Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / April 2, 1954, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE TWO BULLETINS R i (Continued from pore one) WASHINGTON (IP) Rep. Leo E. Allen R-111, chair (nuui »( one of the-most powerful committees in Congress, predicted today that President Eisenhower will bei a can didate again in 1956 and will be re-elected, Allen who fre quently site in on Mr. Eisenhower's conferences with, leg islature leaders, shrugged off reports the President is dis -1 inclined to take on another four years in the White House f after he completes his present term. | MEMPHIS, Tenn. (IP) Teen-agers Eugene Ring found a home and foster parents today after placing a classified ad saying he needed a chance to finish his high sehopl ed ucation, Eugene, whose parents are divorced, immediately liked Mr. and Mrs. Morey Evans, who were among the many .persons to offer help after the youth placed this ad j in newspapers here; am a 17-year-old boy, healthy and ambitious. I want to finish school but 1 need a home and will work [ hand.” S ’n : Vr t,„J' .WASHINGTON (IP) House leaders gave a frigid re ception to the Senate-passed Alaska-Hawaii statehood bill today, and its future was very much in doubt. House Re publican Leader Charles A. Halleck (Ind.) charged that the Senate “played fast and loose” in tieing Alaska state hood to the House-approved Hawaii bill. ~ WASHINGTON (© - Informed sources said today a government report probably will show that unemploy ment increased last month but remained below the 4,- 900,000 mark. About 3,671,000 jobless were reported in February. WASHINGTON (IP) -m Atomic scientists are speeding Up evolution in plant life, and plan to try out the same process on animals. They already are breeding better crops | wad think they can develop a “superior type” of animals as welL They are working with big, controlled doses of ra dioactivity. This speeds up normal* , changes in the genes that control heredity. Most of the changes are bad. Good ones are singled out for reproduction. >< ! —rt —...» I— PARIS (IP) The National Assembly upheld the gov ernment’s firing pf Marshal Alphonse Juin hy passing the 1854 military budget,today over the stormy protests of right wing deputies who tried to block it in retaliation. The budget, which i» «1 ud e s allotments for Indochina, passed by a vote pf 302 votes to 232 although right,wing Gaullist opponents of the European Defense Community turned the session into an uproarious defense of Juin. 4 NEW YORK OB wTfoe district council of the Inter national Longshoremen's Association called an emergency meeting today to consider an order In the National Labor Relations Board ,tfi|it ißimd the .29-day-old dock strike in the port of,New York. The council, called the meeting of union heads after the Bi-State Waterfront Commission turned, down a,bid by the independent to end the crippling strike by a comprimise. ■ * 8 ad* * NEW YORK (IP? Three. Navy fighter pilots rode a 4Q,000-foot high “jet stream’’ from San Diego to New Yosk in less than four hours Thursday, each shattering cross continental speed record for jets. The Navy said the rep-. ? CJ ord-smashing efforts were accidental, however, and be cause the jets were not officially clocked the record .of L four hours, eight minutes and five seconds set in January by Air National Guard Col. Willard Millikan still stands. 9 -'it* *-.y LONDON (IP) The British Labor J*arty wasconfi-, 1 dent today of passage of. jits motion asking Prime Minister Winston Churchilk for a meeting with President Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Georgi M. Malenkov to , tame the hydrogen bomb Laborites, appealing against i the. H-bomb’s, “grave .threat to civilization,” went tq work in the Parliament lobbies in hopes of winning a majority for their motion which is to be voted on during Monday’s debate on the hydrogen bomb. ? LONDON (IB .Sir Adrian Ivor Dunbar, the former J Maryland farmer-handyman, entered the pages of nobil j ity officially today with publication of the 1954 edition, of • Debrett’s Peerage. But Debrett’s glossed over .his