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PAGE FOUR (Ih? ailtj Jltmvfr DUNN, N. G. Published By RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY At 311 East Canary Street NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. 205-217 E. 42nd St, New York 17, N. T. Branch Offices In Every Major City SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER. 20 cents per week; $8.50 per year In advance; S 5 for six months, S 3 for three months IN TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND ON RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: $6.00 per year; $330 for six months; $2 for three months OUT-OF-S1 ATE: $8.50 per year in advance: $5 for six months. $1 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 The Right To Become A Property Owner Writing in The Exchange magazine, which is pub lished by the New York Stock Exchange, the head of an internationally known manufacturing company said that one cf the greatest challenges facing the corporation is the problem of establishing a real community of interest between management and labor. Then he offered the 6- pinion that the most practical and effective way of show ing the workingman the virtues of free enterprise is the Employe Stock Purchase Plan. His own company has made an excellent record in this respect. Some 26,000 people, one out of every five em ployes, own stock, for a total of more than 500,000 shares. These figures cover employes only, as officers and directors are not eligible to participate in the plan. Sale of stock, he pointed out, typifies one of the fundamentals of free enterprise—the right of every American to become a prop erty-owner. He added, “It represents public ownership of industry in the true and desirable sense.” Today 4,750,000 families own shares in publicly-held corporations. Each family averages 2.74 members. Thus, these families represent a total of more than 13,000,000 human beings men, women and children. And that means that one out of every 12 persons in the United States has a direct and personal ownership interest in American” industry. The total is growing. These are the people who voluntarily share the risks and the fruits of our free enterprise system—and these are the people who constitute a solid bulwark against the freedom-de stroying “isms” of socialism and communism. For The Better To the casual observer, locomotives, boxcars, tracks and terminals, and all the other facilities that make pos sible our magnificent system of transcontinental trans portation of goods and people by rail don’t seem to change much over the years. Today’s train looks about the same as yesterday’s. So it does—on the surface. But the fact is that rail road facilities are always changing, in minor respects and major, and for the better. No industry is more interested in research which promises to provide swifter, surer, safer and more economical service. This work is carried on in laboratories owned by the Association of American Railroads, by individual lines, and by universities and technological institutions, its purpose is to improve the railroads of today, and to lead to still better railroading in the future. Railroad research is so wide in scope that it is al most impossible to define its limits. As one authority has pointed out, almost any technological advance can be applied in some manner to railroading. Finding out how is the biggest research job which the lines, individually and collectively, undertake. Some current research jobs involved such problems as ballast; “controlled cooling” for rails; new rail design; bridges and other structures which bear heavy stresses; new types of locomotive power; mechanizing the task of maintaining rights-of-way; more comfort and stability in passenger cars, and so cn. The scientist and his la boratory are as important to the railroads as the engi neer and his throttle. Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON You've doubt less heard of Arthur E. Summer field of Michigan, the biggest Chevrolet dealer in the world. He's also the chairman of the Republi can National Committee and hence, in days like this, a top-flight source of news. So we invited him over to the National Press Club for lunch. The members paid $1.75 per head for Swiss Steak and apple pie. but Summerfield got his free. The ide_3 was to make him sing for his sup per, or at least say something newsy enough to justify that $1.75. By the time he'd put away the last of that pie, the curly-haired Arthur was glistening around the temples; after all. it was a warm day and he’d taken on a heavy meal. The photographers wanted him to pose for pictures. “I’ll give you my victory salute ” said he, standing in the floodlights with both arms stretched up. The picture men were not impressed with this tableau. "Say something.” demanded one of the camesamen. The chairman of the national committee gulped. Then he said something, all right. He did, for a fact. “It is distressing for me to have to say that events of the last few hours indicate that