PAGE TWO
Mh* jPaiig JitmriL
DUNN, N. C.
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-u.T''
A Splended Spirit
The Daily Record wants to take this opportunity to
and commend the fine citizens of Benson for their
"wonderful spirit and their willingness to work for a school
cafeteria.
It* seems that when the Johnston County Board of
"."Education was handing out funds for building purposes
” they,neglected to provide this badly-needed project for
Benson.
In most school districts, the citizens would probably
just,keep on arguing with the politicians to come forth
*'.with i.he money and provide the building.
}»- Not so with the public-spirited citizens of Benson. They’re
'going 1 ahead on their own.
At the last meeting of the Benson Parent-Teacher Asso-
Vttiartion. the citizens voted to sponsor a number of commu
nity events to raise the necessary funds.
Thiy’re going to put on basketball games, a barbecue,
plays and various other events.
STuf# old-timers are going to forget their age and get out
on the basketball court and perform—aches and liniment
notwithstanding—and do their best to provide better facili
ties for their boys and girls.
We’re going to be watching those projects-with a great
initial of interest and pride. With such a splendid spirit,
~we know the citizens of Benson can’t fail.
Their example should be an inspiration to all the rest
of us-,- never to givS up.
Prty The Poor
Potato Producers
We find ourselves in complete sympathy with the white
potato growers in Idaho, refused a further price boost,
and nobody can blame them if they do hold their potatoes
off the market.
And we are quite aware of the high cost of food arid
the high cost of living.
The present OPS price for, 100 pounds of Idaho white
potatoes is $3.95, since the government rolled back the
price of potatoes 26 per, cent. Furthermore, the potato,
farmers had a poor crop.
Ttese, notatofermers >mgL a jighMMtty -claim that, sh*
govfljrimem hßT'diserimirPP« aMmsf fttfrnTWw
moditte*have heen rolled bad: 2ft)per cent. ,
The irony of the situatiori is that the government didn’t
roll back the price of fertilizer used to produce the pota
toes; the government didn’t roll back the cbst of labor
to plant and harvest the potatoes; the government didn’t
roll back any price except the price of potatoes.
This action of the OPS was in line with President Tru
man’s recent speech to Congress in which the nation’s
chief executive called for a reduction in prices but made
no mention of holding down wages.
.It is pure ridiculous and utter nonsense to think that
a Benner, a man in business or anybody else can raise the
rnßnTf producing any item and then cut the price of the
itwENotoedy makes that kind of profit any more. And
tapgdevour anv profit that’s left.
gßb.an argument is as foolish as trying to argue that
wtaHß as black or that black is white. Nobody has ever
suHWftdty gone against the law of economics. Nobody
“ jgSody cart blame the Idaho potato farmers for holding
off the market. The working man has the
riJßkto strike; tp refuse the public those potatoes is the
oiMSeeapon the?farmer has. Sometimes, an issue can cut
boßSitys. This is one of those times.
unfortunate thing is thpt a great per cent of the
Washington know nothing about the laws
or the hazards of business because they’ve
be3taoJu|24iving off the taxayers.
Frederick OTHMAN
¥• WASHINGTON Uncle Samuel,
- you doubtless have read before
S><« is the world’* biggest store
leeper. He’s also the world’s slop
jest. Keeps all the wrong stuff on
ge right shelves, while his inven
! fijiry records are in such a sham
bles that he’s wasting at least a
Billion dollars a year of our money.
§9p£bat's official; it isn’t Othman
Biking. So now we’ve got almost
4,000 men, mostly military, working
An a catalogue of the stuff Uncle
Eys. This is a Herculean Job. It’ll
maybe four or five million
4&M«t items, but at least they’ll
dWr ba listed ence-and there’s a
chance we’ll know where
stacked. This should be
Some of these bushings cost $9.
Some cost 565. You can imagine
the surprise of the admiral's assis
tants when they discovered that aB
eight batches of bushings were
identical.
“Some in bins only five feet f
part,” he continued.
Rep. M. O. Burnside (D., W. V*o *
said that wasn’t the way he heard
it. There weren’t eight stores of
duplicate bushings SMkr different
catalogue lists, but 20g.
Correct, agreea Admiral Fowler.
