Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Oct. 13, 1952, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO elks? JJaiiij Jiaotrft DUNN, N. G. Published By ttECORD PUBLISHING COMP ANT At 311 East Canary Street NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. *OS-217 E. 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. Branch Offices In Every Major City SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER. 20 cents per week; $8.50 per year In advance; U for six months; $3 for three months IN TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND ON RUIUL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA; $6.00 per year; I3JO for six months; $2 for three months OITT-OF-STATE: $8.50 per year in advance; $5 for six months. SI 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 Where Are The Voters? During the years since the Herbert Hoover. A1 Smith Presidential race, the population of Harnett County has increased immensely. With the increase in population there should logically be an increase in the number of votes cast in General Elections. Logic, however, evidently does not govern the voting in Harnett, and instead of the steady increase in the num ber of voters who go to the polls which should follow the increase in population, the number of voters in the gen eral election has decreased. The high spot in the voting in Presidential elections total of 10,282 votes were cast In the race between Frank lin D. Roosevelt and Alf Landon. This number was just 1,267 votes more than were cast in the 1948 Presidential election. In the 1932 presidential election, which put Roose velt in for his first term, a total of 9,012 votes were cast. The vote in the 1948 General election totaled 9,015, an increase of exactly three. In 1944 a total of 9,770 went to the polls. We can find no logical explanation for the trend downward in the voting figures. Surely the issues in the past ten years have not been so unimportant that they can exolain this apathy on the part of the eligible voters. The stakes have been the highest in history, with not only the welfare of this country, but of the world, dependant to a large extent on what lakes place in Washington. The last count showed 19.995 voters in Harnett Coun ty and Chairman Dougald Mcßae of the Harnett County Board of Elections estimates that this number will have increased to more than 20,000 by election day. Unless there is a sudden change in sentiment it is a safe bet that only about half of these will vote. Unless some way is found to overcome this apathy on the part of the citizens and arouse more interest on their part in the affairs of the country, it is possible that a well organized minority can take over and run the country in their own interest as has so often happened in other countries. The situation found in Harnett is not confined to that county alone but is general throughout the nation. Unless a remedy is found, the day may come when the' right to vote may be lost. __ __ lie , drunkenness to possession and 8J _ II j-i-q n r/T drunken driving, r OfilCS SucDSfl "We've sure got a jail full this “ r" moraine: " Chief Cobb remarked. ic. ntlm.ed frr.m oa*«- one) ? s a waitress brought in twelve were two soldiers, who had jacked breakfasts for his unwilling guests, up a car parked outside the Glad Tidings Church while the owner #»_ was attending services. The two had jacked up the car V vlUvll and placed a cement block under the vehicle, and were busily en- 'Continued from -net »neil gaged in twirling off the lug bolts Willkie's 1940 campaign, when the officers gathered them Among other prominent ‘‘defats-, in. tors" from Eisenhower to Steven- Thev. together with two jacks son he listed writers John Stein and the cement block, were taken beck. Will Durant and Edna Fer to the Police Station, after the ber: theatrical producer George evidence was removed from be- Abbott: composer Oscar Hammer neath the car. stein 11, and actor Henry Fonda. Ophelia Bridges. Negress, from Others, he said.' include John Raleigh, was locked up on charges Jacob Astor. Cornelius Vanderbilt, of attempting to break into the Jr., Frederick Lewis Allen, editor , home of Henry Williams. of Harper’s. Cass Canfield, chair- , The major portion of the other man Os the board of Harper and , arrests involved liquor in one form Brothers, and Financier James R. or another and ranged from pub- Warburg. Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON. You remember the old- saw about no man being able to serve two masters? This means everybody except U. S. At torneys. like Howard L. Doyle of • Springfield. 111. This dapper, dignified little man has been our United States attorney in the Southern- Illinois District since 1935: for the last eight years his income from his outside law practice always has been far larger than his salary from Uncle Sam. Sometimes this two-master business got a little complicated, even for Doyle. Once there was in court a tax case involving the trustee .of the American Distilling Co., of Pekin, 111. There on the legal papers was attorney Howard L. Doyle repre senting the distillery: there also was this same Howard L. Dovle fighting the case for the U: S. De partment of Justice. This caused the judge to raise his eyebrows. When Doyle strolled in. his or inquired; “Whom do you rep resent?” The judge was joking. Doyle told the investigating subcommittee of Rep. Frank L. Chelf (D„ Ky). Doyle said his name on documents representing both sides of the court battle was purely coincidental. A mere technicality. He had nothing to do with it, personally, either as distillery attorney or government prosecutor. The Congressmen badgered him unmercifully about the numerous legal jobs he did in his spare time while prosecuting miscreants for the government. The white-haired Doyle finally removed his rimless eye-glasses and exploded: “If the U. S. attorney was paid a sufficient salary, he wouldn’t have to engage in outside practice.” His own government wage was $9,000 a year. He said, he believed if the people would pay him about 1 515.000. he couid afford to ditch ‘ his weekend and after - dinner ‘ clients. As it was. hi.s total income ' ranged up to 530.000 a year. He represented such industries as soybean refining, coal mining, 1 real estate and. once, the Society 1 of Music Composers. This was till . in accord with the rules, he con- 1 tinued. and he’d paid income taxes ! on every cent. "What about the 55.000 you didn’t r report in 1945?" demanded com- 1 mittee counsel Robert Collier. Doyle flushed. That was a mistake ■' He'd forgotten about that $5,000. 1 As scon as lie was reminded of it, ' he rushed over to the tax collector. ’ field an amended return, and paid UP' . ’ , "When was that?" inquired Col lier. j "Last week," said the U. S. at torney. 1 The gentlemen then began exam- ' ining his tax returns and compar- s ing them with his bank deposits. 1 They discovered three more de- r posits of better than 52.000, which c somehow he hadn’t mentioned on E his tax returns. What were these? Mere legal fees? s Doyle couldn’t remember. He said he didn’t keep records and he just I didn’t know. v "But don’t you know that is a r criminal offense for a taxpayer I hot to keep records?” demanded c Rep. Kenneth B. Keating (R. N. “ Y.>. a Doyle said he knew. Then there g turned out to be another $7,500 d fee on which he’d paid taxes, all. a right, but which he hadn’t depo- £ sited. He was durned if he knew h what had happened to that. He s These Days £chcUklf CINERAMA It is not too often that one sees something that is altogether new and different. That is what hap pened when I went to Lowell Thomas's "Cinerama." Frankly. I could not imagine, in advance, what would be so different about a movie. "Cinerama" is not the same as a movie because if is not on a flat surface, just as life does not move on a flat surface. It is three-dim ensional. but that is not quite the description because, while you sit in the theater, you are also part of the life which goes on before you on the complex screen. The projection is not limited to the Stage: it makes each viewer a par ticipant. Now. that is something new. It did not exist before. I am old enough to have seen the earliest motion pictures. I recall the ster eoptieon slides which preceded it! The change from one to the other was not as startling a performance as "Cinerama." We had seen flat pictures pictures in one form or an other, even some kinds of motion pictures, viewed in a penny slot machine. But no one had ever seen "Cinerama” before. That is as new as the electric light and,the radio when they first appeared. The younger