* WEATHER + Generally fair and warm this af ternoon and Friday. Cool tonight Highest today 75 to 83; lowest to night 36 to 45 in mount* iss and 44 to 54 eisewhere. VOLUME ft WEST SAYS BIG FOUR MUST AGREE -JJ Jr ■^^^ftHdugfiHkL. i iIK £Huß JR I W *“' 1 ‘- InP l|jB« ■! B iJ ft ■„!%*' * JHHU - lißr §s|| |; p - ■§ '^^Bl /} ■ •» BBv .. “MR. HENRY” HONORED Tuesday was the 62nd birthday of W. H. Slocumb, popular cashier of the First Citizens Bank and Trust Company here and his co-workers didn’t forget. After they finished counting money at the close of the day’s business, they brought out a big beau tiful birthday cake and let “Mr. Henry,” as they affectionately know him, count the candles. Mr. Slocumb, a veteran of 13 years service with the bank. Is shown here slicing a piece of cake for Vice President Earl H. Mahone, shown holding his Jhsti be ctltib JhinqA if HOOVER ADAStfI SOME LITTLE NOTES ON THE DUNN SCENE Crafton Tart, who travels to the big markets both north and south,, has made an observation that cMls.< for action on the part of Soqfe-r body In Dunn—Crafton « out that there are no road signs anywhere outside the immediate area giving the 1 mileage to Dunn . “You can find dozens of signs 75 and 100 milts away giv ing the mileage to Sftiithfleld, Wil son, Newton Grove, Fayetteville and every other town except Dunn,” points out the prominent Dunn business man He cites the fact that there Isn’t a single sign be tween Dunn and Rocky Mount giv ing the mileage to Dunn Those signs are good advertising for a town and Crafton thinks it ought to be called to the attention of the State Highway Department S;> do we... A number of local people are planning to attend the preview opening of the new Eutaw Shop ping Center in Fayetteville tonight early In November ..It is one of the most attractively designed shopping centers In the southeast and is located in the Eutaw section on Bragg Boulevard ... Mrs. Ruby Newsome advertised an apartment in Monday night’s issue of The Daily Record—She phoned back Tuesday and requested: "Please take it out. It was rented long ago and my phone is still ringing.”... Ruby says one insertion is all It takes In The Record And Jim my Suggs, livewire head of The Suggs Company, says he advertised an appliance he used as a demon strator in The Record’s classified column and not only sold it but (Continued on Pace Two) Benson Says Politicians Exaggerating Farm Issue WASHINGTON (IB Sec- I retary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson said today politi cians are exaggerating the plight of the nation’s farmp ers. Benson, central figure in the con troversy about farm policies, de clining farm income, prices of farm produce, and the new pork purchase program, aserted that pollcitlcans are deliberately kicking up a storm without cause. "The farm program now in op TELEPHONES 3117 - 3118 empty plate at right. The cake was baked by Mrs. Shirley Bass and Mrs. Maxine Whitman decorat ed it. Shown in the picture are: Mr. Slocumb, Mr. Mahone, Mrs. Phoebe Murphy. Mrs. Wilma O’Brien, Mr. Whitman, Miss Barbara Parker, Miss Jean Blackmon, Mrs. Evelyn Cameron, Mrs. Bass, and Mrs. E. B. Graham. Two employees, Mr a Lou Frances Royal and Ermon H. Godwin, cannot be seen in the picture. Mr. Godwin, a banker by profession and photographer by hobby, made this picture. AT JOHNSTON HOSPITAL Given Up As Dead, Woman Is Revived^ SMITfifrIELD, N. C. (TP A woman whose doctor "be lieved her dead after a 20-minute massage failed to re store her heartbeat may have made the most complete and dramatic recovery in medical annals, the doctor said today. Dr. Wayne H. Stockdale had left ,dhe pktient and James Raynor had dead. * Then nurses removing anes thjftie 'apparatus noticed that she had started to breathe again, the doctor said. He immediately re sumed the operation. Mrs. Marjorie Barbour Raynor, 30, has made a recovery that is “the most complete and dramatic I know of.” Stockdale said. He described it as “a miracle of the Master’s work upstairs.” , Severe damage to the brain us ually results when the heartbeat stops for as long as seven minutes, and if the patient survives he is not mentally competent, the doc tor said. Erwin Gets Its First Attorney Erwin, a community of around 6,000 population, will soon gain its first practicing attorney. Charles Williams, who received