PAGE FOUR mm + g —mm u n wwm '■ '.v > jp»'. y»ir WJ olrew , i»ww M*mVM4ii *» MM HBm h Cmy Utl* Clli •-Wiiia., ( I^ l <jjb'Mfjgt#frQjM: yt'- ■ - —■ J *3y^tuiaapt.'»; as** py W*l OM|«}wti advatoo; W **»; RJt l«r«Millki; tt for three monU« «LM per ywt 'h'Hwni V tar h> mb*- H Jfctered-a* feeY>tt* Office* In Dunn, lTt:.. unde* the laws of Congress, Act at S, 1878. WfGty afternoon, Monday fenrwgb'ftidJS^ Wbw'To STop "Creeping Socialism’' ' Our most distinguished elder Statesman, Herbert Hooter, Mas joined the fast growing ranks of those who believe that the federal government should get out of the bdsiheSs of generating and distributing electric pow er as aeon as possible. The ex-President, after declaring that in the field oftetectfic, power “we have an example of 20 years of creep ing socialism,” proposed three first steps that; in his opinion, should be taken now. Fflrst, Congress should stop prividing ’money for plaiits. whose sole.purpose is power production.. Second, Congress should stop appropriating funds for multi-pulpose projects unless the electric power to he produced is first leased to private industry or to citfjs, states or state-managed regional authorities. Third, Congress and the-President should jointly set *up a*temporary cornmission'euthorized to investigate and redomWended proper''accounting methods and a revision of -the divisions oi federal investments in federal projects between electric -power and other purposes; to report on the actual cost of and‘fee prospective returns from each major'activity; to formulate methods and terms for leas ing generating plants and related facilities to private en teiprise, municipalities, or other bodies; and to develop methods by which non-federal agencies can share coop - eWtively in - the-oost of future capital outlays on the elec / trie part of. mufti-purpose dams. MT. Hoover’s idea, in brliif, is to stop the socialistic tMid, tofcvedtually liquidate socialistic enterprise—and, in the meahtfiae, to put the tax-bought, tax-subsidized socialiked pOWer Systems on a business basis of operation. The long-run savings to the beleaguered taxpayers of this natiGtaWoUM total niahy billions. Still mole impor tant, “creeping racialism” would be dealt a body blow. Thdse who Itelieve in socialism will opjJbse this plan. Those who believe in freedom and in representative gov ernment yrtn approve it. The One WfctiJc Spot If anyone "has a question in. his Wind» concerning the of our rallreatn industry he’d do well to read ** Preddent Uliam T Faricy all know, most prices and costs have gone up tremswiottsly Since 1921. Yet, measured on a tern-mile basis. which is the most accurate of all yardsticks, freight seMcc TOiCh cost the shiver SI.OO then costs hims only $1.06 hdw. -Changes in : passenger fare are also astonishing —passenger-mile sendee'which carried a bill of SI.OO in l«jfetts-bdt Bl cents in 1961. fthe ralirtals have been spending more than $1,000,- OOQJiOO awgar s to Improve add expand their Vital services. Irt mr. Fpricy’s view, there is but one weak spot in the piWreMlhW is ’the fact tedt Obsolete regulatory policies and practices Bare prevented them from attracting suf fliteSt flew investment capital. whe cure, he believes, is'HOT ”the public pnd the gov enftilint to reeoghlze the railroads for the’highly cota p«tß|e -iad|rnfy they are rather than the toonopbly they alb once to have been.” The time to use that - «5». . SSTi -n . , -- «„■> fr,—,,-.,.. , , Frederic OTHMAN —- NOW cltatMne’lliven nhonev ministers of on a hott-td Coteiiftttmsts every one Mid the kndw* thSr wSE yet except tHe -Berta/te In tend Security -subcommittee. the f.b. t, about who was doiagwbit with tnrn IrttoWnf- ■**tHf*-*ff-. - okjoiid oeven to flight rttaisters score m -consecrated ministers in Senate flail to toe traitors to chfWHXnlty m ‘MMWUy as possible The Way FhHbrick explained it there In the old Supreme Court . chamber with its busted marble clock, toittMtitts worked years sometimto Vo «near their godless •ones into t% dMßtolefl. They even paid the triftien flf one youflg Communist «t a natalry, where he spent four J>av. a -waio rnm to an dd vertising solicitor 'tor toe New Toito Herald-Tribune, struck toe as qtdte a Wtow. The eurly hair, the tHtOk-riaamed -ajpglaflaes, toe moats, rnadp