Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Aug. 1, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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(OjurtJw ...» Wewa v fr ju-i» I >>i rr» r . Variable cloudiness and continued quite warm through tonight with scattered mostly afternoon and evening thundershowers. , - ■ .! w i — VOLL»^ Jl nuraoNS mi-tui - uut-ms -DUNN, N. C. THURSDAY AFTERNOO ..... ... ... ' 1 1963 FIVE CENTS PEE COPT , ■, ..--... DUNN KIWANIANS BUILDING GIRL SCOUT HUT—President; Gordon Townsend and -a group of Dunn Kiwanians are pictured (here at the site of the new Girl Scout Hut being erected by the Dunn club. The building to cost $2,000, will have 840 square feet and is located beside the nut of Boy Soout Troop t$6, behind the Dunn Armory. Shown left to right are John Lewis, Dr. Clarence E. Roberts, Dr. Townsend Abe Elmore and Gerald Mann. (Daily Record Photo by Russell Bassford) Democratic Committee Pays Tribute To Pate The Harnett County Democratic Executive Committee Wednesday night endorsed County Commis sioner WUlam A. (Bill) Warren of Erwin for appointment as county coroner to fill out the unexplred term of the late Coroner R. L. Turlington Back From Omaha Trip Henry A. Turlington of Dunn, Route 3, widely-known breeder of prise-winning Duroc hogs, has re turned from the annual meeting of the National Duroc Association in Omaha, Nebraska. Mr. Turlington is president of the national association. He flew in a Jet from Omaha to Chicago that traveled 555 miles per hour. The trip from Raleigh Durham airport to the Midwest ern city took only a few hours. “I made the trip a lot quicker than it used to take me to go from Coats to LUlington,” declar ed the farmer Chief Deputy TJ. 8. Marshal and prominent Democra tic party leader. (Bob) Pate, also of Erwin. Formal appointment of the vet eran Erwin official, now serving his third term oil the county board of commissioners, is expected at the monthly meeting of the board on Monday. Although an endorsement by the county’s Democratic leaders is not binding on the county board, it customarily follows the recommend ations of the committee. While nearly a doaen wen-known democrats of the county had made a bid for the appointment, only three names were placed In nomin ation at the executive committee meeting and Warren wan by an overwhelming majority on the first ballot, ,* Watted received 19 votes, Assis tant Coroner Paul Drew of Dunn received three votes and Dr. Bruce Blackmon of Buie’s Creek received two votes. Make It Pwanlmens Dr. Blackmon’s wife, a member of the executive committee, then made a motion that Warren’s en dorsement be made unanimous and it was carried. Dunn attorney Wiley Bowen, precinct chairman in Aver asboro No. 3, nominated Drew and the Rev. Robert Newton of Bute’s Creek, precinct chairman in Neill’s Creek, nominated Dr. Blackmon. Chairman Neill McK. Ross, who presided over the meeting, read a letter from the Harnett County Medical Society endorsing Black mon for the post. Drew, who has acted as coroner since the late Mr. Pate became 111 about three weeks ago, has served (Continued on Page 6) Postal Routes Are Extended Po&tal routes are being expand ei‘'ftrto two new* lillHngton areas this week giving service to,#p es timated 400 people. V i u Postmaster Lou Bottlgller ’ ‘ skid his office has received approval to give fuller coverage In the Shaw town and Church Street areas. The service, to be part of R-2, will begin Saturday. Bottigller estimated that the ser vice will give mall box delivery to some 300 people In Shewtown and to some 100 residents of the Church Street area. They have been getting their mall at the Lilllngton post-office, he said. Bottigller Is urging that cltlsens of the areas put up mall boxes this week so that they might be getting mail at their home. His Women. Sex, Art and Medicine Dr. Ward -His Four Faces EDITOR’S NOTE: In the fol lowing dispatch hr the London Daily Expres*, Dr. Stephen A. Ward — key figure in Britain’* act and security scpndat -talks freely about his life and women, an, art and medicine. Coyprifht by London Daily Epiwss Distributed by DPI LONDON (UPI) — Artist, osteo path, playboy, romantic. These are the four faces of Stephen Ward. Proclaied as a leading por trait