+WEATHER+ NORTH CAROLINA Consider able cloudiness today and tonight. Saturday cloudy and cool with oc casional rains. VOLUME n Rita Steps Out FILM STAR Rita Hayworth, who tt £ Print*** Aly Khan in private life, is shown dancing with actor Kirk Douglas at a Hollywood night club. The actress told reporters that she plans to go to Reno. Nev, next week to get her divorce from, Prince Alv Khan (Intprvtftlnnal) Dr. Ellis HIT ’ Revival Delayed There will lie a delay Os one week in the start of the revival series at the Dunn First Baptist Church, it was announced today by the Rev. Ernest P. Russell, pastor. seri« was catfsed by the unexoect ed illness pf Dr . J . E. Ellis, who is The first service in the revival series will be held on Sunday, March 23. at 11:00 a.m. Service Monde v through Friday will be held at 10:00 a.m. and at 7:00 pm. Family night at the church will be held on Wednesday evening, March 26, at 7:JO p.m. Prayer meet ing will follow the family night service at 8:30. The revival series will cause no changes in the other regular acti m.vities of the church groups. Mr. said, and choir practices will be held at the usual hours. Woman Held In Big Theft RENO, Nev. —IW— An attractive gMFrench-Canadian brunette was sus_- todav of being the woman who "cased" the mansion of a Reno millionaire for a band of thieves who got away with $1,500,- 000 in cash, securities and jewels. The FBI held Mrs. Marie Jeanne D’arc Machaud in Flagstaff, Ariz., on charges of transporting stolen property across state lines. ARRESTED WITH LOOT She was arrested yesterday on a train en route to Chicago with a part" of the loot stolen from home of La Vere Redfield Feb 39. (Continued On Page She) WPTF Will Carry jDebate From Dunn There’ll be no lack of questions when Gubernatorial Candidates Bill Umstead and Hubert Olive come to Dunn on Thursday night, April 17th to debate before the Dunn Information Clinic. That was the word today from Jim MeMUlen, founder and mo derator of the clinic, after he read that at Wilson only one question was asked bv the audience. "Judging from the amount of interest in the Dunn debate.” said McMlllen today, "the candidates 1 might even get tired of answering Both Umstead and Olive accepted BBtf Jtt them from other sections of the “X caq assure you," said McMUtei: TELEPHONES: 3117 - 3118 - 3119 More Government Grain Shortage Revealed Truman May Try Purge Os Congress KEY WEST, Fla. OP President Trum an may shortly embark on a con gressional political purge aimed during the 1952 cam paign year at ultra-conser vatives of both parties. Whether the President runs atrnn, his associates at the Winter White House say he is determined to launch a new offensive avainst the people he blames for obstructing .the Fair Deal. Whether Mr. Truman's “purge" will resemble the 1938 attempt by the late President Roosevelt, re mains to be seen. But Mr. Tru man is expected to shoot at one of FDR's 1938 targets—Sen. Walter F. George (D-Ga,\ chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. The President long has felt that some ranking Democrats among them, George and Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va.) are ideologically in clined to the Republican, rather than the Democratic party. Oeorge recently said some things in 'Congress that firmed up the President’s opinion of him and that opinion cannot be safely stat ed without the immunity attending Mr. Truman's public remarks. AFTER TEXAN, TOO George Byrd and Ben. Tom Con-' nally (D-Tex.). chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit tee, recently voiced strong words of oppostion to Truman plans. ‘ Consequently, the President, how ever a strong advocate of the two party system in the past, is repres ented authoritatively as wanting to publicly denounce positions taken by these senators. Whatever Mr. Truman's plan fpr boek by William Hiilntan. is pub lished. The book consists largely of the President’s intimate opinions of people and situations since 1945. - Big Jim Won't Be A Manager WASHINGTON (Isl Support ers of Sen. Richard B. Russell are trying to recruit James A. Farley the “old pro” of Democratic pol itics, to help push the Georgian’s bid for the presidential nomination But any hopes that Farley might become Russell’s campaign man ager apparently are doomed to disappointment Senate sources, who are in a position to have accurate informa tion, told reporters Sunday night that Farley had been “approached" by "certain senators” who are supporting Russell for the Demo