fdpt .wtotoblc toe Wnagtreiiarity of Communists who bate appeared -to the past before * riiliftwinrn ill committees. , ortlng 'to "know that I itoawtee he was working for toe takes no great ■ town. Bt u ea it's getttog ™that i >»a Cflwmunist cam even trust an f®ffiTSto SS: way And that brings us to the clock ! ito man rememtors. For «f «, . These Days £ck*bkil THE CURSE,. OF TITOISM Since the Yugoslav Communist, Tito, broke with Stalin, smne of the statesmen of the Western 'world, including not a few in our own State Department, have seeking an imitation Tito in each of the Communist countries. Thus far, "they have failed to And any. Tito is apparently a special case among Communists. Nationalistic Communists, such as Dimitrov in Bulgaria or Earl Browder m the United States, were eliminated for their divergencies. Tito is as much a Marxist today as he was when, as a member of the Comintern, he Was chosen to head Stalin’s forces in Yugoslavia. He has never renounced Marxism. He has only established National Communism in his own country, re jecting a subordinate position to Stalin in the leadership of the world revolution. Why Titoism is superior to Stalinism is not under standable on any ideological basis; 'it is dnly understandable in the outright opportunism which has been characteristic of the Britlsn foreign policy from Chamberlain's appeasement of Hitler at Munich to Churchill's appeasement of Mao j TBe-tudg in China or of Malenkov t in his latest speech in Parliament, i Our State Department, under l Dean 'Achepon, generally was a mirror of Brttish policy. Therefore, while Acheson paid lip service to . anti-CommuniSm in China, he ser- I ved the cause of British trade too 1 ardently to hold an indepedent 1 view for the United States. John i Faster Dulles, who has tried to 1 build an American foreign policy, has encountered so much opposition : within our own government that 1 his earlier pronouncements, as well i as those of President Eisenhower, ] ' have melted away 'as though in thip i ■air. , d This country is now back to the '■ opportunism of looking for Titos 1 and bribing them to serve our tem porary purposes. Yet, the Republi cans always denounced the exped ients of overly-clever men who liv ed by hicks rather than by prm- 1 ciplas of action. They are the auth ors of most of our present misfor- 1 tunes. One of the Titos that these statesmen, ‘.British and American, would manufacture is Mao Tze-tung the 'current Kremlin satrap to China. Following the advice of Ne hru of Ifldla is always dangerous because Nehru is a broker whose profits can only come from trouble amcmg the Western countries. When he advises that the United States recognize Mao Tze-tung, he is trick ing us into a dangerous situation. His motive is to achieve the lead eraohip of Asia for India —a laud able motive for his country but not in our interest. Senator WifHam Knowland, who "Is -Undoubtedly the best-informed bieiffltor of the Senate on Asiatic buasCUms, recently said in a speech: “While I recognize there Is rdbm fbr on henest difference of opin ion, it is’my belief that the ac ceptance of the OonmmmiSt prOpos al to have prisoners of war turn ed over to a commission represen ting-India, Czechoslovakia,. Poland, Sweden and Switzerland is a great mistake, antr®fle"that may'be hard to-jastffy-in the years to come. “All five of these nations have recognized Comrhtmist China. Two or these nations, Poland and Czechoslovakia, are Oomwun i ist satellites, and consistently fol i; tow Soviet paKcy. T|*e nation, India, has ; more than'•» percent of the time, i since the " Korean War broke oot,: : voted with toe Communist side or i abetahifed.” i What India wants the United i Stales to do is to accept wiUytfiMy ; toe Russian terms as presented *kt > ‘PanrnunJOm. This wftl seal our de r feat In the Korean War and will ; please India ho end because of the Indian’s intense hatred for the An . g’lo-Saxon- countries. The defeat of r the United States wotfd be a vic » tory pot only for Mao but , for ftoktu-'as well. » Such a concession on our part, l 'makes a Tito Otit of Mao Tze-tung.x . He'Has been to toe totematWaal . Communist Movement since about , »20 WTOn he Was -a student t -too Peking National University. He : the imagined for the known; to