Newspapers / The daily record. / Oct. 22, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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Win A $3,021.35 Dodge/ SI,OOO Cash, Other Prizes In The Daily Record Expansion Contest .WEATHER* North Carolina Fair west, partly eloudy east portion today. Little change ia temperature. Part ly cloudy and mild tonight. With “Prestone” Anti-Freese You’re set, you’re safe, you’re sure. VOLUME 3 U. S. TO BUILD ATOM POWER PLANT a>r<k IT CAN BE TOURS Pictured here ia the beautiful new 19*4 nita'podffe Royal v-8 to be given as first prise in The Daily Record's Expansion campaign. Somebody has to win and it can be you. Sec *3 Grand Prizes , 4 Bonus Awards In Record Contest H Always the leader in promoting programs for the betterment and prosperity of this thriving community, | The Daily Record today announces a big Trade Expan- 1 sion and Everybody Wins subscription drive in which ev- « ery resident of Dunn and its trade area will benefit—read ers, advertisers, and the general public. Everyone who t participates will be liberally paid for nils‘or her time. Th« Drily Record takes great! pride in announcing the inaugura tion of one of the most unique me thods of placing within easy reach of its many readers and potential r subscribers, an opportunity to earn t for themselves awards amounting Lto thousands of dollars in prises. W This great prize-giving event ‘ gets underway today as The Daily Record announces a seven and one ■v, if week subscription campaign ft the most Interesting and at ftractive prises being offered to 1 those participating. A 1954 Dodge Royal V-8 four door sedan worth $3021.35 and 81000 cash and SSOO cash are to be award ad the top three contestants at the close of the contest, Saturday, Dec. 19th. These three prizes alone •Ifould be sufficient reason far ! those Interested to enter the con teat quickly, but, to make things i all the more attractive, four big i cash bonus awards will go to the l fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh > place winning contestants. L NOT is that all! A veritable show- Vgr of money in the form of spec ial prizes and weekly commission paychecks are yours for the asking. AH of thele prises are being offer ed to anyone who Is willing to co operate with The Daily Record In this short program. PURPOSE IS TWOFOLD Although The Record enjoys an ever-growing circulation throughout this ares. It nevertheless wishes to add to its lists quickly, and at a the same time give present read '-en the opportunity to renew their subscriptions by helping s friend or relative who participates in the " contest Abo. through the contest, the {Record offers a real opportunity to ajany energetic citisen of this area JR to earn valuable prises and com- IfeMS? »•“?£«.«. .#• One of the outstanding features ~of this unique contest is the fact .itbat there will be no knew! A <*ti» commission of 30 percent (one dol ilar out of every, five collected) on' ’either new- or renewal suhscript (Csattnaed en ♦—> IWfVUv « — j ...... ■ > .... I Address...— Coupon will court forlOMQgftroe^awteu jj*,***!™™ * w mMmm i •tert m the 88M> , V- n . (EJt? Baiht l&ttnrfr TELEPHONES: 3117 - 3113 As LLOYD FLORA Campaign Manager Area Leaders Named Judges Seven prominent citizens of this section have accepted appointment to serve ss members of the advis ory board and as judges of The Daily Record’s big “Everybody Wins” Expansion Contest. The judges were announced to day by Lloyd Flora, director of the big campaign. They are: Lofton A. Tart, chairman of the Harnett County Board of Commiss ioners; the Rev. W. Robert Insko of Erwin, pastor of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church; State Represen tative Carton Gregory of Angler, Route 3; Mayor J. Roaeoe Bare foot of Benson: F. A. Flequet, prin cipal of the Main View School; Norman Buttles, manager of the Dunn Chamber of Commerce and W. E. Nichols, propinant Coats leader. ond prise will be *I,OOO in cash, third prise will be SSOO in cash and there’ll be other awards. The handsome Dodge will be on display at Naylor-Dickey Motors In Dunn. Cash Prizes To Be Given First Week Just te “start the ball rolling,” so te speak, and as a little added incentive for prompt action on the