PAGE FOUR NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE B THOMAS T. CLARK CO.. INC. M 6-217 E. 42nd St, New York 17. N. Y p!'' Brsitcb Office* In Ever; Major City Kfe: " SUBSCRIPTION RATES I BY CARRIFR. 20 cents per week; 58.50 per year in advance ; U tor six months; $3 for three montba IN TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND ON RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: 9&M per K year, HM lor «4x months; 22 for three month* *; OUT-OF-STATE: $2.50 per year in advance; $5 for «ix mon«- ft ■ tot three month* I Altered as second-class mr.tter in the Post Office In Dunn, |lpr C., under the laws of Congress, Act of Ma~ch 3, 1879 Every afternoon, Monday through Friday 200,000 Mile Production Line in a recently-published picture book called The Rail roads of America, Merle Armitage writes, “Without the gppiu’oads’ vast mileage and powerful equipment there would be no American industrial and agricultural economy, no high standard of living, no ability to outproduce the world in wartime emergencies . . . The railroads are a gi i gantic production line without which the plant comes to IP full stop.” |L That’s no exaggeration. For transportation is the jplxeart of trade and commerce—and the railroads are the ' transportation agency which outperforms all others by a vast margin. They move more goods in intercity traffic than all the rest of the commercial carriers combined. Yet today substantially -less of our total cost of living expenditures goes for railroad service than was the case 10 years back. This means that wages and prices and meet all other costs we must pay have gone up more than railroad rates. The demand for railroad service has increased greatly over the years. That demand has been met well. Since 1946, the railroads have spent an average of more than $1 ,000,000,000 each year just to improve and enlarge their facilities. They would have spent still more had it been possible. They have not, for instance, been able to obtain •i.ls fnany new freight cars as they wish due to materials But in spite of handicaps the railroads have to meet soaring transportation demands—they have k ept the “gigantic production line” moving. Pandora's Box Explosives, sulfa drugs, paint, tar, nylon, plastics, livestock feed, fertilizer, insecticides, roofing, Iphoto chemicals, aspirin and pharmaceuticals have one pishing in tommon. All of them are derivatives of coal. The petal list of coal derivatives would fill many pages—and Igaore are being discovered all the time. This wide variety ||jf‘ products extracted from coal didn’t result from luck. gMLcame, instead, from the intensive and costly research iplork carried on by both coal producers and coal- users. R Coal has proved itself to be one the most versatile Kitibstances known to irian. It is, orie o£ the primary sources Ijof.heat and energy. It accounts for most of our electric Ppower and all of our steel, to name but two necessities jfwbich are dependent on it. One phase of coal research lies in discovering means * to make it do a constantly more efficient and economical I job when burned. According to the scientists, coal’s hori zons have been barely touched so far. Current experiments ??*nd developments indicate that coal is capable of many llfoore miracles, and that -its usefulness to humanity wiil llecbme greater as the years roll by. Coal is one of the ■ oldest of fuels —but it always has something brand new Frederick OTHMAN A WASHINGTON. I blame tele .| vision and a sensitive Senator for shortcomings this dis- HjHtch may have about projected : love nests and Voice of America. BpPersonally, I was prepared to Jot gpftown each word uttered by the jjff beautiful Miss Nancy Lenkeith, as Retold the harrowing story of her • first day at work in the French sec tion Os the Voice’s New York office, f The Mg glass eyes of the TV BPitteras were ready, too, to carry Sper every gesture to the far ends giiil the land. Kp» the lovely Nancy, a Phi), gjpespite her movie-star face and pfigure, began with her first inter g.View across the desk from Troup fiMa thews, the man who was to be lipße told me he was interested in setting up collectivist groups,” said Kpbis brunette with brains. “He glltanted to establish one of these in ■Hyoid farmhouse in Rockland gf'Wfaoa,’' cried that defender of ■Htfthful morals, Sen. Joseph R. BglCcCarthy (R., Wis.).' “We are on WjjwVision and many children are BjKy»K)rrung at Route watching. We will let you describe these groups after we are off the air.” * Miss