PAGE TWO DUNN, N C. RECORD COMPANY At Sll Bast Canary Street NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE ... THOMAS F CLARK 00., INC. aw-an a «m at. mm m n, n. y. Breach OflteM la fvery Btajor OKy. - subsclMn Stes ' art 1 CAREXEK: M cents per w«ta; SBJW per year to ativaaea; $i far rix aatla tt far three aseathe. w towns not served bt csam Atm on MW ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: PR Wr jeer; $3.5$ far six months; St far three Math fgTT-OF-STATE: fSJt per rear la advance; PfetA Haathe. Si far three eraatha. Altered as second-class matter In the Post Office in Dunn, N. C., under the lews of Congress, Act of March S. I«7Q. Bvery afternoon. Monday through Prtday Excellent Service . ‘.ln case you haven’t already noticed, we’d like to take tills opportunity to point out to you the very excellent bus service now offered between Dunn and Irwin by the South ern Coach Company. 'tThis bus line, which also operates between Durham, Wiftbington and Raleigh, has taken over the route be tween Dunn and Erwin previously served by Safety. “SPor the convenience of citizens in the Dunn-Erwin sec tions hourly bus service is now offered 14 times a day dur ing,the week and six times a day on Sundays. - Convenient bus stops have been set up in the business dk£acts of Dunn and Erwin and stops are also made wherever desired between the two towns. The company offers to regular commuters tickets at greatly reduced fares. jus service means much to the people of Dunn and Ertiin and it also means a great deal to have such a splen did‘.Company as Southern Coach Company operating the franchise. ; This company, organized by Former Secretary of State Stacey Wade and his son, Lewis Wade, has made great Strides and great progress and continues to go forward. It has a safety record that is amazing. ' Furthermore, the company is a public-spirited concern anxious to cooperate with the people and with every worth while movement. & On Saturday, for instance, the company obligingly sent its buses free of charge to transport the children from the Dunn Free Will Baptist Orphanage and the Falcon Orphanage to Dunn’s Christmas parade. When it became kndlwn that Safeway was leaving tilsr field, we became greatly concerned because we re alize what fast, economical anti safe service means to the tv?x> communities. Coach solved the problem. ■ -It is the hope of this newspaper that citizens will give this company the support 'it deserves. ' ' ~ i |» k»M»m-fiO-ROUMO [VaPJMg ty |Hf MAttOW WASHINGTON Republican members of the King Income Tax Committee, apparently not trust ing their Democrat colleagues, have retained their own investigators to probe Dan Bolich, recently re signed Deputy Commissioner of Internal* Revenue. Here Is one phase of Bolich’s activities they might want to check IaSIM. summer of 1949, top mem ben w|l ,the Los Angeles Internal ReVBBUC Bureau came to Wash ing(jr.with what they thought wniw» rensatlonal tax-fraud case. ThejFmlso thought it was airtight. It involved the Guaranty Fln ancp j3orp. of Los Angeles, a high sounding name for one of the big gest "gambling syndicates in Call- SS"Sw , ffi/-SS Guaranty Finance had deducted tree its tax return S34MW paM tq - “Lopez” and another $108,009 mid to “special.” No further ex- Blknation was given, but Treasury •tents were convinced that the $509,000 was paid to runners and that the $348,000 to “Lopez” was paid for police protection.* ’The T-Men, including Ralph Bead, intelligence agent in San Rrancisco, Dan Goodykoontz, In telligence agent in Los Angeles, ahd Walter Campbell, chief coun sel in San Francisco, came to Washington, recommended prose- Option as gamblers Marvin Kovey, Albert Kogus. Harry Rockwell, and rail Cobert, partners in Guaranty In -Washington, they conferred RWrVSrious high treasury officials, toe hiding Assistant Commissioner Bolich; who has been seen in the company of gambling-king Frankie Cfotello; also with Charles Oli- Rhant, internal revenue counsel, E$W W.