Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Feb. 4, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
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y v , ». ,ii. ■■■*.l— /Br 5? V s - IT™ FRANCE DARES HOLOTOV ON GERMANY T ~ . .• ; ■—■ - ■ ■ ■■' p:- ! :^pPk ' L ' CALENDAR GIRLS OF THE MINSTREL Pictured here garet Godwin, Linda Williams, Catherine Butt and Nancy Jerirfgan; ■ nee thf U pretty girls who will portray the various months as “The standing, Linda Hardee, Annette Barefoot, Alice Prince, Catherine Cstamitr Girts of 1954” In the minstrel show to be given tonight at White, Margaret Naylor and Mary Lou Westbrook. There'll be min- W I o'eteck in the high school auditorium by the Dunn Lions Club. strel men, talented singers and pretty girls galore In the gala show. ■' Left to right are, seated: Dot Laughinghouse, Barbara Snipes, Mar- (Dally Record Photo.) ' ■ Capacity Crowd Is Expected LPor Lions Minstrel Tonight ■ ~—* »4- I ' ctiUio I JhinqA L-j "Ts fff ■- | CAuIi?THEY m Mr. And Mr*. Joe Leslie, who op ■ orate The Oift Center across the ■ street from the Dunn Hospital, are ■ rest Clever people. They're also I very honest. ■ Midweek; they announced that ■ they're having a sale at their shop ■ —and It was « unique announce ■ mmit too. ■ It said: “Franks, we are a little ■ NfUd of sales, aren't you? White ■ sales, clearance sales, removal, clos- Bjng out tales, pre this and after ■HfcW). It's getting a Uttle monoton- I we're gonna have ■ one, too. And because we aren’t im ■ aginative enough to conjure up a Shatter name, we are calling ours ■ the Green Tag Sale simply be ■ cause *• have a bunch of Qreen | TAnd for lack of a better reason ■ for having a sale. we*U truthfully ■ lay it is because we need the mon ■ey to buy vittlee, to pay the ■ preacher some and Uncle Sam ■ tome more. So if you want our ■ pretties (brass, lamps, china, crys ■ tal, novelties, etc.) at real reduced ■ prices, com« to see us anytime be ■ tween Wednesday. Feb. 3 and Sat. ■ Feb. H. Marie and Joe." anjipprottch as that ought BjaTTL* NOTES: Harnett School H||jrOienn Profflt says he hopes ■ - (Onadumm aw aa«» *•*»■ Conference Held On Deserted Families I A* sharp in the demands lilt <the county welUr* office for ■M»;farMM»ai deserted by hus Ptaivte eriTfither* prompted the to meet Jointly loud and hf enforcement loffWdak on Monday afternoon in ; ItflSStp ldance 111 dealw aUWONBi mi . »IH ■ A capacity' crowd is ex-, pected tonight when the: curtain rises on the Dunn Lions Club’s gala Minstrel, Varieties. The show will be gin at 8 o’clock in the high school. auditorium. Rehearsals for the minstrel have been underway for the past two weeks and those who witnessed the dress rehearsal last night ac claimed the production “a smash hit.” The minstrel was produced by Lions Nathan Cannady, Paul Wag goner and Jesse Capps, and the chorus is directed by Lion Frank Belote. Mrs. Gene Smith is pianist. Most members of the cast are members of the club and their wiv , es, with a few outsiders. , MEMBERS OF CABV , Locke Muse is the Interlocutor , and end men are: John Weddle, , Gene Hood, Preston Pa.-ker, Wood row Hill, Skinny Ennis, George Lee, Bert Hoggard and C. D. Hutaff. , Members of the chorus are: Lil i Han Hartley, Becky Bryant, Patrlc , la Johnson, Patricia Lanier, Laney . Hodges, Sylvia Slaughter, Barbara ; Reddish, Susan Black, Rita McLean, Madge Ennis, Flo Gammon, Palm j er Davis, George Bxum, Frank Be lote, Bob Dickey, Grover Hender (Can tinned an pace two) Marlon Brando Mentally 111 NEW YORK tm Film star Marlon Brando, who walked out on a starring role last week, turned up here today in the care of a psychia trist who described him as a “very sick and mentaUy confused boy,” his agent reported. The agent, Jay Kanter, said he did not know how serious Brando’s mental condition was and would have no announcement unless It was authorised by the psychiatrist. (OqaUWMd ea pace twei .fund, one of the largest that the {welfare office handles. At present the county receives for this purpose UIMMWJO, of which the county con quick to say she did not think the county can afford to spend money tor any one phase of the welfare ; _ >' Wxt flaiUj DUNN, N. C., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 4, 1954 i (Erwin Quins Gets 90 Days In Jail Erwin Guins, 1006 E. Broad St., Dunn, 63-year-old white man with a record of 16 convictions in Dunn Recorder’s Court, had two more convictions added to the list this morning when he was given a total of 90 days In Jail for larceny and receiving; and drunkenness. The Dunn’man was chargea with stealing six gallons of paint from Nu Home Builders January 