Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Sept. 15, 1953, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO BULLETINS! a great season soared with the return of star fullback Rick Casares today after he was cleared of responsibility in a fatal auto crash. His injuries on the mend, Casaras was scheduled to register as a senior and check in with the Florida football team. . NASHVILLE, Tenn. UP Nashville’s walloping Volte today got ready to take on the Birmingham Barons for the Southern Association championship after polishing off Atlanta, 6 to L The finals series opening here tomor row night promised to show off some of the heaviest hit ting power ever collected for the Shaughnessy Ptayoffs. WASHINGTON (IP) Everett Frederick Morrow, the grandson of a slave, was sworn in Monday as an adviser on business affairs for the Commerce Department’s Na tional Production Authority. Morrow, 44, is a native of Hackensack, N. J., and once was field secretary for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. WASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (IP) Wiley T. Buchanan, investment banker and real estate and oil operator, was sworn in Monday as U.S. minister to Luxembourg, suc ceeding party-giving Mrs. Perle Mesta. WASHINGTON (IP) President Eisenhower has in structed alii government agency heads to “take the ini ative” in enforcing the policy of non-discrimination in federal contracts. MONTREAL (IP) The new National Hockey League season will open Oct. 8, the earliest in history, with Chi cago playing at Montreal and New York at Detroit, it was announced today. NEW YORK (IP) Wallace “Bud” Smith, an aggressive lightweight ranked fifth nationally, today was in one for “bigger and better” things, as his convincing victory over British empire light-weight champion Arthur King in dicated he is ready to move up. RIO GRANDE, Ohio (IP) Rio Grande College, unde feated in 39 basketball games last winter when freshman Bevo Frances scored 1,954 points, handed its critics a stiff 25-game schedule today with games against larger colleges slated in New England, Nebraska and Miami, Fla. PANMUNJOM, Korea (IP) Red correspondent Wil frid Burchett presumed today that Ist Lt. James A. Van Fleet Jr., son of the framer Bth Army commander, died in a bomber crash in North Korea. Burchett, correspon dent for the Paris newspaper L’Humanite, said he knew “for a fact” that young Van Fleet was not a prisoner of the Communists. ' . ' PANMUNJOM, Korea (IP) (lndian guards today tightened security regulations on prisoner transfen as they returned nine North Koreans to the Reds amid Com munist fanfare. From now on, the Indians said, Only five observers from each side will be permitted to witness pais, oner transfers. MARSEILLE, France 'fP Michael Patrick O’Brien, the modern man without a country, was Hong Kong bound again today. OTfeien arrived here Monday in the French liner Bretagne, was refused permission to land and sailed in the ship for Genoa, Italy—and for Hong Kong. HANOI, Indochina (IF) Communist-led rebels fought today to capture the vital Red River delta before Indo china can receive promised American military aid. Viet Minh forces began their all-out offensive six weeks ahead of schedule, French high command spokesmen said, ftnd attacked 15 government strongpoints in northern Viet Nam and Laos. VIENNA Austria (IP) A major reorganization of the Communist Czechoslovakian government in which eight of the 10 vice premier posts were eliminated was announced today by Prague radio. The drastic shakeup dropped veteran revolutionary Gen. Karol Bacilek from the government Bacilek, 57, gained a reputation for ruthlessness as minister of security, or chief of secret po- Kce. GROTON, Conn. (IP) The keel for the world’s se cond atomic submarine was laid today and Navy Secre tary Robert B. Anderson warned that it could be used to carry warfare to the “doorsteps” of enemy aggressors- The sub, the Sea Wolfe, will be constructed alongside the towering hull of the USS Nautilus, the first atomic-pow ered vessel cf any kind, scheduled to be launched next summer. The Sea Wolf is to be launched in the summer of 1955. ’ PITTSBURGH (IP) The 419-foot, 39-story Alcoa Building, first aluminum skyscraper in the country, was dedicated today in down-town Pittsburgh. The Aluminum Co. of America, which occupies 25 floors in the ultra modern structure, said the building is the lightest for Its size ever constructed. CHICAGO (IP) Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri, mentioned presidential possibility who in Hie 1956 campaign and I am not available,” Syming- Sa "*° * a *"* xn “ or to ■ _ ■ f BOSTON (IP) The FBI maintained silence today concemmgtestimoßy by the sister of a prime susmret of