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' I % ® Keller Foes Lose Again In Ouster Move ❖ WEATHER + Mostly cloudy and cool today with occasional rais. Friday con siderable cloudiness and little change in temperature. VOLUME 6 ERWIN STRIKERS TO RETURN TO UORK PLAIN VIEW ROYALTY PUin View School’s hints ands queens quite a crowd of them are pictured as they were crowned at the talent show. The queens are Catherine Hol land, grammar queen, and Betty Hawley at. the high' school, daughters of Mr. Mrs. Clayton Holland and, Mrs. Mamie 8. Hawley. King*., are Jh&M JhinqA By HOOVER ADAMS LITTLE NOTES ABOUT PEOPLE AND THINGS Scores of Dunn citizens are plan ning to ntend the Carolina-Notre r*n-m <r*rr>o on .Qotirrdav . . . fTVlirhflm T ,t«rnlw»n orftrtmr *vvf fe\ fV>O ftf V*« Wo^ffo* mown (Bcmviniao Ortonfe n.or»w»o ♦/> WhUoV fr\y» AV\o fHplO 'TMrO C<v» floA«»TO Vl«»4 IneMTABAA TV\l*/*P no 4 Ho ffA* c ?rev*lv*or fHo j».sAr*rwHr*n l c on fHo hslt . 4 . f T*h«f , q vrH** V*o*c <vne Os tmr> I*V« cHo woo f*o4vf*r»<r aH +H« +H« Tl*o"M pwrl tn Vmw (< h |f JYiwb’a +r*tt*ry fllVvOT p HnV room In fornn* vet H »H(W« flv-a to OOnHlvOf, p wM** pm on (wmW!|Mf pvptv nWHf>** . . ftHe WH<? to fh® tnrVttr cHoot* . . . M Alvf Atr\eWr«n LMkrn. too.* rfie added. fCATitfnoed on Fare Two) Constable Freed In Hunting Case Two Harnett County game war dens, two men and five bird dogs spied from the air as officers were on a routine patrol, could add up to but one thing—hunting out of season. But Magistrate M. B. Stewart of Lillington took a more lenient view and acquitted Constable W. B. Castleberry and Jack Howard late Wednesday of hunting birds in closed season. Robert Wright, Harnett Wild Life protector and Jim Sullivan, Wild Life pilot were flying low ov er Western Harnett, they told the magistrate, when they saw a red pick-up truck In the thinly wood ed area. Nearby, they spied two SMB ui Ova EM dogs iMieMu a TELEPHONES 3117-Sllß J. R. Best, grammar school, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Best, and J. W. Watson, high school, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Watson. They are being crowned by last year’s winners Carrie Jean Jackson and Mrs. Jimmie Hinson and John Core and J. W. Thornton. (Photo by Ermon Godwin.) Harnett Polio Fund Sent To National In an unprecedented move to save the March of Dimes nationwide program of providing for the neces sary care of polio patients, the Harnett County Chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis has transferred $6,000.00 of its “surplus” funds to the nation al organization. In announcing the payment, Mr. Roy G. Cameron, chairman of the chapter, explained that the money was to be earmarked and pooled for redistribution among chapters of the National Foundation which are confronted with dills for pa tient care beyond the limits of their financial resources. “We have made this payment,” he said, “in compliance with a call issued by President Basil O’Connor of the National Foundation to all chapters with current, surpluses be yond their estimated needs for this year. "Our county has received Epi demic Aid totaling more than $19,- 000.00 during our years of high po lio incidence,” Mr. Cameron em phasized. "The money we have sent this year to aid other strick en counties brings to $12,196.12 the amount we have boon able to repay to the Epidemic Aid Fund over the years. I wish to stress that we are not legally obligated to pay back the aid given us in the past, but we do feel a moral (Continued on Page Two) hill. Game wardens in the air quick ly radioed wild life patrol car the direction, and the car went im mediately to the scene. Supervisor Ed Cain, Cumberland County Pro tector Jack Canady, Wild Life Pro tector Oscar Chadwick and Special Protector Stacy Forbis answered the call. In a short time two men with guns and five bird dogs appeared. Wardens recognised, to their sur prise, a Harnett County constable and a friend. Jack Howard. Cas tleberry and Howard Insisted they were squirrel hunting. A search reveled no birds, nor