-H.' Woolf, head of the in •St though the case deemed the Treasury, for some ppMOe-reason, let it drop. Mean- Angeles. California, to ’oT'toe i band-wagon, and Jump on it. It : also takes money to corral dele gates. In fact, getting nominated i$ now big business—and the vot ers don’t have much to say about *• .’ln an effort to bring nomina tions back to the people, however, the Washington Merry-Go-Round irili qonduct a Presidential public cptakxi poll—beginning with the Republican*. Later, there will be a Democratic poll. Here ia how you can. participate: 1. Send $ penny peat card to the candidate you favor, Care Box 1952, Washington 13, %>. C. (This may be the last time you can send a post card for one cent.) 2. If, for instance, you favor Eisenhower, address the card to “Gen. Eisenhower, Box 1952, Wash ington IS, D. C.,” and on the re verse side write: “I’m /or you in ’s*.” «*, m ymfn for Senator Taft Gov. Warren of California, or any other GOP candidate, address the' post card to him, Care Box 1952, Washington 13. 3. Give your name and address. Tour name will not be published, but-it’s important to give it. Ring ers and anonymous voters are not wanted. 4. Give your present political party. This too is important, be cause in next year’s election a lot of people may cross party lines. In the South, for instance, it’s claimed by bath fitenhowto and Taft supporters that many Demo crats would rota Republican if they are nominated. 80. if yob are a Democrat who plans to vote Re £S&d ls ac oT l' 0W P oß * Results of the poll will be an s«“-,B!aßLsrsr in Chicago. --Congreixman Kersten of Wiscon sin played right into Communist hanto—by introducing a public amendment to spend $100,000,000 to finance subversive activitijsbehind the Iron Curtain. The Communists -are now throwing this in our faces all over Europe. It also gives them an excuse to finance subversive ac **?**!? {£. the if. 3. A. . . . i-uring World War n. President ** However**** kept ) These Days W By ems* ******* £drc(jJrtf ' mmmmm—mmmmmmmmt A REAL PEACE Viscount JowMt, speaking in the > House of Lords,, made this com ; Rent on peace in Korea. “ It must be a real peace. If a cessation of fighting in Km , were to be followed by fighting on , a large scale in Indo-China, Malay, or Hongkong we should not have gained anything. The opposition wbuld support the government in their policy in Egypt. They agreed that the Sudanese must not be i handed over to the tender mercies , of the Egyptians as, some yean ago, the Czechs were handed over to the mercies of Hitler." Apparently every country to the World is important except China and Korea. Lord Jowitt is not bothered with them although many of his countrymen have been killed lh those countries both in war and by atrocities. The truce in Korea is as un military as the war has been. It is not even a cease-fire. It la ex tremely difficult to analyze quite what It is. Why should it have taken nearly five months of nego tiations during which the Chinese communists built up their forces for the next phase of the war? It ia interesting that Lord Jo- Wilt objects to the Sudanese being handed over ta the “tender mer cies of the Egyptians,” but no men tion is made of handling the whole Otdaa over to the tender mercies at the Russians. And while It seems, to the Noble Lord altogether wrong,to haire giyep ther Czechs to Hitler, be is not at all excited over the Czechs now being enalavdd to Stalin. The logic is of the order intro duced by President Roosevelt when He decided that he would diSgjiai between a good arid a bad dictator. That formula has got us into most of. our difficulties, for the goodness of Stalin proved itself a disaster. It was a formula based upon per sonalities rather than upon princi ples; upon blamor rather than Upon ideals of life. Actually this country does not know where it stands in this Ko rn situation. Are we tUB ta the N.’s police action there and are We going to forget our 100,000 casualties and our nearly 20,000 dead? What are we to do about our--prisoners of war, those alive or those killed in the atrocities? Axe we to sign off and forget? There are those who feel that we must sooner or later make peace with Russia and that the sooner the better. Therefore, they teould accept peace on Russia’s forms if those are the only terms on which Russia will make peace, ■they are willing to accept the status quo as Stalin has estab lished. Stalin will behave hence forth; Russian imperialism will end. The compound that produces this solution is not within any range at facts. Since 1938, Russian im perialism