Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Feb. 22, 1952, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE TWO f Uta JBathj Jlmi W, S' l'- DUNN, N. C. J • '• Published By RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY _ • At 311 East Canary Street NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE r: THOMAS P. CLARK CO., INC. - 205-217 E. 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. Brandy Offices la Every Major City ’ ~r- * - subscription rates •H CARRIES: 20 cents per week; *8.50 per year In advance; *5 •J* ' , for six months; $3 for three months Dh-towns not served by carrier and on rural ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: *6.00 per * m Z- year; *3.50 for six months; $2 for three months OUT-OF-STATE: *8.50 per year in advance; $5 for six months. *3 ; ’ for three months Entered as second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, ICC., under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3, 1879. - Every afternoon, Monday through Friday Everyboby Profits From The Chamber ' A GUEST EDITORIAL r_. BY DR. G. L. HOOPER A lot of people are of the opinion that a Chamber of Commerce is an organization to promote business in a comrflunity for the benefit of the merchants. There is such an organization, but the name of it is-a “Merchants Bur eau*.” T r ’A Chamber of Commerce is an organization that not only helps the merchants of a community, but all busi nesses, professions, institutions and individuals. The du ties' of a Chamber of Commerce are numerous. One of tfieir mam duties is to do those things which will enable, tfte. greatest number of its citizens to derive a benefit from itk I*. .Let me cite to you a few of those things which the Dwnn Chamber of” Commerce has done. Our community summing pool is a shining example of how the local chamber is interested in the citizenship of our community, boSE the children and adults. JT'Our tobacco market is a project of the Chamber of Commerce that we are. proud of. This project not only bflitgs more business to our merchants, but to all our cit izens, indirectly if not directly, in that it brings millions J! (jpgars to our town each season to be distributed among many of its citizens in many different ways. - I_ Our temporary citizens, the U. S. soldiers, in the town U(S.t summer, were here upon invitation of our Chamber qf-Commerce. These thousands of young Americans not wily spent money in our town, but contributed much in IfOCking last summer an active season instead of a dull one.v . These are just a few of the many things that our Chamber of Commerce has brought to our town for the Benefit of all its people, and they are good reasons why §ll of us should be’come members of the Chamber of Com merce. i t ;f It is a nop, profit corporation that pays you dividends whether you contribute to Its support or not. It is an Or .gSfiization that is working to make your town a better place in which to live. It is a group of men working to gether to give each of us a town which we will be proud .of. It is you and you and you making our town one which Jwe are proud of or one in which we are not interested. 2*t us all be good citizens by belonging to the Dunn Chamber of Commerce and support it in all its worthy fljfljtertakings. / 1 • MORRISON, ILL., NEWS: “Horrible to contemplate, 4m‘t it, that America is running, not walking, toward a pSalitarian dictatorship So what are we who cherish Ifet freedom going to do about it For one thing, we can .laid encouragement to those Congressmen who valiantly -ale fighting this centralization of power in the hands ofc bureaucrats in Washington.” f SrSOMERSET, PA., DAILY AMERICAN: “It is surpris- ; ■ “teg-How many people there are who imagine that the \ government has a means for obtaining money that makes Jits gifts to the people real benefits. The fact is that the f gwemment has no means for obtaining money except jp«£ r and loan.