art|st, he sketched royalty at Buckingham Palace. Accepted as a top society osteo path, the famous were among his patients. . . .. A witty and gay conversational ist, he was a sought-after guest at many exclusive Mayfair dinner parties. Yet the complex Stephen Ward was also a libertine, poroograph er, and constant companion of j prostitutes and call girls. He was happy in drab Soho clubs, shoddy Bayswater restaurants and de lighted in squalid sex parties. Women Fascinate Him Stephen Ward has talked about his life, his women, sex, art and medicine. On women: **I suppose I have been one of the most successful men In London wilt* girls since the war. I have never had any (Continued on Page Four) Now In Iron Lung LONDON (UPI) — Dr. Stephen Ward underwent an operation, developed bronchial pneumonia and was placed in an "Iron lung" respirator today by doctors fight ing to save his life. •Dba 50^ ear-old society c»too path was convicted on vice charges Wednesday only hours after he took an overdose of sleeping pills in an apparent suicide attempt to beat a Jail sentence. He was rushed to St. Stephen's Hospital and has been unconsd ous for almost two days, with his condition fast becoming worse, A hospital bulletin this morning said he was “grievously and criti cally ill” Mid had undergone a tracheotomy — an operation to help his breathing. -- A second bulletin issued this af ternoon said: “Dr. Ward’s condition has de teriorated and he has had to be returned to mechanically - eon trolled breathing.’’ (Continued on Page •) General Electric Is Awarded Harnett Contract The Town of Lillington Awarded : General Electric Company a con tract In the amount of *1,740.00, for the furnishing and installation of st 10 horsepower Triad, fire and air raid siren. This siren is Civil'De* fenjO approved and meetS jift sp^c-; be forlABHt Will be a high and low :a<f||HPpie(d douMfc^M, The second wHT t» taa^Kefifc. which will have a high jM note undulated double third being the fire slgnaffwMMl will have an alternating high tone’ then tow tone, then repeat. i This toeing the first of this type of signalling in the county, hopes are that the Other towns can soon be able to install this type of equipment because to qualify for other types of emergency equip ment, the towns will have to have this type of warning signal. RA LEIGH (UPI) — Got. Terry Sanford today named State Sen. Edgar J. Gurganus of Wllllama ton and State Rep. Jack A. Moody of Siler City to new term* on the State Prison Commission. Gurganus served on the Prison Commission since 1957 and served as vice chairman from 1887-62. Moody was first named to t& commission in 1961. BEGINS FRIDAY Ray's of Lllltngton was Closed aU day today ' (Thursday) and their big annual August Clearance Sale, begins Prltlay morning, Aug ust vat iJ'Vcloek. The firm Ik of rering big molten-saving barglns during thig annual trade event. All summer merchandise has been drastically reduced. *’;v WORD ON TEST BAN FOR SENATE—Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harnman, right, shown with Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman J. W. Fulbnght, D-Ark.r brings the committee further word on the nuclear test ban treaty. -- Heel Senator Keeps Grilling RFK Irvin Keeps Pouring It On %A8HINaTON (UPI) — Atty. Ohd Robert F. Kennedy agreed Hi* >to> , exempt barbershops. beauty parlors And' swimming pools which do not cater to trave lers from the administration’s botQMlisputed public accommo dations bill. Kennedy told the Senate Judi ciary Committee that he “would be happy to accept a clarifica tion” of the administration pro posal although he has maintained that the measure was not intend ed to cover such establishments. Sen. Sam J. Erwin Jr. raised the issue in his marathon exami nation of the attorney, general. He monopolized the committee’s en tire session Wednesday and con tinued his searching questions to day. Kennedy said the atjministra tion has explained its public ac commodation* Ml as applying to beauty parlors, barbershops and swimming pools in hotels and oth er places which cater to interstate Campbell Concerts *• %> i. 4 < - f V'-”'' _ Begin October 17 Dr. Paul Jfoder, chairman of the Campbell College Concert As sociation, has ambitions. One of them la to see a Standing-Room