PAGE TWO BULLETINS GUATEMALA CITY (IP) The military junta govern ment charged today that ousted ex-president Jacobo Av bcnz masterminded last week’s regular army revolt from his refuge in the Mexican embassy. A communique said Aj aenz and other refugees in embassies here are trying I*/ promote a Communist sponsored counterrevolution in Guatemala by “sowing anarchy and disorganization throughout the country.” GKEENSBORO (IP) A 41-year-old house painter and his two wives were free on bond today after being arrested on bigamy charges, police said. Police said Clyde W. Cut ting, who has been living here with two women, admitted bigamy after his pregnant wife, Beatrice, and her father complained to them about a minor argument with the painter. RALEIGH 'IP' The State Board of Agriculture, al ready approached for funds $540,000 in excess of appro priations for the current biennium, met again today to hear more 1955-57 budget requests from Agriculture di vision heads. The board was asked yesterday to approve j requests totaling $4,628,460 lor the next two-year budget period. LOS ANGELES (IP) Men are more fussy about hair stylings than women. Right now they’re going in a big! way for finger-waving and fancy haircuts. These revela tions were unfolded before delegates to the California As sociated Master Barbers and Beauticians’ convention yes terday. SEOUL, Korea (IP Shouting, banner-waving demon strators protested against Polish and Czech truce inspec tors in two South Korean port cities on Monday, the U. S. Army said today. The Koreans shouted anti-Communist j slogans for 30 minutes in Pusan and then “dispersed with- j out incident,” an Army spokesman said. The Kangnung | demonstration lasted about 15 minutes. BERLIN (IF A Czech soldier was shot in the leg as j he fled into the American sector of West Berlin under Communist police gunfire last night, Western officials said } today. Details of the Czech’s flight were not disclosed, but ! official sources said he was wounded when he broke across j the guarded border from East Germany into the Ameri- j can sector. WASHINGTON (IP) State Department officials said today a congressional group's proposal to cut all diplomat-i ic and commercial' ties with Communist countries, might! hurt the free world more than the Reds. They said such a 1 step coukl handicap the West by cutting off its listening posts behind the Iron Curtain without seriously hurting the Soviet orbit. WASHINGTON (IP A new light loomed today on the administration’s controversial atomic energy bill. The compromise version of the bill cleared its next-to-last leg islative hurdle Monday. The House shouted its approval without the formality of a roll call. WASHINGTON i(P Representatives of six major air- ISnes and 26,000 ground crewmen may postpone a strike i threat today by agreeing to start wage negotiations. Rep- j resentatives of the airlines and the AFL Machinists un ion were scheduled to meet with federal mediators on pro-1 posals that would provide a basis for starting negotiations. ! WASHINGTON (!!’ Brig. Gen. Herbert D. Vogel ap peared certain today to win the approval of the Senate | Pablie Works Committee as new boss of the Tennessee Vai-j ley Authority. Committee members, including TVA cham pions originally skeptical of President Eisenhower's ap pointment,‘said they had been favorably impressed by the 53-year-old Army Engineer officer’s appearance before the g-oup Monday. WASHINGTON 'IP/ ? worked one summer in Carl Fit j chett’s drug store here. . Ho wanted to play baseball for Dunn 1 i and the. only way he could be eli- I f.ible was to gt t a job here,,. Mr, i Fitchect says Stag was a good soda , jerk too.' and all the girls liked i him.. ..Dunn's new Open-Air Mar -1 j ket, which will open in a few Weeks 'lout on the Erwin. Highway', will j ! j really give service. Ir’l! be ; ■ open seven days a week from 5 1 , n.rn. to 12 p.m. . Really can't see 1 why C .8. Tart wants to close tlios; j ether five hours. But a little sleep : is better. than none, isn’t it?. In} • most towns, these open air markets ; . are very successful. ..A number; , of Dunn people went to Raleigh] Sunday night to see all. three hour:;; ' | and forty minutes of 'Gone With ! 1 The Wind."