Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / March 19, 1954, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE TWO D sS “ c^sjfrai|^?«w« ~ TSS «SSr9W^IP I,yE M-W «tei;Bt, Nets *Mfc. «, N. 1. ;-|gMk OOm In Iwj Major City for ate awlta; « for three months. » wyrgiUOTD bj qp^ypi^ •WfT-Orrmt^^i>. M entered as second-class matter in ,toe Office, 1i?l Diwn, N. C., udder toe laws of Congress, Act of March 3,187 ft iteery afternoon, MqatteytotoWgft Congratulations To Daley' And s Tq The Dunn School ■ We’re a little late in doing so, but we extend congrat ulations to Daley Goff; son of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Goff, upon his selection for, a Morehead Foundation Scholar ship at the University of North Carolina. It is a high honor, awarded to a very, deserving young man. Daley has long been recognized as one of the out- ; standing students at toe lodal school; The honor which has come to him not qnly reflects credit on himself and his family, but on the Dunn school and to the faculty members who have taught him during these years. Daley is another of many Dunn IJigh graduates who : has gone on to win high scholastic honors. The list of 1 these students is too long to enumerate. We congratulate Daley, Principal Ai B. Johnson and all the others responsible for his success. Harnett Awaits Outcome Os Jbhnston ABC Vote Citizens of Harnett County, along .with the rest of toe matey wW: he anxiously, awaiting; the returns from Johnston County's ABC vote on Saturday. Harney will he more interested than most; other counties* bepapse ths outcome, wjl|. probably affect this county, most. J%mston at present is bordered-by two wet counties, Wayne on toe north and Wake on the east. The vote in Johnston will be particularly significant. Since ABC stores were established in North Carolina years ago, only two of the many counties which established stores later voted them out. All the other counties have been well pleased. Johnston was one of the two that voted stores out. , i It will be interesting to see whether or not citizens of Johnston are better satisfied with illegal vtoiskey than they were with controlled whiskey % We have followed toe campaign in Johnston avidly. | It has been a typical liquor, election* highlighted by emo tional and sympathetic appeals apd with very little logic. The “dry*’ fprp«M have tried to leave toe idea that citi zens will be voting-for cur against whiskey. That is not the case at all. They will be vptting on which system they think best in handling the. evil; Regardless of * the outcome of Saturday’s* diction, Johnston wiU}be jti£t as wet-as it has always been. ■ ■ ■ ’■ ■ - s ~ Citizens still recall that after that county’s last ABC ‘ election, a and. mguenUal Smithfield. bpofleg ler very arrogantly hung a $25 wreath of flowers on toe door of toe AfS£ store. Ha has continued to grow, richer. He is a powerful, pphtioal figure. Johnston. County np. dpubt will vote “dry” again. It* will be a sutorise if . toe eiectiorf goes otherwise. ‘ It is our hope that one of these days the Question n *~ ABC stores will be debated in North Carolina not cm an , U may take sevefal. generations, later Harmon. W. N*ch4» ... , “*;• *»**':■* • y SS« y*zt f WASHINGTON- (IB —An item rather stay in something more Brit- . - tee American style of heme, | or motels. These were those, like a M-. f But the promoters have hit a Hugh Parka, who argued that I *°!?■ “apagt. weeks in the peak The Dally Telegraph and Mom- of 4A summer, season, there would I. “X S.3E “SS |- t*l t* oppoaad “by the local Ufiepafiv., byrP@3s, where the mansion is lo fi trade and by private resident#;' catS 7 ’ ! . F* Here is the way the story in. tb- ‘“Phis talk of a motel is just a l Br .S? ‘^ pCr !