Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Dec. 6, 1951, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE TWO DUNN, V. C. ' m RECORD BUlffijltfC? COMPANY jj Atqil EasfTWftry street :i ,„ WW»W??r • - , SUBSCRIPTION BATES BY CARRIER: 3* cents per week; sß4* per rear in advance; $5 «» ter six months; $3 ter three months in rqwN§ Not served Mr Carrier and on rural ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: $6.00 per •• year; $3.50 far six months; $2 for three months ] OTJT-CfF-STATE: $8.50 per year lh advance ;$5 for six'months. $3 H for t|>ree months Entered as second-class matter in the post Office in Du|in, N. 0., under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3, 1879. ilEvery afternoon, Monday through Friday WeVe One Year Old And We Thank You Thtf Daily Record is one year qld today and °P this birthday we want to pause to exress to you our heartfelt appreciation during our first year of operation. ! We!do so humbly and with gratitude that wards can not fußy express. The first year has been a little hectic, we grant you, I just as;,to be expected with a new business, j Like others, we sometimes have felt that we had just I a few rtlore headaches than anybody else ever experienced \ before. - * Bui looking babk today over the past year, we find i* the results Very gratifying—thanks to the wonderful suo port of,*the public. • ThR Dally Record was established because of the great I need for a daily neVSfcpaper in this section. The establish t ment c(t The Record was evidence of our faith and confi | dence in a progressive and growing area of North Carolina. We felt that a wide-awake, complete daily newspaper j would receive the support of the people. Our faith has been fully justified. The people—our subscribers, our advertisers—have been wonderful. The Daily Recpfd is npt yet the newspaper it ought to be. It falls short of opr goals in many respects, but we are working and diligently to' continue to make' improve ments and to put out the very finest newspaper possible in this conhpunity. And ,iyh|le we are far short of our goals, we say, humbly and gratefully, that we have come a long way. We are proud of the splendid reception, that the Daily Record has received and we are proud that so many people now look upon The Daily Record as their family newspaper and $s an institutiop pf service. We are proud that in'just one year’s time (even though it took a big campaign to do it) The Record at tuned a paid circulation 37 per cent greptfr than tpat of any other newspaper sh this area, as shown by sworn Post Office statements. We gre proud that during the year The Record pub- Kne of advertising ever published area, that it published the largest torj of the town and that it pub itjonal individual mer ijne of qpr advertising campaigns I attention and recognition in the atait pf loyal employees and the |t fpf any achievement or progress 3 you—the public—for your mag up this is YQUR newspaper— leqifated to serving the people of Smith hr JjfflStbf Wflj* Iffiith of North Carolina is rendering | satfra 1 ! .iJXSrW I » jpg! rally of I Wetoocratic Clubs in preens boro. The Senator jd “forget the false promises Dempc^ 16 J<Jg called for a hopge cleaning to rid the government iSjd the I . and the democratic party would 8 ad l l?e WLRfI coming from tfce former HHfftsL?! Association artncaroima s junior Senator. Frpm The Charlotte Q B Frederick OTHMAN I WASHINGTON ir Mr Tru fmAa’a stuf looting for an honest attorne y 'Mitchell told the House investi gating committee that he almost got the old heave-ho. When he got back to the Justice Department Caud l ' wouldn’t give him any work to do. Wouldn’t even talk to him. Stocethen, of course. Caudle has fir** to the President and returns. w w" £ekoUky POLITICAL MIRACLE The death of Senator Wherry, minority leader of the Seriate, makes sharper the division within the Republican Party between the Taft and Eisenhower adherents. If seniority prevails. Wherry’s position should be taken by Senator Salton stall of Massachusetts, an Eisen hower adherent. Senator Saltoh stall has been an internationalist, a liberal, and close to the C. I. Os, which is influential in Massachu setts. He is a man of dignity if not of stature; he is respected if not admired. The Taft men are not likely to