Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Aug. 20, 1965, edition 1 / Page 1
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:;YY (OsjcdthsUi Fair to partly cloudy and warm but leg humid tonight and Satur day. Evening thundershowers %f fccting about 90 per oent of tfce south coastal area today and Sat urday. ? ! . ■ JTXtmrb The" Gets Resu ftCTO U nurgjftn - m-iiu* DUNN, N. C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGC8T 20, 1965 mi CENTS FEB COPY City Oks Resolution For Hospital To Borrow $200,000.00 Way Is Cleared For Hospital Architect Now Dunn's city council last night approved a resolution authorizing Betsy Johnson Memorial Hospital to borrow *200,000 from First Cit izens {tank Js Trust Co., if needed, to begin construction on the town's new hospital. Tpe city officials also approved $ie purchase of land to be used os an access road to the hospital. The coat far this is a little over ♦a.ooo. In other actions, Mayor BUI tfarehburi) and the board handled resorting and paving requests and disposed of other routine matters. Chairman Myres TUghman and Secretary Raymond Cromartie of the hospital board presented the gfenhiUons to the town boadd. ‘"Since the'hospital property has transferred to the . In bonds as its share total cost of 1*1, the structure could fleeted for that.amount, said. ths long delay to be W i« resulted ig. about ' available mif. explained the taoo.aoo m»y but the construction seed costs to< mon? than l Ke neyer have to ~ Medical Care Commission requires that the total amount needed must he available before a project is approved and Federal money al Ktotted. first Citizens Bank agreed to - Continued On Pagb Bight Missing 3 Weeks A, 31 year old woman has been missing from her home in Angler ftw more than three weeks. Mrs. Mary Ashworth Gill was last seep Bearing a black sktrt and bioAss, brown flat-heeled shoes And Mown purse. She Is described lie beipg five feet-five inches tail, weighing about MS pounds. Mrs. b#s dyed blonde hair, brown eye* and a medium complexion. Authorities have no information or dues as to her whereabouts. Apgier police reported an all - stats alert started more than a weto mo. . MUSLIM CLASH — £os Angeles police line tip Negroes along the wail of Black Muslim mosque, V scene of a gun beetle. Sight Negroes were wounded In the brief battle and police took 52 into cus tody. (NIA Telephoto) '_ : ■ ‘ ' Five Regional Offices To Be Set Up Gov. Reveals Industrial Plan RALEIGH (UPI) -v Five regi onal offices to attract industry were announced today toy Ck»v. Dan K. Moore and State Board of C 4c D Chairman J. Willie York of Raleigh. Washington, Lwnberton, Sylva, Salisbury and Raleigh were tap ped for the development offices. The offices “wrtl help commun ities prepare for Industry and guide them in shaping their pres entations of favorable factors to industrial prospects,” according to York. He said the regional offices would not, however, work directly with industrial prospects.. York said the board chose rel atively smaller cities for the offi ces because “the. larger cities have Hot Dispute At County Seat Hearing Is Slated On Water Project A public hearing has been call ed for Monday, August 29, at 7:30 p. m. in the Lilllngton Town Hall on apportioning the casts of a new 6th Street water Mne. The town board in special ses sion recently set the hearing with owners of property which abutts on the proposed line. John O. Sut ton is the chief property owner. Mayor W. H. Randall said today that town engineers wHl be asked to make a survey to determine whether or not any land owned by Mrs. W. R. Crawford will be af fected. Line of the present street has not been yet checked with of ficial town maps and may not be in line with maps. Randall said. the town board, following sev eral heated discussions has order ed construction of a new 6-inch line from the Prison Camp Road northward to the intersection of East Front Street. Continued On Page Eight i Mayor Cuts Ribbon; Company txecutives rieasea Ray I ass Opening Here Today &raws Crowds, Big Success The new Raylaas Department Store received an official welcome from city and county of and hearty approval from crowds of shoppere who __ the mw clothing center. | Mayor William C. (Bill) Manta, bur* cut, the ribbon at I a. «. to. officially launch the (rand op --"2r,celebration, which wtB con through aU of next week, n Jack Brock end Oom ; Willard Mixon of the caupty "hoard <rf President Abe Elmore of the Dunn Chamber of Commerce and vari ous other local and county dig nitaries were on hand for the event. "The Town of Dun is pleased and proud to have this outstand ing company open this fine new store in our town," said Mayor Marahbum. “It is further evidence that our town is moving forward, and we appreciate the fact that you came here. It is my sincere hope that your location in Dunn irtll be mutually beneficial to your company and to our town »nd I am confident that it