PAGE FOUR vita JPaug jH tt&m DUNN, R C. mum By RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY At U1 Eaat Canary Street ' NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. 2M-Xl7 C. 42nd St,, New Tork 17, N. X. Branch Office* In Beery Majar City “ SUBSCRIPTION RATES BX CABBIES: 20 cents per week; SBAB per year in advance; » far dr months; $8 far three ■«■»»■« IN TOWNS NOT SERVED BX CARRIES AND ON RURAL BOOTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: RN ear year; yua far Ms month*; n far three wnda 4||t- fer ats manta. » far three montha Catered 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. Wanted: Qualified Managers A news item in the Wall Street Journal said, “The trend toward bigger stores has led to special college courses to fill the demand for people qualified to manage such operations.” The paper then pointed out that Michi . gan State Is now offering a course in food distribution, with special emphasis on supermarket management. Chains and other retailers are eager for the graduates. This is indicative of the strides that retailing has made in the last generation. Running a successful store isn’t just a matter of buying stock, adding on a profit, and then waiting hopefully for patronage. Retailing is one of the most competitive of all enterprises. It is en tirely dependent on the tastes, desires and the changing whims of the consumer. The customer who is displeased or disappointed goe6 elsewhere next time, and usually his trade is permanently lost. Retailing thus offers almost endless opportunity for men and women .who wish to make it a career and have the necessary training and aptitudes. < > Moreover, retailing, in ail its branches, is a field where there’s always room at the top. The executives of many of our leading chain systems, for example, began as clerks, warehouse people, assistant buyers, arid in other minor capacities. Energy, ambition and intelligence brought them advancement. s Finally, there’s nothing dull or static about present day retailing. The retail store is America’s show window and it is as varied and colorful as America itself. Oil Expects More Attacks The chief executive of one of our leading oil compa nies* recently stated that new attacks on the oil indus try may be expected in the next Congress and that an effort will be made to repeal or reduce oil’s depletion al lowance of 27 Ms per cent. This allowance, which applies against taxes, has been in effect for a great many years and has been approved by one Congress after another. Loss or reduction of the fdlpwancp, in the executive’s phrase, “would be suicidal.” It, would abolish the incen tive to hunt for new oil sources at a time when such sources Are urgently required. More than 80 per cent of all the wildcatwells drilled last year turned out to be worthless. Men will take heavy risks in this kind of pio neering if, and only if, they know that they will be per mitted to keep a fair reward if they are successful. They won’t take the risks udder a “heads I win, tails you lose,” situation. There has been considerable talk about high oil prices. Actually, since 1948 the increase in the cost of petroleum products has been less than five per cent, while the in crease for most other commodities has been more than double that figure. And a very substantial part of -the profits earned by typical oil companies have been plough ed right back into the business for expansion and im provement of physical facilities. Competition sees to it that we get the best oil products that can be made and at B fair price. ma Texas Company Frederick OTHMAN WASHINGTON Strikes me it: was too bad 111’ ole Harry sot so sore 04 the TV the other night that twice he called U. S. Attorney General Herbert Brownell, Jr., a liar. Bsmlnrinl me a little of the time Harry Truman went after that mu sic critic and hurt nobody but him self. This time Brownell answered back under oath, with page and paragraph documented, and it was obvious to me, at least, that he was tailing the truth and nothing but, exactly aa he’d sworn to do a tew minutes earlier. It this sounds. like I’m writing mi; editorial, or taking aloes, I’m soery. My job is to write amusing pieces about the great and the near-great in this town and I like it One. But occasionally, as of now, -I find the back of my neck getting amttaitned in the floodlight* turn ed on the principal actor, who has nothing funny to say. It’s down right important and U’a my job to he an honest reporter. So let’s get the scene first in the hßtefte caucus room of the Sen ate, where Were focused on the witness chair to TV cameras moun ted on so many tripod* they looked like a forest of saplings with wink ing red lights on top The crowd was ayhiTiri htm almost unnoticed. red pin-stripe, freshly polished black shoes,’and horn-rimmed glas ses which concentrated the glare into his eyes. Nowhere did he call anyone a liar. He denounced no body. Not once did he sound sar castic. All he did was tell the story of Harry Dexter White as it had been furnished to Mr. Truman by the FBI. He listed the names of a number erf others who worked for White at the Treasury, who'alleg edly were Russian spies also, and who likewise received promotions in the government. This surprising story you doubt less have read already in detail; there’s no need for me to go Into it here. By the time Brownell was half way through, his face was moist and his glasses damp from the beat generated by white lights and packed people. The rich red carpets were littered with spent flash-bulbs. The reporters who’d overflowed to the big table of-Sen. William Jeaner, (R. Ind.,) and Co., had worn. their pencils to nub bins. Haring listed the details 0: the two spy rings which operated ta Washington. Brownell said he didn’t think much of the idea of promoting suspicious characters to still bigger jobs with still greater influence, just to make it easier to watch them. Then he came to this line; . “We don’t have to wait until a man is convicted ”df treason before ; we remove him from a position id trust and confidence.’' turned it over to Mr. Truman, but These Days Vi r MV £ckobklf THE FBI AT WORK The attempt to foist responsibili