Eight in the Navy, 200 in the pos
session of other outfits using bush
ings. i.t-
He said he’s seen a good deal
hi the newspapers lately about the
paid ior similar materials, ana tne
general confusion between n-
hadn’t seep anything
. - of'
His research indicated that there
These Days
£ckoLktf
THE POSITION OF DOUGLAS
MacARTHUR
The fact is that in many parts
, of the United States a notable
grass-roots movement has appear
ed for “MacArthur for President.’’
In some places, the support for the
candidacy of General Douglas Mac-
Arthur is stronger than that for
any other candidate.
To all who have inquired of him
concerning this, General MacAr
thur has replied that he is not a
candidate and that of those who
are currently In the field, he fa
vors Senator "Robert A. Taft.
It has been suggested by some
that General MacArthur assert
that he would not under any cir
cumstances be a candidate. It is
not in the nature of General Mac-
Arthur to presume what he would
do in circumstances of which he
currently has no knowledge. How
ever, it is apparent in all conver
sations that he is sincere in his
lack of aspiration for the post and
in his support of Taft.
In his letter withdrawing his
name from the New Hampshire
primaries. General MacArthur
makes his position quite clear:
“In reflecting upon my own re
sponsibility of citizenship. I have
felt that I could contribute in
finitely more to the high purposes
involved if not personally seeking
political office through the entry
1 or use of my name in connection
, with any State primary.”
But in that same letter, he goes
further to define the type Presi
dent whom he would prefer. This
paragraph, it would seem to me,
might form a model for candidates
of all parties this year or any oth
er year. I quote;
“Every American citizen shares
equally the constitutional respon
sibility of doing all In his power
to restore and preserve our sacred
American free institutions and to
secure a reorientation of policy
patterned to serve our impelling
national needs and requirements.
To this high purpose the Imme
diate demand upon the citizen lies
in the selection of a national lead
ership of demonstrated capability
in the science of civil government,
of unimpeachable dedication to our
country’s constitutional precepts
and great traditions, and one whose
wisdom is founded upon broad ad
ministrative experience, with the
resolve
Fl fhT 1 pUWK ortheday with
out eojnpromlka, of principle.”
General gigfejtrthur is a literary
stylist "Hrid tiles WoixW to express
rather than to repress though.
Thus the use of the phrase, “re
store our sacred American free
institutions,” clearly means that
they have been damaged. It is an
overt assertion that the Roosevelt
and Truman Administrations have
failed in the maintenance of a ba
sic American philosophy.
Similarly, his phrase, “a nation
al leadership of demonstrated cap
ability in the science of civil gov
ernment,” excludes General, Dwight
Eisenhower, who has never had
anything .to do with civil govern
ment In this country. It comes as
close to a direct attack on Eisen
hower’s candidacy as MacArthur
has yet made. Senator Tobey cor
rectly caught the fitness of this
idea as applied to General Elsen
hower. ,
I am certain that his statement
is only laying a basis for similar
and more pointed attacks, ending
to the use of General -Elsenhower’s
name, although General MacAr
thur is reticent about storting a
five-star generals’ battle as part
of a political campaign. He reliev
ed General Eisenhower when the
latter was a junior officer aasoriat
ed with him in the Philippines. He
will not discuss that or Eisen
hower's activities in connection
with the Bonus March, for which
Herbert Hoover and MacArthur
have had to accept full credit or
discredit, whichever it may be.
Further, the use of the phrase,
“without compromise qf principle.”
is General MacArthur’s way of at
tacking “Me-tooism,” particularly
in relation to the foreign policy.
Effort this campaign is over, the
■ihleeHnr at* the President’s office
on April #;• 1961, on the subject
of the dismissal of General Mac-
Arthur, win have to be discussed
ft** 10 ” haw to
be considered os to who was there,
what was said, and why General
MacArthur was dismissed. This Is
sattnSlaSs
he was dismissed., ?
jfr’ssafi&tisri
supplement entitled “Prelude to
Ptol»ter.” dealing With the dis-
Sara 53s*«a
’ Thu -
The political position of General
tHB DAILY RBOOBP. DUNN. H. a
I i qUVttSUMim
2*3s MERRY-60" ROUND
SICS*M l» >»«w HAtSOW
WASHINGTON What the ave
rage cltisen may not entirely real
ise about the huge new budget
facing the nation is that 83 per
cent of It is for the military. This
Includes mutual security aid to
Europe, primarily military, and
care of veterans.