generations ac cept everything new in their stride. They did not witness the transi tion from the Welsbach mantle to the early electric lights. Suddenly, the whole world seemed to change. It was like that when the first automobiles altered our streets and roads and produced a horseless age. I could not help, thinking of the broader aspects of this new devel opment. The motion picture in dustry has been hit terrifically hard for several reasons: television, the poor quality and high costs of pictures, the separation of produc tion companies from theater owner ship, public resistance to writers, artists, actors, etc. who have had Communist affiliations or take ad vantage of the Fifth Amendment. But what has struck at the industry hardest is public weariness with the sameness of pictures. If one lias to see a Western, it is as good or as bad on television as in the theater, and television requires less effort The resurrection of vaudeville on television gave the amusement in dustry a fillip which the movies>. could not equal. ‘ < < The public relations and adver tising schemes of the motion pic- , ture industry can do them little goed. The arguments set forth for the industry are unimpressive be- . cause, after all. no one has to go to a movie theater; The very large i houses, the movie palaces, over the ( country are particularly in trouble ; because their overhead is so en- i ormous and the people expect more j than can be provided. I "Cinerama" may save this in- - drstry. It is an entirely new form 1 of entertainment and its no-sibi- i lities are withe: t limit. For in- 1 stance, the travelogue is no longer ! the cold, drab, lifeless animated pic- 1 ture. Whether one views the ma- ' .iesty of the Rockies or the beau- ' ties of Venice or the gorgeous 1 colors of the Everglades in Florida, 1 or even an airplane flying through ! clouds everything is alive, vivid, } full. Nothing is flatter on the screen than it is in life itself. ‘ The possibilities of this new de- j vice in the dramatic presentation of scenes, persons, movements, emotions are infinite. It could save j this industry; it could fill the large . theaters. j Louis B. Mayer made the point ( to me that the ingenuity of the - American mind is never to be dis counted. H? recalled when the sound j was added to the American motion t picture, it was a crude device. In f “Cinerama." sound has achieved dimensions and clarity almost to tbe noint of fidelity. What this will do to television, it is hard to sav. Television has the great advantage of being in the home. It can be turned cn and off at will. But it can also become a nuisance. Children quarrel with adults. Some want the lights on; some want them off. Rules have to be made as, no television during dinner, which can upset a little girl no end and make her regard Mrther as. a mean, old crow. The theater has the advantage of being an occasion, of being a relief from daily humdrum. But then, it must be that and not a repetition of boy meets girl in an other cortume. This three-dimen sional device, in color, with , sound, involving audience participation, mav bring folks, and particularly children, back into the movie pal aces. simply could not rec Ml. Rep. Keating said he believed the Department of Justice should in vestigate the tax payments of its own district attorney in Southern Illinois. “Do you agree?” he in quired. ‘By all means." said the district rttorney. So be it. And I can sug gest only that we have 95 other district attorneys: they’d be id vised to search their memories. Some of them soon will be here, :ou. answering questions on the subject of dual mastership. TIE DAILY K ........ “Mr. Cole will be ready 1 for you in about five minutes... ” a qu mswoK MERRY-GO-ROUt® | y • BIW BKAISOM WMM *■■■»< WASHINGTON Political Notes From Around The Nation ’— The Democrats have had to do some quick house-mending. Sen. Bill Fullbright of Arkansas has been summoned to Springfield to smooth the ruffled feelings of various Dems who feel they’ve been slighted. Adlai hasn’t had a chance to ho'd everyone’s hand. Sens. Lister Hill of Alabama and Clinton Anderson of New Mexico are helping stroke down the ruffled fur One rup ture broke out in Florida when se date Sen. Spessard Holland. Dem ocrat. threatened to bolt to Eisen hower. even though he led South ern spokesmen