any squir > rels. ,1 (Osattnmd On race Five) iShc Bailtt TEtwnrit DUNN, N. C., THURSDAY AFTERNOON. NOVEMBER 10, 1955 Rise Stevens' Bare Bosom I Brings Rise NEW YORK flPl Soprano Rise Stevens’ bare-bosom-effect costume for the opening performance next Monday of the Metropolitan Opera season struck too low a note for the dignified Met, the singer re vealed today. Her original costume for her role as a saucy courtesan in Tales of Hoffmann” seemed to dip down be low the bosom. Only flesh-colored chiffon and a couple of velvet flowers saved the day. Miss Stevens described the total effect 'as startling” and the cos tume as the sexiest one in the performance." “ Then she wore it on stage for a rehearsal. It was too daring for the Met stage,” she sighed. Costume de signer Rolf Gerard and other of ficial observers decreed a change. They raised the corselet and added more flowers,” the red-hair ed singer said. Then it was too high. Now the decolletage has dipped again. Miss Stevens said, They have upped it in one way and lower ed it in another. The corselet is higher but the chiffon and the flowers are gone. It looks pretty bare to me. but the last I heard It had finally been approved.” People wouldn't worry so much about what others thought of them if they realized how seldom ilheydV mm Pastor Refuse! To Allow Vote® On His Firing | By TED CRAIL % Record Staff Writer’!. Seventy members of vie Second Baptist Church M§hg a hymn, said their pray Hrs, and" listened attentively if reluctantly to church busi ness last night and then the free-for-all started. £ A group of members, sevetnj of them wives of the six men dSkted from the church several Meeks ago, sought to bring to an exmfthe 11-year pastorate of Rev. ■ C. Keller. They didn’t succeed. 1 Introduced at the height dl the stormy discussion. a “motion to adjourn” was accepted by thelhair —occupied by Rev. Keller—«USQ on the vote which followed the front and back rows split solidly.j De fenders of Rev. Keller wont the vote 36-32. BANGS CHURCH DOQKB One member, C. A. Holland, strodei angrily out as the voting | chinch as he went. His wife fol lowed him. The evening's outcome was a hard blow for Derwood Godwin, local real estate man who fed the ficht to separate Rev. Keller from his position. Godwin claimed later that a “secret bailot* on his mo tion to dissolve the oast orate would have gone against the pastor. THE MOTION Whereas, our pastor E. C. Kel ler. offlc’aHo resigned Feb. 17. 1954 effective March 26, 1954, duly accepted* by the church; and. Whereas, the church voted a 6 months extension of the effective dale to October 1. 1954, and. Whereas, the church voted on Sept. 19. 1954 against calling a new pastor by extending said ef fective date 12 months further, to expire October 1, 1955, and. Wheeras, no official recommen dation to extend an indefinite call to E. C. Keller, or any other candidate, haa been presented or (Continued On Page Two) ♦ Record Roundup + EXPLORER POST NO. 766- There whl be an organisational meeting of Explorer Post No. 766 at Thurman Ennis’ Office Thurs day, Nov. 10, at 7:30 p. m. Advisor John Ingram urges all young meen between ages fourteen and seven teen who wish to become members to be present. ’ TWICE DIVORCED BY SAME WIFE Sailor Kills Wife, Children And Self SAN DIEGO, Calif. (IP) A second divorce from the same woman was blamed today for provoking a sailor to shoot and kill his wife and two young children and then commit suicide, police reported. Officers said George H. Smith last night Shot his wife. Anne Ruth, 27, his daughter Connie. 