cratic nomination. These sources said Farley was asked to become Russell’s’ cam paign manager. And that he prom ised to come to Washington this week to talk U over. Farley immediately denied that he had discussed such a proposi tion with Russell supporters. He added: “I am through managing cam paigns. I feel that I have served •Centhmed On Page Twe) BISTORT MADE HERE In the heated Senatorial cam paign two yean ago. Senator Frank Graham selected Dunn as the place to his famous tt-1 atement denying any connection or affiliation with Communism. It was one of his major addresses of ths campaign ana was aturerea do fore the Dunn Rotary Club. The Dunn speeoh **s widely quoted. The gubernatorial debate will take place In the same high school cafeteria wjtero Senator WUlls Smith mads his only Harnett speechof the Tampaign. It too was (Hire jl uily£ ytemvfr BOMBER CHALKS UP 1,000-HOUR RECORD IN KOREA rCV TmM&M 1.- A ORAND OLD OIRI Is Mtt* Jacqut 11, at these veteran* of the 138th Bomber Wing in Korea are ready to testify Here they point with pride as they tnspec! the impressive record of the Ait Force F-S4 Thunderjet which recently completed its S64th combat sortie Its I,oooth houi In the sir was clocked off when Miss Joeque II completed a mission ovei Sinanju. In North Korea The tout Airmen are (1 to r.): Lt Bruce D. McMahan, pilot, of Houston. Tex.: Sgt George R Beaber. Jr- assistant crew chief; Col James T Buck, Wing Commander, and Sgt Clifford White, Jr., of San Antonio. (U.S Air Force Photo from International) Jury Picked To Tis Porter Selection of a Jury to try Robert . (Bob) Porter, Erwin radio announ cer on charges of attempted rape ! of a teen-age girl was completed this morning in Harnett Superior j Court as opening day of Criminal term moved swiftly with Judge W. ; T. Hatch of Raletah presiding. The all male Jury includes terf white men and one Negro. The Negro is B. J. Burnette. Others-are y Dallas Sherman, Lining ton; A Hr£ Robert Lee Bass. Dunn: W. V tart, ! Coats; Whiter Mason. Spring Latter W. H. Byrd, LiUington: W. Mac Barefoot. Dunn; Bennie B. Harper,. Hrwin, Route I; Leslie Strickland, f Lillington. Route 8. • V*f Trial of the'Porter caw is expect- I ed to consume most of the after- 1 noon. l HALLMAN ACQUITTED 1 Earlier the court directed aver- I diet of not guilty In the case of ■ Sam Hallman charged .with care less and reckless driving. The case was tried In December term and ended In a mistrial. Benjamin Bailey, 20 year old ne gro pleaded guilty to 15 counts of breaking and entering. Testimony of Deputy Sheriff Casey Matthews extended from December Bth to December 20th. Officers state that the tgtal amount of the stolen goods from various LiUington business houses (ContlnuM on Pare Two! Police And Patrol In Busy Weekend The Dunn Police Department and the number of the Highway Patrol had a busy weekend, according to the records of the department. A total of 22 arrests were made over the two day weekend. Intemperate drinking habits were involved In the majority of cases' with four of the defendants ar rested booked for drunken driving. Other charges ranged from public drunkenness to assault with a deadly weapon and carrying concealed weapons. ITS HIS DAY CLEVELAND (VI An as sistant police orosecuter here was in his element to day. His name, sure and be gorra, s: W. Patrick Day, Revival Slated At Tabernacle A revival series wiU be opened at the Dunn Gospel Tabernacle Wednesday evening at 7:45, It was announced today by the Rev. Bane Underwood, pastor. Services will start each evening at 7:48 and wiU continue through March M, Rev. Mr. Underwood said. He extends a cordial invitation to the general public to attend. The Rev. C. C. Forehand of Tall ahassee. Florida is the evangelist. a mm »rvm u tt. _!»■«» of * fast-growing church in Florida. M being a praacher of DUNN, N. C., MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 17, 1952 Pretty Hostess Kills Lover To Prevent, Torture, Death ST. LOUIS OP) A 20-year-old alrljne hostess admitted she level ed autorrfatic at her mjar *T^P*-ssß7Baay she killed him' ! because is-«was my only chance to' 1 live.” ’ Li. Pretty Betty Lou Tracy said that I Larry S. Kell, 43-year-old airline? ; official, threatened to "slitrmy eye* with a razor and put bamboo strips , under my nails and burn them.” SIM confessed firing six shots ! from Kell’a own .25 caliber pistol j into him as he sat in his parked ' car outside her apartment in su burban Overland. | ADMITTED INTIMACY Miss Tracy, who admitted