accept toe hope for c: f the reality; to reject AWtgWSe-data ! statekmansh'p; it is amateurs play * tog " with the lives of cHizens. - —I * on. ' THE DAILY RECORD, DUNK, It. a "You say you playtd Furniture store an* sold all our thinoro . . . f |»i i vttSWSfST d»MB«y-Q0- ROUND ** iy »ti« mifcu ■ —i—>— «« "■ mm. WASHINGTON lt may not be pleasant to talk about, but at no time in years have our relations with our ancient allies in Europe been on such thin ice. Behind the senatorial blasts of Joe McCarthy et al—which are bad enough—relations with our/,ld friend and mother country, Eng land, are in deplorable Shape. Not much better are our relations with France. . Here are some of the background factors which have strained re lations to the. point -where we are not only bitterly disliked to many British circles. But where British officialdom has almost given up the idea of working with us and seriously contemplates closer ties on the continent and’’ even behind the Iron Curtain,! 1. Churchill’s desire for a Big Three meeting ties squarely across the Dulles-Elsa&hower belief that there must" be no such meeting un til the Russians show some Indi cation that'they are ready for gen uine cooperation. 2. The appointment Bf redheaded Adm. Arthur Radford bs chairman of tlm Joint Chiefs of Staff Is the signal that the USA. from bow on will follow an Asia-first policy. 3. Hie shortsighted sleight of hand by Secretary of Defense Wil son In juggling toe low Bfttish bid for generators for the Chief Joseph Dam has the British boOing. Ad mittedly the British made toe low bid. Admittedly, under U, -S. law, the Defense Department was obli gated to accept the bW. However, Wilson finagled new bids In order to cut the British out. 4. Chancellor of the Exchequer Butler charges that We have forced England to curtail trade With Chi na and satellite countries iand si multaneously blocked British trade with the United States. We can’t have our cake and eat it too,.the British say. They "also allege that toe Eisenhower slogan of “trade not-aid” is a complete phony. 5. If the Eisenhower Adminis tration doesn’t let down Hie trade barriers, toe ChuraMU government is ready to re-establish heavy trad ing with Red China tod Iron Cur-- tain countries. The important thing to rtonember is that this Impasse has taken place not with the Labor government of England, but with tbe’B*4t)gh con servatives led by a PrijAe’Sinister whose mother was American and wHose chief policy in the test has bean cooperation with theTJnited States. In fact, Churchill took a special trip to the United States to Visit Eisenhower before the In augwation in order to cement a Trterfdshlp which soma feftt ted lag cures 1 Ax/ - * 4 ir % ;■ ! | ||i ■annsS-yKII \ I : ■ ■■ ' •; '#■ \ ' *— i ged under Truman. Furthermore, Elsenhower himself was considered the best wartime, friend England had, and his Guild hall speech in London has been hailed as a milestone cementing American-British relations. Tragedy is that Ike himself, though realizing the dangerous , drift between the two allies, seems unable to do anything about it. His desire to “get along with Congress" is now uppermost on his agenda' ' of objectives. In fact, some friends say he seems hypnotized by that goal. Os the various snags in the path , of British-American relations, you will probably hear less about the , appointment of Admiral Radford as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Yet it rankles deep with the , British. They are too diplomatic to talk about a domestic American appoint ment; nevertheless, they recall all too well how Radford has advo cated virtual war with China, and how he sold Eisenhower a promising but phony bill of goods regarding the power of Chiang Kai-Shek s Formosan army only to have.lt turn out to be a dud. EUROPE VS. *6l* « .Radford’s appointment revives the World. War II roup ' between MacArthur and Elsenhower as to which-theatre sf war, the Pacific or the European should come first. Eisenhower at that time wanted 'more men, more material for Eur ope. His old boas, Douglas Mac- Arthur, wanted more for the Pa cific. The navy generally sided with MacArthur. But Eisenhower had two powerful friends who In real fact were calling the shots for the total war—Roosevelt and Church ill. They