* WEATHER * Partly cloudy, warm and humid today, with widely scattered thun dershowers. High in the 80s in the mountains and 88 to 93 else where. * THE RECORD IS FIRST VOLUME 7 TELEPHONE S117 — 3118 DUNN, N. C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 24, 1957 FIVE CENTS PER COPY NO. 141 BRIGHT FUTURE—Sam Yaffe (second from light) predicted an impressive future for the Bien Jolie plant here. Here he looks over one of the garments being turned out at the local plant with Emmett Aldrttlge, former head of Dunn Investors (left). Miles Friedman, vice-president of Benjamin and Johnes (next to Aldredge), and Sam Lazara, factory manager (right). Has Facilities To Double Payroll Bien Jolie Aiming Higher Yet I Jhinqjy ED SULLIVAN HOST TO A DUNN FAMILY Corporal Rofhmie Williamson, commander of the State Highway Patrol in Harnett, has received orders to report to Manteo this coming weekend to serve as an aide and escort to one of the visit ing governors who will be there attending a conference-. Rom - mie has received similar orders to assist visiting dignitaries be fore...One of them a decade or so ago happened to be a fellow by the name of Dwight David Eisen hower, who was visiting the State with his wife, Mamie....The popu lar Dunn officer spent three days squiring the Eisenhowers around. ....Cute little Dolly Peay. eight - year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Peay of Dunn, will make her television debute Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 o’clock over W MFD, Channel 6, at Wilmington... Dolly, a student of George Mark’s School of Dance, will sing and dance on a kiddie program.. She’s got talent-plus.Mr. and Mrs. James Snipes and their two sons, Jay and David, had a fine time in New York last week. They didn’t just see the Ed Sulli van Show — they were on Mr. Sullivan’s personal guest list and occupied reserve seats at the big broadcast.. .They also saw a loi of other good shows.The same iContlnneel On Pief Sir) “Our ambition in Dunn is not to stop with this build ing,” said Benjamin and Johnes president Sam Yaffe. On Saturday Yaffe and other high officials of the Bien. Jolie com pany were on hand for the house warming at the new plant Which has been in operation here for sev eral months. Noting that ithe payrou at the Dunn branch of the famed founda tion garments organization has surged to $375,000 annually, Yaffe remarked. “We have the capacity and space for double the present employ ment ” Yaffe said that he expected the local payroll would soon reach half a million dollars annually. A major factor in the build-up of the output from the local plant, Yaffe Indicated, is the labor force available to do the work. The Bien jolie head said that girls and wo men hired here “have really grasp ed our way of doing things and we like that.” “Pass the wrod along to any of the girls that you know” that Bien Jolie might be able to give them employment, he advised, the assem bled guests. Local supporters and some out-of-town guests were on hand to hear Yaffe and other spea kers, eat a barbecue luncheon sup plied by the company, and inspect the plant during the Saturday housewarming. I A front-row audience for Yaffee and the local speakers were a long line of Bien Jolie’s leading oper ators—ladles who had dressed for mally and acted as a receiving line to welcome the guests a^ they ar rived. Earl Westbrook, president of the Dunn Chamber of Commerce, acted as master of ceremonies and brought a number of local men to (Contlnaed 0» Page Eight» Arson Suspected In House Burning The house was falling in as the fire department ar rivd. Throwing flames high into the sky, the burning building roused a large crowd fo curious spectators early Sunday morning and they stood about as firemen pumped water on the roof and sides of the blazing dwelling. It was at 708 North Layton Ave nue and belonged to Mrs. O. T. Wilson. Afterwards, it was reported that the house had been empty since the morning when the occupants reportedly moved out. Fire Chief Ralph Hanna said he suspects arson, but stated there was no physical evidence uncov ered to prove this nor any indi cation of the supposed perpetra tors. John E. Norris, member of th fire department and the town’s fire marshal, said some neighbors living nearby had allegedly heard a car drive up shortly before the fire was discovered at 1:35 a. m., Sunday morning. Mrs. WHson, the owner, said she was sure “no-one is angry enough with me” to have delib erately set fire to her house as an act of destruction. The residents of the house, she said, were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sea e (O—tt—< Oa rage Ms) . -.1 Delay Hearing On Bond For Bobby Pope The hearing to determine whe ther bond will be allowed for Bob by Pope, Dunn youth accused in the fatal shooting of Harold Ma yo, has been indefinitely post poned. Attorneys Everett Doffermyre and D. K. Stewart had