PAGE TWO ffl kt* TSdllu RECORD .COMPANY 1 tf ZV .. At 311 East Canary Street P 'NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE v« kl ..v, - THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. “ '•• 383-811 E. «etid 84., Ntw York 17, N. t. ' “ Rriinch Offices la Every Major City \\ SUBSCRIPTION RATES I ' BT t’ARRIEE: *0 cents pier wtok; $8.91 per year in advance; $9 ' for six Months- $3 lor three mohths ' 7 IN f«WNS NOT SfcRtED 6*- CARRIER AND ON RURAL i.' ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: S6.M per ’ yeir; S 3. Si fit six months; $2 for three months OUT-OF-STATE: 38.90 per year In advance; $9 for tlx months. U * r-'-r ..... for three months * Entered as secotod-class matter In the Post Office in Dunn, ”N. C., under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3, 1879- | ; i[i __ Every afternoon, Monday through Friday (iMr. Charlie' Is Gone His Influence Remains —• Death, as it must come to all of us, came yesterday to * QjaMes Rotes, beloved Lillington attorney *nd a man whose good, judgment, wisdom and good works earned for him {Be title of Harnett’s “elder statesman.” JT _ Xha although it has been apparent for weeks that the end-’was near for this distinguished citizen, it seems hard ttfSeaiize that “Mr. Charle” has gone. ZZZ hate beefi a part dl this county and State for so long and has served so well ahd ably that his passing seems Uffire like the passing of an instnutioii or an era than the mere passing of a man. w- m a Way, his dfeath does mark the passing of an era— the era of thbteC old-time statesmen whose eloquent voices and noble deeds wrote some of the brightest history of our land. Ase we sat down at the typewriter to pay this final tribute to a man so greatly admired and loved By all, we thpught how wonderful it would be If we just had his vocabulary and the great ability to express himself that he possessed- s Jf so, we Would be able to pay him the tribute which his Use so richly deserved. • ■ Far •more than 50 yearsj the voice of Charlie Ross has beenlieard throughout Haniett CoUnty arid throughout the State—in the county courthouses, in great public fOrums, in the halls of our Staft capital, iri his church and. in every field so enriched by his presence. He was a man of many talents, a sHveT-tofigued Orator, a mah of great literary ability with the peri, S sricCessfiri lawyer and business man, a person whose judgment and cOunsel was sought by those in evety walk of life—from the poor tenant wfto sought his free Advice to Mg corpora tions and high public officials. Some of his legal works still stand today among the bOstAver written. * , ..The recedfl he made in the various public Offices and -of trust are a tribute to him, bite COuritrr . arid State. Thert art no MeriiltehOs. He wate a loyal Democrat, ts fhan who served his ritrity • ,j?nd his political opponents in his own party arid ih mK n ty Sdlaj? Tav S recognz^! him 35 a man of honor - I t*r rtcite his mariy honors, to tell of Tiis long and colorful carter arid to enumerate the offices he held in his Community and State But they are so well known that such enumeration would m inere repetition. - - *ub ar .h e Rps§ was. a big man, a good man who put more 'TaHfenn the Golden Rule than in the dollar-mark, a man ffne things about lus life was that he riever *° 4ppttc ‘*“ *• M “ te fa&& He preferred a teirtple life in Harnett County, pride a year or so ago in successful heading restmafU, Os theTistoric M StfmSflk felt just as milch at home teaching Sunday as he did leading a debate in North Carolina’s nwy 6f arguing a case’ wewrt the supreme L „ T5 e achieved many things but he was no doubt best of \ te^fiSsanfbSMasjSSi i - also lartatif tortta arid some of his dodUmdhts art . j wm re ™“" : I he hved hert, it * a better place. | Sf®ater tribute could be Raid any man! i Frederick OTHMAN : ■ a 'ifegsarss tookenhearted by his own admis s ! PMk* the once-suave T. lamar con -11 fcaag%rhia.