Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Dec. 5, 1951, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO •—mmr * ' — x “ * "MT'M "* Wxt jiatiu j&tmvfr ' mSf R ‘ RECORD PCBLISHIHO COMPANY 3 a > m ;,- At 311 East Canary Street “, ’ 7; 9M-Sll E. 49nd St, New York M, N. Y. . ''l ... ■ ■ -»i<ttcl. Offleet Mkjto city: —«miM : “ *575" , “& , §ps.. c *s« S&ras „ fss «" jmr; UN iwn months; ** for three hnth WW-ITiTliiUt »ft weete sdTftooe; 85 tor ate months, n Pw Teke It Itsy fifty years $29 first §utppipbile race \yss run racers ww^b^Cha rles Duryea^r. whiSi roamed about the towns scaring she ciayUghts put pf their equine competitors, stid Hme'general public" as wep. taSbns, speed limits were set up, the highest of o2*sl£was usually about 10 miles per hour. In some IJew Efogf&na-towns, this speed limit still stands, in many others it*aHs and some, Springiqld, Massachusetts, fpr example, jniles per hour m tpwn. Incidentally they are en i * have cornea long way since those days, which we §tepS7‘hqrse and buggy,” a long way in speed, and in many gjjmfr EESpe<ts. The automobile, then a novelty, has now ipg our millionth fatality on the highway. Daily our papers gff full of lists of pued and maimed due to the lethal char we hr ve built intp the modem automobile, gs We don’t suggest we go back to the horse and ‘(Cggy dtays with theu - fen mile speed limits. But we do jugfest'That iye" mix a Ijftte caution and a lot less of reck- TCjQU&s with our speed m driving our automobiles. -!3u»mdess we do we wiUuqss that first million in fatalities /!!$JpPb have our second million. Take it | ygp save may be your own. jjpjipt Others Spy boom year off 1929. Per cap. per cant of the average per S of g Expe rience has it that when the fox take, goes above 25 per cent of the income, inflation is here. Present tax bill of 40 per cent places the nation well qut on tHe inflation limb now.” * 7" [ PAftiEA, TEXAS, DAILY IfEWS: “The BbbUc has yielded to exorbitant ‘taxes, controls, restrictions’ to an ex tent that has enabled bureaucracy and outright dictator ship to thrive and expand to a thoroughly alarming de gree- It'has stppd by and Seen its money shrink steadily $ value, Its earnings ana profits seized, its rights trampled under foot. Yet it is told qver. and over that It doesn’t Co- Operate. It seems to us It’s time the public begins telling the bureaucrats a few things.” NEWPORT, TENN., TIMES: “Pick up any daily news fer, glance at the headlines on the front page, ana you’ll > op® tphalf a dozen cases where some government of fi ls on the carpet % questioning. But, just a few basket teu players get caught selling out for a few hundred fast bucks and that takes the headlines away from those who toe accused of such small things as kicking around the tax SRgpey. influencing REA officials, buying expensive gfta fifh government ifioriey, ans—ph well, you know what.” Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON After long : years in Hollywood, I came to the b considered opinion that Bam OoM- S wjm mangled the king’s English op I He sot attention, where «h*r, more careful grammarians : Bfissssw there I "Was to the Senate Can- Uiftcent god bis assaults upon language. This fine of thought was e “ou# breause the fellow of the malapro ographer, ordering him to change to the official record that word, as pirations. And make it read, asper sions. .... Jumping Joe plowed on through the granpnar books, wrecking every rule he encountered as he explained his loss of the election. ' ' “The reason I got beat so had was because the Democrats did pot go oUt" lanp vote,'’ Be said. “Not With all due respect to the lady (fo dicating Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, R„ Me.), the working people has got their bellies full now" add they don’t go qut to yote and pro tect their rights. In Ohio the peo ple stayed home.” He roused, thought that over a have beat me worse. I don’t know.