his oath as a new attorney on October 19 before Superior Court Judge Clawson Williams in Lil lington, plans to open an office shortly for the general practice of law In Erwin. Williams said he will locate his office In the Bank Building. Williams now is employed in the protective service of the Harnett eration is the result of a year’s study and was adopted on a bi partisan basis," Benson said in an interview with United Press. “A farm program should not serve partisan political purposes. “Yet a determined effort is un derway to paint the picture blacker than it really is. Nat Helping Farmers “Some politicians are not help ing farmers much by their com ments." He answered with a grin only when asked If he thought those (She Baihj Jltmtd “Her heart did not beat for more thap 20 minutes, but she is perfectly ratioial and normal,” Sjjdckdale. saicLJ Mrs. Raynor can “expect a deplete and normal ifc? complications de velop.” j V** - Mrs,? 'Raynor had been critically injured'ln a three-car wreck last FrlSay. She was brought to John ston Memorial Hospital suffering from internal Injuries, including a contusion of the heart. Stockdale said he began an incision of the abdomen to reach the heart and other vital organs, but her heart stopped beating before the incision was completed. It was then that he began the 20-minute massage of the organ that was given up as futile. County Welfare Department, a so cial case work position he has held while awaiting the August bar ex aminations. He is the son of L. W. Williams and the late Mrs. Wil liams of near Lillington. SERVED IN GERMANY Following his graduation from Lillington High School ih 1943, he entered N. C. State College as an Army cadet, and later served with the Army of Occupation in Germa ny for 26 months. He holds the l Con tinned On Page Two) persons who advocate a return to 60 per cent of party say it would jack up farm Income. Criticism of the administration’s farm program has been severe. Benson has been pressured by high ranking politicians of both parties, farmers and farm groups in the Midwest, and others to do some thing about the economic situa tion of farmers. An indication of the severity of the pressure was the announce ment late Wednesday that Benson (Osallnii «m Pag* Turn) DUNN, N. t., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 27, 1955 Benson Speech f Is Anxiously Anticipated | WASHINGTON IIP ln* siders will be listening for Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson’s Minn., speech this week for a tip on Republican plains for dealing with organised labor in next year’s pru dential campaign. Benson is scheduled to speak; before a farm audience Friday evening. His last previous speech on farm prices aroused CIO Presi dent Walter Reuther to sharp re ply. That speech was given Sept. 2fl in New Orleans Before the Farm Equipment Institute. Benson did not place all the blame for the high price of farm equipment on union labor wage gains. But he squarely placed some of the blame there. Reuther 'challenged Instantly, in- , viting Benson to join him in urging congressional investigation of wag es. prices and profits in the steel, automobile and farm equipment industries. Meantime, the word in Washington was that Benson had not cleared his speech with the White House where some of the staff was represented as upset by the secretary’s potshot at union leadership. Politically .Extfloriv* The** of, Benson’s ibdvlsere, S*W%h«mprMs»l: THINr iivk 'ofg ed the secretary to stick' to the theme that some of labor’s gains have been unwarranted and unfair to both the fanner and the con sumer. That is a delicate and po litically explosive proposition. Ben son stated it at New Orleans; with special reference to farm Equip ment and some parts of the food indfistry in which he cited spe cifically higher wage, handling and transportation costs. It has been suggested by some (Continued on Page Five Veronica Lake Suffers Attack DETROIT (W Actress Veron ica Lake collapsed in the lobby of a downtown hotel early today and was hospitalized with what doctors described as a possible heart at tack. The 33-year-old stage and film star was rushed to Receiving Hos pital where a preliminary diagno sis listed the attack as a probably coronary occlusion. She fainted as she entered the lobby of the Barium Hotel and complained