Lenkeith obediently changed the subject and never did return to it, on or off TV. It may be that the Senator thought the youngsters of this land were playing hooky to view the proceedings, but he did arrange for the press to see the transcript of Nancy’s earlier, secret testimony. But this is secondhand, and I can’t particularly recommend it to either young or old. She said (and what she said now is a matter of record) that Mat hews told her he was going to set up in an old Dutch farmhouse a group dedicated to, collective, Mar xist living. He winted Nancy to Join. She gasped when he said the children would be brought up to gether. Nancy said she had no children. Mathews said that could be ar ranged. She said, yes but she had no husband. Mathews said that also could be worked out. t “I was a little bit sort of stun ned,” Nancy said. But she did go to work for Mathews, broadcasting news, music and funny saying to .France. That’s the end of the non- TV, or love-nest, part of the morn ing. Now we’re back on the air: She’d been on the job about 10 days, Nancy said, when Mathews 1 disappeared. She said his secretary went frantic trying to cover up for ; him. And there was Nancy writing ’ book reviews in French and read ing them herself because she could • talk the lingo like a native. This S wag fine until die got around to . reviewing Whittaker Chamber*’ book about himself and the jailed ; bird watcher, Alger Hiss. . this was an ele ; propaganda purposes, but she said | her top w Fernand Auber- Sckclhi) MORE EVILS AT YALTA Fcr several centuries, Russia had been the enemy of Turkey. In Rus sia’s march of conquest from the little Duchy of Muscovy to world power, Turkey was pushed out of the Balkans and almost was driven back into Asia. The Crimean War (1853-56) has left a bitter memory in both countries. The Dardanelles has protected Constantinople (In stanbul) from Russia’s might. In 1936, by the Montreux Con vention, Turkey was permitted to refortify the Dardanelles and to close the straits in case of war or threat of war. At Yalta, In 1945, a secret agreement was reached by Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill to reconsider the Montreux Conven tion. Before this could be accom plished, President Truinan went to Potsdam and discovered the fear ful nature of the Russian game, with the result that many subjects were left incompleted. Had this se cret agreement of Yalta been car ried through. Turkey would be a flattened country today instead of our strongest ally in the Mediter ranean. Another phase of the Yalta agrep- 1 ment was the tacit acceptance of ; the expulsion of about 10,000,000 1 Germans from countries outside of Germany in which many had lived for centuries. This idea was con firmed at Potsdam, Churchill even telling the House of Commons a bout it on February 27, 1945 before the Potsdam meeting. Actually this , had nothing to do with war, as most of these Germans were wo- : men and children, but was design ed to smooth the way for the even tual conquest of these countries .by Communism. Why Roosevelt and Churchill should have agreed to It, in view of their joint authorship of the Atlantic Charter, of which this was a violation. Is difficult at this stage to say. The fact remains that in such countries as Czechoslovakia, Poland, Austria and Hungary, the most brutal genocide was practiced, with our consent. The murdered persons cannot be revived, but we , can cofeess error, publish the truth, and somewhat redeem our Honor., Also, at Yalta it was agreed that Russia nationals in Germany .under American or British jurisdiction should be handed over to Russia by the Americans and British. Many of these Russians had taken refuge in Germany and other countries from Stalin’s tyranny before the war. Many of them had been en slaved by Germany and had been forced into the German army by Hitler. For all these people such a delivery could only mean a swift i death. ’ How many we handed over, I ao j net know. Perhaps Senator Homer Ferguson can get at the facts, or maybe all documents in connection with this matter have been de stroyed. This stands out: that until we broke with Russia, we were handing innocent people over to Stalin to be murdered. There is no advantage in discus sing in detail what was done to Po land at Yalta.. Poland has now been totally conquered by Soviet Russia and is, for all practical pur poses, a province of that country. However, a Congressional investi- _ gation would show that at Yalta the steps were take to make this \ conquest easy and that they were taken with the consent of Roose velt and Churchill. Should Poland ever be reconstituted a nation, it would be useful lor the truth to be in the record. I shall refer to the Far Eastern secret agreements at Yalta in ano ther article. The subject is too large and important fbr a para graph. Y-et, it needs to be noted that just as it was made easy for Russia to move westward into Eu -1 rope, so was it made easy for Rus sia to move eastward into Asia. It would seem as though the pur pose of Yalta was to make Stalin the conqueror of the' world. As it ' has worked out, it was made easy [ for Communists to kill Americans. If Senator Homer Ferguson is to investigate secret treaties, he might also into the question ol Roose . veit’s deals witfi the Arabs, leading , to the organization of the Arab I League. It would be of value to get a full record of his discussions with Ibn i Saud on February 28, 1946. ' There is published correspondence, , dated April 5, IMS, to show that : that sort of deal was made be tween Roosevelt*and Ibn Saud . which in believing that Israel , would not be recognised by the 5 United States. Subsequently, the i Arabs took the position that they had been double-crossed by Presi * fl«mt Truman, who had nothing to ;■ '‘wfLS’.fßS £\n4 l M “Promoted," ’ corrected Nancy. Than she departed and I was so S mi<anjidpri effort ahd I must report - THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. I / ■ ] -i-P “Use BOTH doors. Dleascl” A eiLwsliiif dffi&MEMY-fiO-ROUND SgglS >y »»«t HUIH WASHINGTON, Few people on the outside know it, but the jailed Communists are going right on making trouble behind bars Except for the most celebrated Communist of them all, Alger Hiss. He is “taking it bard,” but is an “excellent prisoner.’’ This is the confidential, off-the cuff report of Federal Prison boss James Bennett, delivered behind closed doors of a Senate Judiciary {Subcommittee the other day. He gave Senators the lowdown on names that made headlines yester day, but are only prison numbgrs today. They included Hiss, Atomic spy Morton So bell, husbahd-killer Yvonne Madsen, and kidnaper Harvey Bailey. “The Communists cause a lot of tkmble,” Bennett complained.'- “For one thing, they get neurotic and we have to move them to the hos pital when there is nothing ser iously wrong with them. These fell ows are difficult. Some of the other men pick on them, steal their shoes, or mess up whatever their work is.” “Has Alger Hiss been -a good prisoner?’’ demanded Sen. Herman Welker (R., Ida.). “Yes, he has made an excellent prisoner,’’ Bennett acknowledged. “He has taken it hard, and he (a doing what the boys call a ‘hard timq.’ He is thin, neurotic, but he has never asked a favor or a priv ilege. We have assigned him to tbs storehouse (at Lewisburg Peniten tiary). - “That’s anpther thing you have to worry about with these hot-shot prisoners,’’ added the prison chief, as an afterthough. “If Hiss had not been so notorious, we would have assigned him as a teacher and to the hospital, but I couldn’t do that." Bennett listed Morton Sobell, who was implicated with Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in the Atomic Spy base, as a “serious offender,” but *not so dangerous.” HUSBAND MURDERESS As for pretty Yvonne Madsen, who shot her Army husband in cold blood in one of last year's most sensational murder cases, the di rector of prisons disagreed with the . court that found her sane. “She is very paranoid and neu rotic, but the court found die was mentally responsible for her crime,’’ he reported. "Nevertheless, she is a mental case, and we are trying to get her into St. Elizabeth's (Mental Hospital).’’ Bennett also told how hell - raising Harvey Bailey, notorious kidnaper of the "Thirties, has turn ed into a model prisoner after Id yean on “the Rock’’ at Alcatraz. Bennett described Bailey as “the Fellow that put the wire cord a round the warden’s neck at Kan sas’.” “That is a very old trick with prisoners," he added. “They take " ' -- - . - - - ■■ 'U ' CUTIES r>l I} / f r y / im a piece of piano wjre, reach out from behind through the bars with this stick and loop it over the warden’s neck and say, “now you let out of here, you S-O-B, or I’m going to cut your head off.’ Harvey Bailey did this. Made the warden take him out the front gate. After he escaped, he got involved in an other kidnaping, and then was sent back to us. "While at Alcatraz, he did, after a little while, make an excellent record,” Bennett continued. "1 finally moved Harvey Bailey out, and he has now been at Leaven worth for six or eight years, and he is doing a fine job. He has a life sentence, and whether he lias a chance for parole I am not here to say. He is 62 or 63 years k>f age now.” , The tough, Leathery prison boss was most sympathetic toward the ex-servicemen who have been turned over to his custody from the Military Disciplinary Barracks. "They are, for the most part, young, aggressive fellows,” he shrugged. “Our theory on Army and Navy cases is that they are young fellows and that maybe what ever they did is sort of a casualty of the war.” IKE AND OIL President Eisenhower made some frank remarks to Adlai E. Steven son, at their recent luncheon, a bout Tidelands oil. “All I know about the Tidelands oil issue,” he confided, "I picked up by accident six years ago. "Back In 1947, I was visiting in Fort Worth, Tex., and somebody causally showed me a document,” Ike continued. “That document is the basis for my belief that the Tid eland oil reserves belong to the States, not the Federal govern ment. , “It was an old, faded piece of paper addressed to the Congress and signed by the Texas Legisla ture. It was written when Texas was trying to come into the Union and the Legislature was offering to turn over to the Federal govern ment all of Texas' public lands if Congress would assume the State’s $10,000,000 debt “During the campaign, when the Tidelands issue came up, I re membered that document and the fact that the Federal government told Texas she could keep her pub lic lands That of course, in cludes Tidelands. I believe that a contract is a contract and the gov ernment, above all, must live up to its word. “Frankly,” concluded Ike, “that’s just about all I know about the subject. It’s as simple as keeping your word.” Note The document was shown Ike when he was the guest of Anion Carter, No. 1 Texas citizen. __ In ine Koney express: JMuauu ut-jc., tl>/ lUTMMUi U>U Uie a.iA>. uv»Ai»> u»u.e peupie »m*>- >u| a.Utkr vivOirey, <u«iwa i/toiSMjf Hu»;c, OU.MU./ a/Ul«Use t*e*u ovlica A iUliu* UllwMCrkl tabAltg Uwli me DCAdU, ito WOsiUtT uuucit ai Wat uoteis u> i mu ecu* »»»: • . . v***oy» c-We low. waosewayi me most attrac tive spot on toe ohy. ’kne setting is a i .rate s lave. 'sue prop, u Lie suapeneot Belie in town, Betay Ult tinser of Atlanta and nartiord . . ituu-ian Murray Brooe an anale car rying The Most Terrible Torch Os load A11... Betty George is head lining at Nassau's famed r ort Mon tagu Beach hotel ... The spot (formerly Colonial Inn) n date to , remember. The food, of coarse, Is Leone’s at Its best . . . Fran Keeg an (of the Broadway Glri Shows) has Quietly beeh doing * swell job .(alone) entertaining the lonely gays at the Florida, army and naval bases . . The Bomoay Bar is a popular spot . . . Jim .'.orris Has pa. in be Biggest Imo lor tue si. Louis Car us . . . Where were toe Mirror proofreaders yesteruay? That line about Ken Kltng should have read that he had 3 winners AND n Dally Double, not 3 winners In a Daily Double . . '. Kay Bolgbri (Beal| Fanderful) now sings Ms top song this way: “I’m in Love With Ma mie.” A walloping show-stopper . . . Yon haven’t really lived until you’ve feasted at Stone Crab Joe’s. The mldtown stay-ups are in ; stitches over Borey Ingrayt’s re ported hysterics. When he learned- Bob Olin, the former heavyweight star, belted him all over the Olin l mikes, the Fraudwayite yelped (in his best falsetto) and almost ruined his nose-bob clutching at it manl -1 laccally and screaming “Oyakluggg! ... The tickets are ready for our Big Show for the widows and fam - i 'll tec of cops and firemen slain in i action. At Madison Square Garden , March 16th St. Pat’s Eve . . . Apply i for tickets to Runyon Fund Ticket Offi&e at Hotel Astor or to me at Daily Mirror; please . . . Thanks also ! to the Essex Hotel, St. Moritz and ' Astor, which are offering suites for i the distinguished front-row guests . that night: The Congressional Medal r of Honor heroes ... The Stork Club, Llndy’B and Reuben’s were first to say: “Wfc want them as our guests, too!” Middle-of-the-Night Vignette: We left for Roneyplaxaville (after the broadcast) in a blinding snowstorm i that suddenly fell (without warning )N I on the Idlewild Airport the other midnight . . . The Captain and , his crew lifted the Eastern Airline I Flagship (an M-pnasenger Constell ■ stlon) into the sterm at though it j wasn’t there—and was soen doing . 