‘t " t P** lrll !I and face a*hen and B* nr _ / ' • AM, agreed Caudte. . He liked to | watch the ponies .raft. ~ ( “Tou #r*r win a substantial sum?" i Inquired the from New i Jersey. ■ Caudle smUed Ufr the first Mall I in a week. Back la Ntf (before | Sfa t tS"eSBt,“M! coat), he took Dwedt 1 Bowie, a racing park In nearby j Maryland. All around them were < B3TWr&. < sr?^s; a hot tip. i He rushed down to the betting t window >lO daUy * testified her husband “There was { very nmch rejoicing us and we collected Ute rtonej. I dfehtt** I thfcSS m ! * Rep w»«n | “No, sir,” said Caudle, “t also had j These Days •W®" £ckcUkij MORE BETRAYAL When the nations met at San Francisco to sign the Japanese Reaefe Treaty, most Americans were shocked that China was not rep resented. * . Nationalist' China had been at war with Japan since September it, 1931. From that day until De cember 7, 1941, Chiba fought this battle tihaidea by anyone* occupy ing Japanese troops and Japan’s energies. In World War n, China fotight alongside of the United States up to V-J Day. Russia came into that war about one week be fore it was over and after it had been won. For China’s heroic ef forts, it was arranged’ at Yalta that SdViet Russia would get all the benefits; for Russia’s lack of WfOrt, it was arranged that the united States would force China lo Stalin’s will. China was not represented at the San Francisco Conference and Rbviet Russia was. That was done by an astonishing agreement to keep out Nationalist Chink, our ally, and commtmist China, which was then at war with us. The two were put on a basis of equality. The story, as I get it from the Far East, is that the J4j>ahese cooked up r proposition that it would be troublesome ts China were represented either by the nation alists or the communists, as that Would raise questions extraneous io the peace treaty. Therefore, China should be omitted from San Francisco, but shortly after that treaty was signed With Japan, the’ Japanese were to enter into sepa rate negotiations with Nationalist China and would negotiate a bila teral agreement with them. This, Prime Minister Yoshida to the British, who ac cepted it with alacrity. ThS Bri- Ish sold the proposal to the State Separfmerit, even John Foster RiHes accepting the formula, al hoiugh it & impossible to believe' bat he could have thought it Et or just, in fact, it is being **Dulles*had* e was such a formula ahd that t would be carried throagh. - It has not been carried out fin >ny manner. The Japanese have made no approaches to Formosa. Siey have, in no way, indicated at they will not make a separ ate treaty With Soviet China. On the’ contrary, there is evidence to show that as sbon as Congress rat ifies the Japanese Treaty the Japanese will their trade fcf China, Supplying Manufactured goods to/the Chinese comfhttnlsts who ate ’ killing American*. TfiS ft* only waiting for the Senate fe ratify the San Francisco treaty. After that, they are off their own. Japan’s immediate pTdMem j, twofold: 1.1. Tb get as m*eh aid from the United States a* is possible so the Japanese can rehabilitate their industries- and restore their coin mainland of Asia, particular]* with China which before the troubles Rarted, was Japan’s principal ®«ir- v »*t fOr the SMe of manufactured tods, especially textiles, electri cal equipment mid chemicals, vAS Most of Uhtna is occupied by the communists, the Japanese Would prefer to dead with them, if IRey can regain that Market. On Se other hand, such dealings will waffPmH Will be used against the United ptate*. .3. woCdd mem from the record that the entire business represents a first-cIaSS double-croes Whether the twist was manufactured in Ja dear: Japan R showing no