f. jOLUME 15 dJarithaA Partly rlourly and continued mild this afternoon, tonight and Sat urday. m. (®>. TELEPHONE 892-311'. — 891-3118 _ MAHN Fim LAB ORATOR? 740 CHATHAM ROAD WINSTON SALEM, *. c# The Record Gefs Results _ i ■ _ DUNN, N. C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER ifc W65 FIVE CENTS PER COPT NO. 214 Man is Given "Stiff Sentence By Judge Hill j A Dunn man Herman Langley I fis tried Thursday in Dunn Re- ' • order’s Court on a charge of as raoit. Jud"« Wocdro'v Hi’l in tentenning the man told him not to be seen drinking any alcoholic j b vsrages for 12 months, not to rp?n in any store where they sell b' seen in any store where they H^Hy employed for a period o’ $“'1, a’-ohopc bevp-ages and to be gainfully employed for a period (•J 12 tnpnths. I angley, who alleged y> assault ed his step-mother was ordered to jail for 90 days suspended on pavnient of court cost. In another assault case, Willie McCoV. 29-year-old Dunn man, Was fined $50 and cost of court and told not to violate any law for two years, to be gainfully emplyed during that period and was placed on probation. Those tried for public drunken ness were James P. MePay. cost; Fred Dawson, cost and Carlyle Darden, cost. William Shaw, of Envin paid epst for following too closely and rt^nry Perry of Ft. Myers. Fla., ptaid cost for no operator’s lb ease Charles Sullivan who was tried for assault with a deadly weapon was bound over to Superior Court and bond was Bet at $100. 0thex . cases nuib*eU*ii Tlnstnas * (Continued On Page "8) Robert Lee Gets Conduct Medal j . Army PFC Robert L. Lee, son j of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Lee, Route 5, Dunn, received the Good j Conduct Medal Sept. 21 while as- j signed to the 72d Artillery Group j in Germany. Lee received the award for exemp- j iary conduct, efficiency and fidelity as a soldier In active military ser vice. 24-year-old soldier is a tele type operator in the group’s Head quarters Battery. He entered the Army >n October 1963 and com plete 1 basic training at Fort Jack son. S. O. He was graduated from Hobbfon Ht"h School, Newton Grovei, in 18§9. More Harnett Fair Winners Four Dunn residents took the honors for Harnett County in the M|rket Steer Show at North Caro liiii State Fair. Warren Bros. Farm Canter placed second, third, and fifth in all-breed champion com petition. Clifford and Ruby Warren p]|ced fourth in the all-breed champions and first, fourth and fifth in the beef carcass classes. Lilda and Phyliss Warren placed fifth and sixth respectively In An gus competition. Miss Cassie Moore of Erwin was the first place win n"r tins year at the N. C. State Fair for her crocheted rug. HIGHWAY CHIEF IN HARNETT — Highway Chairman Joe Hunt chats with a group of Harnett County 1. ade s in front of the IJUlngton Court House. Left to right: Bill Marshburn, Mayor of Dunn; Jack Brock, Chairman cf the Harnett County Board of Commissioners; Robert Morgan, State Senator; High way Commission Chairman Joe Hunt; Clyde Adams. Chairman of the Harnett County Governors Com mittee for Better Roads; Godfrey Beasley, Mayor of Coats and Jack Marley, Mayor of Angier. (Photo by Heulon Dean) Campbell Fund-Raisers To Report Senator Morgan To Speak Community fund-drive leaders of Six Harnett County towns will con verge on Campbell College Saturday morning for a report to the college and the people on the current drive for Campbell College. In a meeting at 10 a. m. in the Tr'iateeg^Rnonr otj the^roH^ge camp us, the first composite report on the campaign in Harnett will be recorded by local radio stations for broadcast later Saturday, which drive leaders have set as Campbell College day in the county. Morgan to Speak Purlin# ev«»k will be Judge Commits Him For Safety Boy, 11, Is Menace MEMPHIS (UPI) — A juvenile court judge declared an 11-year old boy a public menace Friday and asked that he be confined “be fore somebody kills him.” It was the first time in two years on the bench that Judge Kenneth Turner had asked the Department of Corrections to commit a child under 12. The boy has a record of 17 arrests for burglary, prowling, truancy and tuning in‘false fire alarms. Turn er sad. Turner said the boy has seven brothers and sisters who live with their mother on a $140 per month welfare check. DRIVER IS HELD A jury impaneled by Harnett Coroner Paul Drew last night order ed Willie McNeill held under $500 bond for the death of a three months-old baby, Byron Judd, In an automobile accident tbat occurred Sept, 14 near Angier. Register's Probation Revoked Dunn Man Ordered To Serve Sentetnce Harvey C. Register, about 40, well-known Dunn resident, has been ordered to serve two years of a federal prison sentence gi ven him in 1962 for violation of U. S. liquor laws. U. S. District Judge Algernon L. Butler, at a hearing held in his chambers at Clinton, ruled that Register had violated terms of his probation and ordered him to serve term. At the time of his conviction Register was given three years in federal prison, suspended for five years, fined $750 and ordered to remain on probation for five years. The government offered evi dence to connect Register with the ownership and operation of six whiskey stills and