PAGE SIX fame JHailg |Xtmrii DUNN, N*C. —^ RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY At «U hit Cmmj Mrert S NATIONAL ADVERTISING representative fc THOMAS P. CLARK CO., INC. 888-811 B. 4SBd St.. New Twk 11. N. X. Hurt Ofßces In Every IbJw CRy SUBSCRIPTION RATES (ItMlIKi M cent* per week; JBJI per yeas In itramt M Hr rix maths; $3 for throe monthi ?n TOWNS NOT SERVED BT CARRIER tND OH BOltl IOCTII INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: 9AM M tear; RN for riz months; 32 tor three months WT-OF-gTATE: AH per rear tn advance; 88 fer rta msnt>»- N for three months Altered as second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, If C. f under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3,187 ft Every afternoon, Monday through Friday. investment And Prosperity U An item in Newsweek deals with some late develop ments in the stock market. Among other things, it points that there is increasing public interest in that mar f't, as is evidenced by the fact that, up to the timet|ie "Sen 42 days this year in which 2,000,000 shares were Cught and sold, as compared with only 23 days in all of m. What that means is that more and more people, most *them in the middle-income brackets, are investing some , 5 their savings in the concerns which supply us with our walth of goods and services, which provide much of our rjiployment, and which are the base on which our mate -2.1 well-being rests. That, in turn, means that more and s>re people have learned that the stock exchange is not -father mysterious institution existing primarily to serve 5 wealthy, but that it is an open market place that ex 's to serve us all, the same as a stockyard where cattle la offered for sale. And increased public interest in stocks £s been greatly stimulated by the recent adoption of an |italhflent-purchase system whereby people can become Jesters in securities of their choosing for as little as S4O month. y All who believe in the American system will welcome Be current trend. As President Eisenhower said, in mak his proposal to modestly reduce the double taxation incomes, “The more we can encourage savings SS. investments, the more prosperous will be 160,000,000 Baerican citizens.” woctored Competition [8 A two inch news item appeared in financial newspa jjs recently which few people will see, although it in ||!ved a tax policy which affects everyone’s pocketbook. He item was dated Sacramento, California, and said: Delivery of Central Valley Project power to the Sacra fcjnto Municipal Utility District will begin as scheduled H July 1.” This district was the largest wholesale cus- Ujper of the Pacific Gas and Electric Company and pur- Rksed $4,000,000 worth of power in 1953. here is the Unresting point: Central Valley is one of the great tax fSaapt federal power projects. It enjoys all the benefits Organized government without paying its share of the IK load as does every other individual and industry. The Kytral Valley project does not pay taxes to help keep a Iggf on the California capitol, or buy a gun for a battle- H|), or put an engine into a plane to defend this country. H It is interesting to note that in 1953 the Pacific Gas B Electric Co. paid in taxes a total of $97,466,492 to fed ■> state and local governments some 20 per cent of ■gross income. On the $4,000,000 business, which tax- Bnpt Central Valley took away from it for the Sacra ■pto Utility District, it would have paid some $400,000 ■ These socialized federal power projects, now scattered Iftughout the nation, and more of which are being pro fited, are one reason why all citizens’ taxes are high. law should be changed so that such tax-exempt in t Tries operated by the government are taxed exactly lAEame as private enterprise. ■*Any producer or manufacturer could destroy his com jgter if be enjoyed the privilege of tax exemption and ■ fT tax subsidies granted federal projects. lIiPOLSON, MONTANA, FLATHEAD COURIER: “In SO ffgstic and communistic countries the representatives of Brnment pull the strings and the puppets jump in a ■ranical way that does not lend the enchantment of ■flom to the work of the citizens.” nmnnffi . lir- Bto - »Ha V 800 "***??* B These Days By SoJudaJuf When countries are allies to each other, it is necessary for them to understand each other. They need to recognize not only that there are differences in approach and manner but also that where there are apparent similarities, the end objectives may not be the same. That the United States is misun derstood is obvious from the increas ing neutralism. John J. McCloy, after he had ser . ved his term as High Commissioner for Germany, said: "The advantages of the American system and its departures from the backward capitalism which has in the past characterized European life are largely unknown among the rank and file of Socialists of Europe. Moreover, the very fact that the American economy has been success ful in 'distributing its advantages in a classless manner stirs some of the doctrinaire Socialists