fWPMT AFTERNOON. JPLY t, 1054 New City Onfinance Oh Parking Meters ARTICLE VIII PARKING METEBs Section 1. DEFINITIONS. (a) Theworcl “vehicle” (hall mean any device in, upon or by which any person or property Is or may tie transported upon a highway, ex cept k device which Is operated up fen rails or tracks. . (b) The word “street” shall mean e«y public street, avenue, road, al ley, highway, lane, path, or other public place located in the Town of Dunn and established for the use hr Vehicles. (c) Thfc word "person" shall mean fend Include any individual, firm, do-partnership, association or cor poration. (d) The word “operator” shall mean and Include every individual who •pah operate a vehicle as the owner as the agent, employee Or permittee of the owner, or is physical control of a ve to) Ths wsfd “park” or “parking” •ball moan the standing of a ve hicle, whether occupied or not, up on a street otherwise than tempor arily for the purpose of, and while sotusQly engaged In, receiving or discharging passengers or loading or unloading merchandise or In o hodlence to traffic regulations, signs or signals or an Involuntary stop ping of the vehicle by reasons of causes beyond the control of the operator of the vehicle. If) The words “parking meter” shall mean and include any mechanical device or meter not Inconsistent with this ordinance placed or erected for the regulation of parking by &u --i Vwrity of this ordinance. Each / parking meter Installed shall in dicate by propyr legend the legal PkHcloC tlm« sstabHsned by the city »4 whgp operated shah at all tim er Indicate the balance of legal perking time, and at the expiration of Sitch period shall indicate illegal cr overtime parking. d) The words “parking Meter Zone” shall mean and Include any restric ted treat upon which parking me ters -are installed and in operation, (h) tty words “parking meter space” shall mean space within a parking meter sone, adjacent to a parking meter and which Is duly designated for the parking of a street •d anas, streets or portions of streets and ofcchotlur areas, streets, or portions of streets as may here after fee Included in this section by amendment hereto, lying within the corporate limits of the Town of feMydag constitute a .parking ine rt ter acne,, namely: -J Cfe) Broad Street from Fayetteville r ttfMsgooila Avenue, except the fol- Infeing spaces. (») That space on, the North aide ct'< Broad Street. Immediately West ofClfnton Ate. about-seventy-five s tet ln length and in front of that JW:;gfew- used as. a filling station, (fe) Those spaces designated by pri or ordinances of the Board of Cotn tMsetenera of the Tbwn of Dunn, l| C., sa loading sous tor paseen (qVThote tpaese established fey crdUtfnce of the Beard of Com atatenlrs of the Town of Dunn as jiMhif some for persons having hoMte on Bread Street, and sdmarked or deelgnated. fit to Cumberland street, ax iijfee foßowing spaces! That smm Saw designated by Board qf neminlsslonere of the Tfenn of Dunn as a loading eoins feir the pereone having business honsts on Lucknow Avenue, to) IsOmd Avenue from Broad Sfreet to Cumberland Street, ex cent the following aaoees:. space* now kg tbs Board of Cnmmlwlonen for gfed-Town of Dunn os a loading eone ffer paraona having business houses eg Railroad Avenue. (F) Cumberland Street from Clin - ton Avenue to Fayetteville A Venue, r except the following apaces: l man’s Case and the Oyster Bar. r (o) Those spaces now established by ( the Board of Commissioners of the i Town of Dunn as loading senes for - persons having business houses on Cumberland Street. ’ Section 3. DESIGNATION OF - PARKING METERS. The Chief of - Police is hereby directed and an ■ thorized to mark off hi dividual par i king spaces in the parking zones ’ designated and described in Sec ’ tlon 2of this ordinance and in such ■ other zones as may hereafter be r. bUshed, said parking spaces to designated by Ikies painted or ’ durably marked on the curbing or i surface of the street. At each space so marked off It shall be unlaw- I ful to park any such vehicle in i such away that skid vehicle shall i not be entirely within the limits 1 of the space so designated. Section 4. INSTALLATION OF i PARKING METERB. In sold park ing meter zones the Chief of Po- L lice, shall cause parking meters to ' be installed upon the curb or side walk Immediately adjacent to the 1 parking spaces provided in Section 1 3 of the article, said Installation 1 to be placed not mere than (2) two feet from the curb net Isas than ' four (4) feet frost the fret* Hue of the pbrktog spate os Indicated. Each device shall be set as to , display a signal showing legal par king upon the deposit of the sp propria te coin or coins, lawful mo , ney of the United States of Amer - lea,, for the period of time pre , scribed by this article. Each device shall be so arranged that upon the i expiration of the lawful limit It t Win