ty in the Harry Dexter White case upon the FBI will faU because of the law, the operations of the FBI and the facts. The FBI got into this particular situation by sending a routine report to the President., Harry Truman, and to the Attorney General, Tom Clark, now a just ice of the Supreme Court. A routine report from the FBI is never a brief, an opinion, an obiter dictum, a decision. It is the product of investigation and eva luation. The FBI is not a police must be remembered that the FBI force, a Gestapo, or an NKVD. It is not the sole Investigative agency ;of limited jurisdiction; the Secret Service, the Narcotics Bureau, the CIA, the Immigration Bureau are similar agencies performing specific investigative duties. Spies, saboteurs, subversives come under the charge of the FBI, A raw file is kept into which go all kinds of data, some of value, some at the moment worthless, some hard fact, some rumor, hearsay and gos sip. Information comes to such an agency as the FBI from many sources: its own operatives; under cover agents who voluntarily risk themselves to serve their country; citizens who write letters; co operating police forces; crackpots who hate individuals, etc., etc. All this materal needs to be evaluated and the evaluation corro borated by skillful perrons wHo know the entire subject matter in to which the particular individual under investigation fits. When a report is sent to a President, an Attorney General, or to the head of some other deportment of govern ment, it is not a formal complaint for indictment such as a local police department might make to a local prosecuting attorney. It merely a statement of fact upon which the President or the Attorney General may or may not decide to act. Such reports are routine. The FBI is not an information bureau to which a citizen can ap ply for information. It is the in vestigative agency, of the Depart ment of Justice. If a citizen desires Information, he should gq in the Department of Justice. In some matters, such as an annual report on crime in the United States, or the rise and fall of junvenile de linquency, or the nature of the Communist conspiracy, J. Edgar Hoover issues reports to the public, makes speeches and writes maga zine articles, but the FBI never opens its files to anyone. Al though some citizens are willing to cooperate with this agency. they find that this does not entitle them to a reward in the form of a reward of a quid‘pro quo. It is important to note that since J. Edgar has been at the head of the FBI, it has not once been in volved in a scandal; it has not once been involved in a leak; no sub versives have been found to have infiltrated it. Attacks on the ,FBI have been few. The worst is a book by Max Lowenthal, entitled “The Federal Bureau of Investigation.” which Lowenthal is a close friend of seems to be a spite book. Max Harry; in fact, he is reputed to have been responsible for maneuv ering Truman into the Vice Presidency. It is known that Harry Truman has been antagonistic to the FBI for several reasons, Includ ing the Kansas City election frauds case in which the ballot boxes were destroyed by an explosion, thus eliminating the principal evidence. Max Lowenthal, Truman’s friend, devotes a 558-page book to an at tack on the FBI and particularly Hoover. He summarizes Truman’s dislike for Hoover in this para graph; “There are some indications, how ever, that the views (praising Ho over) are not universally held by Americans interested in effect coun ter-espionage. President Truman, when he. set up the CIA (central Intelligence Agency) as .a new esp ionage and counter-espionage or ganisation. disregarded suggestions that Mr. Hoover himself should be come the head* of any such super intelligence organization. In 1868, when the President made a new appointment to the post, he again disregarded the suggestions that Mr. Hoover be promoted to that posit- R.R. Indeed, when the President created the CIA he went further and withdrew horn the FBI the authority it had peats usd for seven years in counter-espionage work throughout Central and South America.” The Harry Dexter White case, like the Alger Hiss and the Rosen berg cases, establishes the fact thet has Iwm ahM-t trtuie the cover 19. -D shew. It fellows “Eternity” ‘ at the Capitol. , ’ ABC’s 11-year-old boy star, Bran r don de Wilde, has to diet to keep , that schoolboy flgger. . .Lillian Ross ' who scalped MOM and John Huston t in her New Yorker series, has one ( coming up on teevy’s top producers, , Goodaon ds Todman. . . Saroyan’s . “Time of Your Life” will get the , Broadway musical treatment a la ; "Wonderful Town. . .Lawyer L. Ni ger will get over 8800,000 for his part • in the Bobo Rockefeller and Eleanor . Holm solltouts. . .The Judge in the John Wayne divorce cam la still deluged with mall from Wayne’s , fans. . . Beverly Mahr, who sings i the exciting “Cresent City Blues” r in Gordon Jenkins’ new album "Se ven Dreams” is Mrs Jenkins . . . 1 One of the prettiest redheads on , Broadway is 8 bus girl at the Broad j way Automat... The Century Thea- J ter*s been a Jinx for its last 3 shows . They didn’t run longer than a week; "Buttrio Square,” Carnival in Flan -1 ders” and Sherlock Holmes” . . . . Flretnightere, weary of S 2nd 4 openings a week can relax. “Esca pade,” due od the itth, is the only entry between now and the 35th.-. . , Dick Powell’s comment In an inter view; “Any star attar who does a regular teevy aeries must either be nuts or hard ujt for the money” . . . Or Very Popular. giving thanks for Its blessings, the National Association of Letter Car riers Will stage a unique contri bution to less fortunate neighbors. At that time the letter chtriers will “walk” to raise money for muscu lar Dystrophy, that dread disease which strikes only at children. * Under the Rational chairmanship of PostmasteK General Summer field, head of the museular Dystro phy drive, the mailman will collect ftrnds to help find a cure tor this mysterious disease. Though the Chicago Tribune has raised some criticism of their ef forts, Die letter carriers will not march on the taxpayers' time, but oh theft own time. 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