Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Dec. 23, 1952, edition 1 / Page 11
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PAGE FOUR <lkz jPathj Jksard DUNN, N. C. Published By RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANI At 311 East Canary Street NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. W 5-217 E. 42nd Si.. New York 17. N ! Branch Office* In Ever; Major Cit? SUBSCRIPTION'RATES BY CARRIER. 20 cents per week: $8.50 per year In advance; U for six months; $3 for three month* IN TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND ON RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: s€.o« per year; S3JO for six months; $2 for three month* OUT- OF-81 ATE: fS.SO per year in advance; $3 for six months. II 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 Friday Millions Os Capitalists Real progress is being made in the campaign to create a nation of share owners—of people with a personal in terest in maintaining and strengthening the system we call capitalism, as opposed to the liberty-destroying sys tems we know as communism and socialism. The Brookings Institution recently issued the first comprehensive study of share ownership in' America. And several extremely encouraging facts stand out. First of all, one-quarter of all the owners of shares in publicly-owned corporations made their investments in the last three years. Second, six per cent of all the owners either became share owners in the single year of 1951 or acquired additional shares during that year. Third, the report thoroughly debunks the old idea that stocks are only for the privileged few. Investors include clerks, far mers, small shopkeepers, salesmen, skilled and unskilled workmen, housewives, and members of just about every business and profession and trade you can think of. And the legions of share owners include those in every income bracket, right down to the undcr-$2,000 level. The bulk of our share owners are in the medium-in come category. They are thrifty, representative Americ ans who managed to save some money and invested a part of it in the stocks of companies in whose future they have faith. A great many of them own shares in the concerns for which they work. These are the kind of people who made this country strong and have kept it free—and who mean to do exactly that in the future. The fact that their number is swiftly growing should hearten everyone who believes in America and what it stands for. They Were Wiser In 1788 As the old adage says, history has a habit of repeat ing itself. The following quotation is an interesting ex ample of that truism: “It has been found by experience that limitation in the price of commodities is not only ineffective for the purpose proposed, but likewise produc tive of very evil consequences, to the great detriment of the public service and the grievous oppression of indi viduals.’’ Save for a slight arehhism in tire language, that could have been written today. Actually, it is a resolu tion which was passed by the Continental Congress way back in 1788—a period when Americans valued liberty above all else, and held fast to the philosophy that that government is best which governs least. When will our modern Congress show a little of the wisdom displayed by the Continental Congress? Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON. g. Claus can’t possibly take care of all my wishes by next Tuesday, but his memory is long and I figure it won't hurt to jot down my hones for Christ mas. 1953. Such as a little money left f om the revenue collector’, va cuum cleaning. Mv taxes don't have to be much smaller to make me smile, oh, wise men of Congress; I know the size of the bills you most pay and I’ll settle for a token reduction, Just to show you’ve got, my interest at hea rt. Any bureaucrat who so much as dares suggest a new scheme, no matter how high-minded, to spend more of m,v money, r want; stuf fed in my stocking. I'll take care of him personally. By Christmas next yea- I ex pect a five-cert rup of coffee, and I’ll not be satisfied by any more Senatorial investigations of the high cort of the cup that cheers. When the gentletn.cn start asking ques tions, seems like, the price goes up. I want fewer enps and a little more dignity around the White House, which Is a symbol to m° of all that is good. It may sound as though I’m cutting off my nose, but I’d appreciate fewer scandals to write about. It is no fun to bang out items about thieves in high places, since they inevitably have their paws in my own po-kets. and I'll be pleased to take my chances on finding pleasanter subjects. StPl and all. the e are a couple or th-ee gents who be’ene In jail (you who have followed these dispatches know the ones I mean) and it'll give me some satisfaction to see them there. That sounds like a sour yuletidn wish, but my charity goes only sc far. On December 25. 