Indicate by a proper visible , signal {hat the lawful parking per * 'tefe tofe”expired awl• te such whs. ! the 40* of such vehicle to oc cupy such space than cease and toe operator, owner, poeafaseor or aOna , ger thereof shall be subject to the . penalties hereinafter provided. Section 8. OPERATION OF PAIUC . INO METERS. Except in a period of emergency determined by on officer of the Fire Department, or In com pliance with the directions of a po lice officer or traffic control Wgn or signal, when any vehicle be parked In any parking space alongside or next to which a park ing meter is located, the operator of such vehicle shall, upon entering the said parking meter space, im mediately deposit or cause to be deposited In said meter such proper coin of the United States as is re quired for such parking meter and as la designated by proper direct ions on the meter, and when re quired by the directions of the meter, the operation of such vehi cle, after depot* of the proper coin or coins, shall also set In operation the timing mechanism on such me ter in accordance with directions properly smearing thereon, and fail ure to depoaelt such proper coin, and to set the tinting mechanism in operation when so required, ahail constitute a violation of this ordi nance. Upon the deposit of such coin (and the setting of the timing mechanism In operation when so required) the parking space may be lawfully ooeupied fey such vehicle during the period of time which has been prescribed for the part of the street in which said perking space is located, provided that Say per son placing a vehicle in a parking metre space adjactent to a meter which Indicates that unused has been left to the meter by the previous occupant of the space does nqt be required to deposit a coin so long as his occupancy of said •pace does not efeeed the indi cated unused parking time. If said ▼chicle shall remain parked to any such parking space beyond the park ing time limit set fee stem park ing space, and It the meter shall indicate such inegal parking. «*■»), and to that event, soch vehicle toen fee oonridarod as parking evur time and beyond the period of legal parking time, and each parking shall be deemed a violation of tola ordinance Section I. PARXXRO TIME UK ITS. (a)-Parking or standing a vehi cle m a designated space to a twevu • minute paiblng meter sons shall fee lawful upon the deposit of one-tent coin, (hi Parking or standing a vehicle to a deUgntted «aoc to a one-hour parking teeter sSKSF&s a vehicle to a MtopWfM tfeae* to a twe_-fato pa^j tweenty minutes “T"* tog deposit SSicsasranT > • Churchill Has Lost None Os His Charm WASHINGTON (UP) Baek : stairs at the White House: ' Prime Minister Sir Winston 1 Churchill may be 79 years old and ; walking a bit more slowly, but he [ has lost none of his charm. Cigar, zippered boots and a rhe torical gift for fashioning bon -1 mots, Sir Winston epatured the top White House staff members when ' they met him In the President’s 1 office last Friday. The upper echelon of Elsenhow ; er advisers stood around the Presi , dent’s desk and listened like bob by-soxers before a Perry Como as the prime minister rumbled In his best style and flipped off one Churchilllan phrase after another. “What did he say?” one staff member was asked. “I don’t know,” he answered, “but it was superb.” “He’s A DoH” Two of the more beauteous mem bers of the White House staff peered at the prime minister through a door to the President’s office. “He's a doll,” said one “No, he Isn’t,” said the other. “He’s a kewpie.” Because Mr. Elsenhower plainly doesn't go to the airport to meet time limit zone, such as parking, for less than sixty (60) minute upon the deposit in a parking meter of a coin or coins less than five cents In denomination. Section 7. VIOLATIONS. It shall be unlawful and a violatio nos the provisions of this ordinance for any person: (a) To cause, allow, permit, or suffer any vehicle register in the name of, or aperated by such per son to be parked overtime, or be yond the period of legal parking time established for any parking meter zone as herein described, or to deposit In any parking meter any coin for the purpose of parking beyond the maximum legal parking time for tbe particular parking me ter zone. (b) To permit any vehicle to re main or be placed In any parking space adjacent to any parking meter while said meter Is displaying a signal Indicating that the vehicle occupying such parkng space has already been parked beyond the period prescribed fro such parking space. (c) To park any vehicle across any line or narking of ajaritiwg.. mater apace or to such portion toot the vehicle shall not be entirely within the ares designated by such lines or markings. (d) To deface, Injure, tamper with, open or willfully break, des troy, or impair the usefulness of any parking meter Installed under the provisions of this ordinance. e) To