President Tru man is the hatchet man of the 1952 campaign,” he said. "He is the pee-wee ickes, who has degraded the great office of the Presidency But the people will not fall for the big-lie technique this time. It worked once, but it will not work again. This brought a spattering of ap plause, mostly from the associate members, who atended for enter tainment’s sake. The working press wai too busy taking notes; this fel low talks fast and it’s not so easy getting down on paper his exact wofda. He went on to say that he be lieved there wasn’t a thinking American who didn’t deplore the kind of speeches Mr. Truman was making n his whistle-stops. “What about Adlai’s speeches?" needled one of m ‘.cohorts. who ob viously was seeking good value for his 51.75. “I don't know who’s more con fused. Stevensn or the people to whom he’s speaking,” replied the chairman. He went on to say that he was. no professional politician, and I suppose he’d be the first to agree he’s prejudiced in favor of a can didate he called a guy named Ike. “The day we take over the ad ministration in Washington, you will have once again the kind of a government you have the right to expect.’’ was the way he put it. He also talked about a guy nam ed Dick Nixon. ’ A good guy. said Summerfield, and also a fine, young American. “I’d like to talk just a moment on the Nixon incident.” he con tinued. “Then I’d like to forget it. Oh, it’s so sickening to me that he should have been treated as he was “But he told his story and he bared his soul, such as no man should be forced to do. But’ he did it. And what happened? You all know the heartening result ” The thing about this guy, Ike, he said, is that he loves people. So, of course, the people love him. “This busy America of ours hasn’t grown so big as to fail to recognize those qualities Ike Eisenhower possessses,” he added. “One of the greatest men in history is this guy named Ike Eisenhower and I’m sure you’ll never forget it.” He said finally that, of course, Ike would be our next President. By how big a plurality? Haw. He knew, all right, but he’d be dog gned if he’d give those Democratic ■ These Days MARXISM AND RELIGION As the years pass, it grows in creasingly difficult to , understand how some clergymen of various re , ligions uphold Communism and support Soviet Russia’s program of world' imperialism. The Red Dean of Canterbury is not an outstand ing exception. Every list of sponsors of Communist activities in the United States includes Protestant clergymen and Jewish rabbis, who apparently do not relate the pur poses of the Maxists with their own beliefs. The Marxist attitude toward re ligion was recently stated in 1 Soviet Russia by P. F. Kolonitsky, • under the auspices of the "Society 1 for the Dissemination of Scientific and Political Knowledge.” Kolonitsky is important enough for his lecture to have been circulated : as a brochure. He said >1 am quoting from a condensed version): "....The communist ethic is the exact opposite of the religious ethic. They are as incompatible as free dom and slavery, truth and false ; hood, light and darkness. Com munism is the great banner of the i struggle for the liberation of the Working class, the working people, from slavery and exploitation: re ’’’gion constitutes an ideology for justifying and preserving slavery exploitation .... “.In contrast to the communist ethic, the religious ethic is an ex ploiters' ethic. Its precepts are de signed to preserve all forms of op pression and exploitation slave holding. feudal or bourgeois. Each religion and its ethic to buttress new ruling class of exploiters adapts its rule, but the essence remains the same the preservation of ex ploitation. justification in God’s name of the ruling classes' dom inion over the working people.” This is what is being taught in every Communist country, in keep ing with Karl Marx’s materialistic concepts. There is no God; there is only the eternal Struggle between class and class, between the ex ploiter and the exploited. There is no morality; there is only the struggle between man and his en vironment. This they believe to be true and with this concept they will not compromise. Therefore clergymen in our own country who support Maxism arc support ing the enemies of God. Kolonitsky says : “Religion persistently fills be lievers with the idea that people can accomplish nothing without God’s will, that their whole fate is in God’s hands. Man is only- a creature of God. a worm, a slave of God .... It is clear that such an ethic is capable only of extin guishing every will to struggle in man, of killing any impulse to ac tion. of poisoning his soul with the venom of disbelief in his own powers .... Furthermore, religion preaches renunciation of earthly good, considers earthly life tran sitory and worthless "Particularly indicative in this respect is the cult of the sufferings of ChiTst ... He is always pre sented as a model for Christians. ‘Christ suffered and bade us to suffer’ - this is the most import ant maxim of Christian ethics Not