* 1 You get the iefea. Jumping' Jpe was a frank and likeable little : guy, Who got to dver his head When : he tried to wrestle the Senatorial seat from Taft. Mrs. Smith was haf togndttd of Ms chanty slb‘ These Pay# THINGS MEN SAY Men have away of saying things that they would prefer probably no one should remember. They speak with the authority of high office arid hope that it will be assumed that they know what they are talk ing about. Too often such men read, irv public, speeches written for them by committees or press agents which differ from what they say in private, and the excuse is that their high office requires such consilidated thinking. Then they leave their high of fices. They disappear from public life. The public quickly forgets about them. Even their names are lokt to the welter of new names. But the mischief that can be done by irresponsible statements, lightly made, perhaps prepared by the Writers of the speaker’s department of government or some other, can not be so readily undone. It leaves a permanent impression on the pub lie mind. Hitler called this process “The Big Lie.” If repeated often enough, the tale grows into a certitude. It is believed, for instance. Franco was given a bad name by the vast propagandists forces of interna tional Communism. How much of that bad name was or is deserved has never been analysed by the public. It grew into an interna tional axiom, accepted generally and serving only Soviet Russia’s imperialism. This axiom is considered, studied and analyzed by Professor Carlton J. H. Hayes in his book, “The Unit- * ed States and Spain.” This is a valuable contribution to the subject by a scholar of outstanding reputa tion who has had the advantage pf studying the subject Jlfst bend as American Ambassador to Spain It is altogether doubtful whether Professor" Hayes’s book will arrest the antl-Ffanco propaganda to this country or that it will vitally alter public opinion. The big lie stands. To this day. Franco has a 6a<f name and among some American si Stalin still does not have the had name be has always despryert. I note that Kenneth O. Royall. who used to be. and not so long ago. Secretary of the Army of the Unit ed States, said at ope time: ‘‘We frown qp dictatorships ip general and Communists dictator ships to particular. But when "any government—whether Democratic dr otherwise—is firmly established to a country, I do not believe w* have a right to foment revolution against it. 1 * This looks like a correct attitude, hut when a war is being fought with heW weapons, one Os Which is Infil tration, What defensive weapons ean be developed? Let us ask about Mo land. That country has now be come a virtual province of Russia by conquest infiltration and pro paganda. /Poland has practically ceaqpd to exist, although there are pretenses of sovereignty. 1 Yet, (me cannot fObget that on September 3, 1939, our world went to war over the sovereignty of Po land. Stalin and Hitler, Nazi Ger many apd Soviet Russia were then to alliance and they entered Po land simultaneously. It all seemed very important tbep, important enough to cause a general war. Now, according to Mr. Royall, if would even be wrong to forget or WPort revolution against the pow er. foat deliberately stole foat coun wn d businee? about?blandami cry other country, but that is not toe proposition that faces us. what we are told" is that we must mind'our owh busineess about Po land. which has been conquered but not about Cashmir, which has not ydt been conquered by anybody, and pot about Iran, which' desires fo'ruh its SWn show to its own ad xH4 logic of that position is dif ficult to work Suppose Sp many, as it has China, ftbuld We, according to Mr. Royaß, mind our of the Cfainete people for some Way out' of their misery. “As I see It. our principle hope n® DAILY RECORD, DUNN, R. €L 1 “Newspaper, dear? I’m not the selfish kind of wife who ! mm* at tlie.Aab^-.y.r ROUND WASBHWraij - The Hjwhas taken unpfpal stand regarding the air warfare whlcli la getting mor? and more intense oyer Korea It has tip-bed down a request from General Otto Weyland, Air Force commander in the Far East, that navy jets help out the air force in combating Rushan Migs. With increasing communist strength 'in the air, and with the Air Force sometimes badly out T numbered in battling Russian Migs, General Weyland requested