1953. if not. before. I trust I’ll receive words of a lew Federal agencies razed and turned into parking lots. I mean outfits like the Reconstruction Fin ance Ccrp.. which was established to cope with depressions'. I don’t insist that it be abolished; mider -tand, but nn boom times like these it. could be put under wraps ana I. don’t mean mink. Fact is. I mentioned a while back that the Agriculture Department spent half its billions teaching far mers how to grow more stuff and the other half buying up the re sultant surpluses. My joking sug gestion was that the whole shebang could be closed. This caused such bitter reaction f cm certain mas ters of things rural, that I’m be ginning to think perhaps the idea has merit. The filler of my Christ mas storking at least Can think it over. I want for Christmas, but. do not really expect to get. a formal statement saying the’ Army and the Navy have decided to centralize their buying and start paying the same prices for shoes, light bulbs, spark plugs and a few hundred thousand other items. The experts estimate this could save us tax payers upwards of a billion dollars a year. The military boys insist they arc working hard on this de sirable result. The record shows they’ve been working on it- - since 1911. I’d also appreciate a notarized document, certifying that no Fed eral purchasing agent had bought any more stuff than he needed. The bureau that got enough fluor escent light buibs to last so- the next 90 years can start using them up. These gifts and others I’ll doubt less think of later I want wappscl in the government’s beautiful red tape. I mean the genuine article as purchased under specifications as amended for tape, cotton, red. I have copies of the original red-tape orders p-inted on white paper. I also own the amended red-tape reg ulations printed on green. I intend to have them framed for presen tation to Santa Claus. Should give liim pause. These Day< © By THE DEPRESSION LOOK Men are as they think and those who are products of the Great De pression are likely to think in an , atmosphere of fear. They take on a clerk-like disposition whether in government or business, recalling that courage and enterprise and thrift were forced down in the ugly days of the 1930’5! Those who risked most, seemed to suffer most. This, perhaps more than any other cause, produced the lust for security in place of the vision of self-made career based on initia tive and thrift. A few enterprising individuals risked greatly, even in the worst days of the Depression. Picking up businesses that had , collapsed or ware on the verge of coilapse and building them into mighty enterprises. Other brave souls started new ventures and many of them did well. And some of the older ones were rescued by new management. But even among these people, the fear of a recurrent Depression had the effect of penurious thinking, not so much in the definition of penny-pinching as in the sense of keeping one eye always peeled for the worst that never happened. A people that has not the cour age to fail, never reaches Olympian heights of enterprise, because the view is narrowed: the mind is small. The depression attitude ex presses itself in all strata of society in the desire for a guaran teed life in the form of govern ment-provided social securities, in pensions, in fringe benefits and similar devices to eliminate risk. In government circles this has been particularly true and has been responsible, in no small measure, for the fear of Russia, the depend ence on Britain, the appeasements in policy and the acceptance of such insults as we take in. pur stride, for instance, in the United Nations, We did experience the historic fact that we could win a war and lose it simultaneously and that frightened our statesmen as much as the Depression frightened our generation. If that could happen, anything could happen. Yet. the ex planation for it is so simple that it should have been understood: we were courageous in fighting: we were cowardly in negotiation. When we fought we were old-fashioned Americans: when we negoitateci, we lived in the depression-bom at mosphere of fear. We thought that we could buy peace by dollars as We gained prosperity by subsidies. Those who inherited great or even small fortunes were particul arly affected by the fear psychology of the Depression. They saw their fortunes diminish by the loss it values and the depreciation of currency! They witnessed the effect of taxation, especially inheritanc; taxes, on the rich. They concluded that there would be no more rich men in America, They hoped to mitigate the force of the revolu tion. Many of them joined Roosevelt, not because they believed in him. Actually, in private conversations, they ridiculed him shamelessly. But they did believe that the techniques which he evolved in the New Deal arrested the revolution before whicn they cringed during the Depression years. They believed that he had saved them from the barricades and the guillotine. They put on the masquerade of a hardly understood liberalism, in the hope that when the revolution did come, they would not be taken for reaction aries. Many