Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / March 3, 1955, edition 1 / Page 1
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* WEATHER <■ Mostly fair and mild today with high temperatures 65 to 75. Friday some cloudiness and mild. 0 VOLUME 5 DULLES WARNS COMMUNIST CHINA NEW RADIOLOGIST ON THE JOB - Dr. Gro ver C.' Bolin, Jr., left, formerly of Orangeburg, S. C., has joined the staff of Dunn Hospital as radiologist. He’s shown hede with Dr. Randolph Jh&M JjJtils JhimjA By HOOVER ADAMS A SWEET VOICE CALLS f TO SAY SHE’S PRETTY ( fIL H. L. Swain of Williamston, can ™ didate for the office of State Amer <7%, lean Legion Commander, vu' in AsDunn doing a little campaigning fZT among local Legionnaires yesterday . . . Mr. Swain says he feels opti mistic over his chances of getting elected to the State’s top Legion post . . . Joe Ruark of Dunn is a cousin of Bob Ruark, the famed newspaper columnist . . . They grew up across the street from each other and used to play together . . . City Judge A. R. Wilson of Dur ham, a Dunn native, has been urged to run for the office of Su perior Court Judge but annouheed in Durham yesterday that he woy’t be a candidate . . . I’m happy id M my present job as city judge,’’ says His Honor, who has held the post for many, years and is still grow ing in popularity . . . The Dunn Yam and Produce Market is a busy place . . . They’re still buying, grading and selling yams by the hunderds of bushels . . Manager Enoch Godwin has announced that he’ll have plenty of potato, pepper, egg plant’and tomato plants and seeds for growing all' kinds of com mercial-vegetables . . . The Dunn prbduce -market is being expanded this year and will sell any kind of produce that is grown commercial - (Continued On Page Two) 114 Whiskey Stills Taken Last Month Sheriff Claude R. Moore reported today to county commissioners that during February rural police and con stables captured a total of 14 liquor stills, destroyed 2,150 H gallons of beer, 30 galons of whiskey and arrested five men. Rural police had 11 still captures I to their credit and accounted for - an men arrested. Police who coop- V erated on all the raids were B. E. Sturgill, C. E. Moore, A. W. O’- Quinn, j. 8. Byrd and Leon Smith. * Constables Frank Giles and W. B. ■ Castleberry went with police on " two raids and Sheriff Moore per sonally took part In three captures. Constables reporting stills taken ' In the month were L. L. Holder, v Jr. Holder seined" one stunr^Spl’ TELEPHONES 3117 - 3118 Doffermyre, light, examining some X-rays. Dr. Alfred Cornwell, hospital administrator, said pro curement of Dr. Bolin would mean much to the hospital. (Daily Record Photo) Radiologist Added To Hospital Staff Addition of a radiologist to the staff of Dunn Hospital was announced here today by Dr. Alfred L. Cornwell, ad ministrator of the institution. Dr. Grover C. Bolin, Jr., of Or- ■ angeburg, S. C., has already joined the staff and has begun his new duties. , Dr. Bolin’s time will be divided between the Dunn Hospital -and \ Johnston Memorial Hospital at Smithfleld. i In making the announcement this morning, Dr. Cornwell declar- i ed: “The Dunn Hospital has long i needed a radiologist to head our i X-Ray department and we feel ex tremely fortunate in securing the < services of Dr. Bolin.’’ - i HAS FINE RECORD He pointed out that Dr. Bolin ■ comes to the local hospital with the j highest of recommendations and references and with an excellent record of service to his credit. Dr. Bolin is a native of Orange- , burg, son of a physician and bro- ; ther of Dr. Paul Bolin of Beula i ville. He Is a graduate of Gleason Col- : lege, attended Washington Univecr i sity in St. Louis and received his 1 degree at the Medical College of ; South Carolina. Dr. Bolin recently was dls- I charged from the Army. During his stay in the Army, he served as i radiologist at several big Army hos l pitals and medical centers, lnclud- , ing Fort Sam Houston, Tex., Fort Eustis, Va., and Letterman General (Continued On Page Two) i Creek Township. Location of stills captured by rural police was as follows: five in Averasboro; three In Buckhorn, one In Anderson Creek and two in Bar -1 becue. Two men arrested