decreed, that the Euro pean theatre should come first, skid , that was why V-E day came ahead of V-J day. Today, Eisenhower is in a posi tion where he can call the shots as Roosevelt and Churchill did. , However, if he is calling them—and tit looks as If he is not—he has in , effect put Asia, not Europe, first. He has done this at a time when /the United States lacks the mu nitions to spread itself over two continents at one time. And in do i ing so, he has let the China lobby, the Admiral Radford wing of the navy and the extreme Asia-first ■ wing of <pe Republican Party ac tually dictating our foreign policy. ; HEADLINES AND FOOTNOTES [ Attorney General Brownell has , sent a private note to President ; Eisenhower urging him “to commute the death sentence” on Shangri La, . the presidential retreat in the Ma ryland hills. Ike was about to a- KW 7 « -'‘ ' ■ Winchell In . New York . \ . ’ ■ HOLLYWOOD STARDUST Jane Powell (who. had marital difficulties recently) has a how-to be-happily-married interview' in a current movie mag... What happened to the gee-whiz columnist who sol ves/crimes and rescues damsels in distress? He’s daredeviling In “The Blue Gardenia” movie. (CAU in a day's work folia?) ...Thus far 3-D films merely shock and startle. Af ter the novelty value fades 3-D cinemas (without an expert script) will be 2-Dull...Feminifty Gloria Grahame’s tip: “To look sexy you’ve got to think about a man." (I don’t gedditl)... The coyest title is the French film named “Fanfan the Tulip.” How thWeet...The Journal- American’s photo of Ingrid Berg man carried this eyebrow-lifting caption: Her face has grown thin ner in recent years and from some angles Ingrid now bears a striking resemblance to Katharine Hepburn’ ...There are times when imitation is a form of flattery. Liz Taylor and Jean Simmons are' lookalikes and both are glad...Marllyn Max well mystery-guested on “What’s* My Line?” A panelist queried: “Are you female?” Marilyn sa*sed: Yes, the last time I looked.” (Blackoutl) Photoplay would have you be lieve H. Bogart has become a stu « dent of Greek mythology. (Uh-huh) ...Sextra! Sextra! Gander M. Mon roe’s photo gallery in' Photography mag. Marilyn and Jane Russell cer tify 3-D will never replace That Foolywood! The “Sadie Thompson” movie (being filmed in Honolulu) uses plastic cocanut trees... Lovely Dorothy Dandridge’s portrayal of a school teacher in the “Bright road” film wins the reddest apple ..Morton Gould’s re cording, “Music Box Tango,” gives the correct melodic throb to a tan talizing tempo.. The 3-D indecis ion has caused a drastic cut in production. During 1953 film fac tories wfll tarn out about 250 ci nemas. The customary annual av erage is 400...Klng’s Restaurant in Movieville is high on the list of the celebs..Add grand ditties: I Am Loved!” And Peggy Lee’s “Sans Souci” with Gordon Jenkins crew. Our new ABC-TV time Sun. is 6:3« jun. (Ch. 7). Radio 9 pjn. _ C*n you The Ambush at Tomahawk Gap” film Includes such dainty items as rape, shooting, fights, an amputation and people murdered with .flaming ar "»*»• You'll see it again In your nightmares... Liz Taylor shed 40 ex -2" P®«uds becoming a mam. Whew. Jf you enjow meaty movies served raw. see the realistic'ltalian exciter titled “Rome, li o’clock”... ZsaProclaimed: “I have never * r#wln * At 60 *» something.” (No comment). > * * 3 D is money-in-the-bank. De spite so-so reviews; “House of Wax” is currently the box office champ... Lend an ear to Norman Brooks’ platter of “Somebody Wonderful.’! The most amazing replica of Jol son’s wah-wah style...“ The Robe" to a major project. It cost $4,600,000...Drive-in theatres stre a big biz. Over 3,000 have sprouted the past few years..H. Skolsky notes he 'would accept Esther Williams as a desert island companion be cause she has a sensayuma. (such a reason IK./n,at recalls Madeleine Carroll s wise-firecracker when ask ed: “Who would you like as a des ert Island companion?” She flipped "An obstetrician." ( bandon Shangri La along with the presidential yacht Williamsburg as an economy move. However, his at torney general has been using) it as a week-end hideout to catch up on his work away from the clutter and clatter of his office... .Presi dent Eisenhower was shocked to leam that a few veterans hospi tals are