inchn many weri gir:t ii believe w4B entered inio. BMgaln with John Foster Dulles •r w*s this only loose talk? If no .tty? Who fooled whom and how *** it arranged? . Fornw *« unUl we Mb* that Ja- Sikhw* SwiatOT Tom c<xi« AiifiL'l ‘ totrigue .... * % •/. ;v“. oSSai.r'-vSi''- "-"Tli *5 It’-'. : • THE DAILY RECORD, SUNN, N. a ,in,iiii.i.lh.l. nam. M, 5 getting TERRIBLY scarce ... a qu voiMoM ROUND WASHINGTON—Long-view GOF ! strategists aren’t advertising it, but I a lot of them do not agree With ! the famed wisecrack of Illinois i GOP Committeeman Werner SCh • feeder, “The Republicans can even i win if they nominate a Chinaman." i Even in vltfw of the current Truman tax scandals, many GOP i leaders admit privately that there : could be a Democratic victory in : 1852 if the Republican Pgrty gets , overconfident. Here are three key . factors on which they tese this : caution: i 1. New York went fM Oewey , by only 96.959 in IMS, Shtyftan i eously Wallace carried oVer 800,- 000 votes. Normally the Wallace i votes would have gone Democratic, which would have given a Margin , of about 450,000 to Truman. 2. Pennsylvania went fpr Dewey m IMS b$ 149,771 with 55.0Q0 votes for Wallace, thus m Sling Dewiy’s . actual mafgin about 94,000. Mean while Pennkyivanfa has become more and more industrialized, with U. S. Steel putting up the biggest steel plant ih the world on the banks of the Delaware River m the 1 hack yard 61 GOP Bob* Joe Grun dy. On top of this PhQadrilimia ' fM the first lame since 18M has ' gwe completely DeMocfatiC. thee aßghtegt fcharice of carrying the "state next year, v 3. ACalffornia, now the gfeCohd Most pOpdlou* state in the union, went for Triiman in 1948—even with Governor Warren on the i ticket for vice president Thus the three largest states, representing about one-fifth <4 the Tpting population Map weß go OemocraUc in 1952. This.with the sttid South arid a few other states Mould about Clinch s DCMOCratic vkioty. Note—ln order to influence the (Wty leaders toward pfckhtg the bedt Republican candidate, mail 4 ’< postcard to the Merry-Go-Round ; . poU. box 1952, Washington 13, D, C-. ' JP® y QU * “Piwion «to viho , Ute nominee should be. Remember, i Thiie Hie people elect, they do not i always nominate. However, party I THE RING 1 When It come? to investigatMg C *its ! own chairman. . No one really expected the com- i Mfttoe’s crack investigators to find l their own boss guilty of tariitritottw ] tox casks. However, If they had i ayanrsscr!.! 'KM* t «toe of tht ablest mem- 1 hers oI C<*vhess, but belierini hit < own can aUnm sh. own case deserves tne sarnie ctoto fCaatMitß 04 Rage Five) Hi, \ VHpl I ■,' ,v ; - i i — -——— ■■ in.-,i ■ husrnsivw scrutiny as the cases be is inves tigating, this column has contin ued whCre his investigators left OIL The committee held three days of whirlwind hearings, all safely behind closed doors, then issued a public statement white washing King. No evidence had been fqund, the Statement assured, that King had intervened in a. tax investiga tion of Thomas A. Gregory, his old fritnd in Long Beach, Calif. However, this column has un earthed some documents, which the King Committee conveniently over looked. These documents not only indicate that Sing brought pres sure on the Justice Department in Gregory’s behrif, but also fought Jbb keep a loophole to the tax law for the entire naticto--411 at Oreg- GregUry is president of the Long Beach SsVlngs and Loin Associa tion. long under lire by the Fed eral Home Loan Bar* Board and the Justice Department The board has made the foßOWtng serious charges against Gregory: * 1. That he Made fantastic Man* to firms M Which he WM iinancfal ly2.iTlMt be’wMd depositors’ fiirids to get gaMbling concessions in Mba<- »o; . •?