has steadily Increased her territory until It now runs from the Pacific to the Elbe and has an tocreased population for 280,000,- 000 to 800.000.000. Why should Soviet Russia stop now? By what title are wd to convince ourselves that the limits of empire have Men reached? ■ Suppose the Unites Slates were to withdraw from Korea, where £3VMB3r& < 3&3 upon this adventure of a police action on behalf of the United Rattans. If that .is ail we have baen fighting for during this year and tSLSVS&Sfts. limb and mind? If there was no thing to accomplish, why did this titobtiy ever go tote the tiArai* enterprise? Was it to safeguard Japan? If so. can Japan be pro tected with the maritime provinces of Siberia, Korea snd Manchuria in Russian hands? The point is that every situation requires analysis of the facta and the problems involved. The phrase fgßorrto'w lfoMcy jatfc- Wserve in understanding a com pE" Korean war will continue or OAL but that we do not know MOT*. TIB DAILY EKCOW. MM. N. O. — - - ■ - . “ As I was sayin’ before we were so rudely interrupted ~ ? Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON The ashen faced T. Lamar Caudle was sipptag ice water from a paper cup and looking rockier than ever as the Congressmen lambasted him with embarrassing questions. A couple of times there 1 thought he was going to keel over. The longer he talked about his deals, the more I got to wondering how he found any time to work for us taxpayers: Until President Truman fired him, we paid T. La mar $15,000 t year as Assistant Attorney General to prosecut the 1 thieves vAta would cheat the tax collector. And there was Caudle taking rides In airplanes of those involv ed to fox cases. Going fishing with ’em. Buying a trio of Chevrolet sedans from a taxi magnate with tax troubles, Going into oil well dealt with attorneys for those to the tolls pi the tax man. Worrying about the mink coats still another of these legal lights helped buy wholesale for his wife and a couple •f Other leading ladles of Wash ington. Pocketing a $5,000 commis sion on the sale of a flying ma chine to a one-time embezzler who was an tba pay roil of two black marketers. AH these extra-curricular enter- V.isos T. Lamar explained In a rlctu North Carolina accent. In no ca*e, said he, did he let his pri vate deals influence his tax work. I’ll even go along with him on that I just don’t think he had much time left for taxes. So he told how he pocketed $5,000 for selling a friend’s $30,- 000 flying machine to one Larry Knold. who sfrved a little time In 1939 for embezzling. WeU, sir, Larry worked for Samuel Aaron and Jacob Frledus, the notorious black marketers, who tried to cheat the rest of us out of $130,000 in Income taxes. Sam and Jake now are in the ebnk and T. Lamar takes a good deal of credit for that; says he gave ’em no more delays than he would anybody else. The names of the Messrs. Aaron and Fried us seemed familiar. Then it dawned on me; they’re the babies who seemed to have Iriends all over the place. And lawyers, too Even as the judge was sentenc ing them to jail in New York for holding out on their taxes in some shady steel deals, they were buy ing a Juke-box factory from the Reconstruction Finance Corpora tion. How we taxpayers became the proprietors of such an estab lishment in Kansas City, known as -the Aireon Manufacturing Co., is another stair. Briefly, be lent' the management the money to go into business, it wound up bank' nfot. artfl we fofond gages with ' | CUTIts jA:' • v4h(l ■rß tm v JR HR J i--' 1 s A. \h * **-mmi* yti I'WP>'«■ inoifSWv an automatic phonograph company o« our hands. When the RFC signed the deal with Sam and Jake, it didn’t even know they were on trial in Fed eral Court in New York. Sen J. William FUlbright (D„ Ark.), who was investigating the RFC fancy- Dan financial operations, suggest ed to the management that it was doing business with a couple of Crooks. He said the RPC totter back out of the sale. The financiers said they couldn’t because the papers were signed. They said Sam ahd take might sue Sen. Ful bright doubted that and the gov ernment finally tore up the Juke box contract. By then—the fall of 1900—Sam and Jake were behind btos; one for four years, the other for two. All this hasn’t much to do with Qaudle’s cauldron