PAGE EIGHT Ralph D. Miller f Given Honor ; fast moving communications bchnical Sergeant, Ralph D. Slier, Erwin, N. C„ was con ra tula ted today by Lieutenant toeral 8. E. Anderson as the too fman of the Fifth Air Force in 1/ Airman of the Month ceremony t Seoul. iSSergeant Miller first came to th* Mention of his unit, the 58th Igljter Bomber Wing, when he in tftuted a continuous patrol of jet ighters on the flight line wait'n « ' ' . • i • A coif of living characters in absorbing adventures which sat a now high in comic strip realism, that's.... 1■ > . \ *§> . • l®va, hate, laughter, jealousy ... the gamut of hu |v v man emotions .. . the scale of human life .. . are run as h* brilliant picture serial unfolds r day after exciting , i «'v «hy- Don't fall to road this thrilling drama of a wise eld ' .• lady, an attractiva young woman .. . and a man with a ; . ' wandering heart. An Exciting and Amusing Real Life Drama Starts January 18th On The Comic Page ■ .[ Trial of L. G. Allen, Route 1, Dunn, charged with manufacturing liquor, second offense, was cut short today when Judge H. Paul Strick land ordered the defendant jailed until he could sober up. Allen came into court with a doctor’s certificate for another per son, not on trial, and attempted to get his case continued. Judge Strickland denied the motion and ordered the trial to proceed. B. E. Sturgill, rural policeman, began to tell how he arrested Al len, but was interrupted by the defendant.' After a second attempt to tell the story and an interrup tion, Judge Strickland asked Stur gill and Chief of Police Alton A. Cobb to check Allen to see if he was drunk. Chief Cobb said the defendant smelled like a liquor barrel. The Judge ordered the man held until , he is sober enough to go on trial. OTHER CASES Other cases heard in court to- TBapwT arcoaft, o«rtt, a a. Maid Os Cotton . In New York Snow NE.W' YORK the. MM Maid of Cotton ventured eot into one of New Terife wend toe*- stem. In :* deeade today. (Named Teg., might have wished she bad been chosen ■‘MOso Lets*. gindeg wear of 1954” instead. Rat the <»«•«» ween said she wasn’t the Taximan Is (Con tin eed Front P*po One* . with the taxi and the seriously wounded man at the Dunn Hospit al, an unofficial report stated, Mo tives for the slugging were not known. '■ > x\; . ; • Henry said that he knew little about the case, but as", far as he knew, the driver of the taxi wan not robbed. " • ■ A number of persons were being questioned regarding the Tease to day; the local Police Department reported. Vo 'Yv, r i _ Snowfall In lOmWneed tmm par* owes fall would continue until Tuesday morning and would “he in exceaa of 15 inches." ... IMN AT WORK The city denartmsnt of sanitation mobilized a force ot at least 10,000 men in art effort to keep streets cleay. Commuters from the suburbs and from Connecticut and New Jersey, numbering in the ten* of thousands, were expected either to be late for their . Jobe today at unable to reach them at ill. V Flight operations at the two giant commercial [ ' airfields, LaGuardla and Idlewild, continued but; with delays In both take-ooffs and land- I lngs. T , j ...Operations were suspended at I the Newark sirport at 3:30 a, m. ‘ because pf the heavy accumula- j tion of snow on the runaways. V;. A “snow emergency*! was declared in Washington, where. at least El inches of snow was expected. A«te- * mobile traffic on 56 Srnub Rt-e»*x . in the capital was 'restricted '.to cars equipped With. chains. •; 7 Eight to 13 fetches of snow snarled traffic . ip Boston, .■where "heavy’’ snows were predicted for the rest of the day,- * Meayy snow was foreeast froth Maine to Tcnneseee with • lito, sleet and falling temperatures for much of. the. mg of the nation. Temperat«fp ib'j>»r i low zero in parts of the Plains states and the Mkjwest. Inter national Falls. Minn , reportea. 26 heMWj it was 8 below at Des Moines, one help* at Qmeha, 1 above at Kansas jClty. 18. aoove at Chicago and ltabova la Ntor’fryk. day included* 1 •.VCV'i iJ ' - Cecy. A, Jeyh&jfe. Wl.M'fk&m . public, -tfrunkgtfhssa - judgment, continued sot : J? montS on payment *f H and wrstiof court. . ~ PWffcr Ofalgi 310 N-.JWIwIUWs wife. Bertha Craig, tdqi. up V wge- i continued, '••i? *s-■-- jyVrJr' ’ Judge; tee Ungdon, Rotfe J, An mSSSS!Si^S& six months ih 1011. ituwsJet lh> two yearn op payment COM of court for driving drunk, po eemlqa an&ggtodteg. Hi* fine was c , u t tram slS9*Oton he teS No Comment? - , \'‘ '' ’ _ . > 3 K;; S| |!4PWsofti -- !K§ to fires j i .. By-; UNITED rtnf ' A fir* to rural Nydr County claimed six lives and othef acci dents and violence took seven others ewer e weekend whtuh .saw a toll ot at Mast i| deaths ip accidents and violence In Noirlh Carolina. 1 Six members of a. Negro truck driver's family perished ih a fire which burned a small frame house f» the grdttod hear Engelhard ear ly Sunday. Details of the tragedy were not reported until 'today. Dead were Willie Spencer, s truck driver, his wife Mary, gnd their four ShMfin, Willie Jr., Bobby, Su]a and Shinty. Three of the children were Ugh school students gnd the fourth was of pre-school ***' family Huffed The family apparently was trap ped inside, some of them over come as they slept. There were in dicationa that several had awak ened and bad tried In vote, to escape. 2 : v V- B, C. TRAGEDIES Eight Negro children burned to death to two sepafate fires during the weekend as ct least- 19 per sons lost their lleer due to Vio lejwe ih South-Carolina, a United Break survey showed today.- Fife children died near Belton In Anderson OWntv when fire consum eda five-room frame house FVidgy children were Identified as Oii fA* Williams, fc >farv Nell Williams, Georgia May Brilllams A aandnt'Williams 3. and Joseph mvkt jiSiu Negro children died When fin destroyed A two-story f**ejw*e at wiarlegton yerier 4ay. "Wwiy -were Identified- as The wss Paper*. 3. Mary Capers, 4, gad Benjamin Caper Jr., «. Harnett Men Hava Uav# b«, Japan Nvt. John »mn#BI Ctoistobii. today 'and G»to reports / «atd «y*»eua were MBcd.