Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Aug. 12, 1955, edition 1 / Page 2
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BULLETINS PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad iIP/ Francis Cardinal Spellman, archbishop of New York, left with 300 Cath olic pilgrims for New York Thursday night aboard the liner S. S. Brazil. HAVANA, Cuba U*' Former President Carlos Prio Socarras said on his return from self-imposed exile Thurs day night that he is willing to meet with President Ful gencio Batista in an attempt to bring peace to Cuba. TOKYO 'IP A rolling earthquake originating in the j Pacific Ocean shook northern Japan on a 200-mile front today. BERMUDA IP) U. S. Navy rescue boats went to the __ aid of the British freighter “Wytchwood ’ today alter the vessel became lodged on some rocks 10 miles off Bermuda. .. HARLINGEN, Holland IP Gold fever struck this North Sea harbor today alter word spread that a tavern owner who was killed in World War II had buried a box filled with gold coins near his house. MOSCOW 'll' l Russia's new “sweetness and light attitude spread to tourists today and the first two groups of travelers were scheduled to leave for abroad in a tew days. The groups, one from Moscow and the other from Leningrad, will visit Poland lor 10 days. Other like groups are expected to follow on visits to China, Hungary, t zech oslovakia and other Soviet satellites. SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico tIF Hurricane Connie led to the death of one worker and the hospitalization of six others Thursday. BOGOTA, Colombia IP Fifteen persons were report-, ed today to have been killed by a landslide which buried the settlement of Jamaica in western Colombia. Ibis! brought to 29 the number of fatalities due to heavy rains in that area since Tuesday when 14 persons were drown ed in a flash flood of a creek neal* Medellin. WASHINGTON UP President Eisenhower yesterday i signed a bill boosting pensions lor 225,000 retired federal employes and 70,000 survivors of deceased federal work ers. The increases will take effect October 1 and will cost about 45 million dollars a year. WASHINGTON IP) Donald A. Quarles, a mild-man nered authority on weapons of the tuture, takes over as Air Force secretary next week with a promise to push de velopment of guided missiles and atomic arms. CHICAGO UP: About 500 American Federation ol Labor leaders met today to discuss the organization s pending merger with the Congress of Industrial Organi zations. CHICAGO (IP) Visiting Russian farm leaders today got the red carpet treatment at Chicago's famed stock yards, where Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov was turned away only a few njonths ago. WASHINGTON iIP President Eisenhower said to day the death of- Ambassador John E. Peurifoy has cost the world “an outstanding champion of freedom and peace.” The President said he and Mrs. Eisenhower have "lost a valued friend.” They immediately cabled condolences to Mrs. Peurifoy at Bangkok. CHICAGO (IP) The Atomic Energy Commission re vealed today that the little town of Arco, Ida., has become the first United States community to receive all its light and power from electricity produced by nuclear energy. AKRON, Ohio UP- Funeral services will be held Tuesday for Frank A. Seiberling, rubber industry pioneer who died yesterday at the age of 95. Seiberling was found er of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, which he lost during the 1920 recession, and later founder of thal rubber company bearing his name. SALT LAKE CITY (IP) The Kennecott Copper Cor poration and eight unions reached an agreement early today and ended a 42 - day strike that had cut off one third of America's domestic supply of copper. PARIS iIP West Germany announced today that Chancellor Konrad Adenauer will visit Moscow on Sep tember 9. DETROIT IP) The CIO United Auto Workers today rejected a “Pattern contract settlement” from the Chrys ler Corporation similar to those it recently accepted from Ford Motor Company and General Motors. 