PAGE TWO BULLETINS MEADVILLE. Pa. (IP Fire destroyed the 80-year-old LaFayette Hotel here early today, but a night clerk and a bellhop aroused the sleeping guests in time and all 58 es caped safely. RICHMQND, Va. (IP William and Mary’s 180-pound junior end Walt Brodie today was named the Southern Conference’s player of the week for a sensational defen sive performance against VMI last Saturday. JERUSALEM, Israel (IP Premier - designate David Ben - Gurion said today he is prepared to meet Egyptian 1 Premier Gamal Abdel Nasser and every other Arab lead er as soon as possible to work out a mutual settlement of ( their years-lorig dispute. t J RALEIGH (IP/ A. H. Parker of Greensboro is the new president of the North Carolina Bottlers Association. He was elected at yesterday’s closing session of the group’s 41st annual convention here. WILMINGTON (IP Leroy Evans, 17, Wilmington Negro, today began a seven to 10-year prison term for the fatal knifing last August 13 of Samuel White, 26. Evans pleaded nolo contendere to a manslaughter charge yesterday in New Hanover Superior Court. He said he stabbed White in self-defense. STOCKHOLM (IP Two American physicists, Willis E. Lamb and Polykarp Kusch, today won the 1955 Nobel Prite for physics. MINNEAPOLIS (IP Poet-historican Carl Sandburg has been quoted as saying Ad|pi E. Stevenson “is fully equal in quality of mind and spirit to Jefferson, Lincoln, and Woodrow Wilson.” NEW YORK (IP The American Newspaper Publish ers. Association has entered a formal denial to government charges of violating the Sherman anti - trust act and de c- manded a judgment dismissing the accusations. chry* TRIPOLI, Libya (IP Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, cand r ATO supreme commander, believes Communist arms ice piipments to Egypt may affect plans of the North Atlan tiquec defense alliance. pedes ( t _ prapes TAIPEI, Formosa (IP Nationalist China showed off nuTw* rme< !. m, S ht dn * he Offshore island of Quemoy Tues- Mrs. P? a large-scale air, sea and ground war exercise with presided ; les of the Commuist coast. others wh Mrs DaviOME (IP Premier Antonio Segni may follow the Os the French government ard call general elec- Marvin Betif ad of schedule to end domesfU uncertainty. telle Morgan ~ ~ ’ Honduras (IP The and fu|t Company today rushed rescluff|A relief par- Apd-stricken cities|n the bananM|| | r of North ■nmduras. \ 0 3 FARMS W 2 STORES =1 IN HARNETT COUNTY .AUCTION V FRIDAY NOV. 4 ■■■■■ " " ' ■■■■■ ITU IHT Tm ’li" PI lit SALE 5 Miles N. of DUNN> N. C. 16&&A. M. THE VIRGINIA SIJRLES PROPERTY being located 5 miles north of Dunn. Sr. C. on DM Fair Grouhti Road. Containing 2 1/2 acres of land. Also one Stoke Building with 4-room living quarters. Also one 15x20 Warebqhse. Land carries 2.0 acres of cbtton allotment. TERMS: 1/3 down,, balance 1-2-S-4-5 years at 6% Interest. POSStSStDN: To be announced. VIRGINIA BURLES, Owner Js 3 AIE JdOATS, N. C. ll:3tt A. M. The Valuable B. A. NORRIS FARIII being located 1 mile west of Coats, N. C. on Highway T of. 30 aett*. more 6r less, with approximately 25 acres in cttltlvatlpn. Carrying 2.1 acres tobacco allotment and 3.2 acres of cotton. One 5-room hoqse having electricity, running water, and being almost new. One tobacco barn equipped with oil burner, feed barn, pack house, and other farm buildings. Farm has nice stream of water. The above house and one acre of land to be sold separately or as a whole with farm. TERMS: 1/3 down, balance to 2-3-4. years at 6% interest. JIM SEXTON, Owner h "‘I r ■■■■■■-■II' i n i—ls Da iff nr srd SALE BUNNLEV'EL, N. C. 2:bd M. J * cre tract known as thq JOY;BRYANT FARM being located 4 miles southwest of X»I n t!*' "? Bundcvel-Fort Bragg hard surfaced road. Having one 7-room house with electricity and other conveniences. Farm carries 3.0 acres of tobacco allotment and 4.0 acres of cottop. Property has one large store doing good husiness. Store and house to be sold separately from farm or as a whole as public desires. TERMS: to be an nounced on day of sale. MR & mrs. joe m. Bryant, owners 4th SALE BUNNLEVEL, N. C. 3.