* WEATHER * Considerable cloudiness with scat tered showers occurring mostly in west and central portions this af ternoon, tonight and Saturday. Thi- B aily Kewrd THE RECORD IS FIRST SHOWING THEIR TU TU’S—Harriet Press ley (left) radio commentator who was the nar rator of last night's Fashion Show sponsored by the Business and Professional Women of Dunn, helps two little girls fasten on their tu-tu’s. The youngsters are, left. Dale Webb, 8, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carson Webb, and Denna Ruth Ennis 8, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Ennis. With Mrs. Pressley is Ilariett Johnson, president of the Dunn BP&W. (Record Photo.) Says He'll Run For Re-Election Lennon Sees Farm Role As Vital JhinqA By HOOVER ADAMS OUR READERS WIN OUT; EARL IS COMING BACK One of the best ways to judge a newspaper feature and to test its popularity with readers is to drop it for a while and see how many people miss it. That’s what we did with the co lumn written by Earl Wilson, the dapper expert on Broadway, show business, pretty women, cafe so ciety and bosoms. Only a few people complained at first. Others probably expected the column w’ould be automatical ly resumed. But the requests tc return Earl Wilson to this news paper have been increasing now for weeks. So our readers have won out Earl Wilson’s column will be back in The Daily Record, beginning or Monday. BIRTHDAYS: Today is the birth day of Ina Kathrvn Hamill, J. D C. Godwin. Claude Martin, L. A Gavin. Debra Lou Jones and A B Johnson....Saturday will be the birthday of Ralph Wade, Mrs. I J. Williams and Eunice W’ilson... lOontlniml On Pare *11*) Congressman Alton Len non made it plain to local of ficials and supporters who met him here yesterday that he considers his attitude to ward farm problems the cru cial role that he can play in the . House of Representa tives. He also confirmed that he plans to run for re-election. :“I’ve tried the best I know how,” he said, “and if the people here think well about what I’ve done. I’d like for them to help me again.” Lennon said he has held many conferences with the appropriate government officials on tobacco growing and other agricultural interests which have been jeopar dized for one cause or another during the past year. Delivering hearty handshakes to all who came in contact with him, he visited the tobacco sales at both of Dunn’s two big warehouses yes terday and in the afternoon m"t with others desiring his views on pending legislation. Last night at j Camp Alice he was guest of honor | at a chicken supper given by Louise Baer. Solidly behind the price sup port program himself, he said that Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson would probably be ' in favor of dropping all supports if public opinion would let him. Lennon emphasized that the pro grams he has supported is design ed to take pressure off the smaller along without the help,” he said, farmer. “The big fellow may get “but you have to offer somethiing j to take the pressure off the little (Continued on Page Eight) It's Official Now; Grace Is Expecting MONTE CARLO, Monaco (IP1 - A palace press office spokesman said tonight Prince Rainier anc Princess Grace are expecting s baby next March. A communique said: “The palace of the Prince 01 Monaco announces that a happj event is expected by Their Mos' Serene Highness, the Sovereigt Prince and Princess Grace, foi the month of next March.” The announcement put an enc to months of rumors that the for mer movie actress Grace Kell} and her prince would have an other child. Their first child. Princess Caro line Louise Marguerite, was bori here last Jan. 23. Both the princ< and princess have expressed hopi that their next child would be ■ boy. BETSY JOHNSON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PATIENTS Patients recently admitted t< the Betsy Johnson Memorial Hos pital are Mavis Maynard, Mrs Louis Allred, Robert Smith, Pdam ie Elliote, Mrs. Ethel Core, Mrs Marie Burns, Mrs. Irene Jones Mrs. Regena F>egicy, Mrs. Mar garie Tomi, Mrs. Mary McArthur Mrs. Irene Martin, Mrs. Maiv C fehortt, Mrs. Irene Wood, and Ba by Sherry Snider. Judge Morgan Vs Sen. Morgan In Harnett's County Court It was Judge Robert Mor gan vs. State Senator Rob ert Morgan in the county re corder’s court in Lillingtor :his week. And it was enough to have an; clerk of court’s head swimming