tVwihfJi Showers likely late tonight and Thursday morning. Rather cool. 740 CHATHAM ROAD WINSTON SAIEM, N. C. The Record Gets Results *otrMK u DUNN, N. C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 24, 1965 mi cents rr« cor* NO ** Church Events Will Feature Holiday Here Thanksgivening will be a holi day fr most people in Dunn, Har nett and throughout the atjea, marked chiefly by church services and family ga herings. A Union Thanksgiving Service for citizens of Dunn will be held ♦ anight( Wednesday) at 7:30 at Hood Memorial Christian Church, with the Protestant churches of the town participating. The Rev. Eugene Ensley, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, will deliver the sermon. The Rev. Carl on Best is pastor of the host church. The Sampson Presbyterian Ch' a pel will hoi da special Thanks giving setvjce Thursday morning at 9'30 o’clock with the Rev. Mr. Smvthe delivering the message. Special services have already been announced by a number of other churches in the area. Most retail business firms in Dunn will be closed. Craflon Tart’s Open Air Market will remain op en as always for the convenience of shoppers and The Daily Record will publish Thranksgiving Day as usual. Practically all local, county, State and fgederal offices will be closed for the holiday. Harnett County schools, as well as those in adJohtijjf cotmHes. cl osed at the end of classes to day end will not reopen until Monday. DANCE AT BENSON The Johnston County Voiture of the 40 & 8 of The American Legion is holding a holiday dance at the Legion building in Benson Thanksgiving night, beginning at 9 p.m. for benefit of the nurses’ training program. Bill Joe Austin’s band will furnish the music. Warren Rifts Will Be Friday Thomas Felton Warren, 58, of Route 1, Godwin, died early this morning at his home of an appar ent heart condition. A farmer, he was the son of the late William Blake and Susan Wood Warren. Funeral services have been set for Friday afternoon at 3:30 from the Wesley Chapel Metholist Church located on Highway 13 near Jack son’s Comer. Officiating will be Rev. Wesley Noble, pastor, and burial will fol low here at Greenwood Cemetery. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Lelon Jackson Warren of the home; onp son, William Irvin Warren of Raleigh; two daughters, Mrs. James Richard Rankin of New Bern and Mrs. Robert A. Page of Fayetteville; three brothers, Willie B. of Dunn, Clifford and Luby, both of Route 1, Dunn; two sisters, Mrs. Robert A. Draughon and Mrs. Ralph Snipes, both of Dunn; also seven grand children. The bodv is to remain at the Cromart'e Funelal Home until 4 o’clock Thursday and at that time will be taken to his home STRIP TEASE ON TIMES SQUARE—Those long absent from New York have a jolt coming to them when they visit Times Square. The Times Tower, completed in 1904, shown left, in a 1936 photo, has had a face-lifting and a name-change. Because of zon ing laws, had the tower been razed when it was converted for its new owner, a new building would have been limited to six or seven floors in height, rather than its present 362 feet. The building’s skeleton was stripped, center (1964), and the pres ent structure, the Allied Chemical Tower, is seen as it will look when dedicated Dec. 2. One familiar touch remains: the electric news bulletin sifn girding the lower floors of the building. Meanwhile, the shows go on, the hot clogs are sold and the razzle-dazzle traffic of Times Square continues to flow. , NEW YORK (UPI) — Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon danced away Tuesday night on a trans parent floor over a bubbling pool at a lavish farewell party attended by socialites, celebrities and Tommy Cole. Although the royal British cou ple were the guests of honor, a good deal of attention was diverted Traditional Observance Turkey For LBJ JOHNSON prtf , Tex. (UPI) — President and Mi*. Johnson are planning a traditional Thanksgiv ing celebration Thursday with tur key and all the trimmings. The guest list o far is “just family’’ but with vhe Johnson's hospitality that is always an open end affair. The Johnson’s daughter L*l, 18, is expected to fly to the LBJ Ranch for the feating. She may bring a long her boyfriend, Patrick J. Nu