of woe. except to indicate that a pair of thieves lapse among the innocents in Washington can cause a good deal of trouble'. End story. if it has sounded confused, in coherent, and entirely too compli cated to make much sense, that’s the idea- After listening to the Whole sorry tale, IH not he sooth ed even by soft music from a juke bpx that Sam and' Jake almost, Ujit not quite, bought at a bargain ffom us taxpayers. With our money. Service Officer fenders Report SERVICE OFFICER REPORE .. A total el 1,789 services were per formed by the office of Veteran Service Officer L. B. McLean, ac cording to the report tendered to the Harnett County Board of Com mtasleoers today. A breakdown oh the report shows; Letter In. 125; letters out, 118; long distance calls, 44; field trips, 37; "interviews. 387 educa tion, 3; on-th-job-training, 5; com pensation and pension, 15. Insurance. 0; loans, 358; hospi talization, 5; farmer training, 0; burial benefits, 0; legal or business advice, 361; committments, 1; out sp&sisr 7; miscellaneous* IfftTßS FKBBiNAND TU BULL JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (W—A dif ferent kfiid of thief has been found working this area. A resident re ported to police that eight prize camellia plants valued at some SBO were uprooted and stolen from his property. „ r^rsrassr BOSTON im—Mrs. Kathleen - Bean’s 10 children are aged 1,2, 3, i j L t 7, A 0 sad 10, - .. .nTm 1 4AM YT Hilv* * Winehell 4- New M V ork WHCHSU THE TALK OF THE TOWN Lana Turner's current heart-in terest, the handsome Uruguayan actor (Fernando Lamas), ia being divorced by his wife in Montevideo. Takes 3 months ... Glenn EfcCarthy the Houston olllonaire, and thrush Betty George, who is beaked to star at his Shamrock Hated, deny a romance, but they've been insep arable since his hop from Cairo ~ Jack Laßue has taken on Ayers. Her first naene is Phyllis ..Gilbert Miller’s two productions of Cleopa tra (Shakespeare's and Shaw's), starring the Oliviers, must attract $69,000 per week to break even .-. The Street of Hits (W» 45th) just lost five flops . Irving Berlin’s three daughters each have invest ments of SI,OOO In the Henry Fon da play, “Point of No Return,” which arrives next month with out-of-town “hit*' reviews .. Barba ra Stanwyck, always the star, gets 3rd billing In her current film, “The Man With a Cloak," which features J. Cotten and Lealir 'Ca ron The R. Y. C. Police Dept, in finding the Stork Club not guilty (on the Josephine Baker charges of discrimination), con firms what we’ve argued all along. Now jump to the last paragraph. Madcap Merry Fahmey and her old flatoe. Billy Revert, have re kindled. . .The Judith Evelyn-James Noland, twosome 1s the tch-tch of the L’Armorique set ..The ro mance between Berle’s top aide , (I. Gray) and Berle’s Gal Tuesday Sandy Lewis) mutually curdled .. Mitchell Parish, who wrote the wordage to “Star Dust” (among other classics,) has two new dit ties: “The Windmill Song" and “The Blond Sailor,” both clicking large , John Ryan, 20, of the Thomas Fortune Ryan mint, quit Yale to try his talent at producing plays . Joyce • Van Patten (the charming child in ‘Tomorrow, the World,” a play years ago) Just pre sented her husband, T. King, with a boy at Flower Heap Beverly Lawrence’s tv appearance on ABC the other eve’g. starred a low-cut frock that was just ICU tUU. Linda Darnell, long ailing lh London, is well enough to com plete' her assignment there in “Sat turday’s Island”.. Joe (Fingers) OaR, whoae best-seßar piano record ings Include “Down Yonder” and “Bnow Deer Rag,” is Margaret Whiting's husband. L. Busch .. an Import from Paris. She stars soon for L. Walters at his Florida Latin Q Gigi Durston (who let herself get too plump) has shelved oomphteen pounds for her Dec- 3rd premiere at Le Vouvray . .One of the neatest holdups of the ye&r is the $lO extra charge many bars win have to pas to stay open a few extra hours New Year’s Eve. ' From the Pittsburgh Courier, the Negro newspaper In the U. S. with the heaviest circulation .. “There has been much ado about the al leged discrimination against Jose phine Baker and three friends at New York’s celebrated Stork Club. The party entered the crowded place, were seated were served drinks, but when they placed their order for food it was necessary