*W EAT HER. 4 North Carolina Considerable eloudinos* and oeai today. Genaral ly fair tanighL Low temperatures near E mountains, 38-35 elsewhere. * Saturday Increasing cloudiness and not so eooL • ■ VOLUME 4 I LIONS MINSTREL MO SUCCESS Shown I boro to on ororoU view of the (tore and part of the latte «wwd which peeked the Dunn Hlfh I School auditorium last night to see the Dunn I Uons Club's Mlnotrei Varieties. The show was rWofk On 301 Bypass Slated 1 To Begin Before End 01 '54 ■ ' a^pßt^a^ MMaHaMlaßßßaaiaaaaa ißssau I ' 4 I lAeotso ■ ' , •*.InuAD I « tuns I Jhitup I . SrBMTH ADAMS H LITTLE NOTES: The new home ■ of tHe Bank of LUlimrton la going ■ to be a wonky building, one of tl the finest In this entire section . . . ■ It trttt be toa -only bank In the ■ cobnty wlth * right depoeltory . L Cashier John Spears Is a very pro- W *’ C Jr " ■ former Dunn newspaperman. Is now ■ covering ChanceUor Adenauer's of- I sur ■ Is giving up the Packard dealer ■ Ship here Robert and H. D. ■ Strickland are too busy repairing ■ cam to bother about selling new ■ om> ... Robert Is getting ready to ■ attend toe big stock car races in ■ f>ai>ltvurfnn Norwood StFDhenson ■ iTpShring to attend toe Uons ■ Convention in New York this sum ■ mer . A number of Dunn Uons ■ wffl be there . Dr. GerMd James j'sr,°‘£g.w. “Write he'was telling ■ us about all toe things WhitevUle ■ has, he didn't name a thing that ■ Dunn didn't have and In most cases ■ ws have even more to brag Mjout." ■ lOmdMued On Page Tw?> ■ I McCall Resigns From ■. h ’ -M. fi . f *5 Ids• • Fit mp if E? a • 05* Ol Ol C I uiffii ffTiiHr °y u w.. fWitllMM* la »J> t Hi t I?r* TT - m . > i-* t - M V *l imf X> «££ TfcpU* church** in th. SnSr. Mr. Ccc*ll «0d bt fa! B ■&*»• dp the pMtonte "with much Mr regra*," * Mid that m yet h« ""TELEPHONES: 1117 • 1118 - acclaimed a tremendous success in every respect and proved highly enjoyable. The audience was delighted. The club Is considering a repeat per formance, but a decision on that has not yet been made. (Daily Record Photo.) Sixth District Highway Commissioner C. A. Hasty told The Daily Record to day that construction work on the new Highway 301 by pass will begin before the end of 1954, but that it would probably be at least three years before the new highway would be opened to the public for travel. He said there was little chance of opening the highway for travel before toe end of 1958 or early in 1957. Mr. Hasty made the announce ment while in Dunn today on a visit. He was accompanied by Dis trict Engineer L. E. Whitfield. TO COST THREE MILLION The new bypass will cost approx imately <3.000X)00 for the two sec tions in Harnett and Johnston coun ties alone. He said work will begin simultaneously in toe two coun ties. - Commissioner Hasty said it would (Continued ea page two) Harnett T< Scout An Boy Scout Week officially opens In Barnett County Sunday Vining when some 50 scouters represent ing five troops from all over the County receive their advancement badges In a Court of Honor at the Dunn Presbyterian Church. Ser vices will begin at 7:30. BUI Twyford, Sr., chairman of Advancements in Harnett, said to- day that the Sunday evening cere mony will open toe National Boy •l ‘ •> MUCH PROGRESS (Continued On ngt five) ; • 1- Jtatlg Jltfcaril News Shorts HANOI, Indochina (IPI Bitter fighting was reported along a 40- mile defense are north of Luang Prabang today as a thin line of French Union troops sought to halt a Communist drive to take the city. Red vanguards sweeping south In three columns were an estimated three days march from the old La otian capital. RALEIGH (W lntra-state rail roads-today returned to old freight rates in use before the State Ut ; ilities Commission granted a 9 per cent increase last Jaly. Judge W. C. Harris ruled yesterday In Wake Superior Court that the commis sion bad exceeded Its stautory auth ority In granting the increase. i CINCINNATI, O. *2 1 \ •/ l' i - ‘W - DUNN, N. C„ FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 5, 1954 U. S. Accuses Russia Os Design To Push To Rhine McCarthy Urges Loyal Citizens To Join GOP CHARLESTON, W. Va. (IP) Sen. Joseph R. Mc- Carthy Thursday night, invited Democrats who. are “loyal Americans” to join the Republicans and escape the “iodiocy,” “rot” and deceit of their oton. party. The Wisconsin senator began a transcontinental tour with a Lin coln Day speech here which was the first of nine he will deliver within eight days. He speaks to night at