to Po lice Chief Brown Hairgrove that Benson Authorized National Guard Unit A National Guard Anti-Aircraft Battery has been authorized for Benson and recruiting for enlisted i men will get underway on Monday, I March 24th, it was announced today | by Manager Elwood Mints of the j Benson Chamber of Commerce. -J Procurement of a National Guard unit* for Benson has been a ma jor goal of the Benson chamber for some time. The Benson guard unit will be ' attached to the 725th Anti-Aircraft Battalion, which has its headquar ters at Wilmington. Benson’s Guard unit will have, at full strength, one captain, two lieu tenants, one warrant officer, three master sergeants, 11 first sergeants, 25 sergants, 63 corporals, 48 privates first class and only one private. BULLEHTHIV S PHILADELPHIA Oft William F. Meade, 47, former chairman of the Republican eity committee, denied to day a district attorney’s report that he had been shot by a woman in the lobby of a small hotel yesterday. Meade said that he was cut by flying glass when bullets were fired through a window. He mid the shots might have been fired by an intoxicated person outside the hoteL NEW YORK iff) Columnist Walter WincheU Mam edji^ “virus’’ hit appeat an M«ie his script was read by a station^anrtouhccr. ROT S7AQ>r Vnvfhmm TmlmJ /nt _____ lflntffiH* ou *—*• e ■ sdie had been intimate with Keil on numerous occasions, said she mri, him after; she returned front said Ifcev sat in hU parkeff car outside her agartment.and talk ed for several hours. Miss Tracy, a petite brunette, said that Keil, superintendent of sta tions for Ozark, previously had be come violently jealous when he learned that she had relations with another, man. HAD CHOKED HER Ih addition to the threats of tor tusef she said, he twice had choked her. VV. He also threatened to kill him self on several occasions. She said CssiUmod On Pax* Two! Annual payroll of the organized is estimated at over SIOO,OOO. } - PARKER TO BE C.O. Named as commanding officer of I the unit la First Lieutenant David I Henry Parker, a combat veteran of ! Worid War n and a former pris oner of war. Scheduled to be commissioned as lieu tenants are: Gary Hardin of the Meadow School faculty and J. F. Hockaday of the Benson school fac ulty. Federal recognition of the unit Is expected after an official inspection of the new unit about the middle of April. Openings for enlisted men re quire 17 to 45 age limits without previous military service, or IT te 58 wjth prior service. Total Reported In Excess Os Eight Million WASHINGTON (IP! A House subcommittee disclos ed today that known shor tages of government-owned grain total about $1,000,000 more than the top estimate given by Secretary of Agri culture Charles F. Brannon three weeks ago. Brannan announced Feb. 28 that discovered shortages of government price support grain in private ware houses would total from $5,000,000 to $7,000,000. The Agriculture Department sub sequently said that criminal or civil suits have been filed, to date, against warehousemen in 25 cases involv ing grain valued at $7,100,000. In an "interim report,” a House appropriations subcommittee inves tigating the shortages disclosed to day more than a dozen new cases of grain shortages which it said the Justice Department has refer red to U. S. attorneys for possible action. The report indicated that the shortages involved in these cases totaled more than SBOO,OOO. That would boost total shortages to about $8,000,000. BRANNAN ESTIMATE LOW In his Feb. 28 report, Brannan expressed confidence that the net loss to the government, after re coveries, would amount to no more than $1,000,000. The subcommitte gave no estimates of net losses. It cited the new cases as evi dence that it has proved the gov ernment into more vigorous prose cution of warehousemen who have speculated with government grain. '' tt laid it has received informa big to the Justice Department for prosecution an cases involving pos sible violation of farm laws. Board To Hold i Busy Session Dupn’s city council tonight will take up several problems in con nection with new residential devel opments in the city and will also dispose of a variety of other mat ters. Following is a copy of the agenda released this mornin by City Mana ger Oliver O. Maiming: Final action on request from West Divine delegation headed by John Snipes on whether to put In road culvert, grade, and gravel West Divine Street from Oak Court Drive (a private drive) to o|d Pope property line 70 feet beyond Wayne