into a sort of ideological excitment of an tagonisms that cannot be ignored. This is one of the basic problems facing American representation a broad and it is one which must be dealt with." The Socialists to which McCloy refers are anti-Communists and should be our allies. They cannot believe that the United States has achieved Its high productivity In a classless society because they have never witnessed such a society. In Asia, the misunderstanding is even greater. When it is stated that we employ more than 60,000- 000 people without exploitation, that our wage scale even In industrial establishments is equivalent to up per middle-class annual earnings, that laborers own their automobiles, electrical refrigerators, television sets, etc., It Is not believed because it has not been experienced in those countries. In Buddhist countries, this lack of belief is complicated by a worship of poverty. Men's souls are not saved by the possess ion of material things but by the rejection of material things. Did not Gautama himself give up the wealth of a prince to sit under a banyan tree, beggar’s cup in hand? How to state the American case so that it win be undestood is not anything that can be reached by a snap formula. McCloy faced the : difficulty when he said; “Hits thinking has cut deep Into areas where one would imagine that America would find widest under standing. I have in mind parti cularly the European Socialists, who have developed a certain coolness toward the U. S This is disturbing because the Socialists movement is old and established in Europe and because large segments among the Socialists are liberal-minded In dividuals.’* In the United States today there Is no effective Socialist Party un less the A. D. A. Americans for Democratic Action) Is regarded as such. The old Norman Thomas So cialists have disappeared. With the exception of the Rand School and the magazine. “The New Leader,” no. Socialist voice exists. The So cialist Labor Party has become a fractional splinter group of no sig nificance. The A. D. A., while It gives the general impression of being some what like the Fabian Socialists of Great Britlan, controls no political party and has a voice in Congress only as a faction of the Demo cratic Party. A. D. A. Democrats and liberal Republicans are so close to each other that it is Im possible to distinguish between them in ideas. Just as conservative De mocrats and Republicans are normal American traditionalists. Actually, the line of .demarcation between the Parties in the United States Is Dolltcial rather than ideological Thus the European finds it ex tremely difficult to understand what the American political system really is. The European Socialist parties in Europe are old and established and respectable. The word Socialist appended to a political party’s name is not descriptive of radicalism; it might even denote a fairly con servative party which bases itself on party social consciousness rather than on Marxism. For instance, in France, the gnat party of the “Third Republic" the party that is now in power un der Pierre Mendes France, and whose leaden Included such flaunt as Edouard Herriot, Rene Mayer, Henri Queulße. and Edouard Dala dier, goes by the name of the Radi csl Socialist Party. By our stand ards this party would be regarded as fairly conservative, about in the (he De GauDlsts. In Italy, the So center between the Communists and dal Movement is faithful to the T%e pdnt Is that hums do not count; only ism up descriptive of nmft purposes sad methods. The Europeans are as ponded about our pegilc a.-.beut our social and f» Mltf WH PPHH, E i “Dorothy—we forgot to invite the Griswolds!” a qLwsnH MIAn-W-MM ft S it mt wa*— WASHINGTON lt’s now possi ble for Senators and diplomats to get a better appraisal of the Jhurchill-Eisenhower talks. More details of the talks are also leak ing out. Here are some of the high lights, plus the interpretation of the diplomats: RECOGNITION OF RED CHINA What teed off Senator Knowland into threatening to resign as Re publican Senate leader was a con fidential argument made by British Foreign Minister Eden that it was inevitable Red China would enter the United Nations within a year, therefore it was better for the al lies to move for its admission soon in order to get concessions in re turn. . . .What Eden referred to was the fact that Red China had enough votes to get into the U. N. Assembly next September, and there was no way the United States or anyone else could stop it. The United States could veto member ship on the U. N. Security Council, though not on the General As sembly ... A similar argument was made by John Foster Dulles’s law partner, Arthur Dean, in a back ground talk .with newsmen last win ter. Dean, then Chief U. S. envoy for the Korean peace talks, told newsmen there were signs of fric tion between Russia and China, that American recognition of Red CSiina would help to wean her away from Moscow . . Earlier, Vice President Nixon, while in For mosa. made a speech