Only sigh hanging on the door of Turner Auditorium when this year’s artist series opens at Camp bell College. * Opening date lg October 11, with Jose Molina’s Spanish dancers as the first attraction. To fill big Turner Auditorium comfortably will take some 500 more adults and young people than turned out for any of the series events last year, Yoder says. He thinks it can be done. One difference, he points out, will be the change this year in the concert hall. Over the Christmas holkhtya last winter the college completely renewed Turner Audi torium and refurnished it with walUto-wall carpeting and opera type upholstered seats. “It’s mak ing a big difference,” the concert chairman notes. Yoder is head of the college music department and directs tlm Campbell choir. (Continued on Page 6) Barefoot Is Selected Bennie Bare foot, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray mond Barefoot, Route 3, Dunn, has been . select ed by tbe Wey erhaeuser Com pany North Carolina Divi sion, to repre ss n t Harnett County at Bores try Camp lor nuwrw« ? Farms Boys to be Held at Osmp Hope near Canton N. C. during the week of August 4 to August 10, 1063. Bennie, 17 years old, Is a »e® lor at Dunn High School, an officer In liis local FFA Chapter, and * Vic® - President ox the county FFA Federation. He has demon strated his Interest in forestry by purchasing with his own earnings, a small tract of lfend, part of which he has planted in pine seedlings. His fattier operates a local lumber and building supply business and It Is possible that one day he will be marketing lumber that his son has. grown. Mr. Joe Downing vocational agri culture teadher at . Jtonn High School assisted Mr. Nick Denesuk, field representative of Weyerhaeu ser Company to selecting Bennie for the camp. Forestry Camp for Farm Boys is annually cp-snonsored by the (Continued on Page Pour) travel. But he said It was not meant to apply to small local es tablishments. ... , , , , „ Birin Insisted that "down In my country” one of the main funo tions of the barbershop la to sell such products as hair tonic — “hair tonic for bald-headed men.” “If you want to cover barber shops that sell hair tonic for bald headed men, we can consider It,” i K-enneay saia. After the laughter subsided, Er vin asked the attorney general if be would object to a clarifying amendment. “If we put that in, could we count on your support for the bill?” Kennedy asked. “No, sir,” Ervin shot back, “I love my country too well to sup port a bill like that.” Lillington's C of C Recruits Members Directors of the Lilllngton Cham ber of Commerce are preparing to launch a membership drive. Directors have adopted a sche dule for dues and have lMtructed President Robert Redfem to begin the effort. Redfem said1 that letters will go out to some 150 local businesses and1 professional people this week Inviting them to Join. Three dues sdhedules were set up by the board 55, $7.50 and $10, all on a monthly msls. Redfem said dues schedule if designed only to get the chamber joing on a temporary basis for the remainder of the year. He said also that the chamber slans to open an office and have i secretary at work by fall. Directors have scheduled regular ward meetings for 6:30 a. m. the third Friday of each month at Wade’s Restaurant. The schedule of dues was re commended toy Bill Randall at the board’s last meeting and' adopted. The chamber took another step in its reactivation program this week when it secured a mail box at the Lilllngton post offce. mg» Uuahty Loose Leaf Sells For %1 Flue cured tobacco sales opened on the South Carolina — Border North Carolina market* today with some high - quality loose leaf bringing $67 per hundred pounds. The Federal State Market News Service reported the gen wage price j j r the first i|40 to $50 th prices the tales was f&*edweight| iy: lower sales In 196 No tied tpbacco, whicli'^-^, higher prices, was sold during the first hour of trading but several baskets were on the warehouse floors for sale later in the day. The bulk of opening sales were from $20 to $61 per hundred with extremes of $12 for sustandard nondescript and $66 for good lem on lugs. The practical top wu $63 per hundred since the top quality lugs were scattered. Warehousemen paid $67 for a