+ WEATHER +
Partly cloudy, warm and humid
with scattered mostly aftertioon
and evening thundarshowers to
day. tonight and Friday
Ehe II ailg Kiser
THE RECORD
IS FIRST
VOLUME 8 TELEPHONE 3117 — 3118
Dl NN. V C.. FKDIAY AFTERNOON. Allil ST 15. 1958
1 I\ 1 ( I N i s ( IN rs PI |{ ( OP\
NO 212
THE TRUCK THAT CAME TO DINNER
Housewife Injured By Debris
Truck Does Bellybuster Into House
Ready To
Wipe Out
20 Cities!
LONDON <UPI> — Reliable
sources disclosed today that if
Russia had precipitated a major
war with the West over the re
cent Middle East crisis, the
American end British strategic
air forces would have attempted
to wipe out 20 Russian cities w.th
one massive retaliation nuclear
attach.
Those 20 Russian cities, In
cluding Moscow and Leningrad,
are the primary targets for the
U. S. and British Tl-bombors in
the event the Soviets should re
sort to war against the Western
Allied powers.
Now that the United State and
Great Britain have relaxed their
war-possible alerts and Moscow has
announced the end of the Russian
army maneuvers on the Turkish
frontier, the danger of a world
war develooing over the Middle
East situation Is considered in
diplomatic and military circles to
have passed.
A Calculated Risk
However. It is now apparent
that one of the greatest calculated
risks of the cold war was involved
in the American and British mili
tary intervention in the Lebanon.
That risk was based on the
assumption of Anglo - American
diplomacy that Russia would not
(Contirvied On Page Two)
A huge truck loaded with fruit
jars picked up in Dunn crashed
with bellv-busting force into a
small frame house three miles
south of town on Highway 301 this
morning.
The nose of the truck stopped
only a‘ foot or two short of Mrh
Floyd Chance, wno was in a front
bed-room and had bent over to
pick up a pair of glasses.
She was hurt as the contents of
a loft tumbled on her head and
shoulders. Two neighbors. Mrs
Willard Price and Mrs Howard
Best, rushed her to the hospital
Patrolman W. T. Harris re
vealed at two this afternoon that
he is citing the truck-driver,
Roy Gibbs, for reckless driving.
Harris said the front end of the
truck was torn out and would
make it difficult to check Gibbs'
assertion 'hat the truck went
out of control.
They said she was too incoher
ent to give a clear account of
what happened
“I don’t know what went wrong”
said Roger Gibbs, a 27-vear-old
Fayetteville man who was the
driver of the truck
limbs said he was driving along
normally when the truck went out
of control, plunged on a long an
gle through a beanfield. missed
the big tree that shaded the Chan
ces’ home and hit the house with
smashing impact.
A few minutes after the front
of the house had been turned into
a leaning mass of rubble. Gibbs
nimbly pulled himself from the
cab of the truck. He suffered not
even a scratch.
Thirty-two-year-old Floyd Chan
ce. an employe at Autry Bros
; Milling Co., was working at the
| time of the truck crash that null
ed lown his home He was called
! and stopped for a few minutes to
survey the damage before dashing
j on to the hospital to see his 30
1 (Continued on Pafr Two)
Jail Didn't Work,
Judge Tries Again
James Livingston, a Dunn \*e
gro. has a wife and four children
He leaves them now and then arc
whertvhe does his wife goes to th<
law to get action
Once before he had been i t
Dunn Court, after going to Ret
Springs, and that time the judg<
decided the only thing to do wa:
send him to the roads Six months
Yesterday. Livingston was bad
in court, facing Judge H Pau
Strickland The julge didn’t rec
ognize him at first and then thi
light dawned He had a friendl;
discussion with Livingston, wb
said the reason he went off t
Newark N J . was to get a job
[ His wife felt he should have
mentioned he was going but he
I said he wrote a letter.
"I guess sending you to jal
doesn’t do any good.” said Judge
, Strickland, Instead he ordered hirr
, to pay $12 50 a week for now
“You’re a pretty good cotton
, picker, aren’t you?”
I Livingston admitted that he was
“This isn’t enough.” said Judge
t Strickland, "but I reckon it’s a!
r you can manage right now Whet
> you make some more money, I’n
> going to raise it.”
Being Held By Atlanta Officials
Dockery Admits
Alabama Slaying
ATLANTA iUPD Detectives reported today that Edwin H
Dockery, 24, hitchhiker accused of attacking a sxrldier who befriend
ed him. has confessed a strangulation murder near Birmingham, Ala
Dockery, alias Hay Bonjgor, was
j quoted as saying he fatally choked
Willie T. Heatherly of Cullman
County, Ala., and robbed him of
$2. The report came after Deca
tur, Ala., sheriff Jimmy Collier
and state investigator R. W.
