PAGE TWO Mhv Jlailg Jluntril DUNN, N. C. Published By 7 record Publishing company *> At 311 East Canary Street NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. * *OS-217 E. 42nd St., New York 17. N. Y. Branch Office* In Every Major City ” ’ SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER: 20 cents per week; $8.50 per year in advance; $5 far six months; $3 for three months IN TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND ON RURAL n ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: SB.OO per ...V year; RJO for six months; $2 for three months OUT-OE-STATE: $8.50 per year in advanoe; $5 for six months. $3 for three months 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 What About Spelling? Beaman Kelly, our very capable and enterprising assist ant superintendent of county schools, has just announced a six-point program for improving the quality of school teaching in Harnett. His recommendations were made after he personally visited various classrooms in the county schools. .He made some very interesting observations and some valuable and constructive recommendation in his six-point program. Far instance, he wants increased and better use of audio-visual aids; a better health and physical education program, particularly in the ninth grades, further plan ning for better guidance service, more extensive use of standardized test results. • . Summing up his program, he wants emphasis placed on first things first —reading, writing and ’rithmetic. We want to commend Mr. Kelly for going above and beyond the call of his routine duties to make this survey add'to work out this program. However, we’re a little disturbed that Mi - . Kelly didn’t include spelling among his list of recommendations. "' We believe it to be unforunate that schools don't teach spelling any more that is, they don’t apparent ly, put enough on spelling. The failure of students in these modern times to how to spell is something simply appalling. We kpqw many people—and people who are supposed to be educated —who can’t even spell the simple words in Noah’s Webster’s dictionary. All the blame doesn’t lie in the public schools, be cause we’ve found that §ome college graduates can’t spell any better than a sixth grader ought to know how to spell. - - On a recent occasion, we are tempted to send to the" board of trustees of the Greater University a mis erable and horrible example of spelling by a University student. We finally decided against it because we fig ured it wouldn’t do any good. Apparently, North Carolina spellers aren’t any worse than those in some other States. The situation is so bqd across the whole country that the great Scripps-How ri4 chain of newspapers has started holding public spell ing bees and offering fabulously large sums of money as prizes to encourage people to learn to spell. Unfortunately, this newspaper can t afford such. We wish we could. / > We believe that the need for turning out better spell ers offers a real challenge to our public schools and also to the higher halls of learning. CULLMAN, ALA., DEMOCRAT: “The politicians’ creed seemed to be to keep the people’s pockets full of ‘money,’ even though the ‘money’ eventually drops to where it is not worth the cost of the paper used to make it. jtfmOO. WISC., DAILY JOURNAL: “The National Security Resources Board is trying to promote the dis persal of new industry in the United States for safety reasons. Says the board: ‘There is no need of a bureau ini Washington or elsewhere in the federal government this job.’ And apparently the effort is meeting with considerable initial success despite the boards almost heretical views. If it works out, maybe others will be in clined toward this unorthodoxy and away from the pre vailing notion that you’re not in business until you’ve denuded the capital warehouses of every available desk and have hired people to lean on them.” Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON The Bureau of i Internal Revenue will be sad- : dened to learn that as March » I aonrcaches I am becoming—eeee- s X**!*—lncreasingly hysterical i my distraught and bewildered I condition I’m likely to cheat the / tM collector am ol his eyelashes. I < wouldn't be surprised even if I 1 developed a hysterical psychosis. Then all I’U need is a Public Health Service doc to swear to my ' ». sorry condKion and the good, old. 1 humane Department of Justice will 1 7 refuse to prosecute me for my ' v thievery. This surprising news t 1 u>t 0»1W MAtSOII . WASHINGTON One reason for the extra-tight secrecy during the House Judiciary Committee’s de bate on probing the Justice De partment was that the personal doctor of President Truman, Maj. Gen. Wallace Graham, was in volved. Also, Attorney General Howard McGrath used just about every lobbying trick in the bag to pre vent the probe, and certain Con gressmen didn't want it known how abruptly they reversed themselves because of Administration pressure. Among these was Chairman Em manuel Celler of New York, who had just notified the President that he was going to do what he did not do—investigate. The dynamite regarding Tru -1 man's personal physician was toss ed into the closed-door committee discussion by Congressman Keft neth Keating of New York, who told how General Graham had tried to keep the notorious Rumanian, Nicola Malaxa. in the U. S. A. Keating has alleged that Malaxa has sent jewelry to Ann Pauker, Communist Premier of Rumania, has collaborated both with the Na zi and the Communists, and has had so much drag with Moscow that he is the only Rumanian bus inesAaan able to get $2,000,000 out of t»t country. A CIA report found ' In jf/fly Coplon’s purse also show ed tr.at Malaxa made Mar shall Ooering's brother a partner in his business before the war. Nevertheless, the Justice De partment gave Malaxa a favorable report, putting