- to be repaid from taxes.” Frederick OTHMAN I ECS NOTE: Our man. claims he’s not lazy so efficient. He drops down the government’s mustier rery February 22 to see his facts still are true. digs the following dis m his files and takes the lays it was a funny story time he wrote :t and why ■gwt It? EDSRICK C. OTHMAN NOTON. I have check tal this time of year and fegfet to report that the father KlflObtii country looks As goose jtimply as over with a sneet around Rio-middle, a laurel wreath on his . jrgw.and his bare toes sticking in Is he’s a little dus ' 10 feet *** inches °‘ him ' to white marble. I might caU him the re " 5.. resß sorriest ex per- began t. in the mud. The ship settled on ' o top of him. n The V. S. Navy sent a battleship i T to Italy; sailors fished Washington e from the mud and stowed him : aboard. The ship docked in New ■ York, but the railroad tunnels be e tween there and here weren’t big y enough for him on a flatcar to y squeeze through. - The Navy took him to New Or leans then and forwarded him by 1 - devious routes, without tunnels, to 1 Washington. The freight bill was • r a whopper. This artistic enterprise by now ] 1 had cost *26,000 and some odd ’ » cents. Congress appropriated an- : 5 other *2,000 for a polished granite , base to hold the statue and the - great day for the unveiling came »on George’s birthday, 1841. The t Navy band tootled, the lawmakers , - made patriotic speeches, the Speak- , • er of the House pulled the strtog and good-goeh-amightyf r Then was George Washington, , - twice as big a* life, clad as p Ro > man Senator on the way to his j » bath. His chest muscles ripped in I > Die cold sunlight. A carven wreath : ■ held down his curls. A marble sheet, r loosely draped around his middle, 1 t barely saved the proprieties. Hie i t king-sized toes were encircled with i i thongs to keep his Roman sandals , from falling off. , ' njf” res * * h °rri- * l' These Days GEN. DOUGLAS MacARTHUR Now that the Eisenhower boom seems to be in difficulties because the General cannot or will not re turn to the United States to dis cuss the issues, a new type of cam paign has been devised which is already appearing in the writings of New Deal columnists. This campaign is designed to separate General Douglas MacAr thur from Senator Robert A. Taft. The gist of this hoax is as follows; 1. “When General Douglas Mac- Arthur tells his visitors and inter viewers that he is for Taft and would like to see him nominated and elected, he does not mean it. He is being cagey." How do these people know what General MacArthur means? Are they telepathic? Do they have second sight? Have they interview ed General MacArthur on the sub ject? I can say categorically that Gen eral Gouglas MacArthur, as a cit izen and a Republican, is support ing the candidacy of Robert A. Taft and that he has gone about as far as a man can go in making that clear. I have spoken to Gen eral MacArthur and while I am not quoting him, there is no doubt whatsoever in my mind as to what he said and what he meant. If I were directing the Taft campaign, I would use the slogans “Taft and MacArthur” or “Me and Mac". It is as sure and as realistic as that. 2. These New Dealers and so called liberal Republicans are also saying that General Douglas Mac- Arthur is really lying low, en couraging Ta/t to believe he is for him, but that he is actually wait ing f6r a deadlock in the conven tion to take advantage of the sit uation in his own interest. This is strictly a lie and an In sulting one. It makes of General MacArthur a conniving politician, such as the authors of the can ard are themselves. It reduces him 1 to a ward-heeler whose word Is as good as the wind. No one who knows General Mac- Arthur can. for a moment, accept such an appraisal of his character If he wanted to run far President, he would have said so; heTwould be nominated by the ltepublibafts on the first ballot and the proba bility is that he would be over whelmingly elected. He does not need to connive at a trick. The reason these opponents of both General MacArthur and Sen ator Taft are resorting to this hoax is that they have correctly appraised the popularity of Gen esal MacArthur and seek to use it in their own interest. It is true that many of General Mac Arthur’s admirers still hope he will run. I know of one who went calling on General MacArthur, found that his enthusiasm only en couraged the General to request him to support Taft He told me afterwards that he wiR go on ad vocating MacArthur no matter what the General has to say on the subject. But he did admit that General MacArthur is supporting j. The story continues that while Oeneral MacArthur is supporting Taft, his friend, General Courtney Whitney, is slyly and secretly en couraging a boom for MacArthur This is a lie. I know Whitney. I have discussed the campaign with him. Apart from such trickery not being In his character, the impli cation that he Would embarrass General MacArthur or put him in a false light, or give the hnpres- < sion that two versions of a posi tion