28. How ever, he testified that he didn’t re member taking anything. Judge H. Paul Strickland told Guins that evidence indicated that he had taken the paint. Strickland ordered Guins to serve 30 days in Jail for drunkenness, and 60 days for larceny and receiving, to run at the expiration of the first sen tence. He filed a notice of appeal and was ordered to post S3OO bond. Guins has one of the longest rec ords listed in Dunn Recorders Court. Including cases with mul- tiple charges, he has faced charges of public drunkenness 11 times; larceny and receiving, three times previous to today’s conviction; pro perty damage once; ndn-support once; assault, once; disorderly con duct, once; and possession twice. Including one sentence of 30 days AiUJIUUiUg UUC OCUtCUCC Ui ou un/a to run concurrently with another sentence, Guins has been handed 210 days on the roads. One sen (Continued on page two) R. R. Raynor Opens New Concern Here R. R. Raynor, Dunn realtor, an nounced today that he has formed a new company, Raynor’s Paint, Glass and Contracting Co. Mr. Raynor, who has had 26 years experience in building and financing, will do a general con tracting business. This will -in clude painting, repairing houses and outs’ds buildings, plumbing, and fixtures, electrical wiring, glass fronts, for store buildings and mirrors lor homes. Financing all work will be the Dunn Insurance and Reality Co., which is owned by Mr. Raynor. Payments can be made In weekly or monthly payments at 6% inter est. All work will be handled by . skilled workmen and the work will t be guaranteed. t Dunn Rotarians To Honor Ladies y Dunn Rotarians will honor their 0 wives and ladles at a Valentine Party Friday night at 6:30 in the- General Lee Room of Johnson’s $ Restaurant, President John Strlck d land announced today, >• e Rotarjan A. B. Johnson is In I. charge of the program. He said f that avariety proframwtn *• by local WeiiLTner® Damage Suits Are Settled Judge Joseph W. Parker at noon today recessed the first week of a two-week term of ,Harnett Superior Court and ordered court to resume Monday morning on a second week es civtil docket. Adjournment was reached today earliqr than was, expected when a settlement was reached in four' automobile damage suits brought against Johnson Cotton Company. The Jury for the trial had been se lected and part of the evidence heard when the settlement was reached. The suits arose out of an auto mobile, accident September 27, 1952 at the intersection of Wilson Ave nue and E. Pope Street In Dunn. A Chevrolet car driven by Mrs. Kiz zie Barefoot Godwin was struck by a Ford truck driven by Flynn Lee, employee of Johnston Cotton Com pany. Mrs. Godwin was suing to re ; cover damages. Also injured, in the accident were Mary J. Barefoot, 16 , and a one-year-old boy, Stanley i Godwin. i Partners In tne suit- were asking $20,000 each, but made a settlement I for $6,200 each for the two wo . men and the year old boy was ’ given SI,OOO by the Dunn Cotton i Company. A number of other cases orig ! lnally scheduled for trial this week : were postponed to give time for the i trial which ended today in a set ■ tlement out of court. t Judge Parker thanked the Jury ■ for their service as he adjourned court today. , i niTV V I7HFWTV® MU mjmjmh 1 WLIH cl WASHINGTON (V) Four coutal states which stand to reap millions from tideland oil richss ashed the Su preme Court today to Mock an attack on the legality of a law giving states title to offshore lands. Attorneys for Texas, Louisiana, California, Florida and the federal government took their turn before the court to defend the submerged lands act passed by Congress last year. HONOLULU (W A Navy transport plane, attempt ing to make a record Pacific Crossing in stratospheric winds, was lost for three hours with 79 persons aboard but landed on three engines yesterday with only two min utes of fuel left. , (OmUagna Oa Mss Tws) + Record Rounduo + ■ ■IVWI ■ ■ FILING DEADLINE - The date, so far u candidates for the legis lature. county and township aflk*t are concerned, is April 17. Dougatd Mcßae, of LUllngton, chairman of the county board of elections, said yesterday that he has been noti fied by tiie State Board of Elections ■ that on 6 p, m. of foe date ta*n s timed, which folia on a Saturday, s- u the last time any candidate can s file for a race In tile Democratic ’ primary. And Mcßae adds that ho has been authorised to accept filing i feet at any time. \ f Sot wheTSlriffattend a Knowland Sees I Victory For I Substitute Bill . By UNITED PRESS Senate leaders indicated today they have plenty of doubts that any form of the Bricker treaty - curbing Amendment