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PAGE TWO (Ihp «B aiig Jlkmrd DUNN, N. G. Published By RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY At 311 East Canary Street NATIONAL AD vERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. W 5-217 E. 42nd St., New York 17. N. Y- Branch Offices In Every Major City SUBSCKIPTIONRATES 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 RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: SB.OO per year; RM 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 as second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, N. C., under the laws of Congress, Act of Ma~ch 3, 1879 Every afternoon, Monday through Fridav Take That Test Today As of Saturday only about one-tenth of the 31,000 persons in Harnett County over 15 years of age had taken the free X-ray offered in the mass X-ray program now being carried on throughout the county. The average of cases in counties where this survey has been conducted has been one case discovered in every 1,000 persons examined. If this average holds good in Harnett and everyone who is eligible takes the test, the mass X-ray should result N in the discovery of 31 unsuspected cases. However, these cases will not be discovered unless everyone takes the free tests that are now being offer ed. Consequently, we urge everyone in the above 15,- year-old age group to take this test. You may think you are in perfect health today. But suppose you are one of those 31 persons who, ap parently healthy today, will have active tuberculosis a year from now. You wouldn't know it now. TB has no noticeable symptoms at the beginning. Fortunately, however, tuberculosis can be discovered early, even be fore the symptoms are apparent, by means of a chest X-ray. That is the reason it is vitally important to take this free offer. Physicians agree that every adult, should get into the habit of a yearly physical examination, in cluding a chest X-ray. Tuberculosis can "be cured, but, just as its onset is slow, so is the recovery, particularly if treatment is not begun in the early stages of the disease. It is, there fore, of the greatest importance to the individual who develops TB that his disease be discovered early and treatment begun at once. It is important to the com -munity, too, for a person with early tuberculosis can spread the disease to others even before he knows he is ill. The trailers on which the tests are being .conducted are spotted in places where they are easily accessible to the residents of the community. All that is necessary is to present yourself at the trailer. The entire process takes only about two minutes of your time. And it could be the most important two min utes of your life. Why not take this time to make cer tain that you are as well as you feel? Tree Lighted For Gl Who Won't Return ALBUQUERQUE. N. M. HP 1— The branches are brown and brit tle and the ornaments a little dusty, but the Christmas tree that was decorated in 1950 still w'aits for a Marine who will never come home. ‘Tve been delayed, but save my Christmas for me." Cpl. Richard Lopez wrote in a letter to his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Salvador Lopez, in December of 1950. A shovt time before he had writ ten that he was coming home for good after six years in a Marine Corps. His father bought a tree and his younger brothers and sisters trimmed it. Then came the letter from Rich ard saying he would be delayed because the Chinese Reds had en tered the Korean war. 'But save Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON The weather outlook in general calls for bliz zards and I believe you’d better join the Reo Motor C 0... and me by our fireside for some comfortable reflections upon the snowplow of the future. This gasoline-powered widget painted pastel green chufts through t.he drifts outside in the cold while yon. the operator sit in the living room bv the window in your carpet slippers, guiding ;t down the path by remote control. Such a magnificent boon to man kind ri ret on the market: the management isn’t even consider ing such a thing yet. But an old friend of mine who is connected with this progressive firm hap pened through town, noticed mv puny effofts with a snow shovel, and' told me this heart-warming tale of industrial research. The Reo people are leading man ufactures. among other things, of power lnwnmowers. For these they! make a kind of vacuum cleaner at tachment for sucking up snow from the ground and spewing it over to the side. One of their engineers added the electronic equipment to a test model. On his plow is a small re ceiving set. In his living room is the tin" broadcasting station that sends the immi'ses that guide the machine a-ound t h e boccnia bush es and stop it when the job ’s done. Even now he is experiment ing with this euuipment in New England where, like no other snow shoveler for miles around, he prays between blizzards for more snow-. Mv man said the trouble w^tn my Christmas for me.” he wrote. Following long weeks of waiting came the word the Marines had been trapped at the Chosin Reser voir. But this was followed by word that Richard had escaped and was coming home. The Lopez family had to move to another house, but the treewas moved so carefully, that not an ornament was damaged. More weeks of -'''waiting followed and then came a’ telegram from Washington. Richard was drowned at Kobe. Japan. July 15. 