can be given out from the same source, is wholly impossible. Gen eral MacArthur is basic and of long duration and is not of the stuff that the current breed in Washington calls “Friendship.” This design to separate MacAr thur from Taft to make the Taft managers suspicious po encourage “grass-rooters” to start MacArthur booms could, in a small way, have some effect, except for one thing: As matters stand, Oeneral Mac- Arthur has avoided direct partici pation in politics. He answers whan asked. Otherwise, his position is that, like any other citizen who is not a candidate, he is not called upon to run about the country tell ing others how to vote or expres sing his opinion on every subject under the sun. Nevertheless, if the authors of this trick press him by impugn ing bis motives and honor and in denting tiiat he is capable of a double-cross, they may discover a fighting man whom they do not quite know. I wonder if any of these smart men have ever seen MhcArthur when he is angry, when moral Indignation sets him afire? tats wondered what was inside the so mortified and me shed so they ******'- *O.OOO. This was to tear down the lum ber and haul the semi-naked m DAILY UOOSD. DUNK, H. ft MISTER BRE6ER ■ MAH M4y JUH JUL AV* SEP OCT DCC‘ UB ■w f\ I m 'A - f , \ - • J fllSsM- { V - ! A/V w \ Vv I Aa/ "‘Boy, you shoulda heard us yodel when we climbed up on top THERE!” ! | .a waa«M dSfcMHWr-fiO-IMUND b > t n«w nmo» LOS ANGELES. NOTES OF AN ITINERANT NEWSMAN WASHINGTON’S BIRTHDAY. For almosf two centuries fee men throughout the world have been marching into battle to champion the ideas George Washington stood for and which are scratched on a piece of paper called the De claration of Independence. Last July 4 the Madison Capitol Times in Wisconsin and later the New Orleans- Item circulated cop ies of the Declaration of Indepen dence and the Bill of Rights among random groups of people and then asked them to sign. The great majority refused—indicating either fear of McCarthyism and our time-honored right of free pe tition or else ignorance with basic principles of our founding fathers. To rectify this a great many people have been making it their business to put copies or the De claration of Independence in the schoolrooms of the hatton, and Au gust Diets, a patriotic printer in ' Richmond, Va„ the state that fath ered the father of the declaration had printed beautifully embossed copies at.cost which have been dis tributed by the Sertoma Chiba. Yes terday in Richmond and today In Williamsburg, Va., the Virginia state printers association is futhfr promotlng the time and drive to put the sacred principles of the nation not only in every school room but in every city hall, every American Legion, VFW, AMVET and, other service-club headquar- : ters. Communist slogans have swept i the world because we have not gone out to show the world our : Declaration of Independence. We i have a document which preaches i not class warfare between men, ' but faith in men. Communism can ; be stopped only by placing the I great creed of the American Rev- I olution alongside the false creeds i of the Russian revolution and let- 1 ting the world choose between them. i JIM ROOSEVELT NO POLITICAL CORPSE I JIMMY ROOSEVELT The 1 elder son of the late FDR took | a tough licking at the hands of t California's master governor. Earl Warren, but he lent dead polltl- ’ caUy by any manner of means, i Jimmy was left with a huge cam- i paign debt—some say about *M,OOO i —and while he could have duck- 1 ed out of it, he has been working i faithfully to pay it off. i He also has been getting round i the State and has become a rat- i pec ted leader even among some of 1 the Demos who stabbed him in I the back when he ran for gover- ! nor. Helen Gahagan Douglas, who i ran for tne Senate, was also left CUTIES ; 1— -- W*? Spctr t sms ' j —, • 'fully m A i BLjnk fßj - / yf f vi x TJa *' c «te H i Wn * •■»***»■ I / f j ' with a large campaign debt; had ■ to sell her home to pay it. KEFAUVKR AND TRUMAN Here in California, Senator Ke fauver stands so high with the vo ters that some of Truman's friends have been quietly trying to pull him put of the California warm up. Officially, Truman isn’t en tered in the California primary, but a delegation or his stanch suppoters is, and everyone in the state knows that its members are pledged to “The Boss." Thus it be comes in effect a race between Ke fauver and Truman. The Tenn essee Senator did such a good job of focusing the spotlight