a word is said in this article of the doctrine of love, of pity, of charity. Nothing is said ’of the effects upon man’s mind and. con science of the Ten Commandments, of the beatitudes, of the whole tradition of natural law. It would seem that this is not only a ma terialistic. atheistic response to Judaic-Christian beliefs, but also it would seem to indicate that this Master of Philosophy has no know ledge of Christianity except per haps in its most deadeningly ritu alistic form. ' v I wonder what American clergy men and the Red Dean have to say about this: "Under our conditions religious superstition represents not only re ligious people's extremely backward notions about the surrounding world, but also vestiges of bour geois ideology, particularly the bourgeois ethic. Therefore religious superstition is overcome not only ledge, but through communist e:l --through enlightenment, not only through dissemination of know ucation as a whole. And communist education, as is known, is a con siderably broader idea than simply classror/n education ” It is important to know what the Communists believe and say in their own country. American apolo gists for them try to give the im pression that they are actually not what they seem to be. It is like.the State Department trying to tell us that the Chinese Communists were not Communists at all. but agrarian refoimeis, that is. Until they began to murder our sons in Korea and cur missionaries in China. It is to our advantage to under stand that they are not only the enemies of our country but that they abhor our civilization. And what they hate most in our civi lization is God. hatchet men any figures on which thev might try their tricks. I’d say myself, that Summer field earned his lur ■«»'.: all hands got a large, or $1.75 size, wad of notes. THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. €L MISTER BREGER uargency call for you, doctor! Go down at once and riove vour car—it’s narked overtime ! "a qi»WSWSIOM ®)dftßW-fio- ROUND LOS ANGELES When Gen eral Eisenhower announced last week that he would publish his income-tax returns, it was pre sumed that his running mate. Sen ator Nixon, would do likewise. However, just tw-o hours after the Eisenhower announcement, a statement was issued by Nixon headquarters that the GOP vice presidential candidate would not publish his tax returns and that he considered the matter a closed incident. In view of Governor Stevenson’s complete financial disclosure for ten years, and the pledge that Ei senhower and Senator Sparkman would do the same, Nixon is left in a position where the public now has a right to ask considerably more questions concerning his fi nancial position than the brief details he gave in his nation-wide telecast. * In that telecast Nixon stated that he had been cleared by the law firm of Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher. However, this law firm happens to represent some of Nix on’s biggest and most active don ors. among them Jack Garland and the Garland estate: also the Union Oil Co,, of which Herbert Hoover is a director and owner of shared worth $1,200,000 Hoover was one of th? two highest contri butors to Nixon’s extra-curricular fund. Nixon also stated in his telecast that Price-Waterhouse an account ing firm, had checked his expense fund and given him a clean bill of health. It happens, however, that Price- Waterhouse was the accountant which got caught with such amaz ing discrepancies in checking the account of The McKesson-Rob bins Drug Company that they were forced to pay McKesson-Robbins stockholders $500,000 because of their oversight. DEFINITE DEDUCTION In the case of the Nixon fund, Price - Waterhouse stated that more careful. For,, when you read the fine print of their statement in the newspapers, you find that Price-Watherhouse stated that they had not had time to examine all of the Nixon funds. This system of self-examination by self-appointed lawyers and self appointed accountants is something which Lamar Caudle or Howard McGrath or others probed by Con gressional committees never could have got away with. Such a self appointed investigation of the Dem ocrats by the Democrats would have brought howls of protest from the Republicans. However, since Congress is not in session at the moment and since Nixon will not bare his tax returns, it falls to the lot of the 1 press to examine as carefully as possible the unusual expense fund CUTIES 4 40% “Enlisted personnel do NOT address W.A.C. officers as ‘Babe’! It’s 'Babe, MA’AM’!” and the financial situation of the man who. if elected, would be one : heartbeat away from the presi dency FAMILY FORTUNES IMPROVED Neighbors will tell you here in the Whittier area, near Los Ange les, that the Nixon family’s for tunes have picked up considerably since Dick was elected to Congress. One year after he was elected —l946—the family bought a farm in York County, Pa. The farm was ; purchased in- the name of Dick's ■ father and mother, price not known and for a while Dick used to go up from Washington