men and women of this segment of our society worked their way into the numerous agencies which, since the war years, have been associated with the conduct of our foreign relations and the development of our foreign trade. There was no courage in their hearts. All that they could permit themselves were such ideas as “the containment policy." or the sup port of socialist parties in Europe, or appeasing the Russians in the hope that they might become good Christians by imitation. They were always afraid because they were conditioned by the Depression years to be afraid, to live in fear cf the very revolution which they always saw before them as the only future possible for them. I write not of Republicans nr Democ“ats hut of a sick generation that had lost confidence in away of life that had given them greater benefits, even during the Depres sion, than any other people en joyed. They were without expecting at best to stop the tide 1 of revolution before it completely en gulfed them. They were willing to give up most to save something. Maybe Eisenhower, through his personality, can revive high cour age. Maybe a new generation will now take hold. AIR EXPRESS GROWS CHICAGO HP) Air express shipments in and out of Chicago increased 12.7 per cent during the first week ip October, compared with the same period in 1951. A University of Illinois veteri narian says the best time to vac cinate pigs against hog cholera is at weaning time. Any later will soon take the profit out of swine raising. ERR DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. A MISTER BREGER A, “Sometimes I just don’t understand these highway signs at all!” _ v qi» mwciT S»MHBW-fiO-Rolß® 8y »i*glOa WASHINGTON. - Bob Ander son of Vernon, Texas, who takes over the job of riding herd on the Admirals as as Secretary of the Navy next January, has ridden herd on thousands of cattle as one of the biggest farmers in the world. He is manager of the 570.000 - acre Waggoner ranch in Northern Texas, second largest in the United States, where he runs a fanning op eration which makes an Easterner rub his eyes in bewilderment. There during the shipping season, entire freight trains back into his rail road siding to carry steers to big city markets. There, also. Maverick cattle, if they have to be driven too far. are lassoed, tied, and car ried by jeep. One of the most mod ern farmers in the world. Anderson converts his alfalfa into pellets so as not to waste stems and leafage when cattle eat it, and each day he sends a sample of pellets to St. Louis to be tested for moisture con tent. Nothing is left to chance on the Waggoner ranch—except possibly cowboy luck. Modern as it is, the ranch still uo t es cowoys; in fact, finds them indispenable. Cowboys use six horses each in the winter when the horses are fed grain, and 14 to 1C horses each In the sum mer when they forage for them selves. One cowboy will sometimes wear out. two or three horses a day. The new Secretary of the Navy got acquainted with Eisenhower through Ike’s Texas friend, Sid Richardson. One day, speaker Sam Rayburn, Anderson, and Richardson were riding together when someone asked Anderson how much he got when he sold his calves. He replied 41 cents. ’Forty-one cents!" exclaimed Rayburn. “Who would be fool en ough to pay that much?” Anderson replied that the buyer was Howell Smith. “What!” roared Richardson "He’s my partner and brother-in-law! you mean to say that he paid 41 cents a pound for calves!" Since the Waggoner ranch had produced about 7.500 calves, the deal involved over a million dollars. SOFT-HEARTED SECRETARY Horses, steers, and alfalfa seem a long way from Battleships and Submarines, but Bob Anderson’s chief know-how is in handling men. He has handled some tough char acters on the Waggoner ranch. But one day during a board of directors meeting, Anderson received a mess age, excused himself, came back, later to say that a town character, “Rabbit” Nye, who had lived in a shack by the river, had just died. Knowing the old man had al most nothing in the world, Ander son took time off to arrange for his funeral. And at the funeial ser vices, almost no one was present CUTIES “He’s not tinder here either. Arc you BURE you l-’m*' - your'husband to the p⁢*, Crac: except the minister and the man ager of the second largest ranch in the United States now Sec retary of the Navy. INVESTIGATING A SENATOR Republican Senators are con spiring against a fellow Republican ; Sen. William Langer of North Dakota. Langer doesn’t know it, but lies being investigated by the com mittee he is supposed to head next month. Agents of the Senate Jud- ; iciaty Commit lee are secretly pry ing into the private bills he has ’ introduced, looking for possible subversives whom Langer may have : helped. 