... .Said they enjoyed j ; it just as much as the first time. | Dr. Randolph Doflennyre says he i •and Margaret had a good time a: j Blowing: Hock while he attended! j tire meeting of the State Board of ] ■_ Medical 1 . Examiners. "But it wyisl hard work, too.” added Doc. BIRTHDAYS: Today is the birth- | day of George Ronnl Barefoot, Doris j G. Cahnady. George W. Gardner. ! Jr., Mrs. Randolph . Doffermyre, [ Florence Johnson. David Parker j Ivey and Dr. Charles Highsmith. j THINGAMAJIGS: Mrs. Jessie j j Davis was reported, worse yesterday | at Highamith’s Hospital and wms I supposed to have spate chest X- I rays made It’s feared she has | at least one broken rib.... Corky ( j Cretini had that rabbit at the ! j Jaycee meeting last, night.. ..I. A. j | Tart and Mrs. Weldon Dorman of ( | Dunn. Rente 4 report that th, y | have open cotton.... Myrcs Tilgh- I man is expecting to gin a bale ! here either this week or next... j Some farmers, are still complaining j about the need of more rain. . ; Hugh Prince is a talented fellow. . ; . In addition to operating one of j ; the largest department stores in j i till- section, he's a licensed survey- j j oi and Was an Air Force pilot m | World War 1.... He also sings in 1 the Methodist Choir, and is the I j town's, oldest. 33rd Degree Mason;.. { i Hugh is quite a man Mr. and i Mrs. Jack Rollins are back from j a v..cation in Florida.. Jack, who j is manager of Johnson’s Restaur- ; ant, look a busman's holiday ! He spent, mest of h; vacation j visiting the ..better restaurants of j Florida to-got hew ideas. .. A spec- | tutor leaving city couit in Dunn yesterday after the trial; of a big bootlegger quipped, 'Think I'll go into the whisky, business,.You only get a S2OO fine for 78 galipns lof whiskey." ..But Judge Striok j land said the amount of whiskey j didn’t enter into his sentence Now- that he has Paul Drew as I hi; partner in the funeral home. | Grover Henderson expects to get i.i I mote, fishing,.. . i • Some cf the prettiest peaches j of the year are now on sale at local | stores. . Jean Adams Wilson has lest too much weight Says she i isn't, .dieting now, but is still losing. 1.. She has that trim look. MORE NOTES: Mr. and Mrs. ! Nathan tJunie) Johnson. Jr. have | jus: returned from a trip to the ! Blue Ridge Mountuins. . . 'But I’d . much rather have been at home ' ' wo: king,” declared Junie yester day.. . iff has a big job now I He's Contactin'' all 300 members ’ Dunn's Masonic Lodge for two ; bucks apiece for the Masonic Cr j phanage. ...Local stores are now j showing pretty new fall merchand - j ise We won't know how it feels ; to wear a coat again. Dunn com | missioners got .so tired of waiting for Leon Godwin at their meeting | Saturday that Commissioner B. A. Bracey suggested that Mayor Han- j na send the police for him Hoi was kidding, of course. ...Mr. and j Mrs. Bob Dickey have one of the | prettiest little girls hi town... She : aces wiili Bob to the Post Office I and takes cut the mail for him j Just a reminder that Friday the , 13th comes after this Thursday. ..James Snipes is the new pro'-.' | gram chairman for the Dunn Ro : ary Club... Says he lias seme hum ; dinger programs lined up. ..James I Thornton and his Smile-Awhils 1 Boys will .se-ile on Dunn Lions | Thursday night... Fred Brown of i Erwin appeared on Jim’s Country i Style TV show over WNAO a couple j weeks ago. . .With the job of get- I ting acquainted, the opening cf the i Dunn Tobacco Market, etc.. Ed | Carroll cf the Chamber of Com | merce is a busy man these days. .. ! Incidentally. Ed is looking for a house Says he needs three bed j rooms. . Lloyd Flora, who con [ ducted The Record's highly success ; fill subscription campaign last fail, ! is now up in Pennsylvania conduct ing another big contest...He sends ! his regards to all the contestants here. . Mayor J. Rdscoe Barefoot cf Benson Is back on the job after j a stay at Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill. LITTLE ROCK. Ark. IIP A heavy turnout was expected today ] in the runoff election between Gov. i Francis Cherry and publisher Or ( val Faubus for the .Democratic} ; gubernatorial nomination. WASHINGTON HP) President j Eisenhower told former President ' Herbert Hoover in a message on' his 80th birthday today that the , Republican Party and the nation t is proud of his long record of de- ) voted public service. THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. Clark Says Continued from page one ten do not understand military problems. Clark said his remarks were not intended as an indictment of the whole State Department. But he said many of its representatives "".end to placate the country in Which .'they are. stationed, rather than stand up for American prin ciples, "The people attracted to that kind of'work.' he said, 'have often j lived in fereigri countries . .. lin j quists idealistic .. the opposite !of the military man who serves j his -country for the lave of it.” Heads CIA Probe I Clark recently was appointed by | President Eisenhower tc conduct a special study of . the super-secret i Central Intelligence Agency. He ! planned to confer later today with ] CIA Chief. Alien W. Dulles and . later with. Sen: