PAGE TWO Mix? JJaUij ilmiiifr RECOBP COMPANY g- At All East Canary Street T rr £ •1; * SUBSCRIPTION RATES OUT-OF-RTATE: «M 9 per year in advance; 95 fer six mcnthc. f> | lar three months. [ Entered as gecond-clags matter in the Post Office in Dunn, under the lews of Congress, Act of March 3. 1879. \ 'Ytoery afternoon, Monday through Friday ,New Health Center Needed In returning an unfavorable report on the Dunn j Health Center, the Harnett County Grand Jury has point i ed upa problem that has been present for a lc(ng time. We i mewittje need for a new Health Center here. I Th increasing activity in public health performed from this office, nas outmoded the facilities, even if the building itself were in good condtion. And this is by no hneans the case, the condition of the building itself is de plorable. During a heavy rainstorm, for example, it 1 sight to see the personnel of this office, scurrying around with pans, buckets or any available container, placing thete at strategic locations in order to catch the streams of water that enter through the leaks in the roof, which is tbaHly in need of repair. \ | However, even if the building were in good condition, the workers there lack the space needed for their activi ties, and during clinic hours, there is usually an overflow jkofcpatients seated on the porch rail, waiting their turn, be muse there is no rocgn for them inside the building. I Our neighboring counties of Sampson and Cumberland shave modem, well equipped health centers. There is no riogical reason why we could not have tbejU: equal here If the town oi Dunn would supply the lot for the buiid , jng, the Federal Government would foot 74,6 per cent of pthr'bilf/ nearly three quarters of the amnnnf. needed. A ■femtabig, well equipped building would cost between $50.- $75,000. BBre is one method by which the county’s’shafeo? ley could be supplied without raising the tax rate . Dropping of persons from old age js he county $1,761.25 monthly. Over a period of a is will amount to $21,735 Tnis amount would an te the county’s share. i a new building and equipment, your health de t could expana its activities ana could • the services for we now send our eßnihai to either health centers. ui. example, we now send our crippled children to ic at the Cumberland County Health Center, in Fayetteville. With suitable facilities here it would be much more convenient for the patient and for the doctors, to hold tiSEclinics here. j*~¥our Health Center renders a valuable service in the iwerests of public health, and these services can be vastly rifaanded and made more valuable to the community, if Betterjjuarters are provided. ** - v ’ * Gross Roots Opinion : 13&&T ROCHESTER, N. Y., HERALD: “Did anyone »ver a&fc now to increase their take home pay the quickest shfiLeaaiest? Did anyone ever think that by cutting down |nftit£great masses pf rats which gre gnawing away at -the ' toycheeks pf every man, he could get an immediate lift in in# take home pay? It’s just’ like a bamful of grain. As rang asrthe rats continue tp carry it away, you luwe to wpi£ that much harder to raise more to take up the losses. These .Jfedcral rats have waxed fat over the years, and they have JfiSftFh more and more defiant of the public, by the protec ffSori which the government has given them. They have irfached a point of an army of rats which not only will not np. dUdbdged, but demand more and more of the public I 9 xjfc L FLOWERS HAVE L always BEEN a rr REMINDER OF H>EEr)SST affection &S HOWST KtaMMiSd. Dimo KbJr, - • ... . , ...I CATCHER AND SKINNER ~2ui **£!&** ss Z 4 4l wSm Hour Os Ned —fIPOAD VT- DUNN. N. C. Anbuleece Service •: Phone 2077 s fiROMARIK FUNERAL HOME DUMM. N C .. >■: “1* . -£■ QUINN'S FUNERAL HOME 24-HOUR SERVICE PHONE 3306 Nil W. HARNETT ST. DUNN, M. &. ff»9§ Days £ckcLke THE GREATNEIO THAT WAS RONDS The Romans had a high civil official called a censor wfeoee busi ness It was to ten the roto. Mar cus Cato, a plain and rugged man, asrtred to the post, but the aristo crats and the rich and those who preferred a smooth life were op posed to his candidacy. They brought forth a number of very fine candidate*, soft spoken and gentle, who made promises to the people to givh them an Indul gent and easy government. Cato would have no competition with them. He delivered tough speeches and advised the people to choose not the gentlest but the roughest of physicians. He painted no glowing picture of himself nor lied about his intentions. Os this, Plutarch says: . . He (Cato) added, too, that he saw all the nest endeavouring after the office with ill intent, be cause they were afraid of those Who would exercise it justly, as they ought And so truly great and to worthy of great mm to be its leaders was, it would seem, the Roman people, that they did not fear toe severity and grim counte nance of Cato, but rejecting those smooth promisers who were ready to do all things to ingratiate them selves, they