20 Society Gals In Gambling Raid Twenty smartly dressed women, who liked to play poker on their nights out without their husbands, j were caught in a rati early ye - • terday on a fashionable home in Island Park. L. 1., where a high stakes [joker game for women only has been running for two months A few burst, into tears when j detectives fy-om the office of Nas sau County District Attorney Frank A Oalotta announced that it was a pinch. . , , Some screamed hysterically and one dashed to a bedroom and hid 1 *th a closet Assured they were not undid arrest all admitted that th'eir hus bands were prominent New' York business men. Two Men Arrested They saki they were picked up by hmouicnes at their homes and drn«n to the poker game at 12 Kildare Road. They also got lUpouaine service home they; said. Th/ sinless of the game for •emeu only was explained by one j of the *card-|Uaying patrons who Mid ' . HU ; i": “Our husbands like to play poker on their nights out. so why can't we?” All the women were released. Two men were arrested as op erator.-, of the game. They were Frank Russo, 38. ol 304 E. 124 :h St., and Charles Kaufman, 44. >f : 1013 Faile St., Bronx. Trial In September ' In First District Court. Mineola, they were released m SSOO bail v each aftei pleading not guilty of i common gambling. They will to • ; on trial in September. < j The raidng squad had watched t the house for two weeks before l moving in. nights as many 1 : as 30 jeweled women played, po i ice said. The lavishly furnished house was ' equipped with four oversized poker i tables, the raiders said. BROTHER HIES Henry Gautier. 63, of Clinton, Rt. ■ 2 died in a Ciinton hospital Thurs- j j day morning at 6 o’clock as era ! brief illness. He was a brother of Livic Gautier of Benson. Rt. 1. i Cole Revival To Open On Wed. Due to weather conditions of! Hurricane Connie, the Rev. James j Cole Evangelistic Campaign sehe-, duled to start Friday night. Au- j gust 12th ha- been rescheduled and; win start Friday night. Au- 1 gust 17th in the tie flame-proof i gospel tent on North Chilton Ave., ; in Dunn. Service- will be held nisrhiy at 8:00 p. m shutting Wednesday and there'll be special organ music and singing during'the campaign- Rev.' Col?, one of the South’s leading evani-eli.-'- u:-, t you come out nightly for these inspiring meet.. ing.s' This famed evangeli-t can be heard daily at 300 p m. from] Radi , Star ion WFMO at 800 u-> your dial! That’s the Janies Cole Evangelis tic Campaign rescheduled to a new starting time . Wednesday night.. August 17th at the large fiame proof gospel tent, North Clinton Ave in Dunn. Services Today For Mrs. Cameron SANFORD - Mrs. Martha Ann; Bass Cameron 70 died Wednesday afternoon at her home on Route 2, | Cameron. Funeral services were conducted ; Friday at 3 p. m at Cypress Pres- j byterian Church by the Rev j George Tally ,nd the Rev. A D. j Carswell Burial was is the church j Mr*. Cameron v.as born in Cum-! berlund County, the daughter of | the lam G.lbei: and Elizabeth Maxwell Bass. Surviving are her husband. Rob- i ert Smith Cameron: six sons. Let- j ester Cameron of Niagara, Rov j Cameron of Erwin. Lee Cameron of j Raeford. Martin Cameron of Route j 3. Cameron. Oscar Cameron of; Dunn and Farley Cameron of San- j ford; three daughters, Mrs. Lena j Cameron of (Southern Pines, Mrs Wesley Hennings of Route 2. Cam- j cron and Mrs. Laura Branch of Route 2. Vass: three sisters, Mrs. I C. C Cannady of Route 3. Dunn ; Mis. John Barefoot of Route 4 j Dunn, and Mrs Lizzie-Calhoun oL Hope Mills, and six brothers, J. W , Bass of Route 2. Cameron, J R ! Bass of Route 4, Dunn. Frank Bass of Southern Pines. C C Bu s j of Route 1, Erwin. E. D. Bass of Erwin and J L Bass of Salisbury, i Chiropractors (Continued from Page One) Ryan D Guilds of Sumter. S. C., a former member of the faculty of Lincoln Cniropractic College in Indianapolis, Indiana. Dr Guilds, an authority in his field, will address the group on Special Mechanics of Chiroprac tic Technique.” Another dignitary appearing on the program will be Dr. John Frizleie of Durham, president of the State organization. He will rep resent the State group at the meet ing and will bring greeting- from the State organization. Another speaker will be the Rev A.