* WEATHER + Considerable cloudiness and cool with scattered light rain tonight Thursday occasional rain or scat tered showers. The D aily Kenmd THE RECORD IS FIRST VOLUME 8 TELEPHONE 3117 — 3118 DUNN, N. C., WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON DECEMBER 18 1957 FIVE CENTS PER COPY NO. 1! Crack Musicians Perform Before Large Audience Ill W1II.. I..ve Linda and Helen Lee Tart Dunn N. c. Dear Santa Cluse I am a little gril 5 years old. I have been a good gril. Please bring me a tea set. Doll & Doll Carriage for Christmas. Please bring my brother a re cord player. And please try to bring all the rest of the boys and grils what they wont and I will be real hap py. I will leave you some cake & milk on the table. I sure hope you enjoy it. So good night and hope to see you Christmas Love Wiclie Stephenson Dunn Rt. 3 N. C. DEAR SANTA DJ Dear Santa, I am a little boy 5^ years old. For Xmas I would like a leather jacket, two gun and hoster. and two cars. My sister would like a baby doll. Cordially James Coxum (Continued On pace Two! Midnight Service On Christmas Eve When the clock chimes twelve on Christmas Eve, Hood Memorial Christmas Church will hold its annual midnight service. For an hour preceding midnight, soft organ music will fill the church and Mrs. Thomas Jackson will continue to provide an organ background during the actual ser vice which will be done entirely to candlelight. Those who attend are to enter and leave the sanctuary in com plete silence. Becky Jo Cannady will appear as Mary in a tableau of the Ma donna. Theme of the candlelight cere- r mony will be,. ‘‘In the Stillness of c the Night.” Christmas Eve falls on s Tuesday night. j The two speaking parts in the service will be taken by James Surles and Mrs. Mamie Clyde Jef freys. Eugene Huggins, choir director, will sing ‘‘0 Holy Night” and “In the Stillness of the Night.” The tableau will be the center of wor ship. Re*-. Jack M. Daniell, pastor of the church, will pronounce the be nediction. This is the fourth year that the midnight service has been conducted at the Dunn church. LONDON (IP! — A Soviet scien tist has predicted that flights to the moon will be possible within the next 10 years, Moscow Radio reported today. One Actress Was Nearly Nude Princess Attends Naughty Stage Play LONDON (UP)—Princess Margaret showed up unex pectedly Tuesday night at a play in which a nearly.nude actress portrays Britannia. Margaret stared unblushingly at the beautiful showgirl posing 50 feet away from her in a scene in the play “The Entertainer” which stars Sir Laurence Olivier. The princess went to the theater on a snap decision. Her appear ance surprised officials, but they made no attempt to censor the scene. The play was written by John Osborne, author of "Look Back in Anger” which is now running in a New York theater. Court circles were surprised at Margaret’s visit because Osborne recently made a bitter attack on royalty. She Liked It Friends said Margaret enjoyed the play. Earlier Tuesday the Princess passed up an invitation to the wed ding of another of her old escorts, handsome millionaire Christopher Loyd. Billy Wallace, who has become iContinued on Pan Twoi TIMES ARE TOUGH AGAIN NEW YORK (UP)—One sub way rider must have been dis appointed when the subway strike ended Monday. A letter to the New York Daily News read: “It has been a pleasure riding the jammed subways these past few days, and I trust the strike will continue for ma ny weeks to come." It was signed, ‘Ralph, the pick pocket.” CARE TO TRAVEL? HOLLYWOOD (IP) — Actor Cor el Wilde has concocted a new ocktail which he calls “The Con tellation.” “Four of them and you oin outer space.” Big Sing Coming On Xmas Eve Everybody, including those with ionsillities or a general monotone, is invited to the big sing around the town Christmas tree on the evening of December 24. Spirit not voice quality will count at this big community sing. Mrs. Wendy Hunter, manager of the local Chamber of Commerce, said the tree (located near the Catholic Church) should be brigh tening the avenues within another night or two. Complete plans for the sing are to be announced later. Talks Slated With Russians At Early Date PARIS (UP)—The United States and its NATO allies agreed unanimusly today to strengthen the Atlantic alli ance’s defensive shield with American missiles and nu clear stockpiles in Europe. At the same time, they agieed unanimously today to talks with' the Russians. Full agreement on the entire summit conference agenda was hammered out by the foreign andi defense ministers of the 15 NATO countries at a meeting this morn ing. It was then submitted for fin al indorsement by the heads of government at their third working session, which began at 6:10 p. m. U. S. delegation sources hasten ed to stress that no "deal” was involved. They said the United States did not agree to new East West talks merely to win the Eu ropean members’ acceptance of American missiles in the NA’l’O defense shield. Two-Way Plan The agreement still has to be spelled out in detail. But it con stituted, in effect, a sweeping two way plan for putting new vitality into the alliance. It will bolster the NATO group with every mod ern weapon in the West's arsenals while at the same time seeking new talks with Russia to end the nuclear arms race. The agreement came as the NATO conference, spured by the United States' successful launch ing of the Atlas missile, headed into the home