deposit or cause to be de posited in any parking meter any slugs, device or metal substance, or other substitute for lawful coins. Section 8. It shall be the duty of the Police Department to enforce the provisions of this ordinance. Section 9. COLBCTIONS. It shall be the duty ol the Chief of Police to designate some member or mem bers of the Police Department to make regular collections of the money deposited In said meters and It shall be the duty of such per sons to designated to remove from ths parking meters the coins so deposited, to said meters and to deliver the same to the Town Trea surer of the Town of Dunn. Section 10. USE OF FUNDS. The coins deposited to parking meters are required and shall be used ex clusively for the purpose of making such regulotio ineffective and for the expenses iscurred in the regula tion and limitation of vehicular parking, and traffic relating to such parking, on the streets and high ways and to cover the cost of pur chase, supervision, protection. In spection, Installation, operation, maintenance, control, and use of parklg meters, (or for the provision of off-street parking). Section 11. RESERVATION OF POWERS. Nothing in this ordinance shall be construed as prohibit tog the Town of Dunn from provid ing for bus stops, for taxicab stands and other matters of similar nature. Including the loading or unloading of trucks, vans, or other commercial vehicles. Section 12. SBVEfeABIUT?. If any section or provision, or Parts there of to thl sordtoance shall be ad judged invalid or unconstitutional, such Invalidity or unconstitutional ity shall not affect the validity of the prdtoanoe as a whole or ot any other section or provision of part hereof. Section 12. EXERCISE OF POLICE POWER. Ttds entire ordinance shall be deemed end construed to be an exercise of the police power of the Town of Dunn to the State of North Carolina so rfhe preserva tion and protection of public safe ty, and all of Its provisions shah fee liberally construed with a view ot the effectuation of such purpose. Section 14. PRIMA FACIA RULE Os EVIDENCE. WhmifßT irpeeawftod of^compldiant ■Mten kte f»{xnA foci* evidence av . -Tijvfei wahtsla ■■■ hv the parson to whoat the eekiMa Is ncMated. TOE daily RECORD, .npWLJLjSL 0 anybody, lie waited on tl.e north portico of the White House for Sir Winston. Meantime, the President's top Secret Service driver, Richard Flohr, took a custom-built conver tible to the air strip to pick up the distinguished visitor. Vice President Richard M. Nixon, chief of the airport welcome party, was In the back seat. A voluble photographer spotted Flohr as the car rolled onto the concrete apron of the Military Air Transport Service and shouted to Flohr, “Attaboy, Dick.” Whereupon, the vice president rose from his seat and waved en thusiastically. The bedroom of the rose suite where Sir Winston lived over the weekend has one large double bed. This may have annoyed the prime minister. He likes to have two beds In his room, so that If the covers get unduly rumpled during the OUR THANKS TO YOU I Mr. Ami Mrs. Substriheri! For Helping Us Attain This Position j Os Leadership And Dominance In This Area Dispatch Ordered To Cease Claim By UNITED PRESS . WASHINGTON (W The Post Office Department has Drdered the Dunn (N. C.) Dispatch to remove from its p™^ __ front page the claim that it is “leading the county in paid mb # Readers . Advertisers ' A Department spokesman said Department and this office insofar this claim doesn’t “Jive” with cal- a s paid circulation is concerned.” s m m culation figures filed with the De- Postmaster Wade said that a re- A IJ.ASE |m' , B sw«gk partment last October. quest from the Department Is the JLwR.W#M toJI M IT MUM Records of the Post Office De- same as an order and that the partment show tahat The Daily Re- Department has full authority to m cord at Dunn has more circulation cancel the newspaper’s mailing per- li' ’ B ’ M— w w than any other newspaper In Har- m i t whenever postal regulations or JT Ua A B mm nett Oounty. instructions are not complied with. M W The order came from Assistant RECORD LEAD INCREASES Postmaster General N. R. Abrams since its first issue on December « of the Division of Mail Classifies- i 960, The Daily Record has shown ITW _ tlon. a constant Increase In circulation. W B TBft Failure to comply with the order, The sworn statements referred to _ afficials said, sould result In rev- by the Post Office Department was B__ rail ocation of the newspaper's mail- f or the period which ended last AMI A ■■ W. mg permit. October 1. fB Newspapers are required to file The Dally Record’s Ownership IB XI I B fe Jnmial Bwom statements’with the statement was filed in October, as V Po®* Office listing their owner- required by law; statement of The B 111 ■ ■ W ship wid circulation. Dispatch was not filed until Jan- Record jsrSSh l Record has sent the following letter to L.B. successful subscription campaign. ——***• during which hundreds of new oubhshers of the Dunn Dispatch: subscriptions were added. 