Joseph Specs O’Keefe. ; ,y -1 ’ ' ■(' . f- RESCUE LIFEGUARDS FROM HEAT " § * * v. - I 1 ANVjnmO CAN HAPPEN in a beat wave, as.lndicated by this picture, whim finds girl swimmers coming to the rescue of UfegU&rds who for days have been sizzling in the sun at a New fork City beach. With til®-.temperature continuing in the not-so-gay nineties, the young wwfijßr pohr buckets of cold water on die guards. They sre Jane Rhodes and Frances Kirsehner. Enjoying the refreshing shower sre guard* Richard Palasxl and Jbhn Thierjung. (international; — Ordinance On Signs Clarified By Uzzle Here This Morning ' City Manager A. B. Uzzle pointed out today that there a misunderstanding of the sign ordinance. Sirar msy beoplaced so long as they are pot on the strip of land next to the streets, if permission is received, he sattt. - aaiu. Stated that a number of person* wive contacted him re garding a ruling and interprete- ; tlon of the ordinance. Signs plpe ed on a post dr building, when the poet-4* on private property, is per mitted. However, any slgto- sus pended over a side walk of stapei tget be atleast 10 feet labpvcr 'Twmtaion. must be received be fore these signs c«.n be placed, Uzzle pointed out. Under the ord -1 nance, there are specific rules for httigtog a sign which must be fol- i 10we(fc~7t wag. stated. In the meantime, the sign dis cussing, in Dunn? was at a stand still ytflßay Whlie Town Commiss ioners’ await an opinion from the Statdi,. Attorney General. J. y7 Bass, Councilman, said to day, that a letter want out to the Attorney General Saturday asking for an opinion on the ordinance. Dispute over the enforcement of the ordinance arose after City At toraey I. B. Williams recommen ded' that Council abolish -the Or dinance. Williams doubted that it‘ could be enforced, he told Council. Both Raleigh and Fayetteville havd ordinances regulating the placement of the signs which are very close to the one now on the books here-in Dunn. ; *fwo Dunn firms are currently violating the ordinance as it now stands by leaving signs up after having 1 been - notified to take them down. PJtchett Oil Company re moved.'a sign after being asked to do go, hut replaced it after City mrnm . Sk -in, -."•.J IS w fcM ' • M V v . - ■ ■■ , •' THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N.C. Attorney Williams asked Council to revoke the ordinance. The ordinance levies a fine of ' sl6 each day the signs remain up after toe warning is given. ' NOTICE There will .he a church rally add itfeh supper at Beulah Baptist Church Friday, September 18. Sup per will, be served from 5 p. mi. iirttl «. . Plates wtil be 60c to SI.OO. The proceeds will be used for Sun day School roonis. The public 1$ invited. v NOTICE There win be a, cemetery clean ing at the Beulah Baptist Church Friday, September 18 beginning at 8 A. lg.' l All persons interested are asked to be present to help with the work- Floyd Taylor •CoMteaaa ftm «an One) of the family went to Greensboro last night to investigate the ac cident and make arrangements for returning the body to Lining ton to day. O’Quton ambulance will bring the body back to Lillington. Funeral arrangements tor Taylor have not been completed. He is survived by hi* mother, Mrs. Floyd Taylor of Buie’s Creek; his wife, of W. Overdrive Avenue, Winston-Salem; three brothers, Jim of Hillsboro, Archie R. of Llllingr ton, and Billy, an attorney here Roundiui .. (Caattamed ftm page ana) Association will have Jr Fall plan ; Wag meeting on Thursday a* 7:50 : ip. m. at Antioch Church in Mam erg. Pastors, superintendents of Suhday School* and teachers from SO churches are expected to at i tend. The conference has been ar ranged by Julius HblloWay, associa tions! missionary. TO FAYETTEVILLE The coun ty committee of the Harnett Farm ers Home Administration will at tend a training school in Fayette ville, on Wednesday, September 18. Cumberland and Robeson county FHA groups will also send repre . sentatives. Purpose of the school Is to familiarise committee mem bers with their dntias In the agri cultural agency. Going from Har nett will te Johnnie C. Thomas, j Jonestoro Heights. Route 7, new committeeman, and Ernest F. Tart, | Drnn, Route 2 and Jarvis Pleas- j ants. Angler. Route 2. This marks I the third year Tart has served the federal agency in an advisory ca- i pacity, and toe second for Pleas-1 ants. Howard Watkins. FHA su- i perv’.sor for Harnett, also will ac company them. MARRIAGE LICENSES Recent marriage licenses issued by Mrs. Inez Harrington,'county register of deeds, from her office in Lilling ton include the following: Sept. 3, to Truman Webber, Olivia and Myrtle Corine Robert-,, Sanford; Sept. 3, to Arthur Willie Holland, Lillington Route 3 and Genevieve Thomas, Lillington, Route 