accept Saltonstall, although he is not politically as objectionable as Senator Wayne Morse would be. Many feel that Senator Byrd or Governor James Byrnes would be more suited for Republican lead ership than Senator Saltonstall. The logical minority leader would be Senator Owen Brewster, a New Englander of rare political skill and party devotion. Ordin arily, his leadership would be ac ceptable. But now thd Eisenhower forces are likely to oppose Brew ster lest they add another notch to Taft’s gun. Republicans generally do not want this sqrt of quarrel before the convention. It is a quarrel over qothing, for as of the moment the minority leadership is hardly im portant. In the Senate, Robert A. Taft wijl lead his party, anyhow. It has been suggested that wis dom lies in giving this office tem porarily to Senator Wi|liam Know land of California, who belqngs neither to Taft nor Eisenhower and who is being courted by both. Senator Knowland is independent and knowledgeable and would be acceptable to the Taft group, gl though the Eisenhower contin gent and the C. I. O. prefer Sal tonstall. 'lt just goes to show that In a i free society things do happen jßhfct the politicians cannot control, Bf ' forts to realign the parties con tinue as though that were w|t|Un . the realm of possibility. Conver sations on the subject are inter minable and each conversation alist has a new and brilliant gim ! mick to get around the organiza tional and legalistic handicaps. What seems to have been for gotten is that the United States remains a federation of 48 sover ' eign states, each one of which con trols the election within that state. , To many citizens, the state and local election is as important-as the national electiqn. Furthermore, Senators and Rep s resentatives are not elected on a national but a state level. The Citizen votes for them to repre ' gent him in the federal govern ■ ment but he votes for them as state personalities. New York is represented, for instance, in the United States, Senate by Irvjng Ives and Herbert Lehman, local characters, who could not be elect ed to anything, say, in Tehnessee or Texas. Similarly, such "a' person as Wayne Morse could not Carry ■ Ohio where he would not fit, he I being more suited to the British ’ parliament as a back-bencher for • the Labor Pirty. The Individualistic character of [ political personalities ip this coun , try makes realignment difficult. For instance, Anthony Eden, over ! In the mother country, has loyal ! ly waited for Winston Churchill l to step down, tp get opt of the way. , But Winston stays op, frustrating . the aforesaid Anthony’s hopes of 1 being Prime Mihirier. In this country, a politician so j situated would, soon- enough, try i to get out ftom under, perhape ■ projecting hlmstif aa an extremely [ suitable candidate. He would travel i the land, delivering speeches on every ..conceivable subject, at first slightly and In time fully diver gent frpm the petition of his lead -1 W. His hope Would be that in time. his leader would be fouled up and [. He would take his place. . In Our siettin, this is not con . sidered disloyal eithef to party or the hope that the vacancy, which ipust eventually be caused by Dean Acheson. win fall to one of them »»eh hopes the other will become dike i>f jrfMpiejel '**" *- •< >c t * ML who pretend to undwsUmd it.no , body else does. It taamasing how ‘ many men in Washington knoW : that nobody else knows as much . ss they do. They remind me of a ■ only six men in tbs , voriff understand this sick- .- .7oW.geaA-»L> ! l- "This one’s special for ißjtn- the fragrance of •c crisp, new giopey..- |1 qCwSwsfST WASHINGTON. Another m|nk coat has been dancing around the Justice Department—or, rather, the ghost of a mink coat, ylt’s one of these will-o’-the-wisp, now-you see - it - now - ybu_ - don’t - see - it garments that was seen on the wife of a Justice Department offi cial about a year ago, but which is seen no more. The coat, beautiful as it was supposed to be, is probably not as important as some of the political maneuvering around the alien property custodian. The general public may not realize it, but the alien property custodian handles millions of dollars worth of prop erty seized from the Germans, Ja panese and Italians during the war. However, a mink coat worn