to spend week ends on the farm. His father and mother didn’t care for the Pennsylvania climate, however, and moved back to Cali fornia' They still own the farm. Back in California, Dick helped get his father a job as postmaster of a U S. Post Office substation at Friendly Heights, near Whit tier, The Senior Mr. Nixon secured the job just about the time his son became a Senator, and while it doesn’t pay much—s6o0 —it has one important advantage. It is lo cated in the Nixon Store. Thus, to buy stamps and mail letters, you pass through part of the Nixon store —a great help to any merchant. A few blocks down Whittier Eoulevard, brother Don Nixon has just opened a swank new Drive-In Restaurant, replete with palm tress, an orange grove, and tables under the grove. As you drive in, you give your order for food through a mic rophone, then pick up the food and take it out under the orange trees. This setup must have cost well over SIOO,OOO. The Senator’s home in Whittier is a modest California bungalow on which he actually has a bigger mortgage than he stated over the air. But the difficult thing to un derstand, and which he did not ex plain, is how he was able to buy two houses at about the same time paying $20,000 down on his $41,000 house in Washington. Retired Maj. Gen. Burr Johnson, the agent who sold Nixon the $41,- 000 house in Washington, states that he paid $20,600 in cash, which at that t# le was necessary under Regulation X. The house is also well furnished at a cost of at least $5,000 probably more. Some of it is Chinese furni ture. Mrs. Nixon, writing in the Sat urday Evening Post September 6, just two weeks before the “ex pense fund’’ storm broke, said that while running for Congress her husband was so broke sometimes “there wasn’t any money to buy stamps to mail campaign litera ture.” This was in 1946. Yet five years later on a Congressman’s salary he was able to buy two houses, on one of which he paid $20,600 down Walter Winchell York WMTMM Broadway Chop-Suey: The book ies’ reminder on election betting: “The candidates don’t make the odds—the money does|” At this time of year midtown New York ers were introduced to new swank (and other) night spots. There hasn't been a new one this Fail . The local (7) school teachers who refused to tell Congressional probers (if they were or weren’t Reds) will be fired by the Board of Education shortly .. Why doesn’t the committee subpena a Police Dept femme detective to name the the same Red cell when she was Hunter College prof who was in an undercover spy?- - It's a branch (a boy) for the Artie Pines Bud Gibbs will merge with Patricia Lee Cook. Her pater “lights’’ all the Broadway shows.. The biz for Hemingway's “Snows of Kiliman etcetera” (at the Rivoli) is terrific. Manhattan Murals: The giggle on the sign of an auto collision repair - hop tat I’o'h and Manhat tan Ave.): “Pear Fired”.. The sign in the deity on Ave. D at 2nd Street: "Abie, formerly of Hymiefc of Ave. C Is Now With Us” Katz’s immense-size koshery on E. Houston Street: The walls are covered with bologna & sala mis—zillions of them Dept of Incongruity: Roth's on Broadway which sign-boasts: "We Specialize in Sea Food.” The window is crowd ed with hams, corned beef and pastrami .. . Tiie synagogue (at 106 E. Ist) with a Catholic Church for its neighbor. 42nd Street Crosstown Bus: None of the papers reported the breath less action and the movie melodra matics of that bandit's capture cn a 42nd Street bus at 5 a. m. Friday . The 14th Precinct cops smother ed him and took awav his loaded automatic —after a columnist’s car slowed the bus (down to a waltz) by making a swift U turn between B'way and Bth.. In the station house we asked the prisoner, a handsome guy: “Did vou see a cr*r cut off the bus?” . “Yes,” he nod ded wearily, “I knew you musta got it over the police short-wave calls’ .. “What was vour last job?’’ we asked him “I worked at Radio City”.. “Doing what?”.. “I was,” he grin-sighed (offering a hunk of irony for the column) “in charge of protection,’.” The ShoWW-Stoppers: Edith Piaf at Versailles Martha Rave at the Latin Quarter.. Tamara Hayes’ first Victorecord. “You Be long to Me”.. Mary Jane Shour’s “Blueprint for a Divorcee” on page 143 of the book: “The Girls from Esquire” Fulton Oursler’s “The Reader’s Digest Murder." Sounds in the Night: At Howie’s: “The campaign is being covered so well by the press, radio and teevv—that by election dav the voters wdl h»te evvvbuddy’’ At La Vie En Rose: “Marciano, the Rock of Jabraltor”. . At Old Rou manian; “She’s living on Park Avenue now. You oughta see her gent-house” . At Villa d’Estc: “Her hips have a Paris accent”.. At Chiseler’s: “People who live in glass houses shouldn’t’’ Memos of a Midnighter: Jack O’Brian’s surgery in the N. Y. Journal-American: “The most dis graceful of our Village Videots, Was was run out pf N. Y. for h's shame ful slandering of the physical short comings of performers and friends who haven’t done much for him lately, now is shrieking at the lack of ethics and taste of those