Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / May 20, 1959, edition 1 / Page 2
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-.. Parents Are Slain By Mental Patient WARWICK, R I. (UPI) —Ar escaped mental patient who In. vadW his »*n bMtts and tfcil Mi pareiAs to death with a ictowbai was cap lured fedHy M|f by a |WA a*. . . the bloodstained Atm bar #*» round behind the home Vhfeto Russell 1 fchice it-., 4 htrtbdine 7ft year ofel sMt.footer, bludgeoned his parents Thursday night. Mrs. Ac nice H Chace, 50, was dead on arrival at Kent County Hospital. The elder Chace died early today after his son's caP. tune. A Wftje hunt was launched after H§tglW*s <thd a telephone opera, tor ilfehed police. Young Chace walked hway from the Rhode Is. Jand et4te hospital at Howard, at 11 p. m and apparently returned home In a stolen car. He was captured in the same car early today, parked on an abandoned railroad bed, after a high speed chase during which several shots were fired. Anita Says Wolves Worse In Hollywood HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Anita Ekberg says she can handje Eu. rope's sophisticated wolves, but she doesn't know what to do about the more earthy Hollywood types who try to pick her up in theiir cars. "Almost every time I go out tor a drive here, they chase me," said the voluptuous Swedish blon. de, who hag been on the loose since the bust.up of her three. / year marriage to British actor Anthony Steel, and her divorce ' this month. "When 1 slow up, they slow up, she said. “When 1 turn, they fol. low and whistle at every traffic light. The other day, when I turned into my driveway, a man forced my car to the side and said, 'I'm stranger in town. I’m trying to find Fascati's a restau. rant.’ "When 1 tried to be polite and tell him how to get there, he said, ‘hi, honey, how about a cup of coffee?' Thai's when I acted like Ekberg the icdberp. I'm not a cold person, but 1 can be some, times.” ___. The monumentAHy . built at. tress, clad only in a tight, light blue ’ bathrobe, adiriitielfl in iher home that this constant attention of other men helped break up her marriage. . . Steel had complained that the main trouble with their' marriage was "the way men looked at Ani. ta." Said Miss Ekberg: "My husband was annoyed by any attention I got. Any woman gets attention." Miss Ekberg, who soon will ap. pear In the film "The Sweet Life ’ with Henry Fonda, frankly admit, ted she likes getting attention . even ogled.lf it's done in a ma_ ture way. But she doesn’t think American men are very mature as oglers, "mainly because of the way they learned about sex as children.’* In Europe, she explained, “we learned more realistically about life as children. When we asked questions about the birds and bees, we didn't get any stories about storks, we were brought more into the life of the family. j “On the beaches in Sweden, we didn’t wear bathing suits until w* were 7 or 8. It was healthy, and I think rather sweet. It's like learning to read and write. Love comes naturally to people who grow up this way. ’’Here the parents don’t know how to act when children learn about the facts of life. The hus. band is working, and the mother belongs to a bridge club, So when the boy gets old enough, they give him a car to take the place of love. And he drives around and shouts at girls from cars, 'hi, honey, where are you going?” Her Closets Full Nothing To Wear iNE,W iuim lul l I - uesigud Pauline Trigere lias closets full of clothes, but she can’t find a thing to wear. .] “i have nothing, nothing,' she. j sighed during u'n interview before j receiving the seventh annual Cot. ton Fashion Award Monday. "I locked this morning, and coctldn’t find a thing." ^ The designer, an explosive dark. UlUIlUt Wil» uuiu OHU iiaicu *»» ' Paris. Now an American citizen, she is divorced and the mother of two sons. Trigere opened her own fashion house in New York in 1942 In 1949, she won the American Fashion C’ritcis’ Award and its return award in 1951. She also holds a Neiman.Mar. cus award and an NBC “today” award. t She received the cotton honor for her year.round, unusual treat. ' rhent of the fabric, such as putting diamonds on seersucker. "I'm all excited about this award. My whole family is com. mg," she suid. "Thank God it’s at a decent hour. 1 got one award •at five in the morning." Trigere would not make any predictions about fall fashions. "There’s an old French saying, love what- you burn, and burn what you love.' That’s completely, wrong in fashion. I work with my heart. 1 don’t follow A silhouette. My collection is never revolution, ary," she 8atd. "Don't. throw out your Whole wardrobe because styldS changra," she said, "ff you etm iftond to spend much, just add a dress a season. You can be badly dress, ed for $10,000, y<>u know. It all depends on hoW y6n thtnk about i your clothes and if you dress for I the life you lead. “Some Women.the Duchess of Windsor is one.hit dh i ddesl tiiAi is right for them and buy lots of copies." Does Trigere w ear one of a kind designs V i£lt11|lttrxrb DUNN, N. C. Published By RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY At 311 East Canary Street featwcd as second-class natter In the Post Office In Donn N. C. under the laws of Consress. Act. of March 3, 1171. Every afternoon, Monday throuch Friday. Second-class postace paid at Donn, N. C. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By CABBIES: 25 cents per week IN TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CABBIES AND BUBAL ROUTES INSIDE NOBTH CAROLINA: $8.04 per year $4.ft For alz Months; $S.M for three months OUeterefATfc: *!*.«• Iter year in admnoe; $8.50 for «x MM $4.00 for three month* FRESHEST PRODUCE IN TOWN teWvttfdi f6 bttf ttbHft FForrt the fcelds-Carefully Trimmed And Prepaid For Your Conven ience Under Our Veri-Best Label - Inspected Hourly To Assure You Freshness! 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The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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May 20, 1959, edition 1
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