assuring Chi ang Kai-Shek that Red China would never be recognized. Later he got a cable from the State Depart ment advising him not to close this door, that Red china might be rec ognized in return for peace in Ko rea . . . Nixon later changed his line, told Prime Minister Nehru and other Middle East leaders that if China was reasonable she might be admitted to the U. N. ... All this made Senator Knowland and other China-lobby senators hit the cell ing. . . .Knowland, who has cam paigned so passionately for Chiang Kai-Shek that he’s sometimes call ed “The Senator From Formosa,” really means it when he talks about resigning as majority leader if Red China is admitted to the U. N GUATEMALA AND BRITISH Secretary Dulles seemed preoccu pied with Guatemala during part of the Churchill talks. He kept coming back to that subject. After various points on the agenda had been discussed, Dulles would come back to Guatemala again.’’. . Com munism is getting a foothold in the 1 - j $ /yjln i FjSI iScottttdrattOTn luitom'FpaJ'f «n vour tnanrsnc wakl" ** • Western Hemisphere, Dulles ar i gued. The question Is vital to us, ‘ and Great Britain will have to back ! US Up. . , . What stuck in ms craw was the ; fact that the British had abstained from voting when the question of the Guatemalan revolt came up for discussion at the U. N. Security Council . . . “What did you want us to do?" was the essence of Eden’s reply. ‘ Your Ambassador Mr. Lodge had reminded us only 10 days ago that it would be a shame if the time ever came when a little nation couldn’t present Its case before the Security Council. Since we could not very well vote against letting Guatemala present its case, we tried to help you by abstaining.” A-BOMB TALKS One of the most vital questions discussed wag use of the A-Bomb. Churchill made this one of the most important points of his entire visit. He said that Britain must be notified and consulted If the United States in tended to drop the atom or hydro gen bomb. . . .Churchill had once told the House of Commons that he had such an agreement from the White House, only to have 4 da-„ nled in Washington much to his embarrassment, so he tried hard to get such an agreement from the President on this trip. He said he had to have such an assurance, or there was no use talking about anything else . . . Eisenhower, how ever, stalled. . . .He said he believed in the principle of consul tation, but under the law gown ing the atom bomb he could not consult. He agreed to notify Eng land In case of such drastic action, but said he could not consult. QUIRKS OF DIPLOMACK The British couldn’t understand why Eisenhower insisted that they see the movie, "The Student Prince.” They sat through the showing in the lower White House, but were bored stiff. Besides, the air con ditioning was turned up so high that they almost caught pneumon ia. They still don’t know why they had to sit through such an ordeal . . . Winston Churchill resented any attempts to help him because of his age. At the airport when ! Canadian Foreign Minister Lester Pearson started to help him up stairs, Winnie pushed him aside, , went up the stairs, then turned round at Pearson and made a face . . Anthony Eden and John Fos- , ter Dulles were sore as biases at , each other over Eden’a critical . speech in the House of Commons, ' but patched up their differences. ■v ■■■ x \ i j 'i- •< ■ mmm V. - . • + The + WORRY CLINIC By Dr. George W. Crane Clark Is worried because be baa not chosen his Use work. There Is no future in ANY Job! Fer the future is always la the worker who holds the Job. So CUrk can take his pick at graduation and succeed in almost anything. Vo cational guidance is no magical elixir tor taro success. But it can offer some help. Case H 340: Clark J., aged 20, is a college senior. “Dr Crane, I’m all in a muddle," he began, “for I don’t know what I want to be in life. “Yet some fellows have already de cided to be doctors or lawyers or business men long before they even enter college. ’ I didn’t know what career I wanted when I left high school, and I still don’t know even yet. Isn’t that terrible?” VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE No, that isn’t unusual. In fact, I once made a survey of my senior students at Northwestern University .* and almost 50% of them still didn’t j’ know what they were going to do for a livelihood though they were graduating barely two months later! J If you teen-agers develop an early : fascination for being a physician 1 or an artist or a teacher or a cler l gyman, well and good. ! But when the rest of you graduate 1 from high school, don’t stay out of s college Just because you haven’t al : ready selected your lifelong career. * The important thing, anyway, is ! to fill your brain with new ideas 1 and logical methods of attacking ! problems. 