1 IS “This office Is to receipt of a _ communication from the Post Os- ~™ a *}**•, °? UT 1 ?f oard * flee Department dated June 154964 1 in which It was requested that you other neWsp * pers “ “*• eomrty discontinue the use of the following The Dally Records leads to both ; 1 tag statement that appears In the rural and city circulation, as well upper right section of the front page as In advertising volume to every | of “The Dunn Dispatch.” classification. “Leading the county to paid dr- While The Record’s circulation Is culation and reader Interest.” showing a steady increase, elrcu “tsasmuch as this statement does lation of the town’s other newspa- U not conform with copies of the last per has dropped sharply during the ; sworn statement on file with the past three years. We Are Justly Proud AncM)eeply Grateful To You For Your Loyal And Valuable Support Which Has E na Become The No. I ||' To Give You A Still Better Newspaper. We Are Dedicated To 9 THE DAILY RECORD i I Harnett s Only Complete Newspaper |j Perry Como Declares He Needs 8 Weeks Vacation i NEW YORK —(If)-—Those who won ’ der why so relaxed a character as Perry Como appears to be on i his television show needs with an l eight-week summer vacation in > , night he can shift to another, un j wrinkled slumber couch. , Siren Goes Off The day before Churchill arrived I at the White House, someone un , duly eager or maybe It was an . electrical short circuit 1 — but at , any rate, one of the air raid horns which have the ear-splitting deli . cacy of an angry explosion went ' off. Police In the lobby grabbed special telephones and shouted “sec’urity.” i Secret Service agents ran quietly : and efficiently to key posts along . the President’s route to the White s House shelter. 5 But within a matter of seconds, i it turned out to be either a false i alarm or an electrical ghost. „ 1 - which to relax—can now busy them- i selves with other matters. “I’m not relaxed,” was the sing- l er’s explanation. “I’m Just tired. And I’m not kidding.” Perry is out on his Long Island acres now to golf and putter around and rest up for the new TV season 1 starting in September. “Before I go over to the CBS TV studios to rehearse and do my j shows on Monday’s, Wednesdays ; and Fridays,” Perry explained, “I . stop in at my office for a few , hours of appointments and desk ; work. j “On Tuesdays and Thursdays, I which are my so-called ‘off days, tape personal messages to disk jock eys throughout the country, re hearse and wax records, and con ’ fer wdth my producer. Lee Cooley, ' and the rest of the gang on the show about the TV programs two ’ weeks in advance. 6 LUNCHES AT DESK “My lunch, more often than not, is a sandwich and a container of coffee at the desk. “But don’t get me wrong—l love it” The singer then took up the sub ject of relaxed or poised perform ing. “Kids coming up In show busi ness strive for it,” he said,, “and there are courses given by many types of schools striving to get over the idea. But it Isn’t easy to come by. “I lacked it as a young singer back in the 1930 s wdth Ted Weems’ band, and it took many years of kicking around, playing to audi ences throughout the country in little off-beat spots, big auditoriums, theaters and night clubs before I acquired what is for me the thing called poise. “Os course, poise is a different thing with many persons. For me, it’s whaJt peopOfc- call a relaxed manner. A guy like Jackie Glea son throws himself around, roars, talks fast and that’s poise, too. for him. AUDIENCES HELP “It’s my theory that audiences help you achieve poise. It has something to do with the warmth and enthusiasm that comes across to you while you’re on the stage. When you know that people like PAGE ONE .you, you like them, and the result Is a general atmosphere of friend liness in which it is easy to relax, with the result that you have poise. “In television it’s a little more difficult because in some cases the studio audience is small. The Im mense audience In the living rooms across the country Is beyond the performers sight and hearing. "But I found that this obstacle was overcome for me through the thousands of letters from the un seen audience." ♦ • * The new flat-bottom tracks laid on British railways have proved to he 59 per cent stronger vertically and 136 per cent stronger laterally than the “bull head” type formal ly used. Each mile of such track ’ requires 16,000 fewer components. • • » Geysers in Iceland can be coaxed with a bar of soap to erupt for ’ visitors, says the National Geo graphic Society. Dumped In a cra ter, the soap breaks surface tension and the geyser performs satisfac ( toriiy. . ... l The first teachers’ college west : of the Appalachian Mountains was . established at Ypsilanti, Mich., to 1852.