'mis is part of a backstage plot ' to unseat the hard-hitting senator ; irom North Dakota and prevent ; him from taking over the powerful , Judiciary Committee. Reason is ' that Langer’s too independent to j suit the Republican regulars, who want to keep this important com- ' mittee in the hands of a dyed - in-the-wool regular Sen. Homer Ferguson cf Michigan, who is next J in line. Many times in the past Langer has demonstrated that he . won’t take GOP orders. He has belted to . the Democrats any time he thinks ; his own party is wrong. He also committed the unforgivable poli tical sin of riding acresa North , Dakota on President Truman's : campaign train, once even intro ducing the Democratic candidate who was running against him lor ' the Senate. These are hardly grounds for ■ expelling Langer from the Sen ate, to the GOP bosses are looking , for stronger ammunition. To this end, a judiciary Committee in vestigator has been thumbing througli Langer’s private bills on the chance the big-hearted North Dakotan may accidentally have aided a pro-Communist. Always quick to sympathize with a hard-luck story, Langer has in troduced hundreds of bills to help cut hardship cases, particularly ■ Aliens. For example, he drafted a special bill to allow 18 Estonians to stay in this country. They had ' broken out from behind the iron 1 curtain and drifeted for 92 days ( in a small, crowded ship to get to ' America and escape Communism. Under our laws, they would have been deported immediately but Langer intervened and saved them. ' KIND HEARTED SENATOR The Catholic Welfare Board also came to Langer with the story of ' a young mother, who had been 1 brought to this country when she was only six years old but had never been naturalized. She gave birth to ; an illegitimate baby, and when‘she ’ tried to force the father, a police man, to support the child, he moved ’ to deport her. Under the law, an : Alien guilty of moral turpitude is ‘ Waiter WincJicll In A New York •auCIM The Big ’lime: ' Music for Lovers Only" (Capital) with Bobby Hac kett’s trumpet-smooching settling the groove on fire-... Sandy So lo's version oi a new ballad, "Close Your Dreamy Eyes” .... Don Cor nell's Cora la be! of "I” ... Ted Saucier's “Bottoms Up" (100 s of recipes) for. Getting Gooft .... "The Sub>” (RCA-Vic due soon), whicli'll launch a sensational new rhythm for Peres Prado, the Daddy ol the Marnbo. New York Novelet: A local liar heckled one of our lulus and falsely testified: “When I make a mistake 1 never hurt anyone” .. Ask Sugar Kay Robinson When the champ was idolized in Pane the newspapers (here) reported than an American Country Club (in France) had barred Suqar. “Be cause,” said the report, "he is Negro." Tne colyumist denied it. He noted tne “real reason” was Sugar’s “arrogance,” etc .. Weeks later, the champ met the chimp in Lindys and said: “I thought you were a friend of mine. How could you hurt me that way? I was very late and that's Why I didn’t play. I wasn't stopped at all!” ‘‘..l have friends," said Sugar (trying to dis guise his agony), “who, for years, warned me that you are a heel but I didn’t believe them until now!” The Broadway Bus: Wc prom ised to debunk Tide mags coai piaii.t that Life's circulation "had not" dropped over a million copies ou the newsstands. Inride Adver tising's nest issue (out anyday) saves us; the trouble and space and confirms what wc reported. That Lite lost a million in circ on the stand period . ..Harold P. Rich ardsons definition of Striptease; “Where the Morons watch the More-Offs” .... Ooops! We sug gested a cookbook titled: "What's Cookm" and Helen Dunn titles her colyum that way in her N. Y. Colyum in Daily : Sports Bulletin. (Free ad oven .... Add nifty book titles: ’Please Excuse Johnny," by truant oificer Florence MeGehee .... Lew Carey heads the cast of the Chateau Martin Fashion Ree ue. Over Yv'JZ Sat. Nights .... G. M. Cohan. Jr., is now prez of the music firm publishing ail his fam ed father’s great songs - except "Over There. ' for which FDR got him a medal . .Latest on O’Dwyer: He may co-chief (with ex-Pres. Aleman) Mexico’s new gambling empire. Their Agua Calientc setup to compete with Las Vegas and Reno. The Times Square Circle: Champ Rocky Marciano holds a big family and your party kindiy leave quietly? home on Dec. 11th for his baby tight - . Who will finance the party is The Big Riddle because the Heavyweight Champion is so broke he asks any inquiring interviewer: “How much do 1 get paid for this?" Dade County, Florida ( Miami) lias a new ordinanre prohibiting males from working in female ap parel. This means the swish spats won't open. There’ll also be a curb on strippers .... Tom Ewell, the star of the new smash, “7 Year. Itch," jerked sodas in an Bth Av enue drug store not too many years ago . . Agnes Johnston's sen tence containing “irrelevant": never forgets! .... Agnes, will you and veur party kidiy leave quietly?) .. During the last World War the new word “Cinerama” was a scrambled code word for “Ameri can.” Sounds in the Night: At, the Pclonaise: “Typical Fraudwayite. His friendship slips from a pat-on the-baek to a kick-in-the-pants” At Colombo’s: “She a chorus gal and he’s married. Their story .starr ed about 73Gs ago" .... At Dow ney’s: “Trouble