1 "An investment in knowledge.” ' said wise old Benjamin Franklin. ! ‘Always pays the best dividends." Every intelligent high schooler ’ should thus try to obtain at least | ONE year of college. If you cant ; go away to a distant campus, then 1 get a Job in some city where col lege courses are offered at night. FOOTBALL STRATEGY In taking college courses, your goal should be like that of the foot ball player. The latter doesn't fo cus on a specific point where he wishes to hit “pay dirt.” “• No, he may plunge over the goal line from the coffin corner just as readily as directly between (he uprights. All a football player aims at. is the end of the field. Remember, his goal line runs across the entire width of the gridiron! And so It is with your education. Keep heading forward, realizing, that you win be able to use much of your knowledge in any or all careers that you may ultimately select. For example, most lawyers go dir ectly Into business firms and tiUlijle their legal training not as prac ticing attorneys, but in working for Insurance companies or other busi ness corporations. The famous F. B. I. also is Par tial to lawyers. And politics Is a big career for every professional group. Dentists and physicians and clergymen and teachers have been in Congress. USE HORSE SENSE “There’s no future in this Job" a young man exclaimed irritably when he was offered a chance with a certain company. There U no future in ANY Jobl Hu future is ALWAYS in the work er who holds that Job. Whether you start out as a news paper, boy or a farm boy or a boot black, you can reach the top. For Jobe are Just stepping stones or rungs on the ladder to success. And those “rungs” obviously don't move upward. Only the enterprising workers who step on those rungs, move ahead. So don’t worry too much over this new fad called 'Vocational Gui dance." We nsvchoioslsta can often help you a little with special tests. But you’ll get to the top. aurway. If you Just realise that the future u not in the Job but tn you! So tackle the best opportunity open st the moment and meanwhile keep your eyes on the breaks of the game. Send for my “Vocational Gui dance Hit” enclosing a dime and a stamped, return envelope. Always write to Dr. Crape in care of this newspaper, enclosing a tone Sc stamped, addressed envelop* »nd s dime >to cover typing and prin ting costs when you send for one of his psychological charts. They were soon calling each other “Anthony- and “Foster.". . . .Ike failed to me FDR's tactic for get ting seme sleep during the Church ill visit. A* a result the Prim# Min ister kept him up every night unto 2 am. Roosevelt got around these later —el one by sßhsffaHtff early, morning seeeions so vmjggefo H# alT£h S&*j£i2ShSi : stalls. Ordinarily the Prime Mtait ter deeps most es (he day, works ; "iff* of the ltjgiH But FDR tent *° *** ** ** j ■ V/-> • v.,.- ''• ' ' Xtft&DAX AFTERNOON, JULY 6, 1964 H&DWAY SI THE- RAIN | y**®* Are-talking About: Alfred Hitchcock’, latest thrillir, Ahrhri, which is delightfully different from the usual musical show'. Despite good notices (and the Criticef Annual Medal) the talented neY comer needs patrons J. . Jimmy Durante and the Barry Bisters at the Copa . . . Cosmopolitan’s front cov* Rembrandt of Clark Gable, one Os bis best . . Lillian Roth back at the Palace for the first time since she Co-headlined there in the early 1030 s. Her partners then were H. Richman and WW . . . “The Caine Mutiny" film due at the Capitol • . . Smith & Dale’s hilarious (28 year old) act at the Palace. Good old Dr. Kronkhite . . . ’Til Itfc Bennennahs If I Tjico and I Like!" . . . “Vott iss da diff-phew-kfllty?" . . . "Wot kind disses I eat? Wot am I —a crocadile?” . . , “Take hoff de my Boyyyy!” The Big Burg's insiders are talking about the latest report (to high -Ul«) h« the Laughing-Soup Bis: Tn tho last M months Uquor stare gnus sates are up t p. e. Restaurant groas sales are down 18” . . . That means in the M States. They blame R on Television. Many Mho buy a bottle (In a package shop) and go right homo and dial to Channel 1 . . . Eleanor Holm’s explanation “I:’ns not going to elope to Las Vegas with Tommy Whelan. Tat going there to make a personal appearance and I may see Tommy there" ... Her local steady dates are with Her nia Kamber. but don’t bo amaiad . . . Mrs. James Farley’s predicament: Good Old- Bess (who eeuld never forgive FDR for breaking with Jim) (became soe of the meet rabid anti-Roosevelt voices. She is meodlng at Roosevelt Hospital. New Yorkers are in Love with “The Pajama Game." the maiden at tempt of producers Brisson, Prince and Griffith . . . They started from seratch by purchasing a book titled “1% Cents.” They hired many un knowns. The only B*way pros are Eddie Foy, Jr. and Geo. Abbott Their hit is No. 1 Ticket . . . It all started with “1H Cents" . . . They al most lost their leading ingenue show-stopper (Carol Haney, peraounc ed Honey) over a needed pair of stage shoes . . . The radio people who are shaking their heads over this tine state of affairs: The “Author Meets the Critics** show OOUlHn*t ftml nnvhnHv trw S—»h. mvts we - snow couian t ima anyDoay to criticize the boat, “The Reason Why,” so U had to be cancelled . . . That