will be passed at this session of Congress. Senate Republican Leader Wil liam F. Knowland predicted a GOP substitute lor the Bricker Amendment would win out over a rival Democratic plan. But he would not say that the proposal would muster the necessary two thirds vote for final passage. Sen. Walter F. George (D-GA) refused to predict the fate of his proposed amendment other than to say a “majority" of Democrats would support it. He said chances of any proposal winning approval were “very slim” unlees a 11th hour "reason able compromise” is worked out. He turned down the latest com ’ promise prepared by Sen. John W. Bricker (R-Ohlo.) chief sponsor of the treaty-limiting Idea- Knowland hoped the Senate could begin voting today on the various proposals and counter proposals. It will take only a simple majority to amend or sub stitute the Bricker proposal. But final passage wiH require a two thirds vote. President Eisenhower who has split sharply with Bricker over the proposed amendment, has Called for a new study of all issues in-. i voted. * , OTHER CONGRESSIONAL NEWS: . Coffee*. Sen. Guy M Gillette <D '• Iowa) said his committee - ap- , ■ proved bill to put the New York , ’ Coffee Exchange under federal ! ! regulation is only the find step 1 toward driving down coffee priese. ' Butter: Sen. Clinton F. Anderson . (D-NM.) a former secretary of I agriculture, said-he has asked for . a legal opinion on the govern ment’s high-price butter - buying . program. He termed the present , butter situation “ridiculous.” McCarthy: Sep. Joseph R. Mc- Carthy CR-Wis) brushed aside a presidential commission’s oem plaint that congressional investiga - tlons last year hampered the work s of the V. S’, overseas Information K program. McCarthy *aid his Sen s ate Permanent Investigating Sub committee “scared hell out of a j few Commies” in its probe of the t program. Taft-Hartley: Bouse speaker s Joseph W. Martin Jr., said GOP a member* erf the Bouse Labor Com mittee Indicate they Will support - Mr. Elsenhower's proposal for k government-supervised ttrike votes, e Judges: Congress h«s sent to the ,- White House a bfil creating 30 new federal Judgeships. "It will give y the President his first chance to d appoint Republicans to a large 'number of Judgeships. cs&ta Farm Bureau . . . Others (Tom Rite section of the State expeoted to st ub© is now a member of the Farm j sT . ; fHH: tito)' FIVE CENTS PER COPY GETS $420,000 FOR LOSS OF LEGS • • SIlI2i& • ■ • ~w.-. -.si. ifet w A ifil Jf ISAAC O. MAN YARD, 44, n painter, and his wife, Tonnie, 38, are shown after a federal jury in-Chlcago awarded Manyard $420,000. Manyard tost both legs and his left forearm when he was run over by a railroad boxcar. The verdict involved the largest sum ever awarded in a rail road case to one per Mn. The suit was brought against the Chicago and Milwaukee, SL Paul and Pacific Railroad, (international Soundphoto) Boy Gets Term For Ityssgult On Girl David Dixon, a 18-year-old Negro youth, charged with assaulting a 15-year-old girl, also of Dunn, went to jail for six months today when he admitted on cross examination j that he assaulted the girl because she refused to spend | the night with him after having promised to do so. News Shorts WASHINGTON Reuse mem bers who saw a still-secret movie of the 1962 hydrogen exptoeioa at Enlwetok said the sight was ap palling and awe-inspiring. The pic ture. possibly after farther edit ing for security, b expected te be made available soon to the public. About 266 House members saw it late yesterday in the Home caucus ream. ATLANTA (PI Southern states preparing retaliations against Ohi o’s use tax on out-of-state trucks may take similar action against New York state, it wae learned today. Walter R. McDonald, Georgia pub lic service cemmlseiniur who heads the South’s 16-steta Reciprocity Commission, amid the group win meet In late March to consider New York’s trucking tax levies. LOS ANGELEBIPI James Roos evelt and his wife, RomeUe, face each other Friday at a court hear ing on her request for $3,566 a month temporary support for her self and her three children, pend ing trial es her separate mainten ance suit Samuel B. Flceae, Eeeee volt’s lawyer, mid it wfll be the lint time the couple have met since the filed her euit In Pasadena 8u- ' perier Court. WASHINGTON (PI —There wae a ■harp and ominous Increase recent ly la shipments of weapons and robt It in Indoehlns, H was lam sd today. This plus increased rebel activity has prompted the fee Mag that the Commentate may be gear ing far aa all-out drive to ferae the Preach eat es twdechha aad (Oonttaaod ea page tore) Carroll Returns From