originally expected to as kfor bond at a hearing last Monday. Postponed until this Monday, the hearing has now been delayed till some un specified date. Pope was arrested on June 2 for the night-before slaying ol Mayo, 21-year-old Four Oak; youth, whom he described as his best friend. The shooting took place in Mayo’s car. Otis West, claiming he was in the middle seat of the car when the shooting occurred, said the two were argu ing over a gun. Bobby is the brother of Dunn Policeman Red Pope and well known in town. The shooting ol the Four Oaks youth, Bobby’s dis appearance and subsequent reap pearance, only to be arrested bj his brother, electrified the town Boxing Combine Smashed NEW YORK (IW) — Federal Judge Sylvester J, Ryan today or dered dissolution of the two In ternational Boxing Clubs and com plete divorce of Promoter Jim Norris and partner Arthur Wirtz from the Madison Square Garden Corp. Those two orders were the most important punches in today's de cisions on remedies to smash the most powerful boxing combine in ring history, which already had' been found guilty of monopoly in its promotion of title fights. The divorcement of Norris and Wirtz from the Garden corpbro tion will be achieved by forcing them to resign as president and director of the garden, respective ly, within 30 days after July 1 and lose all voting power on their stock. They are ordered to dispose of their 2 million dollars worth of Garden shares within seven years. Special Meeting Called On City's Budget Problems In a quiet session of the Dunn City Council, the hoard deferred until Monday night any further action on the proposed city bud get. Preliminary approval must be gi ven by July 8 and final approval 20 days thereafter. Board members heard from W. F Morrison, execfutiMe secneitary of the North Carottaa board of ex aminers for plunSSfcig and heating contractors, on the state licensing laws. Local plumbsrs have com plained there are unlicensed free lancers at work in Dunn. They approved curb and gutter for a property owned by Bob Baer on Cole St., and afcfo for the James Snipes property at Granville and Gen. Lee. Only one bid was received in re sponse to a board request for es timates on private upkeep of the Greenwood Cemetery, work present ly undertaken by the town with its own workers. This bid, from house-moved Addison Brewington, was • not even opened, the council deciding so little interest had been shown they would postpone action until later. A request for traffic signs on Guy Avenue was tabled. Postponed for later action was a request from Mo tor Credit that a parking meter be Thoved. At the Gulf station, no meter will be taken but three will “slide forward.” Since the regular meeting would faii-on July 4. CouncUmen resche duled their next regular session for July 1, a Monday instead of the usual Thursday. A new shipment of city tags has arrived, said City Manager Uzzle, who has advised all motorists who haven’t bought them they’d better hurry. A list is being prepared for Dunn police of those who bought state tags but not the city tags. Those convicted of skipping this little item will be fined with court costs instead of the mere dollar it costs to get the tags before police | haul them in. COMES ROLLING IN—Elmore’s new feed mill, Jusit off 301 south, held an open house Saturday, showed off its facilities to local farmers who have been invited to bring their grain there for processing Photo above was snapped as the first load of corn was sent through the firm’s neatly arranged processing unit. Lifting bag (right cen ter) is James Elmore. He runs business with his father, J. H. Elmore (seen just behind him). (Rec ord Photo.) To Restrain Man From Sin ... Billy Says ; Hell Necessary NEW YORK (UP)—Evan gelist Billy Graham said Sunday night that Hell is necessary to keep man from sin as the electric chair is necessary as a deterrent tq murder. Graham discussed his concept of hell before some 18,000 persons in Madison Square Garden. The North Carolina preacher said he did not know what hell was like “but I know the word (Continnfid On rase it*' Princess Meg s New RomanceBrings T alk LONDON (UP)—Princess Margaret’s frequent dates with Lord Patrick Beresford touched off new speculation today about her marriage plans and brought a gossip column comment that she might be poaching on an other woman’s romatic pre serve. Anne Edwards, columnist for The Daily Express, suggested that the 27-year-old princess and the 23-year-old peer might be getting serious. She also said their age differences would not matter. The “poaching” remark came from Ephraim Hardcastle of the Sunday Express who reported that socialite Joanne Smith—Bingham, 21, was “mortified” when Beres ford entered the royal box at As (Continued Ol PM* PRINCESS MARGARET Nineteen Escape Without Injury 17 Persons Killed In Plane Crashes Stevie Stone Hurt As Jeep Wrecks A four-year-old Lillington