in Chicago in pledg ing allegiance to the party. What ha opened was that Holland was sitting on his hands; so ex-Sen. Claude Pepoer. noting the, political vacuum, walked in and be-ren to fill it. Pepper’s work for Steven son began to build an organization which dominate the state ..Some Dems at Springfield fig ure they could save a lot of money if they just closed down Democra tic Naticnal Headquarters in Wash ington. The entire camnaiyn is be ing run from Springfield. Wilson Wyatt, not Shephen Mitchell, is the mastermind. AIONG THE ROUTE OF THE TRUMAN TRAIN Colorado is still considered a Republican state, ‘despite Truman’s recent whistle ‘stop at e-ery Hamlet alcum the Denver fir'd R-o Grande RR The fact that Ike snent nine we°ks in. 1 )<•!)'•••■•• -s hard to overcome, though he wasn’t nnv great he’p to his own political leadrt'S. D;'”- ine Ik“’s e-tire stay, he d-dn’t once talk to the Republican State Chairman, the Republican Nation al Committeeman o- th r - Re-vhu can State Central Committee Fish ing. bridge and conferences with the National OOP o"ciinied most of h-s time Ike will sneak in a bridge game whenever h° gets a char-"" a’so hasn't, )rrt bis taste for “Westerns” Truman got squawks from local Democrats abet the wav the government was trert ing Colorado uranium miners. Joe Williams, candidate so- Governor and State , Sen. Stephen McNicnhs comp'ain that .uranium miners can sell there ere to only two mills. United Stat"s Vanadium Coro,, and The Vanadium Corporation of America, which won’t let miners follow their ore through the mills to see if it’s nroperiv assayed, t.Se crecy regarding uranium and the A-bomb is given as the excuse.) Miners aren’t satisfied that they always get full pay. due to inabili ty to check the assay. In the o’d days of gold-mining, a miner could always rheek the a=sav of his ore ..Independent uranium rn-ne--s produce more than 60 p°r "on) p f the domestic uranium output, but. thanks-to the secrecy of the Atomic CUTIES m COP*. I »£ KING ffMTL'BES st MiirATR. !rw. wntl.lt *k;hT< *F>T|:vrr> /o*/4 “So the meat tastes kind of funny! Well, why don’t you laugh?” w, iv. c. - y ~ Energy Commission, they are get ting fed up. DEWEY AND IKE Full story of Tom Dewey’s private session with the General before the lat ter’s endorsement of McCarthy is gradually leaking out. Dewey has kept completely ill the background, but in this case had a three-hour session with Ike in New York, beg ged him to shun McCarthy. His reasons were that Ike would lose the independent vote, alienate far more people than he would win. Dewey told how he had gone to Illinois in 1948 against his better judgment to endorse Gov. Dwight Green and ex.-Sen. CUrley Brooks, two Chicago Tribune Isolationists. It hurt him materially Eisen hower listened attentively, finally agreed tq cold-shoulder McCarthy It is now known that Arthur Summerfieid, plus Senators Fergu son cf Michigan and Hickenloouer of Towa. with Tom Coleman, Mc- Carthy’s campaign manager, con ferred at the Hotel Washington next day. then flew to Ike’s train in the Midwest, got him to reverse his pledge to Dewey Ike ca-ie into the nress car of this tyin later to tell newsmen that McCa’'- thy had not persuaded hi- 1 to or-ret, two naragr-aphs from h-s sueeeh praising Gen. George Marshall. But what actually hapnened was that Chairman Summe-field. knowing lhat the of General -Marshall : was in the Milwaukee sn°eeh and figurine it. wo-ld he reneid—od a slap at McCarthy, sneaked McCar thy tin a service "levator es the p?-> Ms-auefto Hr* cl at Peor-a to Ike’s suite. There McCarthy beg ged Tke not praise Marshall at Milwaukee. The Graera’ finally concurred, struek out the two paragraphs After the Mt’wa-kee soeeeh v-»s ptl o—r, McCarthy PTC'-c-d --watP 1 - that ’h« General hadn’t been cordial to him. CrtJV-R\STTJRF POT.ITI CS Genial Gov. Dan Thornton, the ex rowbov, new running for re-elec tion as Governor of Colo-adn is considered a “ood bet to b a Sec retary of the Interior if E'senhower is elected.. However. Dan itiav have a hard time getting re-elected himrelf. For ene thin"-. the Taft people are cool: l-kewise the vet erans, because of his draft defer ment on the ground h» was in the cattle business. F-nallv, Dan has been out of t’’e state so mueh that he’s being cePed the absentee Gov ernor. and has held back