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PAGE TWO (lit? JJaihj J\txmt DUNN, N. G. Published By BKCORD PUBLISHING OOMPANT At 311 East Canary Street " NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. 205-2X7 E. 42nd St., New York 17. N. Y. Branch Offices In Ever; Major City SUBSCRIPTION RATES ” BY CARRIER. 20 cents per week; $8.50 per year In advance: $5 for six months; $3 for three months IN TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND ON RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: $6.00 per year; $3.50 for six months; $2 for three months OUT- OF-STATE: $8.50 per year In advance; $5 for six months. $1 for three months Entered sis 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 Land Os Opportunity In these days when seme people in both high and low positions would sell the United States short for the pur pose of promoting restrictive socialism, it is well to pause and take stock of what this country has offered the indi vidual—unlimited opportunity. Recent news reports cite one more example of what opportunity means. J. C. Penney, merchant and agricul tural expert, has just given to the University of Missouri 250 head of pureored Guernsey cattle for breeding, re search and educational purposes, together with a 750- acre farm, and stocks and bonds to assure working funds, having a combined value of $725,000. Penney, who is now Chairman of the Board of J. C. Penney & Company, has demonstrated what a man can do with opportunity. He started as small as a man could in 1902 with an idea and a little store in Kemmerer, Wy oming. He believed then, as he does now, that what is nee ded is ability and the will to work hard toward the achie vement of a goal—any goal which is right and clean and decent and worth while. He had the ability; he had the goal; he had a sound program. Above all, he lived in a country that oifeied in dividual opportunity. Today there are over 50,000 luil time employes in over 1600 Penney Stores. Records such as this should cause any red-blooded A merican to turn thumbs down on opportunity-destroying socialistic schemes which remove the chance for each in dividual to advance according to his ability, as did Mr. Penney. Nixon Says (Continued From Pise One) and it is a very grave question. "He has failed to recognize the threat, as many have failed to rec ognize it around him. In my opin ion his actions, his statements, his record disqualify him from leading the United States and the free na tions in the fight against Commu nism at home and abroad because, you see. the election of Mr. Stev enson would mean four more years of the same policy which has been so disastrous at home and disas trous abroad for Ame"ica.” , CITES DANGER Nixon devoted his 30-minute ad dress to the dangers of Commu nism, the Hiss case and his con fidence in the ability of Dwight D. Eisenhower, the GOP presidential nominee, to combat the Red men ace. He reviewed in detail the events that led to the conviction of Hiss for perjury on charges of lying about his association with Whit taker Chambers, a former Com munist spy and courier. He said Stevenson supported the accused State Department official "at a time when he Stevenson was governor of Illinois and the prestige of a great state and the governor of that state were thrown in behalf of the defendant in this case." Nixon said he found it signifi Frederick OTHMAN > —o McLEAN. Va, The frost is on the pumpkin, my mowing machine has clattered for the last time in 1952. and we farmers are digging in for the winter. This is not as easv as you might think. Take the other night, just as I was about to climb into my bed. Some loudmouth on the radio was spieling about the season’s first killing frost to arrive by dawn. Hilda cocked both ears. She said we hadn't dug our sweet potatoes. I said I was reducing and I didn't care if they never were dug. This, she said, was not what she meant. She lugged out her garden encyclopedia la volume I claim never should have been written) and it said that if frost hit a sweet potato vine it turned all the tubers attached thereto bitter. You know what happened. At 11:30 P. M. I pulled my pants over my pajamas, put on shoes and an old overcoat and went out to survey the potato patch. There was no moon. It was so dark I stumbled in the furrows. So I got out the tractor and by its headlights spent the next hour and a half whacking off the po tato vines with a sickle, as per in structions. These were tangled with the sweet corn and I don't think I ever did see such a horticultural mess. The trouble was that Mrs. O. likes sweet potatoes. She'd planted 200 of these spindly little plants last spring and now they were great, sprawling growths, as in a Brazil ian jungle. I finally got 'em all chopped and found myself so muddy and sweaty that I had to take an other bath before I could go to bed. I’ve still got to dig the po tr tees, themselves, though the book says they’ll be okay, now that they cant that "Stevenson has never ex pressed any indignation over what Hiss had