8, and his son George Jr., 8, with a .22 cali ber automatic rifle, then turned the gun on himeelf. Neighbors said the couple came here from Greenville, Ga., 18 months ago. Before the shooting yesterday, Mrs. Smith appeared in court to file her second divorce action against the sailor. The Smithe were divorced several years ago, she married another man, then divorc ed him and remarried anKh. A neighbor. Rom Mario Jnroaayt, A HEIRESS WEDS SIXTH TlME—Dime-store heiress Barbara Hutton, 42, and Baron Gottfried Von Cramm, 46, shown above in a recent photo, were married in Versailles, France. It was Bar bara’s sixth marriage and the second for .the German tennis star. Graham i Tries Out Intellectual Role CAMBRIDGE, England (IP) A new Billy Graham changed from serge suit to cap and goWn and tried out his common-folks preaching on the intellectually elite this week. The meeting of minds was polite but enthusiastic. The evangelist came with his North Carolina draw! and dogeared Bible Into the big-brain country of Cambridge Universty. His styi’e has changed, his listen ers have changed, and "his sur rounds have changed. But the effect has been the same. Conservative and intellectual .Cambridge turned out wholeheart edly. I Congregations packed Great St. Mary’s Church from the first night and overflowed to extra seats in the aisles. Listeners filled two other churches that got Graham’s speech (Continued On Page Three) DIVORCE SUIT Mrs Ida Roy all Watkins of Liilington has filed suit for a divorce from David Ray ford Watkins on grounds of two years separation. The suit, filed Nov. 7 in the office of the clerk of court says that their child Anna Marie is in the custody of the mother. (Continued on Page Five) 17, told officers Mrs. Smith came to her before the shooting and Ask ed that she go to the Smith home and take care of the children. Mrs. Smith returned home. Mlsp Jaron mky was preparing to leave for the Smith residence when xhe heard the shots. Mrs.' Smith Was found lying near the front door of the home. Smith was in the doorway between the kitchen aad living reran and the children in the living room. Smith, his wfe and their daughter were dead when police reached the borne. The boy died fetor. Tribute Paid To Flora McQueen Mrs. Louise Hick® of Erwin school paid tritome to Flora McQueen at a meeting this week of the North Carolina Education Association, Harnett unit. Miss McQueen, former pubic school Bible teacher. Korean mis sionary and operator off The Book shef died a week ago Tuesday. Principal speaker at the Monday night meeting off the NOEA was Mrs. C. Phoebe Emmons of Wash ington, North Carolina, Who deliv ered a taik on ’lmportance off the National Education Association. Miss Ophelia Matthews. Dunn high principal and secretary-treas urer of the Harnett unit who re- Dorted on the meeting, said today that county teachers already have learned the message Mrs. Qnmons brought. “Were practically one hundred (Continued on Face Five) Rock Hudson Weds Aaent's Secretary SANTA BARBARA. Calif. !W Actor Rock Hudson. 29. and Mbs Phyllis Gates. 26. his agent’s pretty brunette secretary, honeymooned.' in secret today. The actor and his bride drove off for their honeymoon shortly after thev were married here last night by the Rev. N B. Thorpe of Trinity Lutheran Church. The couple eloped from Holly wood. They had been dating for a year and gossip columnists fre auently had t*''* r-*»r --riaee. The actor freouently was quoted as saying he wouldn’t think of marriage until he was 30. His 30th birthday is next week. His picture recently appeared on the cover of Life magazine, listing him as Holly wood’s most handsome bachelor. TRUMAN GOT ONE AMES. lowa OP A final count showed today that Mayor James P. Lawlor got all but one of the votes cast In Tuesday’s municipal election. The holdout vote was a write-in for former President Truman. <■ The Record Is Firsf i IN CIRCULATION ... NEWS PHOTOS... ADVERTISING COMICS AND FEATURES ■ " " II ...ll—. —MI FIVE CENTS PER COPY Doffers Vote Today To Allow Union To Settle Grievances » Two thousand Erwin Mill workers are going back to work, probably on Monday. Forty-two staking doffers offered a concession by the company, were talked into letting the union handle the dispute from here out. Boyd Payton. Southern Director of the Textile Workers of America, CIO. came in from Charlotte this morning, met with the doffers at nine o’clock, and brought a vote on. terms he worked out with Erwin Mill officials. WEEKLY PAYROLL $90,060 - The strike began a week ago