on Fe£ 11 In ■ Anderson Creek were Wiley Maa i gum and Bill Holder. On Feb. 33 ■ Tatanadge Jones was arrested In - Buckhorn and on Feb. 34, RoHle > Street and Alonso McNeill were . found at' a still to Barbecue. All ■ (Site JJetihj JXtmrfr Nurses To Hold Session Here Registered nurses from four counties will gather in Dunn Mon nay night for their annual dinner meeting and business session. The meeting will be held at 7:30 o’clock in the General Lee Room of Johnson’s Restaurant. Dunn nurses will serve as host esses to the meeting, and Mrs. Marie T. Rayford of Dunn is in charge of local arrangements. MRS. POOL TO PRESIDE Mrs. Ada G. Poole of Roseboro is president of District 14 and will preside over the dinner and busi ness session that will follow.' The district is composed of Har nett, Sampson, Duplin and Cum berland counties. A number of important business matters are to be discussed at this meeting. Reservations for the dutch sup per can be made by contacting Mrs. Rayford at 600 West Broad Street In Dunn. v Clerk Os Court Renders Report Mrs. Elizabeth F. Matthews, clerk of the Harnett Superior Court, to day reported In her monthly ac counting ofi activities in her office that total collections handled amounted to $3,677.96. Os this sum the Harnett Record er’s Coijrt, as usual, accounted for the largest part. 'Civil and criminal actions in the Ullington court amounted to - $1,194.10, while the fines collected In the same court were $1,7&50. Other monies came fregn the fol lowing sources: from probates *438.98; from civil and criminal ac tions and special proceedings In the superior court $347.40; from trust commissions, $13.98. | ijrdup I o(ga\ : • . • \ / DUNN, N. C., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 3, 1955 Varied Items Before Dunn Board Tonite A wide variety of matters will come before Dunn’s city council at its semi-monthly meeting tonight, according to the agenda released to day by City Manager A. B. Uzzle. Following is a list of the matters on the agenda: Application for Beer License by Mr. Johnny Britt (on premises). L. A. Tart, Jr„ about burying fuel oil tank in sidewalk in front of Gardner’s Dairy. Tax Collectors Report. C. T. Latimer, concerning dilch. Mr. E. S. Whaley—about water bill? Set up Election rules and regu lations. Approve rental of building back of old Purdie Wholesale Co. Action on acceptance of N. Park Ave. (Wellon’s Portion), also S. Wilmingtton Ave. from Godwin Stt. to Duke St. and alley-built for Mr. L. A. Tart running from Surles St to Cole St. and lying between Ellis Ave. and Orange Ave. DISCUSSION TOPICS Election May 3, 1955, 7 a. m. to 7 p: m. Registration Books open April 4th, 1955 and remain open for 20 days—Last day shall be challenge day 7 a. m. to 7 p.m. (April 23)—As provided in Charter. H**t up as'in 1993—Dates Would be as follows: Primary—April 19th or 26th (No provision In charter for primary) elecUon May 3. Filing of Candidates—April Ist to Noon on April 11th. Registration Books open March 26th, April 2,- and April 9th. Challenge Day April 16th. Registration Books open again on April 30th. Mr. Hudson will serve as registrar if you want him to. Mr. Robt. Draughon will serve as Judge if you want him to. Mr. Harrell cannot serve. Capitol (Improvements Fund—for water plant. Enlargements & Im provements only. Do we need leg islation to authorize Town to do this? Several Towns & Cities are passing such legislation. Has Woodlawn No. 5 been re recorded with Anne Ave. lines straightened at intersection? Get Map for Map book.' Recorder’s Court BUI Amend ments—for Ass’t Clerk of Court', etc. Powell BUI money for Clinton Ave. job. See page 9 Popular Gov ernment for Feb. 1955. Mother, Girl Held In Plot To Murder JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (IP) A mother-in-law pleaded with police today to free'her daughter of charges that they plotted to murder a prominent grocer to avoid the scandal of a divorce trial. T . ,Mrs. Sadie Teitlebaum, 52, ad mitted trying to hire a Negro truck driver for SSO to beat her son-in-law, food store owner Jack Blattner, but denied tearfully that she conspired with her daughter to have him killed. A ■‘Tm to Marne for,it all,” she said after she