PAGE TWO . S‘W V. T : > . 'a • - mm ft *+ g dun*, n c. K RECORD COMPANY . ...t-y. „,.... - ■„„ .„ ■ - I|“£ NAfIQNAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE !--. a .. THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC * lm4 VDr"-e>r J W 6-217 E. 4Znd Bt, New York It. N. Y. j£\ Breach Office* In Every M*J*r City. Star ,i;"‘— *' ■ ■ "' ■ SUBSCRIPTION RATES -fIY-CARRIER: 20 cent* per week; *BJO per year in advance; fS . ,o "■ for six months. *3 for three month*. IN ■TOWNS NOT ffIKTED BY CARRIER AND ON RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROUNA: RN pW & - iWU®*OF-BTATE: SBAO per year in advance; IS for six months, W * /r» tor thun months. - .1 At 311 East Canary Street Entered as second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, N.,C.,'under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3, 1879. EVery afternoon, Monday through Friday He Puts Country First Three times within recent Weeks Senator Willis Smith has dettßtastrated qualities which are conductive to the restoration of confidence in our form Os national govern- SNft&ngly indifferent to the lashings cfdtis enraged critics, he has been so bold as to exercise his own judg ment at the expense and in to,what is the ac cepted View of those who put party first and foremost. u.:Following the abrupt firing of General Mac- Art ftVir, Senator Smith was the Only member of .the North Carolina, congressional delegation t& Sdeatian the action of "President Truman. The former Raleigh attorney Said MacArfs|u - may have felt that the ejgfliqssion of his news wa&Jiecessary to prevent national disaster., “I regret ex ceedingly,” he continued, “that the acted so stfMWanly and I fear that such sufnmdry action Was a mistake at this time.” On May § in a letter to the former president Os the Forsyth County Ydung Republican Club, Senator Smith again made a statement which reflected his own views ratteathan those of the Truman Adioinistrßtion or of theWehajjcratic party. “I feels” he wrote, “that a mis take* was. made with respect to General MacArfchtir’s re calljlßSß am inclined to think that hip view of the sit uatiSßrafld his plan for ending the conflict is nearer cor rect .tfcan any so far advanced, unfortunately we do not seem to "have a positive foreign policy in tnp Far East. Titnyhrr incident will force the Aattiinistraticm to give u$ a, jnore satisfactory one.” * Then on May 14 in an address before North Carolina automobile dealers at Pinehurst Senator Smith struck another note, the sound of which the Truman Admin istration and some elements of the Democratic Party do n. 4 «■ 'ly . ; | , A ' ' ' .-itmiiim-fj ■u |. r„ sX* “I don’t care if other bosses like to be called by their ! initials—l DON’T!” NTimilt OS % ; BROADWAY AT 42d Fantastic memory displayed by Gen George Marshall, before the Senate committee, points up his inability, before the Pearl Harbor in- I vestigators, to remember how he occupied his time on the night before ; the Pearl Harbor tragedy. Marshall’s fabulous memory completely i startled the current Senate probers. His testimony, covering an aston ishing range of crucial events, and the equally rapid answers of Gen. MacArthur indicate that life Begins at 70. Not once did either Mar ; ; shall or MacArthur ask for a recess, though Senators frequently left , | the hearing because they couldn't take the strain of sitting and con centrating. Granted that controversy rarely serves a constructive pur-. ; i pose, this behind-the-scenes view of high American policy levels is i \ the best thing that could have happened to any of us, because it informs [Public Opinion. ./ i Every time a Yip Harburg musical comes to town, playgoers must I examine it for a message, Yip never being content to let Western Union , 1 handle messages. "Flahooley,” mighty cute in spots, is embarrassed by its message, so confused in its symbolism that I defy the Joint Chiefs . of Staff to decipher it. Only people on the stage not helping to deliver this obscure communication are the Bil and Cora Baird puppets, which, quite naturally, steal the show....As I understand it, Yip is agin witch (hunts, over-production, “the Yaakec policy of deporting” undesirables, and has a great sympathy for a ginii who can’t make sense out of the American inconsistencies. Whether or not this genii is supposed to be Gerhart Elsler never becomes quiti clear. Oniy conclusion is that Yip, a big time “pro,” should get out of the AT&T area. MacArthur, Helen Hayes’, hubby, sling Red Skeltan - pud jira Hawkins. called R quits —The Ben Hogans in town ite the Jaak' Benny show... ■ Jbc-Kma: Michael of Rumania recouperating * $ auto i aeckMnt 1« ' Italy!.. .'The «Satchel Paiges expect 9» rfftSr...Cqrnipg Glass heiress, Betty H. McCord, daughter of the i AmWflF Houghtons, to we# Jim Weinberg, end of June (his dad is right hand' man of Defense Mobillzer Charles E. Wilson)- Cesar Romero and Beverly Stoner serious.:. .Robert Sterling dating Ann ; Baxter, of the Toni Twins Doris Duke and Porfirio Rubirosa ap • plauding Marty McCarty’s Hi-Jinjc at the Persian Room Bob Hope . returning from Europe and will da a ship-to-shore broadcast.. Pierre i Cartier dating TV’s Marsha Wilis Mldtown office girls playing i softball in Central Park lunch hour league. ; PIRST DELTA WING riANE TESTED , - - - " > The Commerce Department had tightened up the rules against shipping China any of our own war goods. There Was a large cop- , per refinery in Japan, only an overnight ship ride from Chink, but that was covered by the reg ulations, too. So the wily operators bought , loads of this Jap copper for ex- j port to the United States and goodness knows we needed it. , While the ship was plowing across the Pacific, the owners of the copper would sell it to somebody else. Sometimes the ship would dock in New York, or Baltimore, j where the copper would be trans- j ferred to another freighter bound . for China, But more often the | same ship that left Japan would I circle the slobe to deliver the metal to the Chinese. Perfectly legal. That wasn’t all. Some of our traders used similar schemes to buy Belgian steel and French transformers, which were sold to the Chinese before they ever reached our shores. A number of the gentlemen in the trade appeared to defend iuaM>mmummmmummmuuHmiMamuamwui Loans—Financing We Make Loans On New and Used Automobiles INSTALLMENT LOAN DEPT.. . FIRST-CITIZEN BANK i TRUST CO. Stewart Theatre Bldg. Phone 3587 j Dunn, N. C. \mm ■ n—wi—> Thousands of satisfied users stand as concrete proof ttiat oge-dtrfd, one-coat paint! •ONE COAT COVERS! #NOT A RUBBER-WATER •READY-MIXED! JHXTUMi# 1 A WWE •JJL^SF«CIOR.r " (M# ! ' at r, is xiz gun - mast I ; TauaißDAy, mav ti, mt themselves before the Senator stop their trll^^J 1 had bettor | pam a law. Some were defiant; said they were violating no sta tute. Others - said they took the business on the theory that tT they-'stayed out somebody else would grab the chance the chance to trade with the Chinese. : One of these international defi ers, I remember, almost had tears in his eyes; he said he didn’t want to lose the Chinese custo mers with whom he’d been doing business for 20 years, ’ Sen. O’Conor raised so much cain in a polite and dignified way that this loophole, too, was closed and since last fall we've shipped nothing to China. Now the British belatedly are seeing things our way, too. Too bad it took ’em so long, but in viev, of Sen. O v-on or’s troubles, I’m Inclined to give them a muted cheer. The spare tires and the garden hose are only incidental. stop within'..* utiseonsHUf Soo CROMARTIE HARDWARE COMPANY E. Broad St. Dunn, N. C.