Joseph R. ' McCar thy. who, twice threatened investi [ gati'en of the CIA. I Sen. Herman. Walker iR - Utah) I read Clark a resolution- by de } Bouncing the 'Kremlin internation fal outlaws" and. urging, breaking | dipicMratic relations with Russia and its satellites. “Based, on my experience, which has been extensive, if I were a member of Congress I would vote for it,” Clark said. Dunn Police (Continued on page five) The Negro man charged the po lice with hitting him at least twice, once after he had been handcuf fed. Officer Broekington reported Monday that, the Negro Jiut up one cf tile worst fights of any man ho ever arrested. He said the mar. tore his shirt off, kicked Thomas in the stomach and legs, anil, did everything possible to get away. Dr. Lilly reported the case to .City Manager A. B. Uzzle today who stated he was making an in vestigation. However, he added that the man could have been hit Mon day morning after he was released from jail. Upchurch (Continued From Page One) have been, Denvood Godwin, Wil liam (Corky) Cretini, Bob Leak, and Bobby Jackson. Winner of the national contest will receive a $1,200 scholarship If he is successful in the contest, Upchurch hopes to attend Camp bell College at Buie's Creek this fall. Market (Continued from page one t mand for such a market here. The new market will open in about two weeks. Mr. Tart is a native of Samp son County, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tart. He graduated from Plain View High School in 1939. During World War 11, he spent 39 months in the Army, serving in tlie. Middle East, Palestine, and Iran. He rose to the rank of ser- i gcant and made a splendid mili tary record. He began service with Colonial Stores seven years ago and resign ed as manager at Smithfield to open the Dunn market. At Smithfield, he was active in affairs cf the town and commu nity, was a member of the Lions Club and also active in the Bap t:st Church. Mr. Tart married the former Miss Esteline Elmore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Elmore of Dunn. They have three children, Sharon, Debra and C. S. Tart, Jr. They are residing at 807 East Pearsall Street. WASHINGTGON (IP) Sen. Mil ton R. Young (R-ND) predicted to day the Eisenhower administra tion’s victory in the bitter con gressional farm fight will turn in to Republican defeat in the No vember elections. NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. 'IP) Operation "fgee-lifting” was under way here today as workmen work ed to remove, a scar left by nature on the mighty Niagara Falls. WASHINGTON (l? The House Post Office Committee has ap proved a bill providing that most U. S. mail may be stamped: “Pray For Peace." MIAMI (1?) AI Silverman, who bought a 70th ticket on a 69-pas senger National Airlines plane to N?w York, won exactly $1 dam ages for being off-loaded. Silver man sued in circuit court for $275.- 000, charging he was asked to leave the big plane and take a later flight which made him three hours late for a testimonial dinner in his honor. KEY IN TUMMY NEUBRUCKE, Germany (IP) Tommy, a 3-year-old son of Lt. Col. and Mrs. Thomas H. Major, arrived here yesterday with a toy steamboat clutched in his hand and the key to unwind It in his stom ach. The child was Hawn from Salz .burge, Austria, in an Army hospital ; plane for treatment at a U. S. hos -1 pital. No difficulties were expected in recovering ‘the key. Actress Says ifonlmaX 'ram iuii ] a Mississippi marriage license, j Mrs. Howell said that after the I hearing she went to her mother's j apartment' for her clothes and found Latta, an insurance agent, and her mother waiting to talk to her, I “He grabbed me,” she said. “I i slugged him. They both slugged j me. My clothes were almost rip ped off." Mrs. Liles and Latta said the girl went into a rage when they tried to talk to her. Mrs. Liles said she has some $200,000 invested in Liles Productions of Hollywood, Which recently produced but has not . yet released nationally the movie. “Wonder Valley,” co-star ring her daughter. MR. RAPER DIES Mallie E. Rapey, 63, of Lucama. died in a Wilson hospital Sunday night following a heart attack Sun day afternoon. Mr. Raper was a brother of Mrs. L. E. Stevens of Benson. RABAT, Morocco (UP)—Nation alist terrorists threatened today to cut the throats of any persons caught killing a lamb on this feast day. A moroccans prepared to ob serve the feast of Aid El Kabir, the terrorists circulated tracts warning that “those who sacrifice a sheep will have their throats cut with the - same knife.” -* V* v .V"' • v - x . -.v XyiX f Q «?