by the wife of a government official these days is getting to be like arson, sabotage or treason, so' | went doWn to the Justice Depart ment to Investigate. The husband of the lady, Harpld Baynton, the alien prqperty cus todian,' I had never met befqre. Hmed like a nice guy and to open up every detail of ; so I felt sort 6f like Mr. District Attorney,, prying into his wife's wardrobe, especially since he was at that time Under investiga tion by GOP Senator Wiley of Wis cousin. Senator Wiley, I had learned earlier, had taken an investigatory Interest in the alien property cus todian after his brother-in-|a w , R D. Jenkins, had been turned down' on a case involving the interna tional Silk Guild, of which Jen kins is an official. The SQk Guild wanted to collect several hundred thousand dolars from the V. S. gov ernment, which the alien property custodian seized during the war ! as Japanese funds. The Silk Guild claimed they were not Japanese funds, but their own funds. How -1 ever, the alien property custodian i finally ruled they were funds which the Japanese had set aside lor advertising, and therefore belonged to Uncle Sam as alien property, not to the SUk Guild and to Sena -1 tor Wiley’s brother-in-hkW. RAT TO OLD ROOMMATE Regarding other ' mattes though not this I think Eena i tor Wiiey is right In investigating toe alien property ' custodian. Meanwhile, I proceeded with the Investigation of Mrs. Baynton’s mink coat. The mink coat, I had heard, was given to Mrs. Baynton by Harold ; Nnrtwltz, who diraws $27.80 as l President of J. Leitz Cq„ the for mer German firm which makes Lei ; ca cameras. Since this alien com t Deny is now operated by the alien property custodian, Horowlta kedps [ mer Assistant Ctoperal, dm. - i i jflfc A : || i{ ■ w j SiiH B Si' : I & W H; y. .f m b ; JA\ n j // * a ]&/ it iij, |)H i J m T/JtmV who turned put to have been Horo witz’s 'rSonuhato Rfarfard Law School. Running the Leitz Co. is qnly a haHrtnne job, so $27,000 is pi-etty good pay, though in fair ness to Horowitz it should be noted that whpp he took the firm over, it was on the verge of bankrupt cy. Now |t‘s making rpal dough. Horowitz also gets an expense account of about $15 l f)p0 a year, ahd Baynton’s prededtosor, David Razelon, npw a Federal Judge, questioned some of his expense items, including a reported $2,000 for a trip to California. In fqct, Bazelon, qn one occaaipp, picked up the phone and instructed Horo witz notto' spend a cent more with out his okay. Incidentally toe profits from alien property gp to U S. .jeteans who Were imprisoned by the Jans and Germans, to every doflar paid out qn expenses means that 'much less for tpem. Baynton to|d me, however that he examined Hqrowitz’s expenses is being in private law practice.. Baynton explained that the Leitz l Co. Wak careful to observe toe Fair ' Trade Act, and Bergson, former -Assistant Attorney' General in t- charge "of the anti-trust division, is V MIffK going into ah these things, I came around to the less agreeable subject of the mink coat. I point ed out that Mrs- Baynton had been seen in a mink coat last winter gnd it was reported that toe coat had been given her by Horowitz in return for government favors given him by Mr. Baynton. ’ Mr. Baynton admitted that fti* wife did have a mink coat last Christmas, but had only borrowed # ' “She felt she deserved a mink ooat,’' he explained. "We were in the full flush of just being ap pointed Assistant Attorney General, gnd T guess it went to our heads. “I owe quite a Ut to my wife,” Baynton mqved here from the West to fin ish roy law degree; I got a job at a year and we lived on my ad studying law.' However, we still "T3SfSPßfflf'iia- Horowitz, and Baynton admitted that she borrowed It from Mrs. i Horowitz. ‘‘When did she send it back?" , (Cantoned Or Thge BIx) Wtnchell In ew 'Jfts York 5 WWCHBt MAN ABOUT TOWN Gertrude (“King and I") Law rence’s dghtr Pamela got a quiet abrogation in Uas Vegas weeks ago, Hgr husbapd is a tap medico at Memorial Bpsp. ... Movie staf Esther Ralston and her man sud denly parted too , - . Dan Dail|ey and June Haver are bging folksy and foxy . . . Jack Dempoey has checked info Mayo Ctjbto. The champ's had 3 major operations in a year . . .Countess d’Avalon’s Park Avenue robbbry i (as Mrs. Laird Whitney’s guest) didn’t make the gaieties. Burgled gems include a 558 year old pear) necklace . . . Gambler F. Erickson (according to the'talk-titoO tolled off $250,008 in kCt .ds.'SLfte .