<W fr. lk « 57 a L r , e * ract be,ns located 5 mi, e» southwest of BbnnleVel on the BuOnleVel-Fort . Highway. Having 35 acres in cnltivaitloh with 4.6 acres tobacco allotment and 5.0 acres of cotton. Also has one 6-room house with electricity and running water. 2 topac-co barns equipped with oil burners, one feed barn, smoke house, 2-storv pack house. “* buildin « s - TERMS: 2*% down, oh delivery of deed with balance in 1-2-3-4-5-6-7 years at 6% Interest. ... . „ >tR. * MRS. MARIdN (BILLY) JORDAN, Owners The above properties are well located in good neighborhoods and will merit yftur inspec tion as the farms are Just the size that the demand is the toost for. If you are in the market, please sto JOHNSON & NORRIS in Coats, N. iC. for inspection; tt see Owners at the property. Telephone 3724, Coats, N. C. or Col. Bob Butler at 4276, Warrenton, N. C. FREE PRIZES! GOOD MUSIC! LADIES INVITED! COL. 808 BUTLER, Auctioneer North Carolina and \irgihia-Wlde License We Urge You To Attend This Big Sale R. B. BUTLER AUCTION CO. ; —aSti— JOHNSON & NORRIS WoHrenton, N. C. * SELLING AGENTS • Coate, N. C. Mb Johhtan ft Norrtl, GJaH, H. C. it Yftd Have Dunn Hi (Continued from Page One) friend’s peace of mind we can but vaguely conjecture. Boys faced with this choice, which would seem like pretty good practice for bigamy, were Russell Carter, Donald Gardner, Ronnie Kimmel, Albert Fail. Robert Regis ter, Jimmy Turnage and Harry Green. Youngest of the varsity sweet heart candidates are Diane Conn and Betsy Sue Tart, both fresh men. Not one single sophomore girl made the grade; we don’t know' how the sophomores are taking this up to; now we’d heard no complaints about them. The juniors got in with Rita Mc- Lean and Ann Wheatley, but n’i, all the rest of the football boys’ dreamboats are seniors; Mary All red, Sue Bailey, Becky Bryant, Laura Carr. Jean Ennis, Bobbie Parker, Alice Stewart. Virginia Vann and Jean Young. SCHOOL SPIRIT While the richer set at Dunn High deliberate for which of these girls to break up their five dollar bills into pennies, the school as a whole is conducting some exercises in school spirit which may possi bly help it to recover from the 41-0 beating suffered at the hands of Morehead City last Friday. Yesterday the halls of the high school rang and rang with the strains of “Faithful and True hearted—’’, every class period be ginning with a rendering of the school dongL On Monday, Rev. Leslie Tucker of the Presbyterian Church had a talk with high school students about the relation ship of good character, sincerity and simplicity to attaining one’s goals. Today, all Dunn students, and teachers, too, are decked In the school colors, white and green. For those who don’t think green mat ches their argyle socks, or just don’t have the color in their -ward robe, green ribbons have been pas sed out to remind' them of the glory that can be the Greenwave’s. Thursday is poster day, and classes from the fifth grade up will submit the prize poster from their room in a general contest. The contest is dedicated to the theme of Better School Spirit. In the evening, weather permitting, a massive pep rally will be held on the Dunn High field. Friday, the team girds fir the game (against Gray High School of Winston-Salem' by going througn the much greater ordeal of a [tear- TO DAILY RECORD, DUNN, MX ing and being Introduced to the student body. Coaches Jim Brown and Maurice George as well as the (ffheer lea tiers, will appear during the program, prepared by the: speech class and under the direct ion of Mrs. Roy Dixon. Following the game—and pro viding Dunn High students hti'lj have enough pennies to buy gas for their father's car and get