3; Sept. 4, to Wallace Henry Mldgette, Va rina, end Sue Carol Smith, Fu qua y Springs, Route 2; Sept 5, to Jim Edward Nahers, 123 Alabama Ave., Selma, Ala., and Sue Evelyn Stewart, Coats; Sept, 10, to Wil liam Roscoe Driver, Dunn, and Betty Grey Walton, Buie's Creek. I A (BIT OF OVERCOOKING Lillington firemen were called to the residence of Town Councilman 8. O. Howell and Mrs. Howell around noon Monday. They found a pot of beans had caught fire on the electric stove. Mrs. Howell said she had left the house thinking she had turned off the current. lit tle damage was done. NEWSPAPER MEETING Frank Daniels of the News and Observer will speak at a dinner meeting at Johnson’s Restaurant Tuesday, Sep tember 32. Dealers for the Raleigh paper will attend the meeting from all over the State. MONEY FOB DUNN Money al located to the toWn of Dunn through the Powell 818. will be received here this week, City Manager A. B. Uzzle said today. VFW MEETING The local poet of VFW will meet tomorrow eve ning at Langdon’s Wood Works of fice at 7:30. Plans for toe fall membership drive, finance, driw. and building fund drive Will ’be discussed. ' ' ‘ MEMBERSHIP MEETING—Mem-' bers of the Chamber of Commerce Membership Committee met at-the Chamber office briefly this,morn ing to discuss methods of keeping the membership growing. NEW PATROL CARS—A of new car* for Harnett CoUnty patrolmen are due to arrive today. The cars will be different colors, blue, green etc., instead of toe ciistomary black, or black and sil ver. County Board <rontUaed tram page amt to be done about the situation. . Mr.. Tart said today that the matter is still in the discussion stage and that It would probably be three or four months before any action is taken. , in Dunn; and five sisters, Mrs. Connie Walters, Hillsboro; Mbs. Martha ' Robbins, Paris, France; Mrs. Carl McLamb, Buie’s Creek; 1 Mrs. Frank Clifton, Dunn; and 1 Mrs. Dougald Mcßae, Ltotog ton. ' ToOpen InDunn^Monday i C. M. Rumley, general manager of the Four County Fair sponsored in Dunn by the American Legion, ar rived here yesterday to be gin plans for the opening Monday, September 21. Tents will go up Friday, Rum ley said, in preparation for the opening of the sixth annual fair. The exhibits .promise to be the best ever held at the fair, it was I reported. ! Around $3,000. will be given in I premiums for exhibits this year. JUDGING ON TUESDAY I Two big tents will be available (for exhibits, one for agricultural { and 4-H projects, and another far commercial exhibits. Judging will jbe held Tuesday morning follow {lng the opening next Monday. The 1 exhibit houses will be open to the public Tuesday and remain open each day until Saturday noon. FARMEBB DAY WED. Tuesday has been designated FFA, YMW. 4-H and boy and gfrl scout day; Wednesday as Farmer’s Day; Thursday as the white school children’s day; and Friday as the Negro school day. Saturday, the closing day of the fair, will be Veterans and Frater nal day. Tbd fair grounds is located to the Jonesboro Road, Northeast of Dunn., Participating counties in the fair toe Harnett, Johnston, Cum berlsrid and San Tr . —i- —i y : —: Truman Wont Say About Adtai In 46 CHICAGO Jtf) Restless Harry 8. Truman strolled ihto City-Htoi yesterday and found himseif in the middle of * news conference. He told the reporters that A dial E. Stevenson was the “number one" Democrat to the United States and said "I recognize Stevenson as the head of tile party.” He had made that same remark before during his visit here. The former president was asked* however, whether he thought Stev enson would make a strong presi dential candidate to 18M and ans wered: - - - “Well, the oonvenMbn doesn’t take place tor three years, the time to talk about that is then.” CALLED ON MAYOR Mr. Truman came to City Hall to visit Democratic Mayor Martin £enneUy and found that KenneHy ; reporters who quickly turned their Michigan Gov. (Continued From Page Owe' golden promises,” he sgla. ■’Re publican promises are golden but Republican performance is tarnished brass.” ADLAI SPEAKS TONIGHT The Democratic meeting will be climaxed tonight when SteVenso.i makes a nationwide television and radio report on his recent round the-world tour. The Democrats gave their North- South loyalty fight a quiet burial, at least until the 1886 national con vention, to join hands for toe tight to win control of Congress next year. i In his speech last night Truman said that “the Republicans claim they are going down the middle of the r0ad....” “-Hut if they are, they’re going down it backward backward, mind you and going backward faster every day,” he said. He said the present Congress, controlled by the GOP by slim margins, is “worse” than the 80th Congress which be criticized strong ly to the 1948 campaign. - ’’*!