UJncdkoA
Saturday, considerable cloudiness
and warm with scattered showers
and turning cooler west portion to
ward evening.
MANN FIIM LABORATORY
740 CHATHAM ROAD
WINSTON SALEM, N. C.
ON, NOVEMBER 26, 1965
DUNN. N. C. FRIDA!
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J0LTUE 15
TELEPHONE 892-311'. — 892-3118
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PLAIN VIEW FIRE DEPl
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PLAIN VIEW PLANS FIRE DEPARTMENT — Fre 1 Tew of the Plain View volunteer fire department
shown here looking over the site where the unit’s f re station is to be erected. A barbecue was held in
the community Saturday, turkey shoots are bein t held each Tuesday and Friday nights and other
events are slated to pay for the building. P. M SM s heads the volunteers as Fire Chief. Members at
the building committee include Earl Eason, Ja.ne i Eason and Eugene Jernigan. (Daily Record Photo
by Russell Bassford.)
i Priceless Items Stolen From Library
Half Million Vatican Theft
VATICAN CITY (UPI) — Thieves
have tajten two priceless manus
cripts and two relics worth nearly
half a million dollars from the
Vatican library, Vatican police re
ported today.
The hit-or-miss theft of the
four unrelated items from the heart
Since Wednesday At 6 P. M.
I 205 Road Deaths
A United Press International
count showed at least 205 persons
killed in traffic accidents since the
start of the four-day holiday week
end at 6 p. m. Wednesday. The
breakdown:
Traffic
205
FIre .. 31
Planes .. 4
Miscellaneous . 27
Total . 2B7
California led the highway slaugh
ter with 19 traffic deaths reported.
Texas reported 17 dead in traffic
and Ohio 14.
Wide Range of Cases Tried
Man Ordered To
Let Woman Alone
Wade Jones of Buckhorn town
I ship, charged with trespassing and
disorderly conduct, drunk and us
; ing profane language at the
pleaded not guilty in Record
er’s Court but Judge Robert B.
Morgan found him guilty as charg
ed.
Jones had his sentence continu
ed on the condition that he stay
away from the premises of Mrs.
[ Seagroves, remain sober and pay
[[actual court cost.
Doris Peretti, 30-year-old Dunn
ehite woman, pleaded guilty to a
charge of public drunkenness
through her attorney and was as
sessed cost of court totaling $18.
Hubert Tyler, Rt. 1, Spring Lake
who was tried with failure to pro
vide adequate support for the il
legitimate child of Mary Ella Sea
berry had his case found firvilous
and malicious and the prosecut
ing witness was taxed with the
cost.
Judgment absolute was ordered
for Alvin Haynes of Waterville.
N. Y. and cash bond , forfeited
('Continued os Page Six)
4,807 At Houston Event
*lly Graham Raps
oken Homes T rend
USTON (UPI) — Evangelist
Graham’s Thanksgiving mes
drew 44,807 persons to the
nditioned confines of the
County domed statdlum
y night.
evangelist blamed the “break
of American home life” for
ng rates of divorce and ]u
crime.
m said the broken home,
racial crisis, is the great
problem facing America
Graham made a plea for liberal
contributions from those attend
ing the crusade. He said his “Cru
sade for Christ” still needs about
$120,000 to meet local debts. The
Baptist evangelist said none of
the contributions would go to mem
bers of his staff, all of whom
are paid salaries from crusade head
quarters.
Graham said the Houston Sports
Association was charging the cru
sade $12,500 for each day of the
10-day crusade. The HSA has a
lease on the domed stadium.
of the apufitoiic palace was the
first reported- at thP Vatican in
y/ear.s. The theft was discovered this
morning.
Although Vatican library sources
said the two ancient literary manus
cripts were “priceless” they put a
value on the stolen relics as rang
ing from 200 to 300 million lire or
up to $500,000.
The most valuable was an ori
ginal work of Francesco Petrarch’s
“Canzoniere,” the outstanding work
of the 14th century poet. Much of
it was in Petrarach’s own hand
writing and included important no.
tations. “Canzoniere” includes a
number of sonnets, madrigals and
ballad.*.