stretch. America’s NATO allies accepted in principle the U. S. offer of nu clear stockpiles and missile bases in Europe. Decisions on just where these would be established were left for further review. In any case, the bases could not be ready for use for at least another 12 to 18 months. All 15 countries approved in principle a British plan for a bal anced NATO force to which each nation would contribute those arms it is best able to provide. They agreed on further integra tion of NATO armed forces, estab lishment of an integrated NATO air defense system in Europe, tigh-^ ter concentration of supply servic es and closer Integration of nav ies. SPINNER OF GIFTS—The almost-90-year old hands of Mrs. P. H. Westbrook (above) made aU the Christmas gifts in this colorfully wrapped boxful. A resident of the new Hinson Rest Home % r in Dunn, she made the gifts for relatives and i for friends who work at the home. She will be f 90 this coming Spring. (Dally Record photo by 11 Ted Crall.) Christmas Parties In Full Swing Here LIONS STAGE CHRISTMAS PARTY—Mem bers of the Dunn Lions Club entertained their wives and ladies at an elaborate Christmas lad ies’ rtght party in the General Lee Room of Johnson’s Restaurant here. Pictured here, left i to right, are Mrs. Ray Wood, Willie Moff, Mrs. Moft, and Mrs. Agnes Cannady. It was one of the biggest Christmas parties held here this season. President Charles Whittenton was mas ter of ceremonies. (Daily Record Photo.) Dulles Warns Against Any Red Promises WASHINGTON (IP)—Secre tary of State John Foster Dulles tossed a new warning against Soviet promises to day into the Allied debate in Paris over the advisability of East-West talks. In an article in Life magazine appearing on newsstands today, Dulles said the Soviet Union is seeking the break-up of Western alliances and Western acceptance of expanded Communist world in fluence as the price of a cold war armistice. A 24-year record of broken Rus sian promises shows that the free world can rely on no agreement with the Communists that it can not enforce. Dulles wrote. An unenforceable a r m i stice agreement could imperial the anti communist world, Dulles indicat ed, if it lulled the West into let ting down its guard. Diplomats were surprised at the timing of Dulles’ expression of views on the dangers of trying to do business with the Russians. The article, released simultaneously by the State Department and the magazine, appeared just a week after Soviet Premier Nikolai Bul ganin called for new East - West talks. The State Department said the article was written long before the receipt of Bulganin’s messages to Western leaders, although the cur rent NATO “summit” meeting had already been scheduled. Benson Place Is Padlocked Hudson’s Place, a combination restaurant and hot dog stand oper ated by Arthur Hudson on the south side of Main Street in Ben son, was padlocked late Friday af ternoon under a temporary order signed by Judge Leo Carr of Bur lington, who was presiding over Johnston Superior Court. Hudson was ordered to appear before Judge Clawson L. Williams of Sanford in Lillington at 2:30 Monday afternoon, January 6, to "show cause, if any he has, why this order should not be made per manent until the hearing.’’ District Solicitor W. Jack Hooks in a civil complaint requ|sted the padlocking order on the grounds j that Hudson’s Place was operated j i untiuurd ’n V-acc Twai Building Dedicated At Xmas Banquet Rev. Andrew Stirling, state su perintendent of Assemblies of God, was the speaker last night as members and wives of the Men's Fellowship gathered for 3 Christ mas banquet. The meeting-place was a recent ly completed building located on C. IIII ch fe< wa nif A. Jernigan’s pond which the ■n’s fellowship has prepared for ireh and community activities. I'he new building is 25 by 50 t long. The formal dedication s held in conjunction with last ht’s party. « OPlIniirH Otl P%f* TVSl Denies Butler Had Small Boys In Car A witness to the incidents on Highway 301, where highway pa trolmen claim they pickel up two drag-racers Saturday night, has objected to a statement in yester day’s Record that ‘‘small boys” were riding in the car of Charles Butler. Butler, one of two youths held and charged with racing, claimed he was only out there to watch. MXmtiiiiiH: On Page T^oi Directors Salute Dr. McQueen Hutaff Takes Post On Hospital Board Charles D. Hutaff, Sr., Dunn businessman, has been named to a life position on the board of directors of Betsy Johnson Memoiial Hospital here. He fills a vacancy created by the death of Dr. Angus McQueen, widely-known minister and edu cator who died at the hospital of which he was a director of Decem ber 7. Dr. McQueen was 81 years old. Hutaff’s appointment to the board was announced this morn ing by board chairman Myers Tilghman, following a regular meeting last night. Others who serve on the board are Lofton Tart, Raymond Cro martie, Dr. C. L. Corbett, Dr. J. R. Johnson, J. R. Byrd, and Earl I McD. Westbrook. The board joined in adopt ing a resolution in tribute to Dr. McQueen. Hospital administrator Hoyle Green released the text of the resolution this morning. It read: “. . .In the passing of Dr. An gus R. McQueen the board of trustees of the Betsy Johnson Memorial Hospital . . . has lost a loyal and faithful member . . . (who) served in this capacity with good judgment in all matters af fecting the operation of the hospi 1” Continued on Ptff Two) 1 I CHARLIE HUT AIT