* WEATHER + Fair to partly cloudy and cooler today. Fair wit* freeze or scattered frost tonnight. torn 25-30 moun tain*. 28-3C elsewhere. Tuesday fair and warmer. The Egily Kieka « THE RECORD IS FIRST ,r0LT7M1E • TELEPHONES SU7-S11S DUNN, N. C., MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 19, 1956 .. > ..—._ .. FIVE CENTS PER COW no. n T I ** " LUCKY GIRL—President Eisenhower looks through his desk drawer for souvenirs for four-year old Clara Jo Proudfoot, National Easter Seal Child, after purchasing from her the first sheet of Easter Seals to help crippled children. The President also gave Clara Jo, of Miami, Fla, a $5 bilL Jh&AG atittfa JhinqA •f ROOTtl ADAMS PARSONS, JAYNE. RITA. LEX, DOLLS AND ORCHIDS Attorney Glenn L. Hooper, Jr. oT Dunn. asHflm district attorney, win no Aou»think, twi<* before Rt itHl— »aother church func tion away from hit own first Pres byterian Church here. He probably WHO also take the ttooe and trouble to find out in advance whether or not hit own pastor will be there. The popular young attorney was one Of several special guests in vited J>y Rommie Williamson to attend' the first meeting of the Men's Club out at the Grove Pres byterian Church. After the dinner meeting war over, Glenn bumped Into the Rev. *Leahe Tucker, pastor of bis own church, who was also a special guest. “Well. Glenn,'' admonished Par son Tucker good-naturedly, "now that you've found out what a Men’s Church dub meeting Is like per haps we can persuade you to at tend the one at your own church " For opce, the mouthpiece was speechless. He just gulped a cou ple of times and grinned, with a real guilty look on his face. BIRTHDAYS: Today is the birth day of Wayland Jones, Mrs. John L. Sorrell and Mrs. J. W. White head. LITTLE NOTES: Rody Williams was asking Tommy Harrall of Co lonial Lockers Saturday about the price of bams Said he has to buy three of them for Easter . . If he buys Colonial Hams, he'll have ham fit for a feast The Rev. and Mrs. J. W. Lineherger of Di vine Street Methodist Church ’ars getting ready to spend most of the summer in Europe .‘‘All our friends who have been over,” aaid Mr. Lineberger the other day as Arvel Tart was trimming his hair, “are telling us places to see. You IQssltnssA ob Pam Two) NEARLY 100 PEOPLE DEAD IN STORMS New York" Almost Paralyzed By Snow NEW YORK (ffl — New York City and its three-state metropolitan area was almost paralyzed today by a pair of violent storms that blanketed the city with more than Hearty WO person* were dead at a netult (4 the two etoe—■ ■gWy three persons died in the first bios which hit Friday with naar-Mis sard force acres the mid-Atlanti< and Hew England states. Ten non were reported dead in the second stage of winter’s dying ooe-twc punch. Tens of thousands of abandoned autos were stalled on city street! and along the nearby highway! and parkways in New Jersey. Con necticut and New York. In New York City alone police said 10,000 autos were abandoned and some 3,000 persons spent all oj part of . the nisht in stranded cars Subway service collapsed to many outlying sections of the city. Two New Jersey commuter train line* stopped Tunning other train* were delayed from a few minutes op to WOIff SWCt tMT The snow which began lazily about church time yesterday mora ine had piled 13 inches in the city by 8:30 a. m. today It added to a 4.8 inch fall which stalled traffic on Friday. It was the heaviest fall since the Christmas weekend “bis snow*’ at 1947 A record 25 8 inches fen in 34 bourn then. Spring is only two days off, bat ft seemed to be coming in on snow There was no prediction of temperature* The jnow traveled up from the mountains of North Carolina and across Virginia and Pennsylvania." DESPONDENT OVER HEALTH Route One Farmer Takes Own Life Matthew Strickland, 51 - year - old fanner of Dunn, Route 1, shot himself to death Monday morning about 10:45 o’clock at his home on the outskirts of Dunn. Mr*. Strickland told authorities that her husband came into the kitchen where she was preparing lunch and told her that he had a •ore throat and was going to rest for a while in their bedroom and asked that he not be disturbed. HEARD NOISE A few minutes later, she said, she heard a muffle sound and went to investigate. She found her husband