took him. . . It is interesting to note that |dl the same arguments against can didates were used in ancient times that are used against them today. For instance, they say that Senator Taft lacks beauty of appearance. Tliat he does. He would never win a beauty contest at Atlantic City, nor does he have toe charm of manner or toe gracefulness of per sonality of a Franklin D. Roose velt or a General Elsenhower. He is a homespun sort of personality Who talks like a vigorous Yankee —and thinks wjth all the intellec tual toughness of one. He makes no attempt to paint roseate pictures of the world*his, country, or even of himself. • mce ancient Marcus Cato, he gathers toe facts and presents them and if. they are unpalatable, it mig». make him unpopular for saying what is undesira|Me. Yet. if that is the way it needs to be said, he says it so. and it might have Saved us our If 10.000 casualties in Korea had we linto^fi Perhaps had Bob Taft tailored: himself for popularity, he might* have been president by now and the country would have been saved many an ordeal, but then he would not have been Bob T&ft. but a flg urlpe that some trlfler painted to fit a mood. An# as the mood seem ed to change, additional paints jmd lacqugrs would be added until It left an odor of an icebox dish cooked lover two or three times Lo Which perhaps a curry or a tomato JMMe had been aft& todtoguise its staleness 'Those who fern-fact* and arithmetic but who specialise to toebroad and general so often dislike Taft. Too many of our politicians sub stitute glamour for integrity, man nerisms for gradousness, the quip «d gag for knowledge add w|s m*l thus we get foul govern ment In which corruption vies with chicanery. Think of what a low estate be have sunk to U any pub lic persdn can make Such a speech as Captain Victor Hunt Harding executive director of the Detno cratic Rational Congressional Com mittee, permitted himself* s*yto a meeting: "A great many government work ers may feel that they have been maunder Ct^SeHta*. ket yanked out, and they'd shiver.'* Then the continued: v ' : ' T (It is. “Unfortunate that many who came here as a result of the Democratic Party have so com pletely forgotten this and now feel gence.” There it is, the degeneracy of a nation. Not ability and intelligence matter, but loyalty to a party, obe dience to the dictates of those who prefer to give something for nettl ing rather than to get a dollar's worth of a dollar paid, which mean* service jmd responsibility. It ns stimulating to re-read who speaks his mind with utmost cansjf: »is opponent* say that be has aB the virtues that Plutarch 2&£22B&iSS!S yATffiaat an? Apparently tt does possess sex SDDeaL ’ v - ■ r \ i t • TBB DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. fl| 4m ? i v f i j£TS z a jj W o / “Surprise, deer! Close your eyes and open your check book!” The Worry Clinic By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE k* Parents, vaccinate yopr child ren against Insanity! Tent’s tragic case today is duplicated thousands es time. A shy intro vert who idled heavily 'on the affection an it shelter of his mother's love, has suddenly been thrust into a competitive, harsher, enviqenjtent. Case B-388: Tom D„ aged 18, recently enlisted to escape toe draft. “Dr. Crane, Tom recently went to an army camp, We were very proud of him and he seemed to feel toe same way about it,” his coed sister informed me. . “But ’after three months, some thing terrible must have happened to him. “He grew less and less Interested in things around him. We finally found him sitting in a hospital, Ytaring vacantly at the wall. He didn’t even know us! ' “#ie , army psychiatrist told us he was being discharged from service because of seirisophrenia. He is a mental case. We are now heart broken. Win he ever 1 get well?” INSANITY IS ESCAPE Thousands of .men like Tom have been discharged from military ser viec for mental reasons. But please notice how many were rejected on mental grounds before they were even admitted into our military forces. In citing some relative data from World War II regarding the selec tees between toe ages t>f 21 and 36, Dr. L. G. Rowntree, Chief of toe Medical Division, reported that defective lungs catsed tha re jection of 26,000 men. Defective feet accounted for 36,- 000 krhfle defective . ears caused 41,000 to be rejected. Hernias or ruptures accounted for 56,000. But mental and nervous disorders caused 57,000 to be rqjerted. An other 57000 were rejected because of venereal diseases. SST PSYCHOLOGY Jfour editor runs this psychology umn to help vaccfyate young people against insanity, as well as excessive timidity, wall flowerism, and of dates. In this column you find specific aid for avoiding divorce. And re member, every salvaged home means actual money to your pocket. For every divorce ckse involves toe time and money of your local courts, bailiffs and judges. Your taxes pay tWf bffl. And how much do you