on filing the number of days he was absent since Slay H°’s supnosed to fi’e this in order to let the Lieutenant Governor draw pay as acting Gov error during Dan’s absence If Governor Them ten does join the Eisenhower cabinet, it "'ill bring joy to h-s delightful wife, Jessie, niece of the late Andy Mellon, who. Walter Winehell York •MOM The Main Steminent: The Rex (Lillie Paimer) Harrisons (’The Four Poster" starsi handnhanding along Vth Avenue —just like Mr. and Mrs. J. Doax v . . . Phil(osopher) Silvers philosophying in the Ber muda Room . . . Charles Farrell (back at La Vie En Rose) observ ing: “What a Series! Going the full 7 games. It takes thorobreds to go the distance” , . . Lionel Hamp ton. spellbound by a Salvationist’s sidewalk sermon, at 47th and the Stem . . . Gov. Dewey. L. B. May er and Dudley Roberts (who he?) in a huddle in the far-away cor ner of the Colony . . . Florence Chadwick, the champ swimaedchen, diving into a double steak at Ed uardo Condon’s . . . The Hank (Carol Gimbel) Greenbergs (she's sooo preddy) doing the town. Hank and the Cleveland ballteam’s p.a. (Marshall Samuel) have divorced after all these years . . . Lovely Paula Stone (Fred’s baybee) and grcom Miguel Sloane on the Rock efeller Rink. Skate-charmers. Sallies In Our Alley: Sherry Jack son, 10-year-young actress (in “Miracle of Fatima”), met Card inal Striteh recently. “Your Emi nence,” she said, “I’m not really a Catholic you know” . . . “What -1 ever you are,” was the sweloquent reply, “be a good one.” . . . Wash ington’s latest silly-dill.v—about the Capitol’s very happy Apple Tree. It explained its glee with: “After November, when they want applz sauce in this town, they're gonna have to come to Me!” Midtown Vignette: The scene was Lindy’s . . . The stay-ups were weary and bored with a name droppa who was claiming every Name in politics as an intimate friend ... He had just “lunch'd with Adlai Stevenson” when an ex asperated local interrupted: “What a coincidence! Here comes Adlai Stevenson now—and you just dined with him?” The name-droppa was petrified . . . “Did I say Adlai Stevenson?” he winced. “I meant Adlai Goldberg.” Memos of A Midnighter: Mid town newsstand* are enjoying a hike in racing-sheet sales. A Sure Sign that off-track betting is also biking . . . The Charlie Silveras (he’s a Yankee catcher) expect a pitch from the Stawk . . . Soph (Tucker will appear in the final /scene of “Some of There Days,” which'll star Be!!.v Hu!!on . . Martha Stewart (after all these free items) finally got the decree. Her latest is dyinee director Les Clark . . . UP phoned (following our first teevv newscast Sunday night) and said: “About 8 Coast papers i ant to reprint your edi torial disclosing that Truman beg ged Ike (in 1952) to save the Demo. Ticket.” The last, lines were: “So when vou hear Truman slander Eisenhower —remember those slan ders come from the Sourest Grape in all history. Hell Hath No Furv Like a Truman Scorned” . . . We got 5 complaints in hundreds of wires. when reminded that she was "First Lady of Colorado." joked “Yes,” First lady of a cow pasture.” The Governor has ra-red -ome of the top prize bulls of the West and Southwest. MORMON INFLUENCE Most influential church not merely in TTt-h. but in Idaho. Nevada and Southern Cahfornia is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints—better known as the Mo-- mon Church It was probably pure accident that, on the day be fore President Truman arrived, kindly Elder Statesman David O. McKay, President of th° Church, announced that it would take no stand in politics. He urged people to vote, but. vote tb**“ own con science This was interpreted to mean that the strong Republican ism of 80-vear-old Elder Statesman Reuben Clark, who served as Am fca<-ador to Mexico m the Hoo-er Administration, should not influ ence church members this year.. President McKay, a former school teacher who used to ride 14 miles a day or horseback to his job as head of Weber College, is a strong defender of education and liberal policies generally—in contrast to the conservative Republicanism of GOP Gov. Bracken lee Presi dent Truman seemed to enioy his visit with President McKay at Brigham Young University, and vice versa. Significantly the president took this occasion to an nounce the aonointment of another Mormon. Eugene