Thus a 17 per cent chunk of tax
payers’ money remains for civilian
purposes, including the coast guard,
which is semi-military, the FBI,
secret service and other domestic
policing agencies of government.
While some further pruning may
be possible to the civilian branches,
especially to regard to the pork
barrel, rivers-and-harbors bill
which no congressman wants to
cut, nevertheless, the major oppor
tunity lor saving, if any, i? to be
accomplished, must be from the
military’s 83 per cent chunk.
Yet the military have been least
cooperative about even the most
rudimentary principles of efficient
spending.
Take merely the simple question
of bidding against each other. One
o* the great p’ess for unifying
the Army and NaVy was that it
would save money;, that the two
branches of the armed services
could pool their buying, not dup
licate a list of thousands of items,
such as towels, blankets, rope, pul
levs, wrenches, all about the same
whether used in the army or navy.
This, however, has not happened.
tostead of working together on
tewlßny buying, there h’liov
a third competitive service, the
air force. It is true that much air
force materiel is purchased for it
by the Army, but efficient, uni
fied buying, as done by a private
business firm, just does not exist.
BUYING CARPENTERS’
SQUARES ,
For instance, the army to some
•extent competes with itself. Its
catalog of commodities contains
she different numbers for each
Army branch—the Signal Corps,
Ordnance. Transportation, Engi
reers. Chemical Warfare, and
Quartermaster Corps. Under this
arrangement, such an item as a
carpenters’ square has six differ
ent numbers. according to the
specification of the signal corps,
ordnance, engineers, etc.
On top of this, the Air Force
has to Jiave a seventh number for :
the commodities It wants. And the
cost of reprinting Army catalogs
to add the Air Force’s seventh i
number is about 51500,000.
Congressman Herbert of Louisi
ana, now studying armed servioe :
inefficiency, estimates that mil- i
lions of dollars cquld be saved by
revamping this antiquated system
of luting different competing price* i
for this Army-Air Force materiel.
Take the relatively simple ques- ]
tion of buying carpenters’ square*, i
There are only 12 inches in a foot, i
whether it be-an Air Force square, ;
a Navy square, or any Army i
square. Nevertheless, a carpen- <
ters* square for the'Quartermasters*
M
PARFUt OS Mi ■
l _/ > Mr
fl M M BIMB /<»
"It comes ifMhree scent*. ’M-m-m-mm’ . . . ’Aha’ . . .
and’WOW’!"
Corps costs 65 cents;" for the Navy
52.00; for the Army 51.90; for the
Signal Corps 82.10; for the Army
Engineers 81.48, for the Air Force
51.40; and for the Army Transpor
tation Corps originally $4.35,
though this was hurriedly corrected
last week to 52.19.
I have seen all these carpen
ters’ squares. They, are all the
same size, and as far as I can see
almost identical. They all have 12
inches to the foot. Yet the price
Is different. Thus the mere paper
work of buying separately and
maintaining separate numbers in
catalogs take extra time and mon
ey.
This may sound like a small
saving. But when you multiply this
inefficiency by millions of items
and set up to big expensive wea
pons, It runs into tremendous a
mounts of money.
CLOSED DOOR SESSIONS
The Senate Interior Committee
held a super-secret meeting the
other day and voted to stop print
ing secret transcripts in an effort
to “keep Drew Pearson from find
ing out” what goes on behind clos
ed doors.
As a test, no secret transcript
was kept of the meeting that de
cided to ban secret transcripts.
However, this column is able to
report what happened.
Able Senators Clint Anderson of
New Mexico and Gene Millikin of
. Colorado fussed and fumeQ, over
this column’s rTC
ports of what they 7(bd said be
hind closed doors. Philosophic
Chairman Joe O’Mahoney of Wy
oming agreed that it was an out
rage. but added; “I have inter
viewed every member of the staff,
and I am sure they are all In the
clear.”
“I know the source of the leak,
and it wasn't anyone on the staff,”
snorted Anderson. He accused the
official reporters who record the
committee sessions of leaking.
