BULLETINS WASHINGTON (IJPI) — 1 hr House Rules Committee threw . roadblock Thursday In the way of a pro|>osed two billion dollar pro (ram of federal loans for conslructin of local public works projects At a closed session the group sent the measure back to the Hanking Committee with orders to amend it. f ailure W* do so would mean the bill would be pigeonoholed. WASHINGTON (CPI) — The American Red Cross said today that because of a comnvinirations emergency only the most pressing messages from families can be cabled to C. S. troops in Lebanon. RICHMOND, Va. (CPI) — Gov. J. Lindsay Almond says he is confident Virginia's state police could handle any racial disturbance that might crop up when school integration orders take effect in three localities in September. HAKTLORI). Conn. (CPI) — A boy who “just wanted to make a little fire” was held today for setting off an explosion-punctuated in ferno tnat reduced HO tons ol scrap metal to smoldering ashes. SAN SALVADOR. II Salvador (Cl’li — Dr. Milton Eisenhower, brother of the President, holds the first of his three-da.v talks with LI Salvador's top officials today on the last leg of his fact-finding tour of seven Central American countries. COLOGNE, West Germany (CPI) — Otto John, former West German counter-intelligence chief who was sente-need to four years in prison for conspiring with the Communists, was free on parole today. John vanished mysteriously into Last Herli on July 20, 1954, exactly it) years after participating in the abortive bomb plot against Adolf Hitler. NEW YORK (CPI) — Prime Minister Kwane Nkruina returned triumphantly Sunday to the llarleni where as a college boy he once, peddled fish on a street corner. An estimated 10,000 persons greeted the Hi-month-old Airica republic during a parade up Seventh Aveiyir. Later about 7,500 persons, including Cniled Nations undersecretary Dr. Ralph J. Bunchr gathered to pay tribute to Dr. Nkurmah in a llarleni armory. I .VIPI 1 (CPI) — Nationally China paid tribute today to an Ameri can llicr wiio served ( hina through two decades ol victories and heart breaking retreat—Gen. Claire ( hennault, who died Sunday. WASHINGTON (IJPI) -— Diplomatic officials expressed doubt to day that Soviet press charges of l). S. '‘prqscrastlnation’' mean llijd Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev will reject President Eisenhow er's latest conditions tor summit talks at the Cnited Nations. M W IDItK (I PI) — David McDonald will how out as president of Ihe Cniled Steelworkers Cnion this year in the fare of mopniing rank-and-file opposition to his leadership of the one million-man un ion. fortune Magazine said today. llloMANtILLL (CPI) — (supermarket operator Robert Cran ford, convicted once ior violation of the Sunday closing law in the city of Thoinasvlllc, was arrested again Sunday for keeping Ins market ©pen for business. RALEIGH (CPI) — log shrouded much of the state and lightning flashed in the pre-dawn skii-s oil llattrras early today hut the outlook yvas for more warm, humid July weather. The state forecast for today aud Tuesday was about the sum*- as lor 24 of 2K days this month_ warm, humid with widely scattered afternoon and evening thunder showers. High temperatures were expected in the low 90s outside the mop tains. SOI III BOSTON. \a. (CPI) — Damages in a fiery collision be tween two tractor-trailers that killed one and injured two Sunday are expected to reach $50,000. Jack Dempsey Scott, 53, of 806 Orange st. Wilmington. N. < was burned to death while pinned in his cab after Hie spectacular wreck that blocked state route 301 three miles east of here. Fire Chief 'Continued fwrnv rage One) will insist that needed personnel and equipment recived top priority within their communities," he said Seawell's address was to a meeting of the North Carolina Assn, of Fire Chiefs, opening the convention program. A memorial service and business meeting Tuesday will open the full con vention. Wednesday’s session will fea ture discussion of the new fire men's pension fund law enacted by the 1957 General Assembly. State Insurance Commissioner Charles F. Gold and State Audi tor Henry Bridges will In* speak ers. Victim's Father (Continued from Page One' told his story at pond-site. Just a few minutes earlier Ralph Spence found the body of Calvin Watson, swimming underwater while