H. aj- Commire'cner t" the Federal Com munications Commiss'on. This makes two Mormons out cf seven members of this i—nortaut body which regulates radio, TV. tele phones and tel“granhs. The other is Rosel Hyde of Idaho, a Repub lican. According to history Blackbeard, the pirate, would weave candles in to his beard before a raiding party, lighting the wicks when boarding a victim ship in order to terrify his enemies. RKO make-up Chief, Mel -Berns, duplicated this feat oi) Robert Newton for his role as “Blackbeard” with startling but non-fatal results. MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 13 (>52 The Worry Clinic ||P®|| DK. GEORGE W. CRAM? GIRLS, KEEP SLENDER IF YOU WANT YOUR HUS BANDS TO P.E MORE RO MANTIC. BESIDES, SLEN DERNESS PROLONGS LIFE. NOTICE HOW MY AUNT DUG HER OR WE WITH HER TEETH. SO WATCH YOUR DIET WHEN YOU AP PROACH THE AGE OF 3<l. SEND FOR MY DIETING CHART. YOU CAN USE IT WITHOUT ANY' SPECIAL MENUS. CASE E-384: Ruby M.. aged 83. was a foster aunt cf mine. You may recall my describing her in this column a few years ago. At that time she had a stroke, sorter blood pressure was 220 and her weight then 215. She was driving her ca- when it happened. She managed to null to the curb and give the police my name; so they called me. Then she went into a coma, but ultimately recovered, though her face and left arm still showed per manent evidence of paralysis. But she could finally walk around and do her cwn housework after the stroke. However, there was a noticeable change in her person ality. She had formerly been an ener getic, executive type who never let any of the men folks stay idle very long before she hatched up some job for them to do. STROKE OF APOPLEXY After recovering from the st-oke. however, she was very submissive and quiet. Her memory seemed un disturbed, but the characteristic “drive" of her personality was lacking. Meekly she followed orders in stead of giving them. A vear after wards I assisted one of our emi nent gynecologists in removing a 23-pound fibroid tumor of her uterus. Meanwhile. I had put her on a diet. For months she had a nurse who watched her like a hawk. By means of the dieting and the re moving of this fib-qid. she got her weight down to 161. Her blood pressure meanwhile //airfoil) An,er J»airs Counsel FIDELITY BEGINS WHEN VIRILITY ENDS. SAYS MAN WHO CLAIMS THAT POLY GAMOUS INSTINCT IS IN ERADICABLE DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I read with amazement your comment in reply to a woman who feels she has reason to doubt her husband’s fidelity. Among other things you sav. “I believe it is no secret nowadays that infidelity is a trait of imma turity . . . philande-ing men are childish fellows.” Well, I dislike to disillusion you, Mary. If what you say is a fact, it is still a deep dark secret from most of us. It seems to me that you have proof positive all around you. in the professions, in the buf-iness world, everywhere, of so-called pril andering men who are anything but “childish fellows.” You have enough worldly wisdom to know that, Mary, or you couldn’t qualify for your job. So why write such claptrap? It is a basic unchanging truth that man is polygamous: it has been true for centuries and is true “nowadays.” Customs, laws and civilizations change; but man's na ture doesn’t change. Biology can’t be regulated by laws or customs or religious training.' Philanderer, deceiver, hypocrite, these are harsh labels, but men can and do carry them more or loss philosophically. We can be. and mostly are. fairly good hus bands—devoted, affectionate and kind. When the time comes, as it must in the course of nature, that a woman fails to arouse the primal man in us, then we know that this is the end of the line. Philan dering ceases; fidelity begins. Mor tality reigns supreme. N’esfc- ee pas, Marie? Cordiallv, E N. STOPMY ARGUMENT DOESN’T PERSUADE DEAR E. N.: May I guardedly say that your comment is inte-- estirsj, amusing and disarmingly candid anyway. But I am not per suaded by your stormy argument. It is my understanding that the male is instinctively polygamous, at the primitive or brute level of human existence. But that he tends to become monogamous, again bv instinct (higher instinct?) -as his psychological and rational facul ties develop to a degree where he is capable of experiencing love and