PAGE FOUR m* min mm DUNN, RC. | Published By RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY gr- 1 ' At m East Canary Street NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE ~ IP THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. 265-217 E. 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. Branch Offices In Erery Major City I SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER: 26 cents per week; 18.58 per year in advance; $5 for six months; <3 for three months. «N TOWNb 501 SUCVEh 01 CARRIER AMU ON BUBAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: $6.66 aer year; *SM for six months; 22 for three monUs ■CT-Of-llAXl: |S M per year in advance; SB far Bx assit« SB for three months Entered as second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, N. C., under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3, 1879. Every afternoon, Monday through Friday. Ministers Not Immune This newspaper does not beliteve that any Congres sional Committee—or anybody else—should make sweep ing indictments against the clergy of this country be cause some ministers have affiliated themselves with the Communist Party. By the same token, we do not believe that sweeping in dictments should be made against doctors, lawyers, brickmasons, carpenters, newspapermen or anybody else. We believe that every case should be handled on its own merit.. However, we can’t get sore over the fact that a Con gressional Committee has put its finger on Communism among some of our liberal, left-winged pink preachers. Tne committee has pretty definitely established the fact that Communism is prevalent among certain groups of ministers and the country should be indebted to tne committee for making this expose. We do not agree with those people who contend-that ministers are immune from investigation and above sus picion. There should be no “sacred cows” jn ferreting out Communism in this country. . It ic unfortunate but true that many ministers are very gullible and naive when it comes to swallowing pro paganda—particularly when some cause is heralded in the name of humanity or Christianity. Because most ministers are basically good and have an abiding faith in their fellow man, they are not as suspicious and do cot keep themselves on guard against isms as well as they chould. They are susceptible to sop called humanitarian causes which really serve as a front for Communism. A number df North Carolina ministers have joined so many left-wing groups, that there is cause to believe that while they are not card-carrying Communists they certainly have helped the Communist cause. We might point out that we. know of none in neither Dunn or Harnett.. But, getting back to the point, there is absolutely nothing wrong with investigating those ministers whose actions arouse suspicions any more than to investigate newspapermen, politicians, factory employees or anybody else. Tfcere are frauds, misfits, quacks, phonies and fakes in every profession—including the miniMrY. i-J; So why shouldn’t they be investigated! '. — C ••• Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON The all-nylon i bed &eet practically is upon us. j Perhaps I should say. under us. This is news of sensational ohar -1 acter and why nobody’s paid any attention to It, except appreben- : sive laundry owners and cotton tanners, is beyond me. The point is that everybody in this land < sleeps on sheets. These have sot to be washed. They also must be : Ironed. 1716 labor involved in keep ing America’s bed sheets fit to j sleep between is enormous. This win continue undiminished until *qn that date one of America’s largest makers of sheets will place bn sale across the country his new nylon Jobs. These will cast $5.95 each at retail for single beds; $7.50 for double. This admittedly is a high prltse. but the producer fig- 1 urea they’ll outlast the best cot- < ton . sheets three to one. This he hp* tested. He has hir ed people to sleep on ’em (that's i > the kind of work I’ve always want ed) and they , report that dosing on nylon is something Hte on satin, movie star style. This testing Job took longer than any body expected; the sheets were laundered daily, but they lasted far beyond the life of any percale sheet yet made. It develops that a sheet doesn’t Harnett Native Succumbs Friday Jce C. Jones. 