the dragging operation was proceeding in another part of the pond. Two young boys, ten and 12 years old. had watched Watson’s struggle. They were the only wit nesses to the drowning which oc curred about II a m. Sheriff Claude Moore said the colored man had apparently de child to walk across the pond, stopped Into a hole that was over his head and couldn’t yet back to safe around. He did not know how to swim. Neither did the two youngsters who were helping him rig the Ir rigation system. Watson left a wife and two small children. Mr. and Mrs John E. Wilbour nc of IJllington announce the birth of a son. John E. Jr. on Sunday, July 27th in the Betsy Johnson Memorial Hospital in Dunn. Mrs Wilbournc is the former Miss Av inelle Graham of Dunn Mr. and Mrs. Carl 1). Fuller announce the birth of a son on July 21 in Betsy Johnson Memor ial Hospital in Dunn. Mrs. Fuller Is* the former Irma Whittenton. Mr and Mrs. Hob Dunigan of Benson announce the birth of a son on Monday, July 21 in Rex Hospital at Raleigh. Mrs. Duni gan is the former Ann Blake of Burgaw Mr, Dunigan is ag teach er at Meadow School, near Ben son. Record Ads Pay Ehr-)- B ailtz Wer-nnd DUNN. N. C. Published By HSCORU PUBLISHING COMPANY At 311 East Canary Street Cn^.rea as second-class matter \n the Post Office in Dun. O. inder the laws of Congress, Act of March 3. 18*7* Every afternoon. Monday through Friday. s^,gSCKIpTION rates By CAKRIER: 25 oents per week it TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND RURA» ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: $8.M par ;ew; KH for six nonthii Ji.00 for three month# *CY-e/F-STATE* 110.50 per year In aAeanoe; MAO far Si mb* UH for three mentW VYINC FOR MISS U.S.A. TITLE One of these girl1 u.ill represent the United States in the Miss Universe contest r s Mis* U S A, Shown in f orig Beach. Cahf., are, left to right, top row, Judith Carlson, Alabama; Donna Broor ., Cali mia. Man ia Valibus. Florida. Diane Austin, Georgia; June Pirkney. Illinoi ; Sharon Tietjin Montana, and Eurlyne Howell, Loui.-i ana CeDter row, Dee Kjeldganrd. Nebraska; Virgins Fox. New York; Patricia Moss, Smith Carolina, and Helen Yom j/iul• r. South Dakota. Front row. Martha Boales, Tennessee; Linda Daugherty, Texas; Sandra Pugh, Utah, and Hose Nielsen, Washington. ; Couple Charges Harassing Planned Atlanta Hearings Set ATLANTA (Ul'l) \ Kentucky couple charged today the House tin American Activities Commit tec intends at a hearing here Tuesday to "harass" white inte grationists in the South. Mr anl Mrs. Carl Braden of IxAlisvIlle issued a prepared state ment stating they are amen . 15 l»eisons sutipenaed to appear be fore a three-man subcommittee headed by Hep Edwin T Willis < D-La t Committee Chairman I’rajjeis K. Walter tD-I’at said the two day hearing is intended to show that Communists have infiltrated industrial areas of several south ern state- from "control centers in the North.” Other subcommit tee members are Heps. Will iam M. 'I~uck tD-Vai and Donald L, Jackson ( R-Callf). Tin* committee has not dis closed witnesses’ names but the Bradens. now vacationing in Kliode Island, said they were sub penaed. Mrs. Braden's ajipear - ance was postponed because of illness. "These hearings are apparently designed to harass white people working to bring about peaceful integration in the southern states." the statement said "We ha\o been active for many years in the southern integration movement and are presently em ployed as field secretaries for the Southern Conference educa tional Fund, a southwide inter racial agency.” Mrs Brad: :i also had been in dicted in the case. Don West, former minister and professor whose name has been linked with Communism, said he also received a subpena although. I don't know anything about any members of the Communist party. West, who now farms on 200 acres near Douglasville. Ga., said he is “just trying to make a de cent. honest living on my farm’’ but added, “a subpena is a sub pena and attendance is com - polled ” West said his wife was recently Injured in an auto accident in Kentucky and he must leave her bedside to appear at the hearing. Designated By Queen Elizabeth II Charles New Prince Of Wales CARDIFF, Wales (UPD—Queen Elizabeth II announced today she is designating her son Prince Charles as Prince of Wales. The Queen made the announce ment about