also charged that he had been engaged in selling fruit jars and sugar at his store knowing the Jars and sugar were to be used in the manufac ture of bootleg whiskey to de fraud the government of taxes. Defense Attorney D. K. Stewart (Continued On Page 8) Missing Beauty Returns Home Miss Arkansas Is Unhappy pjNE BLUFF, Ark. (UPU — Blende beauty Rhonda Oglesby, who resigned as Miss Arkansas last week and disappeared, said today she was very unhappy and needed to get away. She returned home late Thursday night and her father, Horace Ogles by, issued a handwritten statement from her. She was not available for questioning. <phe statement started off with an apology for the way in which eh* left — she sent telegrams to the Hot Springs Chamber of Com merce, sponsor of the Miss Ark ansas pageant, and to her par ents from Memphis saying she would not be living in Arkansas any more. Until Monday even her parents did not know where she was. "I thought at one time nothing could make me happier than being Miss Arkansas for a year" she said. "I considered it a challenge and an honor and I still do. Mavbe I was trying too hard to live up to an idea that existed only In my mind. “I’m not really sure of all the reasons why she left. I just know that I was very unhappy and need ed desperately to get away.” She said the only person she knew to turn to was Lee Carter, a boyfriend from Pine Bluff she had dated, and she convinced him she wanted to leave. She said they left the University of Arkansas and went to Washington so she could join the Peace corps. “I discovered It’s not a simple process and takes several months, so I returned home to discuss my future plans with my parents,” she said. W. L. Corbin of Dunn, member or Campbell’s statewide Million Dol lar Cabinet and general chairman of the Harnett County effort. Prin cipal speaker will be Senator Robert Morgan, president Leslie H. Camp bell wilt voice the appreemttdir of the college for the fine response the county has already made In Campbell’s effort to retire capital debt, on its science and library buildings before it stands review for regional accreditation as a senior college. Heading committees at work in the county are Wilton Fish, for Angler; Nell Powell and Fred Mc Call, for Buies Creek; Curtis Guy and L. E. McKnight for Coats; Jo seph Ruark and Tommy Godwin, for Dunn; W. Harrington and C. W. Howell, for Erwin, and Archie Taylor, for Lillington. Assisting Taylor’s committee have been the members , of the Lillington Junior Chamber of Commerce, un der leadership ot James Goff Pre sident. In Dunn, Godwin heads the work of Chamber of Commerce there In support of the Drive. The two organizations have made the drive an official project on their civic calendars for this fall. Will Attempt To Perform Ten Orbital Changes CAPE KENNEDYt Fla. (UPI) — America’s power packed Titan - 3C military space launcher raced into an overcast sky today carry, ing two satellite* on the first leg of a record attempt to perform 10 orbital changes The ttiple-barrelled rocket, key to the tT, 3. soldier-tn-space effort, was making Its second and tcughest test flight - a trial to show it can perform the cosmic acrobatics future space ships mi ght n-ed The Air Force booster was launched at 12 25 p.m. EST 1:25 EDT with an awesome display of force and fury that makes it the free world's rooat powerful. In three years, it will ultilize its mi ght to orbit manned space sta tions. The Titan was first headed toward a low. looping orbit ar. (Continued On Page 8) Two Rotirians Are Recognized Two Dunn Reprians received 4og .*he..<»u«Rtor.T?T. ' J. Shepard Bryan was recogniz ed for his. repent program at which time Maldon Yelland, In ternational Farm Youth Erchange delegate from Australia, spoke, and Hoover Adams for his musi cal program when Alexis Parker entertained the group. The club met at 6 30 at Port er’s Restaurant with President Earl Vann presiding William A. Creech, a lawyer and government employee of Washington, D. C., was the key note speaker. The Smith field na-' tive waB Introduced by Dr. G. L. Hooper. Publicity director, Howard M. Lee said Richard Carr, Rev. Eu gene Ensley and Roy Burch were inducted into the club member ship. Guests at the meeting were Vernon L. Parker and Philip Ken nedy, Buies Creek; George Akers of Glasgow, Ky., a buyer for Am erican Tobacco Co., and Albert O. Gaakil] a Morehead City ac countant. gifts at Tuesdi their outstandin .urogram: meeting for >grams dur Senior Citizens To Be Honored Shady Grove Plans Homecoming Event Shady Grove Original Free Will Baptist Church will observe its an* nual Homecoming and Harvest Day October 11. Sunday School will be gin at 10:00 o’clock and the war ship service at 11:00 o’clock with the pastor, Rev. Walter Reynolds bringing the morning message. This service will feature a pro cessional offering with each per son from the nursery thru the en tire congregation bringing their own offering to the altar. The special feature of the after- i noon program will be a tribute ' honoring 30 senior members of \ Shady Grove who are 70 years of ( age or older. A brief life history of < each one present will be given and t (Continued On Page t) j BIG EVENT UNDERWAY AT