done and the treachery that he engaged in against his own country.” The Communist danger still ex ists at home today, Nixon said, be cause "we can assume because of the coverup of this administration in the Hiss case that the Commu nists, the fellow travelers, have not been cleaned out of the executive brapeh of the government." Hoyman Says (Continued From Page One) jobs have been leaded dowfi with the extra work of laying up rov ing for 60 frames. This stretchout. in the Durham mill brings out the point we have been trying to impress on the Er win workers that every victory for the UTW-AFL ha's been a serious defeat to the workers in that mi'l. Certainly what happened in Dur ham adds to the evidence we have been pointing out in the Aleo. North Carolina Finishing, Edna Cone and other mills that workers have- not gained a single thing bv going AFL. The stretched-out work-loads in Durham certainly indicate that, the Workers there have lost. The story cf: the stretchouts will be told to Erwin Workers personally tomorrow. Hoyman said, when a group of Durham workers attend the CIO Erwin meetings at 1 p. m. and 7 p, in. tomorrow. have no leaves attached. Leaves, in general, are some thing else. They are beginning to fall. Somebody's got to rake 'em. and he is me. Only fellow in these parts who has solved his leaf raking problem is Harry Truman, who has a place about the size of mine over in Washington. Well, sir. Harry has an automatic leaf raker and or chopper-upper. This is a kind of gasoline-powered carpet sweeper that rolls over his lawn sucking up the leaves, send them through a grinder, and spray ing them back on the grass as a kind of fertile dust. Many an en vious glance I have given Harry's chopper at 1600 Pennsylvania Av enue. The trouble is the cheapest mo del costs 5350. That's reasonable enough for all the machinery in volved. but Hilda says it's silly to spend that kind of money for a de vice that would be idle 51 weeks a year. And anyhow, she adds, she doubts if I could make it run at all after it had gathered dust for 358 days. She is right. Sometimes I can't even make my gasoline lawn mower w'ork. while it’s still hot. About the only pleasing news of the autumn concerns the Othpian applejack distillery. It is out of business. My idea last year was to make my apple crop, which was sizeable but wormy, and convert it to cider. I’d let nature take its course and when it was bubbling hard, I’d leave it outside to freeze, as per the old farmers’ almanac. Th? watery party would freeze, but in each cake of ice would be a natural cup, containing the alcholic essence of the apple. Getting this started was a good deal of work. Then nature double-crossed me. All last winter it never stayed These Days £ckeUkij THE DANGER OF IGNORANCE I get it in my fan mail but it is particularly noticeable in question time after lectures and speeches— a satisfaction with ignorance, even a pleasure, a delight with an avoi dance of knowledge and facts and a repetition of improvable pre judices. In the realm of public questions. I often find that our people are ignorant of our form of govern ment, The Presidential campaign, each four years, is ballyhooed into such a circus as Mussolini would, have enjoyed had he not feared defeat. The result is that far too many of our people believe that we have a Presidential form of government when actually the Constitution reduces the authority of the President and elevates the power of Congress, Mr. Truman has made that mistake since he was elected to his second term and it took a Supreme Court decision to put him in his place. Similarly, far too many of our people are ignorant of the history of. our country and the traditions of our people. They fail to grasp that the essence of our civilization is the liberty of the individual hu man being, as a gift from God. as clearly defined in the Declaration of Independence. The abolition of poverty may be a virtuous ideal but its accomplish ment must not. in our tradition, involve the abolition of liberty. When human beings become de pendent upon the political power of the state for their livelihood, the independence, of person, the dignity identification of economic survival of person, must disappear. It is the with police power that destroys the right of the individual to liberty. This spectacle we have now wit nessed in some 15 or 16 countries. The abolition of poverty is the ideal of Marxism but the Communists have reinstituted slavery as a hum an institution. Whereas in our civil ization, the concept has been that for every man there must be equal ity of opportunity to achieve what his own abilities, application, for titude and laboi will produce, in mentally planned society, every per the Marxian concept of a govern son must be reduced to the posi tion of a mechinical creature sub ject to the necessities of those who control the state. Hard times, such as our recent depression which lasted from 1929 to 1941. will produce alterations in the thinking of a people, but the ranger is that generations will arise who are completely cut loose from the traditions of a civilization. The shocking condition in our land is that ywe cider people, those who knew America before Roosevelt, should have forgotten what they once believed, that freedom for the individual, political and econo private ownership of poreptry and mic. built this great society. The the recognition of superior ac complish:'!