part of them who want to make the mast of every opportun ity in The Drily Record’s big “Everybody Wins” prise subscrip tion campaign, this newspaper will award ten special $35 cash prises to aggressive “early start era” making the best showing dur ing first wreck of the contest, ter minating Saturday night, Octo ber Slat. These special prises are in AD DITION te the regular 38 per cent commission, payable weekly and major prises te be awarded at end of the contest, but to shew good faith a minimum of SIBB In subscription collections is necessary te qualify for one of these special prises (these win ners will receive In return a cheek fOr $45 out of their first SIBB In new and renewal subscriptions) which, after all, is a very small requirement and easily obtainable. .Then, toe, there’s another ex tra-special $35 cash bonus anlrd an top of the above mentioned specie] prims and cash commis sions for extra effort and unusual remits during your first week also easily obtainable—es more fully outlined In the big announce ment elsewhere In this lame es The Dally Record. It te easily possible, therefore, for any aggressive contestant to earn SIBB cash, or more, during his or her very first week in cam paign, while at the mute time ac cumulating large numbers of votes toward winning aue of the major award* Be an ‘early starter” sad share in ALL the geed things offered. Coats Church To Hold Sale The First Baptist Church of Coats will observe their mutual Harvest Day sale at the church Wednesday afternoon, October 38. following a barbecue dinner. Tickets are on sale by members of the Sunday School tor the ■din ner, Paster J. Ben EBer annouac ed today. Both and pork barbecue wUI be aeryed. The sale has been an annual by the group this summer. Pastor Eller said that all taken in from the sale next Wednesday will he applied on the expense of • the thing* as Hush vegetables. I cotton, and other crop, are offered for eale each year at the church lari* I Owen Odum te superintendent of «rt lg ttrirtint . DUNN, N. C., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 22, 1953 Three Held In Tobacco Theft Rural policemen revealed today that it was a few grains of wheat found in the car of William Cleve Nordan which first linked the Er win man With a chain of tobacco aQd grain thefts which have har assed Harnett farmers ’ for more than a month • Nordan, free on 86,000 bond, face* charges of breaking and entering and larceny In superior court. Yesterday, in Harnett Recorder's Court, Nordan confessed his guilt and testifying for the state at the preliminary hearing, Implicated his' 19 year old step son. Malcolm Ivey and his brother-in-law, S 3 year old Ralph Turlington of Erwin, Route 1„ recently’ employed as a Lilling ton construction worker. Nearly a thousand pounds of to bacco belonging to Charles V. Lan ier of Llllington was recovered by conty officers last week at the Nordan home. But It was the few grains from the 30 bags of wheat Nordan allegedly stole from R. K. Turlington in another part of the county which led officers to visit Nordan’s now. Investigating the entry into an (Continued on page eight) BULLETINS BERLIN (UP) Walter Schreiber was elected mayor of West Berlin today to succeed the late Ernst Reuter. The nomination of Schreiber, who has been acting mayor since Reuter’s unexpected death on Sept 29, was approved by the West Berlin City Council by a vote of 62 to 57. WASHINGTON (UP) Sen. Karl E. Mundt says his investigation of a government decision to give Russia plates to make Gorman occupation currency shows how Communist spies operate. The South Dakota Republican said the U. S. action resulted at least partly from pressure espionage agents put on “high officials of our Treasury Department.” TOKYO (UP) Pyongyang Radio reported today for the first time that a South Korean pilot flew an Amer ican-made Mustang to North Korea and surrendered it to the Communists. LONDON (UP)—Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s government faced a full-scale debate today on the Labor party’s challenge to the ouster of the government es Brit- v Record Roundup + METHODIST LUNCH AND DIN NER—The women of the Divine Street Methodiat Church an hav ing a turkey lunch end dimin’ in the basement of the