help from the Navy’s carrier-based jet fighters. However, despite the fact that there is supposed to be armed ser vices unification, the Navy re fused. Official reason was that Navy carriers were outside Hie , fighting range. Ah Force officers point out, however, that the Navy used to fly Its fighter planes' as far north as the Yaftj River when there weren't many Migs to tl}e ajTa; so presumably it could do 60 again. They also feel that for one' br&pch of the service to refuse help td another branch in wartime—espec ially ' when badly outnumbered—is anything but unification- ”in fact, &e$ use grorijs iar less refined ' Air 'Force pilots who sometimes go into battle against "superior communist odds believe the Navy Is trying 'to hide the fact that" its Jets are inferior to the Migs. Since the Navy specializes ill fighters, and not long ago boasted the best Jet fighter plane in the world, this is a bitter pm to swallow. Navy pilots today are among the best to the world, but apparently planes haven’t kept up with either the Air Force or the enemy. As a result only two Migs have been Shot doWqTby the l?syy’ during the Korean % pp? was bagged by a Navy Panther jet some time ago. the otKfer by a Navy pilot Wtio. however, flew an air force sabre jet. . move to oust Attorney General Howard McGrath and name cr)}- Mding - Spn. Estes Kefauver to clean up the Justice Department. This proposal WKs pOshed bact stagC by AVerell dßarrbn'ah, *Whp ly the corruption Issue is hurting; also by usually cautious White House Counsel Charlie Murphy, dent not going to stop with Internal . Revenue and Hyp, but WUI go into’ • -X . likpsj I ■ / I \ - .... (■ tjyui K ¥ Ifflj ftf ffliifUlKlßßP jjJm i alien property cUStodl&n, surplus ; pioperty, and possibly the Federal r Judiciary right ud to the Supreme . Churt. The Atherfcan people won’t i be satisfied unless" the admlnlstr|- : tipn cleans house boldly and dra t nfotically. A sure-fire way to fo > gab public confidence is to name Senator Kefauver as Attorney t General, giving him complete au > thority to prosecute, no matter who . is. hurt.’’ i Mr. Truman seems to like the l Idea and has been saylhg private [ iy ; •■x’vc always been loyal to my friends. But they hajen’t been : fair to me” • 'On foe other side, a powerful ■ White House force, Matt Connftfy, - who sits next to the President and ‘ makes all his appointments, it more ; tljan cool. ConneUy vigorously de .'fends his fellow frlsliman to the > Justice Department ’ ahd' hai been i digging up political friends of'Mr. ’ Trufoan to talk lip McGrath and talk down hls ouster. ' “ The decisive factor and still on i the fence" I npwya ! pJiilhemt , But ~ "Hkrriman tKat corruption ’ the Issue add reqiiirdT ' steps l bjf foe administratfon. *1 In'a recCnt talk With President ’ Truman, McKinney told hfln. to i effect: “You’ don’t have' a pf obll- ' ! gatlon to any official" who lias been , indiscreet dr corrilpt. jbin ; del the fug out from uhdri- you* i MERKY-GO-ItOUND POLL People not op the poUtical inside s seldom realize Row much back ’ stage wire pulling goes into the nomination of a presidential can i didate. To a considerable extent i this lessens the" chance' of “"the ! AwsjlMO peo? 1 ? to dbft U Pres i SSWJ?!ISSL*','^ This frequently leaves the selec i tion of the Presidential nominee ; [ gan and the big-city bosses’ fin -1 agled to the HlackstOne Hotel to . pick Truman for Vice-President to ■ dice' to the sarbe BUckstone Hoi • before they ever took the train to Philadelphia. ' • ; J advance. Some of these may rep <PMty«N cn - * Wfnehell In A New WsT York . WHCWU BROADWAY LIGHTS The first-Nighters; The critics played Romeo all week. They trans formed ' typewriters Into musical instruments and serenaded Audrey Hepburn’s compelling playing in “Gigi,” adapted by Anita Loos. The play, they however’d, didn’t merit as many love-letters as the star. The bright side of the dissenting reviews was J. Chapman’s size-up: “A charming fairy tale” . Every notice was also a valentine for JUlle Harris’ superb gamutlng in John yan Druten’s play, “I Am a Camera.”' Not all the oracles Were as enthusiastic about the script