calling him names that make hie ‘sickle’ . N. Y. Post editor J. Wech sler (Lawson was his Communist name) was on G. Hamilton Combs’ WJZ panel Wednesday night. The switchboard was clogged with calls asking to speak with him. He ac cepted none. Attaches who tried to pacify the callers took the fury for him Dewey gave Nixon the idea of appealing to the people for telegrams .. The publishers of “Mr. President” (by Wm. Hillman) lost such a fortune on it—the firm has been cutting the staff to the bone . The N. Y. Post lifted the - Nixon-fund skewp from the N. Y. Enquirer, which van it (with lead ing donors’ names) on Aug. 31st. The skewp-claimers ran it Sept. 18th. Big Town Circus: Not a few readers have urged us to get back “on the Big Time” and stop pick ing on people who aren't your size,’’ such as a “former Communist” editor We’re enjoying every syll able of it.. New version of Our Pet Gag: The N. Y. Post called Walter Winchell a dawg To which he replied; “The attitude of The Morning Winchell will con tinue to be that of any Dawg to ward any post.” in cash. Ordinarily the public would not be concerned with any of these matters. However when a Senator has a highly unusual expense fund contributed by big businessmen many of them doing business with the government, and when some of these contributors at first say it’s for the purpose of helping Dick’s living expenses in Washington, then the public has a right to know the facts—especially since Senator Nixon stated on the air that none sonal expenses, yet to Peter Ed- MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 6, 1952 The Worry Clinic IPPff!! by DK. GEORGE W. CHANT ks V * ak. Does your church have a Boy or Girl Scout Troop. Some church folks look askance at having a troop of boys meet in the church basement on Friday nights. But Jesus believed in helping child ren. He prefers the laughter of youngsters, to ornate religious decoration.’- and ritualistic pray ers. By Dr. George W. Crane Case E-381: Timothy R.. aged 39, is a conscientious Scout Master. “Dr. Crane, we’ve been meeting for 10 years in the recreation hall of a large church,” he informed me. “It’s clergyman recently checked over our records and found that we have brought over 400 boys into our scouting work. “But he found that only 15 of that entire number have even been members of his church. So he tried to have us deprived of the recreation ’•a)). “That vc -i have been a blow to us. thous ' fc- this church is the only good meeting place in the vicinity. “For example, just 5 blocks away is the Red Light district. And 6 blocks in the opposite direction is the business area. "Luckily for us, the father of one of our scouts is on the governing board of this church. ‘He told the other members that our livewire Boy Scout Troop was really the best home missionary pro ject they could ever hope to spon sor. MYOPIC CLERGYMEN "He also informed them that even if only 15 of our boys were actual members of their church, just think of the inspiration and moral leadership the other 385 fel lows obtained from our scout work in that church. "Well. Dr. Crane, we were per mitted to continue using this fine meeting place. In fact, that hostile clergyman was not asked to re turn at the end of the year, for the church board felt he didn’t have the true Christian spirit. “While he is an exception, there are still a number of clergymen and church boards which are not friendly to young peop’, v s work, such as the Boy and Girl Scouts, as wen as the Camp Fire Girls.” sau)(fitkb for *£dor YOUNG MATRON WRITES GAILY TO DIVORCED MO THER, BUT CLAMS UP SHY LY IN HER PRESENCE; ASKS HELP DEAR MARY HAWORTH: My mother divorced my father after several years' separation—the sep aration and divoxe having been somewhat advised by my sister and myself. My brother was in military service at the time. As I am the youngest of her children, moth i r and I have been somewhat closer than the others; and usually she has consulted my opinion about things, which I have been glad to give. When we cor responded—she lives up country and I live here—my letters are chatty and gay, and she tells me just about all the happenings in her days. However, the puzzling thing is that when we get together on hol idays and vacations she seems to be too possessive, and I shy away from her and clam up, and she notices the difference. When I’ve returned to my home, or she to hers. I feel badly and want her to know it. She always asks if we— my husband and I still love her, etc., and this embarrasses me, as I wasn’t accustomed to much ma ternal demonstrativeness in my childhood. Yet I know she needs the affection and I want to give it—but the “block” is there. I am sure I can overcome this barrier: yet every time we are to gether I go into the old shell, so to speak; and when we part I feel badly again, and promise myself that next time will be better. Some thing must be wrong with me. Any suggestions? L. B. HER REMORSE ISN’T VALID DEAR L. B.: It seems you have an unduly anxious conscience with regard to your mother’s