Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Dec. 22, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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+WEATHER* toto tonight JS* wtStXy**!^ awxto seller Wednesday night. ;■ ? ; VptUMB 4 ■ .4* . ' i‘», ■ Dulles Says War Would Be Futile For Russia , Two-Price Plan lor Fanners Under Attack A '.WASHINGTON OF) Two w Democratic senators charg ed today that the “two prke'’ support plan for farm » commodities under study by * administration agricultural advisers would cut farmers’ aims. Robert a Kerr of Oklaho ma and Hubert H. Humphrey of Mnar-.otft ooupled a slashing at tack o.i the proposal with a Pkdae to'. fight next - session foi extension and expansion of present JMgMevel supports on- basic com- Tbe National Agricultural Ad. Tisary Commission, «t work on the adhiltdltnaitods new farm pro tram, is understood to be consfder m to* a two-price system to replace T’wh supports on seme products. Tt» Man would call for high sup ports on that portion of the crop tooeumed domestically with little Ofno price guarantee on the por f tlyn sold for export. i V FAVOR PRESENT SYSTEM \ Humphrey wore among the\flrst farm bloc spokesmen to fthey prefer the present sys msndatory supports at 90 of parity on corn, cotton, ricn tobacco and peanuts. ‘THths la due to expire next De • Other high support advocates—ln- Republicans and most SlPHpiy yf_ Agriculture Ekra T. «;*S Kttt said. "It would da ladreaae. the costa to jjpd U would severely «r relations with friendly «. «* Woduegrs of the •ttte beauuful etalnetf|fc^n- to ud the state They in the life of window facing S%*B£b«U«S tat «such }» thekinidom oj s»ven.* And he referred to in John 11-14, to Whlch the gPOd Shep . .herd, and I know my sheep, abb Mi ; The windows wtu.be lighted toch Mght ftatoM»fr,m- to mttfnigi Catholic Mass Set For Christmas Eve it wm by Ta-j Sm thftughtmt tbc, Vailed Steles I SMWMWHI: *ll7 . tilt RANK PARTY A group of those who at tended the Christmas party given fer the First attest Bask employees tad their guests by Mr. Bari Ms bans, bank president, are pictured above at Mneeat Restaurant. The party was given Sat- New Orleans Doctor Hacks Estranged Wife To, Death Heavy Court Docket Is Tried In Benson Hubert Hilton McLaihb, Route a, Benson, waa given a 90 day sen tence. suspended on payment of gtS And cost of Court in Benson Re corders court -yesterday tor care lecp- and reckless driving'and fail ure to halt at a stop sign, causing a«k si hwJ iin m 9 anapewent. Judge Ed Johnson ordered Hc- Lamb to pay into the court, with in ’the stoat 60 days, MX far the use of James Bryant whose car he iwurt arid today. The Judge fur ther , ordered Me Lamb to refrain igo&i' operating a car for the next O&er (oases hoard yesterday ac cording to Clerk Norris included, Nathan Strisler, Westfield, N. J. passing on a hill, prayer for Judge ment and payment of east of court Belli Slschblen, Brooklyn. N. V. Passing on a bin and speeding, prayer for Judgment continued on payment of cost of court ; James C. Butt Paolichea, .Pa, speeding, prayer for Judgment con tinued on payment of ocet of court. Raymond Lamar, Princeton, Fla, speeding, prayer for Judgment con tinued on payment of coat of court. Lark, Avery Beasley, Route 3 Benson, failure. to halt at a atop sign, resulting in an accident pray er tor Judgment continued on pay ment of cost of court Herman Bdward Rapefc Raleigh. aptSding, 60 days in Jail, suspended on payment of 680 and cost of , Writes te «a page tew)- *!• 1 \ • r lattWJrih Win at uje p. «. Slh D * e *S ' nw f ' Q fI2vBBING or fit fliifc jßailij ttnrfr DUNN, N. C„ TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 22, 1953 urday night and dinner was served at the Restau rant Those shown above (1. to r.), seated, Mrs. Henry Slecumb, Mr. Mahone, Dr. Carl Altmaier, and Mrs. Beulah Graham; and standing, Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Exam. (Daily Record Photo) Last Minute News Shorts LOGAN, W. Va. (■» The FBI scratched the name of Thomas E. Dickerson from it# "16 most want ed” list today with the arrest of the fugitive at the home of a cou sin in the nearby mining com munity of Verdunville, W. Va. Six PPM agents fmm Pittsburgh and two state troopers seised Dicker son and his uncle, Glen Johnson, 17, Monday night at the house of Virgil Skeens