Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / July 6, 1953, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR wke JBaiiu zz&h mWQQRIt PUBLISHING 00HPAN1 At Sll last Canary Otewt NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F , CLARK CO., INC. Ms-Sl7 *. 4Sad M, New Iwk W, N. 1- g. onto. m array Majer c*> t: SUBSCRIPTION RATES At OtURB: M cento per week; AM per peer In advaaeo; to far dx Mato; 91 fcr three ——•» w ~ *N TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CAKBIEB AND ON BUBAL BOOTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: IMS war w; IMS for toe months; II for three mantle OUT'OP-STATE: IMS pee pear In advance; BteSi aentna. ft toe three aontas r festered as second-class mr.tter In the Post Office in Dunn, £ N. C., under the laws of Congress, Act of Ma'ch 3, 1879. I Every afternoon, Monday thrcogh Friday e L lmstead Should Appoint i Man With Smith's Ideals ; ! Nobody envies Governor William B. Umstead the * iask of appointing a man to fill out the unexpired term of * die late u. S. Senator Willis Smith. t We believe that Governor Umstead made a mistake in t: -rot making an interim appointment and, then let all the v ispirants light it out in the election. It would have been ri nuch easier on himself and also better for his adminis- b oration. It will be impossible for the governor to find a man ti with the supreme qualities of Wilus Smith. s Just sit down and consider the background, exper- <■ ence and qualities of Willis Smith and then try to find * mother man who can match him. * We cannot hope for such a man, but we can hope that a 3overnor Umsteaa will appoint a man who has the sam., t: philosophy and ideals of government as Willis Smith. £ It would be an insult and a personal affront to the h thousands of North Carolinians who loved and admirea s md voted for Willis Smith for the governor to name a man 11 with opposing views to fill out his term. p The appointee should be a man who went down the one all the way with Senator Smith. j If the people want to elect a man next year with s opposing views that’s a horse of a different color. * Gov. Umstead should forget the matter of perhaps paying off one of his personal political debts, Decause £ Afulis Smith owed Bill Umstead no political debt. Gov. Umstead voted for Willis Smith and supported c him but in a mild sort of manner and didn’t dare stick b iis neck out tot him, despite their lifelong personal friend- 5 ship and admiration for each other. i Qov. Umstead should consider, the kind of man Willis s Smith would want to take his place. h The governor should also consider, as The Fayetteville f Dbserver points out, some of the reasons why the people c Df North Carolina elected Willis Smith. * In that campaign points out the Fayetteville paper, s ‘the issue was clear. It was to move toward greater h- r oeralism with Graham or more toward greater conser- n vatism with Smith.” “In declaring in favor of Smith the people of North v Carolina gave him a mandate to work for traditional A- i africanism, rather than for the new internationalism j which had become a hobby of the Roosevelt and Truman s administrations. t i “Senator Smith undertopkXhis mandat* at a time when it was not too popular with the’tJf) national “brass” : 3f his opm party, but he updertoojc it with a sinoerity apd i a singleness of purpose that he pursued until the day he v was fatally stricken. t “It is hoped that when Governor Umstead gets a- !. round to the business of selecting a successor to Willis r Smith he will keep in mind the basic reasons behind t Smith’s election and that he will giye the people of North 1 Carolina a representative in the United States Senate 5 iwho will be willing and able to carry on hi the Smith tra- I htion. 0 “We want h Senator fully imbyed with a burping 0 hatred of the forces which would tear down and make 1 )ver America in the likeness of European radicalism and we want a Senator of experience aim intelligence, capa- a ise of a successful fight against such forces.” 