Wednesday in the thro big plants in Erwin. Workers at the mill, who take home $90,000 a week in their paychecks, lost salaries as the stop page continued. Early conferences between the mill and the cloth doffers seemed to lead nowhere. Before the doffers voted to come to terms this morning, a pre-vote was taken and the doffers agreed that, whatever th« outcome, they 4rOuhf abide by tha results. SETTLEMENT TERMS Lacy Dawkins, general manager of the local at Erwin, told The Daily Record shortly before noon today that the doffers voted to set tle the unauthorized iby the union) strike on these terms: (1) That the company rescinds its recent order for a change ih duties of the cloth doffers. (2) That all employes return to their Jobs as promptly as peeaible .beginning Monday, under same conditions and ytatus as existed prior to the order for change. (3) That a conference be held art 10:30 a. m. on Monday in the com pany’s office at Durham to con sider all problems. TWO WEEKS GRACE The settlement provided that if the company and doffers don’t come to an agreement on Monday, the company will serve notice so proposed changes and will allow two weeks without prejudice or ef fect on paragraph 9 of article 7”) for discussion berfore the proposal becomes effective. Thi quoted paragraph, said (Continued On Page Two) Just 1,063 Liars In This Man’s Town HAMMOND. Ind ID Republi can Vernon Anderson says he would have been re-elected Majf>r In Tuesday’s municipal election If all the persons who urged him to run had voted for him. A petition signed by 18,606 per sons urged Anderson to run again last spring. But he polled only 15,- 937 votes Tuesday to his oppon ent’s 16,859. Fall Achievement Program Is Planned Plans for the annual Fall Achievement Night pro gram of the Harnett County home demonstration clum scheduled for Tuesday, November 15, at the Mt. Pisgan Presbyterian Church were announced today by Mu# Thel ma Hinson, county home agent. I Summary of club achievements in the year and announcement of the county’s most outstanding club will feature the program. The Mt Pisgah home demonstration club, headed by Mrs. Clarence Holde-, will be the host club. A barbecue and chicken stew dinner will be served for all ceunty club members and their families from 8 to 715 p. m. In the social rooms of the church. The program will follow. MRS. ENNIS TO PRESIDE Mrs. Delmer Ennis off Coats, pre sident of the county council es home demonstration dubs, vIO NO. 243 dßy n||jK rfg; I I OUCH! —Just looking at Julis as she and her partner.rehearse, their act in London cah make yotjr bones achg. But Darva* and Jtilia. specialty dangers, have trained for this sort of thing, which is why thogi ap-i peered before Queen Elizabeth in the Royal Variety Perform-, ance at Victoria Palace Theatre. Delegates For Meeting Picked Four Harnett County local and county school board members have been designated as delegates to the State School Board Association meeting at Chapel HIH, Nov. 16. The delegates, selectel Monday by the county board of education, are Bab Baggett of Liilington and Haywood Roberts of Coats, mem bers of the county board, and D. W. Denning, Jr. of Angler and t. N. Holmes of Benharen commun ity, local school board members. Alternate* named at the same time are Sidney O. Thomas oil Broadway, and Boone Trail com munity, Charles V. Skinner of Dunn, Hugh Green of Buie's Creek of the county board, and James (Continued Page five) preside. The Rev. S. JL pastor of the ML Plagah Churofe will lead the devotional. Presenta tion of attendance awards an# reading certificates win be mad* Special guests win include Mrit May McAlister, district home agenty and Charlie Brlckhouee, district farm agent, Miss Ruth Curren% State home agent, and her assist* ant. Miss Verna Stanton. Business win be held to e mint* mum. and chief program featuff will be a recreational boor led fep «tM Rev. E. ©. Shoal, IffithiAMf
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Nov. 10, 1955, edition 1
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