**L . bait? he. sajd. “What is wanted i& _ Gearg4 Graham Lyon, of in the application is just a vast i Royal A '«3ue’Cfceleea, hotel prop- road house to attract apipne who. !!■ rietor. an* 00l WUliam Atx.ns, or wgnts a dnnk A road hdUse.ln that | Bath Roajh implied for the grant beautiful locality would-destroy % t The platt war evMLtuglly to let the sighted, inthis comSy,- wtoterW % a*- m2r OMy thoi|rtK»h®l*<itbe.-»iittshers might have andtber Jbpfcsxound at l * [K tea and Men year tage. ■ ■_ * .. • ra( . j protest. - QOflflUCtftdl IoCmBL l “Maiford House." night at 7:46 mesa Days s)p kol&ky IHE CARACAS CONFERENCE The problem that John Foster DuUes faces, at Caracas, Venezuela Is that the Soviet Universal Stata has successfully penetrated aj ea In Latin America; has establish ed a base for operations in Oua.te mala; has disaffected- both Hon duras arid Costa Rica; is moving rapidly into Cuba and Mexico. Bri tish Honduras is at this moment Up particular danger of becomjh* part of the Guatemalan Comm,VaiSt base. This moves, the danger from the realm of theory into that of real ity. The Panama Canal is Imper illed, as anybody can see who reeds a map. But equally Import ant, the United States can be iso lated from its Lattjj -American neighbors and .can be< diverted from its world, policies to a defensive program on the American conti nents. While our statesmen excite themselves over small politics at, home, we are being invaded, in the sense, that areas that hav? been important to this country's n* - ional existence since Thomas Jef ferson was President are being ab; sorbed by our national enemy. This is the problem and It will be solved by the cuirent trend to ward; happy talk which means nothing when historic events rush at terrific speed, against us. The realities are grim because involved is our national existence- While some-of.onr so-called stat esmen continue to view,, without alarm, in their, relaxing, material comforts, the penetration into our own government,' they cannot Ig nore the base established In Guate mala by the Kremlin, or the pres sures upon other countries, parti cularly Costa Rica, Cuba and Mex ico. Dulles is facing up.te the eq uation realistically and fearlessly but he may be late. The “Good Neighbor Policy” of the Roosevelt Administration, de vised by Stanley High and,, carried forward by Nelson Rockefeller, proved to be a failure, not so much because the program was wrong but because of the “Europe First Policy,” which diverted at tention from both China and La- d^r^TO°to China and to penetrate Latin Am erica. When one reviews all the facts. It stands clear that ever was making salient, moves against this country. The harm done in Latin Am erica, can be. undone but “dll . b V a casual, policy or by faitere, te.acf swissrix.ax; the Argentine, w.ith the very Peron whom our Left Wing geniuses paint-, edas a bad dictator while the/ cutties, will;- be multipttsd., ra^pK ."fe lept Eisenhwyst, a PPgrenjjy. recognised early iippression and g»i|**d lnuphrieM information ay ttt.Wftet~.aafggO,<f.-bS.. senhower’s upon SUrie of out'iw.o iMd SUB DAILY JEQQRDj DDNN. H, ft 1 11 m t Xwt ameuMteifSr LA warnm f rtsfc ** " WASHINGTON Since the car pitol shooting, secret service guards who watch the President have be come even, more sensitive about hh personal security. A, special com mittee of Secret Service, kBI and government intelligence agents has . beep “screening” the. President's travels apdpuWtc appearances more closely than ever before. One security measure was ord ered by, the Secret Service even before the Capitol shooting—no outside painting on the White House lawn. The next step may be a ban on another Presidential relaxation —practicing golf shots on the lawn. So far Ike has refused to give in on this. rn addition to sprucing up his golf game, the President used to enjoy