■» * .... * 1 ■ , J ■ *• . Off on an Hour’s Vacation! ; To be honest with you, we’re not certain where he’s most automatically to leave his cares at the curbside, going. He may be journeying to a branch office of his 4)id it will bring him renewed enthusiasm and j;< ] corporation ...or he may be heading home for the interest —for every moment a man spends with his day ... or he may just be taking his afternoon “con- Cadillac serves as a stimulating reminder of his past stitutional” behind the wheel. accomplishments—and acts as a wonderful inspira- But one thing we know for certain! He’s about to tion for planning and thinking out the future. embark on a little vacation. And for its length, it will All this, of course, is the very essence of Cadillac 'jU be one of the most wonderful interludes a man could value. All cars offer transportation—and varying fA hope to enjoy. ■ degrees of satisfaction. But it remains for Cadillac ~,J For he’s about to spend an hour in his 1954 Cadillac ;to provide a definite therapeutic for the mind and -A-] —and here,' beyond any question, is the perfect body of a work-weary man. remedy for iteving day. '• In this glorious respect, there are simply two types It will britj&'him physical relaxation— for his Cadillac of cars: Cadillacs and all the others, is so comfortable and luxurious; that merely to sit in Come in sometime—when life has grown stale with the driver’s seat is to rest. Ans the car handles and the toil of the day—and take an hour’s vacktion in a steers with suc’h complete effortlessness that every 1954 Cadillac. ' mile is a tonic for the body. ; ]t will be the most refreshing sixty minutes you - ji|| It will bring him mental refreshment—for the car is ever spent on the highway—and well be delighted such a joy to drive and ride in that'a man seems al- to provide the car at any time! . • ' \ ; ■ ON HIGHWAY 301 DUNN, N C. PHONE 4800 Kefauver Won't Seek White House WASHINGTON (IP) Sen. Es tes Kefauver (D-Tenn) said today it is “unlikely" he will be a candi date for the Democratic president ial nomination again in 1956. The Tennessee senator, who led the first two ballots at the 1952 Democratic convention, said he thinks it "more likely" that the party will turn to a, governor or sonieohe who is not on the firing line of voting on a wide variety of issues such as face a senator from day to day. Kefauver told a National Press Club lunch he has “no plans” to seek the nomination in 1956 “But that is not saying what I,would do if I had the opportunity.” News Shorts MASSENA. N. Y. (U>) Construc tion of a huge project to turn the water power of the St. Lawrence River into electricity began today with a blast of dynamite set off by Gov. Thomas E. Dewey in joint ceremonies between the United States and Canada. WASHINGTON (IP) The Sen ate committee weighing the move to censure Sen. Joseph R.. McCar thy may reduce the 46 charges against him to 10 to 15, reliable sources said today. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUCJUST 10, 1954 RALEIGH (UP) 'The North Carolina Crop Reporting Service has forecast an 11 per cent drop in the output of Tar Heel cotton this year as compared to produc tion in 1953. WASHINGTON (UP)—Secretary of State John Foster Dulles said today that Russia’s latest note on President Eisenhower’s plan to share atomic energy for peaceful purposes was 99 per cent negative. DIJON, France (UP) The head jailer of the wartime Nazi Gestapo in Dijon has just gone home to Germany after spending four days as the honored guest of his for mer prisoners. In Dijon they call Joseph Gumbir, now a crane oper ator of Hamburg, “The Good Jos eph." MOSCOW (UP)—Former British Prime Minister Clement Attlee and seven other top-ranking British la bor party leaders arrived in Mos cow today for a two-day visit, en loute to Red China on a goodwill mission. WASHINGTON (UP)—The Sen ate Judiciary Committte blocked an attempt last night to kill the administration’s bill to authorize the use of wire-tap evidence to prosecute spies and traitors. RABAT, Morocco (UP)—Tank led French troops arrested 3,003 persons today in Port Lyautey scene of weekend riots that caused 192 casualties. GUATEMALA CITY (UP) The Guatemalan army high command today appeared to have assumed Authority in this tense Central American Republic in the wake of yesterday’s 14-hour revolt against the “liberation army” which won control only a few weeks ago. GUATEMALA CITY (UP) Seething crowds in the streets and a student “general strike” today created threats of new violence in strife-torn Guatemala. A menac ing demonstration by President Carlos Castillo Armas’ four-plane “air force” yesterday quelled .in anti-government uprising at tha Aurora Air Base without bloodshed, but tension still ran high. DREW HENDERSON Funeral Home 24 - HOUR SERVICE Phene 3306 211 W. Harnett St. Dunn, N. C. ■d.