Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Feb. 10, 1956, edition 1 / Page 1
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* WEATHER * Friday, considerable cloud mass and cool. Saturday afternoon. THE RECORD IS FIRST VOLUME 6 DUNN, N. C., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 10, 1956 TELEPHONES S117-S118 FIVE CENTS PER COPY iW? NO. 47 ,1 POLITICOS POSE — ItornrU'a Democratic Executive Com mittee. including the chief officer*, are shown in above photo. Front row. from left, are: V. S. Baggett, Chairman W A. Johnson. Sec retary Henderson Steele. Second row: AmJe Hudson. Archie Taylor, Ctady Matthews, Herman Holloway, Henry Turlington and Palmer Matthews. Third row: T. J. Byrd, Denser Bethune. E. H. Mahone. Robert Draoghon. Edgar Gilchrist and Clarence Holder. Fourth row: Clyde Adams, Ererette Barnes, John Page. Cordon En nis, Marvin West and Fulton Patterson. * l I I fP) Last Minute News Shorts TUSCALOOSA. Ala. — University President hold* first press confer enre on Negro coed crista BI RAIN — Western powers W» Russia against letting ''armed group*” of East Germans threaten peace of West Berlin. WASHINGTON — Senate inves tigators order inquiry Into l\ S. approval of Britain's sale of gen erators to Russia. ALGIERS — French settlers hat tie police In new riots protesting Moliet reform plan, WASHINGTON — Air Force au thorises big Denver Colo., research plant which Is expected to work on intercontinental missile. WASHINGTON — President has n’t ehangfed opposition to rigid high farm price supports ‘‘one iota.” LONDON — New storms send European cold wave deat htoll over 250 mark. WASHINGTON — Israeli envoy makes urgent new appeals to Dulles for swift approval of fa rmers arms purchase request. PITTSBURGH — W’estlnghouse negotiations collapse; Federal med iation service quits efforts to end longest major walkout since World • War II. Constable Jackson Seeks Second Term HU bat s on in this picture, but | by this morning Lonnie B. Jackson had it officially off and in the ring He U entering the forthcoming Democratic primary to seek re-elec tion a« Constable of Averaaboro Township of which Dunn is a part. Jackson, who lives on. Dunn, Route 4, to a former Dunn police chief and also a former deputy sheriff In declaring for re-election, I Jackson said. “I've had the honor j of serving in this post, and believe j the people the kind of law en forcement which they can expect from me.” Mr. Jackson has made an out standing record as constable, ren dering outstanding service to the people. Ho opposition has been hinted and none is expected. < Cm turned Oa Bags Six) Ike Could Make Front -Porch Race WASHINGTON UP> The Eisenhower-will-imn school of Republicans visualized President Eisenhower today in the roie of a second term candidate conducting a “fro^t * porch’' type of campaign by television. * t That was the inference drawn by 'rm« Rem dill ran* from the Presi dent-* new* conference remark Wednesdav that he had never con templated a bamstorminar cam osvVn. even if he had not suffered « Heart ettack. While President Tnunan made effective n*e of that technimje in !<M« Mr. Eisenhower made it clear that he rewards it as improper for a president. Mr. Eisenhower’* new conferenee aealn provided evidence to strep If then the. belief of both those who heiieve he will and those who think I he will not mm avain Some Pemnhlicans saw the Pres ident fittirw himself for m strenwth •srinv canrnaWrn bv television. Oth ers saw evidence that he would not run in his continuing stress on his health and the fact that he ex pects to announce a decision by the end of thi« month. "I feel confident that the Presi dent could confine his camnakm to 1 television appearances and win on ] that basis,” said Sen. James H. ! Fluff (P-Pai. *1 don’t think the Democrats have any candidate who can lick him. '•Everv nubile poll of his pooti laritv shows it continues to main tain itself at an extraordinarily hiwh level. I not onlv still think he is coin? to run, but I'm confi dent he is eoin* to win.” Sen. Barrv M. Ooldwater (Aria.*, chairman of the OOP Senatorial itj^n tinned On Pare Twal Guy Must Pay His Ex- Doll $500 A Week NEW YORK — A hefty award of $500 weekly alimony — believed to be topped only by the $700 Elea nor Hplm Upped Billy Rose for in 1953 — was awarded to attractive red-haired Mrs. Anna Marie Gold muntz. 32. to keep her comfortable while she is suing her diamond dealer husband for separation. In making the award. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Gold also ruled that Mrs. Goidmuntz could live in a swank, five-room co-op. Gold said he had Uken into con sideration the style in which Mrs. Goidmuntz had lived with her hus band. Sylvan Goidmuntz, president of the Allied Industrial Diamond Co. The co-op is at 875 Fifth Ave. Style They Lived la Gold found that “it is clear that the parties lived in a style and on a scale grossly at variance with the husband's claims as to his fin ances.” He cited Mrs. Goi'dmuntz's Jew elry and wardrobe, the couple's plush apartment and their tripe abroad, to prove his point. In addition to the temporary alinJbny. Gold apptt>ved counsel fees of $7,500 for Mrs. Goidmuntz1 lawyer, Sol. A. Rosenblatt. Trial of the suit was set for April. Sight Clinic Is Scheduled A Sight Conservation Clinic spon sored by the Dunn Lions Club will be held Tuesday. Feb. 28 at thi Ounn Health Center. Process for who is edgible for 11 - school children are checked bj the County Health Department ant ‘hose who need further examina tion then check by the welfare de partment for them to certify thosi In financial need. Eye specialist u furnished by the State Commissior for the blind and in the examin ation in Dunn area 61 were foun; In need of further medical exam tnatton. Of this number 33 respond ed certified by the welfare depart ment; 19 white, 11 colored, and ! Indians, of this number 14 boy: 19 girls, ranging in age from 7 t 16 years. The clinic is a cooperative affai between County Health Depart j ment. Mias Lassiter doing super 1 (Continued Oa rage Tww) Two Bound Ovei To Federal Courl FAYETTEVILLE — A Oreensbor woman charged with prortitutkrt cm Brag* reservation aw over lo * federaTcour^'TW^fffiemrtfi veeterdav before 0. S. Commission er St. L. Hem. Charged with prostitution is Rou melle Rova! Barefoot. 25. McArthu Hotel. Greensboro. Eari Dewayn Green, 24. Sacramento, Calif.. i chanted with aiding and abettin in prostitution and assault. The pair was picked up by mlH tary authorities and the F. B. 1 after they were reportedly eneag ed in prostitution from an auto mohiie on the military post An assault charged was placet against Oreen after he alleged! assaulted Joel Frederick Martin 307th Eng. Bn., Fort Bragg. It wa reported, that Green became an grv when Martin failed to pay th full price. Green has been released unde $1,000 bond pending trial at th next term of U. S. District Coin and the woman has been placed » jail in default of $750. + Record Roundup + HONOR STUDENTS — Student from Harnett County at East Car olina College in Qreenville who re ceived special recognition for out standing scholastic work during th winter quarter are as follows: Eve lyn Mae Sherman of Fuqua; Springs was on the Dean's last; Oi the Honor Roll were Dorothy Jeai Barnes of Coats. Mrs. Culaye H Beasley of Dunn, Betty Jo Butte o Angler, Nancy Ann Cooke of Dunn Pat Budd Hannon of Buie'S Creek But Ike Mill Unchanged In His Opposition WASHINGTON !IP> — Pres- I ident Elsenhower has not changed by "one iota” his opposition to the rigid high farm price supports voted by the Senate Agriculture Com mittee, the White House said today. Ignoring the threat of a presi dential veto, the Democratic-con trolled committee today approved 13 to 3 an omnibus farm bill in cluding a 1.1 billion dollar ‘soil j bank" and a return to 90 per cent price props on corn, cotton, pea nuts and miUable wheat. The high price supports bareiy squeaked through 8-7. Both friends i and foes predicted they would be approved by the Senate after a hard fight, expected to get under way about Feb. 30. The House nar rowly approved 90 per cent sup i ports last year. Oppose Rigid Supports White House news secretary James C., Hagerty said President j Eisenhower and the administration j have not changed their opposition j to rigid supports “one iota.” j He recalled that Mr. only two day* ago write Sen. Of- j COTS'# O. nlKMI rigid supports wouid defeat purpose of the soil hank which is designed to curb costly crop surpluses. Officials of the newly-formed National Farmer* Organic tkm urged the White House to order a “bold and aggressive* program to support prices of hogs and cattle. Sells Sister-In-Law Into Prostitution YOKOHAMA, Japan (IF — Po lice reported today that Ichitaro Shimizu has confessed to selling 101 women, including his wife’s younger sister, into prostitution for about *1,900. The 65-vear-old said he used the 11 money to support his political ac tivities. police said. i Dorothy H. Laughighouae of Dunn, ■ Richard Carlton Leonard, Jr. of - Erwin, Joyce Elizabeth Stewart of ■ Broadway, and Mary Gibson : Whitehead of Dunn. r EASTERN STAR MEETS—Dunn 1 Chapter No. 59 Order