1951. The lights are turned on once again this year on that special tree for Richard and if the tree holds up they'll be on again next Christ mas. "I told him I'd save his Christ mas for him.” his mother said. ■ this arrangement now is its deli cacy. Let the operator inside take his hand off the dial for an in stant and outside there's likely to be a collision between snow plow and an elm tree. This is hard on the vacuum tubes. Inclined to jolt ’em out of action. No prospective customer, he cpn tmued. would favor tinkering with the radio when the thermometer was 20 below. He'd be wearing gloves, anyhow, and probably make a real mess of it. Furthermore, he said, this first electronic snow plow costs like sin. He didn’t know the exact price, but, he guessed about 51.500. Fair : enough. I tried to put it out of mind as a dream that never would romp true. Then today T met a couple of gents from the West ern Electric Co., which manufac tures the stuff that goes into tele phones. They were bubbling, liter ally, with news about transitors, which their firm seems to have originated. The wav thpv. explained it. a t v nnsitor is a tinv piece of metal about the size of a match head that'll do all the work of a vacu um. tube. It uses hardly anv power never gets hot. seldom wears out. and laughs at bumps. As of now. the Armv and Navy are using all the transitors that can be made. b”t traduction is starting to boom and thev see the day not far off when the wrist-watch radio and the tinv TV sets will be realistic. Thev’ve already built laboratory models of radios smaller than cig- i arette packages, while RCA a couple cf weeks ago announced i These Days £ckvUkij CHARITY BEGINS AT HOME This is a good time of the year to write this, for as we approach the Christmas Season and the end of our fiscal year, our. thoughts in evitably turn to the charities we .give. Christmas has, in our country, became the holiday of giving even for those of our people who are not Christians. And as it is easier to give when everyone else is doing it, the custom and habit needs little encouragement. Last year, the American people gave more than $4,200,000,000 to private charities. It is an enormous outpouring of the American heart. When it is realized that last year was also one of enormous taxes, the contribution and sacrifices were all the more real. This amount does not represent the whole of our contribution to charities, because many of our citizens help care for relatives and friends and freely fill the hat that is passed around among good fellows. And many give to churches and put coins into boxes. Giving is an American habit. It is true that manv contributions are deductible from the income tax and it is to be hoped that every one takes full advantage: of that. But much is given beyond the a miunts that may be deducted be cause the heart does not stay the hand. I hone that no .socialized groups in Washington will ever reject, the concept that giving to charity should remain a deductible item in the income tax returns. Tt is unfortuante that some of our larger charities have got them selves in bad by hiring soliciting firms to raise funds. The question of how to raise funds and how to keen administrative costs down bothers every charitable organiza tion. Personally. I do not like to re ceive ornate and expensively print ed brochures. They seem to be an excessive expenditure. I always feel that if it costs that much to con vince me. there must be something wrong with the organization or with me. In either case. I'give to some group I know something about. That is a matter of taste, just as I never respond to a campaign but. do most of the giving for this family in the month of December when I know how generous we can afford to be. Nevertheless, there are some campaigns that are impressive, liks this year’s "March of Dimes.” the | initial meeting of which I attended and heard the story of the great experiments that are being made to find a preventive serum for polio. It was heartening to listen to Basil O'Connor tell that story and of the wonderful work that is being done to save our children from this dread disease. But the most encouraging fact is that come depression, war, high taxes, efforts at socialized medicine aud other oppressions. private charity is net dried up ,among the American people. "The Wall Street Journal" estimates