him in a preferred Dosition to become a permanent resident Qf the United States. This recommendation. Congress man Keating told the Judiciary Committee, was based partly on an affidavit from Maj. Gen. Wallace i Graham “building him up as a fine fellow.” “Apparently this man (Malaxa) . r’aches into high places,” the New , York Republican told his astonish ed colleagues. “I want to find out . how high—and who his sponsors . are besides Dr. Graham. I also ; want to find out who in the immi gration Service wrote that report . clearing Malaxa.” ( Note—Once before, Dr. Graham faced Congressional charges, and > admitted speculating on the com ; modify market. Unreproved, he , was lated promoted by the Presi . dent from Brigadier General to , Major General, On one occasion, . Malaxa came all the way from. . New York to Washington to get a | physical checkup by General Gra . ham. ( * HOT WIRE-PULLING About ten days before the foot, debate inside the Judiciary Com . mittee, its chairman Manny Cel . ler of. Brooklyn, went down to thß . White House and warned the ‘ President that he was going to in ; vestigate the Justice Department. HfyMtfM | , mp 1 ''iWßilfll I lIIT' 11 f dtk "% . I P' a. _ -1 “Let’* l What made him do so was when [ Sen, Lyndon Johnson. Texas Dem (Continued On Page Fhre) Walter Winchell In New York Memos of a Girl Friday Dear WW: The AF confirmed "dental” with its piece from Holly wood about Jolson’s widow winning a second $1,000,000 from hia will. When we said she would try to upset his, bequests of $3 000,00 Q to charities several dopes denied it. This new million has t# come out of those three!. Connie Mack's daughter got her final decree (out there the other day. Her merger name is Mrs. Marshall Breedlove Prince Alexis Romanoff, re cently divorced from Phyllis B. Brown of here, |elU friends his next will be Barbara Fidler ■of Cincey Gen. Patton’s widow will be urged to campaign actively for Taft, but she is not very likely to be "used” that way. Something a bout an Eisenhower-Patton feud, etc. Sleeping pill addicts should ap preciate this: It happened to co median Harvey Stone. Been tak ing pills for years because of in somnia. Desperate for slumber this day (because he hadn’t slept the previous night), he took four, not a lethal dose. However in trying to shake a cold earlier he took two empirin and then used strong nose drops He start ed choking, turned purple, and firemen took ten hours to revive him. Federal Judge J. W. Waring of South Carolina achieved quite a reputation for his stand on racial questions last year. Landed in Col lier's and the newsweeklies with his fight. He retires tomorrow — just 10 years to the day he took office . He was called "The man they love to C., vilified in the papers there, ostracized so cially and his Charleston house was stoned for opening the Democratic primaries in South Carolina to all citizens. He is 74. Ethel Merman is reported defi nitely getting a divorce. When you said so six months ago the same opposition paper said It wasn't true. How stale can they get?.. Sam Goldwyn’s uphappy about the way you handled the Moira Shearer thUig. Sam Goldwyn's always un hafopy about sonietljing. End of Yaw. The twice-postpohed S. Ray -Bobo Olson fight In San Francis co is now listed for Feb. 14th. The Runyon Fund gets most of the gate Sacha Guitry, the French play wright, is getting his 51Ji divorce. The French recognize only 5 mar riages. so he weds his next here. Jane Russell's friends wonder why a child (with passport issued by Eire and a U. S. quota num ber) should become of such in terest to His Majesty’s gov’t. Es pecially, when both Irisji parents gave full consent for the tot to remain here. Jane and her hus band pretty unhappy about It all Money talks with millionaires. Howard Hughes gave Ed Grainger a 5 year contract because his flick ers prospered. Hughes gave Wal death and the lack of even a dozen meals will not seriously injure their growth, so stop letting them bluff you. American babies are too fat, anyway. Mothers, have a second baby within 2 years qf the first, for that will give you better perspective and furnish a playmate for your first born. In the sieep: there is a gradual dimming out of. consciousness; and in his approach to wakefulness, the lights of consciousness go on again grad ually. This misty indeterminate arga, between sleeping and waking, is sometimes called “the threshold of consciousness.” And it is in this argg that you are having trouble, it seems; and the trouble prob ably consists in trying to shake-off a had dream that deals with some basic emotional deadlock, early grglned end long since lost-sight- w of. The panicky sense of urgent need and stymied helplessness, which seems to pin you down just short of waking, is a dream-fftting. » probably alto is the dimly recog-’ nised postlude to a dream’ epi sode. In which you are always un copyiously trying to solve or escape a psychological dilemma, Implicit in some forgotten life-situation. Your nightmare as described is common to many, arm embodies ti*u s&nwtioQS oi hapless childhood —as when a youngster is to establish satisfactory communica tion with hia mother, or any close “safe" loving relationship with her, for the mothering person) in his early defenseless years. REFERS TO. PBORLSM OX INNER ISOLATION You mas insist, sincerely, that yoq have w> recollection of un pleasant. dreams Receding toese noctural attacks of frozen dread--w But the more painful or threaten ing the emotional stuff embroid ered in dreams, the less apt to dream-story, is to break through to surface mind or conscious revery. I’ve no dpubt there is special significance in the fact that yew 335 terrors tend to stride when your husband, your famUx protec ness stirs up complex anxiety In the the eW This interpretation M toe am seems further sustained tot sew