369 m.p.h. A half hour later there , was no snow, no storm, no nothing ; at 19,999 feet np over Point Pleas ant, N. I. . . . After we sUdded [ through the early editions of the , Monday morning papers and got . gabbing with seme of the 88 we were , spellbound by the roundest moon . (orange as a crate of them) which lit . np the North Carolina coastline . and the Atlantic Ocean .. . Captalh t George Sheridan broke the spell by 3 saying: “There’s Palm Beach an# yon ban see Miami Bench (86 miles . away) at the same time” . . . The * city lights below seemed like dla . mends and baguettes . . . BennU ; ful . . _At 4:45 a. m. (right on the . button) we (thrilled at the easy . and graceful way the crew brought . down the giant-steed airliner (6$ . tons with fuel, baggage and people) , without one bump during the flight : . . As 6JI-W (the alrpfrt radio s guide calls It 631-WUlto—lt used to * be Whisky) roared along the Miami I strip (about 188 miles an hour on the ground) * frightened rabbit t was bOwled by ear spotlights . . . } “Ohhhh! the crew exclaimed. "The iXa lit by f! e^pitotkf , ni f got away! It get away!” And we all sighed with relief . . . Not that tie rabbit did, too. Services Sunday For Mr. Allen Funeral • services were held Sun ! day at 3 p m., at Bethesda Primi- I tive Baptist Church for O. E. Al : len of Coats, who died Wednesday .- afternoon. • Elder Lester Lee, Elder i 3. T. Lewis and Elder Frank Nordan officiated. Burial was in the church cemetery. ’■ 'I. ' ‘ (CoßflM lift citisens have been urging Wmto run and that Mixon is to wnklnfi f ngrm n r wiagflF wffto , . .* | . a a '■j l njri an THESDAY AFTERNOON,FEBUARY 24,1953 By Dr. George W. Crone J ‘ Livestock breeders an unusua lly careful to selecting breeding < animals. If yon implosive girls would not stampede so easily Into marrying the first man who shows an interest In yon, then yon might avoid the unhappiness that has befallen Dob's wife. Pick yonr mates most carefully at the start and yen need not fear a divorce later. i ‘ CASE F-363: Don L.,, aged 32, has been married 9 years. “Dr. Crane, Don shows no senti ment or affection for me except Just when he wishes marital rela tions,’’ his wife protested unhappily. “He doesn’t kiss me or compli ment me in an way, though I strive to please him and always endeavor to cook the things which I know he enjoys. “Last month we had our first baby. Don dropped me off at the hospital and then headed out of town with c r*l of his for a week end of fi?hir.7. i “His callousness hurt me worse than the labor pains! I cried to think he would thus desert me when I wanted him most. Dr. Crane, are all husbands like mine?” SELFISH MALES ‘ Thank goodness, they are not! Most of them aren’t as thoughtful and unselfish as their wives might wish them to be, but the average American husband can at least show a. little gallantry on occas ion. Don is simply a spoiled brat of adult physical and mental age, but of kindergarten emotions. He was an “only” child who grew up without having to share toys or adult attention with seve ral brothers and sisters. So he is by habit a selfish per son, though he will not admit that fact, for he hasn’t a childhood back ground that enables him even to recognize his own greediness'. SPOILED BEATS He didn’t want any children, so for, 8 years he prevented his wife’s becoming pregnant. In this one ac cidental case, he demanded that she have an abortion, but she was Hiartf Hawrtk 'i Hlail By America's Foremost Personal Affairs Counselor Secret Bride of Soldier Regrets Elopement, Feels She Con Never Live With Her Husband DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I am in a terrible dilemma. I am sec retly married and dare not let any one know. And I have decided my marriage was a mistake. I got married 10 days before my husband returned to Camp, and he is now in Korea, where he will serve tor at least a year and I know I never could live with him if he re turns. I cannot tell my father of the marriage, not only because he dis likes Joe intensely, but also be cause he is potting me through college, and I can’t very well stay to school without his support. I am . a senior, training to be a teacher. My mother has 'died since I re i turned to school (after the mar riage); and I have my father and I my younger brother to care for, i weekends. I stay at sorority house ! during the week, and owing to ex treme loneliness and sorority acti vities, I have been dating various i men recently. I never dat«£ much ' before X married Joe but now I have i many chances to date. » I had not interest in my husband, aside from