lying dead on the floor, with a 30 gauge shotgun at his side He had fired one shot into his right temple Death was instant. Coroner Orover C, Henderson said Mrs. Strickland to id him her hus band had been despondent since given a physical examination for an insurance policy, when he learn, ed that he had high blood pres sure and heart trodbte. The coroner ruled that an in quest was not necessary. I - The body was brought to Hatch - I er-Skinner Fun real Home in Dunn. HASN'T BEEN INDICTED FOR CONTEMPT Myers Will Seek Job In N. C John Myers, the Camp bell College language pro fessor who was firea from his job for his attitude to ward Congressional inquir ies, -said yesterday that he may vacation in New York for a week but then he will returri to North' Carolina and try to get a job here. Summing up hi* attitude toward the House Un-American Activities Committee, wto questioned Myera ed os Communism in a nearing at Charlotte, Myers said. “They came down here to investigate Commun ism. and their Ides of Communism U anything left of slavery." Xt was his original opinion, he said, that the committee scheduled the Charlotte hearing in order to discredit the N. A. A. C. P.„ but he did not find much evidence of that at the hearings. Committee members attack, he said, seemed to be “random.” WILL VISIT PARENTS (Myers was discharged tram bis poslUpns as language professor and goo coaen at tne napust junior College in Buie's Creek sifter hie publicly announced decision to be an “uncooperative witness" at the hearings. His present plana are ’ to join his parents—bis father is a Baptist preacher—at their home near Fort Mill, South Carolina. Committee members. Myers claim, ed. handed out contradictory state ments as to whether he and other unfriendly witnesses at the Char lotte heaxlnps would be issued con tempt citation. No citation baa turned up yet, he said. Ervin Favors Voluntary Segregation NEW YORK (IPt — Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. of North Carolina called today for “a system of voluntary school segregation” as “the only way” of solving the segrega tion issue. The North Carolina Democrat that such a system is sanc tioned toy the unanimous Supreme Court decision in 1954 which for bids the states to segregate white and Negro children in public schools solely on the basis of color. Voluntary school segregation, Er vin said, would afford moderate Southerners of both races an op portunity to solve the South’s racial problem “in an atmosphere of good will, patience and tolerance.” He said thoughtful Southerners fear “that the* harmonious race relations now existing in the .South maybe destroyed by the intemper ate demands of those who seek immediate mixing of races in pub lic schools. 'Fortunately, those making these demands put an erroneous struction on the decision of May 17, 1964. this decision does not require bnmortlsfe integration of the pub lic schools of the South. It does not even require integration,** the sen ator wrote In an article in the current Look msgaxine. **1 believe in racial segre m It' exists in the South today, 1 “The reasons for my belief social segregation baaed on are staple. They do not rest on any theory of racial superiority or racial inferiority. NOT PKJUDICE “Racial segregation la not the offspring of racial bigotry or racial prejudice. It results from the exer cise of a fundamental American freedom—the freedom to select one’s associates. Whenever Ameri cans are at liberty to choose their own associates, they virtually al ways select within their own race,’* Ervin said. The senator said that Southern (Centimed On Page Pear) 1 EARNS FREE TRIP — It haa Jut been announced by W. E. Sim. M of State Capital Life Inst ance Company that Roland Adeox, Superintendent of the Dunn branch haa fully qualified for the company*! 