while the three men were caluely watching television. CHICAGO (W Police today in vestigated the possibility of mur der in the mysterious disappear ance of a sailor who was carrying S2,MO to bay Christmas furlough tickets for his buddies. Charles Donald Borns, an electrician's mate at the Great Lakes Navel Training Center, disappeared tout Thursday when he came here to bey cut rate air tickets to New York for 68 fellow sailors. VERSAILLES, France UP) Pre mier Joseph LsnleL who came with It votes of becoming president of France, offered to withdraw as a candidate today if his backers oeuld agree on a substitute. The 64-year old Norman industrialist, whose bid tor the nation's highest honor begun to dip an the ninth end 16th ballots Monday, called a caucus of hb coalition group this, morning to consider prtppiil LONDON (to Western obser vers mid today that ene of the (Continued on Page Right) Erwin Workers to Get Holiday Employees of Erwin Milk. Inc, at Erwin will begin their Christmas holidays beginning Wednesday night at 16 o'clock when the mill will shut down, it was announced today by Manager X. H. Best. The mill will cease operations from Wednesday at 10 p. m. until Monday morning at 6 o’clock, and all tone shilts will enjoy the hoU estranged wife to death with*** carving knife today, then drove three miles and olunged to his death in the Mississippi River from the 400-foot-high Huey P. Long Bridge, police said. Authorities identified the doctor as Marx D. Sterbcow, 34, and be gan a search of the chilly Mississi ppi for his body. The doctor's wile, Msrcla, 37, mother of two children, was found hacked to death in his uptown res idence. A Moody carving knife was found nearby. “We are positive now that the doctor killed her, timn drove to the river and jumped in,” a police spokesman said. SEPARATED FOUR MONTHS Mrs. Sterbcow had been separa ted from the doctor about four months. She was stabbed and haek- TmUmM an |«I» twa> BULLETINS LONDON (IF) Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s hopes for t face-to-face meeting with Soviet Premier Georgi Malenkov rose today as he considered Moscow's reaction to President Eisenhower’s atom proposals. The Prime Minister regarded the Kremlin's long awaited Christmas greeting as the first gleam of hope from Moscow and thought it might lead to wider top-level discussions, informed sources said. DETROIT On Two convicts who participated fag a mass escape from Southern Michigan Prison eluded po ■ce today and one of them was believed to be stalking five persons who helped put him behind bass It years ago. Roman Usiondek, 37, described as a psychopathic murderer, and Robert Dowling, 33, who was serving a breaking and entering term, were the only “survivors” from a group of 13 convicts who fled the huge prison at Jackson Saturday night. YORK on— Former Assistant Secretary of State Spruille Braden was called before the Senate Internal Se + Record Roundup + .The annuaj Bethlehem” waj*th* theSfcl*ithe costumed pageant, directed by Mra. Lynda Pawell and Mra. O. W. Rally. SPIRITS LOW The supply of that J* h -2St£j±Ef^«i!r!i S m % ~ j - fi \ r/ ; • Declares Reds Intercepted Govt. Messages NEW YORK (IP) Former Asst. Secretary of State Spruille Braden indicated to day that Communists in the State Department inter cepted warnings of Com munists infiltration in Latin American countries which he addressed to the secretary of state and the President from 1942 to 1945. In testimony prepared for de livery before the Senate internal security suocommmee this morn ing, Braden specifically charged that two important cables he aa dressed to former Be<xetary of *tate James Byrnes and former President Truman in July, 1945. tailed to reach Byrnes, and pre sumably the President. - Braden described the fate of the cables as a "mystery which might be portentous." He said they con tained a recommendation to Tru man and British Premier Winston Churchill to demand that Stalin end the Communist infiltration of Lit tin America whan they met with the Russian Premier at the Potsdas. Conference. -REPORTED CONTINUIOUBLT Braden testified that from 1943, when he Itecame ambassador to Cuba, until <1946 when he left his ptnt as atebossabor to Argentina to become assistant secretary of state be “continually reported to the de partment by growing anxiety about the spread of nommimtsm in hi* at"taM>flt / Mt It "atgnHteW teat he “#vtr received any ac knowledgement at my many com munications on the dangers of com munism.” He euld it took a two year search and required senatorial pressure “to discover stem one copy of an inuxstaht memarandum of which I personally had delivered teveral oopies to the department in January. 