that in 1951 the giving of the American people exceeded 1941 bv 180 percent. And it is startling to learn that the best, know charities do keep the costs ri 'Wn by employing volunteer workers. The American Red Cross, ‘or Instance, is aided by a volun teer, force of 1.500.009 Americans who give their time to the. raising of funds: the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis reports 500.000 volunteers. The associations of the people are important in our kind of civiliza tion-where we cannot depend upon government to do everything for us. It is a part of our. concept of life that the people enjoy the privilege o| helping their own, of serving others, of working in com munal groups. It is wholesome to have Community Chests where men and women of all strata of society can work together in a common service without regard to race, religion or personal prejudices. Charity is a binding element in our society. It is good to know that not only do individuals give as they can but that businesses are recognizing what they can give under- the law. It, is estimated that corporations are now giving about $250,000,000 which is a small sum. The tax law permits corporations to give 5 per cent. which is deductible from their income tax returns. The likelihood is that charity from corporations will increase. Charity is love. Unlike taxes, it is never compulsory. ■ It is a free will offering to God 'and man. It is American to have an expression of free will in suqh generous dim ensions. its first television set powered exclus’ve'v bv transitors. So I pet tip to these gents the idea of the remote-control lawn mower and -or snowplow. You should have seen their eyes light up. They said such equipment was relatively simple to makg. that transitors would make it practical for hard use. and that volume pre dation would cut the costs dras tically. Reo Motors, meet Western Elec tric. Mr. Western, shakes hands with Mr. Reo. I’ve done my good deed for the dav and now I can hardlv wait until you fellows get together I’m hoping against hope it doesn’t snow again until you do. nO. DAILY RECORD, DUNN, H. 1X CUTIES ■mi “Why, Gertrude ... is there someone else?” l~qu wmm rf&MERRY-00- ROUND If >t»w MA»>ow __ WASHINGTON. At the big White House farewell dinner whicn President Truman gave for his cabinet, Gov. Adlai Stevenson stood in the reception line alongside tne President, shaking hands with guests. Spying Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ives, his brother-in-law and sister, Adlai said: "Welcome to the White House. I told you I’d get here before Eisen hower." 'T always knew we'd get to see Adlai in the White House,” shot back his sister to President Truman. "But we hoped it would be for more than one evening.” NEW JUSTICE DEPARTMENT Most important spotlight in the entire Eisenhower administration will jpe .focused on the Justice De partment after Jan. 20. Because of the corruption issue, what justice does, how it prosecutes, who it ap points will be watched more care fully than any other department. As a rebuilder of American mo rale, justice will also be all-import ant. For the American public badly needs a restoration of confidence in honesty of government. One unfortunate byproduct of exposing corruption is that every thing abort government is dis honest, and no government official is to be trusted. Young men who once wanted to serve in govern ment shun such service. Conscien tious officials already in govern ment become ashamed of their pro fession. This is the kind of atmosphere Which eventually rots any Demo cratic system, eventually would make for Communism. Parent Attorney General James McGranery, after getting off to a slow start, is now doing a good job of cleaning up corruption spots. But much important is the personnel which will run the; Justice Department under Eisen hower. The man who will pick the per sonnel and manage it under new Attorney General Brownell is William Rogers, former counsel for the Senate Investigating Commit tee, now to be Deputy Attorney General. A Republican who got crime-busting experience under Dewey. Rogers came to Washington when the Republicans controlled the Senate in 1946. Taking over di rection of the old Truman com mittee, he did such a good job that the Democrats continued him when thev rewon control of Congress in 1948. And it was Rogers, working un der a Democrat, fair-minded Sen. Clyde Hoey of North Carolina, who CUTIES “Well ... I had to buy SOMETHING, to get a choc!:* cashed!” t ! exposed a lot of Democratic in i fluence peddling The deep freezes > of General Vaughan, the five-per -1 centers, and confirmed this col : umns’ exposes, such as the opera i tions of John Maragon and the scandals of the Tanforan race track. , Rogers not only is honest, but he i is diligently honest. Having been practicing law for the past three • years, he recently informed his law j clients