Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / June 15, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
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+ WEATHER + Generally fair, hot and humid Tuesday except for widely mattered afternoon and evening thundershow ers mostly over tbs east portion to day and northeast Tuesday. VOLUME 4 TRAINING MACHINERY Billy Sexton, * center, president of the Lillington Chamber of L Commerce, inspects the electrically powered sew “ lac machines and other equipment now bring in stalled In the basement of the Lillington Commu nity Center by an Industrial firm seeking to lo cate In the county seat. Trainlny machinery is being sot up in the temporary location pendlny l JhsM I ©tltils \ Jhitufi By BOOm ADAM! asswTinet.l. nan I COMPLETED NEW BOAT 'ja£ Pretty Mis. Nancy Alberglne of I Dunn doesn't have Just double I trouble. No, indeed, she has tri- Itor husband, State Patrolman 1 Paul Alberglne, is in Rex Hospital V At Raleigh recovering from a back || operation and will have to be con -1 teed for months. j'r-:'mtir two children have been ■Maying with her parents In Shel !:.< Or Wednesday. Mrs. Alberglne ■ was called to Shelby when her lit -1 Jte son had to undergo an emer. P®Bicy appendectomy L; ?Jnst as she was preparing to ■ leave the hospital, a nurse called ■ Iter to the emergency room. Her ■ daughter had Just been brought in I seriously Injured. The child fell ■ and struok her head against a ■ bureau drawer and has a possible ■ concussion. II Between going back and forth ■ between Rex Hospital In Raleigh ■ and me Cleveland County Hospital ■to Shelby. Mrs. Alberglne Is hold ling down her job at the Blen Jolie ■ girdle factory here. U& She’s convinced that when It ■ rains it pours. ■L But Nancy is a remarkable per ■dlon and with all her troubles, she ■ still retains her good nature and ■ gweet disposition. H BIRTHDAYS Celebrating birth- Hdays Monday were Melba Harrlng ■ ton. Opal Satterfield, B. F. Canne ■dy and Alice Hart Purdie.. To ■day is the birthday of Mr. P. A. ■Lee, Sr„ John Wesley Purdie, in. ■Mrs Joe Leslie, Richard Jerome, ■terry Pope, Lou Etta Strickland. ■Stevie Herring. Donald Denny and ■jack E. Oates. Mrs. W. E. Ryals ■tape she’ll have a birthday Thurs ■o. y “And I’m not a bit asham ■ed of the fact that I’m getting ■older” she laughed. Ifffi fCewtteued On Page Twei I Puerto Rican Proud wpf Shooting Solons mm cf WASHINGTON (W A 25-year-old Puerto Rican rev olutionary took full responsibility today for plotting the ■ 1 11 1 March 1 shooting in the House of Representa- Bvhb which wounded five congressmen » SM'Tan, handsome, Rafael Cancel ■■tinnda told a federal court Jury ■ led the attack because he wished Oto" on behalf TELEPHONES 3117 - 3118 the construction by Lillington citizens of a new industrial bunding to house the manufacturing plant. Charles Taylor Edgerton, left, is the elec trical engineering supervising the installation of the modern machinery valued in excess of 120- MO. Man at right ip a company representative. (Photo by T. M. Sewart) Cover Girl Hides In Ex-Hubby's Fjat ROME (IP) The American cover-girl bride of Bolivian tin heir Jaime Ortiz Patino hid out over the weekend in the London flat of her former husband, Robert Sweeny, while her second husband hunted frantically for her, it was reported today. But Jeanne Connalley Sweeney Patino, who vanished from a Rome clinic last Thursday, apparently lit out again for parts unknown to ex tend her hide-and-seek honeymoon into a marathon chase. Patino, 36, asked police to find hit -bride and Joined the interna tional hunt himself. He caught a plane from Rome to Geneva, but his lawyer said he believed Joanne now was in Paris. ■ Young Patino admitted he was following the slenderest of leads in trying to find his wife. But this much was known of the merry-go-around the 23-year-old Joanne, Manhattan’s most beauti ful debutante of 1948, set going when she fled the nursing clinic where she was undergoing treat ment for an overdose of sleeping pills. 1. She caught a train for Nice with a friend, Mrs. Dorla de Ran dich. FLEW TO PARIS 3. She flew to Paris and tele, phoned to New York for help from the wealthy Sweeny, a business man-golfer whose marriage to her (Oentimsd ea pete twai Moss Goes On Hunger Strike WAYNESVILLE im Jailed mountaineer Berl L. Moss, 68, re fused food today for the 12th day in a “hunger strike” officers say is instigated by a desire to starve to death rather than face trial on a first-degree murder charge. Moss is held In the Haywood County Jail hero without bond on a charge he prompted his 9-year-old son to fatally shoot a teen-ager. Mom was brought to the modem [ Jail here from the Jackson County | jail at Sylva after the fourth day of his "hunger strike.” Sheriff Fred | Campbell said he thinks Moss . “prefers to starve to death rather 5 than face trial.” He said the man has had only a soft drink