boy and his father were both Injured on Friday night when an oncoming car failed to dim its lights and the jeep in which they were riding ran off the side of a road into a ditch. The father, Allen B. Stone, said today that ‘he expects ms son to be out of the hospital in two or three days. Stevie Stone, 3,‘ suf fered a fractured collar-bone and a minor skull fracture. The fath er received a couple of cracked ribs but was not hospitalized. Stone said the wreck occurred three or four miles from Lilling ton. After the wreck, a car behind took them to Good Hope Hospital in Erwin. Highway Patrolman Ro bert Beck investigated the accl - dent which occurred about 10:30 p.m. Friday night. By UNITED PRESS .. An airliner crashed with i heavy loss of life at Por Hardy, B. C., Sunday, bu another liner made an em ergency belly landing a Minneapolis without scratch to its passengers c crew. At least 17 persons were kllle In two plane wrecks Sunday. Nineteen other persons escape unhurt In crash landings Sunds and today. At Port Harty. 14 persons wei (Continued On Page Six) Today's Blast Was Biggest One Yet Fired ANGELS’ PEAK, Ney., (UP)—The Atomic Energy j Commission unleashed the fifth and heftiest atomic ex plosion of its 1957 expri ments today—a blast so powerful it ripped off a door and cracked the concrete wall of the control block house 14 miles away. ' j Its mighty flash shamed the post-dawn daylight and momen tarily blinded unguarded witness es 45 miles distant. Its sound wave bounced off a stratosphere layer and was heard in Reno, Nev. 300 miles away. The detonation was set up as the first major test, in the sched uled 20-shot series, of a totally new approach to civilian under - ground shelters. 1 In addition to testing the survi val characteristics of civilian shel ters beneath concrete domes; ex periments were conducted to de termine the most suitable radia tion-protective clothing for soldiers and civilians and the effects of radiation fallout on foodstuffs. Interior doors at the control point swung freely in the earth quakelike shock, wave, the AEC reported. No one was Injured. The door went flying off its hinges and a four-foot long crack split the thick concrete wall. i . Men In Trenches A total of nearly 1,000 military observers occupied trenches 5 1-4 miles from ground aero, the first use of troops close up in the cur 1 t t t a r d d y rent series. > Troops have been used in tests during previous years. They have been stationed up to one and one fifth miles from ground zero, al though undergoing less powerful blasts. Military items for testing in cluded field fortifications, fox hol es and gun emplacements and battlefield equipment in addition to various types of protective wear for the soldier of the atomic age. “Only light fallout readings are anticipated” along Highway 93 and “for further distances into Utah,” the AEC said after the blast. It’s announcement said the cloud, which had started out to the southeast, had taken a firm course as scheduled slightly north of due east. Held by Balloon A thunderous roar shook the Nevada proving grounds 45 miles from the observer’s site as the (Continned On Page Seven) . * Erwin Value Days Begin Tues. At 9 Erwin Value Days, designed to be even bigger and better than the tremendous money-saving ev ent sponsored by the friendly bu siness firms of Erwin, last June, will get underway Tuesday morn ing at 9 o’clock and continue thro ugh Saturday night, with business firms of Erwin offering outstand ing and almost unheard-of values during these five days. The slogan is “Bigger and Bet te a n Ci c! n c n r” than before and merchants •e busy bringing out their finest ;w merchandise and slashing pri ;s to the bone. Merchants on the committee in large this year are: Roy Cameron, retiring chair - lan; George Joseph, incoming lairman; Ty Thomas, J. A. Hol ies, Buck Godwin. They’re pulling out all the stops (Omitinned On Pngn Stx> Supreme Court Bars Sending Obscene Material In Mails WASHINGTON (UP) — The Supreme Court # today upheld the constitutionality of the federal law that bars sending obscene material through the mail. Justice William J. Brennan Jr., speaking for the court majority, said “obscenity is not expression protected toy the First Amend - meat’’ guaranteeing freedom of V • \> ■ 1 .A \ f the press. At the same time, the court up held the validity of a California statute enacted in 1870 which makes it a crime to write, ad - vertise or distribute Indecent lit erature. The court division scenity law was 6 to eral case. It was 7 California case. Justices Hugo Ham on the ob fed the Wil instances. Justice John M. Har lan dissented In the federal case but concurred in the California case. Chief Justice Earl Warren con curred in the result. He wrote a separate opinion. Not Synonymoos Brennan emphasized that “sex and obscenity are not synony - Obscene material U matai (Cantinned On fl|» ttxj raous.