that he could handle no more court arguments for them, not , even prior to Jan. 20. Since he does not take office until Jan. 20, there appeared to be nothing wrong with j his continuing private law practice until that date. However. Rogers feared that if : he appeared in court, some judges might be influenced by the fact that in the future he will pass on their promotions, so he leaned over back ■ wards, gave up aU court appear ances. This is the young Republican who is on the lookout for diligently honest Republicans dedicated to public service, the kind recruited in the Roosevelt administration to operate the Justice Department and U. S. Attorneys’ offices through out the country. Upon his operation will partly depend restoration of confidence in government. The man who will have a great deal to say about the hottest po tato in the new Congress revision of the Taft-Hartley Act is a 51- year-old Pennsylvanian, Congress-, men Sam McConnell, who says: "I’ve never ducked a hot potato in my life and I don’t intend to start now.’’ As chairman of the House Labor Committee, McConnell, a Republi can, is bound to come into conflict with fellow Republican Bob Taft, who wants to do his own rewriting cf the Taft-Hartley Act. McConnell, cn the other hand, thinks it better, to junk the entire* Act, write an other one. "We ought to have a simple, un derstandable law that makes sense to the man In the street,” say Mc- Connell. "If that means a completely new bill, then we ought to have a new bill.” McConnell's father was a Metho dist minister. McConnell himself is a Presbyterian with a deep re ligious conviction against unfair ness to any group, whether it be a labor union or a racial minority. He favors a “voluntary” FEPC pro gram. administered by a Federal Commission with power to expose and recommend against employment discrimination because of race, color, or creed. The Pennsylvanian is against the Walter WlneheD York NOTES OF A NEWSPAPERMAN Dept, of Misinformation: From The N. Y. Post (The Liar’s Den): "Winchell told the General he had it on the highest authority that if he ran for the Presidency Gen. George Marshall would take the stump against him throughout the land. This same Ike-Marshall story is the highlight of the Winchell p(°ce in FLAIR ANNUAL (W W note: At all book stores) .... The 'act is, Marshall NEVER stood in Ike’s way— and will be his guest cf honor at the inaugural.” The Hiss-Acheson school of thought also advances the novel idea that Gen. Marshall was not Opposed to Eisenhower running in ’4B Our sources were 2 eye-and-ear witnesses (both Democratic U. S. Senators) who were at the stag party and heard Marshall boom his threat with wordage that included: “I could have run. But I am not one of those soldiers who tries to cash in on my heroics, etc.” The facts are that the highest Democratic National Committee men, plus Mayor O’Dwyer, James " Roosevelt, Jake Arvey and the A. 5 D. A.’s best crackpots wanted to ’ force Truman to quit in favor of " ike Marshall told intimates (in ' ’4B l that he would stand by the ; President and take the stump, if • necessary, to keep any military man , ' from assuming the position of i Commander-in-Chief, etc. : ( ! it was widely publicized that : Marshall tell that the U. S. Army t had built up a great reputation with i the American people by staying out j - of politics • His mind may have , i changed, of course, after watching ; the disgusting spectacle of civilians ] 'and Truman pa's) invading the ( [ army in the shape of Harry j s Vaughan. ; : i At any rate, I relayed the story . over the yjir and in the papers . twice—and never a denial oP’Sny- thing from Marshall or his friends. , ’ told 't to Eisenhower in Feb., 19 , 48. and he seemed disturbed. “I , can’t believe it.” he said. “Gen. t Me’-shall has always been so civil , and kind to me" .... I told it to Gen. Beedie Smith in the Stork ' and he said: "I don’t believe it. He isn’t that kind of man.” I know Gen. Marshall isn’t. Buf 1 1 I aFo know that my sources, two cf the most resoected men in the U.sS. Senate, were there and heard it and Beedie wasn’t .. Marshall, 1 incidentally, has never said that he changed his mind. But if he did -he is only exercising that right claimed so desperately by “ex-com -1 my” editors. From Robert Bendiner’s column in the N. Y. Post: “Whv does Dulles want tn be cleared bv th» FBI when he’s already been OK’d by Joe Mc- Catrhv?” Talk about slanted reporting! look who’s talking! This Bendiner guv, who is on the staff with “for mer Communist" Wechsler, was a card-carrving member of the Com munist Party! ! “Dear Walter.” writes a SSO Win dow-Man. "When you tipped Olym pic Views; (On the Grass) we knew that when it ran in the heavy mud it would be the same thing. So whe it would be the same thing. So when it came in paying S3O last week -at Bowie we all wish to thank you very very much. You are a