Canton, Ohio. Democratic leaders here, at Can ton and In other cities on his itin erary were armed with “trutn kits” distributed by the Democra tic National Committee in an ef fort to meet his anticipated char ges head-on with “facts.” The ■ national committee an nounced in Washington today that - the “truth kits”—including a 16- page “fact sheet” and two articles from the Democratic Digest were prepared because McCarthy tends to be “cdnsiderably more careless with the truth" when he goes on tour. USED BY REPUBLICANS The Democratic strategy re called the use of a four-man "truu Aa«4dr* -bp*tofe' RepuMfeaiis duHbT the 1952 presidential campaign. The squad trailed former Presi dent Harry 8. Truman on his whistle-stop tour, holding news conferences or making speeches to answer his assertions. McCarthy told his audience Thursday night that the label “Democrat” is “stitched with the lodiocy of a Truman, rotted by the deceit of an Acheson, corrupted by the Red slime of a White.” BLOOD OF DYING MEN Those who wear the label, he said, “wear it. with the stain of a historic betray el; wear it with the corrosion of unprecedented cor ruption; wear it with the blood of dying men who crawled up the hills of Korea while the politicises in the Democratic Party wrote Invi tations to the Communists to join them at the United Nations.” McCarthy said the ‘‘mßllons of loyal Americans” who voted Dem ocratic “do not even remotely de serve this label.” “They deserve something far better than this. They can get something far better by joining toe Republican Party,” he said. The Wisconsin Republican said his party would lead the nation “back to religious ethics of hon esty and loyalty.” His references Jp “Idiocy,” “rot” and '‘slime” were directed at Tru man, former Secretary of State Dean Acheson, and toe late Harr/ Dexter White, a former Treasury official branded by Atty.Tlen. Her bert Brownell Jr., as a Soviet spy. BULL] WASHINGTON (IP) Ri Leonard W. Hall expressed 1 being unable to find more g faithful. But he assured me tional Committee, who are m work for the 1954 congressk go on doing his best to “repl good Republicans ” He said President Etoenh and “keenly wants more an the policy-making posts of WASHINGTON W & liam F. Knowland ruled t - ?. i Coatimad as in.- . i ... ■a ■ CONDITIONAL ANNEXATION Vernon told on Pope Road would-ks taken Into is arunraa tars. FARM BUREAU “BRAIN TRUST" The executive board of the Harnett Consty Farm Bu reau held a conference on Wednesday , night In Lilllngton to discuM policy and plans for the com ing year. In the group were, front .row, James T. Tart, LUlington, Route 3, vice president and direc tor for LUlington township; Walter Rogers s|f Johnsonvllle, president, and Am Cameron, diree Irene Castle Offers To Let Mad Bog Bite Her in Test Cotton Awards i Are Presented : M. E. Thornton of Dunn, Route 1 4, Thursday night was presented J first place in Harnett County’s Five- ' Acre Cotton Contest for 1953. ! This wss toe third year that Mr. 1 Thornton was won the county cot- . ton-producing contest. He received a check for $75. Presentation of awards took place at a meeting of cotton farmers ‘ held in the city courtroom. Coun ty Agent C. R. Ammons presided. The checks were presented by Chairman L. A. Tart of the county board of commissioners. J. A. (Bud) Shanklin, cotton ex tension specialist from State Col lege, and Myres W. TUghman of Dunn, president of toe Carolines ■ Dinners Association, were the prin -1 clpal speakers at toe meeting.' Tyree BroadweU of Angler won second-place in the county-wide The prise money was donated by event and received a check for SSO. (CentimMd am page six) CAPITOL HEADLINE WASHINGTON IW Headline te the Washington Pest: D. C. Has Toe Many Lawyers, Ned - Enough Undertakers, Survey Shows. ETINS republican National Chairman keen disappointment today at government Jobs for the party embers of the Republican Na leeting here to lav the ground anal campaign, that he would dace Democrat holdovers with bower is aware of the problem Senate KopuhHean Leader WO - "t**™ Bw Jnfe 811 H| II ■ M jpa JL HVlSllllifllf " • I I FIVE CENTS PER COPY tor from Barbecue Township and a pest presi dent us the county group. On the buck row are H. L. West, director for Johnson Till* Downship; Carson Gregory of Coats, who represented the county at the State Farm Burean convention; and W. R Byrd of Bunnlevel, director for Stew arts Creek township. (Photo by T. M. Stewart) CHICAGO Hi - Animal