there. —a big dance will be held at the j Armory Students, alumni and the , visiting team are all welcome. It sounds like it might be fun. Stevenson (Continued from Page One) Leader has spoken it would seem the state’s big national convention delegation may be put in the Ste venson column. This week's invita tion to enter the Minnesota pri mary was an impressive example of the Stevenson buildup. Stevenson’s unannounced cam paign had one slight reverse, tout that has been corrected. Former President Truman left the impres sion during a visit to New York that he favored Gov. Averell Har riman over Stevenson for the Dem ocratic nomination. But Mr. Tru man fixed that. On most other fronts the Stev enson campaign is booming. Tam many boss Carmine De Sapio was set back on Ms heels on a recent visit to California in search of Har riman delegates. Democratic Mayor Robert Wagner <3f New York seems to favor Stevenson as of now in preference to Irarriman. Sen. rifcr bert H. Lehman off New York is firmly committed to the man from Illinois. HARRIMAN LIKELY ALTERNATE Harrirhan is counted by some persons the most likely alternate if the convention rejects S’evehson. The defection of Wagner and Leh man is not deadly to his candidacy. FDR won his first Democratic nomination with Mayor James J Walker of New York City, former Gov. Alfred E. Smith and the en tire Tammany organization oppos ing him. But it is signiffcant that Steven son can chip away soihie of Jtarri man's Democratic associates. Ste venson has aocoJtmMshed even more in Tennessee, where a coon skin cap is as much the toadse of Sep.. Estes kefauver as of Davy Crockett. Gov. Frink G. Cleih'ent of jtennessee is for Stevenson for president ft fact which the senator *Ol flat seriodsly consider before de* cidifig to make another try for the White Whose. Stevenson’s candidacy has not yet come squarely up against those Southern conservatives who did not like hhn in 1952 and bolted to the Republican ticket. The breach in the Democratic Patty remains wide and deep. None knows what will happen when the .party fac tions resume next year in Chicago the dispute which was interrupted in 1952 by adjournment of the Democratic national convention. But the current situation is not at all obscure. Stevenson is way out in front and gaining steadily. Croup Seeks (Continued from Page One) that he had no comment on the 'proposed motion. Mrs. Godwin stoutly defended last night those who were accused of subversive activities against 'he bylaws of the church. Os her hus band, said, “I’ve lived with Elils Godwin nine years anl if he wasn't fit for ohurch membership. I don’t know who could be. I in tend to ilse my rights and stay and work for get’ing all these men re instated, if it takes a year." The 25 who met list night con stitute about a fourth off dhe membership of the church. They will seek relnstatemen with res toration of full rights and fellow ship for B. O. Slaughter, M. A. Knox. Joe "Earnhardt. Eilis God win, Alton O. Bennet: and Charles E. Massengill. Said Durham Rowland, electrical repairman add member of the Sec ond Baptist congregation, ‘‘lf nec essary we will appeal to officials of both the Little River Associa tion ahd State Convention to med iate iri an advisory capacity and will seek to get the church to ex tend the necessary invitations. We feel those groups have moral res ponsibility, IX hot legal authority, and can exercise advisory powers to enlighten our membership.” “If any individual or group wants him (Keller) as official pas tor, then let them propose such fact,’’ said Derwood Godwin. “Let the people duly elect or reject hi&" J. W. Danieis. chairman of the deacons of the church at the time of the ousting, is among those who opposed his church’s action and he spoke at the meeting last night. “if the church will shut its doors in the face di these six men,” jgaid Danieis, “it will shut tt. in the face of any oithtt tftah. All off us need to ask. 