still segregating the sick. As a result, he is preparing a spe rfai order abolishing segregation m government hospitals Edmund Mahaure, the conscientious new General Services Administrator has stopped political firings in hto agency. He instructed his staff: A man's politics is as much his own -business as Ms religion, pro vided he a a loyal American”... Be he couldn’t talk his way through the Washington Police line* In the Armed Fotc£ dLT Pared* McCarthy tried to cut fheei.at, the parade to get to his office He ar gued with the cops at every inter* section, but they, routed hta'the long way around—Just like Urn rest of the trafflc....Be»atorMcC&rthv is using his new power in^the key gOTwnment°Jobs^Hls* reauests are taken as orders by tonid ad- _ WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 20, 1953 i! li ii H te ms. . II rl. l||l'|kM|||| rJ ■aa ■ ■lie worry viifin » By Dr. George W. Ctane Hardy’s case may be a distinct shock to many of you home owners but it is high time such pernicious Influences were brought out into the spotlight of public attention. Paste this. Case Record in your scrapbook, for it supplements to morrow’s case Case G-368: Hardy K., aged 37, is a successful newspaper executive. “Last summer my wife and I spent the week-end away from home," Hardy informed me, as I was in his city for a speech under auspices of his newspaper. “Apparently, our garage door wasn't loeked, so a little girl from the neighborhood opened the door and started exploring the contents of our garage' “She finally became Interested in the lawn mower, which was standing in a far corner. And In pushing it around, she must have become intrigued with the revolv ing bladcp \ “Anyway, she cut the end of Her finger. It bled enough to leave • several red stains on the concrete floor. “Whan I returned home, her fa ther told me about the situation. So I urged him to be sure that her finger was looked after by a phy sician; saying I carried compre hensive liability insurance. Mean while, I called my Insurance com pany and told them about the case. LEGAL RACKATEERING • “I thought nothing more about the incident until a few weeks la ter. Then my 'insurance company called and said they had under stood the father of the girl was a friendly neighbor of mine. “I told them he was and ajked ; why they felt dubious. Then they Informed me that he had Just sued me for SIO,OOO damages. “It seemed almost unbelievable, *, so I called my neighbor to get the dope' He said he had been talking to an attorney friend of his. The ‘ attorney told him that if I was In sured, then they might as well get all they could from me, so this at torney had insisted that they file i suit for SIO,OOO. ( “And the grounds for the suit mi Mi ieiihimn|. 1., n ,11,, ||||,||ni IKatif Haucttk 'a Ifiail By America's Foremost Persona! Affairs Counselor . Uwuercssfid to 4uest HsaiMjMp , ing Man, English Girl A(4* W|mv , ther to Wed Another. I . ■ DEAR MARY HAWORTH: How r long should a girl go on hoping that her Prince Charming will find i her again? I am in the. difficult i position of the princess who met . her dream prince, once, fell in love > and then fate separated them. I I Just don’t seem to havethe ca , pacity for losing faith In his pro mise of marriage or for giving up hope that we shall meet again one day. We fell In love in Florence, Italy. I was on holiday from Eng ; .land. He was on business from New York. We planned to meet in Ven ; ice the following week but some , thing went' wrong. I waited and watched the whole week. I was there but he didn’t come at all. How dumb t can a girl be? x i I still believe in him. and two I years ago I came to New York } hoping to find him. All my efforts s to contact him have been lnaffec ■ /who wants to marry me, and would l make me a good husband. But I s tual. Now there is another man ■ still think (if the first man and our ■ plans for the future and would : simplv hate to be married to some one else, if one day ,we should meet again and he were still free. , My girl friends say lam foolish, ' that I shouldn’t waste the. balance . of my life on a dream that won’t ► come true and* that I, should take , what life has to offer while I am . still young and pretty enough to . be wanted. What do you think I should do? * SR. ’ MATE HUNGER BASIC PROBLEM ; DEAR S.R.: Perhaps your pursuit , of this will-o’-the wisp really stems ■ from the mounting scarcity of ma , trimonially eligible males in' Eu rope. It occurs to me that you’ve .’ magnified the fellow's worth add his intentions out of all propor . tion to reality. to test his potential powers with European women. Or whether he , was already affianced or married t at S' ame 70X1 ***** y° nr topes ; In.any cast, it appears he took himself in band, •to think things ; ayjga’t l desired, usually his re ' leanTon® aU * g^ ce to wanta smd . t IT sekms MSN ■•( ! BOD IDENTITY - were that I had offered a dangerous enticement to his child. “Well, for goodness sakes, can'Jjg a householder keep a lawnmower— in his own garage without being charged with enticing children to their own hurt? “What have our courts become if they don’t protect taxpaying ci tizens against the invasion of their private property by outsiders? INSURANCE PARASITES “My insurance company said they might be able to fight the case, but it would be cheaper for them to compromise, for SSOO. • “My dander was up so I refused* to compromise, for it irked me that a shyster lawyer would deliberate ly break-up neighborhood harmony for a 33 1-3 percentage cut oir all he could get from me. “But my insurance company a gain approached me several months later, saying it would be - cheaper to pay through the nose to the tune of that SSOO compromise, than to bring in witnesses and go through the costs Os a trial, even though I might vindicate myself. A “They inform me that nowadajft this is a customary racket that at torneys indulge In. The attorneys don’t expect them to fight the case, knowing v that it is for the innocent party to settle for SSOO, than to fight the case and spend SI,OOO or often much more, just to be finally acquitted. "They say one reason why in surance premiums are now so hl?h, is the fact that there are so many parasites bleeding insurance panies for these compromise set tlements. * “They also tell me that many courts settle cases on the basis of which litigant belongs to the larg est voting block in the general po . pulatlon, instead of on the actual evidence itself. Thus, even if the evidence Is on your side, you can’t be sure of a just verdict.” t ■ (Always write to Dr. Crane in care ; of tnls newspaper, enclosing a lont - 3c stamped, addressed envelope aniß' ea dime to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his ; psychological charts.) WMulty. even in the vast interior at the' United States, by using tbW telephone network as a medium of inquiry. If you have an offer of marriage from a congenial admirer who would (as you say) make a good husband, don’t reject it in favor of waiting for your so-called dream man. I think he has gone with the wind and, if he ever appears on your path again, he probably will be a great disillusionment, provided you’ve been maturing normally meanwhile. jto The thorough going if graduaP cure for romantic frustration is to become deeply invested in a pro sale pattern of dally living with arid for others—and the frame work for this kind of living is mar riage. M.H. Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mall or personal interview. Write her in care of The Daily Record. Light & Bright ■BOSTON ‘mare television sets; than bathtubs. A survey . reported by Admiral Distributors, Inc., said homes in tfife metropolitan Boston area have 730,000 television sets and 719,056 bathtubs. . Chicago OP Frank referee in Friday night’s heavyP weight championship fight between Rocky Marciano and Jersey Joe Walcott saiid today a referee’s life is, no bad of roses. But, Slkora said after counting out Walcott at 2:25 of the first round, “you can’t beat the hours.” San FRANCISCO BP Rodeo stunt rider G«rge Burton said that after he spent II t months .in a hospital with a broksn Lack He decided tricks ijrero “for the birds Jb Now he entertains In night club* With a group -of birds that wash clothes, pm wagons, lift weights and do a trapeze act. OAKLAND, Calif (IP Lt. v made it . back ed out over the Oaktond day. He made a belly hniding on a F l*l 1 * 1 tte Alameda * LOS ANGELEB - IB - Sailor Yawn Harootimian, *O, said to te* glad to *** 64011

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