few baskets of good lugs. The demand held up for fail to good lugs and primings but there was little call for low primings and ■ nondescript, which comprised a majority of the leaf offered today. Quality was expected to improve, the market news service said, as the volume runs heavier on the 16 markets. f .Estimated deliveries to the Flue Cured Stabilisation Corp. during the first hour of sales ranged from 10 to 20 per cent of the of ferings on various markets. This leaf would fall under the govern ment price support program. The approximate range for a few predominate grades: Good le mon lugs $66467; fair orange lugs $63-$64; good lemon primings $58-$63; fair lemon primings $54 $61; low lemon primings $42450; fair orange primings $52-61; low orange primings $42454; bast thin nondescript $20-$22; substandard nondescript $14-$30. Sale prices fell below last years $50 per hundred opening day av erage as low quality loose leaf to bacco flooded the belts. Ten Die In Crash TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) — An outing to a drive-in movie ended in violent death Wednesday night when ten persons, including eight ; young children, were killed in the worst traffic mishap in the me mory of highway patrolmen. The dead were identified as Fe lix Campos, 41, of Florida City Fla.; hls wife, Catherine; and their children, Joseph, about 10, Rose, about 16, Davaid, about S, and Teraea, about 5; and Guada loupe Chico, 6; his brothers, Ra oul, 13, and Jaime, 7, and sister, Maria, The Chicog were the children of Mr. and Mrs. Oamilo Chico. The Chlcos and Camog were migrant farm workers employed by Emil Webert of near Elmore. A (Continued on Page Six) Woodall Stars In Game Tonite A crowd of about 200 of his Er win hometown fans will go to Sreensboro tonight to see Quar terback A1 Woodall of Erwin star [or the Easterners in the 15th an nual All-Star football game at 3reensboro High Stadium. Woodall, son of Dr. and Mrs. 3. C. Woodall of Erwin, is hailed i- one of North Carolina’s fastest ices. The Erwin start will be pitted igainst All-American Jeff Beaver >f Charlotte’s Myers Park school ind some are predicting that an lerial duel may develop between them. East Coach Paul Gay of Sanford :alls Woodall "a lanky boy who xm really throw that ball.” Woodall ,wbo graduated in June Irom Erwin High, made a dazsllng •ecord last season, completing nore than 70 per cent of his pass ss. He's a popular youth and citi zens at Erwin said this morning they expect at least 200 will travel to Greensboro for tonight’s game. GREENSBORO (UPI) — West football team goes after a clean sweep tonight In the 15th annual High School All-Star Sports Car nival, but the underdog Eastern ers have no intentions of playing the clown. The powerful West, led by All America quarterback Jeff Beaver of Charlotte Myers Park, hasn’t been beaten since 1955 when the East won the grid classic by a score of 14-7. Last year’s struggle ended In a 0-0 tie. Kickoff time is 8 p.m. Beaver will be tossing to a pair of tall, talented ends tonight — Burlington’s Bill Gentry, 8-foot-4 and Bob Powell, 6-foot-S of Greens boro Grtmstey. The O-foot-2 190-pounds signal caller tossed 24 TO passes during his senior year, but in the event the West’A aerial attack falters, Beaver can call on fullback Jim Fortune of Brevard and halfback Bob Matheeon of Appalachia* for ground assistance. Both were All State selections. Fortune, a 6-foot 190-pounder, ground out men than 1,600 yards last season and scored 96 TDs. Matheson scored 166 polntg In his senior year. Rounding out the West backfield will be Nelson Smith, S-foot-11 halfback from Al bemarle. Leading the Easterners will be two of the state's speediest young halfbacks — Jacksonville’s Dave Dunaway and Jack > Foley of Greenville. They'll get soaring punch from quarterback A1 Wood all of Erwin and 918-pound full back Spencer Barrow of Ahaskie. In reserve will be talented half back Au&tol Youmana of Raleigh and fullback Knox McMillan of Wilson. Woodall, the 6-foot-i field amo ral will be tossing to ends Bobby Knott, 6-foot-l of Roxboro and Mike Riddle. 6-foot-S of Northern (Continued on Page Six)
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Aug. 1, 1963, edition 1
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