67, of Godwin died ■ Friday niglyt at Highsmith’s Hos- A native of Harnett County, he was the sou of the late Jesse Mar tin and Sarah Beasley Jones. He lived in Cumberland County for many years and was a prominent fanner In Godwin communi ty. Funeral services were conducted ‘ Sunday afternoon at three o’clock ; fium the Godwin Presbyterian SSS w^ : J£a* D and M bu^ will he in the BMf Church Cem etery. The body will be taten to the churqh to -lie » stale for one get much wear In bed. unless the sleeper thereon has sharp trenails. Where the sheet suffers is in the washing machine. The nylon sheet is like the nylon shirt; all it needs is a quick dunking and the dirt falls out. Like the shirt, the nylon sheet doesn’t need to be ironed. That’; the big selling point and I have no doubt that my bride and all the other ladies will be standing In line to buy nylons for their beds. Thare"s only one small question I have concerning nylon sheets; will they be shocking? . First time I took a trip In a flying machine to far places I took along a couple of nylon shirts, which I personally washed each night and hung up to dry on a coat hangar. One morning when atmospheric conditions were prop erly dry I crawled into one of my synthetic shirts and got a nasty static electrical shock. A think like that can wake you quicker than a aup of hot black coffee and I only hope the sheet man has taken care of this problem. Hot sparks in a cold bed could be demoralizing. Another industrial revolution, this one involving king-size ciga rettes, has me wondering The manufacturers of these have spent trillions of dollars advertising them, promoting their sale and in particular persuading tobacconists to make room for them on the shelves. ’ •■. >, .The big fight now in the tobacco business concerns cigarettes vend ing machines. To put in a line of long eigarettee means that some standard, short length brand has got to be tossed out. The compe tition is what you might call bru tal etui arid all the Jon* brands have been gaining in popular fa vor. This started a Chicagoan to thinking. Everywhere he went, seenied like, he aa# in ash trays king-size cigarettes snuffed > out, half smoked. Bsruck him as, a hor •So he perfected and put on sale thlrfgA few quick puffs trom 40 sMIBr 'ciggretSss should be con eottLbfYO tone"dteß Bile cigarette futoe^ ?' These Days £ekcUkn MIKE BORODIN I see by the newspapers that Michael Borodin, once parctically the ruler of the whole of South China, is dead. Iknew Borodin and watched him operate from the day he arrived in Shanghai on his way to Canton in 1924. Although a Rus sian, he had been educated in the United States at Valparaiso. Indi ana. He had studied law but he onerated a preparatory school in Chicago. I have never been able *o discover whether he ever became an American citizen, perhaps be cause of the many different names he used. Borodin was a theoretical Marx ist. a close friend of Karl Radek and Leon Trotzky, although he novor joined the Trotzkvist’functon of the Communist Party. In 1924, Dr. Sun Yat-sen set off again to conquer China, but this time with Russian assistance. Mich-, ael Borodin, with approximately 100 military and civilian experts, was based on Canton to reorganize - Sun’s government and army. At Whampoa, outside of Canton, they organized a military academy, at the head of which they placed Chiang Kai-shek, who was then an obscure military man atta6hed to Sun Yat-sen. They legalized the Chinese Communist Party. Borodin’s ability was beyond be lief. ,In a short period, he had mas tered the intricacies of Chinese pol itics and had put himself in such a commanding position that those who disagreed with him went swift ly into exile. Dr. Sun Yat-sen was then a sick man and was to die ’on March 12, 1925. The’ leaders of the party under him were Liao - Chung-kai, Hu Han-min and Wang Ching-wei. Liao was assassinated. Hu. And Wang went into exile. Borodin was in command. His choice to lead the revolu tion was Chiang Kai-shek. Assisted by a Russian general who in China called, himself Galens. but who be came Marshal Bluecher, in com - mand of Soviet Russia’s Eastern armies and was subsequently to De liquidated, Chiang conquered China. Borodin operated psychological pen etration organizations in advance of the march of Chiang’s armies; he organized on a Russian bais tn ; the rear of the armies. It wajHUl > bone, wfth amazing effectiveness^ Meanwhile, Chiang, deciding;*!