her 9-year-old son in a tape-recorded statement to thousands of Welshmen attending the Empire Games at this princi pal Welsh city. # “1 intend to create my son. Charles. Prince of Wales today,” she said. ‘‘When he is grown up I will present him to you at Caer narvon.” Caernarvon Castle was the an cient seat of the Welsh "kings. The last Prince of Wales reach I til the throne as King Edward VIII | but abicated because of his love ; for tlie American Wallis Simpson, whom he later maried. He is now jthc Duke of Windsor. George VI, father of the Queen, was Duke of York before he be came king on his brother’s abdi cation before World War II. Harnett Picked Foi Homemaker Projeci Harnett County has been given the opportunity to participae i a demonstration program In the use of home makers to serve age persons, according to an announcement today by Miss Lola Moor Hall, Countj Supeiitendent of Public Welfare. Three counties in the State will lake part in the Homemaker Pro ject. Chatham County is the other county already chosen by the State Board of Public Welfare, accord I ing to a statement by l)r. Ellen Winston. Commissioner. A two year demonstration in North Car olina has boon made possible by a grant of $20,000 from the Doris Duke Foundation and matching Federal funds. Mrs. Esther Hutss of Augier has been selected to be the homemak er serving in this county with white families. Mrs Marjorie Har rington of Route 2, Lillupiton, will perform the duties among Negro families. They will begin their work Thursday, July 24, 1958. Homemakers for service in fam ilies where children need care at a time of the illness of the mother have been employed in public wel fare programs in North Carolina aud some other states for several years. However, it is a brand new project for homemakers in public welfare to serve in ways which will assist older adults so as to tide them over some crisis or to give them occasional help in their own homes. This is intended to supplement the home keeping which the old er person can do for herself or himself. It is a program so new that North Carolina's demonstra tion is already alerting national interest. The program lias the sup port of other professions concern ed with improved services for old er people in their own homes. These two homemakers will serve in this country as a part of the public welfare program. They will go. into homes of aged per sons receiving .^public , assistance to perform duties of homemaking which will permit the aged per sons to continue In their own homes rather than be forced by circumstances tfr give up their owu living arrangements. Tims, b serving in a number of sueh home in varying ways aecording to th needs, each homemaker will er courage the aged person to cor tinue to do as much for himself a possible. In addition, it is hope that this project will eventuall save money which would other wise need to be spent by the cour ty and the State for more type of care. Farmers Need Market Cards Tobacco markets will soon b opening and ASC manager W. 1 Byrd is reminding fanners t "bring marketing cards to th warehouse.” The card must be produced wit each load of tobacco, said Byrt if it is to be identified as accep able to the buyer. Marketing card label the tobacco as being aceep able or of a discounted variety. • Under the program, farmers who plant any amount of the tobacco" lacking in flavor and aroma" will I be eligible for price support at ■ one-half tlie regular support rate. Another thing that will probably be of interest to Harnett County , farmers is the fact that over a I third of the $31 million to be paid out to North Carolina farmers for participation in the 1958 Soil Bank Program has now been paid out i through local ASC county offices. * Nearly all of the remaining $20 ' million will be paid out between now and the 15th of next month. Participation in the Soil Bank Program in North Carolina which j made those payments possible is v made up of $29.5 million through ; the acreage reserve part of the Soil Bank and $1.5 million under the conservation reserve part of the program. Unless quick action is taken by the Congress there will be no Acreage Reserve pro gram for 1959. Many of the farm ers in this State who this year placed their allotted acreage in the Soil Bank v\ill have to change their plans somewhat if they have been expecting to participate in the e Acreage Reserve next year [. The county office is milking e\ - o ery effort to get the Soil Rank e checks in the hands of farmers as qiiickly as possible, and it will h hurry the delivery of these checks I, if farmers wait until they are no titled to visit the county office to s pick up the checks. So far in Harnett County $384. FROM WARNER BROS.