remind, us of “McCarthy and His Enemies," the book, now No. 7 (up from 8) in the N. Y. Times Best-Seller Dept. The man named Wainwright, who apologised in court for p—chipg * »vman. “Yeur Honor, I’m sorry. I thought she was my wife.” . . . Empire’s 4 pages sf yoo-huo views of Derethy Rice, it teases readers atept what she dm fer a living ... The demand is so great (Esky re psvts) It h keeping the tab to itself ... Oh, eeWe new. Dorothy weeks as a model U get the msecs to continue as a toevy actress and enm aser-stock player . ... Mabel Wayne (whom songs include “Rarnena" and “Little Spanish Town”) whs is suing the publishers of “I Under stand" tor alleged title piracy. She used tt ten yean ago. That ex plains the sudden ads (in Variety) reporting change of title to: “l Un derstand Hew Yen Feel” . . McCarthy’s sfstwacnt (he knows he can not win without hurting the OOP and Administration): "Phis is the «rst time I’ve been to a fight which I cannot afford to tom but which I don’t went to win." • a. " 4 y amwtMMi 1 JsssLSSS^&Li MARY HAWORTHS MAIL .Gruep of Matrons Booed by One Member’s Tiresome Monologues About Her Children. DEAR MARY HAWORTH: We are a group of middle-aged married folk who have been biased with children and young grandchildren. Most of us have been friends for yearn, and now that our children art for the meat pert married or away' at .school, we feel free to en joy our . leisure. Thug .we often ret together for dinner*, bridge luncheons, eivic projects and such. Regrettably, there is one woman amongst us who takes advantage of any'social gathering, large, or smaH. to. go into a lope detailed monologue about her fe*illdren”-their inter ests, clothea. beauty, popularity, etc. Apparently R never occurs to her that we in the audience are Just as enthusiastic about our progeny— but wg don’t expect other people to share our intimate Pride in our parenthood. On occasions when we try to play cards'with the meq. the game Is held up interminkbly by Maude’s monologues. If Maude and Tom are asked to dine at someone’s bouse, usually they strive 15 minutes to an hour late, became Maude was “handling some detail” for one of “the children." with -never an apology to her hosts**. FRIENDS PLAY SECOND PIDDLE V Ye are dining with Maude and Tom. they never can Join their eue»t« for a cocktail, because !n --vtriMy “one" of the children" is Involved b> sn impromptu party the game night, and Maude is busy looking out for their pleasure, and acttnr so noble about it all. We can’t very Weil exclude them from our stoop; and we're tried to wueleh her bv listening in bored alienee: but even ab. she seems to think we are rapturously drinking In rite wondtroi she has to relate about “the children," Mart* a dv- Os vIWwOWXHJII ... ..... DEAR X. N •; Poor Maude Is a boro .hm-vher children ueeanee sh« feels they *ne her only verifiable claim Masrsa-arrs between her gad other m«tnre-«ge women of Mneeeuenee. . that the wIM y* iweeniy; es her boring ' » ’ v J ' ’ ' ■' i' * and from long back, she rejects herself as a nobody in adult com pany, who brings nothing (In her self) of compelling interest to others. : Therefore she has seized oh the I subject of “the children" and talks 1 it to shreds in middle age for quasi . neurotic reasons. , 1. In these discourses, she man . ages to immerse herself in a sense of personal well being, haring to do with her real or assumed value , to her "children." 2. By dwelling on her implied maternal value, die , identifies unconsciously with an ' linage of "weight and worth" she has in mind namely, her chlld | hood image, of her own parents, to early relation to whoth she felt in effably inferior, or superfluous, I think. INNATE SHYNESS SPARKS TARDINESS 3. Likely her husband is a kind ly fellow, who has listened encour agingly or appreciatively, with an air of interest, ai she ha* shared “the children’s” doings with him, over the yeans. Thu* in man-lam Hie hat found courage to sound eff about a vocational enthusiasm, and to consequence is giving her so cial circle a hare time, without awareness of her Wonder, The fact that aha 1* never “on th« beam” of her social engage ment*. whether as boetea or ruest is indicative of Ingrained shyness and a concomitant tendency to e vade or delay each new (rot- en counter. if possible. She “sets so noble about it sO." you sav of her buibUnv about the children; and no doubt there is some smug ness to her attitude—the smugne** of the defensive person who drapes himself to a blameless cause. As to whether them comment* wik expose the bos* to himself, I can’t be sure. But “to understand *0 is to forgive *n." the wring coca, so thev mav fortify vour to lerance of the musing problem. M H. Mar* Haworth counsels throurh her column, nut. by mail or eorson al interview. Write her to care of The Dallv Record. Because fresh laundry soap cort ♦ren ir^Thd*it few weeks before use. The soap win faut longer. _ tape* ft. •. Library paste rubbed on th'n material win make It eastar t® handle i nsdring buttonhotas.