1 if To these remarks by our Fayetteville contemporary \ we say, “Amen.” ' ■ 1 ' 3 ’ * The governor cannot afford to apppipt a jpan who c tees not possess the ideals and purposes qf Willis Smith 1 He would not be frithful to his trustofhgflit? so. ‘ Frederick Q7HMAN ! WASHINGTON Everything in connection with Amy research, in stalling its vinegar with the water put, is serenhipicai. or at least, marly so. 1 What, : demanded tba erudite gentlemen of the Ways and Means Committee, is this here now seren ttlplcal business? ff'Maj. Gen. Leslie E. Simon, chief jit the Ordnance Research and De velopment Division, who spends Atone of his time researching in'the « mythical kingdom of serendins. T*The King had two daughters Iwho constantly and unexpectedly Bxperienced very pleasant circuai .mances,” the General j£ The Congressmen in charge «f The money bags, faced with fork ing over more than 13 bpiioo pl ain to the Amy, were in no seren jppical mood. They wanted the *qi gUers to be a little more deondmlcal. sUke why spend half a million do|- jtars a year on psychology? „il ; The General said psychology was jßsportant. General Simon produced jahand grenade, where mddhl nose :S«s etched so it loopd like a pine apple. These slices in the metal, he Wm. had nothing tq do with how “The military men were proud of rinr patrol in Korea was the own- i putt (and also the cough-cough) in i ' their gasoline engines. qpr snip the Colonel, tys experts have developed the world's first , 1 steam outboard motor. Just light .< i a fire Under the boiler and away t • you glide with only a gentle hiss- \ tag. My own interest in this has to i ■ m with the fact that the outboard i ■ motor is almost exactly the same 1 1 M Pi* lawnmower motor and I 1 ' have no doubt that we fortunate \ I pivl|ian| eventually will be cutting • our grass with ateayi. ; A wide assortment of the Army’s i i biggest; brightest brass parsed be- { r fgte. tljp money men and in so do ■ tag thCy said they stm thought , too«s widely denounced overcoats i 1 with Suit - in leggtas were a i ■ good idea. They said that, thanks j ■ I# tatter protests before the Sen- t ■ ate a few weeks back, they had ri- , ' 80 ' • cashed, fried hamburgers could be r e *tosr flat or round. j 7s ey announced they were about ; > to buy 13.600,000 pounds or salt. . I That, said Lieut. Col. J. W. Max- < t wen of the Quartermaster’s office. asr 11 : doesn't seem like so much. These Days £ekoLkif This is one of those tales that requires full investigation not be cause the matter Itself is important but because it discloses such un believably chaotic conditions in gov ernment that it is an index to our major troubles. In the case of the Austrian Schillings, the rate of exchange was fixed so that it was against the in terests of the United States and favorable to the interests of Soviet Russia and the satellite countries. In 1949, American officials in Austria started negotiations with the Austrian government to alter the rate of exchange. The Austrians were very anxious to improve the rate of exchange because it would benefit Austria. Failure to improve the rate ceuld only benefit Russia. In November, 1949, just before the agreement between the United States and Austria was finalized, the Secretary of the International Monetary Fund, Frank Coe, an Am erican who has taken refuge in the Fifth Amendment, objected to the American negotiators arranging for the correction of the rate of ex change in the interest of the United States. Coe said that he got his information from the Czecho slovakian member of the Inter national Monetary Fund, which is part of the United Nations. Coe told the American negotia tors to desist. General Geoffrey Keyes, American High Commis sioner in Austria, and Gabriel T. Kerekes and Clyde Nelson King, the negotiators, decide to go ahead because Coe had no authority to stop them. Whereupon a communication came to them from Washington backing up Coe. The testimony is net clear as to whether it came from the State Department or the Department of Defense or who sent it. Here is a negotiation that is taking place with the Austrian government on a matter of some significance; there are communi cations between the American negotiators and Washington, pre sumably the State Department, and nobody knows who sent the com munications from Washington. Mr. King said; “I can’t definitely state, but it was my impression all the time that we were dealing with the State Department. I don’t know. I am not too sure Just who was sending all toe messages because they were going back and forth." The negotiators in Austria tried, to find out who was swidinif ths] messages and they got no answer. How did they know that these were official instructions? Row did they know by what authority toe instructions were sent on an in strument called a te)econ? They never did. General Keyes decided to go thrqugh with the negotia tions and he carried them through on his own authority. Rpt nei|h er he nor anyone else to Austria ever learned who was toe plher end of the telecon who was sending orders from the State Department, If it was the State Department. Senator Jackson asked Kerekes; “Do you feel that there was someone within the State Depart ment or the Defense Department that was agreeing with Mr. Coe in his apparent subversive efforts? That is what I am getting at. Or did the State Department simply transmit a communication that came to tom in a routine fashion. There is a vast difference here, you '‘liir. Rerekto rqpiigd: “No, sir, it wag nqt in routine fgslilon. it wps transmitted to ijs with instructions t q stop, and those 1 instructions were very clear." Mr. King said; “it is ;py flPitaw. if m psrdpn m, that the re*s«n ftp* General Kayes dkj not.fgel toaf this was (of) too great importance was because both .he and I won dered who was at the other end of toe telecon. } *ver knew and he never knew. I am sure General Reyes lr«jto 1?