1946." "Apparently over revealing docu ment* I forwarded on thi* subject also are ; missing from the flies,” Bidden said. Braden testified that he had clashed officially with “the pha lanx” of the Communist conspiracy to -Washington including the late Harry Dexter White and Alger Him. Braden recounted bow he out maneuvered White, ah assistant secretary of the treasury, by in toaxfixaad On Pace Tkraa) , Buckhom still were Robtet Spell, wfelafciy. two other tin sttUt were sated to Ste rsLK?. rv^bip ***** *- rid poheemen on tfte rekte FIVE CENTS PER gOPT J 8 . GETS COfDFtB OF HUGS - Old Santa Chas is IMm WB Mg bug* teens twe pretty esaployeea of the Fiat Ctttmns Knut Company at the bank's annual Christmas party held ■>U at Johnson’s Kootaurant. Hugging Santa at the left ■Pashm and at tbs right, Mrs. Myrtle Hail Os oaursf, they they want. Csa Cbrtetms., (Daily Raoaid ntetoj ’n ' prisoners Refuse To Read Letters PANMUNJQM, ' Korea - |l) / —The 22 unrepattiated * the interview - ■ All of the Americans declined to accept the IS-paßt apiteS; tody dressed to each, of the mad, after Lt. Q*n. K. S. Thlmayya entered their 'compound to give thdm ls' “last chance” to accept repatrhifiott. United Nations authorities asked permission from Thlmayyaa itenr. teal Repatriation Commission to drive three sound trucks' ts the edge of the barbed wire compound Wednesday and broadcast messages to the meh ahd play hit abngs of 1950, the year most of the Gb came -to Korcs. i. ; 4 *lf i know these chaps, they will go to the other end of,the oom pound and start singina their i ' ■ ' ; >“■ • v }*? ;; r," • . . . ■ - ■ fiMW «•*- Jhuw- T.. liiwtiliiit, \ Jtow-" a M at the pew ltM fHii if ahull. Whhe the ear Is ' THE RECORD GETS RESULTS swi*" fl | . < ’-> LABT-DIT9H. «SfORT j era to attend explanations, ofiastd 1 to take the m*n in'-three ’ sections Wednesday—the 'Americans ih aha, the lone Briton In .another, and tlte Bouth Koreans to a Jtoku- •'« If they still refuse'to attend ex will inform them .of the v. Ni s in ’ (Oiwtt—ad am *•» 6m) , • T-. . : J • p'.l4a\ • - - «• , ; •min ‘li ii • - t|init fTTuittin- fr ii!fMh!^i' -NoTa Declares People Under Red Rife Too Discontented WASHINGTON (IF)—-W retary of State John Foster Dulles said today that peo ples under Soviet domina tion are so discontented “it would be reckless” i’or the Russians “to engage in gen* eral war.” ■f M'.v Dulles said the East German rtf voft last June cleariy exposed'"ttß vast underlying discontent” of'wmi kers in Soviet satellite area*>'’ 1 "It indicates that, if there ddm an armed invasion of Western Eu rope, the Soviet lines of cammWfr teati ops might not be altogethiß' secure,” Dulie# said. - Dulles made these observations to an address prepared for delivery at a National Press Club lunqh. He devoted the first portion aTtoe address to a report oa the reeaxt North Atlantic Treaty Council inem ing in Parlt. i ■’ DANGER LESS Dulles said the NATO minMMb Judged .“the. danger of open. mOb tary aggression from Soviet Kb eia was less than it had been A year or two before.” If this is true, Dulles mto * is hugely due to NATO's grMnfi power. But he added that «ik,.4te creasing likelihood of war MMto due to Internal pressures •M.-tttb content, "resuming bam tMEdjHs living conditions within th* MRt Woe and the contrasting better too dittohs within, the nelghboriprfiw countries.” » • ' Dulles said to btoM thftt ' the Soviet raters’ exploitation of th«ir ogm and the satellite peopßf'JMa reached a point where it would be racism for-them to engage V go&- " WASHINOTCto iff T|to BB|. ed States set the wheels In toßtton on Prertdent Eisenhower's khtoric plan to pool atamie tmmW tar peace rather than war. f at ahd with.,Aa^tot«am<»«^gto ■■ -mm -. ■»!' ■'jj^ Barbara Gene Coats f . .. Dunn, Bt 3 . .Dear Santa ’ Chum ? v , *:? -I am a uttle girt three yean m 1
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Dec. 22, 1953, edition 1
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