(Note—You’re not even warm,
Senator.)
O’Mahoney then suggested ban
ning these official reporters. If no
record is kept of closed-door meet
ings, he reasoned, Pearson will
have trouble reporting what hap
pened.
But the usually genial Gene
Millikin was pessimistic.
“I’ll bet you two to one that all
that will result from this will be
a story to Pearson's column that
the committee was stumped.”
Note—The reason this columist
frequently reports what goes on at
closed-door committee sessions 1j
that more and iqore important
business affecting the nation is
transacted at these sessions.
It used to be that the mo6t im
portant debates took place publicly
on the floor of the House or Sen
ate. But as the work of the United
States government has grown big
ger and more complex, it has be
come necessary to transfer vital
(Con tin lied on Page Six)
2m I Jr
In
New
York
MAN ABOUT TOWN
Orson Wells’ carrent romance is
Rita Hayworth’s double in Rome.
She is Italian Airlines hostess Gina
Ludovici . Joan Crawford’s most
ardent Romeo is San Francisco so
cialite Bradley Fuller, who wings
to Movietown regularly to fight off
the pack.. Martha Stewart’s movie
husband has finally agreed to file.
An amicable abrogation . .It’s a
boy for the William Lowes. He’s
Look's ime. ..The Marcus Good
riches (Olivia De Havilland) are
sorry ’to disappoint the rumor
spreaders .The John Wayne melt
ing will feature a Mexican movie
actress.. Marilyn Maxwell, the
thrush, hat that Lohengrin
look. He to Rock *Hudson, a click
in “Bend in the River” ...Gary
Cooper and Pat Neal are still
steadying. Mrs. Cooper’s coast
rendezvous are with Peter Law
ford.. Vlkkl Dugan, the cover girl
r at Ciro’s, Miami Beach, established
! Fla. residence for her freedom. .
r •
! The Cables: Anthony Eden and
■ the woman all London expected
• him to wed (Mrs. Lionel Fitzsim
-1 mons) have cancelled it . Jean
Paul Sr.rtre and Emmy Werner, an
. American, have Paris buzzing...
> Just resigned Ambassador to Spain
> Griffis and Paulette Goddard have
! had enough . Edda Ciano, Musso
> lint's dghtr, is involved in a triangle
■ about to break in Italy.. Marcel
1 Cerdan's widow may merge with
! Murvin Marvin, a U. S. busiuess
. man • Prince Sidi Buka, 14 year
old Kenya Colony Potentate, mar-
I ried two belles last week.
Gen. Eisenhower’s former Girl
• Friday, Kay Summersby (now
working in a local dept, store),
Jilted Taft forces attempting to
“woo* her ..Architect Jeffrey Ful
' ton is buiiqing Clarissa, Newton's
castles in the air. She’s a college
gel .. Virginia Hill’s new agony
followed threats to snatch her chil
dren. . Mickey Rooney’s persistent
pleas for a reconciliation with
Martha Vickers, his ex, are sty
mied because of a sport’s announc
er . Madcap Merry Fahrncy is
back to sue a renowned dermatolo
gist for a 550,000 investment that
didn’t Jell.. Betsy Cushenberry, ex-
El Morocco haichlck, and Peggy
Yancie, who clashed over a French
itetodte, will fight it eat in Supreme
Chart. ."Joe E. Lewis sap* he
hasn’t made a bet since April, the
bookies' worst news since Kefauver :
If Gypsy Rose Lee derides to
change grooms—first call goes to
r Roanoke, Va. high school teach
er.
New York State license registra- i
tion (for the first time) requires i
tlje color of your car. All paint jobe '
during the year must be Jotted '
down. Ruthrauff & Ryan, the 1
add agency, now has 39 veeps—one
for every dozen staffers . The :
quick closing of “Month of Sun- <
days” in Philly trapped several <
mag drama pages which tried to i
help it The Russian Embassy '
people (Park Ave. to the. 80s) must 4
wonder if the street repairing out •
front is a form of criticism. Been 1
going on for a season or longer ..