The two county officials have th same name. It seems that the foot of Hai nett’s popular State Senator gc a little too heavy on the accelers tor and a State highway patrol man cited him to court for speec ing 69 miles art hour. State Patrolman John Moore of, I Angier got the Senator enroute to i Fuquay Springs. ‘Good Things,” He Says "I really think it was a good thing that they got me,” smiled i the oficial. “I’m afraid I’ve been . driving too fast and this will cer ?, tainly slow me down.” Cost Him $20.73 Judge Robert Morgan exercis t ed leniency with Senator Robert - Morgan (they are the best of - friends but no kin1) and let him - i off with a $5 fine and court costs So Senator Morgan forked over a total of $20.75. “I couldn’t aford to hire a lav yer to defend me,” quipped th Senator, who also happens to b one of the county’s leading attoi neys, "because all of them wante pay in advance.” It just so happened that on' th day before Senator Morgan g< his ticket he was behind an aut< mobile containing Grady Earp an H. M. Keith, two clients, followin them to Fayetteville on a leg: matter. Earp’s car crossed the whamrr (Continued on rift lw«) Faubus Holds Out; Lawyers Walk Out LITTLE ROCK. Ark., (- ton was a jury decision to aw d ard $6000 to plaintiff William J. g Blackwell and $25,000 to Warren il G. Tart in their injury suit. Co defendants Howard Ray Lee and y Bobby Glover were held equally at fault by the jury and they were ordered to shoulder the settlement half and half. Details of the trial below. Warren G. Tart. 37, and Willian J. Blackwell, 41, two Dunn met who are Civil Service employes a Fort Bragg, were injured In i (Continued On Pag* Ux, Adulterous Wife Blamed For Slaying WASHINGTON, N. C. (OP)) A psychiatrist testified to day that attorney J. D. June Grimes Jr., was “temporarily insane” when he killed ten ant Haywood Paul after fin ding Paul and Mrs. Grimes almost nude and “very close together” under a tobacco shed. Dr. Harry Brick, Richmond, Va.. said the 42-year-old former county prosector had been awak ened from a deep sleep and was in “a twilight state — half-awake and half-asleep” when he came upon the couple lying in intimate embrace. “Though a person can hear, see, touch things, he does not know what he hears, sees, touches,” Brick said. Grimes, member of a prominent family, has pleaded not guilty by reason of temporary insanity in the slaying of the sharecropper. Thinking Disturbed Grimes’ thinking was so dis - turbed that he did not know what he was doing, or what was right or wrong, Brick said. His opinion was based upon six consultations with Grimes and Grimes’ father since the Aug. 17 killing. Brick was asked by the defense for his "expert opinion,” with de fense counsel first tracing the happy marl age to Lillie Grist Grimes. i The lengthy hypothetical ques tion also went into the events on the night of the shooting when Grimes awakened and found his wife missing from the house, took a pistol and roamed over the grounds of his plantation looking for her. Testimony Thursday featured Grimes’ own story and introduc tion of a letter written almost a year ago by Paul’s wife to Grimes' father, warning that her husband and Mrs. Grimes ^ere having an affair. The letter said the affair had been going on since "early spring” of last year. Grimes testified that he did not believe there was any truth to the letter, and said he "loved and trusted” his wife, mother of their five children, “implicitly.” Character Witnesses The defense also called charac ter witnesses. Levi Stubbs, an overalled farm (Contlrued on Pare Eight) CLOTHING NEEDED—This scene can be duplicated al most daily at the county welfare office in Lillington as needy children apply for clothing and shoes. The crowded welfare build ing has no storage space so the Junior Woman’s Club of Lil lington, in cooperation with the State Federation of Women's (Tubs and State welfare authorities, has set up a Clothing Closet. Space has been donated by D. P. Ray, Jr., in the old Lillington hotel. A drive for good, used clothing will be held on Oct. 1-2. (Daily Record Photo By Carroll Vaughn) Gromyko Sounds Off Before UN Russia Blames US For Syria Crisis UNITED NATIONS, N. Y„ (UP)—Russia blamed the United States today for the crisis in Syria and the Middle East and disclaimed any intention by the Kremlin to med dle in internal affairs there. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, in a policy speech to the United Nations General As sembly, also: Proposed a suspension of nu clear weapons tests for two to three years, proposed outlawing use of atomic and hydrogen arms for at least five years and called for a “peaceful coexistence” a greement among all countries. Biggest Concession The new Russian proposal on nuclear weapons was the biggest Soviet disarmament concession since the Kremlin accepted in principal last November, President Eisenhower’s open skies plan. Gromyko, as grim and grumpy as when he won his diplomatic spurs as Russia’s original “no man” in the U. N., fired back angrily at American demands that Russia cease meddling in the Mid East. Soviet Security “The Soviet Union,” Gromyko said, “cannot place itself in the position oi an impassive observer while the Near and Middle East —an area close to the frontiers of the Soviet Union—is being turned into a permanent hotbed of mili tary conflicts. Their organizers should recognize that the Soviet Union cannot watch impassively over a situation which bears on its own security.” As for those “spreading fables about Soviet intrigues” in the Middle East, Gromyko demanded: “Who is speaking to put his hands on the natural wealth of the Near and Middle East — is it the Soviet Union or the U. S. A.? The answer is clear. It is the work of American monopolies, first of < Continued On Pan Elfht' Wendy Hunter Chamber Head Perhaps conscious that other towns have done the same with success, the Dunn Chamber of Commerce has ippointed a woman to be the executive secretary of its ac tivities here. Mrs. Wendy Hunter, wife o the pastor of Grove Presbyteriar Church, has a ready smile anc striking honey-blonde hair. Sh< says she understands her job to be “the promotion of Dunn in all its aspects.” Her official duties actually don’t begin until Monday but she was at the office today to be in terviewed by the press. Woman like, she carried a large and well ■ filled pocket book of splashy de ; sign. - • | She said that she and her hus band, Rev. George Hunter, had been exceptionally pleased since moving here. “I’ve had an awful lot of Just pure joy at working with the peo ple out at Grove Church,” she said. The Hunters came here partly at the instigation of Rev. Dick Gammon, former pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Dunn, and this was her husband’s first pastoral assignment. They were married ten years Continues t*n r&re stsl carnival Midway Open 6-12 p. m. Stock Show And Fair Open Mon. The big exhibit tent was :>n its way up this morning it the fairgrounds on the lonesboro Road where, after i parched summer, kids and grownups can let off some steam at the Harnett Coun ty fair. American Legion Commander Robert Lee Smith has been active ly directing most of the prepara tions for the carnival and fair ex hibition which is sponsored an nually by his organization, i On Monday, the fair will open i with Gold Medal Shows, setting : up its Midway sometime on Sunday, i General admission this year will be 60 cents for grownup and 25 cents for children. It will be an all-week stand for the carnival which boasts a irea high-wire act and free fireworkers four of the six nights that the Fair will be open. Criticism about gambling at the fair last summer has caused Ro bert Smith to annuonce that seri ous gambling games will be abso lutely bared from the Midway. Attorney J. O. West was named chairman of the Fair by the American Legion and the co-chair men are A. L. Poch and Lewis A. Gavin. Directors are Smith, J. B. Warren, Jr., Belvin Strick land, Edwin Boyette, Huey Bass, Chester Johnson and Ralph Wade. The fairgrounds is located two miles east of city center, off the Jonesboro Road. The agricultural and livestock show opens at 6:30 Monday night and will close at midnight on Saturday. Gates will be open each evening from six to 12 p.m. Free parking is pro vided. Gold Medal Shows will send up its high-wire act — the Aerial Winters — every night at 10 p.m. On Monday, Tuesday and Wednes day this will be followed at 10:30 p.m. by fireworks. Exhibitors must place their en tires on the grounds between 8 a. m. and 6 p. m. on Monday un less otherwise directed for a part icular class or department. There will be cash prizes distributed. Besides the livestock entries, l Continued On **»*• SLk)