and her 33-year-old daughter, Ruth, were arrested yes terday on conspiracy charges. “I don’t know why I made such a foolish move. My daughter had + Record Roundup + CAKE BADE ) The Intermediate Class of Long Branch Church is sponsoring a cake sale Saturday, March sth, starting at 9 o’clock: The sale will be held at Alphin Brothers’, Btore on the Fayetteville Highway. Anyone desiring .a spe cial kind of cake please contact Mrs. Jesse Alphin or Alphin Broth ers’ Store. WEDDING PERMIT—A marriage license wasissued on Feb 3$ from the office of the register of deeds in Lillington to; Bari Cameron rhomas, 31, of Sanford, Route g ■ < 1 . J - - % J w% fjpJß EXPENSIVE SWIM Screen Star Esther WUUams, who looks as good on land as in wider, rflodels *£slooo seqflin tfedhiag suit at the Polo Ball, a society charity dance held at Boca Raton, Fla. The suit was de signed especially fear the dance. McCarthy Raps Army Secretary WASHINGTON UP) Sen. Jo seph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) char ged today that Army Secretary Ro bert T. Stevens “deliberately dece ived the Congress and the Ameri can people” in the case of former Maj. Irving Peress. McCarthy’s latest blast at his old foe of the Army-McCarthy hear ings also charged Stevens with an “uncooperative attitude” for delay in naming all persons connected with the honorable discharge of Peress after he refused to tell Mc- Carthy whether he was a Commu nist. The Wisconsin Republican also (Continued On Page Two) nothing to do with it.” The women were freed on bonds totaling $3,500. . , PoUce Capt, H. T. Fowler said the Blattners had had years of domestic troubles and Mrs. Teltle baum, who came here three months ago from Belmar, N. J., accused Blattner of spreading “Malicious gossip” about her daughter. Fowler said she apparently be (Continued On Page Two) and Mary Catherine Rosser, 18, of Broadway, Route I. ROTARY CONFERENCE—Many Dunn and Lillington Rotarians will attend the annual district confer ence to be held Friday at Kinston. Speakers at the event will include O, D. A. (OWe) Gberg of Sydney, Australia, representative of Rotary International, Gov. Luther Hodges and other Rotary dighataries. A1 Wullenwaber or Dunn is a member of the conference advisory commit tee. Dr. J. K Williford' of Lilllng. (CeuHuuH Oa Page *wwr) •• « Declares She's Not Immune If She Attacks TAIPEI, Formosa (IP) Secretary of State John Foster Dulles warned Com munist China today at open ing of his crucial confer ence with Chiang Kai-shek not to assume they were im mune from American attack if they assaulted Quemoy or Matsu islands. Dulles conferred with Chiang for four hours and then took off for Washington after warning the Pei ping regime to “'practice what they preach” about peace and cease their threats against Formosa. "It is the ardent hope of the United States that the Chinese Communists will not insist on war as an instrument of its policy, ’ he said. “The United States and the Re public of China have no alterna tive but to stand firm.” SIGNS DEFENSE PACT He made the statement within hours after he and the Nationalist Foreign Minister George Yeh sign ed the ratification papers putting the U. S.—Nationalist China de fense treaty formally into effect. Dulles said President Eisenhow er himself would make the decision what to do if the Communists at tack the Nationalists two main off shore islands. “Formosa is the area today where the Ohinese Communists most act (Continued On Page Two) Heroin Found In A Baby's Diaper NEW YORK (IP) Narcotics squad detectives searching a West Side apartment for- heroin thought they were stumped last night until one of them peeked inside a baby’s diaper. With the two-month-old tot still wriggling on its mother’s lap, the detective pulled out a moisture proof envelope containing 1 one and one-half ounces of the drug, worth an estimated $5,000 on “the street.” Olson Gets 2 Years, Discharge FT. BRAGG. N.C. (IP) Master Sgt. William H. Olson was sent enced today to dishonorable dis charge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances and two years at hard labor for collaborating with his Communist captors in North Ko rea. An eight-member court-mar tial sentenced Olson after