19SC Preaident's Club Convention. Although there sUU remaina four montha qualifying time, Mr. Adeox haa through hie outstanding prod uction of ordinary Ihsarsm i al ready achieved thia honor which entitles he and hk family to an all expense paid trip to Atlantic City from August M to September 3rd, 1956. S/on WHborn To Head Chamber Won Wilbom, LiUington hard ware merchant, is the new presi dent of the LiUington Chamber of Commerce. ^ ' will sueoeed Caaey s Fowler, own er of a farm implement company. Other new officers are M P. Crew, Jr . vice-president; and Sel wyn O’Quinn, secretary- treasurer, who was re-elected. All officers will serve fdr one year. Wilbom, who has been In busi ness in LiUington for thirty years, is a fading Methodist layman and active in various civic affairs. Hi served as an officer of the LiUing ton Development Corporation which «os successful two years ago la building a new $135,000 industrial building and attracting the LiUing ton Garment Company, a new shirt manufacturing firm, to LiUington. + Record Roundup + 3HRTNER8 TO MZ2E7F — The Dunn Shrine Club will hold Us reg ular monthly meeting tonight at 7:30 at Johnson's Restaurant for a very Important business meeting. A too. Dr Balus will apeak on the Cripple Children's Hospital in Greenville. South Carolina. TO JOSET WEDNESDAY — The WMS of the First Baptist Church will meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 in the Ladies Parlor of the Church. The program topic “Make Me A Channel of Blessings- will be presented by the Ruth Gardner Circle of which Mrs. J. T. Mann is leader and Mrs. Allen Lee is pro gram chairman. Contlnaed oa Page Ms) Sergeant Wood Buried Sunday Sergeant Callbie F. Wood, Sr., 55, of the Dunn Po lice Department, died early Saturday morning at his home at 318 East Cumberland Street. He apparently suffered a heart attack and died in his sleep. Funeral service* were held Sun day afternooon at 4 o’clock at Hood'Memorial Christian Church. The Rev. Jack M. Daniel, pastor, officiated. Burial was in Green wood Cemetery. The body lay in state at the church for (me hour prior to the services. The body remained at the home at his brother. Freeman Wood, at 300 S. Magnolia Avenue until taken to the church. Members of the Dunn police force nerved as paUbearers. VETERAN OFFICER Sergeant Wood was a native and lifelong resident of Dunn, son ot the late Prank and Lizzie Monds Wood. He had served on the Dunn police force for 25 yean and has held the rank of sergeant for sev eral years. He was a member of Hood Me (Oeatfnaed ea Page Five non trailer In Peace Quest President Says WASHINGTON — Pres ident Eisenhower submitted to Congress today a $4,859, 795,000 foreign aid program tailored to meet Russia’s “new departures in foreign policy.” It included author ity for long - term U. S. aid commitments to underdevel oped countries. He warned in a 3.500-word spe cial message to the House and Sen ate that “we cannot now falter In our quest for peace." Although the Communists seem to have “put aside, at least tem porarily" the strategy of “aggres sion through force,” he said, there is no reason to believe they have abandoned their “sinister objec tives" of world domination. He said the United States murt continue military aid to free na tions because the huge and still growing Soviet armed forces “still cast an ominous shadow over the World.'’ And it must have a “flex ible” economic aid program to counter the Soviet Union's new program of “ceaseless probing for opi-trtunities to exploit political and economic weaknesses.” MOSTLY ASMS AID The President asked a total aid appropriation of $4,*50,975,000 fir the 1957 fiscal year starting July 1. He said part of this would cover prognapos authorized but not fully financed In previous years. He asked XJongress to authorise actual wr $4.672.475.000 in fUci The largest share of this - $2,925. 000,000—was earmarked for mili tary aid. Other major items in cluded $1,130,700,000 for “defense supporting" economic aid to mili tary allies; $170, 000, 000 for Middle Bast, Africa and Latin America; $175,500,000 for technical Point Four aid; $100,000,000 for a special fund for economic development in Asia; and $100,000,000 for a fund to meet emergency or special situations any where in the world. The military aid program In cluded $1,640,000,000 for Asia and the Middle East where, the Presi dent said, “serious risk of aggres sion still exists.” He asked Congress lor authority to make commitments up to ten years in length for assistance to underdeveloped counties in long tern non-military projects, with a ICwdoiel On Page Six) NAVY GETS PODRES NEW YORK W — Johnny Pod res, the Brooklyn Dodgers’ World Series pitching hero, reported ear ly today for his