as they were about Julie. R. Watts found it ”a striking, 'in telligent and steadily arresting play”.. G. "H. Shaw’s “Don Juan in Hell” returned ‘for a limited booking with a marqueeful of stars. The ohly drama of the season to win unanimous rayes ..Variety’s Washington ambassador greeted “Ladder to the Moon” with a thor ny .otchld. R isn’t, he noted, good eneitfh for Broadway but should appeal to Hollywood. In the Wings: When Olivia de Havllland was rehearsing to “Ro meo and Juliet” her husband, Marc (Jloodrich, approached the producer and made a demand that is now famous In show folk circles. “I Want,” hi' intoned, “everyone to the cast to address toy 'Wife as Mrs. Gpodrich—and j want YOU to cAll her Mrs'. Goodridh f . To which the poor man logic’d: “But', Mr. Goodrich, that isn’t the name I have on the cdhtract I . Onfe of our Ret poR?-to-the-pose: The tjme critic Alex Woollcott told an actress she wouldn’t make a good Lady IfecHMn “No," she jabbed "but YOU would!” The "Ctoemagiclans: The official observers fouhd “The Man with a Cloak” a dtoget. Full bf suspenae. with Barbara Stanvfyck, Lesl(e skins Irom Reserva - - Jdfofo an entorfolnlpg afnfe-bn’t-cricket fople ... The latest vgrslpn of *A Christmas Carol" indicates the classic still jingle? merfly ''Stagecoach Dri vef*’ move? slowly you'q think It was harnessed to turtles. • The Aristocrats: Phil Foster’s gag-peddling via The Big Show offered a profit -to chuckles . If your ?ars are-swlng-rtogy, then ' switch your dial to Frances Lang ford's soothing ABC jdng-a-ltog and relax.. Those science-fiction dramas have space stops, zooming rfofo plihet to planet but their plots afjf still to tike Covered Wa gon era.. Remember Ric Cortez? He turned Up on Jack Carson’s bteesy show—suaVe as ever ..Bob A Bay (NBC'S Boobsy Twins) cel ebrated an amusing jestlval with their tee v y travesty ... Dinah Shore’s new teevy session is gifted With her silky thruSKlhg and Vel- sfcHrftttg. ~A bargato The oldy about so and so have his pic ture on U. "8. ‘currency and Tdu man being a fellow “who'd be hap py If be could get his hands On itl” showed up on Red Skelton’s video show.,. Tbs M«ll«-Msker?: June Vguie me mr to Ziegfleld’s -Whoopee,” Sfo.egP the bit song. “It Had “Whoopre” X V%«tb K- i>n.L a ; a ASml £_ 9. a . tii »kL..i - . WEDNESDAY 5, ldSl The Worry Clinic |l By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE » Newspapers are foe most in flnentlal to foe country. They have foeir dally “students" almost exclusively for 50 years. And they offer current practical facts about finance and medicine, . and domestic science, psycho lory and • political science. They give yon frank discussions which you often cannot pro cure even In our leading uni versities today. CASE C-309: Harvey J., aged 54, is Supervisor of Health and Narcotics to the Department of Education of a great mldwestern state. “Dr. Crane, upon returning to my desk yesterday from a week of va cation,” he began, "I was delighted to find your two bulletins, ‘SEX PROBLEMS OF YOUNG PEO PLE’ and ‘SEX DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN.’ “Both are excellent. I am espe cially glad that you have prepared such a sane and intelligent bulle tin for youth. “How much worry of a serious nature could be escaped If such sensible information were more generally known! "Knowledge removes the mystery about such matters ahd satisfies the curiosity process. “I hage employed the same psy chological approach to the mari juana problem. I simply state the fdets that will check further won dering and eliminate the need for hazardous personal experimenting. AN EXPERTS VIEW "How I wish I might have seen such a preamble to marriage 30 years ago as your ‘SEX DIFFER ENCES BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN.* "This psychological approach, when understood by more men and women, should lessen one of the principal reasqnk for marital tnis understandtog. “Like others of foe older genera tion, I had to learn these facts by slow experience or trial and error, fqr such knowledge was not* avail able when I got married. “More power to you and the newspapers which spread such ' helpful educational materials! “In this fashion, the newspaper becomes an outstanding , instru ment of the AdUlt BdUcatfoA Move ment to America." ’ ■? W'fl THE FAMILY TEXTBOOK Your newspaper is your local “University to Print.” And its stu j— —— By America's Foremost Personal Affairs Counselor . ■' 1 ujjil l -Li ill: Gtri Loses Confidence In Herself Stow Falling In Love With Athlete DEAR MARY Al though rather quite and somewhat shy, I was very popular with bqys and girls to high school, and was elected queen of many school events. In my junior year I start ed going with Bob, one of our top athletfo, and was miserable when he went oft to college to my senior year. At first we decided to date otheij while he was away, but soon gave it up, as It only made qs miss each other more. Gradually I dropped out of clubs and activities —a big mistake, I realize now, but at foe time T felt no hriwest to such things. However, on graduation I was vqted “most popular, most friendly, best looking” girl in the senior class. That summer, when Bob came home. Ilf? was perfect; but tod soon It was fall and he was gone again. I was working during foe ap&sftsui of kids my age, the harder It was to talk to ’them—as If we htto no lt B a neftoctlonist, dhd gets great satis faction from doing thidgs wen. I admit* Mm for that butTm afraid * **“»? 1 d ° extremfly rffijr x guess I’ni t 66 sensitive hfe is a perfectionist about drtos, coqgfffuenUy t became rety con dents stay with It every day for theiy entire adult lives! For the average American drops out of school By the age of 18. Our longevity is now 88 years. Ftom 18 to 68 therefore, or for the final 5p adult years, of his life, the average American citizen and voter depends Upon, foe daily newspaper for his regular educa tion. „ The average citizen is not a magazine subscriber. Nor does be lean Upon the radio or television for much besides music and sports broadcasts, plus “copycat” news re leases. This newspaper, therefore, i? your “Family Textbook” of Amer ica. It helps mold foe thinking of all of ypu Americans and leaches you how' to be happier, healthier, and more successful citizens.' A NEWSPAPER PROFEBSOR Realizing this tremendous edu cational influence of American journalism, I stated planning this \ psychology column to 1934, when I was teaching psychology Mn George Washington University at Washington, D. C. BUt I decided It would be help ful if J obtained a medical degree to supplement my PhD., so for 6 .more years I arranged my teaching so that all my classes fell in our evening University College. Meanwhile. I attended medical school by day and later interned at Wesley Memorial Hospital in i Chicago. Then I‘launched this clinical column on human behavior. If ever there was a “planned” column then this is itt I consider myaelf a "newspaper professor* Herein, I conduct the largest psychology class to the world, sup plementing it with What amoiints to an extension university serylep byway of foe personal maU, plus the medieo-USychological bulletins. So, teach your children to use the newspaper as a textbook. En courage' them to read at leut one of foe “meaty” features In addition to foe cpmics, which foey retard as dessert. Quiz them at meal time on the contents qf this great newspaper. Or Ifet them make a game out of tge process And ' quiz you parents, (Always write to Dr. Crane In care of The Dbfly Record, enclos ing' a long Sc stoMpcfc. addressed • envelope and a dime to e*rfft |WP charts.) »» Wto4. Wfri* come my Inability to talk with people especially those I've just mot? R. 8. DEAR R. 8.: It occurs tome that yob are describing symptoms pf overwhelming infatuation, a cause of powerful sesual attraction bp tween toeomilatlble definition of I bonaflde love. ooe' Webstfcr’s ±- “A feeling of strong personal attach ment induced by sympathetic un »'» • MtetntjpZ -length; ami in all will continue to suffer Increasing self-doubts, ap long as you narsist basic harmony, or true atftolfo Mlov 1 nP venturing this ‘appratori of
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Dec. 5, 1951, edition 1
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