. employes, whose con . tact expires Sept. 8, voted to give their negotiating committee power to call a walkout. At Montreal, officials of the AFL Seafarers’ Union ordered a strike I vote next Monday among 8,000 sea men aboard 250 Canadian ships plying the Great Lakes to-back up demands for a 40-hour week. ' ATOMIC WORK HALTED The carpenters’ walkout at Pa ducah was the 83rd jvork stoppage at the, vital atomic project since construction began in January, 1961. In the telephone strike, more *fVtblim.e was reoorted in Indiana, but only one Issue was reported, holding up a settlement lit the walkout in six Southwestern states. At Indianapolis, the striking CIO wo-kers protested to the governor and mayor that Indiana Bell had removed from service a telephone line into local union headquarters from which the strike was being directed. Callers got a “don’t ans wer” signal, the union charged.. Negotiations resumed jp New York in a contract dispute between the communications union and the American Telephone & Telegraph Co., parent of the Bell System. The union gave assurance that there would be no unauthorised walkout e of long distance operators. f :+ Record Roundup + s BUG.HUNTING That’s the - phrase radio technicians used to I e describe the work they were doing !- this, week on the two-way radio' ir equipment in the office of Harnett Sheriff William E. Salmon. Three I is of the five rural policemen, the! y sheriff’s car and Deputy K. C. 'Mat e thews have been equipped with! d two-way radios. Technicians Just! ,( want to be sure all is in working! o:der. Equipment for the two po o Ucemen lacking radios will come n shortly. ,t BITE APPROVED—Dr. W. B.Hun i- ter said today that the State Med ical Care Commission has approv- | Dr. William Kale : To Speak At Moriah i- - 5* Df- Wiliam Arthur Kale will “ preach at Mt Moriah Methodist M Church, Sunday, August ,36, 1663. at ,11:06. .. Dr. Kale Is now a professor at practical theology at Duke Divinity u School, Duke University, Durham, td N - C- * •*’ ■:] 3f He has served churches at Wil son, Wsavervttje, Moqresvffie, Kan napolis, Hickory, Shelby and High » Point, N. C. Or. Kale received his ie A.B. and from Duke University JMLJM}. from High is Point CotMippS f to hear Kate apeak. • ' " ; '‘V y ", ™’ B \ Jt wL ; mMUF Jr ' v ‘ Jl’ .iPH TAKING TIME OUT Members of the executive council of the Dunn High Student Council, are shown above taking a few minutes out from their “Clean-up program to listen to Virginia Turlington play the piano. The students are busy with brooms, paint brushes, and waste cans getting things in top shape for the opening of school September 2- Those grouped around the piano are, left to right, Kathryn Thomas, Kathryn White, Donald Jackson, Frank Wilson, Kathryn Butt, Mary Lou Westbrook, Laura Bell Carr, and Herman Godwin. (Daily. Record Photo) Great Debate Predicted Over Atomic Information WASHINGTON (IP) Lines axe being drawn in Congress and the administration for what may become a great national debate over giving ; the American people more facts about the atomic afpis l race ’ —*. :.l , e^^WWßß^^Oord^ Dean of th« Atbmlc : Mtsrgy Com-, mission and -many prominent sci entists who believe tnd public needs more information to aot intelli gently on the grave problems rais ed by Russian and U. 8. possess ion of A-bombs and H-bomb*. On the other side are some at omic officials and a ifetnhig num • ber of congressmen who hold that i any relaxation of atomic georecy ! w in aid the enemy more’ than it , will help the U. K pubde. ! | The issue was pointed up by ! two statements from congressmen ; Wednesday. | Beh. Lester 0. mint (D-Wyo) i (Continued on Page Few) ,ed the courthouse square as a site for the new Harnett County Health Center. However, with wooded area la plenty on the North Bast corner, |he hopes the commission / will fa |vor a spot a Uttle on tfle lower ’.aide of the square, than the area near the library which was ten ! taUvety chosen. He points out that lif First Street was opened below ’ the county agriculture building, it would provide parking area and iesiy access for patient?. Left turns <tff busy 16-A onto the square I present a traffic hasard the health | officer said. Noise is also bad he I said, near 15-A. I (Osnttnued sn y*t «W*> mm - j ■ •fpr ■ ;; -- "Siu FIVE CENTS BER COPY Reds Try To Block Delivery Os Food f butrnmp*' ' BERLIN «f) The Soviets and East German CQMptfmM today put Berlin “off limits’’ to all East Gerisani seeking to reach the city to collect “Eisenhower food parcels. Sale of railway tickets to points within 50 miles of the city was banned. Soviet troops were posted on roads leading to the city. These strict measures were taken as the United States and West Ger man governments opened the sec ond phase of a free food distribu tion program in the Amerclan, British and French sectors of this city-110 miles behind the Iron Cur tain. 196,966 