with fighting little people is they get m ya teetn when you chew ’em up” .... In the Bronx: “Hormone, schjnorrnone , turn out the light!” supposed to be shipped back to his homeland. As a result, the young woman would have been exiled to Malta, a strange country that she ; had never known, if Danger hadn't \ intervened. These ar° typical of the favors the big, affable. North Dakotan has done for Aliens. However, a Judiciary Committee agent, in search of something to pin on . langer, is secretly checking the list of Aliens that Langer has aided, - with the House Un-American Act ivities Committee files to see if any of them has a subversive back ground. Most active in the - backstage maneuver to unseat Danger ty (he man who is next in line to rule the Judiciary Committee, ‘ Michigan’s windy, whitehaired Sen. Homer Ferguson. Like the bridesmaid who never becomes a bride, Ferguson is second in seniority to both the Appropriations and Judiciary Com mittees. He hopefully pestered the office of New Hampshire’s Sen. Styles Bridges, the senior appropriations member, hoping Bridges would give up the appropriations chairman ship to serve as majority leader. However, Bridges won’t budge. This leaves the judiciary chairmanship TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 23, 19§: The Worry Gink Hr UK t-FOKOK vr Wives, vaccinate your husbands against this disease of the male menopause. The best remedy is phophyiaxis, for when a man gets into ti e muddled state cf Luke today, you can seldom influence him by logic: He is emotionally intoxicated and headstrong. So. if vour husbands arc past 40 years cf age, you wives better send for tile bulletin described below. Cass F-350: Luke 8.. a red 57. is a prominent Chicago business man. “Dr. Crane: we have been hao ni’-y married for 35 years." his smartly dressed wife informed, me sadly, "b: t last week he told me lie is in love “ 'th a grass, widow nil*.* 35 rears of age. "He doesn’t want a ci vo ce or even a se: ration blit feels I should bear W'th him ns T have with his , other ’affairs' throughout the past 10 years. “He is frequently reen dining and clammy with tins, woman. foc_he lias taken litt’c if any precaution ■ to be disc ;■ t. OLD FOOLS Tv” -learned that another man sees her on Week-ends, but he is , Ot't c r town Mcndav thru Fri day.- If he and rhv husband eve find out about each ether, there wi'l’ be a terrible scene. "Should I tell my husband of this other man? If I do sc. he may at- ; tribute my remarks to jealousy. If ; this •'•)■ r ever became a p-b’ic scandal, it would hurt, r-v husband in b- slur*, as he is o' if-* promin ent in Chicago Cvic affairs. "Ow hot- e is npv juM a parkin-, • placa for ’tty h tstand. I don't know ; What to do. - , "My ijusband gives this young women large sums of money, too, : art! is financin • an art course for her. To foe’s rho T simply interested in a career, and not a gold digger. Indeed, he seems ail cons sed in ; his mind and 1 'liable to think clear ly. for he sn; s he doesn't want a divorce." i FOXCE DE LEON COMPLEX This domestic tragedy is repeat ed rn many times in every »om- < murity that it is on? cf the com monest pitfalls besetting married people past 35 or 40 years of age, I &au}o%tfcb Wisw HAVING BUILT UP HUSBAND’S SELF - CONFIDENCE. W I F E COURTS PARTNERSHIP FOR HIM IN BUSINESS DEAR MARY HAWORTH: My son Gene married a girl who has been good tor him up to a certain point. She has been a fine wife and mo ther. She hase given Gene confidence in himself and he has snnpo ted her and their children comfortably, since he married seven years ago. However, Ilestv rin’t sa.t'sfied with this. She wants my son to reach for and try thin vs that are beyond his ability—mentally and err.ct'nnally. as well as educationally. Specifically, she wants inn to g-t a supervisory job in my huband’s office, cn a pa tnership basis. My husband feels that oir son can’t handle such a job. Further, he Isn't disposed to give any part cf the business to Gene, because he (my’husband) doesn’t want med dling from our daughter-in-law. He resents her demands. We are fairly well off. enjoying many luxuries that our son and his family don’t have. We give them large and lavish gifts and we pay emergency bills, foe hospital car# and the like, and we have estab lished a trust fund for the children. Thpre is hostility now between ray daughter-in-law and myself. She even accuses mo of trying to cheat my sen because I cannot' prevail upon my. husband to give him a partner hip new. What should my course of action be? I would appre cite your advice. L. V. FATHER SEEMS HOSTILE, VAIN DEAR L. V.: Inasmuch as Hester is a fine wife and mother, a help meet who have developed new strengths in Gene, giving him self confidence and an earning stability that he lacked before, should think good hearted parents might feel that she understands him better than most. And that such parents would wish to help her promote his growth., by providing' him, if they can, with real, opportunities fer "getting