of the East t em Star will meet Monday night at 8:00 in the Masonic Temple. Ad t members are cordially Invited to , attend. , (Continued On Pag* Sts) GIRL SENDS ’EM — Teen-age Evange Marti has drawn audientes all over the landed one of her hi*rest in Milwaukee. «if»*enwt, i jivtty head SHE'S GROWING UP - NOW SHE'S A GLAMOUR GIRL Famed Renee Martz To Open Campaign Here February 26 By TED CRAIL Record Staff Writer Renee Martz, the little girl evangelist, is a big girl now, she even admits to having been kissed, but she is still riding the trail of prayer, song and headlines that began for her many years ago. wui rather ana jsck ana Kstner Marts, Renee stopped In Dunn for a fe-w hours yesterday before rush ing to Augusta, Georgia. But she promised she’ll be back to start a week of revival services starting February 26. The tnp to Augusta seems like nothing to Renee because she has circled the globe twice. She has visited 37 nations, learned to sing gospel songs—in what a reporter called “a definite tee nag ed bebop lilt”—in 16 tongues, and has spok en at “Murderer’s Crossroads” in Paris, converted a Mohammedan in Sinapore, taken a screen test at Universal-International, and rec orded four sides for Decca Records. STRAP BREAKS - PHOTOG Yesterday sne nad on a bright ly striped t-shirt and dark slacks, not the quiet "Princess” dress which she wears when singing and sermonising. A man said she was so pretty she ought to "hug his neck” and without embrassment, in a brief, sisterly way, she hugged his neck. Renee Is a nice girt. SHE'S DIFFERENT .. She is hot exactly a quiet girl, and far from being a suffocating, goody-good type, bat she also as very different from the yippy type of teen-ager so often seen. . Renee is M years old, and full of serilus plans and talk. She doesn’t (Continued on Pago Two) RAPHERS HAVE FIELD DAY Ex - Playboy Slapped For $3 Million NEW YORK — Thomas U. Oar amn, onetime Broadway playboy, tax dodger and black market boom » j peddler to society, was slapped in Brooklyn Federal Court wlih a ' -f judgment for $3,269,249 by the gov ernment. The judgment represents taxes, penalties and interest on his 1949 income of more than a million dollars in his Mack market liquor operations. He did three and • half years in a federal penitentiary for evading his 1943 taxes of $946, 706 and for illegal sale of liquor. 'Continued on Page Two) Local Physician 'New' To Represent N. C. Debute Marilyn Makes Her As Serious Actress Dr. Randolph Doffermyre of Dunn, president at the State Board of Medical Examiners, will repre sent North Carolina at the annual meeting of the National Federation of Medical Examiners next week In Chicago. The prominent Dunn physician, who has headed the State board since his election in October, will leave during the weekend. Mrs. Doffermyre will accompany him. Another North Carolina doctor. Dr. Joe Combs, of Raleigh, Is the newly-elected president at the Na | tional Federation and will take of | flee at the Chicago meeting. Dr. and Mra. Combs will accompany I Dr. and Mrs. Doffermyre. IMPORTANT SESSION r The federation Is holding it* an - nual meeting In connectio with the ■ annual session at the Amsrlcsn (Continued On Pag* Six) NEW YORK flPt — The new Marilyn Monroe was unveiled Thursday but another, unscheduled unveiling left little doubt that the old Marilyn Monroe was still around. Miss Monroe, a blooming young actress who wants to do dramatic parts, met the w**« *1— % — new associate. Su* Lauren _e Oliv ier. For a time everything went along Just fine and the “new" Monroe discussed a picture she plane to make with Olivier as photographers duly recorded the spectacle of a blade sheath dress that covered roughly She lower two-thirds of her famous frame. BUSTS OUT ALL OVER Then, a strap broke and the old Marilyn Monroe busted out all *' over. There was a near stampede and flashbulbs popped in dawdlng pro fusion. Someone, a woman reporter, pro duced a safety pin but the ice had s"~>ken along with the strap and tilings took on the atmosphere of a Mardis Gras. Amidst the assertion of photog raphers that they could die happy. Olivier loudly volunteered to take his coat off. too. No one took up his offer so Oliv ier clung to his dignity until the tumult died down and the strap was pinned up. NO LEG SHOTS — JTST BOSOM “No leg pictures of Miss Monroe boy*," he cautioned photographers, “from now on, *hs's too ethereal.* .The news conference revealed, (OenWwtd m rage Twe) t
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Feb. 10, 1956, edition 1
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