&st Be said to*me was under the impression that it was soma totaor official in the State Department that did not ss.’ssr ■*“ “ - But who was toll minor official who had toe power to determine American pqlioy? Maybe this is a small matter, but did small of ficials interfere in big questions to the sasw ini Actions of this sort are in the record. There should t*! a copy of toe felecon message. There should be a file on the en tire subject flf fra#k Coe and toe Austrian Schillings. That file ought to show who was inter ffirtßl With /([npflcan interests. Who was backing up Frank Coe and the Czechoslovanan member ol the International Monetary Fund? Let us have toe name of this minor effiotal. Let that minor of ft»r °r her authority i few. veterans if this strife still ekfefet (add they already have their ■ffiftjg. thfsp Rpuld seem to b. Song with thousands of other items, toe Generals included In the reWMHHMir rectoe foiJamazejuU- . y } :' v ' > . • «■< t. • ; rm t)AiLritxc<m, dunnn. t. av • totlto SStoto, W)2 > “No, no, NO! How OFTEN must I tell you—? Keep your i head DOWN!” i i <hi» mmm dfilOM-GO-ROUMD By ItlW HAUM WASHINGTON. A significant ’ backstage battle over McCarthyism will be waged Tuesday morning when the McCarthy committee ’ meets behind closed doors to discuss its executive director - J. B. Matthews, and his state ■ ment that “The largest single 1 group supporting the com -1 munist apparatus in the United States today is composed of protes • tant clergymen." Wattoews, formerly employed by ' the Hearst newspapers, has recently [ replaced fair-minded “Frip” Flan ' agati, who for many years directed the 'Senate Government Operations J Committee of which McCarthy Is , now chairman but when the com ’ mittee meets it will face a solid | phalanx of three Democrats—Jack son of Washingson, McClellan of [ Arkansas and Symington of Miss ; ouri—who will demaqd that Matt hews be fired. The three Democrats can be out . voted by the four Republicans, but [, the interesting question wUI be whe -1 ther all the Republicans will line ' up together. For three of the four | Republicans are protestants: Mundt ; of South Dakota and Potter of Michigan are Methodists; Dirksen ■ of lUinois Is a Presbyterian. McCar- N toy. BjMtoH, is Catholic. MW, DuHbr‘ the closed-door debate. ; the three Protestant Republicans | will have'to decide whether to go , along with their chairman-or with ' the Protestant churches which have ’ been attacked by committee direct or Matthews. | DERISION FOR SENATORS | . It won’t make him popular on . Capitol Hill, but Secretary of De . fepse Wilson has taken to using the | term “Senator” derisively. ' . For example, at an off-the-record 1 meeting of aviation moguls at Wlll ’ iamsburg, Va., Wilson delivered a . short, pleasant speech, then called j for questions from the audience. He ) gat a critical one from ex-Air Force I General Joe McNamey, now pres , ident of Consolidated Vultee Air s craft. . “I don’t know who the hell you f are,” snapped Wilson, “but you . sound like a senator.” J To another critical question from j ex-Army General A1 Wedemeyer, Wilson snorted: “Let me tell you, Senator..'.'* e Later, the Secretary of Defense s shrugged off another question with j the grumpy comment: “That sounds like another stupid Senator.” Note—As wind of Wilson’s attitude , toward Senators he* drifted up to • Capitol Hill, even Republican Seri- I stars have been talking pointedly | about Ike’s getting a new Secretary of Defense. d CUTIES il e ■mi missing persons - Es j# . fflH V ** ■*- bOb \ a ■Btii- liijraaliVliV . n "'ll ISB/gSm f Jr^ hHw /SM W nr /• y I 0- 11//,./*/ ir W y } ujQmSBT& i “•«•* lra * b “^ o , ?SSoSwi! ,>r « -;t ■' ' . -BRITISH ADVICE ON RHEE i Field Marshal Alexander of the ; British Army has urged General : Mark Clark to take the unusual i step of arresting President Syngpian r Rhee if he continues to obstruct a ; truce in Korea. Lord Alexander, who was General • Clark’s superior .during the Italian I campaign, says Britain wouldn't • have put up with Rhee’s defiance for ’ ten minutes if he were in charge j of negotiations. r American military