back ground by stating briefly he .was “naturalized an Ameri can citizen 1837.” It then launched into the family’s 250- ' year-old history. « .... . WASHINGTON (IP) The House Labor Committee to - day. tackles three controversial changes in the Taft-Hart ley Act in an effort to wind up its action op labor law re vision, Scheduled (for .a vot# were President, Eisenhower’s recommendation for a government-supervised secret vote of union members in ease of a strike; a move to take un fair labor practice cases from the National Lgbef Rela f tions Board and give them to federal courts; and a, pro posal to give the states more authority on labor disputes. SAVE ON OUR LOW PRICE | m *■. AZALEAS I 10 FOR ONLY $1.25 | gveral Every Plant H t ««;«, if ll I „ S I I reat Moss I n | I Dahlias I I Vigoro IH I Phlox I I Seotts Lawn Seed 111 I. If util-' V 11 * ... ” I l AT BANQUET The Harnei* bounty unit of the N. C. E. A. held a banquet session last night at the Campbell College dining hall mark ‘ ing the final meeting of the year. Around 250 teachers and their guests heard Henry McFay den (right) of Raleigh, public relations counselor for the N. C. E. A. speak and afterwards new chapter officers were installed. Jeff Denny, (left) Little Things (ConUnued from page one) here," explained the motorist. Patrolman Matthews took the \ motorist back to police head quarters and he admitted his' guilt and paid off. As the driver got back in his car, he turned to David and called I out, “See you again next year!” . And. if he comes back through speeding again, we're quite sure Patrolman Matthews will be wait ing for him. LITTLE NOTES: Dunn Jaycees have already sold more than 900 tickets for tile beauty pageant here next week. . . Nothing draws, a' bigger crowd than pretty girls 1 pointed out Chairman Worth Van noy John Weddle says he ani his son were lucky enough to get seats among the celebrities when they saw the Globetrotters in Ra leigh Wednesday night.. .D.. and S. officials and employees' here 'have been anxiously awaiting, arrival of the new diesels. . , -A tdqrist from i New York stopped at Whe EIHC Avenue crossing the • i make a picture of one dr- the old steam engines, which are now on their last leg. . . .'This is the first ■ one I've seen in years,” said the visitor. . C .Evelyn Straughan. edu cational director at the First Bap tist Church, is wearing a sparkler oh her business finger. . . .Rhody Williams and the other Bingharr. • Military Academy fellows are plan ning a party here for General Tom 'Handy, when the four star general , gets back to the' States. . . .General . Handy, the Army's top-ranking brass, retired Wednesday. . . He and the Dunn attorney were on the faculty at' Bingham Military Aca demy in Asheville. , .Neill and Bill Salmon were among their students . . . .They’ll all get together when General Handy gets back; . . .Some body was telling Mr: Williams that some of the bootleg places don’t i mind getting raided, that they consider it good advertising and they [ don’t have to worry about going to ‘ jail'iA. "I don’t know about, that,’’ he replied. ‘lt hurts sometimes be ; cause a lot of people, particularly some of the church people, don't like to buy their liquor from a place that's Just been raided.’’ ... We hadn’t thought about that be fore.... : SEEN ABOUT. TOWN: Orover , Henderson and Hubert Butt having a .friendly disagreement over Arthur Godfrey Grover doesn’t like Godfrey at - all, Hubert, does -like h)m Neither convinced, the other ... . .Mrs. Hugh Prince playing April Fool jokes on her friends - and neighbors Naomi Smith and Lib Ferguson, manager of Benson's Chamber of Commerce, having col fee at the Big-4 ...The Mg new tourist sign-at the home of Mr. and Mrs,, J. B. Bouse... .Ace Sign Com pany putting up new signs all about town .. Coroner Joe Pink ston of Fayetteville in town fk a visit —He has grown a goatee Can’t grow a beard “Believe it or not," said Joe, "J've never >had a beard on either side of my face,” i His skin is smooth as s' babys the only place he grows a beard Is on Mia ehin and lip*... .lucky man Bob Dickey and City Com missioner Leon Godwin' discussing the new 301 bypass Bill Laugh inghouse able to be out after an illness Tomfny Jackson walking back to the POst Office after din, tier . Sack Butt hurrying home from school.,- We’ve often won dered how she got that nick-name Never heard it before.'