on crime in this rapidly growing and racket ridden state that a lot of grate ful folks would vote for him—on either ticket. On the other hand, Kefauver’s organisation in Cali fornia is put together with bent nails and baling-wire, while the Truman machine is as smooth as the Tidelands oil. So if Kefauver Ivins it’ll be a clear-cut victory for the people. , WATCH -TAT” BROWN NSW CALIFORNIA DEMO CRAT—One Democratic leader to keep your eye on in the Golden West is Edmund O. (Pat) Brown, the new Attorney General and the only Democrat to win in the last elecion. Brown, though of the op posite political party, is techically a member of Oovemor Warren’s cabinet, gets along well with him, and has taken a forthright stand in interpreting the law on the 160- acre limitation for land under re clamation. Congress has decreed that when farmers get the bene fit of Irrigation made possible by all the taxpayer’s, farms using it cannot be of more than 160 acres. This is to prevent huge ranches from taking over, as is the trend in Califofnia. “Pat’’ Brown has been firm in ruling against at tempts to find loopholes in the federal law. REAL ESTATE LOBBY The real-estate lobbyists who wine and dine seme Congressmen in Wash ington have now focused away from Capital lobbies to Los An geles. where they hope to stymie the Taft Public Housing Act. After the L. A. City Council voted for a public housing project under the Taft Act, cleared away i many acres of slums and spent some $12,000,000, the real-estate i lobby stepped in, applied the heat, and managed to switch enough votes inside the City Council to ; get a negative resolution. Coura ageous Mayor Fletcher Bowron is bucking the council, and has re ferred the snarl of the California Supreme Court. Importance of the : row is not merely Los Angeles which • (Continued On Page Four) | Walter | Winchell New York By JACK LAIT Subbing for Wlachell | Round-up of Ooes-up My Palm Beach Intelligence ; Dept, reports, verbatim: Gary Coo per has been here for a week, at ! the Brasilian Court Hotel. On Fri ., day night he and Jon Hall had dates with Ruth Bragg and Bettye j Bosworth at the Music Box. Cooper j has been seeing a lot of Ruth, who is employed at Schurr’s, an exclu sive Worth Avenue shop (for men) and is a model in fashion shows, i Cooper visited her several times ' in the store. . . . After leaving the Music Box, the four went to an other place and wound up late as guests in Jfeck Moseley's apart ment. . . . Prince Obolensky was there, too. Veronica Lake waß ex-* pected, but didn't stnw up. What Price Muse! After Max well Bodenheim, whose verses were mauos in the *2O, was pinched for sleeping in the subway, the poets 3 of Greenwich Village called and held a Bodenheim Relief Meeting. " They collected $11.90. (You can’t ‘ even rhyme that!) | Princess Margaret Rose's latest 1 “favored” suitor is said to be the ' Earl of Dalketh, who is on social ■ terms with the royal family. . . . Gertrude Lawrence’s recurrent ail -1 ment is pleurisy. . . . Spencer Mar ' tin, separated from Pat Smart, is ! atttentive to Pamela Rank. . . . ' Novelist Eric Maria Remarque, still ' a bachelor, is said to be wavering; it could be Erica von Hurstig, of | the Hohenspllems. . . . Tom Neal, 1 who changed Franchot Tone's pro file. seen with starlet Winnie Walk er. v . . All Khan’s new delight, it may amuse Rita to know, is re • ported (a friend thought it worth a cable from Brasil) to be Rosia Janietz, down there. ! Lou Walters’ Latin Quarter drew a $25,000 rap when it had its liquor license lifted for a week because those three youngsters who clipped a Massachusetts medic while one of them baby-sat for him were served cocktails -there. But he wth be going in high again. He is open ing a new revue, “Parisian Mardl Gras,” with continental and native talent and a chorus-line. . . . The punks, who had bought grown-up clothes with part of the loot, didn’t look like minors. They came to gether alone—that wasn’t where they picked up the men. one of whom recently got a prison sen tence; his defense was that the girl told him she was twenty-two. Hollywood Highlights—Dan Dally and Marie AUyson pair up as a new Sunset Strip twosome; Margaret Whiting is sulking. . . . Nancy Val entine. back from India and far from her Maharajah, needs the rupees; she will .be one of the stun ners in “One Piece Bathing Suit,” playing a bit. . . . The Ronnie Re gan-Nancy- Davis thing looks like a marriage, after Jane -Wyman re turns from Europe. . . . Jack