*!» Jody Garland’s mimed matinee (Tfaprx) cap be traqed to “too many doctors.” One'needs a doctor himself . . . Sfcowgel Geene Court sn (witp Sjmith A Dale at the Palace) moved Into a new Park Avf. apt since her adventure with a sex-mad bnrg)ar. Has boIM and chains all over the place. Washington Postmarks; Why doesn’t Mr. Prez reveal the corres pondence between himßeU and some of his buddies on what he prom ised the Pope? In relation to the Gen. Mark Clark appf. . . Non-soc ialites are snow-drifting Oen. Beed le Smith with resignations from U. S. Intelligence . . . Communist Party members are so Jittery they now have Instructions not to pay their dues in the presence of com rades ... Now that Chetolter has his tl. S. visa this can be unveiled; A Negro femme star, seeking ven geance for a fight over billing (at the Casino de Paree), wrote Wash ington that Chevalier was playing ball with “ism” outfits. But the govt cleared him—finding her charges baseless. Josephine Baker's manager of fered Alan Gale a lucrative deal to use his Celebrity Clnb on 57th— to give' the star a midtown class rfr. of toe Berk staff will to knotted Bgfoe Hew YctfV Off thg Artie Shaw-Doris Dowling Imf-tel • ■ - Gloria Swanson's pfajSssi E V W° U , hpd ooat squad of 5 inen fn -1 the sales and purchases of au mlpk (and other fur) coats ; ||J R.Y.C. since IMS . . ,"Beveral i Pro;dihen| locals (all mgrtledK are • ■ • They already have ’ Questioned about tiwß sub ’ they bought* for jadfcs are being queried to‘ see if ’ husbands are .tilling S? sll started over » an ekecutor of a famed million- totote—claiming he gave a t m|h| coat to a former Li'egfeld s jpl—who denies getting it I . I ftp** of all those colyum meu titita ' fowling Glenn McCaiiliy), Wl G te t ’» parents will chaner ! set 1° Heoston, Texas, when fir *!ffl M his Shamrock Hotel ' Yw l Merman’s gift to her tester ipn 'Paul Lukas I is the WFlgMetter at “Cali Me Ma i joßywawe TMilr. fB PO L t<^; y j hc 8 5t ber^) ’ guarif Abb^*Lam, hti • Frtumaa ’ wke Phiyed MS^ctaMrSSL* APmtiidQtt, 4, mi The Worry Clinic By DR. GEORG* W- CRANE ban IM "Junu Minn III'FW DR CRANE—THURB. DEC 8 dirts, you can aß'become very popular. But you must follow a bltoprint' and go through the laborious practicing nebesaary to develop a sure-fire techni que." Then practice on every min you meet so when your ' Prince Charming appears, your technique will mechanically carry yon along to soccess. Many girls havt organised elute for coaching each other hv means of the charts named below. CASE C-310: Hortense M„ aged 17, is a timid little wallflower. “Dr. Crane, she is so afraid oi people that she wi|l not even go to the grocery store for Mother, her older sister informed me. “And as for a dates she would be petrified with fright if a bpy so much as smiled at her op the street. She is even afraid to talk on the telephone! , “Hortense was always unusually shy, but when a certain boy teas ed her in high school last year about her name, she grew iph o * worse. Would it be possible for you to hypnotize her and'thus cure her of her unusual timidity HOW TO WIN FRIENDS Popularity is based on certain social habits that require months if not even years to develop. Like piano playing, they depend upon laboriously' going through the right actions day after day until the proper habit is learned. Neither hypnosis nor shock ther apy nor drugs, can bu|ld habits I You cannot suddenly become a skilled typist or saxaphpne player as a result of a 30-minute hy|>botic seance. You cannot change from a wall flower into a popular persqn by any magic hocus-pocus or hypodermic injections. Neither can public speaking poise be instilled by tablets, p|Us or hypodermic needles, hypnosis or any other quick method. There is no royal road to acquir ing either manual or social skills. It takes practice. HOW TO BE POPULAR Two ingredients are necessary to become popular. First, you must have a blueprint or chart, much like the recipe In the cook boedt. Second, you must have enodgfa ms&WM -jyr JJS f • * By America's FQremPf* W Personal Affairs Cwwjor ism ■ < Spinster Fceb Terrible, Phy sically and Spiritually; Doctor