The second manuscript was ser
ies of poems by Torquato Tasso, the
16|h century Roman poet who
wrote “Jerusalem Liberated” among
other things.
Thp other subjects stolen were a
replica of a crown of St. Stephan,
the Hunge-'an saint anl n national
objects belongin'* Morona.
Morena wa' the 'V3,ident of Ecu
ador who was assassinated at the
end of the last century. The box
and its conients had been sent,
to the late Pope Leo XIIT.
Three Klansmen
Facing Trial
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) —
Three Ku Klux Klunsmen stand
trial Monday in federal jaourt here
for conspiring to violate the civil
rights of a U. S. citizen in an out
growth of the slaying of Mrs. Viola
Liuzzo.
Collie Leroy Wilkins - already
found innocent of murder charges -
William Eaton and Eugene Thomas
will be defended by Arthur Hanes,
a former mayor of Birmingham and
one-time FBI agent.
TJ. S. District Judge Frank M.
Johnson, Jr., will hear the case.
Hanes, who successfully defend
ed Wilkins last month in Hayne
ville on charges of murdering Mrs.
Liuzzo, called the federal indict
ment “ridiculous and fantastic.”
He said he was unsure of his de
fense because ‘‘the indictment is
extremely vague. No one is men
tioned in it and it doesn’t say
whose civil rights, my clients were
supposed to have violated.”
Mrs. Liuzzo, a white housewife
from Detroit, was shot to death
in her car March 26 while shuttling
civil rights workers following the
Selma to Montgomery “freedom
march.”
Navy Throwing
More Muscle
Into Battle
SAIGON <UPI> — The first nu
clear powered U. S. Navy ships
assigned to the Viet Nam war moved
nto combat stations off the coast
.f Viet Nam today.
They were the carrier Enterprise,
the’ largest ship afloat, and the guid
d-missile frigate Bainbridge.
While the Navy threw more mus
cle into the ever-growing American
might. B52 Strategic bombers from
Guam today struck enemy targets in
Binh Tuy Province 75 miles north
east of Saigon where U. S„ Viet
namese and Australian troops were
rying to prevent a vast rice har
rest from falling into Viet Cong
hands.
The campaign by the “several
thousand” allied troops was in the
fifth day of a probe through the
Communist-dominated area but
there have been no reports of fight
ing. In the past villagers in the
:lrea have had to turn over their
rice to the Viet Cong which lives
off the land.
I, '?■; an nuclear powered sub
marines have been in the Western
Pacific and have Visited Japan
but the Enterprise and the Bain- j
bridge were the first nuclear-pow
ered ships to join the Viet Nam
war effort. They joined other 7th
fleet ships already stationed off
Viet Nam.
Ike's Recovery
Is Satisfactory
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Former
President Dwight D. Eisenhower,
heartened by a Thanksgiving Day
family reunion, continued his re
covered Friday from two heart at
tacks.
The last medical report issue by
doctors at Walter Reed Army Medi
cal Center Thursday said Eisen
hower was making “ satisfactory
progress” in regaining his health
from the mild heart attacks suf
fered Nov. 9-10 at Augusta, Ga.
Doctors said in a statement the
general got up for a short time
Thanksgiving morning and was in
good spirits.
The hospital, apparently in ac
cordance with the family’s wishes,
did not report who was present in
Eisenhower’s top-floor suite at Wal.
ter Reed for the holiday dinner.
Premiumably, his wife Mamie was
at his side alcng with his son, John,
daughter-in-law Barbara and pos
sibly his three grandchildren.
CATCHING UP WITH THE AIR AGE—At least in Cleveland, Ohio, it s not going .to be
possible in the future to say that it takes longer to get to the airport than to fly to a
distant city. The Ohio metropolis is soon to mark a first in the nation with direct
rapid transit connections between airport and city .center When a_fouwmte extwi
sion of'fhe Resent system is completed in 1967, Cleveland Hopkins Airport will be
only 20 minutes from the heart of downtown. m thi» world onlv Tokvo
witmuwi.. Elsewhere in the world, only Tokyo
and Brussels have similar service. Sketch shows airport terminal, only a few steps
away from check-in and baggage counters.
family Told Just Before Holiday Meal
Hoodlums Kill Father Of 7
* NEW YORK (UPI) — The rflf
on the door came as the Thanks
giving dinner was simmering in the
kitchen at Donald Buckley's apart
ment. .