-nts by individuals is the essence, of a free society. I nthe 1939 s. every country de veloped n Stalinesque type, but each was different. Men’s minds turned from tlie Natural Law to the vails, men are governed by abso- Golden Calf. When the law pre lutes. by the restraints that are imposed by a morality revealed by- God to man. Even among peoples who are outside the Judaic-Christ ian-Moslem civilizations, these mo ral restraints appear in myraid forms but always based upon the same concept, namely, that of a powe orutside ourselves that makes for righteousness, as Matthew Ar nold once put it. However, in the 1930’5. the trend seemed universal to turn from the law of life to the great man, the became infinitely wise and corn inspired. superior individual who petent, Nietzsche's Uebermensch the Superman became an adored creature, almost worshipped for his greatness and goodness. Os such. Stalin. Hitler. Mussolini and Roose velt were the best known. But smaller gods also appeared. It is to be said for Great Britain and Franc? that they passed through this period without becoming sub ject to this trend, although De Gaulle could have been such a figure and Aneurin Bevan obviously aspires to this type of glorification. The British and the French av oided the trend because they had kept alive among their peoples the fundamental traditions of their races. Their peoples are not ignor ant, of the meaning of liberty, and even when the British tried So cialism. they feared the loss of liberty. If our civilization is to survive, our people must not be ignorant of the meaning of America. The re education and the rededication of the American people, it would seem to me. is the really big task that faces us. cold long enough for my apple juice to become anything but slush, as in an auto radiator. After a few such transformations, the whole, business turned sour and then slimy, and I had some trouble dis posing cf the debris. This fall, as I say. I am happy to report that the apple orchard bore hardly a bushel of apples, all told. A bad year for apples, the ex perts said. My own thought on the subject is less pessimistic. TME DAILY RECORD, DUNN, If. C. —1 MISTER BREGER Cope. 19>2. FcaXuicj Syndicate, lac.. World right* toerved (0-14- ° “Hello, plumber? We only seem to call you when some thing’s wrong, so I thought it’s only fair to call now an’ say everything’s okay . . . Merry-60-round OIKW m»IO>l Aboard President Truman’s Train. Harry Truman has been gliding past country that he knows well, and it has been smiling at him. Outside his train window the alfalfa fields of Utah lay green and prosperous as he passed pick-up balers, which many farmers could not afford a few years ago, leaving a trail of green bales behind them. In California stack upon stack of wheat straw dotted the fields. At Provo, a new steel mill, built by the government when private industry refused to take the risk, has broughi new prosperity. Water seems more plentiful this year, and in some areas it has been brought down from the mountains by dams and reclamation projects pioneered by the Truman or Roose velt administrations. Yes, the Far West smiles on Harry Truman both politically and economically. It smiles but it isn’t boisterous. It doesn’t give him the noisy demonstrations that the crowds give Eisenhower, and the President in turn doesn’t usually give them the fire-and-brimstone, skin-'em-alive oratory that Ike de livers from the rear platform. Sometimes he does, but he doesn’t follow a general pattern. However, though the crowds are big and the faces friendly you de tect an undercurrent of Republi canism in these normally Demo cratic states. It's hard to put your finger on, but it's there. It’s there partly be cause the sun is smiling economi cally. There isn’t the economic pinch that there has been some times. There isn’t any workers’ and farmers’ fear of security. And in that respect, Harry Truman’s Re clamation, the new steel mille, the price supports perhaps may help defeat his own political ends. But perhaps more important is the de sire of a change. People aren’t particularly swayed by oratorical bombast on either side, and many are not at all enthusisastic about Eisenhower. And they don’t know much about Stevenson, except that he’s a little highbrow. But above all they want a change. WILL MCCARRAN BOLT TICKET In Nevada; hoary-haired Sen. Pat McCarran is stuck politically between the devil and the deep blue sea. A young war veteran named Tom Mechling succeeded in trouncing McCarran's former law partner, Allan Bible, in the Dem ocratic primaries, so the natural thing for McCarran to do would be to cut the Democratic