will be." Chamber president Elmore ech oed the same sentiments to wel tome the new firm on behalf of the chamber. Responding to the welcome, Fred K. Raiff of New York City, presi Jent of the big, rapidly-growing clothing chain, declared: — ~— “We were really thrilled with the (Continued on Page «) excellent industrial organizations and do not need them as much as cur smaller communities.” Moore, who recommended re gional offices be established said “I have felt for a long time there was a need for a closer, more effective relationship between the Division of Commerce and Indus try and all communities and coun ties in the state.” The counties to be served by each of the regional offices: Washington Division - Beaufort, Northhampton, Halifax, Edge combe, Pitt, Greene, Lenoir, Hert ford, Bertie, Currituck, Martin, Craven, Gates, Camden .Pasquo tank, Perquimans, Chowan, Dare, Tyrrell, Washington, Hyde Pam lico and Carteret. . Lumberton Division - Robeson, Continued On Page Eight Begin Rooting Out Diehard Viet Troops SAIGON (UPI) U. S. Marines doubled back today on the deva Aate Communist stronghold of Van Along peninsula to root out die liud Viet Cong troops from the (Ag-in positions from which they siiot many Leathernecks in the back. sA spokesman disclosed that a Mjafine regiment — about 5,000 n*n —took part in the opera tion which in three days has kill ed 53 Viet Cong, wounded an esti mated 1,000 and taken 116 captives from one of the toughest Viet Cong Outfits in Viet Nam. ‘ There was still no official an nouncements on the number of Marine casualties during the oper ation but losses were described as the heaviest of any single engage ment of the war. A spokesman said i*g per cent of the Marine casual mss were shot in the back by the Viet Cong passed over in the attack. ||The renewed Marine assault on &e Communist base 72 miles south ■ Da Nang came amidst these timer Viet Nam developments: jfi-U. S. Ambassador Henry Ca Mt Lodge returned after a year’s jBfence. Strict security .measures Xr^undeO Lodge’s arrival by air iXi hi% trip into the capita). Pre iUer Nguven Cao Ky was conspi cuously absent on a previously ar ranged trip to Thailand. —A TJ. S. spokesman disclosed that three U. S. Navy planes car ried out a token raid over North Viet Nam Thursday despite poor weather caused by Typhoon Mary and attacked a bridge 115 miles north of the border. —Twenty planes from the car rier U. S. S. Oriskany struok the Thanh Hoa railroad and highway bridge 80 miles south of Hanoi, (Continued on Page Eight) Jackson Hogs Win At Market Glenn Jackson of Route 1, Dunn, showed the grand champion 4-H boar at the State Market Hog Show in Goldsboro Wednesday. His bro ther, Don,' showed the reserve champion boar. This is the second consecutive year the boys received this distinc tion. They are the sons of Mr. and Mis. James JWright Jackson of Route 1. Set For 10 A. M. Saturday Gemini Plans Go Full Speed Ahead CAPE KENNEDY (TJPI) — Sp ace officials announced today they are going ahead full blast with pre parations to launch the Gemini 5 spacecraft carrying astronauts Gordon Cooper and Charles (Pete) Conrad at 10 a.m. Saturday. Radio and electronic gear trouble which caused a postponement of the flight Thursday only 10 minutes before blastoff are being cleared up, a spokesman for the National Aer onautic# and Space Administration (NASA) said. Space twins Cooper and Conrad were set to go through a short per iod in a “flight simulator" this af (Continued on Page 5) NEWS ROUNDUP PARIS — The French government has approved the sale of another 400,000 tons of wheat to Russia, It was announced Fridav This is in addition to an earlier sale of 300,000 tons in July. France also sold 300.000 tons of wheat to Poland early this summer. CAPE KENNEDY Two young college boys who shook up security officials at America’s space port by walking near the Gemini-5 launch pad were fined $100 each Friday for trespassing. WASHINGTON — The government has warned super intendents of 184 school districts, mostly in the South, that they may be near to losing federal funds few the coining school year because of failure to desegregate. MURPHY ADDRESSING DUNN THRONG — KJCJfv Matt Murphy, a flambouyant courtroom figure t^t§d fpf\ his gwpcpsar i. I es, is shown here as he addressed a crowd of 'thou5a$4»..iiirQu»R<. ■ in May of this year. Murphy scored a big hit with the local crowds, the next week was featured on the cover of LifaMagaaipe.'He'inage<^ friends in Dunn while hefe. The Klan & strong' tJhVtwgifciuY tfltti1 area.' (Daily Record Photo by Russell Bassford.) • "King - Johnson * &uJV* Fight Back Votes, Klan YANCEYVILLE (UPI) The Ku Klux Klan Burned a cross in a pasture near here Thursday af ter a rally where klan leaders urged about 200 persons to tight back with votes. ( - * Robert Jones, the grand dragon of the North Carolina KKK, sriid politicians in the North and South were allowing Negroes to run the country. He