.. .Dr Jr M. Morgan on his way to the SOUTH tot of Dunn people will be in the audience when oh the roadshow production of .. _ _ 4 » Aj IpE DAILY of Dunn, a past president, Inducted the new offi cers including Miss Martha McLeod (center) of Benhaven, president aad Mrs. Gladys Phillips of Coats, secretary-treasarer. John Honeycutt of Er win, vice president , was absent. Mrs; Lynda Pow ell of Boone Trail, retiring president, served as toastmistress. (Photo by T. M. Stewart) I i 4 Road Bond Money Not Spent Fdirly RALEIGH (IP) Mem tiers of the State Highway Com mission today studied figures on the distribution of high way funds during W. Kerr Scott’s administration as gov ernor. Commission Chairman A. H. Gra ham handed out: the two sets of figures at a commission meeting here yesterday. He said they pre sented a “very accurate idea” of what each county reoeived and what it would have received if it got “its fair share.” One set of figures covered county allocations from the 200 million dollar rural road bond issue and the other .covered county alloca tions from construction funds, maintenance funds and betterment funds. ■ Graham said that he had asked : commission auditor Sam Smith to provide the figures for informatlon al purpose*. He denied that there 1 was any political, implication. Scott f l 3 P°* running for the Senate portrayed on Broadway by Ezio ; Pinza arid George Britton, and ! Ensign Nellie Forbush, at firs’ played by, Mary Martin and later by. Martha Wright Other out standing ..characters are: Corporal ’ Luther BilUs, Bloody Mary and a : lovely Polynesian called Liat, . ..In away, Luther Billis and Bloody Mary stand out even more than the l two leading characters, .. But the 1 music is . what makes “Boutb Pacific.” Thene are 11 song hits in : the show, from “Bali HaT” to the !■ song that’s now immortal, “Some Enchanted .Evening.’’ Few I Broadway shows have had such a : long and clorful, run as this one— i nearly 4,000 performances before it closed last January I6th We saw the show three times and liked It just as much the third time as 1 the first.... But that’s nothing .. ’ Walter Winchell saw it more than i a dozen times and still raves about 1 it... There are many stories and legends about the show Ro mances and even marriages blos ; somed out of it....1t even figured . in one divorce case in New York •un,A-' couplq-.rwent to see the play, accompanied by a friend, and the wife fell m love with the other man....Or so the.story goes And It was right after “South Pacific.” opened that; young girls across >*he'nation started., marrying ■ men old enough to be their father, : inspired J»y- the • romance • between Pinza and Martin.. They made it fashionable,; . .It was a >fad, or a craze . . .That, . song, “Some En , chanted Evening!’ is now ranked among .the all-time favorites The words are pretty and romantic, and philoephical in some place* . .The song t has been sung at weddings and at least ooqe, w« heard, at-a funeral.. ...Everybody who.,ha* seen “South Pacific.’’ of course, didn't like it particularly be cause tastes vary, naturally Bv.r, we haven't, found anybody yet who •aid he didn't find H to be good entertainment .. It’s well worth . seeing. THINGAMAJIGSi Dunn mer ehsnts are sharply divided-over the proposal that stories close at i:3O instead of <6 o’clock . . There’s: a lot of opposition to it Norman Smttles says he still thinks that having stores stay open one night nite a a * .. ss at against Gov. William B. Umstead’s appointee. Alton, A. Lennon. He said the figures show that the bond money was handled under procedures that were set up by law but that there had been some In equities in the division of the other funds. .. , SCOTT’S COUNTY GOT MORE “You’ll find.” Graham told news men, "that some counties got more than their fair-percentage and some less.” Among