find ing him guilty last night at the end of a 15-day trial. Olson, a veteran of 20 years in the Army, called the sentence a “total and complete disgrace” and said “I had rather be shot than get a dishonorable ’dis charge.” He added that he was “proud of my service” in the Army and indicated he would try to take hts case to the Court of MBitary Ap peals, the highest mlitary court. THEY'LL NEED A TON OF LINIMENT Big PTA Benefit Game To Draw Throng--And Aches! TiHl 1 11.. .... _ It’ll be the parents against the Teachers when the annual PTA basketball games taake place here Friday night at 7:15 o’clock, and the big question today was: “Who’s gonna furnish the liniment?” 1 / Mrs. Frank Spruill, president of the Dunn PTA, promised today that it’ll be the sports even* of die year—with plenty of thrills, spills, chills, creaking bones and back aches. Coach Paul Waggoner will coach the men teachers. Miss Hilda Crocker will coach the women teachers, Woodrow Hill will oeast The Record Is First FIVE CENTS PER COPY AGREE ON SEPARATION— After a 12-year marriage, singer Jane Froman told a press conference in Miami Beach, Fla., that aha and her husband, Capt. John C. Burn, inset, have agreed to sep arate. The stage and TV star first met Burn when he rescued hg T af ter a plane crash near Lisbon, Portugal, in 1943. Funston TeflsSenate Stocks Are Healthy WASHINGTON (IP)— G. Keith Funston, president of the New York Stock Exchange, said today a man with money in the stock market has nothing to fear except himself. The lead-off witness in a full scale Senate investigation <tf a cur rent stock booom, Funston invited millions more Americans with Ahe cash and the sense to use it to come in and bus stocks. The stock market is healths, he said, and the 1929 crash isn’t like ly to be repeated. He credited the boom to the fact that the public feels business is good and the fu ture is bright. “It is true that some of our cit izens miby act unwisely and suffer loss,” Funston said in a prepared statement. “But most will act in. Traffic Violators Are Given Fines Fines were meted out in Har nett Recorder’s Court Tuesday to traffic violators, many of whom were cited for speeding. James Cabell Faulkner, guilty of travelling 70 miles an hour, was fined S2O and costs. He was clear ed of travelling 72 miles as the first indictment charged. Wallace Lee Hicks, guilty of speeding 69 miles, drew $lO fine and costs. Paul Hazel Wilkins, guilty of speeding 70 miles received same punishment. Lesser fines of five dollars and costs were levied on the following the fathers, and Mrs. J. I Thomas will coach the mothers. ONLY THE FANS WIN that they b*^*a pretty hoj*taM task and that regardless of who It’s be mayhem and «r»| IN CIRCULATION. . NEWS PHOTOS.. .ADVERTISING COMICS AND FEATURES telligently and prosper. We cannot hope to protect each imprudent in vestor against himself." N A “FRIENDLY” INQUIRY On the eve of the Senate inves tigation, the bull market closed Wednesday In New York at new highs. This continuing boom prompted the “friendly” inquiry by the Senate Banking Committee, headed by Sen. J. William Ful bright (D-Ark.). The committee wants to know whether the market is on a boom and bust cycle. Funston emphasized that mem (Continued On Face Two) defendants who admitting speeding 65 miles: Wendell Pete Stewart, Donald Raymond Stewart, Clel El dridge Lee, David A. Blalock, Jr. Joy Walter Swartz, Walter Leroy Brownlee, and Leroy C. Jones, Morton S. Williams, Jr., and Mar-' ion O. Matthews. Billy W. Council,' first cited for speeding 65 miles an hour, entered a guilty plea to driving in excess of 35 miles In a special speed zone of 35 miles. He received a $25 fine and costs. % Curtis Talton charged with driv (Con tinned On Page Two) frou won’t to mtas. Coach Thomas announced tfcft following members of the mothers' squad: Mrs. Buddy Jernigan, Mrs, i Fred Stewart, Mrs. Bill Armstrong, Mrs. Paul Walker, Mrs. Pa* ItfWM;: Mrs. Willard Burrage, Mrs. Ftaj* Spruill, Mrs. Fred Warren and Mrs. Mack Hamilton. NO. 63
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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March 3, 1955, edition 1
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