®t Borodin was • actually organizing the conquest of China by Russia, determined to break with Borodin, who controlled most of the army and the vast Kuomintang political party which had been penetrated, by Chinese Communists. So Chiang •came to Shanghai alone, a refugee, to see what he could do with China away from Borodin. Chiang could have stayed with the Russians and he could have had their full support. By breaking with them, he risked civil war and his own total elimination. When Chiang managed to estab lish the Nanking government, he issued orders for the expulsion of the Russians, including Borodin and his wife. Meanwhile, Stalin, emerging as undisputed master of Russia, disapproved of the slowness of Borodin’s pace in converting China into a satellite; further, Stalin disliked Radek. who was Borodin's friend. (Radek was ulti mately liquidated.) so, in 1927, Borodin and his wife, Galens and the other advisors, including 3ome Americans working for the Russians, left China. Chiang controlled the National ist government, but part of the army stayed Communist under Chu Teh. It is that army which the Russians have owned and controlled since 1925 and which fought the United States in Korea. To get the kind of technical advice, which the Russians had been providing but without the political complications that Rorodln brought with him. Chiang turned to Germany, to the veteran organizations. First came tne fapious Colonel Max Bauer, who had been Luden dorff’s Chief - of-Staff, but before he could do much, he died of smal lpox. Then came General Alexand er van Falkenhausen, who reorgan ized Clriang's armies. I r-c-ntly saw an interview between 'Falken hausen and Karl von Wiegand, a great American reporter, in which the general spoke of China in these 1 terms:' 1 • ‘That key was once firmly in the 1 hands'of America. Not under -stand ■ ihg it geopolitical importance or -lotion and econ p TO return to Borodin: when he 1 f or » ***!? t in e*>qcqre positions. I think that : his last job was publisher Os the i “Moscow Daily News”—not much THE DAILY RECORD. DUNN, N. C. ■ ■■ ■ - »■'■■■ e*U-i- ' —.. % “I resented Dave’s watching the fights every night— until .1 realized one can learn a few tips | a qt. wswsiw iStottßY-60-ROtM) tg TJb Fttu» miiyf II If *'» WASHINGTON When John Foster Dulles was suddenly sum moned to Denver last- week, many people, including the Secraiary of State himself, figured he !was in for a presidential spanking , for his off-the-cuff remark about U. S. support for Chancellor Adenauer which caused such a furor among German socialist vc'.ars. But when Dulles got to Denver, he was agreeably surprised. The President, bU3y with golf, fishing, and domestic problems, hadn’t heard much about the political fu ror kicked up by the Dulles State ment. So when his Secretary of State explained the incident, Ei senhower made a very laconic re ply. Our man won, didn't he, he said in brief.| Then what are we worrying about? If your support was a mistake, maybe you Can ar range to make a similar mistake just before the 1954 elections when we are going to need all the help we can get. The two men settled down for a two- hour discussion of world pro blems, and Dulles came away with the feeling that the President had given, him Carte Banche to speak out TBuntly at future press confer ences. Note Before he left Denver he did so. Interviewed by the press the Secretary Os State said he had no evidence that the Commu niists were holding back prisoners. Naturally this was immediately picked up by the Reds, and when Gen. B. M. Bryan served an ulti matum on the Reds to return 944 remaining American prisoners or else the Reds promptly came back with the statement that there were none. Ai d to back up their contention, they quoted none oth er than John Foster Dulles and his statement in Denver. JOCKEYING OVER ADLAI Be hind all the oratory to which the Windy City will be subjected during the next, two days, and be hind all the headlines about sou thern deflections from the Demo cratic Party, there is just one big issue in the minds of those who ga ther at the Democratic Woopfest today. It is: Will Adlai Stevenson ct The Next Candidate Os The Democratic Par ty and the Next President Os The United States? There are a lot of side issues,’ such as the vigor with which the; democrats should criticize Eisen hower; and whether there should be a Southern or Northern Na tional Chairman. But all' these shade off into insignificant side shows beside the jockeying over Adlai. The fact that the jockeying has become so ettergetic less ; than a airas Mg * Jps! 4!? 17 !