taking his easel and brushes outside the White House, where the lighting effects are best. How ever, he must, now dp all his paint ing indoors. In, regard,, to- travel,, the. Presi dent ha*, bppn. teM,to,ke# r opt-;, pf-town tripe to the atephfc*. min imum. One trip he ha*, tentatively put cq hie calendar is to Lop An geles on July 4, where he. hpp been invited to IddriM the Elks con vention. UnX*, he said, the “Se curity Committee' overrules him. “All this confinement and close attention gets on, my nerves at' timet,” the President:tolddele- 1 SSSJ’SEiiSwP’w' lek # the Elks, with ffen. Bob Kerr and Congressman Tom Steed of Oktehoma- “Bat I|b s not enpugU. ' for rri, to. tell .thjt Secret Service that-ftn nog,. WfflßHedi about any- CUTIES i. -H? #lkH: t- ZSL I i Ay t, N *. jjJ 1 X4toJfc- >** ; ' .. Indians is this admission tax as, much as the lack-.of 'a winning bad clpb. “It’s very humiliating in ray ca pacity, ap a,fpn and a.'mepiber hi Congress from Ohio, On different occasions r have taken friends but to the. Washington ball park to watch the Indians. play the Wash ington Senators and on 12 of , these occasions the Indians have lost.” PUSH-BUTTON PUZZLE Foreign diplomats fUbdpd Euro pean chanceries last week with con flicting cables as. to whether : thp. United States did or did not plan to UN- push-button warfare. V " ' Actually the. furor started back on January 12 when John Foster DulJea,. in careful, diplomatic lang uage, said, the Onited’States would, not be dragged Into heterogeneous minor wars but would strike at the heart,.of the, enpmy with the -boo*., if aggropsipn tbjsatened.- Behind the Duljps..speech of course, was need for Justifying the Eisen hower economy program and. it* curtailment, ot the araped; forces. Primarily the speech, wgs aimed at domestic U.S. consumption. Hh* overseas lt- threw ’ouf alhes into a state, of' near panici-for several reasons. First., we had organized, a. Uni ted Nations, supposed to decide when and - w.hefe peace-loving, na- TQ organization to take joint mea sures-against, aggression by the So viet Union. So the Dujles pronouncement io diimthw. that the umtod, state* wouidj decide, without consultation, when-apd how to use the moat ter rib|e weapon in the world’s arsenal meant that ail' this peach, mach inery waa.viriugiiy scrapped, it alt. ’ SO meant that the Upjted States the, right- te throw - tea free, world 4nte.W*r. Following the Dulles January , i; speech, his own aflytouts, have been busy trying, to calm. the fear* of olh allies. Abd.Dullea him self had joined In the move to tope down, hij' tijh abqut push-button war. ", However, while Dulles was fly he'made it even stronger Jbhn' and, calm our allies, Adm. Arthur §p,S»B! shss UtqA poiture.” said the Ada»ifai. “If it had-hb capability dtheithan 1 psvchologieaUh still at tha diaper In the U. S. Navy “t)r. Crane* wi» were married ttwo yeari before Steve entered the Navy,” his young wife informed me, “pur Hby, bom. Jwt to;. months before Bteve left home. ‘T have missed Steve terribly, and I feel-sorry.thgt. he iap't here te see aU the , cute things., the baby does from mopth to. nibßth. “Steve’s allotment check for me hasn’t been enough for us to U«e ofi, so I: have haft., to b|»ird; op baby, with a neighbor womamduf ing the dgy, in Older-, to keep an office job; A , ‘Td gat- along pretty woU, it- Steve didn't- need money, so Often. “Then last month, h*, saidtl Just had; to- send ton- anteJterr lIM Off he’d. be. in, 22S' y°&i£ SFiJjai %xeept by going to a snort loan off, and certainly don’t want him to get into trooMe; “It mm; be. sometbbNt- pteuy desperate, fw he . gets, par*, off h*,, pay check, fpr v his, own spending money. ' : ™ • "Then yesterday he. wrote again and said for me tn scrape tk soaA to pay;- thii:ifib ' loan.l made, and. I dons dßteJrt , doam-oiv tee.,h»|w!s.nS^ !: what ’ thi)», young mwwn atii* td yaw ssnp&Z* baby? ‘ ayyvuzy - 1 If Steve imposes., this ' type of white rv^ttebie do h^fe& : tlodally. Hl« flnandai n r 'low, ”* ’ . . •• ~. la; gambling-hi)a; pay • check tawgy and* then using his wife*, devotion, as g«tlfay|-h«r Up» U mwristtea# fmft like tensed :«hdpte«iiieid> shrewdly before ydu wed. , Pleasant. They, dance, divinely and ,- can hand yau ,a!