Godwin headed for Atlanta to
question Dockery.
Accompanying the officers was
Donald Bullard, operator of the
service station near where Health
erly’s trussed body was found.
Dockery was arrested by Atlan
ta police early Thursday morning
1 after he tried to "chloroform" a
soldier who had given him a rid<\
Clifford Morris, Columbia, S C ,
said Dockery was the one who
attacked and tried to kill him
when he found that Morris had
some cash.
Morris said Dockery boasted of
murdering a man in Birmingham ,
Ala., but he later denied it.
Heatherly was apparently killed
Saturday shortly after he cashed
his $82 paycheck His decompos'd
body, with his hands tied behind
him and a belt wrapped around
i his neck, was found in a wooded
section just north of Cullman off
| U S. Highway 31
Heatherly's car was found in a
; downtown Birmingham parking
! lot. The seat covers were spat
! tered with blood and a bloody
. arm sling was found in it Police
I theorized that Heatherly wounded
I his attacker in the struggle which
led to Ms death
Atlanta police said Dockery
complained of a back injury and
was taken to a local hospital, but
dismissed Officers said he suf
I fered no wounds recently which
j bled.
Heatherly suffered a broken
wrist in the death struggle but it
! djd not bleed.
IT WAS A HARD LIFT
CHICAGO (UPI) — Officials oi
' the Chatham YMCA on Chicago’?
1 South Side today puzzled over i
theft. Someone “lifted" six curvet
redwood benches and a large patk
table from a new outdoor swim
ming pool.
The “Y“ officials are prettj
! sure the furniture was lifted sinci
i ' the pool Is surrounded by an 8
i foot high fence topped witl
barbed wire.
These Men Had
Car Trouble
William Hay Nordan has been
bound over to Harnett Superior
Court on a charge of automobile
theft Probable cause was found
in Dunn Recorder's Court yester
day by Judge H Paul Strickland
Nordan allegedly stole a 1953
Plymouth belonging to Mary D
Stewart and drove it 700 miles
before his arrest in Ix-e Countv
In another car case, John Oliv
er Mcl.amb of Benson grinned
sheepishly, admitted he had driv
en a car home from Strickland
Motor Co here and didn't get ar
ound to returning it A salesman
at the auto company, he said, told
him if he was dickering to trade
to go ahead and drive It home
Charged with temporary larce- j
nv. Mcl.amb pled guilty and was J
sentenced to 90 days suspended on .
payment of $50 fine and costs
— At Cub Olympics —
Tough On Den Mothers
The Cub Olympics at Erwin yes
terday just about ruined some den
i mothers who got more of a rare
, than they bargained for.
Most of the event*, like the
twenty-inch dash 'eat up the string
and get to the marshmallow',
were for the cubs themselves but
one was strictly for the den moms
Their task: run 20 yards, pick
up a nail, drive it in a board, run
back 20 yards. The nail-driving
was easy but the run was a tough
one, especially for the survivors
of the preliminary contest.
Mrs Blanche Williams of Erwin
and Mrs. James Fish of Angler
survived the first heat and were
so close to a tie in the second that
they were offered a run-off No
dice. Two runs were enough
Mrs. Williams, who leads Den
Three. Pack 84, was declared the
winner, Mrs. Fish of Angler's Pack
715 too second place and Mrs.
• Irene Sessoms of Den Four Pack
84 was third.
In the string-eating event, cubs
A F 1Ate of Den Three. Pack 84,
Oan Grady »rf Den One. Pack 84,
and John Strickland of Den Four,
Pack 719, were declared first,
ee< ond and thiijd respectively.
Other winners:
Balloon Bursting Contest First,
Billy Shaw. Pack 718 Anderson
Creek: second. Kddy West, Den
f)ne. Pack 714 Dunn, third. Kay [
D Campbell. Den Four Pack 711.