Justice Dept. exec. Philip Marcus >
was in Buffalo with Rob't. Pat- i
tersen on the same anti-trust case. 1
He cancelled his pew on the plane >
(which wrecked) and took the '
train. Patterson did it In reverse '
and died Some swank university I
clubs are battling card sharps. The '
technique Is to get members (pick
ed up at bars) to invite them over 1
for “bridge” . Natl H*quarters of '
the Commies ordered members to i
"become active in church groups ” 1
Robert Taylor and Barbara I
Stanwyck tell chum* re-marriage i
would be a mistake.. The Morton i
Maguires (he’s the mag earayist) I
tried hard, bat it didn’t click. She 1
is ia Las Vegas . Bobby Barry and t
Hollywood's Jacqueline Parke are 1
a Weal portrait, but Just to get <
their names ia the paper.. Jae E. 3
Lewis finally gave Ciro’s (Miami
Beach) the llfl it needed . Lena I
Home’s debut at the Clover was t
Mg. tea. Her first time in the deep
South and sho packs the plaee...
The Cheily Knickerbockers (Dar- )
rah Waters) are beating Gone i
file In Tennessee Mario Lanza
shelved 45 lbs. in 1* week*. Won’t
stop until he scales at 17* . Chap- 1
Ha, whs need to frown on nows- 1
J* l *? ««*ing hie t
«tedio while making a film, now <
iavttoe them daily “FDR Hyde «
Park” is the title of a film eaon 1
SggyEfK; i
Egyptton||.delega r at ttw UN,
tonTltocra * |^ t,IA tnmmn «
to'iSS/nK* “ 1
TWtt •OW* j
wp ’ > " 'Ww’*' f * '
_ MOfrbAY AFfriWOOW, FEMtCAItt j, Jjjjr
By DA. GEORUK W. CHANT l
"llafftl It maea iMßtftUt |k|H
wtlriah ** Uaaufcatt IWflh
In INM War t kMM*
»P jw tody and «I*ee
you sip. H* be sure you don’t
Mam your family la Its eg*
huagora They are aa critical
m ' iminf-
CASE C-Wii Wolfe, aged at
least XI. hi a beautiful farm collie
dog which we’ve had for 11 years.
Our two outer boys found him
to the woods, with an injured teg
and so starved, he had to be half
cart ted to our summer home on a
little farm to Indiana.
That was U year* ago. Since he
was fully grown ft that time, we
know he must have been at least
one year rid then, eo his minimum
age is IS and oould be more.
But my main purpose to telling
you about Wolfe i* to Illustrate
the fact that everybody is born
with a figurative tattoo across his
chest which reads:
“I-want to feel Important I”
But this desire to feel important
is not limited to human being*
No sir, animals likewise Want to
feel important.
WOLF’S EGO HUNGER
We have a second dog, named
Sandy. She is about 6 years of age.
Whenever anybody stops to pat
Sandy on the head, Wolfe Imme
diately gets up and walks over to
receive attention, too.
If we ignore him, he lifts his
paw. and rakes it down our leg.
If I then give him a word and pat
him on the head, he moves over
to Mrs. Crane for similar atten
tion.
Indeed, I have watched him
make the rounds of 6 or 8 people
standing on the lawn talking. He
would demand attention from each
one and then he’d actually start
all over again,
For he’d come back to me and
rake my leg, to obtain a second
dose of attention. <i
-i t 4
•iM 'afu/-UatOort/ti
VhtM"
V By America's Foremost
r Personal Affairs Counselor
- -
SEEKING RESPITE FROM
GRIEF, WIDOWER SUBLETS
HIS HOME AND LODGES IN
ROOM, BUT NOTHING EASES
AWFUL EMPTINESS
DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I am
n schoolteacher to a small town,
In the small income bracket After
six years of happily married life,
my dear wife was taken from me
by death, leavliig two lovely sons
—the elder now five, the younger
two years of age.
By- close economy, Emily and I
had managed to buy a home to
our six years together, and to give
our sons every care to make them
healthy and strong. But since her
death I am in such a state of. de
gression that nothing makes sense
—whereas I could always think
clearly before.
I have rented my house and tak
en a room, and the boys are liv
ing with my sister, to her big
beautiful new farm home. She Is
one of those rare persons who al
ways has room for one more, and
I know my boys will be happy
there; hut loneliness is driving me
crazy.