Very Nice Man. Olympic View. What a wonderful name, so you can look down on those $2 bettors. Watch yourself crossing the streets, don’t catch cold, and take your vitamins every day. ' “P. S.: Also, don’t stop spitting in all those Ingrates’ eyes.” b “compulsory” approach, believes public opinion is sufficient to deal with cases of job bias, provided they are exposed by a Federal commission. He got a voluntary FEPC Bill through the House in the 81st Congress, only to have it shelved by the Senate. McConnell will try again in the next session. Still another hot potato will be Federal aid to education, which created a religious ruckus in the last Congress. McConnell is opposed to full Federal aid to education, but plans to put up a battle for school aid to needy and defense areas, as well as Federal funds for school construction. “I’m against anything that would ” Impose government controls on our schools.” says the Pennsylvania Congressman, “but will do every thing in my power to give every youngster in the United States a decent, safe and healthy school to ■ learn in, as well as decently paid teachers. “You can’t please everybody',” McConnell says. “Some folks in my district didn’t like it when I took it upon myself, as a Repub lican, to get tire Federal Mine Safety Bill through the last Demo cratic Congress, gut I'ftgurdd that preventing mine tragedies by stricter inspection was more iihpor tant than whether people liked me qr disliked mg.” WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 17, 1952 The Worry Clinic jyj|Pf| By DR. GEORGE W. CRANK Do people ‘ tease you about your freckles? Or your big ears or large mouth or blushing? Then be grate ful! God thus gave you an advan tage over others, for people seldom tease you unless it makes them feel happy. But when you make others happy, you win their friend ship and gain hi popularity. Cap italize on your unusual facial char acteristics, therefore, instead of looking on them as liabilities. Case F-355: Mary K., aged 19, is the blushing coed whom I describ ed last week. “Dr. Crane, it makes me feel so unhappy because the boys tease me about my blushing,” she said. "Even if I learn how to divert their attention by using your Com pliment Club idea, I still will feel humiliated to think I blush when other people do not. "I am afraid boys will not want me for a wife because I am thus handicapped and inferior to other girls." WHY BOYS TEASE A girls who can make men laugh and feel happy, actually is superior to the average woman, so Mary is lucky! Those same men who tease her, are usually somewhat shy and un sure of themselves in a social sit uation. The fact that Mary blushes, thus proves to these men that she is not one of those superior sophisticated persons. So they immediately recognize that they don’t have to feel awed and tense, nervous and fearful when around her. Mary makes them feel more self assured and self-confident. So they like her, for there is a law of ap plied psychology to the effect that the way to make a man like you is to make him feel important, sup erior, confident, etc. Mary’s blushing is not the stumb ling block which she has errone ously imagined it to be. Instead, it is actually a stepping stone to social conquests and greater pop ularity. BLUSHING GIRLS POPULAR Men actually are happier with . an attractive girl who blushes. ' - Woman Doubts Science In As suming That Mental Illness Traces Back To A Disturbed Childhood DEAR MARY HAWORTH: For many years I have been devotedly following your column and its em phasis on psychiatry. However, observing the many ; boys who have returned from the wars with some form of mental illness, and taking into account their various backgrounds and ex perience, I can’t help wondering if we are on the right track in as suming that mental disorders date back to wrong thinking in child hood. Despite the propaganda for psy chiatry, I wonder if we aren’t overlooking a possibility that men tal illness may have a more tang ible basis than wrong thought. Perhaps it is communicated by a virus! We already have evidence of the paresis of syphilis and the par alysis of mentality in encophalities. Also we know there are other di seases that affect personality. Psychiatry has proven no cure and recovery in many cases, as in other diseases, may be due to na tural causes. Perhaps only when doctors and laity regard mental illness In its true light, will it be LaFayette Honor Roll Announced Guy Daves( principal of the La- Fayette School, today announced the six-week honor roll for the second period, as follows: Miss Bryan’s room: Charles Ed ward Grady, Robert Plowman Jr., Phyllis Ann Gardner. Nancy Car- Men Tutor. Mrs. York’s Room: Phyllis Bar bour. Mrs. Sloan’s room: Ronald Arrn old, Jimmie Dean, Vivien Ashworth, Becky Jo Gehee, Carol Wester. Mrs. Whittington’s room: Eddie Moore. Betty Jean Betts, Faith Col lins. Jackie Weathers. Miss