-Lincoln Fauik of Dunn, who will speak on "Chiropractors and Pub lic Relations.” The Rev Mr Faulk has made a special study on this subject. Dr James will welcome the group to Dunn. Tne sessions will close with the program following the dinner. Dr. J. L James of Whlteville, a first cousin of Dr. Gerald James of Dunn, is vice president of the dis trict. ’ Peurifoy (Con!ifined From Page One) nomic analyst. Peurifoy rose rapidly and in v few years became one of the top diplomatic trouble shooters. He was asigned to Bangkok a year ago with the specific task of helpin' thwart Communist designs on the I Southeast Asia nation by' keeping ; Washington alert to new dangers. Peurifoy went to Thailand fresh j from a triumph over Communists j as ambassador to Guatemala where he played a major role in ousting , the Reds from control of the Gu- i atemalan government. Washington political observe. , etached great signifjcance to hisj appointment to Thailand because I the; United States hopes to bull 1 j Thailand into a free world bastion] in southeist Asia. W'lth the lighting in Indochina j as an end, the Communists have j been expetted to try to subvert ] western strength in Southeast Asia Officials said Peurifoy was made ambassador to Thailand to coordi nate U. S. strategy with new envoys to the Indochinese states. WON MANY FRIENDS Peurifoy a native of Walterboro. j c., was a Tarreer diplomat, but he was much more of a back- j slapping politican who Won friends j for the United States wherever he went —including Greece where he served as ambassador. Appointment to the Athens post ] was then the high point of a ea ; reej; that included service in the : Army and Marine Cork's and jobs lin aviation as an elevator oper- TIIE DAILY RECORD. DUNN, N C. l j -1#"..) i■ i ' I INTO TH* EYE— A Navy Banshee jet plane, at an altitude of 20.000 feet, flics toward the “eye” .* hun.--. f. “Cennie." The plane photographed the “eye” of the storm which was at 15,000 feet, 'me 200 miles oil the coast ol North Carolina. . ... Bodies Os Crash Victims Gathered EDELWEILER Germany ;IE The U. S. Army used searchlignts and gasoline flares before dawn today to gather the remains of ?.6 soldier-victims of a two-plane col , liscu and covered them with tne ! led and white nylon parachutes I they never had a chance to use. Army medical men. working in : pairs, loaded the bodies on streteh : ers and carried them out of a ! wheat field and a rocky forest jvheie two snub-nosed Cll9 ‘ Fly- Isotobes (Continued from Page One) j a boon to the scientists themselves, j Waste products once terribly dan j gerous are made more harmless. Dale W. Jenkins, of the U. 3. ! National Research Council in Washington told the conference ! that "nuclear energy has provided ; a new tool which has permitted real progress in solving” the prob : it ms of epidemics and their spread. Th>s was done through making | various disease - spreading insects ; radioactive so their movements ; could be studied. He predicted th.u ] "additional discoveries of major Importance in the field of public i health tan be: expected in 'the I near future." At the same time three Brazilian ! scientists told how they had made ■ niosqtlitoes radioactive by expos- I mg them to a radioactive isotop; j and were able to study their habits |in a campaign aimed at wiping j out malaria. MwLoal Hope's dominated """the j day 4 program with scientists giv ing complex reports on use of ra i diouctive substances to trace the growth of cancer, thyroid ailments #na heart disease. Private (Continued From Page One) protected He is demanding his rightful inheritance because he has ' only recently come of legal age. he said. Joyce's will left the bulk of his estate to a niece, Mrs. Dudley B Kean of Chicago. She received j about 83,400,900 after taxes. A lawyer for the Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust, : which is executor of Joyce’s estate, charged the airman’s suit was “an j absolute fraud” on the court. Bank Robbed 1 (Continued from Page One; | to prevent leaving fingerprints, au ; thorities said. He held the pistol ] in his right hand and took the cash ! with his bandaged hand, bank em i pioyees said. i 'lt apparently was a spur of the | moment job,” a Highway Patrol ! -pokesma:. said. Only a skeleton | force of troopers remained on duty ; in this area, bu: roadblocks were i manned by troopers and sheriff’s ; officers and town police here and at Wake Forest, Loulshurg