^ FUNNIER TRAN THE PLAY i HAPPIER THAN THE BOOK! STEWART AIK CONDITIONED STARTS -V SUNDAY Something For The Boys _ Patou Bares Bosom, Shows Plenty Of Leg I PARIS (UPI) — Jean Patou today came up with something for the boys — fitted waistlines, bosoms daimgb displayed, skirts show ing plenty of k-g. The firm's brand-new designer, 25-year-old Roland Karl, showed a collection which stressed shape and had no traee of last year's sack. A couple of short black cocktail dresses were cut so wide open at the front that even some of the ! women reporters gasped Other cocktail and evening dresses fea tured low low - cut backs ! l The "something for the boys even showed in the name of one 1 of the dresses. It was dubbed ! "Jimmy's.” Patou's two - hour parade of daytime and evening fashions kicked off a week - long period of fall and winter clothes previews by members of the high - fashion Chambre Synicale. Skirt • lengths of most of the daytime clothes felf to just below the knee which was short to this observer but longer, some report ers said, from what Patou had shown last year. The Patou waistlines were a little low at tire back, but were in a normal position in front or of ten hinting at higher waistline with wide belts or fabric insets. Suit jacket* in most cases were short, double breasted with the front ending a few inches below the waist while the back was close ly fitted to the waistline. Coats were slim and most of them had bracelet - length sleeves. Yarborough Seeks Control Of Texas DALLAS, Tex. lUI’I) — L'. S. Sen. Kulph Yarborough, assured of a full six-year term in the senate as the result of Saturday's Demo cratic primary, hinted Sunday that he's not through campaigning The 55-year-old Austin attorney j indicated that he is ready to take t on Gov. Price Daniel, himself a I victor in the primary, in a battle ' | for control of the state Democra tic Party in the September con vention. Yarborough is a liberal. Daniel, an old political opponent, is a conservative. The factions are often as sharply divided in Texas as Democrats and Republic are in other states. | In precinct conventions Satur I day, conservatives appeared to hold a tight rein. The issue is con sidered important as a weather vane on which way the political winds are blowing across the na tion. Yarborough beat multimillion aire William A. BlalUey of Dal las, an interim U. S. Senate ap I - 141.30 has been paid out to farm ers in Soil Bank certificates. The total to be paid out as approxi mately $893,000. "So you can see "said Byrd," that we are not even to the half-way mart; yet. But we assure you that everything is be ing done to get your payment to j l you at the earliest possible date.; I Since the announcement of the; I tobacco maritet opening date of! August 21, the tobacco marketing j cards will be mailed to producers five days before the market opens. The tobacco marketing cards will be mailed from the county office on August 15. Any producer who wants his sale before that date mayr request it at the county of fice. An amendment to the law gover ing tobacco acreage allotments and marketing quotas has recently been passed by Congress and ap proved by the president. Since this amendment has been passed, production and sale of harvested suckers will hereafter result in a reduction of the tobacco allotment the following year. These new pro visions go into effect beginning with the harvesting of 1958 crop of tobacco, and the reduction will apply to the next established al lotment for the farm. STEWART AIR CONDITIONED TODAY and TUESDAY DON MURRAY TODAY and TUESDAY INDISCREET BflC'S * GManOOM I WOOUUTRMI +DUNN+ AIR CONDITIONED i pointee in 1937, by a vote of 701. 