draft induction physical examination and learned promptly that be had been allo cated to the Navy instead of the Army Nanette And Sid Couldn't Agree NEW YORK W — Comedienne Nanette Fahray says she and Sid Caea&r parted company because they couldn’t agree on time, mon ey and other provisions of a new contract. Miss Fahray said she had no definite plans for next season. Boy, 8, Hangs Self At Play mrsBURaH. pa. an —* An eight-year-old boy, who often played at hanging his pet panda doll, hanged himself accidentally Sunday while at play in his home. The boy, Barry Enge, waa strap j led with a bathrobe cord. The coro ner’s office said he apparently tied and looped the free end loosely one end of the cord to a bannister around his neck. He then stood on a chair and either fedd or jumped off. The boy’s body was discovered by his father about an hour later Barry was an only child. (NEA Telephoto) NEW INCIDENTS IN OLD FEUD Community Baptists Anxious* for Status ^ Hot lava bubbles are still hitting the surface from the heat - generating feud between Dunn’s Second Bap tist Church and that part of its membership which broke off to form a new Baptist congregation. _ . . l xesteraay. judge n. r-uui oiricu land, moderator of the Little River Baptist Association, answered ques tions from members of the new church, who have been troubled by various statements about the legal ity of their group. ‘The Community Baptist Church.” * ‘‘We found out that we're Baptists officially,” claimed Joe Earnhardt, chairman of the board of the dea cons of the new church. He added that Moderator Strickland had told the group they could not be form ally admitted until this fall to the Little River Association. TWO BELIEVERS ENOUGH "The first question I asked him,” said Earnhardt, “was weren’t we Baptists — and if we weren’t, we’d like to understand why we weren’t. He gave me the answer that any two baptized believers could organ ize a Baptist Church.” Seventeen Baptists who for merly belonged to the Second Bap tist congergation are “pretty wed stirred up and hurt” said Earnhardt because of the manner in which the Second Baptists received their request for letters to the other con gregation. The Second Baptists, he said, have reAised to recognize the new church, and therefore “erased froth the rolls” the 17 members request ing the letters. Those erased con (Continued on Page Five Final Requiem For Fred Allen NEW YORK TO — A requiem mass for comedian Fred Allen. 61, will be celebrated tomorrow at St. Mafachy’s Roman Catholic Church. - The baggy-eyed humorist suc cumbed to a heart attack on a New Tori* City street Saturday night only hours after a doctor had given him a clean bill of health, his family said. Allen, who would have been 6J in May. was stricken while on hla (Continned « race Teel MAY ACCEPT WOMEN ATLANTA TO — A special So uthern Presbyterian study oom mittee will recommend to the church that women ho accepted as ruling elders and deacono in the future. The committee, composed of four men and one woman, decided to make the recommendation, which will go to the » Preahy teries for approval if appeased by the General Amenably, be cause of “a new understanding of the place in women in the church. Cox Will Address Dunn Jaycees T onite 1 Bob Cox of Chapel Hill, candidate far President of the North Carolina Junior Chamber of Commerce, will apeak before the Dunn Jaycees at their meeting tonight (Monday. March 1S». A National Director of the state wide young men’s civic group. Mr. Cox is a Chapel Hill men’s cloth ing store owner and Past Presi dent of the Jaycees there. The 28 year-old Carolina alumnus was a team-mate of Charlie Justice on the Tar Heels’ football squad of the late '40's. He It seeking tbs presidency of the group which Includes nearly 6,000 young men In 108 local dobs. Headquarters for the state organiz ation is In High Point and the tor - rent president is Edgar Qurgatnu of Williams ton. Elections will it * held at the annual convention *. i Charlotte on May 12. THREE YEARS SERVICE Mr. Oox has been active in stn a Jaycee activities for the past three years, having previously served ns State Vice-President for the F1|t:t District and as State Sporto Ohati man. He has attended all state Jay cee meetings during this period and