church Fri day. October 33rd. Price of the plate* wih be SLM. The affair was previously elated for the Johnson Cotton Co, Implement Building. Lunch wUI be served starting at 13:00 and dinner starting at 0:00. buiiSwi- 1 OuMf H lfl Teachers and Sunday School work ers ol the Gospel Tabernacle will meet tomorrow evening at «:1» la the Education Building AH work ers art asked to attend end bring George Favors Drastic Cuts By Government WASHINGTON (UP) Sen. Walter F. George D-Ga said today he sees no hope for balancing the federal budget in the next two years without “drastic” cuts in defense and foreign aid spending. He said he personally favors such cuts. • Without indicating how large he thinks the deficit might be, he made it clear that he does not ex pect congress to close the gap by voting increased taxes. RAPS FOREIGN AID George, senior Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, ssid in an interview that ’“foreign rid is the real area” where reductions could be made in spending. Foreign aid programs will take an esti mated six billion dollars from the treasury this year. The Georgia senator expressed the belief that some further re ductions also would be justified in the military budget. Asked if ha thinks it would be safe to make suob cuts, he rtjflled: “I’d assume the responsibility and make the decision and go with it. rd get our own hbuse in order once more." Harnett County Designated As Disaster Area RALEIGH HP! Three- more North Cantina counties were designated aa drought disaster areas late yesterday, on the eve of a conference In Kansas City to oatUne piano for obtaining emergency hay supplies for drought-stricken southern cattle men. The counties of Chatham, Har nett and Randolph were added to the list of. 18 others approved earlier by Secretary, of Agrlcul (Continued on page two) menk Bj* wester Thomson, Red Line, Dunn, mag charged with drunkenness. ACCIDENT—Damages estimated at 8318 resulted from am secUmt yes gxisAftSln! Fayetteville, hit a IMS Pontiac driv en by Wilton Durvood Arinrood, ruouay M». »mt »** driving east on W. Cumberland, and Ashwood was driving north fin B. Orange when they coH blurt at no’ SowSfwm^te 04 FIVE CENTS PER COPY Mrs. H. B. Taylor Dies ; Funeral Set For Friday At 3 Mrs. Herbert B. Taylor, 62, one of Dunn’s leading women and former State and national official of the American Legion Auxiliary, died in Dunn Hospital Thurs day morning about 10 o’clock. Death came after a long illness. She had been sick for over a year and a patient at the hospital since August 14th. One of the best known women in the State, Mrs. Taylor had been prominently identified with the American Legion Auxiliary, the Baptist Church and the State Nurses Association for more than a quarter of a century. She had served as State president of the American Legion Auxiliary and as the Auxiliary’s National Committeewoman from North Car olina. Regarded as one of the Auxil iary’s most outstanding presidents and leaders, Mrs. Taylor was in great demand as a speaker for the organization before her illness and had appeared at Auxiliary func tions in pratically every State in the union. ;. ger husband, who served—ae* Mgysrof'Dunn longer than any (Continued on Page Three) Verdict Is Upheld By Supreme Court In a court case which Judge J. Paul Frizzell said set “precedent in North Carolina,” the North Carolina Su preme Court ruled yesterday “no error” in a suit against the McLean Trucking Company brought by the Atlantic Coast Lines to recover $15,000 damages. The case grew out of an acci dent at the Railroad-Cumberland Avenue Intersection here Septem ber 15, 1952. In the wreck, a Mc- Lean truck was completely demol ished. electrical signal wrecked, and several store fronts In Dunn dam aged. When heard in Llllington by Judge Frizzell, he told the jury that tihetr decision to gide )the Coast Line $15,000 would set pre cedent in the Stste. To his know ledge, the Judge said, that was the first oaae in which a railroad company had not been held negli gent In a crossing accident. COUNTER SUIT McLean also filed a 814,100 claim against the railroad company hut the jurors ruled that there was (Ooatinoed on page two) Fight Brewing On SS Tax Increase WASHINGTON (UP) Congress may be plunged into