The two Brooklyn detectives at
the door noted the festively-set ta
ble and the scrubbed faces of Buck
ley's seven youngsters.
Donald Buckley, 43, a man who
held two jobs so his family would
have plenty to be thankful for, was
dead. He was stabbed to death and
robbed by a group of young hood
lums in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuy
vesant .section Thursday after fin
ishing work.
The detectives showed Doreen
Buckley, 39, two sets of keys which
she identified as belonging to her
husband. Then they took her to
the morgue while the teen-aged
children minded the little ones.
Two dozen Brooklyn detectives
skipped their Thanksgiving meals
to hunt Buckley’s killer. With the
aid of neighborhood residents, they
bad found five suspects by even
ing.
Daniel Robisson, 16, and Ronald
Perkins, 17, both of Brooklyn, were
NEWS ROUNDUPS
KEOKUK, Iowa — State fire investigators today poked
through the charged, blackened ruins of a National Guard armory,
searching for a cause to the mysterious Thanksgiving eve explosion
and fire that claimed seven lives.
TOKYO — The 134,000 members of the Japanese Seamen’s
Union began a crippling 10-day strike Friday in support of wage
demands. The strike, which began at midnight, affected 1,509 freight
ers in 52 ports around the country, but no foreign or passenger
ships.
LONDON _ A three-confinent, 100-nation conference will
open in Havana Jan. 3 to align Afro-Asian-Latin American strategy
against worldwide “imperialism and colonialism in all its forms,
official sources said today.
Cancer Proves Fatal
Governor Who Became
Taxi Driver Is Dead
CHESTER, W. Va. (UPlV— Wil
liam. G. Marland, former "boy won
der” governor of West Virginia
who was found driving a taxi In
Chicago earlier this year, died to
day in Chicago, it was learned here.
Marland, 47, had usdergone sur
gery last August for cancer of the
pancreas. He returned to his Bar
rington, 111., home to recuperate.
The youngest man ever to be
I elected governor of West Virginia
at the age of 34, Marland had be?n
employed in an executive capacity
since discovered driving a taxi in
Chicago. Officials at the track con
firmed Marland’s death.
At the time, he admitted that
he had had a drinking problem and
had taken the taxi driving job in an
attemjjt to rehabilitate.
booked for homicide. Two liJO)'; laeri Wiili iHVflllUe delinquency-norm
olds and one l<-ye.ir-old were char- I cide.
Notion Entrs Space Age
France Fires Rocket
PARIS (UPI) — France today put
Its first satellite into orbit. The
launching boosted France into the
space age along with the United
States and Russia.
An official announcement said a
three-stage, 18-ton Diamond rocket
took aloft and placed into orbit
the A-l space capsule at 2:47 p. m.
<9:47 a. m. EST).
The satellite, which was to have
been launched on the Algerian des
ert last Monday, was delayed by
sandstorms and technical difficul
ties. It is an 83.7 pound capsule.
The launching was delayed when
trouble developed in the fuel pump
ing system of the rocket’s second
stage.
"Do It Yourself" Bread Kits Sold
Breadless Weekend
Begins In London
LONDON (UPI) — An estima
ted 20 million Britons Friday night
began a “breadless weekend” that
will leave many tables empty of
the staple foodstuff.
The cause is a 48-hour strike
for more pay by 10,000 bakers in
London, its surrounding counties
and parts of Western England and
the Midlands, including the major
city of Manchester
Some housewives 'ried to beat
the strike by getting up before
dawn and waiting in subfreezing
temperatures at small independ
ent bakers unaffected by the st
rike.