suppose it costs toe state to care for one mental patient like Tom? Well, pleas* ponder carefully toe follow ing facts:. fIUtAIN UPON OUR TAXES ' Dr william J. Mayo once stated that mental ailments far out ranked cancer and tuberculosis cases, combined. One of our current great psy- Chiatosts. -Dr.JVA. Moss, 6tr*d in his- textbook that from one-sixth to one-third of every state's ex penditures is consumed in the support of mental hospitals! In the first World War we found that 13 pw dent of draftees ware rejected because pf nervous or diseases. The'best cure for such cases Is prevention dr prophylaxis. Th> psychology column is vaccinating tnlWons of^ to eettai waiuiowerism, t^und^b^ ft is salvaging toe lives of a host of oar fellow citizens. By so doing, it is thus reducing your local tax rate! Tom would very likely not have H & «*1 his through this psychology column. For Tbm was a toy. introverted individual who Maned upon his matter ter such a degree that he eaißdnS stand :..«r his own feet emotionally, when be was put in- to a strange and more harsh en viornment. , Send for my bulletin entitled “HOW TO PREVENT NERVOUS BREAKDOWNS” enclosing dime and stamped addressed envelope Use it in vaccinating your children against insanity. Send it to your boys in Military Service. * (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long 3c stamped, addressed en velop and a dime to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one ai his psychological charts.) sun news Briefs 1 RALEIGH —(If)—The State High way Commission will open bids on Nov. 27 on one bridge project and 14 road projects covering 120 miles in 15 counties. The biggest single job to be con tracted involves grading of 12 miles of new roadway for U. S. 29 and i TO for the High Point by-pass. The | section will link the newly com pleted Thomasville by-pass With the by-pass to be built around Greensboro and Burlington. SALISBURY —flit— Fred Smyre of Hickory is the new president of the North Carolina Lutherah Brotherhood. T(Ulm Holds Lead In Total Offense NEW YORK flh Tulsa seised the lead in both total offense tad yards gainde rushing as a result of its, accumulation of 705 yards at Kansas State’s expense last Satur day, official statistics released by the NCAA Service Bureau reveal ed today. The once-beaten Hurricanes will clinch the Missouri Valley Confer ence championship if they beat De troit on Dee. 8. Tulsa gained 534 yards rushing to take the lead in that department with an average of 365.3 per game- Arizona State is second with 3)49.1 and College of- Pacific dropped to third with 343.6. In total offense, the Hurricanes now show an average of 485.9 yards per game compared with Arizona State’s 446 J and Holy Cross’ 443.9. ■ I ■ • > , For Sole SEVERAL GOO® MULES JUP odr w(0 Wjl wFlvHilyv : ■— BN|i «i rnAii rrV ■i■ i ■ ~ SL \ mm sfflClC ' So /rank Mulcahy, the proprie ty of the Frolics at Salisbury Beach, Mass, paid no 20 per cent cabaret tax. After aO. he argued, you've got to provide entertainment to have a night chib. Ail he had was Jojo. r , . Opt rushed a platoon of revenue agerite to inffidct Jojo *t *ork. He may have been silent, but the people laughed and laughed. There fore, reasoned the revenooers, Jojo was entertainment. They socked Mulcahy 315,000 in back cabaret taxes. He took up his problem with the distinguished attorney and politi cian, James A. Donovan of Law rence, Mass. Donovan took a look at JoJd, who didn’t entertain him. Then he went to his great and good friend, Dennis W. .Delaney, toe Collector of Internal Revenue at Boston. He told Delaney that Jojo wasn’t entertainment. Delaney listened carefully. After all, he’d been paid 33,000 a few months (refare for taking Donovan down to Washington to introduce him to big Shots In connection with some other legal matters. Delaney just seemed to have friends -all over. Next thing counselor Donovan knew, he had a letter from Delaney Shying he’d talked the powers-that tje in Washington from taxing Jojo on tay past entertainment, but they insisted if Jojo kept on mak ing the customers laugh, he’d be taxed in the future. That saved 315,000 for Mulcahy who then fired Jojo. A few more weeks passed and there was collector Delaney on the phone, telling attorney Donovan that he was tired, weary, and need ful of a nice cottage on the beadh. Donovan suggested that he get in touch with Mulcahy down at the Frolics. He did.. Next thing you know, Delaney was living rent free in a house by the sea; Mulcahy had paid his rent of 31,500 for the season. All this entile into the open when President Truman fired Delapey on charges of assorted shenanigans with the peqpkw’ money. Then it developed that Delaney had paid no vincotne taxes, himself, on the money that Donovan had paid hlip, nor on the free rent he received after saving, Jojo’s boss a cool 315,- 006. The white-haired attorney Don ovan told the whole sorry tale un der oath to the House Ways and Means