a major battle soon after it meets next January by an administration bid to cancel an increase in the Social Security tax. The payroll levy, collected from both employers end employes, 1* now one end one-half per cent of the first $3,000 of annuel income. Under existing lew, It will auto matically go up to two per cent on Jan. 1. Although the higher rate wlB be In effect before Con gress meet* a rollback presumably oould be made retroactive to Jan. ; 1. Rep. Richard M. BHnpoon <R i Pa.), a high-ranking member of the House Ways and Means ComJ mittee, which handles Social Be > cumy legislation, preaictea ia s i speech to the National Coal Assoc • lithrn Wednesday that *an fiffoft I would bo mad* next year to hold the tax st Rs present rate, i President Etierhower asked Con anas during the lest section te at one^ request tirtwmednnrt ■ mb*. ’Herbert taylor Negroes Held In Old Murder Two Llllington Negroes, Lacy Murchison and Bobby Spencer, were in jail In Llllington today without privilege of bond, charged with having part in a murder that happened nearly a year ago. In a preliminary hearing given them yesterday in Harnett Re corder’s Co'urt, Judge M. O. Lee found probable cause and they (Continued an Page Eight) be. the administration is certain to encounter strong opposition. DEMOS OPPOSE CHANGE Democrats, who sponsored the Social-Security lsw in the first place (Centime* en page twa) Man Must Buy Cop New Pair Os Pants Judge H. Paul Strickland fixed i mack ruined a pair as trousers a^nCTV^T of t pants in Recorders sHayf ta Ck si d tuspfnded S j t^**™^*^****!: s3s° and °on °of %18J50 £ V ■ I purchase a pair of treason for jail, wnpandsd tor three jnuni an •’* •r' tX s/’ The Record Gets Results Plant To Chain Atom For Peace As Well As War CHICAGO (UP The Atomic Energy Commission announced today that it is going to build history’s first full scale atomic power plant to chain the atom for peace as well as for possible war. Atomic Commissioner Thomas E. Murray said “this is America’s ans wer” to the recent tests behind the Iron Curtain that revealed Russia’s swift march toward development of the hydrogen bomb. “It should show the world that even In this gravest phase of arm ing for defense America’s eyes are still on the peaceful future,” Mur ray said. ”... For years the splitting atom, packed in has been our main shield against the bar barians. Now, in addition, it is to become a God-given instrument tc do the constructive work of man kind.” TO COST MILLIONS Murray revealed the ABC mom entous decision in a speech pre pared for delivery before the elec-. Uh. eowpuhe panto. "InM—IMBr program here. He arid the plant will cost “tens of millions” of dol lars and probably take three to four years to build. The pioneer plant, ushering in a new era in atomic development, will be built for the commission by Westinghouse Electric Oorp. It will produce a “minimum of 60,000 kilowatts of electrical energy with good possibilities of much higher output." Murray said the commission is thinking of locating it at or neqr one of its gaseous diffusion plants where fissionable A-bomb material is produced. The commissioner warned that it is just as important for the (Continued *a peg* twa) Last Minute News Shorts WASHINGTON W! Pretident Elsenhower will ping for election as a Republican Congress next year bat he won’t barnstorm the oeum try endorsing individual eandMetee. Political advisers saM today that was what the President meant to telling a newt conference yeater' day that he aboohitety will net campaign In state or congressional elections. HANOI, Indoehina HP—A French armored eetamn today sshofl last-ditch Communist defenses and captured the f ■tiroes teens as Pha Nho Quan, the biggest prise taken in the eight-day-oM French drive against northern Red strongholds WASHINGTON » American official, sought today to pin down Yugoslavia on the ptarise terms en which it will agree to a tve-pewar ninffirfinwi regarding the tuploutfc Trieste dispute. Yugoslav Amhama dor Vladimir Pspevta dkntaped yes terday that the Mil States. Britain and France have formally proposed the meeting end that Ids in pridple.” • Vegn Benntoe, toajOhtted NO. 225
Oct. 22, 1953, edition 1
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