of severe chest pains (Continued on Page Two) Schools Ready For Halloween Events Jumping the gun somewhat on Halloween, Dunn schools will pre sent the annual Halloween Carni val On .Saturday night, October 26, at the Armory. Highlight of the evening, ac cording to pert publicity chairman Rita McLean, will be the finalizing of results in a royalty-choosing contest. Not only a king and queen from the high school, but a prince and princess from the elementary grades will be crowned. Students + Record Roundup + AT SPRING HILL CHURCH The annual Harvest Day sale at Spring Hill Mehtodist Church near Mamers will be held on Saturday, October 39. a barbecue and chick en salad dinner will be served for one dollar a plate, and auction of farm and home products will be conducted from 10 a. m. to if -- rS| aw J kJffil JIM ib - iIP jfflSf - - Hlf r B KTkJH • * H!ir nPlr’ *- ’.'i ’• Vf;>!‘wßSmSbSk ts UKyp ] IB isl lii S • , ■■■•'' ■ H'aU ■< I W±: I |j|BBB B fl| ■ SHgHB Msm'i ‘’a. fi esh .di- .■ By PLAN FOR NEXT YEAR Before Little River Baptist Association broke up yester day,l plans were laid for the meeting a year from now on October M and 31, 1956. Prominent at this year's conference were (from left) Moderator H. Paul Strickland, Dunn; Julious Holloway, associ ate nal missionary, Buie’s Creek; Robert Morgan, LUUngton, secretary of the Association; Rev. For rest Maxwell, pastor of the First Baptist Church Baptists { Report Big Gains; Kehame t Association Officers By TED CRAIL Record Staff Writer Nearly 500 pjgepjbns attend ed for all or part'qf day session of thle Little . Riv er Baptist Association on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. Yesterday afternoon an election of officers was held and the top leaders in the association, includ ing Moderator H. Paul Strickland and Vice-Moderator E. P. Russell were re’elected. Mr. Strickland, Dunn attolney and Judge of Recorder’s Court here, has been prominent in Bap tist activities. He was (first elected to the Moderator post last year, succeeding Dr. Leslie H. Campbell of Campbell College who served for 17 years. (Rev. E. P. Russefll Is the pastor of Dunn's First Baptist Church. The association also reelected Robert B. Morgan, Lllltnglton, as secretary, Berles Johnson, Buie’s Creek, as treasurer, Lonnie Small as head of the Training Union (Conttnaed on Page Two) themselves are choosing the fin alists for these titles, but the pub lic wll make the final selection. The Saturday night carnival is intended, said Miss McLean, “to give the young people of our town some sort of planned entertain ment for Halloween." It will open at 8 p. m. and close at 11. Admission for students will be twenty-five cents, thirty-five for adults. Stunts and games are being planned by various grades. (Continued on Page Two) •noon and from 1 p. m. to 4 p. m. All proceeds will go toward the church building fund. GOOD TURN-OUT The train ing demonstration on ’Sweet Po tatoes in the Menu” given on Tues day by Miss Thelma Hinson, home (Oeattned mm Page Two) in Erwin; Ernest P. Russell, vice-moderator, pas tor of the First Baptist Church in Dunn; Series. Johnson, treasurer of the association; and Rev. G. Van Stephens, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Angler. Rev. Stephens gave an ad dress yesterday and the association also heard from E. L. Spivey, executive secretary of the state missions. Fired Bapker Rqms Plane Into Bank LOS ANGELES (IP) A disgruntled flier killed him self when he apparently deliberately crashed his small rented plane into the airport bank branch where he was fired as a teller Tuesday, police said today. AFL And CIO Merger Near NEW YORK (IP) George Meany, president of the American Federa tion of Labor, said his union and the Congress of Industrial Organ izations have “practically complet ed” arrangements to merge into a giant single union. The AFL - CIO, as it is to be known, will have a membership of about 14 1-2 million workers. Meany, who will head the com bined union, and Walter Reuther, head of the CIO, discussed the pending merger at a news confer ence late yesterday. Reuther will be one of 27 vice presidents of the (Continued On Page Three) Tried In Death Os A 'Sex Star' WASHINGTON OP) Brown haired Katherine Haynes, 28, sat sobbing in court today as her hus band accused her of slaying the 19-year-old girt whose ‘ nb’.'