Says She Need* Husband, WhMh Isn’t News to Her. DgAR MAST BAWPJgTH I 39 ana unmarried —ancr thatT toe ; problem. I have fu> excellent em ployment record, adequate mqney ; and a good Tpotal character; but . ! no husqaod and children makes this Jill a dull girl. For the past ! year T haVeTeerT feeling terrible ; physically and spiritually. \ Four months ago I felt so mls ' erable that I quit a good secre . tarial Job I’d held for several years , and decided to loaf a while on my f savings, imping the rest would give me a lift. My boas was shocked h{ ; my resigipitidß, and said the whole office would go to pieces without [ 'me; butf’tet it would go to pieegs . if I s|asfd on, Hi could no longer concentrate on toe work. My deb tor ’ is TWy ’ if that jvere news to mel v | I once kept’ u£ with inany , friends. Was active to several co-ed organizations add attended many parties and social ’functions; but now fall ’these activities seem use ; «a»A itea m : tnem. r ain wiicn onopfimeinwr tn i 1 wUl'*; TiTm’y ! oar, sharing expenses. But as it I jbb heds— the beat so far—ttet begins 1 would thM 11 <4>,flUß ' t *° wltb ■ ? . „ j, I UPII ■! IM WWW fli’llUß perseverance and energy to follow (* through.”’ ’’ Lazily sitting still will not make you popular, even U you have a sure-fire blueprint spread out be fore you. ' A music book likewise will not make you a musician, unless you go through the correct motftms day after day. Furthermore, you may not like the bard work of prac ticing, but there Is no shortcut. Either have enough spunk and energy to force yourself to do the to social practicing necessary for popularity, or quit moaning arojind because you are friendless and miserable! Unhappy people bre uspgljy in tense egotists and selfish to the nth degree. They kgep wqrndng about SELF to the point where they feel Ip sorry for themselves that they cannot think about any b9C'y mi}W TQ GET DATES To "win friends; erifdll in .the to COMPLIMENT dLUB! Po Jt NOW! Even without ’good looks fnd other physical ctoinSitt, you pan be popular if you vjrill 'practice the habit qf looking for good things in your’neighbors and then reso liitely complUnentinfc them thire .... . ’ Sepond, learn what boys admire i in girls and what they dislike. My “TeSt for the girl friend” will show you. It is an admirable blueprint for girls who want' to ga be popular ' ™ "Third, If you don’t know what to talk about, then get my “FORMU-- LA FOR BEING' AN INTEREST ING CONVER sat Io n alls t t And memorize this technique by using it on your grandfather or the grocer or any male you mpet! Don’t wait till you encounter your Prince Charming before you start to practice your technique! For your technique will then be too rusty or awkward to do a sue- cessful job. Instead, keep your technique in daily use so when you suddenly lose your heart, your technique will still function automatically. Then you will mechanically say the right wend at the right tone, ever! though your heart is, doing i a flipflop. Any girl can increase her popu i lsrlty in a few -ww|B to rwtiu tely practicing the habile ojitlifced abb™- *2 t "" - J-B 11 LJK!' !.■ '"ILg.J 1 * 1 your wound*. "n | y There is little U any fteom in m the doctor’s comment toM*~aU you * heed l 8 a gqod hustond ’’ Possibly he thinks that teoraMd sexual companionship wwitM solve your problem. But I ratter bel|eye that a good husband HlH^HfVaatod your inherent l£til you are on better texngYfjjl} your self, more aware of Btotpw nature of your complaints apty MRoder.cv dreams, and thus dteply Weßared . to tackle difficulties ate p-ustia- R spirit, you’re suc cessful wifehood. ■’ In throwing up toe office job, to subside into idjeneto, you prob ably were running dot on fespon sibilitv and py>i itine as such—on finding they hadnVlSO tp ij Fairy Pxtnce: tie., a magic Ondectila an swer to ywir InfantUhtepe of sat- Mfitoto l * »»PPy WWMWit living "ever after.” RutTapSjf ti fuU _ of routine and rempqiAffln in the C average cats. AntT if afe'ntan-wife relitWnshM is to be or ritii in pontentiatev teg must to The r»&T Si¥Bs as of to fc y by dlffWeS; Or aotnbUnng *bre. as the totis for PujM jffort. wrdta a book "How wrott jMate”
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 6, 1951, edition 1
10
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