■>. -MSWp. gjiS&ei I m * - if us) ¥l j —pa—in t' ' ' i r i year after one of the most crush ing defeats a demohraiic’ candi ’ date’ever suffered shows that a E definite gleam of confidence is i back’ in Democratic eyes. Most of i them figure, rightly or wrongly, . that the Democratic nomination in ' 1956 may be worth a lot. of effort. Regardless whether this is right or wrong, however, here Is how . the jockeys line up at the Preis i dential post this early in the race. Jockey No. 1— Cagey, careful . Sen, Dick Russell of Georgia does not even expect to be at the Chica ’ go conclave. But his potent hand ; will be felt just the same. One of • the ablest of Southern senators, Russell went to Venezuela last fall, made no campaign speeches for Stevenson, and privately wants to ' euchre Adlai out of the *1956 run ; ning. • - Russell's Horses are either Sen. 1 Stuart Symington of Missouri or Seri. Lyndon Johnson of Texas, i Both are able, young, handsome, and Symington has a wealth ’of - background in the executive; branch of th4 .government as Secretary i lor Air, RFC Administrator and l Chairman of the National War ; Resources Board. But any ijfan who gets out in front top boon % a presidential race is likely to suffer ’ the fate of another hahdsdme can i didate—Paul McNutt of Indiana. Jockey No. 3 ls Seh' Estes Kgfauver of Tennessee. Kefauver is riding his own horse, hjUing.be ' hind no one eise, and has a power i ful following among GrasS-Roots Democrats. Most Republicans will ' tell you that If-Kefauvef had been - running last fall instead of Adlai ' Ike would have had a tougher bat ! tie. Old Guard Democrats don’t par ticularly love Estes, and while : Speaker Sam Rayburn and Sen. John Sparkman of Alabama were’ especially invited to participate at Chicago, Kefauver was largely lg | nored. Jn The long run this cold ' shouldering helps him with the voters rather than hurts, him, and ' Kefauver will be a man to watch ; for 1956. Jockey No. 3 ls Gov. Mennen '• Williams of Michigan. “Soapy,” as he’s called because his family foun • ded the soap anfl.baby powder com panies whose names he hears, is : not whlppihg up his horse. He’s , modestly running only for the Se , nate from Michigan. But he’s one ; of the most popular Democrats ' ever to be elected in the normally l Republican state of Michigan, and - is ar man who should be- watched : for 1956. ■\ Jockey No. 4 ls Harry Tru ' man himself: Like Dick Russell of Georgia, Harry is a trainer more t than a jockey.. He's playing no fav t orites at the moment, but is ex- leeeeeeaeat Walter Winchell In New York. TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY “Homan Holiday” at the Music Hall is the best light comedy since. "It Happened One Night.” As romantic as a kiss - in - the dark. . . "Vice Squad” at the Globe Is better than the ads exaggerate. The theater frontage features Edw. G. Robin son wltb a gat in hand. He doesn’t handle one throughout the exciter. The famine of top-flight new dram as along The Rooster Route was relieved by “The Starcross Story.” Variety's rustic representative hail ed it as a “potential Broadway click” . . . The Lana Turner film, ‘‘Latin Lovers,” is about a woman who gives away 37 million to con vince the fellow that he alone ma ters. Based on a real love-story. The heroine was a Texas heiress. . . Mindy Carson’s verson of "Darling, Darling” certainly is. . . CBS non sensors have tabood the word sexual . . . BC’s telecast of “Othello,” how ever, used wjhore twice last Sabbath eve. . . A’ moment in “From Here To Eternity” which lingers long after you leave the theater: When Deborah Kerr puts her hand up to shade the sun from her eyes. So she can take a Last Long Look at her Love— Burt Lancaster. April Stevens has a new platter that stays in the ear. “Soft Warm i Lips” • • . “The Robe” due at the Roxy on the 16th (via Cinema : Scopelis 20th Century-Fox at its , Very Best. We thrilled over Its i high spots on the coast recently. . . Recommended: Gordon Jenkins’ - latest album: “Seven Dreams” . .'. And “Ebb Tide” (London Records,) which strums the heartstrings . . Linda Darnell’s baby-talk: “Just I why must a single girl have dates 1 in order to convince people she : isn’t neurotic? . . , Prof Kinsey’s : portrait of Eve offers the best ex planation, dearie. . . “Crazy Man ■ Crazy” is an earache. . . No one ; massacres American names like the Italian papers. A writer for Paese Sera identified a New Yorker as the agent ‘‘for the celebrated Negro show, ‘Pork St Bessy’ . ... Modem Screen mag has a shock for Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe. It reports that Hollywood's most ex- I pansive frontage is owned by Kath ryn Grayson. . . 