subcommittee, which is in vestigating light-fingered revenue collectors in offices stretching across the nation. He went into detail about Jojo. All Jojo did. he said, was sit there and open his mouth while a juke box behind him played drum music. ) “I would compare Jojo to a band leader with his baton,” testified this New England legal lfcht. “And band music is nontaxable. Yet these people claimed Jojo was an enter tainer and they Sent' tax bills.” “H he’d opened his mouth he’d have been taxable?” inquired com mittee counsel Adrian De Wind, who used to be % tax collector, him self. "He dkl open his mouth, but he didn’t say anything,” replied Don ovan. '' “And if he’d said anything, he’d have been subject to tax?” Insisted De Wind. Donovan said he supposed so. He also said he was widened by the scrape in which collector Delaney finds himself. “He has scores, yes. hundreds of friends in Boston, Washington, and elsewhere,” said Donpvan. “He was greatly adffiqrgd.jrhat Bos amuse the people. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NQVFMRER J 5 .i95l MacArthur, possibly in’his Seattle speech, will didn't imdfa ' s^| permen d d g Ij, 1 j, Arthur Ktock Police, shiverihg during cold wave, despite Winter blouses, don’t' don overcoats until the Chief Inspector issues the order. . . . Durante, .back to Coast, fearful that his TV shows will miss hypo of N. Y. syndicated writers. Coast writers focus on movies. . . . Miami Beach estimates that scuttling of bookies and gamblers, via the federal tax, will coetnotels and clubs their top spenders. ... Joe,E. Lewis argues that closing of bars on Section Day locks in too many voters. . . Happy Birthday to the U. 8. Marine Corps, hotter than the 176 candles on ’the cake I He* Kahn us U wed coat rnTr. Abe Barth. . . . Mrs. Truman here ' for a visit with Margaret. . . . Willie Moretti’s family collected S3OOO double indemnity on a life insurance policy taken out 25 years ago when he was a grocer! .... The Tom Kings (Joyce van Patteii) expecting Sir Stork. . . . Mexican film comedian Cantinfias and Evelyn Keyes to mime the wedding date. . . . Helen Hamilton's daughter, Seena, hospitalized after being hit by an auto. ... Joe Frisco, wearer of bow-ties for 34 years, dared a four-in-hand on his S2d birthday. . . . Mae West's “Dia mond Lil” will continue. . . . Girl was flunked out of TV aetthg school because she didn’t know how to open a refrigerator door, swears Mar garet Phelan. . . Some people who bet on Sharkey to win didn’t pay off and N. Y. bookies understandably are afraid to do anything about it .. .. Herons getting razzberries on newsreel screens. . . . Greta Oar bo’s frequent London escort. Brigadier Antony Head, M. P. . . . Widower Clyde Suke forth, Brooklyn Dodger coach, to marry Greth Winchenbach around the Chirstmas holidays .... Betty Hutton's ex. Ted Briskin, and Donna Lee Hickey a hot romance. .. . A son for the Frank (Sped Sheas. . . John Balaban’s daughter, Mrs. Ida Scully, convalescing .after major surgery. . . . When thfe Henry Fonda show, “Point of tfo Return," opens at the Alvin, Leland Hayward will have his banner dying over “South Pacific,” “Call Me Madame,” “Remains To Be Seen” and “Point of No Return." t • , FCC about t* Uft the TV freeze shortly due to clamor from one * station cities Valentin Gubitchev, Russian spy in Judy Coplon case, win shortly wed a Vlshinky. .... Faith Baldwin bought Isaac Don Levine’s lavish country estate in Darien, Conn. . . . Elisabeth Taylor waiting for Michael Wilding to Join her. . . , Gene Sampson, leader of the former striking longshoremen, will no longer need too detectives as bodyguards. ' ■ 1 ' >r. —Horses named after performers are show-stoppers: Joe E. Lewis and Teddy Powell won at Jamaica and Phil Harris won at Lincoln Downs. . . . Working for no salary, no guarantee, just cover charges, Hildegarde left Dallas with $14,000 for six nights. ... ‘Fred Mac- Murray’s wife ailing. He’s "flying from England to be near her. . . ;. 1 The Herbert Swope Jrs. expect Sir Stork .... Doris Dalton of “Seven- 1 teen” and David Orrick nave chilled. . . . “Gasoline,*’ Broadway char acter, killed by an auto. . . . Tenement window siU flower boxes now converted to iceboxes. . . . Biggest royalty grabber of the season on Broadway will be the G. B. Shaw estate, with “Don Juan ft Hell.” “Caesar and Cleopatra,” and “Saint Joan” all going full tilt late next month, and the possibility of a fourth one to come. (Oood thing thfe wry old boy doesn't have to pay income tax, in person, any MorfelY . . , Sam Levenson’s request for an injunction to restrain Larry Alpert nt "Bagels and Yox” from'using jokes claimed by Levenson, has been denied.—AMELlA. Thousands of satisfied users sjpiid concrete proof that i* i iAi jii &in 1 HP aa Hurtful oge-aemu, ftUMMHit tiiilnH vuv^voi JUNE COVERS! •NOT A RU&Eft'g/LTER •READY-MIXED! NO.UENOINGI fIRLSII,|(9 SHLMf, ♦WASHABLE! ; «•' iS*» •DRIES QUICKLY! •SELF PRIMING!