Havana Trio I'l VIII lIMlElIrm ■ ■ HOw Norwood Carroll of Dunn, mana ger of the furniture ***** B|yHonPf , deportment at Purdie’s, Inc. Hen Just returned from a week’s vaca- Mr Carroll was one of seven North Oaroliniani awarded the free i trip for outstanding sate* of Gen- I tern Oaic-llna. THE RECORD GETS RESULTS On examination of Solicitor J. Shepard Bryan, the youth admitt ed having had sexual relations with Dorothy Jean Ferguson since 1952. She had charged him with slapping her and threatening her with a pistol. After Dixon revealed the intimacy with the 15-year-old girl, she was called to the stand and admitted having had sexual relations with the youth since 1952. However, she denied his charges that she had spent the night with him on three occasions. The Negro youth told the court that he spent two nights with the girl in a Negro motel in Dunn, and that on another occasion he slip ped into her home late at night and slept with her. She denied all three charges. In passing the sentence, Judge H. Paul Strickland told the youth that he frowned on his assaulting the girl because she would not join with him in breaking the law. He called the girl back to the stand and questioned her regarding her relations with Dixon. “Didn’t you know this was il legal?” the Judge asked. The girl dropped her head and said she didn’t MOTHER TESTIFIES Earlier in the case, the girls mo titer had testified to the assault On question of the Judge, she said I (Couttouwl Oa Page Two) Tyndall Saw Firm Will Open Saturday Dunn’s newest business is a chain j saw firm which will open Satur day at 106 N. Fayetteville Ave nue. Norman Tyndall is manage! and owner of the new store. Tyndall has been in the chain saw business for the pest eight years, having been employed by Roger L. Crowe, Inc, before open ing his own business. Bora in Johnston County, Tyn-1 daU moved to when oniyj Dunn* High School where he was graduated in 1945. He Joined the I, Crowe saw firm soon after com-1 Tr&all bsgan as a .mechanic when he weht into foe chain saw J i I * MeCTJIXOCH LOfS J NO. 45 Russia Told To Quit Stalling At Conference BERLIN (IP) French For eign Minister Georges Bi dault dared Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Mol otov today to “take the same risk as we’’ and per mit Germany to choose its friends in free and open elections. The other two Western foreign ministers joined with Bidault in demanding that Russia quit stall ing on the issue and give a straight yes-or-no answer to their proposals for such elections as a first step toward reuniting divided Germany. Bidault challenged Molotov at the 10th Big Four conference ses sion. He spoke for all three Wes tern delegations in expressing the West’s annoyance with Soviet de laying tactics. After inviting the Soviets to give Germany an opportunity to decide in free elections whether it will line up with West or East, Bidault said: “I ask my Soviet colleague to give his attention to the practical proposals presented to him ... he is obliged to give up a clear ans wer to the following questions which have been put to him: “Does he agree to form a German government following free elections? “Does he agree to the means pro posed and, if not, what changes does he suggest?” SHARPLY CRITICAL He sharpjiy criticized Molotov for his “obstinacy” and for throwing “legalistic obstacles" in the path of t)ie conference simply because the Soviets fear discussion of free Ger man elections. A The French foreign minister ac- W (Continued on pan two) iFive Rotarians Receive Honor Three members of me Dunn Ro tary Club and two LlUlngton Ro tarians have been appointed to serve on committees in charge of the District Rotary Conference to be held in Goldsboro on February 11 and 12th. Their appointment was announc ed today by District Rotary Gov ernor Charles L. McCuilers ol Kin ston. Dunn Rotarians named to com mittees were: A1 WuUenwader, banquet and meals; Hoover Adams, publicity, and Normal) Buttles, prizes and awards. LUllngton Rotarians named to committees were: Robert Morgan, program; and Clifton Brock, reso lutions Wullenwaber is also a mettMr ; of the district advisory comirifftok : Rotarians from 40 clubs win at | tend the district meeting. The : Dunn club has cnartewd two bus es to transport local Rotarians and [ their wives to the Governors Ban [ quet on Friday night. Charlie HU* ' dreth is in charge cl the tranepor trlfctlm William O. Ras tetter. Jr. of - * \ oi notary invcruivwwi, wui w the speaker at this flamer. normak tmmm ■
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Feb. 4, 1954, edition 1
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