But shops in the strike area ser
ved hy members of the Wholesale
and Multiple Bakers’ Federation,
which normally bakes three out of
every four British loaves, were
sold out of bread because the
walk.out by their employes began
Thursday. They will not get any
more bread until Monday,
imposed rationing of one loaf per
Many of the shops with bread
person or restric ed sales to re
gular customers
Some stores double their prices
from one shilling (14 cents) to two
shillings (28 cents).
The bread lines were less quar
campbells guest
Capt. and Mrs. Frank Campbell
and Lynn and Don, were holi
day guests Of Mr. and Mrs. Locke
Campbell and Rev. and Mrs. J.
Edward Johnson. The Campbells
are from Raleigh.
relsome than Thursday when po
lice were called to a number of
shops to control crowds. Bakers
said the shoppers had become
more realistic about doirig without
bread.
Sales of flour and yeast for
home baking rocketed.
One store chain in Nottingham,
the town of Robin Hood fame,
sent its trucks out selling do-it
yourself breadmaking kits consist
ing, of three-pound bags of flour
packets of yeast and instructions,
all for two shillings and four pen
ce (33 cents).
Lynda Bird
Acapulco Visit
With Hamilton
JOHNSON CITY, Tex, (T
Lynda Byrd Johnson and Ho
wood star George Hamilton
were a chaperoned twosome at
apulco, Mexico, today while
sister Luci and boy friend Patrick
,1. Nugent spent a farewell week
end at- the LBJ ranch.
The White House said that the
President's elder daughter, blark
aaired, brown-eyed Lynda, flew
:o Acapulco Thursday with Mr.
ind Mrs. Earl Deathe of Austin,
IYx., long .ime friends of the
Fohn*.ons.
Informed sources said that Ly
Ida, 21, was invited by Hamilton
o spend the holiday weekend with
ilm and several other guests jfft
he plush Mexican resort.
Lynda departed after the Th
mksgiving turkey feasting at the
■anch. She spent only a few hours
>n the holiday with Luci, 18, who
iad flown '.o Texas with Nugent,
!2 of Waukegan, 111.
Nugent will enter military ser
vice on Sunday.
Dunn Man
Addresses Group
i Rev. a. D. McNeill, Guidance
Counseloi at the Harnett High
School addressed the Cape Fear
“A” Conference recently which was
held at the Sandy Grove Church,
Wade.
Using as a theme "The Power
of Gods Presence”, Rev. McNeill
stressed the many advantages of
keeping close contact with the air
mighty.
Rev. McNeill who is the efficient
pastor of Lillington Star and Rock
fish Grove Free Will Baptist
Churches, Is also the Vice Moder
ator of the Conference having
served successfully two years. Other
positions held by the well-known
minister are: Chairman of thf
Trustee Board of the “B” Confer
ence, General Conferesce Auditor
and a member of the General Edit
cation Staff of the United Fret
Will Baptist Church.
Mrs. Smith
Dies Today
Mrs. Leila Marie Jackson Smith,
61. of Route 1, Dunn, died Friday
morning after a lingering illness.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock from
the Mingo Baptist Church of wh
ich she was a member with Rev.
Donald Price officiating- Burial
will be in the church cemetery.
The body will lie in state ong
hour prior to the service.
Surviving are her father, E. B
Jackson of Route 1, Dunn; and
several neices and nephews.
Mrs. Jackson was a teacher at
East Over Elementary School r\
the time of her death.
Teacher's Aide Loved Hamburgers
French Girl Ends
Visit At Hobbton
A 22-year-old French college
student who finds shopping cen
ters in America “very handy” has
just completed a six-weeks stay in
Sampson County.
Miss Olga Sierpniar who attends
the (.University of Letters in Lyon
France has served as a teacher's
aide to Mrs. Mae Ellen Warwick
Hobbton High School’s regular
French teacher. In additon Miss <
Sierpniak has been giving other i
French teachers in the county a
refresher course.
Her visit to HohbtOjj mod Samp->
son County which began 6 weeks
ago was sponsored by the New
ton Grove Men’s Club and wa*
made possible through the Foreign
Language Teacher Aide Program.;
Miss Sierpniak who explained
that her college curriculum nilgai
?d one years residence in a lor
:ign country said she could hWg
spent her year abroad in nlttlgp.