REACH AREA In spite of the strict Soviet con trols, Western authorities estimated 100,000 East Germans managed to reach West Berlin today. This brought to nearly 3,000,000 the num ber of free food parcels d’stributed since the program began. The sec ond phase of the plan, which opened today, will supply 1,000,000 addition al parcels of American food to East Germans. The ban on railway travel to Ber lin was reported by the West Berlin Railway Administration. Last Minute News Shorts NEW YORK (HI City health officials bsselged by frantic par ents turned down today a plea for gamma globulin for 599 Brooklyn children who attended a summer day camp where two cases of polio were reported. WASHINGTON (PI The United States, Great Britain and France relaxed restrictions on the move ■Mßtft ®f ffuttfinT* diplomats asd journalists today. The Joint action followed the relaxation of the move ment of Allied diplomats in Soviet Rosria by Frontier G corgi M. Mai. •nkev. EAST RUTHERFORD, N. J. HI Three bold gunmen hold up two well-timed rshhery outside a branch of the Rutherford National Bank today and escaped with <37.999 af ter shooting one of the money car riers. The memsngtr was felled by a bMB6 which graced V. head as IB dMbnrataly sought to step s grtjPr ear carrying the t||M wem - Mia ?*£rLm»Vw.T.* hot had ttE rssa*sf?!.rs,f’-5!!r; DUNN STORES OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAYS East Germans who ran the block ade reported that Communist “strong arm squads” were beating up East Germans who attempted to collect the prized food packages. The isolation of West Berlin from the surrounding Soviet sone was ordered even as U. S. High Com missioner James B. Conant ap ; pealed to the Soviets to lift their j Iron Curtain to permit Germans 0 travel freely between East and West Germany BULLETINS i VATICAN CITY (IF/ Spain the Vatican signed • an agreement today recogninjaf the Roman Catholic ; Church as “the only true religion of thmfjgfcholic nation” of Spain. The agreement, a formalpwmpwr treaty, was , signed after 558 days of secret nefMatien. ROCK HILL, S. C. <ff> Funeral services ®* Mrs., Rosa Kate Turner McFadden, whose, tayp-ycar coma ended in death here yesterday, were aeheddMpleday- The 74-year -j old woman injured in an automobtigljMeldent Aug. 17,1951. and never regained consciousness iSB»e . than twoi years of treatment at a here.^ Mrs. Ralph Hmnna : Given State^Post i Mrs. Ralph E. Hanna won a gubernatorial 1 yesterday to the State Board of Cosemetic Art Examiners \ Mrs. Hanna, wife of Dunn s mayor, Is owner pf||#pfc’s . . Beautv Shop in Dunn. i'. . uuautji uiivy ui animus. Governor Umstesd announced . that he was selecting Mrs. Hanna i to succeed Mrs. Iris H. Lawrence of Raleigh on the Board. 1 FORMES STATE PRESIDENT < Mrs. Hanna has operated a beau * ty shop in Dunn tv the past 16 • years and is a past president of the r North Carolina Beauticians As ■ sedation She is also prominent in 1 other affairs of the town. N 0.185 Major Points Os U. S. Plan Win Approval UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. IIP) The United States to day won a “down-the-line” victory in the United Nations as the General Assembly’s Political Committee approv ed all major points of its plan for the Korean politi cal conference. Although the committee returned a 27-21 vote in favor of inviting India to the conference—an in vitation adamantly opposed by the United States—lt fell 15 votes short of the two-thirds majority requir ed for approval of the Indian bid in the full General Assembly, which meets tomorrow. A series of diamatic votes de veloped this way in the commit tee: A resolution providing that any country which fought for the U. N. in Korea could be invited to the conference if it desires was ap proved 41 to 7 with 10 abstent ions. The Soviet bloc, joined by Guatemala and Yugoslavia, voted against. REAFFIRMS OBJECTION This measure reaffirms the U.N. ( objective of a unified, independent . and democratic government in Ko rea. gives each nation the right to (Continued on page two) Gill Asks For Bond Approval , SOUTHERN PINES (IB State Treasurer Edwin Gill urged mem bers of the Sandhills Kiwanls Club . to rote for the 673,'f18Q.«M In bond 1 issues -for ttdNße schools and’ men- ; till hospitals as a “sound invest ment in o p- own future.” Gill, making the first speech of Gov. William B. Urnstead’s cam paign to get voters to approve the Issues in a referendum Oct. 3, skid “there in no question" about the need for the bond issues. 1 H e said that many mentally ill persons are being kept in jails be cause of .a lack of space in the hospitals, and that , overcrowded 1 school rooms in some Cases are ' n3lstquatdly ventilated and lighted “an! 'without satisfactory sanitary * / ;r ■ W- • fei mi Jy
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Aug. 27, 1953, edition 1
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