41 Inches. “Studio One" presented Kipling’s 'The Light That Failed” but switch ed the tiUe to The Gathering i Light.” (Because the sponsor manu factures HHctric lights) . . Doris Day® “Chop-Choo Train” is on The Right Tra<sc. . . Those recent trag edies in which children were smoth ered while playing in abandoned ice-boxes are being blamed on the film, “The Great Houdini.” It un folds the life of the famed Escape 1 artist. . . Bob Hilliard's new tune. “Song and Dance Man” (due in the next Copa show.) is another “Dear ie” . . The Shuberts haven’t had a show on Broadway in Over 3 years. They’ve had a couple of “pieces” of shows but they are now ‘‘in the real estate” biz . . The Girls’ Resi . dence Club (in the E. 60’s,) the tepee for struggling actresses, is also the’ home for two Countesses. . . The real name of 'the new crooner Stan Parker Is Oscar Papenfuse. Show Biz Is Like This: Jack Webb, the star of "Dragnet.” click ed large in Seevee. But labored for years in mediocre films without ; emerging from the bit-role dept. . . i How the mightly have fallen. The Roxy now offers a double-feature. . Somctinmes it pays not to work, i Corlnne Calvet, the actress, Just : got $40,000 to cancel her contract ... Martha Lou Harp's recording ! of “Dream Time” is a soothing bal i lad. Plus an) unusual accomnanl mect: Organ and harp . . . Harry l Truman win get SBOOO lor his first commercial tv appearance. Almost a$ much as “Howdy Doody” . . There Isn’t a single 3-D picture among the current Top Ten box office champs. . . Bing’s latest platter, “Embrasse-Moi Bien,” is mighty jukeable. . . Those recorded bop versions of Fairy Tales afe not as 8 musing as the idea sounds. Man. its the dullest . . . Teevy, as many have found out, is no ditch. 82 shows were canned in the past 2 wks. v* trrmely anxious to pick and train a horse that can w-:, ’ In the past he’s veered toward Adlai. But Trurnnh has been a bit irked of late that Adlai hasn’t taken off the gloves and slugged at the Republican opposition. He feels that precious months have gone by S) d public 4 m* U t«» lVe tbe*I*^ 1 *^ Tte»e are the Chief horses, their jockeys , and the*- trainers, ip and . b .C HICACO -oo - ROUND ' MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER ti 1953 1 iniir 'ww — i —. The Worry oinic j By Dr. George W. Crane P-—-W ' -a - Egotism U not the bads of WUUam’s comments below for hundreds of men make the same complaint. They may be star athletes or handsome, or in the newspaper headlines for something. And then the girls aet like the sorer,ty coeds whom William is now trying to avoid. Girts, get wise to yourselves, and fellow Senecas advice. Case 0-322: WUllam J., aged 20, is a college senior. “Dr. Crane, I have a problem that is really serious,” he began. “Most people would probably laugh at me or think I was just kidding, but girls seem.to think lam good looking. , “And that has turned out to be a curse, instead of a blessing! It has made my hie miserable. I try to shun people, especially girls. "In high school, I was voted the best looking boy in the senior class. I never was a star in athletics. And my grades were only average. “But the girls always nocked around me. They’d even hang around my locker so I couldn’t get to it. They often made me late to classes for tnis reaosn . "Well, I f.gured I'd get away trom all this by going to a distant university. But the problem grew worse, instead of better. “These silly coeds are greater saps than the high school girls. And the sorority girls shower me with invitations. “They buy tickets and pay all the bills in an effort to get me to go with them- For they seem to think it is a feather In their sorority’s cap u they can have a date witn me. “Never since I entered college have I had a chance to pay any money on a date! The girls Just ’happen’ to have given them dance tickets, etc, “Now, Dr. Crane, you might think I should riot complain. But here is the eaten. These girls all expect me to play the Romeo role when I go out with them. “Bince they imagine I look like a matinee Idol, I suppose they think I will act like one. “So they fall all over themselves trying to gee me to take them in my arms and kiss them. They all expect me to pet and neck and go in lor heavy loving. “But it just isn’t in me.. I wouldn't kick so much if they’d be content for me Just to drop them off at their door.. “But these sorority girls don’t want that. I used to think newspaper reporters were spoofing about the swooning females when Frank Sina tra would come