QUINN’S — Bob Hen (erson of Quinn’s of Dunn, an expert on interior design, is shown here advising two pretty housewlv :s, Mrs. J. H. Draughon, left, and Mrs. Charles Sykes, right, both of Mount Olive. They were among the th jusands of custt mers in Dunn to attend the firm’s annual •‘FaU-Wintei'-Christmas Sale" being conduct id by Col. M. C. Maxwell, nationally-known furniture sales specialist. Mrs. Grover Henderson, head of th ■ large furniture store, has disclosed that in the near luture it will be known as Henderson’s Furniture M irt, Inc. as part of a major expansion program. The sales event is continuing with outstanding success. (Daily Record Photo by Russell Bassford.) Mother Loses Lawsuit To Regain Land A:Jury* in Rametf. Superior Court yesterday ruled -against Mrs Ma mie Conrad Kennedy in an unusual lawsuit brought against her grand daughter and son-in-law, Pat and Barbara Price Fore, in an attempt to set aside a deed for property she assigned to them. Mrs. Kennedy claimed she had signed the deed while under sev ere emotional strain caused by the illness and death of her brother, Watson A. Campbell of Cameron, Route 2, She also contended undue influence and pressure had been c.s serted bv the granddaughter and her husband. Judge Leo Carr instructed jurors to answer two questions: 1. Was Mrs Kennedy mentally competent at the time she signed the deed? 2. Was undue pressure used to in fluence her to sign the deed. After about an hour’s delibera tion. jurors ruled that Mrs. Ken nedy was competent and that no pressure had been exerted on her. . The claim alleges that through undue influence and fraud the plaintiff was taken advantage of and in her weakened physical and mental condition and contrary to her will and desire, the defendants caused her to a fix her signature to a paper purporting to be a deed conveying her pronerty to them. At the first trial, which lasted four days at a previous court the case was non-suited at the conclu sion o? the state’s presentation of evidence, pertamed to a former will Mrs. Kennedy had made to the de fendants. The new trial is to break a deed later given the Fores when the plaintiff claims she was in duced to give a deed instead of the will by the Fores, so it could not be as easily broken as a will. The case opened Monday and Mrs. Kennedy was on the stand a day and a half. Attorneys Bryan and Wilson re present the Fores and Senator Ro bert Morgan represents Mrs. Ken Mrs. Kennedy testified that in yrder to induce her to sign the deed the defendants said they yould provide care for the plain iff in her old a?e. PaY ^er sum of $300 per acre per year for ■ent during her lifetime and pro vide a decent burial for her. The land conveyed by the deed o the Fores is of the value of $7, KX) and is located in Barbecue township. The plaintiff asks that he purported deed be set aside and leclared null and void and the ost of this action be taxed against he defendants. Mrs. Fore is the ;randdaughter of Mrs. Kennedy. Archie Cameron of Winston Salem, brother of Mrs, Kennedy, told the court and jury that in his opinion his sister was so emotional ly upset following the depth of her brother on August 1, the date of the signing of the purported deed, (Continued On Page 8) And Prefer Gowns To Pajamas Most French Girls Don't Sleep Nude, They Say I • PARIS (UPI). — If she’s French, she probably doesn’t sleep nude. She likes to wear something- frilly at night. So says a survey made by the afternoon paper France Soir pub lished Wednesday in the wake of reports that German lingerie mak ers are up in arms because Greta doesn’t wear anything in bed. German nightwear makers are complaining because, they say, the average German woman’s outlay on nightclothes has dropped from the equivalent of $5.60 in 1963 to only $3 30 in 1964. Not so in France, says France Soir. ' * Here only one girl out of 15 sleeps nude. And those who cover up come out wholeheartedly in favor of the traditional nightgown rather than mannish pajamas. In the land which produced the uperfume which used to be Marilyn Monroe’s only bed time garb, French women spent a total of $33.8 mil lion on night gowns last year, France Soir said. They only spent $12.8 million on pajamas, according to the paper. France Soir theorized that the girls do it for sex appeal here. ‘•The nightgown is their favorite because of its feminity.” the sur vey said. Stewart Named At Lilfington County Seat Gets A New Fire Chief BRADFORD STEWART c Jiraarora aiewuri,, weu-urown machine shop operator, has been namekl chief of the iLittington Volunteed Fire epartmenDt. Stewart succeeds Frank Hock aday who retired. The change took place last week at the group’s weekly drill. Other officers elected were M. P. Crews, assistant chief; Jim Morgan, trtasurer, and Casey Flowed secretary. John' Womble was elected se cret a rj'-treasurer of the fire man’s relief fund. He succeeds the late Roger Mann. IN NEW YORK Mr. and Mrs. George N. Lee and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Naylor children spent last week In Island, New York visiting Mr Mrs. Kerrnlt Naylor While they toured the World’s F* her points of interest -

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view