■ The tight over the “loyalty oath” adopted at the 1861 national con - vention was settled with an agree ment to have an advisory commit tee consider its repeal revision. Party leaders anticipated quick approval of that compromise by the executive committee and toe full national committee before the windup of their big two-day meet tog here kicking off their 1964 con gressional campaign. Stevenson, who is slated tq make a major speech tonight reporting on his post-election world tour, en tertained a capacity crowd of 1,600 at,a SIOO a plate dinner Monday night with a quip-filled talk pictur ing the Eisenhower administration as one of "government by post ponement.” "The administration'* motto seems to he: ‘When to doubt, ap point a commission,” . he- said. "And the areas of doubt are vary large.” - •' • ? ■ ' CITES UNFILLED FLEDGES He referred to the unfilled Re publican campaign pledges at the end of the' tint session of Congress TUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 15, WSP Boy / 8, Takes Care Os Shot Playmate < DETROIT UP A frightened, 8-year-old boy didn’t know how to dial a telephone sat for an hour beside the instrument waiting for it to ring so he could tell someone his playmate had been shot. The first caller was Miss Cath erine Toomey. assistant school prin cipal at Edgar Guest School, who telephoned to find out where Lar ry Bradford, also 8, was. When Douglas MacDonald answered, Miss Toomey demanded they both come back to school immediately. A weak voice replied: ‘7 can’t come to school because Larry shot himself.” STOOD OUTSIDE Douglas couldn’t give the ad dress, but he offered "to stand out tide *0 ydu can see me” if Miss Toomey Would hurry over. Hie found Douglas on the side walk and Larry inside neatly wrap pec) to a blank it. Douglas had cov ered Ms playmate when hfe com plained of . being cold. Larry Was taken to a hospital wito a bqOet wound to the stomach. His carnation was listed as serious InVeMfeattog Officers said the attention to Mr, Truman. He said it was “great” to.be re lieved of White House responsibil ities and said he thought his new routine might add 10 years to his *You toow.” Mr. Truman said, •T Was to elective office 30 yearn. I found mast politicians are either lacked out or carried out, and I dpht want that to happen to me.” | fhurrhMf uiwmmiwil to. owe.' friends again and again: "History toust nejw say this of me.” “Accordingly" Taylor continued “he feels at the bottom of his heart that he must see ccfetoleted some *dnd of a peace altar tips last war; some written agreement that can close out h 1 * war victory and ex gress the brave purpose of freedom. “He Ims set his own goal for ! history's picture, namely that he will go down not alone as a war maker but as the maker of the peace. If you are perplexed by Brit ain’s policy with Uie Russians to day, remember this fact. "Yet the tragic warning of his 111- nea» Is plain to Britain’s great leader, and he knows fun wen that, as with <ll that Is earthly, his days are numbered. “Thus be Is, to fact, a very old man, an to man, who Is to a hui-ry. He knows what history wUI Anally write of him and his enor mous life must be pressing to a close." Aifei Speed! on Sr*«Sce*t trip P arouna* ) the world. ■£ Btoyenson saw Mr. Elsenhower to the spring before he left on his Journey and was invited to report his findings when he returned. j turned this country, the° Pres ident Wrote Stevettson renewing his MvltatMto. *-T? r ** ' »f, The President invited Stevenson to come ft>-Washington alter Mr. EJsenhbwer rttdrns from his Va cation to Dernier: Stevenson accepted the invita tion but no date was set for the meeting. I . SEE AND HEAR . “(MfiClCEfifiOAßb REPORT ” - with % Bill “I. r Jackson THIIJSHOWONWPTF AT PARKER, SEED & FEED CO. Wednesday, Sept. 16. h, 11:00 a.m. ' Everyone invited £ rliS-tfiWfeNt from Our Store x' ■ v ’- ”■ ‘ ’ ’ \1 'jL'M - Jt ■ .I** ' SkiD m reel} C 0« r- j 408 I Broad! St. Dunn N c*l t two boys had gone on a forbidden visit to Larry’s house to watcti television during the noon hour Monday. They found a 32 caliber pistol to a bedroom. V'"\ 7\ TT\A 17 20 r'* T A f \JIVII *i fi -w ir\ Ij, BANK G. S. TUCKER AND CO. * E. BROAD ST., DUNN All' sizes and patterns m in stock. ® QUINN'S j Funeral Home I 24 HOUR SERVICE f PHONE 3306 4$ e Prcdyou, nt.i*.yowl*rtJ. mm against loss. G< I burglary and robbery lnsurai.ee NOW. “Tomorrow” Sometimes Is too kite. It’s inexpensive > .. but it's worth so much when you need ill For Information, call Phone 4491 * EDWARD GODWIN FCX Betiding Phone 4491 PUNN, N. C. —v— —ffjo
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Sept. 15, 1953, edition 1
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