Sack Relay First. Den Four,
Pack 719. Dunn. aecond. Del
Three, Park 714 Dunn third, D'-n
Three. Pack 84, Erwin
Longest Whistle First Daniel
Grady. Den 1 Park 84 second,
Dtdkie Guy, Den Three Pack 84:
Billy Shaw. Den 2. Pack 713 An-j
derson Creek
Broadest Grin—F%-*t, Jimmy
Stanley. Den Five, Pack 714,
Dunn; second ifour-w'ay tie)—
Dannie Broadwell, Ed West, Dickie
Guy and Bill Harrington. Said
Bush, Jimmy Stanley Is “little
teeny boy whose grin measured
(Contiruied r»n Page Tw*i
Zorlu Angry
At Russia's
'War Threats'
l M I ED N Allow \ a | p|
Turkf' tod a y denounced Hus
sia's threats of war and gave Its
full -support to President Elsen
hower s plan for peace In the
Middle Past
Turkish Foreign Minister Fatlm
Rusto Zorlu told the I'nited N*
lions General Assembly that
“threats hurled continuously by
the Soviet t'nion are in rontradie
tion with their offers to establish
friend » relations which m con
sider highly desirable ’’
Th«' Kremlins policy, changing
“unilaterally from day to das "
Is a major reason why Turkey
Joined the Baghdad Pact foi de
fensive reasons Zorlu aid
He referred to Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Grormkn's chat
acteri/atlon of the Baghdad Part
as “the last pillar of foreign lm
periallsm and added
Itussian Warnini
“It is difficult to sec how much
a statement can tw considered
compatible with the dcsiie for
friendship depressed tiy (he dis
tinguished foreign minister of tin ;
Soviet t'nion “
Zorin's |)l<,i was m.dir j^3ftp.t
a baikgmund of stepped up so\
let propaganda hinting that Hu
ala might take action if \rnetiran
and British troops were not with
drawn from the Middle Fast The
sabre-rattling statement was made
In Pravda. the offielal Oommuptst
Party organ
The Western nations, meanw^:.
were pinning their holies for a
solution to the Middle Fast crlsP i
on a Norwegian resolution asking j
Secretary-General Dag Hammar
skjold to put Kiscnhower's plan I
Into action
Marvin Raynor's
Mother Is Dead
Mr*. Ncolin Raynor wife of .1
G Raynor, well known Linden rr ■ j
sident, died about 11 o'clock to I
day In Hlghsmith Hospital at Fay j
ettcville at the age of 70 j 1
She was the mother of Marvin 1
Raynor prominent Dunn buxine** ^
man and managpr of Relk's De- j
partment Store here
Mrs Raynor had been In ill
health for about a year
The body is at Hatcher-Skinner- I
Drew Funeral Home In Dunn Fun
era! arrangements will he announe (
ed later
THIS ON'F RFAI.LY SMEM.S
CHKRRY POINT N C HJPD j
Mrs R K Dd trick appealed
today to residents of this area not !
to harm her missing skunk named
Petunia
"Petunia Is unarmed and smells
nice," she said "I spray her with
cologne ”
I IONS l»M.Ml Mills \\|» ( II \ II I I II Ml M
HI Its l*li'i«ifrd hrrr 4l Ihr UvUlt s»hfr An
nivrr%*rt irlrbrallott l.ml night In Dunn
I ion* *irr «t frw of Ihr die II «r|t*s prrsrnt *n#| »h
fivr i hartrr mrmbrr* still nMIvr In Ihr dub l,*f%
*n right *rv (.rurgr Arthur .1 «rkfton. Mark 'I
Irrwkatt Hugh M I* rim** II \ and
1(4vtnoiwl I ( ruiniirlir It thr rhartrr mriu
hr is sI.hhIhu Prr*of1« nt ll« rnt.in I %n«h, I41 k
MlrMr* i»«h| prrH|tlnt( of I ions In
l«- r ti4tiwiii«l IlKIrit t (.ovrrnor st n \ Itiiitd of
Srtttforil 4ml I o,islnt.is(« r ( h.irlrs VY hittrfiton
%»ho w 4* i ltdirm.in oi thr i»ro*r,»m < ommittrr
M.iilv Knnrrt I'hoto
At Elaborate Silver Anniversary Celebration
Lions Told To Keep Eye On Goal
John I,, r.laik' Sttf'k!«•> of Chi r
olfe, Immediate past president *d
ion* International the worhj'*^
at .'r«t civic organluhtlon declar
ed hi i »■ Thursday iilgbl that l-iqtl
*111 t* faring It* greatest ehal
«igf anii opportunity at a 11rnr•
t also fair'- Its ,'reate*> danger
Th1 challenge ' he said "I* 1«.
■*tcnd I .ionlam anil il- phllonph}
>f International peaci goodwill
mil communtt) service into *i|r)
orm r of tno globe ’
No Kmtinc Place |
"(Irritrit (lancer* faring I lort-'
*m ” hr warned, “are conipt*rt-J
■nry. imilnrai. lethargy. and Id
rnr*»” arid then hr repeated a
llhlleal (illigtaUon "This l* not
(our resting plaer.”