Demp sey got $5,000 for a three-day job as a referee in Bob Hope's next film. . . . And Bob’s “My Favorite Spy” is a mop-up, as usual. Paramount wrapped up the iegai arrangements for the Ruth Ettliig story, with Rhonda Fleming to play the torch warbler. Ruth’s ex, “Col ” Snyder, of Chicago, signed his waiver for'sls,ooo. . . . They say Gloria Swanson plans her «i»*h marriage. Artie Shaw* autobiography will be published in the Spring title “The Trouble with Cinderella.” Nanette Fabray, who quietly di vorced her press-agent husband, is making a habit of Benny Thau, M-a- M Producer. .. . Harry James stijl with the Treasury boys over his back income taxes • „ Blng Crosby, Tony Martin and Frankie that order voted one-two-three in the singing league by SOO editors snd critics. . . . George Shearing’s comment on the split-up in the George San ders family—“ Love’s Gabon Lost.” . . . Dorothy Malone is credited with straightening out the behav ior of Lawrence Tierney (knock 1 U ’ of course - Scott Bra dy’s brother. Federal agents were startled by i Sjj**®* People” air show, with 1 Earl Teets, an ex-narcotics sleuth, i demonstrating hew dope pinches i are made. The two fictional T-m#n i revealed the Inside technique sented as Procedure which introduced the 1 Whescope in evidence. That has I been held as “entrapment” ahd a I cauae for acquittal. Gen. Robert Wood Johnson and I Sli I mi« them ateleaantvnw ' ' FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 21 1222 The Worry Clinic IH ' By DR. GEORGS W. CRAMS A man who has never had wv eral love affairs during his youth, may make a wonderful husband until he reaches the menopausal age. But if he then happens to Mss another woman he hasn’t enough femi nine perspective to' use com mon sense. So he may develop e a mad infatuation that Is simp . ty a belated puppy love affair. * CASE C-382: Louise L., aged 38, j is the wife I quoted yesterday s whose hhsband became infatuated r with a younger woman. ] Despite his charming wife and , children, plus his activity in church affair; and in spite of the threat j ened lose of his job, a$ well as , hi; social standing, he has run ' away with this other married wo s man wlthost even the formality of a divorce. , “Isn’t that man you wives may inquire. He isn’t insane according to any of our psychiatric examinations, for his mental alertness is O. K. ’ He is oriented to time, person and [ place. ‘ But in his emotions he certain j ly has gone berserk. I have so 1 frequently warned you wives about - this type of problem that you may ; think I am a modern Jeremiah making ominous prophecies about your future marital life. MARRIAGE INSURANCE Louise is like the average hap -1 py wife. She grew so complacent that she could not imagine dis aster jeopardizing her marital bliss. “Nothing like that could ever happen to MY husband!” I have actually heard women state in my presence. / Yet at that very same moment I already knew their husbands had paramours ensconsed in city apart ments! Maybe some of you readers think I am a chronic singer of the blues, but I am a scientist. Just as I. preach vaccination for smallpox or diptherla, so I urge the same In oculation against marital disasters. It doesn’t pay to be a Pollyanna regarding sex dangers! Your optimism and desire to see everything through rose tinted glasses will not check the ravages of typhoid fever if you foolishly drink from a contaminated creek or open well. * * Not will your marriage with- By America's Foremost •IpF Jr Personal Affairs Counselor Jo DESPERATELY TIRED, AND AFRAID OF LOSING HER MIND, >SOTHER OF SIX CHIL DREN ASKS WHERE TO FIND RELIEF. x DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I am ao hard and warped inside that I have no feelings most of the time. Then again I am filled with fierce love of my children and want to hurt anyone who in any way In terferes with their plans. One day I love, and the next day I am filled with a terrible hate that scares me. I try reading the Bible, but I find that nothing prevents these terrible fits of anger. When I was seven my parents parted after a stormy marriage, and 10 years, later my father lost his mind. My mother worked out to support us children, and I just ran wild and did as I please. I had np friends, for we were very poor; and the boys laughed and made fun of me In school, for I was ragged and not very clean at times, I fear. I hated boys and when at 1$ a man of 36 paid ,me attention I loved him dearly and would have died for