counties In which con siderable money was spent, he cited Alamance and Davidson. Alamance is Scott's home county and Davidson Is the home county of former Highway Commissioner George. Coble. > , (Figure* showed that Alamance (received 16.64 per cent of ths-.hjgh d*y funds spent ip., the old-Fifth Division which included seven .oth er counties. . ' . \ Davidson, Randolph and Chatham counties received 70.45 per :cent of. all funds -spent In the old Sixth which lpeluded six other counties; fax Cut, Td Help Easter Businass By UNITED PRESS Merchants and businessmen agreed today that the federal ex cise tax cut win stimulate sales, but few would estimate by how" much. «‘--( The sweeping tax cut. first since 1947, went into effect yesterday on scores of items, including home ap pliances, luggage, furs, jewelry,.gen eral admissions, telephone calls and transportation. ... Merchants said the reduction came at a good time, and should stimulate Easter buying. Acflai To Spook In Stc;te Tonite CHARLOTTE, N. C. W Adlat E„ Stevenson, Democratic Parly ■ standard bearar, will deliver a "ma lar political speech" tonight i hula campaign to defeat a Republieacr congressman In this Democratic stole. - i-.bsa A spokesman said Stevenson iJtaumed a: speech - about* “the K bomb, taxes and the eooaoaiie. sit* uation" but still was working on his speech and Vail that tnty be changed.” by 9:30 p. m. EST to night. • • - si , Stevenson was to- arrive by pri vate plane from Southern Pines, N. C.„ where he ha* been vaoat tloning. Work on the, speech was delayed by a kidney ailment which hospitalised him for several days. Some 4JJOO, Democrats are expec ted to attend the rally, jn part- of a campaign to regain the 10th ‘dis trict seat now held by. Rep. -Chafes R. Jonas fR-NC). Stevenson wHt also hold a press conference/ here Saturday morning. ; A|| ie d Youth (Continued FHM Page One) Delegates and sponsors will a*- semble again Biterdiy morning at 9:30 in the school auditorium for disooßrtoas,. a * business session and intallaUoß of new officer. Offioer* include: Betty -Lee George tZ li M I i ! -WU Qmitn s Aril (Continued From f«i one, the-largest building projects ever undertaken in Dunn. The propeAy re-zoned last night .lies along 421, back of the new Latimer homes. NEW (SHOPPING CENTER stii I With. Quinn’s Furniture* already located on West Cumberland. ,«no .other businesses planning so hx«t« therei there was tome indlwttKY. today that a new shopping, center might spring mp West of -Dumr, Latimer stated today that he had no statement-<to make regarding Che re-zonlng, but would have an an nouncement within the next three weeks. A*;parking-become*):more of-:-* problem, many stowns, are being , “sklrfM" by shopping centers where parking is both free and i plentiful. Council last'night-debated (far sometime before giving approval to the re-zoning rof the property. How ever, there' was some question as to the right of Council ita act without first asking the opinion of the new ly formed Planning Board of Dunn. Most of those attending the meet* ing last night- were of the opinion that the- Planning Board did not care about the zoning so long as the street pattern remained the same. , - - ; ; ffifS. viMRiS • ilSmt'OOf* . yms» ;k*hc;l -■ •CaMlnaad *r«m aad* ~,,■ day land -suit which was the.find of a series of similar civil actions stai'tedabyyMrs. Jaggcrs. to reach the trialistage. .: :*:■■ V-i'm-,;. Various members of the Wither* family, cousins the plaintiff, epd long prominent in the Upper Riaer and Barbecue townships, are, named as defendants In the actions. ' Specific case tried - this week named J. H. Withers and his wife; Emma Withers as defendants. The area in controversy embraced «0 acres- of land. Mrs. Jaggers con tended the tract lies withjn a much larger area of around 800 acres, all land she alleges was a part of the original McDougald lands Inherited by the Withers. ■ ; , , , , ■. By its verdict, rendered- late Thursday after an hour’s; delibera tion, jurors gave an affirmative an swer to the one issue Judge Hub bard asked them to decider Did they believe that evidence tended