relatively empty, lonely life today, as com pared to the years when her child ren were minor dependents at home; and as compared to your solacing status as a young matron —with a good husband, I gather. You feel morally obliged to keep up a . mother-daughter exchange satisfactory to her, because (1) you’ve been her favorite or main stay child since you can remem ber, and (2) you rather urged her to seek happiness in separation from your dad. Your self-searchinfi remorse, at of this money went toward his per son lie first stated that without this expense fund he would not have been able to buy his home in Washington. Another column on the candi date’s financial background will follow soon. e HELP YOUTH Timothy is correct. Indeed, it was a great ove-sight by the churches that they failed to get credit for founding these admirable youth or ganizations. Maybe the clergy back in 1910 were too concerned with husband ing church property, cr in teach ing church ritual, so they forgot Christ’s basic interest in human welfare. Perhaps they we-e backward look ing in their emphasis and too con cerned with interpreting scriptur al laws of Moses 3,000 years ago. At any rate, they ignored a gold en opportunity, so in 1910 the Boy Scouts were organized outside the church. Since the Boy Scout leaders are usually recruited from churchmen, however, we are glad to state that about 50% of the scout troops now meet in church basements or re creation halls on Friday nights. And most of our clergy are ardent rooters for scouting. But almost 50% of scout troops still do NOT meet in churches on Friday nights. And many church people still grumble about an oc casional broken chair or other min or bit of damage, even though their churches do grant the scouts the right to meet therein each week. APPLY CHRISTIANITY The Camp Fire Girls, plus the Boy and Girl Scouts, are the fin est examples of home missions that any church could wish for. if your church doesn’t have these youth groups, then your home mis sionary activities are deficient. Many of you men and women with no children of your own. can adopt an entire troop of boys or girls and win their revotion to a higher degree than may exist be tween those same youngsters and their flesh-and-blood parents. For the true pareiit-child bond is strictly spiritual, anyway. It can be an elective state where boys choose their leader and the leader chooses the boys •hom he wishes to “father" and instruct. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long 3c stamped, addressed en velope and a dime to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his psychological charts.) falling short of her requirements for reassurance, affords abundant evidence that you ane normally fond her her, in a filial way. And I think you need to recognize the ' healthy balance of your presently ' limited response to her. As a matron you are more than i a daughter. Your experience in i eludes other love commitments now, as valid as your attachment to mother; and these she may not try to share, on the basis of having been your earliest intimate. Thus it is normal, it is wholesome and appropriate, if you fend instict ively against a ‘too possessive” or avid hungry maternal assumption of innermost closeness, when you and she are together nowadays. It isn’t cause for self-reproach if you involuntarily throw out a defensive shyness, as if to define a new adult boundary of being, that she ought to respect as a sign of emo tional growth, not an affront to her. MOTHER SHOULD BREAK SALEMATE It is one thing to care loyally about your mother, and to sympa thize with her circumstances, and to ply her with cheery reminders of your unflagging interest. This you should do. and are doing, ap parently, without urging. But it is another matter—and a mistaken idea, in my opinion—to suppose a filial obligation to ambarrass your self with a sentimental display that is alien to your lifelong orientation to her. As I see the picture, your mother, not you. is the person to dissolve the “block” in relationship. I sug gest she surrender the past, ac cept the reality of now, stop bid ding for filial love prattle, and move with you into the further experiences of co-adult friendship, sans flourishes. Thus a new era of mutual appreciation and pro foundly companionable feeling may dawn, to put her mind at rest— securely aware that your spirits shall be forever kin. m. H. Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mail or per sonal Interview. Write her in care of The Daily Record. Many Citizens Now Paying City Taxes Taxpayers of Dunn have been keeping the office of City Clerk Charles Storey busily engaged dur ing the past month in writing out receipts for tax payments. Receipts of ad valorem taxes for the month of September amounted to a total of $42,061.45, Mr. Storey reported this morning. These fig ures do not include privilege lic ense or other fees.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Oct. 6, 1952, edition 1
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