men considered - the idea of replacing Rhee with l the Chief of Staff of the Korean i Army, but President Eisenhower o s ver ruled them. SENATE SARCASM I Wealthy, retired Charles Daw of ’ Daytona Beach, Fla., was testifying 1 before the Senate Judiciary Com ■ mittee the other day against toe ’ appointment of James L. Guilmartta to be U. S. Attorney for Southern ■ Florida. ‘‘Whjit is your occupation and | profession?” demanded Senator ; Herman Welker. Idaho Republican. : “I do nothing, sir,” replied Daw 5 “That Is a wonderful occupation,” ‘ remarked Welker. “If you need a good partner,”. broke In Chairman “Wild Bill” Lan ger of Iforth Dakota, “you coi£d ! have one in Senator Welker.” , PATRIOTIC CONGRESSMAN i GOP Congressman Robert Kean s of New Jersey, who is leading the . fight inside the House Ways and Means Committee to extend the ex cess profits tax. stands t> lose $20,- i 000—if he wins his fight. For Kean . will have to pay an extra 120,000 > on the excess profits of his bank, the Livingston National Bank of I Livingston, N. J. That’s 15,000 more . than his total Congressional salary, t Yet the congressman has unself -1 ishly urged that the tax be contin s ued and Is one of the few Republi s cans inside the Ways and Means . Committee voting against uncle - Dan Reed. MURDER IN THE PENTAGON l H begins to look as U “Murder in i the Pentagon” waa not Just toe title of a detective story or a TV i drama. Finding the decomposed ■, body of John S. Johnson, a negro i, mail Clerk, In the trank reek of his ear casts serious suspicion on e the manner in which Lee E. Hsr a den, a trusted Negro guard, was s found deed at the bottom of a looked “oeeuritj" elevator shaft e two months mo. 0 His body was not mangled by the - elevator, but appeared beaten up. y However, his hand was clutching ’ && r&£2£'SJi»£‘ VVfVVVVVffV Walter Wine hell In New York The Telebrities: Mary Martin on toe 2-hour Ford program dis played every twinkle of her spark ling talent: Hoofing, spoofing, singlpg and playing in a serious dramltlP sketch . . . ABC's t»' “General Store” (on Sundays) is an hour of bargains, which ex plains all those commershills . . . There’s an imaginative touch In the “Saturday Night Revue’s" sta tion-break jingles. Make the in terruptlons seem entertaining . . . The more you witness the other imitators the more you appreciate the cross-firing on “Meet the Press” ... Ed Herlihy, a top an nouncer, makes commercials Un tenable. A real Pro . . . The sports castor to feel sorry for is the one who, predicted toe Milwaukee Bre ves, * now In Ist Place,would finish Last ■ - Several editions ago a newsmag snidely reported that “My Little Margie” had clicked “despite a so-so notice by Wtachell” . . . The sponsor just rejected that show and it will soon depart from the coaxial circuit. (End of Ho- Hum.) Stairway to the Stars: “A Queen Is Crowned” rep.esents a remark able job of editing. The Corona ation’s six hours have been bril liantly compressed into 89 spell binding minutes . . . Talk about Indecision: The film now called “The Golden Warrior” has.had four other titles. It still hasn’t gone before the lens . • • The candor of the week: Maureen O'Honey's wink: “If censorship were done away with for a while, everybody would have their fling; then the whole situation would become nor , mal—a woman’s bust would cease to be a hi»h-hush thing.” (OOh Bwoy! That’ll Be The Dgj!) . . . The day alter the half-mißipn dollar Ford festival Garbo was offered $25,000 for a 2-mlnute tv appearance by Arthur Murray. She declined . . . No Biz Like Show Biz: A teevy animal' agent got a call for a Persian Cat. They paid $450 for it to appear a few mom ents . . . Frankie Carle’s Victor ave “Rhythm of Randrops” is groovy . . . Proclamation by Marilyn Mon roe: “Anyone can be sexy If they work at it." (Shucks, and I’m sooo layzee.) Headlines A Footnotes: “Big 3 to Meet In Bermuda.” (Hoodat? Elsenhower, Hogan and Snead?) ... “Johnny Mise Gets 2006th Hit” (Cen-bat-ulatkms!) / . . Rhee Defies Vti.” (Why not? Vishln ' sky’s 'beef doing it for years) . . . “Truman 'Says Now That He’s In Private Life He’s Happy.” (Mak ing it unanimous) . . “OK Sales it Liquor In Legit Theatres." (That oughta improve the notices.) The Press-Box: Colyumls: Ru ark has a clearer understanding of justice than some legal experts,” who surrounded the Rosenberg case with confqslon. He declared: “When you consider that they at tempted to murder an entire na tion, all of a sudden the death penalty seems mild” . . . Quote from Sen. McCarthy In the World telsun: ‘‘An official of the Am erican Civil Liberties Union of which ex-Commy Wechsler is a member) has said publicly that my' committee respects the rights of witnesses better than many others” 1 . . . Marquis Childs had a big ! skewp. That McCarthy was to be angel’d by Texas oil men on teevy as a commmentator. Confirming I the beat right out of a Wtachell ’ newscast of sabbaths before . . . 