to prove that J. H. Withers had a clear title to the 60* acres of i«H which are- In; eanfepvemy ? The an- 1 UUII N v)i r- I ■ i j Miner ai nome < I I j] iI y All Savings Deposits Male At m MmSfru mm m THE GulnmcßCfAL BARK | km mm ,-' DraW Interest From April Ist. -\I •T- t-b;. U'V>49W* ii u X£t t V.' I ISf 6* in M.k I •;! }[ '«■ AI-Aai a, mm. i? 11 Ta B / w| Ur. More. jj I rv r; •.y r. -ji a-j II I*. ’’Si * ( r\,i A jofifiridt j • ' M H The In A rrnu/'nn BUI **o9 B StPhtT 01- ®* T®o Os ©reefer Security In TW3 I Future., t Ii a-w -4' 4 -3K ai- IL at A fedUbfe* A**. ii - w* ■ (1 - If) ™ ■ ■■■ %VV>IRvI IH / ■ H c ,i - f iriiA v / serving inis vornmuniry since iyiy v v 'mm Friday afternoon. April 2, id»*- swer was yes. >*-< ■ tho law firm of Pittman and BtotHn However, Mrs. J aggers indicated at Banford, Charles T. Unti fIBB she may take exception to thofudg-: charlotte, and A. R Taylor -Oty ment of the court and appeal the LtHington. The Withers heirs werar case to the State Supreme Court.- represented by Neill McKay SqlfHH Mrs. Jaggers waa represented by of the firm of Salmon and HooperM r - ■ ..K-I ■ I ti|, firtlE « A 1 CATHOLIC ATfffMf l j :> f> Business,., on widows and orphans. He‘W the Worker...on FaKism pointed out the right use K ...on Race and Color. of money and the moral*' : *BuCwmay*st*'what 'jM 9 H obligations of the do you mean by a Catholic Os course, Christ saidA Attitude?” After all, what nothingaboutCommunisna,--' has religion got to do with Trade Unions, or Capit* Industry and Labor, Wages | I ism. These questions did* .' ] and Profits?” not then exist. Bat , Just this much, ffienti Religion is more than a Sunday morning af fair it affects every moment of your daily life. Life is made up of one right after the other and these actions are either good or;bad. Religion gives us the moral staqdards to judge whether these actions are right or wrong! It is a question of right or wrong it concern* religion if an em ployer deprives his laborers of their just wages... if a selfish group "corners” the; market 1 and works hardships on others... if a union calls a strike that will cripple the whole country's economy. Thi» is where, the Catholic Attt | i rude comes in. The Catholic Church ■, would be failing its duty, if it did not apply the law of God to the many problems that beset today's wodd. When Christ lived among men, they learned from Him the Chris tian attitude toward the social ques tions with .which thjy faced. He refused to meddle in mere poli • . tics, but Me was careful tp tell rulers not to exceed their authority. L He warned Pilate that he had no E right tq commit injustice for the I sake of expediency. He rebuked F hypocrites who took advantage of L ~ 1 ••“A.. - [ / / v ~Sin»4IME COUNCIL 1 /KfiJGHTS OF COLUMBUS' fad [, ... -J Religious Information Bureau mOj ST l ° UrS L 1 I r- "-Sponsored Bv N. C. Lavmen’s Association —J to us they are every bit asimpoffcl; ant as those on which He gp<d£«jj, to the men of His day. And voice is needed now to speak wfH the same authority for the of our difficulties: * IK Christ established His teach all men to observe all that had commanded-to direct theawjH : the religion of every-day lifq. , It is for this reason we find the'"* Apostles criticizing ihe of their fellow-countrymen; proclaiming the equality of Gentile converts. We see St Pas J writing in great detail of the obfflP gations of masters and servants, of , husbands and wives.. From St. PcMfif we learn about taxpaying and nil \ obedience we owe to civil auchOri-" ■ ties. The Catholic Church | this tradition today by expresiL. its attitude on the basically mqgA.l prohlems of modern society. "Vj You will find it well worth ywsaitJ while to investigate the l Attitude on matters that vitally J concern us'all:"«j and ] . Labor... Race and C010r... Liber-1 alism, Democracy and Communiaiftijfl Write today for a free pamphlet 1 explaining the Catholic Attitude. 3 on these and similar questions. Ask 4 for Pamphlet Na 10 —KG -13| . ’
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 2, 1954, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75