to wait nearly an hour before aarvloe was given, whereupon they refused the food and walked out. “What happened afterward is a perfect example of wrongheaded ness, hysteria and hypersensitivity: ie., color discrimination was charg ed. the NAACP rushed in to tilt with an imaginary windmill .. Walter Winehell was denounced be cause he was present and allegedly did not rush to Miss Baker’s de fohaa. $ picket line was thrown to front of the Stork Club apparently for demagogic publicity purposes, Actors Equity and other actors and musicians’ associations were (xrged “to take action” and altogether a great rtfobarb was raised, probably to the delight of Moscow. This will probably go down In history as the record wsssw&t large whitewash of hypocrisy. "It may he helpful to participant* and their misdirected defenders, way advance their Cause. There ta? dl^taination a to *to“foug°ht everywhere, and it would seem that those advancing the cause of Ne groes would expend their time and energies fighting those cases. In this case there was no evi dence shown that sendee wee re fused (on the contrary the “offend ed” party party twas served drinks) but only that the people had to wait a long time for food service, noflu la r nubliA Mtinff rush hour. Many passengers have had to wait almost as long for ser- W& to soma plot against them. ’ •' MONDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 3» 1951 The Worry Clinic * By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE .=========== A hen peeked husband recently confessed: "After our second child, my Wife's mother said rather tartly, ’You have two. ' [That’s enough! ’ And whenever 1 toe eeee a— with more than ! two, she say* so I can hear: CASE C-307: Paula G., aged 32. ’ is a Houston TOST follower of this • column. i “Dr. Crane, I was so thoroughly ‘ disgusted to see you accuse an ex ■ pectant mother of having temper • tantrums to coerce her family, that - I can’t help protesting. “Her ‘poor, browbeaten husband’ : isn’t deserving of a home, or a wife 5 and children. If I were that wife, ’ I would divorce him so fast it would ; make his head swim! “Since you are a man writing this 1 column, and it was a man who pro - tested about his wife, that explains ) everything. • “What right does any man have 1 to criticize any woman when he ’ knows nothing concerning the pain • of childbirth ” SARCASTIC WIVES ‘‘lf this abused husband had to ' wait on his wife a little during • her pregnancy, I don’t Imagine it hurt anything but that swelled head of his. I “If he thinks he went through ' Hades for nine months, what does | be suppose she went through? "And If bringing children Into ' the world is an obligation of mar ! riage. I’m sure there would pe | fewer marriages. "It certainly Is lucky the world 1 isn’t made up of men like you two! : I have absolutely no sympathy for ; a man who criticises a woman whan 1 it’s absolutely impossible fat, him ' to understand her.” STICK TO FACTS 1 Despite Paula’s outburst in de ! sense of the “dear soul" I earlier de ’ scribed, let’s look at the actual ’ facts, which I stated In that Case ' Record. 1 That “dear soul” didn’t want to [ hear either of her daughters. She [ was gulag to have abortions per formed to evade so doing, but her Formnmt Personal Affairs Counselor Wife Retorts That Model Hus band Hates The Qualities In Her He Once Admired DEAR MARY HAWORTH: 1 am not desperate and there Is no divorce in the offing; but I’ve been ! unhappy and my husband has been, unhappy, and I guess he will con tinue to live to this state unless some miracle clears the air. We have beqn married four years and ' have two lovely children; and Milt is a model husband in his way. He is a steady worker, church i goer, loving father and helper with ' household tasks when possible. But 1 It seems the very reasons for 1 which he married me are M»a>wg I him hate me now. I sin original and talented in cooking, sewing l and homemaking—but not ud to his standards. I sit at the table with coffee and the newspaper and he cant understand It I let the , paper slip to the floor and he goto Into a lecture. I kick off my shoes sis aeon as I ait down. I just man age to be punctual. Such habits make him miserable. I quit them anti he finds new complaints. Milt was orphaned at an early