Avenue. Also on Wayne Avenue to West Cumberland Street. Mack Jemigan brings up the question of whether the city will grade, gravel and maintain Oak Court Drive, which according to the survey map is 26 feet, which width Is considerably less than the usual 40, 50, 80. or 70 feet widths of streets dedicated to the city. Further information and discus sion on running water and sewer lines on the North General Lee project to serve those landowners in the city limits at exact cost of water and sewer pipe without hy drants. This would involve running a 8” line from West Carr and m> General Lee to Buries, and running an 8" sewer line from North Qrpnie through Johnson to Norttt General Lee and up to Buries street, with property owners Inside city limits paying bare costs of materials. The question of Increasing water and sewer tapping fees for those outside of city limits from the pres ent rates. The plumbing situation In Dunn. There are now four concerns in Dunn which have state license*. The question is whether we shall issue city licenses to others who are requesting them but who have (Csettw >4 Oh Page Two) ♦MARKETS* HOGS RALEIGH ffi - Hot markets: Rocky Mount, Fayetteville, Flor ence: Slightly weaker ah gc-M and choice 189-240 lb. hornets and gilts at 18.71. Mt_Ofive, W son, uoiasQoro, tuns ion, onuumew, or At | ; ’ Squ&tc*. Slightly wttkef at 16.26. FIVE CENTS FER COPY ■«u ja > l dm ' 11 I MRS. BEST AND HER HOSTS Mrs. L. J. Best, shown In center all decked out in her Sunday finest and sporting an orchid, celebrated her 88th birthday yesterday. Last night, she was the dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Guyton Smith, her cousins, who are shown with ; her. The pioneer Dunn resident reports lt was a wonderful birth-,. day, but thgt she doesn’t feel a bit older. (Daily Record photo by - W. Temple, Jr.) . ■iaidihncabw-aat-*-!:.-.-—■•■* A 'u-w •%.> ir—n-—... .JIKfHHB iik f * T** I ; I- - ■ 111 f■ I f iglM Woneer Residenr* Has 80th Birthday Mrs. L. J. Best, one of Dunn’s oldest and most be- • loved residents, celebrated her 80th birthday Sunday but said today that, “I don’t feel a bit older.” The widow of a pioneer Dunn at- j torney and realtor, Mrs. Best is one ; of the best known residents of the, town. She’s lived here for 50 years, coming to Dunn in 1902. There wasn’t any formal celebra tion of her birthday, but, really, two Informal celebrations. Sunday morning her sister and niece, Mrs. T. C. Young and daugh ter, Elizabeth, of Smithfield, came over for dinner. In fact, they brought the birthday dinner and served Mrs. Best a real treat. On Sunday night, Mr. and Mrs. Guyton Smith, her cousins, took Mrs. Best out to dinner at Johnson's Restaurant. Looking both young and pretty and wearing a pretty orchid., Mrs. Best became the cen ter of'attention when Mrs. Henry Whittenton played “Happy Birth day” on the organ and a group sang it to her. “I really don’t like so much fuss over my birthday,” protested Mrs. (Continued On Page Two) Track To Work On Route No. 1 The trucks will start rolling to morrow to pick up contribuUons along the rural routes surrounding Dunn, tt was announced today by E. W. (Gene) Smith, rural chair man for the Dunn-Erwtn Chapter (CenUnwed on Page 81*1 — " * * * * “ Tyi * Pugh Will AdtlHm Dunn Masonic Event] The annual Ladies’ Night Mason- : I te program, an event looked lor-' : i ward to by members of Palmyra ’ Lodge in Dunn, will be heM at the Dunn High School cafeteria at 7:30 60+ Sons Os Erin Pay Tribute To Saint Pat By UNITED PRESS ' Sons of Erin paid tribute to 8b Patrick today in carefree..celebra tions throughout the country. New York’s fashionable Fifth Ave nue became Just another extension of Dublin’s O’Connell Street as 1.000,000 citizens turned ’-ent.. Ifc watfch 100.000 Irish on pargtfe • In Clinton, Mass., John £ FtSl* gerald dressed up his old Day maw Jenny for his 23rd annual mmß- St. Patrick’s Day parast^JptelßßA 1 the town. It was a great day for thn^qMf: In Hollywood. Proud Celtic;n|. ants displayed a harvest fiDBMI! rocks and a rash of emerattsflEMh ed ties as they gathered ewtfMHjff wood Bousevard. TiiiaMri HONOR FOR O’HARA Filmland’s moat honoreiESHfifll ter of old Ireland for the*tHpj3K| actress Maureen O’Hara "WljagipS be given the Irish Screen* ABtesn . tonight at the annual Day Ball of the Ancient ■ Osißggfc Hibernians. In Waterbury, Conn., Jim Early put away hfclff&Bf cleaner’s broom to become -WSSMk for a day. I “The first thing IT cCBEMK same V class*ta tLu h LEE TO GET APjMH^R NO. T1