and j Henderson. j Youngsville is a small farming | community 24 miles northeast of ; Raleigh and only five miles north j of Wake Forest. .The bandits fled in a two-tone 1953 Ford Victoria with green fen ! derpants, police said. If It's A Girl Name Is Connie WILMINGTON. N C. W-Mayor j Don D Cameron spent this morn-- ing expecting Hurricane Connie j and a new addition to his family ! to arrive “any minute.” Cameron'*; wife Be tv is expect ing, and Cameron .aid if it's a girl he will name her Connie. However, the name won't be Conrad If It’s a j boy. ‘I don’t like that name, hur i rieane or no hurricane,” Cameron j said. ] a tor a cigarette liehter salesman : and a food buyer for a chain off | restaurants,-. He was picked by Gen. George C. Marshall in 1947 as an assistant secretary of state and was nomi nated to Athens bv President Trtt man. President Eisenhower sent him to Thailand Igst yen-. i n : Boxcars” collided in bright sunshine Thursday and fell like chunks of lead in the worst post i Benson Social News PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Justus Parker spent a few days last week in Charlotte visiting Dr. and M „ C. C. Mas sey. % Mr and Mrs Fred Dulin of Hope Mills and Mr. and Charles Hammond of Fayetteville visited Mr. and Mrs. Justus Parker Sun day. Miss Pauline George of Smith field visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob Johnson and Mrs. Preston George Sunday. Mrs. Russell Gardner of Coa’s visited Mr. and Mrs. E. Dallas Langdon Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Eli J. Morgan of i Clinton visited relatives here on Friday BIRTHDAY DINNER To honor Jesse Martin Denning > cn his 42th birthday members of > his family assembled at the an . cestoral Denning home near Ben- j ' son on Sunday for an all day fami- ] : ly party and picnic dinner fit ■ noon Dr and Mrs. Graham Wall of ; Valdosta. Ga. spent last week here ’ with relatives. They were accom panied home by Dr. Wall’s mother, ■ Mrs. J E. Wall, who will spend , two weeks there. Dr. Wall, na : tive of Benson, is Dean Men | at Valdosta State College. J - Mr and Mjs. Rick Johnsip; and • son. Chris, left Tuesday forSi two - weeks trip through the New Eng > land states and Canada. s Mr. and Mrs. A T Johnson, A. T. Jr . and Janet Johnson spent last Thursday at Davidson College where A. T. Jr. will enter the freshman class on September 10. Mr. and Mrs. Linwood Johnson spent Sunday in Rocky Mount visiting Mrs. .(oh n (Jon's biiother. 5 Lloyd McLemore, who is a patient 3 in, Memorial Hospital there. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Bandy left Monday to return to their home in McCromick. Montana after a ’ visit here with Mr. Bandy’s sister, Mrs. Booker Lawhon and Mr. Law -1 hon. L inwood Johnson is in New 1 York this week on business. , | Mr. and Mrs., Lawrence Neigh , j bors of Eustis, Florida arived first i of the week to spend some time visiting relatives in Johnston County. A E. Surles continues critically ill in Johnston Memorial Hospitai, Smithfield. Mrs. Lloyd May of Houston, Texas Is spending some time here having been called home on ac count of the serious illness of her ! father, Paul Johnson. Mr. John -1 son is a patient at the Dunn Hos - pital. BIRTH CELEBRATION To honor J. F. Woodall on his I birthday last Sunday Dr. and Mrs i DeWitt Woodall of Erwin enter s “tained Mr. and* Mrs. Woodall at ?! a noon day birthday party. si On Sunday evening Mr. and • j Mrs. Marshall Woodall and Mr. j; and Mrs. Will Woodall entertain ed at a refreshment lawn party to celebrate Mr. Woodall’s birth- I I day. Mr. and Mrs. Walton Coals have 1 returned from a visit to relatives in Norfolk, Va On the return trip ‘ they motored to Hatteras Island over a hard surface road of his toric interest which was paved over the same area of the road surveyed by General George Wash ington. The Benson visitors also spent some time at Nags Head. They made use of four different ferries in their travel over the Hatteras territory. Little Penny Barefoot, daughter ' of Mr. and Mrs. James F«arefoot, is making recovery from a broken arm which she re • crntly sustained in a fall from 1 a tree at her home here. Mr. Harvey Barefoot father of i James Barefoot of Benson, con tinues ill In the Memorial Hot l pital at Chapol Hill where he recently underwent major surgery. Mrs. Nora Benson spent first of the week with her daughter, Mr.:. ; J E. Clifton, in Smithfield. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse T. Morgan , spent Sunday at. Beaufort and Sea Gull visiting their daughter, Miss . Bonnie Lynn Morgan. Mr and Mrs Bert Harrison re ! turned Monday to their home in j sjiver s-rings, Md. after pp»nd- i v.ar disaster to befall U. S. forces in Europe. The names of the victims, 11 airmen and 55 soldiers, were with held until their relatives In the United States could be notified. c!be published today. Army authorities said the list may All of the men wore parachutes but none got a chance to use then;. The planes broke up when they hit and some of the bodies may 1 have been thrown clear. ing several days here with Mrs Harrison's parents, Mr. and Mrs J. C. Bell. Walton Johnson is a patient at Veterans Hospital, Fayetteville where he is receiving treatment for a heart condition. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Aberholdt and son, John, of Fayetteville, were visitors here Thursday. Mrs. J. H. Rose and her daugh ter, Mrs. Bobby Hinton and Mrs. Edgar M. Hall of Raleigh visited relatives and friends here Thurs day. Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Barbour spent Sunday at Myrtle Beach, S. C Mrs. Pauline Harmon Dixon re turned last of the week from a visit with relatives in Milwaukee. Wis. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bell. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Harrison spent Sat ! urday and Sunday at a recrea tion center near Wilmington. They I were joined on Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Phillips. I Mr. and Mrs. John Daly Ker-1 nodle. Sue Lawhon. Mr and Mrs. j Mack Overby, Randy and Diane l Overby, Charles Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Barbour, and Tommy Bar | bour were visitors to Carolina Beach Sunday. / CRADLE SHOWER Mrs. Bobby Chandler and Mrs. T. A Chandler entertained at a cradle shower Friday evening to honor their cousin, Mrs. Bert Har rison of Silver Springs, Md.. who with Mr. Harrison spent the week end here visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. C Bell. Mrs. Percy Adams and Mrs. Rob in Clayton honored Mrs. George Earnshaw, 111 at a cradle shower Thursday evening at the Adams home on Parrish Drive. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Wall and daughters, Linda and Janie Lee, of Greensboro rpent Sunday here with Mrs. Ira O. Farmer and Mrs. Ed Hill. Mrs. Sam Godwin who has been at the bedside of her Sammy, at a children’s hospital in' Wil mington. spent a short while at home Monday afternoon, returning to Wilmington that evening. She reported that Sammy was slow'y improving afteXhaving been criti cally ill for the past three weeks Garris Yarborough is receiving treatment at Rex Hospital. Raleign having entered the hospital Mon day afternoon when he became ill while on a business trip to Ra leigh. Mrs. D. B Denning is improv ing at her home near town after having been ill. Miss Annie Mae Hill was host ess Monday evening, August 8, to members of the Business Woman's club of the Baptist Church. Mac McClarv of Atlanta. Ga., is visiting Billy Massengill. They made an overmght trip to At lanta Monday. Jimmie Taylor and Don Norris left Raleigh Friday for induction into the military service at Fort Jackson, S. C. They will receive specialized training during their 3-year period of service. Miss Edith Mae Clifton whose marriage to Herman Ogburn will take place September 3 was honor ed Saturday evening at a miscel laneous shower given by Mrs. John ny Byrd and Mrs. J 6. Clifton at the Clifton home on Benson, Route 1. Carver J. Peacock of Durham was the overnight guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. David L. Peacock. Monday night. Mrs. Rachel Everett Hart left Friday for her home in Orlando, (Florida after a week’s visit here with Mrs. D. L. Peacock. Mrs. Hart will be remembered here as John ston County Home demonstration agent a few years ago. Mrs. Dwight Johnson and Mrs. George Earnshaw nl were visitors tc Raleigh Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Linton Peacock and sons, Linton, Jr., and