'Will I toe next?' Mayibe I’m a ’subversive,’ too, but I’ll be next Dior Explains Line In Round Figures ($350) NEW YORK W Christian Dior, the guy who started a furore a while back when he introduced the “flat look” to the world of fashion, arrived yesterday on the Queen Elizabeth. The French coutourier is here to arrange for a showing of his new line of women’s gowns at a fashion show to be held Nov. 8 at the House of Dior. 730 Fifth Ave. “There will be no H-loolc, A-look or Y-look,” he said, “ I have ru,i out of letters. My gowns will be simple, less full in the skirts and have hems 14 Inches from the floor.” They’ll retail for about $350 apiece, he added. Has the “flat look’ gone for ever? There never was one, Mon sieur Dior insisted. T just raise! the bosom to its natural position. Smart women liked it. I never had such a business as I had last year!' New Heart (Continued from Page One) nual clinical congress of the Amer ican Colleges of Surgeons. “I believe the solution is not too far away," Dr. Herbert Conway of New York said. A major problem still must be overcome,. In the human body nature causes bon owed organs to die, rejecting the "foreign” tissue. But Conway said he and his as sociates have been able to trans plant skin from one mouse to an other mouse and make it continue to live. Previously, except in the case of identical twins or in very (before I'll run or back up . He said he favored Rev. Keller’s dismissal. Jv# v, Li m W M | iJr M 0 M m m m m m Jtaff J to mmw am ‘ m \'H , a great and giamorbus new beauty TUG '■**■>;* : new V-8 power-designed for the super-highway age ...... with new push-button driving t .. new 255 horsepower M Now the propCT drivmg range at the effortleae Never has any automobile delivered MHOm Si twich of a button. Revolutionary m design, such startling "get-up-and-eo” With mmm §L- fine a fe Js& t eve ” 1° setf et '* l J OWr so: lightning fast jown” ®l fel y located , the *, ef t htod side of the power for quicker, safer passing Ex m mstrtinent panel. See and dnve the excitingly citing new power, new push-button Wl new 1956 De Soto with pushbutton driving drivinf, new Fiight-Suvep Btyline at ydw t* Soto Dealer s. Do il'today! De Soto’s got everything ip 195fi! NoW, \ more than ever before, make sure you THE new forward LOOK ... Drive A DeSoto Before You Decide! W. & S. Mot Os, Company, N. Ave. Dunn, N. C. roun di *oto DKAnxw wntBKKT* uwoucwo marx in ’-vou »rr your lw ivxry wxkk on both radio and mcvmioN . , . nbc network*. rare cases, this was impossible in either mice or men. A series of tests conducted by Dr. Clifford L. Kiehn of Western Reserve University along this line indicated that the blood stream carries the killer of borrowed tis sue Kiehn reported to the surgeons that it may be possible to block the transport of this killer sub stance chemically or otherwise. Commenting generally. Dr. Crei ghton A. Hard in Kansas City, said he thought the transplanting of organs and tissue from one human body to another “is solv able in time.” LITTLE MSS MUFFET SAT 0W A TUFFET .DRINKING MILK JUST As SHf SHOULD. SAID THE JOLLY OU) SFI&TR.WHO i V SAT DOVSIN BESIDE HER ’ah' Pllf® sHf KNOWS WHffi GOOO/’i Tor Home Deliver) Phone 4603 WEDNESDAY AFTEftKOOIt, NOVEMBER 2, 1955 BULLETINS PIEDMONTE DALIFE, Italy OP? Physicians opened up the stomach of Addolorata Carbonelli 42 a farmer’s wife here last night and removed a bundle of keys. The woman said she swallowed the keys to the drawer where the family savings are kept to prevent her husband from squandering the money. DURBAN, South Africa (IP) Workmen pledged today to “go to any expense” to save the life of a plucky cat; which was accidentally crated up with a shipment of au tomobile parts and lived for three months without food or water.

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