¥ r That he diverted 6. L loans from the construction Os homes to financing'’ 4 project in which he had a peradtttl interest; t. Th4t he set up 21jXK) one-dol lar accolmtS in the Long Reich Savings and Loan for Voting pttf poses to perpetuate MMself in con- Home Loan Rkrit board also lAporied alleged tad iriegularltßx involving Otegory, to the Internal Revenue Bureau, which began an Overlooked—«jKr^ n^l»? n he immediately went to bat for Greg ofy. Alter a drawn-out, four-year legal battle, the cohgrOssman from California brought ptaihire ori the JpsttCe Department to Compromise. hsfve Onded the tax case him. . King’s part to thk compromise k revealed fn a confidential memo tC attorney Generiß ®Swth Jr'oM Morison. Dated .jWjjT 1950, the saemo reportt: "Mr. piapp and Mr. Macfuinea* <o« toe JMBice Depart meot) appeared bkfOre CongrOM man Dawson, Chariton n of the House CoMmfttoe On Executive Rx ■Mßßtoes, at hir request on httjjr 4 Congressman Kmg and HOli- Oritf to California wtre also Prto fat. •_ King stated VCT a. , wv AlEvli w —W,; - •, York m HAN AHOUt TOWN - The FrabOhto Ton e-Florabel Muir war (she’s the repeltor) to pont Perry) and Noma Ferguson Anl? 4 * groom sent her an uiumatum about a former beau's bokays... Mjs. John Huston Made the recoricifa tten complete hy Sailing with him : “My Bill.”, Sobs punctuated the song from a table in the rear. At i which ElednOr (MrS. Billy RMe) . Holm sat. The Washington flcker: Sfen. George (Georgia) will ignjte the ' next big Capitol probe :ECA funds abroad, etc. Started with the AuS [ trtgn revelations . .Truman’s re ih toe ‘Caudle Scandal, is better known around midtowhßVtay as furS intimates he lias rio.totoh sz tsff%s RJn& new book, is clicking wfth govt execs .. A Senator, whose wife Was listed as getting one of totoe mfrrk, coats (in the Caudle probe), speech’d at the Waldorf the other Principles ‘iirtffir to A top white Houser (not Vaughan) will be irivtived to the Incdmre tax mess. Investigators have letters (sighed bg htM) leniency for'fried Delaney to that Massa chusetts tax fraud. George S. Kaufmah’4 dghtr Anne, estranged from her . husband, rates totto D*vt« chtMjmjd toe Mat. 'Se* Ih “Atfierg,” 1? "Fwirit Yohr dancer as Sri-aT/ juTtoL* Maju Soares ol Tne Latm Q arc '..l'i Lwloadit tw*rirm* ■ niV xinL tend mIJ uw . Doris £&& Wtht Gild leasedfrom chargestoatheleHßd i a sue a local gaStto' recently pqnciu ■ a law deffrefl l ftSm* is \ Charles ! at • J^ rn -- BCW<U gw Btogplg JMtWls ( ■ ■ 1 WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, &ECEMBI& I*, MM I I1«M flints I iim ffcrry uimc | Bj db. oeonoa w. cum *f } mWWIMB “At the office he seems to be all Ukriy ; to i»ve speh.». , “I have had to forego all social I tie toe past 12 months, fpfas sooh as we plan to go tow party or the theater, Jim almost tovariably has sion lest he might suffer from one. So we just stayril at home. ‘‘He fetofc .pretty well when his brbther visits us or his attention is divert&l as we play Canasta, so I am wondering it his trouble May not be mental.” WISHFUL ILLS This is the type of ease where one must be doubly cautious to ar riving at a diagnosis. IS Jim’s trou-' ble wholly organic Or entirely Men tal or possibly a combination of both? • Because he had dome hardening dl the 4itertei, it seemed plausible to assume tost there might be some organic basis tat tag seizures. However, they s&med to com# ob at very convenient times so I agreed wfth hts wife that they aaigftt also be pertly mental if not' entirely so. There Is sueh a thin# as wishful fils. SUBCONSCIOUS ILLS ' At the Conscious level, Jim keeps worrying because he Interferes with ms wife’s social life. When i talked to him. he seemed S ~ By America's Foremost Personal Counselor -j - jpg# a» sm/ts sSuMuSm Weteriff Is Tried « Nightly G Bests nretoptog In To Stay An #f fsivaey U Ia- DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I am taph&r , married, have two lovely m the ototmept. I am sick and i) oughly disgusted. I Want a couple of nfght* g week to sit relaxed before toe fireplace In steppers and bathrobe. •<tor impromptu callers think 1 ate vary lmpunte if i go to bed ahfl leave them sitting there; but I am just at toe end of toe trail. 