in the eight days he has been here. kill any congressmen. “As a human being, I cannot be satisfied to hurt any other human being,” Csnoel said, lifting his toad proudly. -But I ha -tolled ttorar Wxt Jtaiti) JUmrd Stripper Has No Talent ; Must Leave HOLLYWOOD, Calif. Os) Bosomy English actress Simone Silva, who stripped to the waist for a photograph with actor Robert Mltchum, today faced orders to leave the Unled States within 60 doys because she has "no acting talent.” Herman R. Landon, district di rector of the immigration and Na turalization Service, Monday de nied Miss Silva a work permit and said he would revoke her visitor’s permit within 60 days on grounds she had obtained It on "misrep sentation.” “Investigation found no proof she had acting talent, which would authorize granting of a work per mit as required by law,” Landon said. Miss Silva won notority on the French Riviera earlier this year when, stripping to the waist, she flung her arms around Mltchum. and posed for what soon became a widely circulated picture. As a consequence she was banned from the Cannes Film Fes tival, where the picture was taken. But Hollywood movie producer AX , Petker signed her to a contract to cash in on widespread publicity. Post Office Pay Boost Opposed WASHINGTON (W The Chair man and two key members of the House Post Office and Civil Service Committee today denounced a com-, mittee - approved 7 per cetft pay raise for postal workers as unwise, unworkable, and discriminatory. They said it would cost almost 200 million dollars yearly and would further distort a pay scale under which Incentive already is Stifled by lack of differential be tween pay for routine Jobs and tar responsible supervisory positions. The bill overturns an adminis tration recommendation for pay raises coupled with a reclassifica tion of Jobs. High administration sources have Indicated It may be vetoed if it passes in its present form. “It Is virtually impossible to a chieve anywhere near the desired efficiency in the postal service without establishing at the earliest possible moment a pay system bas ed upon equal pay for equal work and increased pay for Increased re sponsibility* said the throe mem bers in a minority report i Isasrse rtf **■) The m »e* approved by the committee May 27 by a vote ofl4 fe ip. It . carries a t Per cent gen ■ *' , \ ySSfir 7 1 ‘ .. .. . . DUNN, N. C„ TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 15, 1854 CHURCHILL TO VISIT U.S. Carr Testifies j Stevens, Adams Shielded Aides WASHINGTON OF) | Francis P. Carr testified to- I day that Army Secretary I Robert T. Stevens and Army 5 Counselor John G. Adams I “went to great lengths to I protect persons who had cleared Communists.” I He agreed, however, that the I Army as such was- not "coddling I Communists.” I Carr, executive director of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's Senate in vestigating committee, was in the witness chair for the second day in the Army-McCarthy hear ings. Army special Counsel Joseph N. Welch suggested that the Army was the one arm of the government that had fought communism, in Ko rea, with blood and steel. Carr agreed and also agreed that it would be ’’incredible” if anyone in the Army protected Communists. “Thank you, sir," Welch broke in. Welch did not want any qualify ing phrases added, but McCarthy (R-Wis) Insisted that the witness | be allowed to finish his answer. “I don’t think at this time that the Army is coddling Communists ” Carr resumed. “I think Mr. Stevens and Mr. Adams went to great length to protect persons who had cleared Communists.” Carr also testified that; V Adams tried to have Mc- Carthy's subcommittee call off its controversial Ft Monmouth, N. J., investigation last Oct B—four pays before the first closed hearings were held. 2. The current hearings represent a “great victory for the Communist Party” because they have post - poned subcommittee plans to in vestigate Red Infiltration of defense plants. This was in response to a question put to him by McCarthy 8. There was no connection be tween the Ft Monmouth investiga tion and the fact that G. David Schlne, then the subcommittee un paid chief consultant was about to be drafted into the Army. Women Can't Legally Pick Cubby's Pocket NEW YORK (IE lf the little woman keeps going through your trousers pockets call the police. That’s the remedy suggested by a Brooklyn appellate eenrt, which ruled Monday that It’s a crime for a wife to steal from her hus band or vice versa. The decision was made In the ease of Harry Morton, 56, of Brooklyn, who alleged? found and kept $286 bis wife Katherine had hidden In her point supply store. The appellate ruling reversed an earlier court decision that Morten couldn’t be prosecuted on larceny charges because of “the nutty of husband and wife.’ These days, the appeals fudges said, “husband and wife are not regarded as one.” There to no rea son, they sold, "why either *mm may net be criminally as well as civilly responsible” for what they take from the other. So Morten, they mid, win have to stand trial + Record Roundup + TO CHAPEL HILL Mrs. Inez Harrington, county register of deeds, is in Chapel Hill where she U at tending the annual conference of the North Carolina Register of Deeds -Association. Dr. L O. Greer, executive vice-president of the N. C. Business Foundation, spoke at the dinner session Saturday night which opened the conference. Dr. Greer stressed the importance of safeguarding democratic Ideals and heritage. The Institute of Govern ment is conducting the three day *. - A _ WBSAT ALLOTMENT Formers on land where no wheat was sanded for grain far all of the years 1414- 1968, sad MM may apply ft* a 1M» I whttt omogfc ftUotoitßt according Ito Mojßrydc Cameron, chairman of 1 * ’•- * V V'/.v' 'flip r : HEADS SCOUT DRIVE —Rep. Carson Gregory of Angler will head the Boy Scout Finance Drive this year, Russell McLean. Harnett County Scout Executive stated today. During the drive last year, $7,500 were raised, Mc- Lean said. Last year the Conn ell budget was $105,0M against $131,000 for 1954, he pointed out, and added that the drive will be larger this year. Rep. Greg ory has called on all interested in scouting to cooperate. Over t r loo At Lions Meeting RALEIGH (VI The 82nd an nual convention of North Carolina Lions Clubs voted here today «.t© hold next year’s convention \at Charlotte and adopted a resolution endorsing the outdoor dramas mt Manteo, Boone and Cherokee. More than 1,100 delegates to the convention here also officially en dorsed John L. Stickley of Charlotte for the office of second vice presi dent. Election of six district gover nors was scheduled this afternoon and the convention Will dose' to night with a banquet and ball hon oring the incoming and outgoing governors. / Monroe L. Nute of Kennett Square, Pa., first vice president of Lions International, praised the or ganization today for its work in helping the blind. He related Inci dents of aid through helping to fi nance operations and to establish eye banks for corneal transplants. Swim Classes Are Scheduled Schedules for swimming classes In Dunn were announced today by Director of Recreation Henry Hu taff. Classes will be held for both adults and children, Hutaff stated. All Instruction will be free to students of swimming, Hutaff said, but the regular charge will be made for use of the pool. Directing the classes will be Coach Paul Wag goner, who is in charge of the pool, assisted by life guards Tommy Waggoner and Robert Pope. Classes for adults frpm 15 years of age and up will begin Monday. June 21 at 7:80 p. m.; and class schedules for children will be: Ages six to eight yOsrs. Wednes day, June 23 at 9:34 ,a. m.; and ages nine through 14, Friday, June 25 at 9:30. Hutaff pointed out that classes will be held once each week far five weeks. Instruction is being furnished through the Dunn Rec reation Commission. mittee. To the considered for an al lotment on a farm <4)11(41 had no wheat seeded for groin tor any of the years mentioned, the farmers must apply in writing to Us coun ty ABC committee by mine 44. Stank application forms are available at the county ABC office for use to filing requests for wheat allotments NEW BOOKMOBILE Harnett County has a handsome new book- county school man of the county Hhbry board. to* to HtotoU. UK. BtoBU to. {Utaanrta oopabla «k troSSSttjg ~ 'i*: FIVE CENTS PER COPY Talks Expected I To Deal With Indo Situation WASHINGTON (IP) —Brit- I ish Prime Minister Sir Win- I ston Churchill and Foreign | Secretary Anthony Eden will | confer at the White House I with President Eisenhower I on the weekend of June 25, I it was announced today. I The White House described the I conference as “an informal meet- I ing” without an agenda. I Press secretary James C. Hager. I ty announced the visit with this I brief statement; I “Some weeks ago the President of I the United States invited the Prime I Minister and the foreign secretary I of the United Kingdom to spend a I weekend as his guest in Washing- I ton. j “The invjtation was cordially ac- I cepted and it has been arranged I for the visit to take place during I the weekend beginning June 25.” I Secretary of State John Foster I Dulles will join the talks which I are expected to deal with the Indo- I china situation, lack of Western 1 success at the Geneva conference, and the French government crisis, any one subject as being earmark- Hagerty, however, would not list ed for discussion. He said the leaders would talk about “many things.’’ The President and Sir Winston Jast met in Bermuda in December, 1 1963; When they held a Big Three i conference with Joseph Laniel, the i recently deposed French premier. Die French, however, are not in vited to the talk ETAOIN ! vited to the forthcoming talks ' which may account somewhat for ■ the White House Insistence that the meeting this month will be “In. ■ formal." i News Shorts i GARY, Ind. (W) Paul Gaines, 27, burned to death on a high powered transformer last night as 4M persons watched. Not one of them knew how to shut off the current. Gaines, a Greensville, N. C, resident lay on the transformer for 24 minutes absorbing 20,600 volts of electricity. CALYPSO (ID State and fed eral authorities today continued a search for a man and woman who robbed a branch bank hoe of SB,- 287 ..The RBI In Charlotte said last night there were still no leads to the man and woman who fled short ly afternoon in s ear believed to have been stolen from the assis tant cashier of the parent bank in nearby ML OUve. HANOI, Indochina m Com munist China apparently has In creased mid to rebel .Gen. Vo Nguyen Gian’s armies for an ab out attack on the Red River Delta, the French High Command said today. HOPEWELL JUNCTION, N. Y. (VI Mrs Margaret Lewiaoha, 59, nationally known education leader, was killed in her chauffeur-driven limousine Monday minutes after she had given e life to Adlal E. Steven son. Mrs. Lewtsohn, widow of mil lionaire phOantroplat Sam Lewis ohn of New Yerk, brought Steven ses here from Vaasar College In rOQ|uK6CPIU, WINIS ■6 ■WIIBIWI 8 SOUTHAMPTON, Eng. (SI . Lord Camroae, 74, editor-In-chief of the Dally Telegraph and one of Britain’s leading publishers, died suddenly today. Nation Broiling In Heat Waves Gy UNITED PRESS . A muggy heat wave, the season’ll worst, broilod most of the nation’s eastern half for the third straight day Tuesday. Feasible relief wai on tho way in the form «f a massive cold front '' ' •- - - ’^ The Record Is Firsi IN CIRCULATION... NEWS PHOTOS . . . ADVERTISING COMICS AND FEATURES ■hrot ... . .jjaya n ' ''iifet* j*X ■ JwSl^Hp ■ • Hit i ROAD-E-O CHAMP CONGRATULATED Murphy Upchurch, shown here in his National Guard uniform, as he was congratulated at last night’s Jaycee meeting by Chairman Corky Cretin! for win ning the State Road-e-o championship. He will compete in the no tional finals at Washington in August. (Daily Record Photo.) Teachers For Dunn I Schools Announced A. B. Johnson, superintendent of city schools in Dunn indicated today that the local elementary school has been allotted two new teachers, but that they have not been employed as yet. In addition to the new allocation of teachers, the local schools will have five teachers replac ing those resigning this year, Johnson said. ■ ______' .' H New teachers already employed " are, Mrs. Herman Green, Dunn, se- 1 cond grade; Miss Jean Flora, Farm ville, second grade; Miss Mary i Frances Allen, Kinston, third grade; Miss Annette Watson, Bethel, sci ence and English; and Miss Hilda , Crocker, Pinelevel, commerce. Mrs. Patsy Coats of 710 West Broad in Dunn, will replace Mrs. Margaret Lee as office secretary. Teachers who will remain in Dunn next year include; At Mary Stewart: Mrs. Archie Burns, first grade; Mrs. Earl G. Vann, second grade; Mrs. Vera N. Milam, seoond grade and principal of the school; Mrs. Luby Naylor, third grade; Mrs. Eva H. Catlett, third and fourth grades; Mrs. Myr. tie N. Hodges, fourth grade; Mrs. Gladys W. Manning, fifth grade; Miss Virginia Pittard, fifth and sixth grades; Mrs. Meta Godwin, sixth grade; Mrs. Lynn Craven, | Ezzel, seventh grade; and Mrs. ' B. L. Frink, music. GRAMMAR SCHOOL Dunn Grammar School; Mrs. Ho ward Godwin, fitot grade; Miss Bue Johnson, first grade; Mrs. J. Perry Jones, first grade; Mrs. Be dell Brtnn Pope, first grade; Mrs. (Continued On Pag* Twui i Horton Posts Bond; j Slain Man Is Buried 1 rv*T and lai* wnr* NO. 138 Truman, Petrillo Will Play Duet At Union Meeting MILWAUKEE, Wls. (IS TWO well-known musicians named Har ry S. Truman and James Petrillo were to swing out today In a piano trumpet duet of “Hail, Hail Tha Gang's All Here.” The team of Truman and Pe trlllo was the headline act at the AFL American Federation of Mu sicians convention. Both musicians are better known for other, activities Mr. Trutoaa as former President of the United States and Petrillo as president of the AFM for the past 14 years. They got together for a Jam ses sion to break to a new black ma hogany concert grand piano the AFM’s gift to Mr. Truman me morial library. The former President, an honnry life member of the AFM since hit early days In the White House, wee to arrive by air and Join Petrillo in their act at Convention Hall, be fore 1.100 delegates. Harvey O. Horton, 47-year-old farmer charged with the slaying of his neighbor, Fred Ivey, 39, al legedly as the result of a “love feud” over Horton’s wife, has been released from Jail under 44,004 bond pending action oy the Har nett County Grand Jury. Rural Policeman Clarence Moore
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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June 15, 1954, edition 1
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