At first I planned to keep my
house, board the boys out during
the day and bring them home at
night for supper and bed. But
when I thought of the awful real
ity of the arrangement I knew
that I could never stand It. Every
thing to the situation would re
mind of Emily, and aggravate the
terrible wound And yet I miss
•the boys eo much that I«am still
tempted to try it They are several
hundted mite* from nX work here,
and it is hard for ms to make the
Journey to see them. \
Since tonllyk death I hkve been
groping for something to relieve
«*to« gnawing feel
tog that envelop* me. I fepl like
weeping all the time, end give
way to this feeling when I am
•tone, and occasionally in com
pany. Friends and relatives W
been mace than kind, but stfo I
You Were Here,” the new ipsh
Logan Musical, wont tryout-tour
Thro# weeks of previews and then
<to«mp Sandy Saddler’s life u Kb-
Liofiel Hampton's crew ... N«y
wlve *- \ \
The Repubbeans hap* to flag 1
?****»..
•. r Elmer Batata top man at Blob*
Wolfe’s ego thus gets hungry
even more often than his stomach,
And what is true of canines, is
evsn more true of children, as
well aa husbands and wives.
USE COMPLIMENTS
How many of you husbands h*v(
paid your wive* a sincere compll
•ment today? And have you given
an affectionate pat on the back
and * word of honest praise to
your children?
I’m afraid many otherwise fine
husbands and fathers give more
pats to their pet dog than they do
their own kinfolk.
Thousands of wives and children
are literally starving for evidence
of affection and words of praise.
Their stomachs are well fed snf)
they have a roof over their heads.
Maybe they are surrounded by
all the modem conventoces, in
cluding television sets.
But still they are being starved
to the emotional realm. Their ego
is growing thin and anemic from
lack of honest compliments.
We parents and teachers biust
remind ourselves every day that
the greatest undernourishment in
America lies in the realm of the
human ego. f)
Vitamins and minerals, (bilk and
cod liver oil are helpful in bulld
ipg up the body. But compliments
are an essential vitamin for the
soul of mankind. They buoy up
our morale, and moiVle tones up
our whole body.
So form a "Compliment Club”
at once, even if you are the only
member. But it is more fun to en
list your family, too, or your Sun
day school class, an office group,
etc. /}
Pay a minimum of 3 compile
ments per day. That means one a
plece to each of 3 different people
around you. It will work miracles
in social happiness and improved
human relations.
Send for my 7,000 word bulle
tin on the “Compliment Club” en
closing a stamped (return enve
lope, plus a dime.
feel all alone, empty and tolfcplete
ly useless. Having long admlrCO
your column, I am hoping that
perhaps you can give me some
comforting word of advice. Yours
in overwhelming sorrow. P. F.
MORE TO PROBLEM
THAN HIS SORROW
DEAR P. F.: There is more to
the problem than bonaftde sor
row. By and large, your narrative
and your distraught performance
point to a notable lack of adult
self-reliance and social aptitude.
Morbid- excess of grief, such t#
yours, when experienced as a by
product of bereavement, refers to
extreme psychological dependency
—suddenly deprived of strong sup
port.
Your characteristic passivity has
bogged down into a sense of total
frustration since Emily’s death;
and your remark that “nothing
makes sense” since she died Indi
cates that you were endorsing her
lead In marriage, 'rather than
charting the course of partnership
I think this is the crux of your
Increasing depression as months
pass, when in the natural course
of events you should be on the
mend—if you were normally resi
lient and self sustaining.
Now a word about bearing be
reavement. The loneliness we feel
for those who have gone out of
our life is an emotion that can’t be
lightened by commiseration, noc
really unburdened by discussion;
nos tossed off by'change of scei%
or hyper-activity. All such would
be escapist exertions tend to en
gender hidden tensions in person
ality, that later erupt in inexplic
able anxiety.
UNWISE TO GRIEVE .
IN SOCIAL VACUUM
The constructive reaction, to
heavy grief is to accept and endure
it without defense, as an ordeal to
be lived through to rational spirit,
while carrying family duties aa
usual. This down-to-earth attitudM
te the best aid to moral* white
poignant sorrow is at high tide;
and n adhered to, It bring* ease
ment
SSris
roundings and by-pass personal
mind and strength of chaimcter in