1 News Photo of the Week: The one ' showing a flag-draped coffin in a 1 depot of an American who paid 1 the supreme sacrifice for our coun try—as Rosenberg tympathixers paraded into a train (bound for ! Washington) to plead far the trnit • or-spies. What a contrast 1 ... It 1 was a terrible week: First Harry I Bridges, the Coromy. got back his citizenship arid out of prison (via a legal technicality); Justice BUI Douglas retarded the execution of the Rosenberg*—and the 18-game winning streak of the N. Y. Yanks was broken. (Awful!) . The N. Y. Compost's abnormal paaslqn for prostitution was again indicated by its tedious rehash on the Jelke Jezebels. These presstitutea give prostitutes a Bad Name • • -It sez here the Coronation hurt London business. Guess that’s the end of coronations . . . The Communists made a world-w)de propaganda story of the Rosenbergs, but haven’t said a word about the di Bonaveqturas . . The Commies found out it’s not the Bapreme Court ... A lot of people hope Mr. Justice Douglas, the mountain cUmbgr. will make his next stop Mt Everest. ~ • ■elf, and he was declared a suicide, on the other hand, the did not carry revolvers that day, pro sttmably IhhAumi of an inspection; and it was significant that Harden had earlier participated in a raid on some government lockers whefe he uncovered evidence i® plica ling one Pentagon employee in the numbers spcket It is also bettered that John- —s » a a —m —a —. , Miu. reraiM, Iran ........ MOKftAY AFTERNOON, JULY 6, 1183 Tp' T earn® ha § ' " "" m I ' The Worrv Clinic I By Dr. George W. Crane I L— —— . Lois is asking seme very critical < questions. Unwed mothers pay a 1 bitter price for trying t« grep up too faat. So apt wise to toe Ms. , It isn’t dgarets or liquor or ItH- j cit sexual liberties that auQg yen | BIG. It shows how to be popular “date bait”, legimately. j Case H-323: Lois M., aged 17. Is 1 an attractive and very popular high school senior. . i advice," she began. “I get dates with I “Dr. Crane, I should like some t many boys and I enjoy their com pany, at least as a rule. “But why do boys always try to , kiss a girl? And even on the first , date? They seem to set that as their goal of the evening. ] “We girls don’t try to jtias them I So why do boys act so’ eager to 1 kiss us? “A few years earlier these same 1 boy’s wouldn’t have anything to do with us and thought It was sissy 1 even to walk beside a girl. “Now, they suddenly want dates 1 and can’t wait to snatch kisses. 1 Some of them are actually re pulsive because they have no ’ Ii- ! nesse and don’t know what to 1 talk about. “They Just want to get a girl in 1 the back seat of a car and then grab her and kiss-kiss-kiss. “Dr. Crane, why-why-why? Mar- ! ried folks don’t do this?" teen-age psychology The male is normally the aggres sor. He pursues and the female flees. But when the male flees, 1 the female Is often found ta pur suit. At 14 or 15. the average boy Is likely to abhor dates and Tegard such thing as "sissy.” At 17 or 18, however, the aver age boy has now changed his views, for he is pathetically eager to do anything which he feels is typical Os MEN. 0 So he sucks on clgarets or a pipe. He may boast about drinking beer or harder liquor. He also wants to wear men’s styles of cloth ing. Since he finds that older men have girl friends, he now is fran tic to have dates. And he wants to kiss a girl, just as he wants to smoke clgarets, as IttaMf wmrfk'A Htail ' N By America's Foremost Pononfl Affoiff Coumelot * f Urged By Friend T* Be Aggressive In Bidding For Widower’s Interest, Lonely Widow Asks Help ‘ -” 1 DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I’ve ne ver asked for advice of this sort be fore, so I hardly know how to begin. I am a widow, 56, though my friends, and even my relatives, say I look 10 years younger. My hus band died three years ago, I lost my son in the war, and a daughter died in infancy, so I am now com pletely alone. I sincerely thought I could “go it alone,” and have traveled near and far visiting relatives and friends. Also I have done. hospital work. Red Cross work, gardening, and have even mixed into the political field in a modsst way. to keep • myself occupied. But so far nothing abates the lonely feeling I have. I love to play cards, attend sports events, the opera, etc., but : I feel like the proverbial fifth wheel at all such gatherings. I’ve had a : few dates with different men in the last two years, but