David, have returned to their home in Washington, D. C. after spending a vacation here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. D L. Peacock.. While here the Washington visitors made r trip to Tennessee, accompanied by Mr* D L. Peacock. and visited FRIDAY AFTERKOOtt, AUGUST 12, J 1955 Texas Gov. Would Not Support Adlai CHICAGO iIP) Rebel Democratic Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas warned yesterday he would bolt the party ticket again next year if Adlai E. Stevenson wins the presiden tial nomination. vmt R.nhert. Mevner of New Shivers, who with several other Southern Democratic governors bolted the Stevenson ticket in 1952, said he would support “practically ( anybody else" other than Steven-; son for the Democratic nomination ( in 1956. But if Stevenson wins the nomi- j nation, he said, he would support j “practically any Republican.'' j Shivers broke with Stevenson in | 1952 largely over the tidelands oil ( issue. He spoke out at a news confer- i ence at the 47th annual Gover- | nors' Conference, heaping fresn fuel on the hot political fires that have been burning at the meeting aK week Politics has completely over shadowed the official business of the conference, which today dealt with the problems of mental health , Shivers refused to be pinned down on the names of possible presidential condidates in either party he might support. But h<* j praised the record of President Eisenhower, saying he had restor-1 ec! “faith" in government and brought peace to “some who have never known it." The Texas governor supported Mr. Eisenhower in 1952 after j breaking with Stevenson. While cleclin.ng to name names himself Shivers said he had heard talk among other governors here about Govs. Averell Harriman oi — —'— Drive Moves Into Anderson Creek J T. Lamm, finance chairman for the Harnett County Centen nial in the Lillington area, yesier day extended his fund raising cam paign into Anderson Creek and I Bunnlevel areas. Lamm visited a variety of busi | ness places and reported that the I cooperation promised in the sell ing of shaving permits, beard but • tons and cosmetic permits wai very encouraging.” j In Bunnlevel, Mrs* Hubert Byrd postmaster, will sell cosmetic per mits and beard buttons She alsc is -the Bunnlevel representative or the county Centennial social com mittee. Cosmetic or “war paint-’ permits for the ladies also will b< distributed for sale to circles ! r the Baptist and Presbyteria: c.h ur c h women's organization: Mrs. J. C. Byrd is president c-1 the Women of the Presbyteriar Church. Mrs. John Cannon, head 1 the W. M. U. of the Friendship Baptist Church. Hurricane Sidelights WASHINGTON OB —Weather fore.j casters pride themselves on their : ability to predict the path of a: hurricane, but they admitted today' that Connie’s 30-hour stall had them baffled. Kenneth S. Norcjuest, Washing ton weather bureau supervising forecaster, said the path a hurri cane will take is determined by the upper air currents—those ranging from 20,000 to 50,000 feet above the earth’s surface. WASHINGTON. N. C. OPI—Na-, tional Guard troops were mobilized! here early today in answer to “ur-; gent" appeals by the Red Cross to 1 , evacuate as many as 1.000 people, from danger spots in the path of: Hurricane Connie. Several hundred were reported 1 “in critical need' of help in rural' areas virtually marooned by rapid-! ly rising waters of the tidal Pam-! lico River. “There's a critical need in’ Au rora, N. C., about 30 miles from) here,” Lt. William L. Tadlock said., MOREHEAD CITY ilPi—Oov. Lu-j ther H. Hodges shifted his head- j quarters here from Wilmington to- j day when it became evident that j Wilmington would escape the worst) of Hurricane Connie. Hodges flew to the state from, Chicago asd headed a "task force" of state officials into the storm' area. The governor checked over dis- i aster preparations then rode into! the teeth of the oncoming storm! to Wrightsvilie Beach, and went on J the air over radio and television to reassure the people. WASHINGTON UP—The U. S. l her father. Linton Mason in New port, an dother relatives in eastern Tennessee. Mrs. Will Wopdall spent Wed- I nesday in Clayton. Dr. H. M. Peacock, member of the medical staff of Sea Level Hospital