physical; and It was the l thrill Os a secret marriage that • captivated me, I guess. Also I was k afraid I would lose him if he went I overseas. I don’t know what to do > about the marriage. There are so t many complications and I don't . want to hurt anyone or cause any s scandal to injure my future career. ■ Should I write Joe about my de i' cision or await his return? Is there l any way We can get a divorce, now k or later, and keep it secret too? k Please answer soon, as the uncer • talnty is wrecking my nerves. CD. BEING MISTAKE INTO OPEN PE4R C. B,: You are indeed in a dilemma, leading a double life, the bidden half of which is an athema to you and a fochs of frightened conflict about “what tp No wonder your nerves feel over taxed. Even the. healthiest penon evidently you < weren’t toowell bal anced at the outset, or you would n’t have leaped Into secret marriage. and urffent to preserve your sren er to my opinion, the only clean e cut handling of the mistake is to smart enough to refuse. « One of his main reasons for not wishing a child is his essential Jeal- 4 ousy. He dislikes having his wife divert her attention to anybody else. I’ve had many husbands can didly admit such a fact, and others . in every large, community show such jealousy, though they aren’t honest enougn to acknowledge it. When Don deposited his wife at the hospital where she was short ly to deliver their baby, he didn’t even kiss her goodbye! Then he went out of town to fish with one of his buddies. * . I Later ) learned that one of Don's reasons for lack of affection, is his belief in the erroneous idea that the sexual glands are only capable of functioning » certain number of times, and after that, they quit entirely. So Don refrained from affection, in part, as self-protection. GLANDS DEVELOP Don’s notion is false. We know that exercise increases the blood supply and functional development not only of muscles but also o f glands. You are doubtless familiar with the fact that a young cow doesn’t give as much milk with her first calf as with her fourth or fifth. And a young human mother may not have adequate milk to nurse her first baby, but may have plenty for the second or third. Furthermore, the unused eye of a cross-eyed person, though per fect in every respqct, may grow rel- ( atively blind from disuse. By refus ing to pay attention to the images falling on the unused retina, we cause the latter to atrophy from dis use. But why would an attractive girl marry a fellpw like Don in the first place? Partly, because our schools haven’t taught children how to pick a mate though they teach them how to cook and’sew for him, after a girl does impulsively marry him. - | So send for my 200-point “Tests for Sweethearts,” enclosing a stam ped envelope, plus' a jdlme. Then i rate before you*date! P’" 1 " 1 ■ 1 while Corporal Doakes is fighting with the such-and-such outfit Ui Korea." LIKELY LIST OF ADVISERS However, the first step out of emotional chaos tor you is to get the problem oft your chest to some disinterested adult, who i 6 in first hand position to counsel objectively, and who is sufficiently professional not to gossip. You need such ball ast in conironting your father with your predicament, since you fear his reaction. The dean of women, or the school chaplain, might be a worthy choice of helper. Or you might turn to any wise clergyman to *the com munity; or tp a family relations psychologist at the nearest Family Service Agency. Ativisert of this type, probably would carry weight with your father and, moreover, could suggest reputable legal aid to exploring the question of how to decently dissolve toe foolish en tanglement. It may be that this chapter of experience will be per manently discredit you tor teach ing; and, if so, you shorn now and revise your work plans forehandely. M. H. Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mail, at pir sonal Interview. Write her in care of (The Daily Record). Spivak Praised By F. Kreisler Among the more moments bant career is the high praise he received from the Ups of Fritz violinist’ his orchestra to the Dunn Armory on Tuesday night. The big show . and dance is being sponsored by Dunn’s VFW Post. Oharbe had recorded an album of Kreisler compositions lor RCA Victor. Called “Kreisler Favorites," : tuoso had approved having his com fsni ' teg sWdir“r^Svtew*AT^ C l^- 1 *° h jpg? be * marvelled 1 at vU-- * “Kreislav FavorrtesS’is one of the * high praise but it was the eonsen-

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