compassion for fellow creatures. In other words, as he becomes more human than animal, with a grow th of consciousness that snarks an aspiration to nobly direct his whole functioning. As I recollect, the famous Kin sey report found a trend towards less promiscuity. at any age, amongst males of higher breeding, extensive culture and social com petence, than amongst the unlet tered. underprivileged classes, whose opportunities for “whole growth” had dropped to 144. But she could n't stay on a diet. Apparently it, had been the nurse who had held her to it fo-merly. So her weight, zcomed back to 207 pounds, ana her blood pressure] went up again to approximately 190. / TEETH DIG OUR GRAVES One day she went downtown shopping aicne. for she had been making such trips occasionally dur-- ing recent months. As she was ready to return home.: pcssibiy rather keyed up and ex cited. another bleed vessel in her brain burst. She fell unconscious in the street. A police ambulance took her to the nearest hospital, and she died within 48 hours. l - By dieting, we had pulled her blood pressure down from 110 to 144. or 76 points. This 76-point drop had parallel ed her weight reduction of 54 pounds! Obviously, not ail high blood pressure is due to obesity. But if you are fat. Jour heart is work-; ing overtime and against a high-! er pressure than if you were to: diet. | For every 5 pounds of exU\ fat' requires 3 MILES cf extra -flood vessels! And it takes higher blood pressure to keep blood flowing in those extra miles. So the rolls of fat around our, waist lines and hips, are actually the cushions cf death. Thev are shortening our lives by as much as 10 25 years. They: also predispose us to diabetes, can cer. heart trouble and high blood pressure. Meanwhile, -they lessen our ener-i gy and kill our youthful ven.4. So they make us look tired and de-i strov our romantic allure. It’would be well if we all stayed within 15 pounds of the weight we enjoyed at the age of 21, if we were in good health at the time. So streamline your figure and restore your romance by dieting Send a stamped, return envelope, plus a dime, for my bulletin “HOW TO LOSE 10 LBS IN 10 DAYS’ It doesn't require any specia foods or nuisance menus. ty were limited by peer heredity and luckless environment. Apparently, the growth of human consciousness brings into play, in human nature, a set of higher laws-of-life that await general acceptance, based on intelligent recognition, to be reai’y effective in lifting mankind to yet higher states of" development. Seemingly you have a fixed idea that the primitive male urea to philander is justification ei#.igh for a modem man’s doing sc—re gardless of the distress* he rrav thus inflict on a beloved wife or sweetheart. And regardless also of the futility of the exercise, which adulterates his capacity to care for anyone, and cheapens the qual ity of all his addresses. If this be your stand, pardon me, sir. I must still insist that it’s imma ture—a throwback to the childhood of the race, when primal man. be wildered fellow, was just sAing out to find his true nature. M. H. Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mail or per sonal interview. Write her in care of The Daily Record. ike Will -Continued from page one) signed to offset the Saturday »ght address of his Democratic oppon ent, Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson, in Louisiana. The Republican presidential can didate said in Phoenix, Ariz., last Friday he would make public be fore election time either his re cent tax returns or financial state ments giving substantially the same information. Farm Bureau * Hears Report Reports from the group making the campaign for membership in the Harnett County Farm Bureau at the meeting in Lillington Friday night, indicated that about 500 of the 1.100 member quota had ieen signed up, it was reported sfriis morning by County Agent C. R. Ammons. Some of. the canvassers requested a little more time in which to complete their work Ammons said, and it was decided to continue the drive through October 25. Lillington was the sole township to report that its quota had been 1 completed, but Black River is nearly so. Ammons praised the jryrk j of the group under Webb DRm-] ing of Angier for their work there. I
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