gent of Waukegan, 111., who goes into the service at the end of the week. Lynda Bird Johnsoh, 21, will tra vel 65 miles from Austin where she is a senior at the University of Texas to be with her parents. How many kinfolks will be on hand is not known. But Mrs. John son is a hostess who knows her guest list always expands. The highlight of " e holiday will be in the evening when the family joins millions through the nation in watching an hour long television show with the First Lady as the star. The color film sntlt.'sfi “A Visit to Washington with '•'fra. Lyndon B. Johnson on Behalf of a More Beau tiful Capital” will be shown on ABC TV network television Thanksgiv ing night. Sen. Morgan Accepts For College Minges Family Gives $25,000 To ECC GREENVILLE — East Carolina College announced today a $25,000 gift from Pepsi-Cola bottling com panies in Greenville, Kinston and New Bern owned by the Minges family. The cash contribution — largest single private gift ever received by the 58-year-old college — will go into the project fund to con struct a field house for the ECC program of intercollegiate athletics. Formal presentation of the gift was made to ECC trustees’ Chair man Robert B. Morgan and Presi dent Leo W. Jenkins by John F. (Jack) Minges, president of the (Continued os Page Six) Two Stilts Were Being Fired First Time Federal Agents Nab 5 At Still i Federal' ATU agents working out of the Dunn office ruined Thanksgiving for five Harnett Co. unty men early Wednesday morn ing when they captured the quin tet in the act of firing up a brand new whiskey distillery for the first time. Art Bryant, chief of the Dunn ATU office, said the plant con sisted of one 318-gallon 'submar ine s'ill and one 285-gallon sub marine still, located just several hundred yards from the State Prison camp near UlUngton. The new moonshine factory had just been set up and Bryant and three other agents were sitting in the bushes waiting when the five alleged operators arrived and st arted firing It up to begin a run. The officers quickly moved in and took all five Into custody. Defenadnts were listed as: Paul Lucas, Jr., 37; Robert Alton Col ville, 31, his brother Thomas Lin ker* Colville, 37. Carl Everette Stone and Lester Leon O’Quinn, all of LUllngton, Route 2. firyant said Lindburgh Colville and Stone were arrested previous ly for transporting- Colville has (Continued os Page Six) to Tommy who as cheered as he arrived in his borrowed tux and slightly crooked bow tie. Tommy, a shy grocery boy, look ed somewhat bewildered by it all as many of the guests called him by name. His invitation was a reward for his honesty in returning a stray invitation to actress Elaine Stritch. Miss Stritch Inadvertently used the back of her invitation to pre pare a grocery list last week. When Tommy returned it, she mentioned the incident to party hostess Shar man Douglas, who in turn invited Continued on Page Six Another 470 Wounded As Losses Mount SAIGON (UPI) — Communist I jjruops killed 210 American ser, | I ticemen and wounded 470 others j [test week, a U. S. military spokes | 41 an announced today. This costliest yjeek of the war brought U. S. losses since 1 £81 jo 1.335 dead and 6,131 wounded. Another six Ameri cans were missHi.e. The figure : r.ucec all services Army, Air Faroe and Navy - but , most of the casualties were suffered by the 1st Cavalry Division which won an ‘‘unprecedented victory” in killing more than 2,260 North Viet- , na nese regulars in a weeklong bat tle on the slopes of Chu Pong Moun. tain rising above the la Drang Val ley. The toll of dead was almost three times larger than asy other week of the war. The Army announced last Wednesday that 86 Americans died the previous week -v a record. That figure was increased today to 88 and observers believed last week’s total al-'o would rise. Follows Earlier Record Thp week before that had been a record — 77 killed, 12 missing and 264 wounded. Military observers also believed the number of casualties would rise as more and more Americans were thrown Into direct combat with the Viet Cong and North Vietnam ese regulars. The army today moved Japan the first element* ol four full field 'hospitals to handle' any increase. Lady Bird On TV Thurs. Nite WASHINGTON