none had any special appeal. However, I »m In ter i ested ta a man, a widower, a friend , of my late husband, who has been 1 very kind and helpful to me in handling certain business affaire. Bart lost his wife a good many 1 years ago and lives ta an Eastern city. In the same city I have a wp : man friend, herself a widow, who doesn’t know Bari She spys I am i not aggressive enough, that I should write him and ask him to vRIt me. I But I hesitate to do this, as I al ways supposed it the man’s place to ask permission to call. Or has this ‘ changed of recent years? Whet do you think—should I write to the gentleman? Or might he con e.iS'sr&SuJE •bout toy marrying again—but I ; cpn't rdmember how* the subject came up. I shkU be watohipg for had been relieved en the sgsglclqp (hat he was shakjnr down the guards on payday, gomo d the guards weye alas tpfctng numbers 1 te man who cut - the Air Fpree a badge of his ADULTHOOD. Hs feels grown UP. The usual kisses of the teen age hoy are. not because the girl is so ravishlngly attractive. Don’t kid yourselves, girls! No, the boy kisses you because it makes him feel that he is a big shot, a- he-man, almost 211 Boys then may boast about the many girls they have kissed. For they use girls as stepping stones to fatten their own ego. . AGE BAROMETERS But boys aren’t alone ta this mad desire for ego inflation. High school seniors, like Lois are doubly For this makes them feel older lege boys. flattered to have dates with col and more sophisticated. Since at age 17 they-can boast of dating a 10-year-old university man! Big stuff! In many college town, too, the sappy high school girls are al most dying to appear older. So they put on the pressure for unwarranted sexual liberties and soon stampede these gullible girls with the Idea that “older girls of course do such things”. So. to appear older, these high schoolers succoumb and thus get syphilis or pregnant and bear cables out of wedlock. Thus they double cross their parents who have struggled to give them a chance to marry happily and be a credit to the mother and father who sacrificed to give them a good education. Send for my bulletin, Sex Pro blems of Young People,” enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. It will show you how to be pop ular date bait without submit ting to unwarren ted sexual libera ties. OAKLAND, Calif. flfi Em mett Williams was fined sls and given a 10-day suspended sentence Wednesday for driving his car with out a starring wheel. Williams said he used a wrench op the nut at the end of the steer ing column to turn comers. “I was very careful," he said. - *819099 j] DRAB 6- r.: IM» still a good ruBT of common sense for a woman W avoid the appearance of pursuiqfc a man with matrimonial hopes. The reason being that the man, however much he welcomes pursuit, likes to harbor the illusion that he is the masterly figure ta the performance, and the precipitator of what goes on. However, a very gamy illusion, fabricated of graceful pretexts coin ed by the lady, suffices to keep him hsppy if he finds her society a greeable. To preserve the charming, face saving amenities, you need a log ical basis for getting tough with Bart, or for writing him. When you do—as I think you might, experi mentally, ta the not distant future. And what basis could be more log ical. then going to visit yoUr old friend Edith (let’s call her) who lives in hi* city. During your stay, your hostess might be persuaded if she doesn’t volunteer) to ask a few {fiends ip for tra dinner, to do you honor. And £*ri should be one of the guests, of course—as a special friend of your late husband, and because of his recent kindness to you. During the party, or at *» ve taking, a candid bit to see more of him before you go. say for a guided tour of his favorites spots (a subject tactfully opened earlier), qr for lunch to get his advice on business investments, could pave the way to deepening friendship. And after that much exchange, it would seem right and natural to write him a cordial letter of appreciation when you get homs. saying nice things about his contribution to your enjoyment of thp Sojourn in his city. Thus a correspondence might be Kit how to get yourself Invited to Edita’s? Wsil, bow about asking her to spend * week, or long week special teo?S of the season are in your environment? Insist that she come; don’t rake no for t.~ tIHUHr and sxert yourself to flip h«r a ft. *9. - its in his estimation—and P Uta al Interview. WTrite her ta bSfjP The Daily Record.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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July 6, 1953, edition 1
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