him If necessary. He mar ried me, although he could have had me anyway, and I had six children In seven years. My hus band soon tired-of me. and. spent all his nights away from home, partying and playing cards with other men. He wasn’t unfaithful, but I was hug and scared, and would wait up all night until he came in. drunk and fussy CHILDREN DON’T ='- . SENSE PROBLEM I got a part time job and was a good mother. AH my chiltfren 1 have a highi school education, and .; and good youn « er are in nigh school now, and I years been a devoted father, to hear'hta 1 talk. He is so’ proud of the chil dren; but I have no feeling for < Wm, «r for any other man. For 1 ** ft ; e J*"* r™ nursed his , Invalid father, and I hate him too. 1 stand destruction If you also close, your eyes to the virus that produces*! divorce. WOMEN, WAKE UP _ No type of wife is immune from Louise’s tragedy. It occurs among clergy and laymen, physicians and factory workers, the intellectual and uneducated. . And don’t think God will shoul der all the responsibility for keep ing your home happy. He will great ly assist but God helps those who t help themselves 1 1 No man is fully immune to the 2 wiles of other women. This is es pecially true If he hasn’t had nu- I merous love affairs prior to mar i riage. Louise’s husband had gone i straight into marriage without i knowing the thrills of any other . • woman's kisses, r As a consequence, he was bowled over, so to speak, when he kissed i this other woman' during his wife’s vacation trip to visit her parents, a ’ A sophisticated man might have* , kissed the other woman, but he . wouldn’t have lost his common [ sense. He would know that there are dozens of charming women who i could adapt themselves happirf to ; his personality and be a thrilling wife. The novice type of husband, however, doesn’t have this stabi . lizing background of experience. PONCE DE LEON Besides, many men become un duly afraid of old age and impo- £ tence. They find that a clandestine affair resurrecte their wading verve and sex ardor which they had thought were dying. So they fall in love with love, or rather with these symptoms of youth which a strange love affair will always arouse in a man who isn’t senile. A wife must realize that since men are many times more passion ate than women, they wilj notice .. a reduction therein more sharply, especially after 40, Jhat terrifies them. y So a smart wife then becomes more aggressive and seductive till she banishes her husband’s secret fear. - Send a dime and stamped re turn envelope for my medico-psy chological bulletin “How To Pre vent Impo tease in >the Male.” Use this technique on your hus band. Jttsttlhjiraccinats your .mar- _ riage against divorce. hardships, stc., as you've done mag nificently. Or if they refuse to hon estly examine their inner conflicts, as you are willing to do. The “terrible feeling” within you is a constitutional protest against further strain at this time. You’ve reached the end of yoqr strength, temporarily. You are physically and emotionally played out, and you need change and rest, and strong kindly helpfulness from some source. You also need to pour your bitterness. to somebody who understands what you’ve been through; and who sympathizes with your burning outrage, blindly di rected at life and people—a senti ment that has been snowballing in your unconscious since earliest childhood. And no wonder, I say. It is only lately, since you’ve made safe harbor with the chil dren, and your husband has set tled down devotedly, that your emotions are giving trouble. There JR are logical reasons for this: 1. In a framework of comparative social security for- the first time, your driving tension has relaxed, let ting unconscious material come to conscious mind. 2. Being exhausted altogether, due to 40 years’ hand to-hand combat with unfavorable environment, your nervee are fnw xled; thus you can’t appraise and sift your emotions sensibly, as you might after getting your second wind. , M ™ = G d AH your life you’ve longed for and needed supporting care to wrap you around, but until now you've mostly been giving your strength to others* You’ve had an unfair deal and you resent It. Who wouM a*t? This is the meaning of your hate. Your fierce love of yoiif children springs from a sense es Wghtaf ’dwamTremsrerotea* *s*•• diagnostic helo tel' Jmuau *
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Feb. 22, 1952, edition 1
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