ticket, which he hasn’t hesitated to do in the past. But if he cuts Democrat Mechling, then he elects GOP Sen. "Molly” Malone, for whom he has no respect whatsoever. Time after time, the brusque McCarran has snubbed or publicly browbeaten his GOP col league from Nevada. Once, when Malone was making CUTIES NM.lflt ItW " stM'li 4T( hj . i\ t* h 1.1) tMMt» RK.'UGU> “I don’t know what it is about lobsters, but after the 20th one I always est twinees rieht here.” 4 a Senate speech condemning the reciprocal trade treaty, McCarran, listening impatiently, finally whis pered to Sen. Walter George of Georgia that he would “put a stop to this.” Deliberately stalking across the front of the Senate chamber Mc- Carran planted himself in front of the other Senator from Nevada and fixed him with a glassy stare. Today McCarran, a Democrat, is likely to cut the Democratic ticket and secretly support Malone whom he doesn't rescpect but whom he can control. NIXON UNDERCUT WARREN Republicans leaders are not hap py over the fact that California’s popular Gov. Earl Warren welcom ed President Truman when the President’s train entered the state, and that he also is inviting both Stevenson and Eisenhower to speak from the steps of the State Capitol. However, Governor Warren is not only always elected by a large segment of democratic votes, but he has no particular reason to love Nixon and Eisenhower. It was Senator Nixon, a member of the California delegation, who bored from within at the Chicago convention in order to swing War ren’s own delegation over to Eisen hower. Knowland, the senior Cali fornia senator, was taken on the mountain-top by Senator Taft and offered the full weight of the Taft delegates from President if Taft failed to make it on the first ballot. In return Knowland Had to deliver the California delegation on the first ballot. Seldom has a young man been so severely tempted. But Senator Knowland remained loyal to his friend, Governor Warren. Nixon, however, didn’t. He cut Warren, got the vice presidency. OFF-RECORD REMARK HURT Another reason why the Gover nor of California isn’t overly happy about the GOP ticket is some re marks which Eisenhower made a bout him when visiting in San Francisco two years ago. Governor Warren had the courage to take a firm stand against the witch-hunters on the Board of Regents of the University of Calif ornia when they demanded a faculty oath that would delve back into the entire life of every professor. Though his stand was unpopular, Warren bucked his board of re gents and backed the faculty. This inspired General Eisenhower to make some off-the-record re marks at the San Francisco Press Club that he didn’t know of any loyalty oath he wouldn’t be willing to stand up and swear to. Naturally the remark got back to Warren. “It is interesting,” commented the Governor to a friend, “that the General made his remark off the record so it would not be quoted in the East. For he and President Walter Winch ell York mttom The late Gil Gabriel, the dra matic critic, replaced a critic on The N. Y. Sun. The latter, known for his wit and limp-wrist, twitted Gil with: "I hope you aren’t having any trouble fitting into my shoes.” "A little,” giggled Gabriel. “I’m not used to high heels.” Emil Coleman suspects the rea son Truman makes speeches from the rear platform of trains “is in case he has to make a quick get 7 away!” ' Margaret Truman’s teevy spot on Durante’s show prompted a scribe to point out that "the kid has a flair for comedy.” •Quietso,” quiete-pod's another "but she’ll never be the comedian in the family.” Billy Rose’s private-eyes are getting in the public's nose. Os all the treasures “missing” from Billy's home the nicest is Eleanor. Add Show-Oafs: M. Lowenthal in the N. Y. Herald Trib: "Obsessed by the riddle of spatial infinity." He means the wide open spaces upstairs are driving him nutz. “Dear W\V," writes a checker upper, "have you ever checked the oft-repeated claim by the Jerkopath that he majored in journalism’ at U. C. L. A.? It would be a swell debunker if you could debunk that claim.” U. C. L. A. reports no record of Barney Laroslaw (or Borey Pink) as “ever having been registered.” End Quotes. Esquire has a delightful Ber nard Baruch story. When Mr. America was 66. he flattened an insulting punk with a single blow. A cop, investigating the incident, asked Baruch what he could do for him. The 66-year-old (at the time) Baruch snapped: “Pick the so-and so up so I can hit him again!” Nat “King” Cole savs since all the sports writers claim the new heavy champ’s most important asset is courage, why not call him Rocky Moxieano? From a World-Telly story: “The average Senator admits he can’t live the way he wants to on his government salary. Most have other sources of income.” A Senator’s annual salary is sl2 500. And it may amaze the average Senator to learn that the average American is forced to sup port a family on an income that’s much less that $12,500. And if the average Senator cannot live on his government salary—why doesn’t he resign and concentrate on his other sources of income? Speaking of Slanted Reporting (as we were recently) an N B Commentator said this the other afternoon (“Time’s cover story on Gov. Williams of Michigan calls him an ineffective governor. Who says so? Time says so. They aren't quoting anybody. “They haven’t taken a poll of the people in Michigan. They, the Time editors (from their Rocke feller plaza towers) have looked down oh Michigan and decreed that Gov. Williams has been ineffective. "Now, I don’t pretend to know Michigan politics . .. but I do know something about journal ism .... No journalist who calls himself objective would do that. But not Time magazine. By de cree of Henry Luce & Co. Gov. Williams is “ineffective.’ I think that we should realize the power which these men hold over the minds of America these few men who publish Time and Li*e and we have a right to demand that they be objective. In that regard, I think Newsweek does a better job.” Practically taking the words right outta whose col’m? Brick Donated (Continued From Page One) above the entrance of one of the dormitory rooms. Many of Campbell’s alumni are responding in a magnificent way to the college’s growing pains. With the moving of Wake Forest with in the next two years, Campbell's administration and Board of Trus tees realize that she must be ready to accommodate additional scores of young men and women who will look to Campbell for their school ing due to its proximity. Conant of Harvard were the first to take a public stand against loy alty oaths. “Furthermore,” continued Warren, “it happens that the university which Ike heads has more Com munists and Reds than any other in the country.” Governor Warren is going out on a train campaign for the ticket. But his friends say it’s obvious his heart isn’t in it. i TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 14, 1952 The Worry Clinic By DK. GEORGE W. GRANT PHYLLIS IS TYPICAL OF 100,000 FINE GIRLS WHO COULD BE MARRIED WITH IN THE COMING YEAR IF WE COULD HELP THEM MEET DESIRABLE PROS PECTS. CHANCE SHOULD BE BANISHED FROM THIS VITAL PROBLEM OF SEL ECTING A HUSBAND OR WIFE. WE NEED A SCIEN TIFIC MARRIAGE BUREAU. CASE E-336: Phyllis P.. aged 29. is a very, lovely brunet. “Dr. Crane, I married 8 years ago but my husband died in Korea,” she told me. “Out marriage was ideally hap py, and the shock of losing Jim was terrible. “But I have finally become some what readjusted. Moreover, I real ize that happy marriage is the normal and proper way to live. "Besides. I should like to have some children and a home and a husband to care fpr. But where can I meet a suitable man? “I don't want to go to cheap dance halls or taverns. I am active in church work and teach a girl’s class in the Sunday School, but I don’t encounter many eligibles there; “I enjoy sports and like to swim* play golf and dance. I have a col lege education and come from a cultured home.” HOMES ARE VITAL It is a shame that society still forces young people to rely on chance as a means of meeting their prospective mates. But chance is not scientific. So we have injected logical planning and business efficiency into almost all other realms of human relax ation except romance. Thus, we don't rely on chance to prevent diptheria, or to keep a business concern out of the red ink. But when it. comes to that criti cal problem of establishing happy homes, we haven’t made any ap preciable scientiifc advancement in the past 300 years. Why. we even have scientific employment agencies just to put worker and job together. But we let our unmarried folks stumble around and marry un- tkh iflaa ericCI 's f° ret "°* or LAYMAN GROUP’S PSYCHO THERAPY CLINIC EVOLVES 18 PRECEPTS ON SUSPICION AND RESISTANCE TO NEWCOMERS DEAR MARY HAWORTH: For five years I have been acting as leader of a Midwest lay group which meets once a week for a psycho therapy clinic-—or round table dis cussion with a top flight psy chiatrist as consultant. In the course of our work we have accomplished some good re sults in individual cases, though this modern method of treating per sonal problems. Also we have evolved 18 helpful precepts which I feel may interest you and that you may wish to pass along. We find these ideas useful in reducing anxiety, suspicion and resistance to new comers; also in affording direction for discussion. They are as follows: 1. We became willing to accept the help that only psychotherapy can give us. 2. We believe that a neurosis it self is an adjustment mechanism that has worked, however imper fectly, at least at one time, and as such is stubbornly clung to. Thus “resistance” is universal. 3. We realize that words in them selves are but symbols of thought and have no power to frighten or defile. 4. We believe that everything happens to everyone but only neu rotics become disturbed to the point of needing outside help. 5. We believe tWat in a vast maj ority of cases evil is a mask worn' by some pitiful defense'mechanism. It can be removed by truth. 