to town. “But I've decided it wasn’t just a publicity stunt. Even though I cant sing like Sinatra, these girls act goofy whenever I enter a roopi." SENECA’S ADVICE Seneca once gave this advice on handling women: “Go to the archer, see how he handles the bow. With one hand he pushes it away, while with the other he pulls it bacx again." Unfortunately, WUilam’s very coolness just incites the girls to fur ther interest. It piques their vanity and spurs them on. And WUilam’s case is not rare. Hundreds of.coliege men some of whom »re star athlts, also complain about tne nauseating behavior of many young women who wui do almost anything to be dated by somebody who rates headlines. Many modem girls are such saps they try to bait men onward and even bribe their favor by granting unwarranted sexual liberties. Men prefer girls who are sufficiently different to stimulate pursuit. ' When girls become the pursuers, the men try to flee, as Williams case so notably illustrates. So if you girls want to win boy friends, send for my 2UQ-potnt ’Test for Sweethearts,” enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. 'iHary Hau>ottk ’i fail By America's Foramott Personal Affairs Counselor In Love With Married Girl Longs To Break SpeU of RtdnMns Attachment DEAR MARY HAWORTH: What can I do to get myself out of a terrible mess? I am hopelessly in love with a married man. a wonder ful guy, father of four, who says he loves me—but win not leave-his wife. I see him nearly every day, as we work in the same byUdtng, and this has been going on for five years. I’ve tried and tried to break away, but it has become an obses sion. Other men 1 meet just aren’t up to Charles’ standards—his sense of humor, his love of life. We are perfectly compatible physically too. I can’t possibly give him up; and I know that my life is being ruined because I by-pass other chances for him. I am 32, considered most at tractive, have a wonderful position. But the thought of marrying any one else, when I lov e Chuck so much, is repellant to me. I tried going away for a while* but when J returned my love was much stronger than ever. What can I do to stop getting in deeper? Now Chuck wants me to take an apart ment where he can visit me often. At present I live at home. I know some day I will regret all this sin fulness, but right now my whole life, every breath I draw, is Invested in him. *. F. CHEATING LEADS - TO SELF-DAMNING DEAR E. F. Tour predlctament Is atrtathr from hunoer. as the savins goes. What you want is Jove that enriches life; and what you have with CTiuck is busks. To use your words, this terrible mess, in which you are so deeply invested, is an experience in hope less frustration, as the stalemate proves. The relationship is essent ially dishonest, a mischance deve lopment. Chuck is cheating you as wen as his wife, as of course he Knows; and his duplicity doesn't elevate his character, certainly, and probably engenders In him a good deal of self-con tempt, in which he brackets you unconsciously. You too are cheating yourself (nobody else) —wasting youthful farlrt? The ana W’face facts,- > slop kidding yourself, lay hold on" leason—and resolutely reverse your course. i PRAYER GROUP Ti> THE RESCUE Like the Prodigal Son. you’ve got to wake up to your situation, pick yourself out of the mire and strug gle hack to wholesome living. You can’t make the grade alone, with ; out help, however. You must have some psychological support, in the form of regular fellowship. Taking into consideration your/ Immediate problem, and the tang/ , of emotional difficulties that un derline it—that precipitated the fL | fair in the first place—l advise /ou to affiliate with an intelligent pay er group. For guidance in making safe harbor, in this respect, I re quarterly magazine now in its 14th ! year, sponsored by a group of dls , ttnguished clergymen and educa tors. It is published at 1571 Grand , Avenue, St. Paul 5, Minnesota.’Hie subscription fee is one dollar a fear. MJfi. Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mall or personal Interview. Write her in care of The I Dally Record. ; Suggs Receives Training In H. Y. r £ORT SLOCUM, N. Y. (FHTNC) —Wilson M. Suggs, personnel man seaman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs, : anwr & 2ssa*i a six-weeks course in Information cuss ton leading, effective prewi- UfUou of curaent newis, use at teaching aids, and the ad- Kduc* tr wi ol pr Os thC Ar { ned Forc ** 11 ruanKs so Public

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