in eastern North Carolina, spent a while here recently with Mr. and Mrs. David Peacock en-, loute back to Sea Level from a tw'j 1 ’frfefas vacs won in Cuba. 1 New York. Robert Meyner of New jersey Frank Lausche of Ohio and Edwin Johnstfn of Colorado, and Sen Estes Kefauver of Tennessee as possible Democratic candidates. ! Only Wednesday night Steven -1 son announced he will make known | his intentions for 1956 by Novem- I her. and possibly earlier. He did ; not say whether he had decided-to j run. but iryny observers felt he ! he will make the race. I Stevenson expressed confidence I he could President Eisenhower ! next year. I Shivers also said today Steven -1 sen apparently would be a candi date. but declared that “I have said repeatedly I would do every | thing I could to oppose his nomi nation and that if I could not support him.” “I do not think he is suited in j temper for president of the Unit ed States, and not qualified from any standpoint,” Shivers said. He said Stevenson's position on the tidelands issue showed a “genrral ! tendency toward federal control and statisin.” | Shivers said his preference al ways has been to support the < Democratic candidate, but that his j party is “now controlled by the ! liberals of the East and the labor j forces’ Asked whether he vyould organize * a ‘‘rebellion'' in the South against Stevenson. Shivers replied: “I don’t think I have to organize. I think it’s there. I hope it Is.” ——< ' 1 ■■ ir . n | Shaving permits and beard but - tons also are available at William - B. Byrd's Farm Supply Company -1 in Bunnlevel. Bethune Brothers j also will cooperate in selling Con tennial fund raising devices. - * Lamm said other business places - i e which have agreed to assist in the 3 [.. official Centennial fund raising 3 campaign are: Shepperd Whitting ton. Bunnlevel, Route 1; Butts * ‘ ! Grocery and Market in the Flat Branch community; Hill's Garage > and West Grocery in the Ander ;o ; son Creek neighborhood: and Earl .a Lasater of Cambro Farm Service [. in the same vicinity. ~J I Cosmetic permits in the Flat 1 Branch area were distributed to n Mrs. John Marsh, who will en ,! ! gage the aid of the circles of the , s i Women of the Flat Branch Pres- . * -f | byterian Church, n Worth Lee Byrd, Lillington in is surance man, and Miss Lois Byrd, p I Centennial publicity director,’ ac companied Lamm in his tour. ■i j weather bureau here received for ijl 1 the first time in history early to ! day a picture of a hurricane over ; a radio fascimile photo system. The picture showed Hurrican Connie as it came w’ithin 116 nau tical miles of Cape Hatteras, N. C. It clearly revealed the eye of the storm and the outward spiral ran land. The innovation is part of the weather bureau’s improved hurri cane warning system. Here’s how . i cane warning system. Here’s the j way it works: Ethel Merman Undergoes Surgery DENVER (IP Ethel Merman. | star of Broadway and Hollywood I musicals, . underwent "minor sur ! eery” today at St. Luke’s Hospital l here. Doctors would not dlslcose the im : nature of the operation but said the star probably would be allowed ; ' to return to her Denver home Sun day if complications did not occur Continental Airlines President Robert F. Six Miss Merman’s hus | band, accompanied her when she I entered the hospital Thursday. —— All-Star Game Is Postponed i “Connie” has delayed the Knee- | j pant League's Allstar games till j next Wednesday, Gene Driver an | nounced this morning. ; The games will pit two teams in I the 7to 12 year old class and two . i teams in the 12 to 14 year old class I ■ against each other. I The youngsters will play regula- I lion hard ball wdth only some of I the distances altered. There will be I umpires for all the bases In these important games to avoid dispute. Admission prices are one dollar . >: |H lor adults and fifty cents for child- | I ien. The funds thus obtained will '' JH go toward the purchase of uniforms ffi|B end equipment for the League. B i Tickets may be purchased from fl i the Kneepant Leaguers themselves B , 01 as the Recreation and Parks oi- JH S flee in the Armory, B
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Aug. 12, 1955, edition 1
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