ahead,” increasing his self as Ferguson’s' last chance. BACKSTAGE MANEUVERS The GOP leadership would rather reward faithful Ferguson than the maverjek Langer, but it can’t be done under the Senate’s seniority rules unless Danger can be forced to steja aside. A^,a ,result,, the Re ptib}jcaJ\ pli gtfajd js workjng with Joe Bridston of Grand" "Forks, N. D., to bring charges that might possibly block Langer from taking his seat. Note if Langer takes over as judiciary chairman next month, his first move probably will be to fire the investigator who has been trying to dig up dirt on him. And if he doesn’t know the . investiga tor’s name, this' column will be glad to supply it. It is the Ponce de Leon complex, wherein the aging male is terri fied. lest gray hair and especially impotence be attacking him. Notice his wife’s comment to the effect that Luke is all confused and unable to think Clearly. That is Just one of "the usual symptoms. Such men act. as foolish as if they really had syphilis of the brain, which is sometimes true of them, but in most cases there is no or ganic germ to account so- this sex panic of £he male in the meno pause. „ His trouble is chiefly ipsychologi cal and based on Bar. Ift hi/ ter ror, he acts like other pdnic-strick en creatures. ■ He loses his sense of social per spective. He cannot even be dis creet in his misconduct, but flaunts it before his family and friends. EMOTIONALLY* INTOXICATED “Why waste time on such a hus band. anyway?" many of you young women may irritably exclaim. “Di v-of.e him and leave hijji to the Diets he'll soon realize he Is in,” That is easy to say but not so easy to follow out. especially if you have been married to the man for many years and still love him. Besides, you realize he is so emo t:onaliy: intoxicated that he can’t think straight, so he might dissi pate the fortune you have helped him earn and further besmirch his t “od name. If you have also been socially prominent in the community and have g own children living in t’je ra re city, you will try to solve the problem quietly, even if you suffer a great deal hi consequence. The use of a rolling pin on his head might help but probably not unless it knocked him entirely un conscious. The best remedy Jor this tragedy is to prevent his fear originally. Send for mv medico-psvchoiogical bulletin. "HOW TO PREVENT IM POTENCE IN THE MALE." en closing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. And fight fire with f:re! A wife cf 55 doesn’t need surrender her husband to any 25-year-o!d siren if she will use the advice in tire bulletin named above. resnect and so ou. There is an Insensitive, brow beating quality of feeling implicit in your husband’s claim that Gene isn't fit for any kind of break in the family business and that Hes ter would be maneuvering for pro gressive control, if Gene got his foot inside the door as a member of the firm. I believe if your husband we-e capable of optimum decency in his family dealings, if he were less puffed-up with pride abort, his own accomplishments and less selfish and pretentious in his handling of money, he would be a more success ful father. He might have a son to gladden his heart and add luster to liis name, in later life. WISH TO CONTROL ALL RELATIONSHIPS One wonders about your true position in the situation. It is pos sible of course, that you have no influence with your husband, busi ness-wise. Yet if you had the pow er to swing a partnership deal for your son, I am not sure that you would. / . It strikes me that you and *yonr are similarly opposed to Hester’s “Striving, not so much be cause you think she overestimates Gene’s potentials but because you instinctively challenge her power drive. You and he have an anxious compulsion to dominate, and Hold others subordinate, in all your re lationships. IT "lice the disposit'on to squelch Hester—just as you’ve always hamstrung Gene, until he’s almost too discouraged to be a man. Since the facts of the case are so obscure, the best advice I can offer is to try to be helpful and generous, rather than devious. In your personal exchanges with -Hes ter. M. H. MaTy Haworth counsels through her column, not my mail or per sonal interview. Write her In care of The Daily Record. Cave of the Nativity—is under the jurisdiction of the Greek Orthodox church. ' i The gro ( tto-like Cave of the Na tivity in no way conforms to the modern conception of a “Stable;” in biblical times, however, shelters for man and beast were hewn in to rocky ledges—thus, the Stable of Bethlehem. On Christmas Eve, members of ill denominations assemble to sing carols above the birthplace of the Holy Child before midnight mass is solemnized in the Church of thd; Nativity. i ; 1 ) SWEET TO SWEETMAKER AMARILLO, Tex. —IIP)— Mrs. N : .{f C. Hildebrand, who won a JrUy making contest at this year’s -Tri- State Fair, was awtafded, a Tf/i - pound sack of Sugar.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Dec. 23, 1952, edition 1
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