*oair.-|»ia.w >“ But they* haven’t mateted emo ■ c|U Lady Luck, Saadi for-my. 200-polnt - bulletins endued “Tests for Sweethearts.- ssy/agr :-w»-«>■ Tmt your reapaWwo mates there Ttefam *** gjj* f •»?, -4 massive .atomio at. in which he repeated, yWt StrW, ‘ U * S ’ “• teC- . conflmief* I '' ,t '* pres^ j , _ _ _ _ , _ _ _ Rapa” Parodies are-, almost as nonsensical as the orig ring* it Says here, has a 95-carat star sapphire head light. oggift. ftr; arii awthdrity on headllghU.) lb “i-lh’ to ” to' Frank V’an°fe Igyelwlth him agaig.” (Eneara'. Encore!) Have a. statistic; There are now 300 tv stations . . . This is to re mlhd Marion Bfahdo that, the only, performer who became popular -by being temperaments, is Donald. Duck . . . NBC has a new afternoon shagr that consists of 60 minutes of gab, if it’s criticism you want . . * AiOoast colyunv repprte; “Jack Wehh Wme that if columnists, want " to,,know anythtombout his amours all they have to da Is pick up a pfurne and call ntai.’ 1 (That howl you hear conies from two New York cofriimniata) .. . Rita Hayworth broke? She owns 45 per cent of the A “Sadie Thompson" movie which will net over a million this year. So V stop worrying, folk# • . . T«npo mag quotes a nifty about Mamie Van a? S„r M bI „*.S?VX“p.S“S: "PFi anybody says, actors are, ciWrens, too. They void, pay I texea f ,aiMgei< traffic thacets.” (Gee, whiz) . . . Item; “Jimmy H.-1 ■»“ Peraonal Ajtairs CronMlor , *, - ytrrzM l&wsa 7®3fS«, steady company for two years! mmrssss T + ntiten net dismnntrM thinklnir of uX two (Ku. iS cgurwdp might dampen the emo tgutet should te-nejr and fresh the express and One ; ''mtff ‘’tey that couples as «but when you love someone, you » AAH*f;Jßni nt .En IM ll Jill j ttte eiMfn Ar Xre th JffteiSlftthME' Mtadtead oYatotol DEAR E. V.: As Shakespeare ob —rTUere.’* nothing either gcod or bad hut thinking make* ifc M.* Certainly this is true of a ltetgtfey engagement, occasioned by senal- Such a nSW period needaH take tlje bloogapdß k>Vtt-' provided the are m»- turwand wejiltnaifea % -the dis cip® of waitipg. Indeed the net I ifts fSainto 2p* of late mar ; '.'f-Jjj- A, ws’is&T.s: The cynic who likens late mar i eouplte past mi<ma age. But. even, , "so. m good company at ahy age; M| isn’t a leisurely pace preferable Hi to .a headtang wh? V : in his (oahaz) right mirul hould H want a true-love relationship to be thundering excitement from ; start te-?Wsk? ' Now to consider your question— ‘S.’S’ta.SK by continuing to grow as persons In •s&ssia&s -iZ&Sßtsisfssrsz 1 front-each- other, as well as most i SrSMBSfVBtSSSfei ! activities that link you to the corn- 8 ’ m unity. Life shared with others* 1 , ln a.»o«l«r 1 TWQ CftCRSZa. S-- TO B*k AvetOHU The destructive potentials Imp - -1 rit iu a long engagement are thsee; 1 I*‘A lazy,or dependenttteanteßfc , ■ to,Withdraw from the. og>*>ciety, to- wither v^ ly less of a person—in seclusiva loyalty to “hope deferred." 2. ZKa| - heart for granted, and fritter one’a marriage to materalize. vitally as your re nriroru»emh for* lUm to*admire; and thus be 8 tok., lrJ:> > !£ rnr w I are the chief tornado last * | cester. Mass. _a^Etect»omp, 6 | to calculate all the incoming data ! in time to do any good. »£.grift |
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 19, 1954, edition 1
8
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