E. Matthews’ room: Sylvia Jcy Mcore, Joyce Lanier. Mrs. Shearon’s room: Barbara Jean Gardner. Linda Rue Griffin. Mrs. Daves’ room: B. F. Kendall, Jr. Mrs. Stephenon’s room: Dollie Holder, Janet Steed. Mr. Senter’s room: Nancy Cur rin. Ruth Ann Arnold. Mrs. Pruitt’s room: Lucille Olive. Mrs. Adams’ room: Joyce Jordan. . Mrs. Arnold’s room: Mack Smith, ‘Mary Johhson, Celia Midgette. Miss Champion’s room: Marlene Kendall. Mr. Foxx’s room: Verlene Mit- . Chell. Shirley Rollins, Mae Omie Hobby. Mias H. Matthews’ room: And rew Dewar. SaTah Brown, Betty Smith, Patej Stephens. than when they are with one who doesn’t. That is doubly proved by the they continually tease her in order _ to increase her blushing! For men don’t ordinarily do things which make them unhappy! On the contrary, their voluntary behavior is directed toward in creasing the sum total of their own 1 enjoyment. If they tease a girl, therefore, it generally indicates they are enjoy ing themselves by so doing. Since the art of winning friends, , plus sweethearts, is to make enjoy themselves while in your company, the blushing girl auto matically has an advantage ov6r her apparently cool, poised and sophisticated sisters. Unfortunately, most blushing girls don’t recognize this natural advantage with which they are endowed, so they flee from their teasers and fail to take advantage of these golden opportunities. MAKE PEOPLE LAUGH If you have freckles or a big or large ears or otner features that cause people to laugh and tease you. be grateful! For you hold a psychological advantage. That’s one reason why ugly men often win such beautiful wives. And just remember that people don’t laugh at you for the purpose of making YOU feel little or un important! Instead, they laugh be cause you make THEM feel sup erior and more important! Mem orize that axiom of psychology! f For you are simply the stepping stone by which they attain a higher state of ego inflation. But that is the way to win friends and popularity, namely, make people feel inflated in their ego as a result of being with you. Then they grow fond of your company and want another date, partly so they can tease you some more! You are thus fortunate. So make capital out of your sup posed defects. You have a headj start in winning popularity. (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). • stripped of shameful implications, > and then we may begin to under stand its nature its cause and • communicability. What do you ' say? R. D. g, HUMAN POSSESS •MANY RESOURCES ' DEAR R. D.: Although I am can i didly respectful of the good poten l tials implicit in psychiatry, when ; practiced by humble, altruistic en lightened minds, nevertheless the ; fact is that this column emphasizes other helpful resources, too. ! For example. I believe in and stress the useful employment of common sense, fortitude faith in God personal responsibility for self- m , help and the like, in treating prob- * lems. It is axiomatic that the Lord helps those who help themselves— . which means that even God needs . human help or cooperation in ex ecuting His purposes. How futile, then to expect the specialist in any , field to "know it all’ or to do the whole job in reconstructing a torn up life. The popular attitude of ironic disdain or scornful distrust aimed at psychiatry seems to be a con- ft sequence of expecting too much from the profession, while respect ing its exponents too little, and understanding their works not at all in my qpinion, the branch of scientific inquiry labeled psychiatry is a pioneering aspect of a new evolutionary push m the growth of human awareness. It htis to do with spelling out a vocabulary of insight into the subjective reaches, of human nature. It refers to an expansion of human consciousness, just dawning on the race as a whole. BASIC SHAME IS BEING ILL Though admittedly faulty, fum bling and tentative in its present form, psychiatry, such as it is, when utilized at its best, already may be justly regarded as an instrumen tality of God another of His means of “let there be light.” whereby to deliver mankind from the pitfalls of stubborn Ignorance. Speaking of the shameful impll- ’ cations of mental illness, a more compassionate charitable view Is , prevalent today. However, when we more fully understand the origins , of all forms of illness, we may realize that the “shame” of illness , is associated with the “shame” of , secret sin. In short, it may be our , unconscious emotional states, of destructive kind such a# fear, : hate, resentment, etc., that event ually brand us with disease and • disorders. Such was .the thera peutic principle taught by Jesus. Mary Haworth counsels through, her colum, not by mall or personal interlew. Write her in care of (The Daily Record).
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Dec. 17, 1952, edition 1
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