- lties” he had openly extolled. Defense counsel for Mrs. Hay nes, on trial for the murder of Nancy Penton last July 19, introdu ced an almost nude photograph of the girl, which Mrs. Haynes’ hus band, Willis. 32. acknowledged hav ing shown to his wife. Mrs. Haynes, who is pleading temporary insanity, sobbed: “It’s one thing to have a wife and an other thing to have sexual love for someone." She has admitted break ing into Nancy’s furnished room and shooting her with a 22 caliber pistol. 4-The Record Is Firs* 4 IN CIRCULATION ... NEWS PHOTOS... ADVERTISING COMICS AND FEATURES FIVE CENTS PER COPY The only injured person was the bank official who fired the crash victim, Benjamin Fauth. “He apparently tried to get even with the bank,” said A. L. Wagnon. one of the investigating officers at the crash scene yesterday. “That’s only a guess, of course, but he apparently had some reason to fly into it.” KILLED INSTANTLY Fauth, 29, was killed instantly in the crash of the single-engined Aeronca plane into the Bank aif America’s International Airport branch. Police and Civil Aeronaq,’- (Continued on Page Two) Four Oaks Farmer Invents Crop Meter : -• ■.% .. J A Four Oaks cotton and tobacco farmer, who has a degree in agricultural education from North Carolina State, has come up with something that would probably pleas®.his professors. ! lfc .*>*••■ i JESSE LASSITER NO. 238 Stiff Warning Delivered At First Session GENEVA «PI The West bluntly told the Soviet Un ion today the Big Four must agree on German unity and European security before there can be “further prog ress” in easing the cold war. The warning came at the open ing session of the Big Four foreign ministers conference in the ornate hall of the Palais des Nations. From the start, Britain. Franca and the United States were ready to offer the Soviet Union a package guarantees in return for German unification on western terms. But as U. S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, British Foreign Secretary Harold Macmil lan and French Foreign Minister Antoine Pinay convened, their dis cussions were dogged by other complications. There was a threatened danger of new war in the Middle East, and a new governmental crisis in France. Decide On Details In his opening statement Pinay. the chairman, said: “It is clear that on . .German unity and security, there is no obstacle to an immediate decision on the details of a plan destined to ibik the realiaatlo nos German unity to the elaboration of a secur ity System. “Ip the absence of such a deci sion, no later progress would be possible" ' As an inducement to Molotov, Pinay added that the plan would be carried out progressively, taking account of everyone’s "legitimate interests,” ®nce the decision Is madej: . Macmillan reitejfated that the West; was.. re%dy 'to make every Effort her# to” keep the world on the road to peace despite a back ground of new dangers. ‘We must recognize that there are considerable gaps between the positions hitherto taken by the Western powers and by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics,” he said. “We believe that these can be bridged, and we are determined to make every effort to achieve success.” CALLS FOR CHANGE WASHINGTON W—Former Sec retary of state Dean Achescn called today for election of a Dem ocratic president because Republi can “imaginative thinking has dried up.” Ache-son. who served as Presi dent Truman’s secretary of state from 1949 to 1953, said the Eisen hower administration’s foreign pol icy “has coasted on the momentum of past initiative.” It’s a counter, operating some what like a speedometer, which the inventor claims will give the to bacco farmer an exact measure ment of his planting, and tell him when to lay off so he won’t exceed his allotted acreage. Jesse Lassiter said he first be came aware of the disruptions caused by not knowing exactly what acreage had been planted while he was giving on-the-farr* instruction to veterans. “My biggest problem,” he “was worrying whether I was cut* ting my own dwindling allotment! short by two or three tenths of sq| acre or over-planting and being rrnm quired to destroy the excess" His feeling about the Row Crof Meter he has designed (a few of which, he says, will be available to farmers this year): "I am certain 1 would ha v # (VWUM Ml JTSfV mWWJ j