985 to 497,219. Daniel was renominated to a second term as governor by a vote of 741.286 to 222,727 for form er Gov. and U. S. Sen. W. Lee O'Daniel, 222,249 for integrationi-t state Sen. Henry B. Gonzales and 32,220 for Dallas insuranceman Joe Irwin. Car Stripped (Continued from f*a&e One) investigation. Four miles south of Anderson Creek on Saturday night, a 1958 International pick up driven by Harley Lee Ashley overturned. Ashley stated that he met anoth er car and the driver tailed to dim his headlights, Ashley pulled to the right, hit a bed of sand, lost control of the truck and it over turned. Damage was estimated at $350. Patrolman Robert Beck was 'he in\estigating officer Saturday 5 miles sou'll of Lil lington around 8 o’clock, a 1954 Chevrolet truck driven by Virgin ia Stewart made a left hand turn off of N.C. 210 onto a rural dirt road. A >1957 Oldsmobile driven by Douglas Butts of Route 1, Bunn level pulled out to pass and the truck and car collided. The acci dent is still under investigation. Patrolman Robert Beek is the in vestigating officer. IN WRECK — Mrs. Alice Faye McLamb was admitted to Betsy Johnson Memorial Hospital in Dunn on Saturday evening. A 21 year-old resident of 118 Parker Street in Raleigh, she had report edly been involved in a car wregjc. There was no information* on her condition. British Chief To Back Pact LONDON UPI — British Pr-.frfg ' Minister Harold Macmillan ’ pledged today that the Baghdad' pact allance rlngr#* Russia s' southern fiontier would continiu* • as "a means of collective secur-” tty." ■ We intend to matfi'ain Uu> aims" of our alliance and to consider how to do this in the light of our pres-' ent situptton." Macmillan said in a speech opening the fifth sessibh of the pact’s council. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles attended the session as an observer, in conservation with pact delegates, Dulles was report ed to have said the United Stiff* would be ready to join Russia in an arms embargo to the turbulent Middle East. Authoritative sources said Dullel ■ * i also informed the pact members’ ! that tho United States eventually will have to recognize: the revoftl' I tionary regime in Irej | Macmillan met in the opening public session at Lancaster House with the.pthiie mtasifers of Tur ' key, fran and Pakistan Iraq was not represented. Dulles talked with the various ‘ministers prior to the regular council meeting and was said tiy have discussed the possible arms embargo in those talks. Dulles was reported to have found pact members far calfn er, in the light of the Middle,., East develpoments, than he had anticipated. He told trie leaders the United Staes does not plan join as a full member at present. Dulles sat in on the ^uncil tafias as observer because the United i States is not a formal member of. ! th anti-communist “northern tier'', , alliance. The United States, how | ever, u a member of the more iin:' | port-ant committees. Radio Moscow continued today , j to denounce the London meeting. ' It asserted the council was meet ing to draw up ptans to attack ’ Iraq. Man Held In : Murder Case BRADY, Tex. (UPI) — A mild mannered Louisiana man was"1 held on murder charges today m " the shooting of a brawny part Indian horseman who was the cen tral figure in a sensational mur der trial in 1953. s • Jesse B. Horris Jr., 32, Shreve port. La., was held in the Mc-Cjil-. loeh ( ounty jail after turning him* self in to police Friday for the tatal shooting of Joe Kuykendall, 39, in the stable area of the July ' Jubilee racing grounds. n^r * A district court jury acquitted, the six-times-married horsemafi* and blacksmith five years jago ! amid shouts and screams after the I ! longest jury trial on record ig, Omaha, Neb. Kuykendall had beeff" changed with beating to death his heiress wife, Ardath Kuykendall, 30, in their plush trailer home. His own death Friday came fwd ) hours after his body was riddje^ -J with 13 bullets at the end of th* .'I sixth race on opening day of the ,1 quarter-horse and thoroughbred I racing at the July Jubilee track, j 1 DON'T WAIT 'TIL TOO LATE Save your family-from // With this Amaiiag Mew MIDGET FIRE EXTINGUISHER New PRESTO kills ell kinds of fires as fast as 2 seconds. About the siie of a flashlight! Yet as powerful as eitinguishers many times larger. Secret is new wonder chemical" I.S to 6 times more effective than same amount of others. Comes with handy wall bracket. Real scientific protection, at low cost — for your kitchen, attic, basement, car, beat, farm, office, factory. DOUBLE CAPACITY SIZE REUBEN JONES ■t t Tv 404 S. Elm Ave. Phone 299*