6. We believe our greatest enemy is solitude, our most potent friend people, people and more people. UNDERSTANDING BEATS TOLERANCE . 7. We believe that upon entering this clinic we had the wrong labels on practically all the boxes in our mental storeroom. The strippfhg of these labels from the wrong boxes and putting them on the right boxes is a long and fascinating process. Os course, the amazing thing is the number of labels we throw away altogether, 8. We never sit in judgment on others. Tolerance is good but true understanding does not accuse in the first place. 9. We believe adult anxieties are unresolved childhood conflicts, taking their nature from the age level during which the emotional disturbance developed. Bizarre .be havior is always natural for the age-level it represents. 10. We believe the “ideal image” for which we all search is fantasy and impossible of attainment. 11. We realize no one can in tellectualize his emotional prob- I leins away; that improvement canh wisely for lack of an adequate op portunity to view a wider range of eligible matrimonial prospects. HAPPY HOMES Happy homes are the greatest need of this Republic. We must have them in order to guarantee a new crop of cultured, American indoctrinated children for the next generation. a But thousands of school teJLiers and nurses and business. secretar ies a~e leading lonely lives though they are pretty, efficient and ideal marriage prospects. It isn't enough to have Uncle Sam clean our tenement districts and build modern apartments. Buildings don't make homes. You can succumb to divorce or Communism in the most un-to dat? house or city apartment! So we need a Scientific Marriage Foundation to put eligible mrij \nd women in contact with each ot.he-. We could easily produce 100.990 ideal marriages each year by such a scientific bureau. A MARRIAGE BUREAU /Each applicant would fill out a lengthy questionnaire and send in a recent photograph, plus a medi cal report as to his health, and a list of 3 or 4 local references. Maybe an initial registration fee of $5 or $lO should be charged. This > fee might be given to the -Field Agent of the Scientific Marfiage Foundation for making a personal visit, to the applicant and for checking with his or her references to make certain the applicant was a bona fide prospect. 1 now read thousands of letters from you men and women who want to marry but are held down by your jobs so you 'haven’t time to tour the country for a mate. It grieves me to see such fine persons so handicapped in meeting eligible prospects. ft! Won’t some of you happily mar ried folks help finance such a worthwhile Marriage Foundation? It would be an unexcelled home missionary project for the churches. (Always write to Dr. Crane in eare cf The Daily Record, enclos ing a long 3c stamped, addressed envelope and a dime to cover typ ing and printing costs when you send for one of his psychological charts.) $ come only through a warm human sharing of our common plight. 12. What psychiatry calls “free association” is invaluable. The open discussion of our problems (catharisis) is not only the most effective means of relieving ten sion: it invariably brings comfort through an astonishing mutuality of experience, spontaneously re vealed by ethers. WORK, WORSHIP, LOVE AND PLAY 13. The closer we balance work, play, love ind worship in our daily lives, the nearer we come to peace of mind. 14. The identification and under standing” of emotional immaturity in others and in ourselves is the ultimate in compassion. 15. We believe that most of our troubles are of our own contriv ing but few of them are our Lult. The wellsprings of guilt are almost always found in innocence. We never forget, however, that the companion of understanding is responsibility. 16. Reluctance or inability to meet responsibility is not so much a lack cf courage or wht the world calls strength of character, as it is con fusion. Tranquillity accepts res ponsibility. 17. We believe that all neurotics are subject to cyclical return- of mild depression, and if we can set up a framework of what we be lieve to be adult emotional be havior, we will, to our surprise, find ourselves filling it. There is wonder ful support in the scaffolding of routine. 18. We believe psychotherapy can remove the emotional blocks to spiritual enlightenment and lead us to the threshold of a tranquil faith. Dear K. G.: Thanks a millior for this rich contribution to sane thinking. I hope readers all over the land are given opportunity to clip and keep your 18 precepts for gaining peace of mind. M. H. Cotton Ginning Behind Year Ago The Bureau of the Census report shows that 7.941 bales of cotton were ginned in Harnett Cor ;ty from the crop of 1952 prior to Oct ober 1, 1952 as compared with 8,751 bales from' the crop of 1951. CHARLOTTE (IF) Funeral services were scheduled here to day for Linda Gale Terry, five month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ansel S. Terry, who was strangled yesterday when her head became caught between the bars of tier playpen. ('
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