lover Irene Castle, one-tong darting of Broadway stage, today offered to let a mad dog kite her to save her four-footed friends from the pain and danger of hypodermic needle. The state of Illinois ordered ev ery dog and cat in Chicago inocu lated against rabies in an unpre cedented step to halt an epidemic of the disease that has killed one child and seen severs- mass attacks by slavering dogs. Meanwhile, deg pounds were fill ing up and officials said they may have to start destroying strays in wholesale lots to make room for oew confer* • . - Miss Castle, who is now Mrs. George Ensinger and operates the famous “orphans of toe storm” an imal shelter at nearby Deerfield, 111., said “Inoculations would para lyze toe hind legs of dogs.” She offered to put up $5)000 and challenged, “no one can prove that a person bitten by a rabid dog ever died as a result.” “She would most certainly die,” said Chicago Health Board Pres ident Dr. Herman Bund«*en. “Well, frhy don’t they Ist me do it, then,” she answered. Her statements about rabies were not supported by medical opinion. It Is considered ofie of the most virulent of diseases, is always fatal after incubation and is accompan ied by Incredible suffering. BITTEN BEFORE The International dancing favor ite of past decades said sba had been bitten about "three times a week" at her animal shelter, which she said took m an average of 14,080 homeless dogs a year. "I’ve been bitten by dogs foam ing st the mouth end I’m not dead yet,” she said. Miss Castle stipu lated that toe dog bites her must not have received anti-rabies vac cine. which she considers danger ous. The. inoculation order, which will undoubtedly be resisted by many pet owners, was likely to oost Chicago ans about (toe million doOpue at $1 a toot for an estimated 380.000 dog] and 250,000 cats, some of which hum alrMfev rtocivtd shots. Popt't Condition Ranor+Ml Weaker ' www, ‘ . VATICAN CUT HI The gen- THE RECORD GETS RESULTS 1 ■ i Marlon Brando Is Facing Suit HOLLYWOOD HI A movie ' studio said today it will sue actor ! Marlon Brando for every cent it > loses because he failed to show up tor filming of “The Egyptian." A psychiatrist, Dr. Bela Mittle ’ mann, called toe 30th Century-Fox > studio from New York’snd said the ’ actor was “very ill” and In his care. * Brando could not work for “at • least 10 weeks,” the studio quoted l •' l Continued On Page Five# i : ■ > H s ■ I ■ i I » H s * I i I t ■ a ■ it s I * H I , HIQIIftOK UPS AGAIN, M» E. tlieuiluii. right, es I NO. 46 Dulles Rejects Molotov's Plan In Strong Terms BERLIN (IP) The UnitedL States today accused Russia * of attempting, in the Big Four foreign ministers’ con ference, to push the Soviet sph ere frontier westward from the Elbe to the Rhine River. That, Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov was told, was the West’s reaction to the Kremlin blueprint he presented yesterday for reunit ing Germany. Molotov, In yesterday’s discourag ing conference session, rejectedihe West’s proposals for free all-Gee--,. man elections as a first step to ward reuniting the divided country. Instead, Molotov proposed forma tion of a provisional a 11-German government before elections are held, and withdrawal of all occu pation troops prior to the elections. This, the West said, would be the equivalent of an Invitation to the Communists to gobble up all Ger many. U. S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, speaking for toe West, made a slashing denunciation of the “Molotov plan." “In the name of peace," Dulles said, "Molotov proposes a method of extending the solid Soviet bloc to the Rhine. In toe name of what he calls democracy, he has set . , forth the classic Communist pat l tern for extinguishing damoeracy w- 1 that word has been understood for 2,000 years." Today’s meeting was convritod amidst growing evidence that toe ministers are hopelessly deadlock ed on the German; issue. “If the Molotov plan were ac cepted it would mead, that anyone who dares to express the doubt concerning commtuSsm is automatically deemed a Fascist or a , militarist or s monopolist,” Dulles r said. t “If this system were to be ap -5 plied, no organization opposing the Communists or toe policies of the . Soviet Communists, which are toe „ same thing, would be permitted* to e take part in the election, It -vdfld , only be the Communist Party and t the Communist front organizations 1 which, under Mr. Molotov's plan, would participate in the eldqtto)*."