said the voting rights law, which has stepped up Negro reg istration in the South was con ceived by what he termed the King - Johnson - Humphrey ad ministration. He referred to Dr. Martin Luther King leader of the Negro movement. ‘‘We’re going to start at the grass roots” Jones said. He said the North Carolina klan hoped soon to have a full time worker in ejoh congressional district to start precinct - by - precinct po litical organization. CLEVELAND Ohio (UPI) — The Ku Klux Klan pushed ahead plans for its second membership rally in Ohio within two months. •The Klan moved Sts planned rally into neighboring,. County countered' with an ' An nouncement its one-night meeting will be a two-day affair,t Parkje Scott 38 an orgamaffi for the Klan in Ohio said th* rafr ly originally planned for Saturday night in the southern suburb of (-Continued on Page 8) Ktl Matt H. Murphy, the Elan’s flamboyant attorney, killed today in a car-truck M The accident occurred on *TX. B. Highway 11 six miles north of Tus caloos a about 4 a. m. CST (6 a. m. EDT). Murphy, a strapping man who | stood 6-3 and weighed 215 pounds, gained national attention for his defense of a fellow Klangman ac cused of the March 25 slaying of Detroit civil rights worker Mrs, Viola Liuzzo, a white woman. Mrs. Liuzzo was killed a few hours after the conclusion of the Selma to Montgomery protest march by Negro and white civil advocates. Murphy was famed In Alabama for his courtroom dramatics. In defending Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr. in the Liuzzo case, he at one point crumpled up his straw hat and dashed it to the floor when he clashed with a witness over a point In testimony. Murphy spent only 53 minutes presenting Wilkins’ case to the jury, but then sweated for one hour and seven minutes in a fiery summa (Continued on Page Eight) &£§j AnnuaJMeef l"i U***'* Trn ill ylslAib'wihll nluiWMv. rtl «J0.' * poqrrbiwDt- ©rd*i#rp<V(M£<"!rt*e u JlWferWan; Cwtio SC /..'0 'M v i.iM - >1 tegiotr-tetfOonat1-’ abnP ' ventton today. ■ u begah ' !~ tioiMtt 356 resolutions on Subjects' frefa iTiefcdlteronalKf'Hvir'' 'r 1-eafr vSnWeffesdkhd^tfeft •atiTe • •btampOUj : State CiSmmafidef Alvfe* Carve oi Dunn, accompanied by' His aid* ce-cSftnp, Bdlvin' StriCfcfaiid, alio' , df bunn, deft Mh4b‘‘li4ht'to heaaV the Worth CatMiriaZ*d^egation to' , the eonvdntihtu^" vangtthrd ' dfi! nearly 8,000 , delegates and air Estimated 10,000 . other visrtbrs'tsigdn jDOuring in- v tc ! ti)is Pacific Northwest city. .... They wefe greeted" tfiy' cool , .Cloudy sweather,i,'ii ^hdrtage jOg'_ .fcoWTFaoihs and the prospect of a Beatles’ concert at ttgf city’s * M3u^°^SSffi*p *§*31 today, the first genera] session “ Is qot urntt} /Tuesday morning, w*UtJ«tWfar fit Dean Rusicl.arfit' dlfet^ the speecfi', Italian Court Rules 4 ' * ^ Arm Kiss Lustful ROME (UPI) — The Italian Supreme Court Friday upheld the prosecution’s contention that a kiss on the arm ia a lustful act. The court was examining the case of a man identified only as D. M. who was accused of kiss ing an unwilling young lady on the arm after he was refused the conventional kind. "When admiration for a worn sp goes beyond certain limits, U in the case of a man who asks for a kiss holding part of her body, even an arm, in his hands, it is no longer admiration but the urging of a libidinous in stinct,” the court said. D. M. previously had been ac quitted by a lower court on grounds the deed was motivated by admiration. He was remanded for another trial. Kentucky State Police Move In job Corps Riot Breaks Out MORGANFIELD, Ky. (TJPI) — Kentucky State Police, acting on orders of Gov. Edward T- Breathitt, moved into a federal Job Corps cen ter at nearby Camp Breckinridge Friday to quell a reported riot. The disturbance bdoke out about 1:30 p. m. EDT according to the office of Col. J. E. Bassett, head of the Kentucky State Police. Bassett said he received an un confirmed report a security guard at the el|^er had been killed and th superintendent severely beaten. Homer Woodard, member of the security department at the camp, said about 300 to 500 of the 650 youths were involved in fighting and disturbance. “I don’t know whether anybody was killed but a lot of people have been hurt,” Woodard said. “I can’t say what started this thing but it’s still going on.” Bassett said he rushed 35 troop ers to the camp when he received the first report and ordered them in on Breathitt’s instructions. Rein forcements were standing by. Woodard said the youth were cadving knife; schick rasor, and I* fighting among themselves and with security personnel. The disturbance broke out about Friday of a march by 100 person* sponsored by the NAACP. STAMPS DISPLAYED LONDON (DPI) — Queen abeth'a $6 million stamp colli will be put on public fall in the Queen’s Buckingham Paleoe.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Aug. 20, 1965, edition 1
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