age and experienced almbst unbe > Hevatie hardships in childhood, emotional as well as physical. And during his war service, he had es capes from dqath frightening to hear about. He doesn’t dwell on these thing*. ju*t factually men tion* them. I've learned some of the details of his childhood from others I had a perfect childhood, brothers are professional men. I not bSSanlng^the^fodt 1 ' ait“l am discouraged because I can’t taske my hiyband happy. REINS IN HER HANDS Our big decisions are up to me; and in taking a stand on an/ issue Milt goes completely by-what I •ay. I manage the money: and it was my decision that he quit j£t fed toe tartY«^ H Md I to * * g j* husband for once in his life laid the law down to her in such emphatic terms that she didn’t dare do so. * But she browbeat hhn and mag nified the pain she suffered. To her mother, she secretly admitted that childbirth didn’t hurt her ex- | ceedingly for her husband chanced to overhear this private admission. But to him and to her friends, she painted herself as a marßrr who went through agonies and the val ley of the shadow to bear his babies. And since their birth, she now keeps reminding toe daughters of R) her sacrifice for them and kow she 4 risked her life. H She didn’t risk her |fe any more 1 than if she had undergone a ap pedectomy! If you consult your doctor reg ularly throughout toe 9 months of pregnancy, toe danger ot child birth is only slightly greater than that of a tonsillectomy I HOW MEN REGARD MOTHERS A doctor can detect a “prlma donna” type of expectant mother in a few moments. She will grand stand. She will shriekk, in between her pains. She will try to coerce her entire family. And often she gels away with it. especially if she is an only child and her doting parents abet her temper tantrums! But doctors will admire and will do all in their power to heljp a wo man who is a good sgort and who bravely accepts her obligations from life’. m It is those welchers that we dls- w lige. Doctors can diagnose a wo man’s personality beautifully by hex behavior during child birth- The true thoroughbreds behave like such. The spoiled darlings often become hellions! Fortified with some of our hyp notic drugs, the average woman doesn’t recall much, if any, pain. Childbirth isn’t suefc an ordeal nowadays if you have a good doc tor and cooperate like' a thorough- m bred. W Send for my bulletin, "FACTS ABOUT PREGNANCY,” enclosing a 3c stamped envelope, plus a dime. And have at least 3 babies, spac ing them about 2 years apart so they can be playmafos. " a—uni ■ you to finish college—but doesn’t like ltl Doesn’t like what?—toe evening classes, or the fact that you’ve no desire to make produc tive use of further schooling? Well, . i perhaps it doesn’t matter. Maybe Q i it means, merely, that you failed to i complete a thought yog were trying • to phrase.- i By and large, toe conjugal dis ■ ficulty highlights Milt as the prin- I clpal and active disturber at family : peace. He is a compulsive neurotic character, obviously; so hag-rid den by unconscious pressures of i anxiety, hostility and resentment ; (Ingrained by earl* distress). Shat he cannot relax when oppertunith [ Presents Until; hanoe ba ia allergic M > to easy-going behavior in you—his : altar ego or better haft, i However, your tender suscepti ■ bllity to his nagging, and your spon : taneous assumption that his dis i pleasure means you are at fault aug : gests that you brought to marriage i a chronic problem of defensiveness. or inferiority feelings, in dealing : with toe masculine viewpoint. Thus your reference to self-sacrificing parents, and a large famUy of brothers all professionally trained, M takes on Instructive signlftrance, ee peciaUy as you dropped out of college to marry beneath yourself.. WIFE IS SHORT ON . SELF ESTEEM The general drift of your experi ence indicates that you got only ! the tag-ends of parental love and interest, 4n competition with much admired brothers; and in conse quence. failed to develop the baste self esteem that enables one to sssr •SnSsrs.’zrz* terprising, resourceful and self re irrmrtiiin M tai* 3u.ia.SSS; Sias&.‘ h *M W sSi £ ESS3S3S on, it ho fails to tnat the ■rniiwi iTmay you todtetiY emphasize toe irrational qvutoty of * £s* and futility at trying to “sgtia- I