1 -OAd’t stsmd It any longer. Some ttaaeJ wish I couM Sate 4 slow MM to China, just po I could ne itc ° r “a I salflsh?— : To s ** ibctunaite ... •* . , she drop her new Italian crush. uStod at St PatricCa Htoph Roden of toe AP and »wto#, feel Reed brinlfi on wrsiyW jltok, Seabrook Signe grieved to think he was spoiling he r happiness. ■ , . N“She 14 young and ought to be xteng to parties” he protested. Subconsciously, however. Jfan didn’t grieve because he was keepv int his wife at home with him. He waa 17 years older and also Impotent so he was really afraid he might not be able to dominate her affeetions. Subconsciously, he had hit upon these heart attacks as a convenient method by which to enlist her sym pathy and tender solicitude, yet also keeping her away from other and yohnger men. At the age of 55, however, the av erage male should not be orsaniQ cally impotent The mind, however, can produce this effect even at the ATTACKS JIM'S iMaft attacks, therefore, camouflaged Kf* sectot sex fears. FOr tftey diverted his wife’s atten tion Woto the etoUc niim and served to an alibi for Jffn’s hick of ardor.- ; Instead of wasting further time on his irtiart trouble, tHSrttOre, i focussed Ws attention upon his priQ mary difficulty and explained that hum’s pbrislon ts possibly 4 times as treat to a Woman’s at toe ato of 21. But at the age of SO it May drop to a 1:1 ratio. So toe male becomes more Nice the female in his sex urge. But this 1:1 ratio contrasts so remarkably with his previous 4:1 vigor, that he grows panicky and may develop a sexual inferiority complex. The wife, who normally is pass) rive, should .then become increas ingly aggrasrive in the erotric realm as her husband grows organically less ardept.. . Send for My,. uwdictopsyefcologi caL bulletin,, “HOW TO. PREVENT IMPOTENCE IN THE MALE,” en closing a dime,and 3c stamped and eddresato envelope. All wives Should have tots sex . bullettaj for it shows you how to hjpjnk “Ponce at Leon” complex Uhwloungly you often reagpg you husbands psychologically important, arid even drive them into affairs with younger women. Or else they sprout psychosomatic ills, as Jim’s case ißasttates. done. It ]s a fine thing, a farm of psychological treasure, that you and, or your husbMdrrhaM this warm appeal for people. However, as with AH types of. wealth, toe aoMtofttap of dn ”em-(} barrassment of riches” fn the way of friends poses a prooiera of in telligent handling, jf one is to aftM ruinous taxes. tomridse the saying—" Charity bo gins to home.” It means, among continuity in a persorial condition of weß being, the maintenance of which is one’s primary duty,—and a great contribution to the general wealth. Thka, in ettiiir to appreciated) your friandt and to keep your en thusiasm for them revitalized, you mustn’t tend yourself to careless exploitation by them, as-you have heap doing—to a degree that criti cally depletes your energies. *be con strued. to sensible minds, to any thing buT confirmation of thto pe whose^^tS gogdnight,' worild best a hasty re ing nitnseif. and commiserating her. When a chfonipalte tired person import, to be respected—that rises niy oeuei it is nigo time ttitf you gsared your paoe to your natural 1 capacity—and established raason- un fatigable In On fair deal is to turn ths rains over to him at an early-hour, any eve-.-. yyuratof^to^ted.U In Ml mobabUity these night o*ls who congregate on ]Mur torn or compsnsatlcn for hXof Th.*WW *. -.v* ‘ i fcoEQ t rises over bed,o I all, *

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