1 We must never, never." he
'onfinued, "take our eye* off the
tnal If l.ioni«m la good enough
or 1400 eommunitle* In 02 tllf
erent rountrie* and geographl
■al location* It'a good enough for
t« re»t of the world If I.lo/iUm
* good enough for 600 000 men of
ill rare*, color*, and creed* han
led together In the common cau*e
if good will, then It I* good en
>ugh for men of goodwill every
where "
Stirkley was addre*alng the SI1
rcr Anniversary dinner banquet
»f the Dunn club held in the la
cl*hly decor atrd main banquet
lall of Phieora Country Club and
attended by Lion* dignitaries from
across the State and by represen
tative* of other local rtvlc group*'
who gathered to pay homage to
he group on It* 25 year* of com
rnunity service
Stlckley brought to the club the
IM-rsonal greeting* of hi* succes
sor International President Dud
ley Sims
President Lynch also read a. if
legram to the club from Pre\l
dent Sim*
"Nothing come* ahead of the
Church of Jesus Christ,” said tip
K ontirvred On Page Twoj
. . r—:—r: - . I i
Judge 5usie 5harp Qommg
From Murder To Mayhem
Judge Susie Sham will bd
charge when llam-lt Superior
Court opt’iix for a mo-week terni
on August 25. 1 ,
Clerk of Court £lliabeth Ma
thew* released a list of
which Indicated it may be heavy
going. There are 82 cases coming
up including eight which go. be
fore the grand Jury for a true bill
or d Is missel
MONDAY, AUGUST 25
GRAND JURY
n Graham Wright. A I) W with
.Jntent to Kill, etc ; Stephen Me-!
•Call, murder. Nathaniel W'.l’lams,
f Larceny; Lacy May nor Assault
twith Intent to lta[>e John Lewi*
, Hlue, Aiding and Abbctting B &
JO, John L Mirnms, B & E; WIl
ham Scott Pittman. Aiding & Ab
bottmg Hit A Hun; Wayland B
[Carter, A D W With Intent to
Kill, etc.
TRIAL DOCKET
Roy Chance, l»t degree burg-'
lary. etc; Henry Ferguson, op.
auto Intox Ernest McLaughlin,
op auto intox.. Wade Cobb, op.
auto intox; Dewey E Spivey,
aban & non-support Willis Gray.
V P L 'sale of beer': Belton F
Jones, larceny Hubert Dan Allen,
manslaughter; Billy Messer, Ben
nie McLeod, larceny & receiving;
Barnard Gus Mason, op. auio tn
tox ; Martin Luther Brown Jr ,
C A K driving; (Hershell Barnes,
t< ontinjird On Page Tw«l
Lay Plans For Headquarters
New Step Toward
Savings-Loan Bank
A not hi* r «tej> hiia been taken to
„-««rcl (hr early fulfillment of «
[plan to eatabliah In Dunn a Klr«1
■federal Saving* and loan organ
Kmmett A Id red ge amnninm
.here yeaterday that a Kir at Build
era (orpotation has been former:
with Italph Hanna Johnny Wei
Iona and himself aa the Incorpnr
atora
"I’lana are being drawn now for
tin- building," said Aldredge, "am
several alle* are under consider
a lion
lie stared that a I mat Ion Irt in
tK'ar downtown will l»e selected
Aldredge did not commit t h t
group trr a dale for the formal op
«*»iini£ but hlntrd If would probate
; ly romi* sometime* this fall
\ldr**dgf’ statrd th«*rt* is "no
'doubt" that th«* minimum drpoalt
I of 1250.000 will b.- exceeded by
I the time Ihr door* are opened Hr
*avx more than SIMM) lUM) hat al
ready been xubarrlbed
Approval of (he federal govern
■ merit for the new Institution ha»
already been obtained There are
atiff requirement* laid down to
protect depositor! Deposits up to
110 o<H) will t>e guaranteed
A full-time manager will he
hired but Aldredge *ald that rhe
man to fill this post ha* not been
■.< lerted yet The building plan*
1 will include a drive in window
to provide eu*y acre**
j
First Of The 1958 Campaign
United Fund Plans
Meeting On Monday
Tin- UnH*»fl Kund .»f Ouim will hold fl»- first uu-fting ot iti tJ >n
(campaign on Monday night at H 00 at t|»- Carolina I’owt-r anti Light
Co offl<f
I The meeting will lx- (hr prelim
jirlaiv meeting of the Budget and
AIJih atioriH Committee, headed by
Herman Lynch Till* committee,
Will hear from representatives of
the seven local and lx slate and
national agencies supported by the
fund, as they present their bud
get needs for !a'>H
The United Fund Is that com
bined effort on the part of the
it ontin/ird On Page Twol