PAGE SIX mte JUaiiij DUNN, w. c. RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY At SU but Ci! mry Street P NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE Eg THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. . MS-.HI R. Skid St, New Ysrk 11, N. Y. Breach Offleee In Iwj Major City W[ SUBSCRIPTION RATES Imp OtHIISi M cento per week; (AM per year In adranee; a Mr rix months; S 3 tor three aranthe. a TOWNS NOT SERVED BT CARRIER AND ON RURAL *!., ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINAt SAM MV I ] rear; UN for rix month*; R for three ntetethn -OP-STATE: EM per year In ad ranee; St far tot raaatha a far three month* ..ered as second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, ..JJX, under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3, 1878 f Every afternoon, Monday through Friday. % A Tyrant * The head of the world’s largest department store gently observed that the day of the dictatorial, table aimping boss is gone. Commenting on this, the Trib- W, of Medford, Mass., said: “The true executive defines of his business and imbues with it all who J|e a part in shaping that personality. He is a leader, a tyrant.” P A retailer who tried to run his establishment like a Jffe-camp today would soon find himself out of help. £ 1 he’d soon find himself out of customers too —for ,* ndly, intelligent training and direction, not brow-beat *, develops the efficient and productive type of employe Jry store needs in our competitive commercial world. |he People Shrink! | A famous pre-Soviet Russian historian, writing of Tsarist era, said: “The state swelled, and the people |fe| That has been true of every all-powerful state since jf e began whether communist, socialist, monarchist, |*lerical. In every instance, individual rights are destrov , bne by one till none are left, and the individual himself a cipher. If When the state swells the people shrink! I mtrols And The Consumer 1 Do you believe that price controls are really of 33t0 the consumer? If so, an editorial which recently ap- Sljred in the Chicago Daily News may give you a differ | idea. It said: “While they had accepted the inevita ty of price controls in World War 11, cattle growers <1 meat packers argued repeatedly for a decontrolled |rket throughout the postwar imposition of ceilings, KCh were established during the Korean crisis of 1950 1 retained until early in 1953. I “Meat price ceilings, they contended, not only led to |espread law evasion and to a general dislocation of fplies but they also forced consumers to pay higher f :es for meat than they would have paid in a free mar s “Striking support for this latter contention is afford in a current report of the American Meat Institute, ?ch shows that the all-time beef production record set ;1953, following the removal of controls brought cor pondingly sharp declines in the price of beef. i “The declines, as shown in Department of Agricul s reports, ranged from 10 to 35 per cent, depending to cut and grade, in comparison with the year before.” This is simply an example of the fact that the free fket serves the legitimate interests of everyone, with ;e and quality based on the law of supply and demand which there is no substitute. ONDURAS BECOMES REVOLT CENTOI ’■■MV*' '.W ' 1 " ' 1 l" MyaM* >'*■<.'l'.' IMWMBMBMVHM These Days By SokoJUky OPPENHKIMER AND SECURITY Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer Is one of. the most imaginative and highly cultivated minds in this country. The conclusions of the Atomic Energy Commission leave one with a sense of tragedy, fo\ no matter what Oppenheimer’s gifts may be, his conduct has been without morality. Even Commis sioner Henry DeWolf Smyth who dissented from the opinions of his fellow commissioners and who de fended Oppenheimer had to admit that ■ Oppenheimer lied childishly and was sorry for it. So is Klaus Fuchs sorry for what he did, but that does not help the United States, Essentially this is a moral ques tion and in a materialistic era, moral questions are often subor dinated to the pragmatic. Dr. Smyth clearly indicates this view when he says: ‘‘Since Dr. Oppenheimer is one of the most knowledgeable and lu cid physicists we have, his services could be of great value to the country in the future...” But skill is not good enough when what is involved is national secur ity. A forger is an extremely skill ful person but no jury would take that into consideration as a miti gation for a crime. Dr. Oppenheim er is not accused of any crime on the statute books, but his discre tion; in a field where indiscretion can be destructive of national ex istence, is denied and at least one Commissioner, Thomas E. Murray, denies his loyalty. It is the Murray opinion that in terests me most because it deals with the fundamental moral rela tionship between the citizen and the state. This we often overlook In the general assumption that any thing goes in politics, that a man is entitled to a job if he has the qualifications, and that the Gov ernment may use any pretext to do what it chooses. Murray’s opinion pursues a phil osophy of life, influenced, I find, by the moral concept of Thomas Aquinas. Murray defines loyalty as faithfulness and says: . .This faithfulness is a matter of obligation, it is a duty owed. The root of the obligation and duty is the lawfulness of the Govern ment. rationally recognized and freely accepted by the citizens. “The American-citizen recognizes that his government, for all tits im perfections, is a government under law. of law, by law; therefore he is loyal to it. . He then goes on to say that the advent of the Communist conspir acy has farced upon the American Government the necessity of es tablishing and emphasizing a se curity system which in some re spects offends the American con cepts of private opinion and private action. So, Murray distinguishes between the citizen who accepts responsibilities within the Govern ment and those who do not He says: "The American citizen in private life, the man who is not engaged in governmental service, Is not bound by the requirements of the security system. However, those American citizens who have the privilege of participating in the operations of government, especial ly in sensitive agencies, are neces sarily subject to this special sys tem of law. Consequently, their faithfulness to lawful government of the United Btatee, that is to say their loyalty, must be Judged by the standard of their obedience to security regulations. . * 1 I wonder if such a distinction can really be made in a tree society. Suppose I were to encounter at a dinner party a blabbing fool em ployed by the ABC o the CIA who insists on showing off by teHlng In a mixed and uncertain company all that he knows, including nation aH secrets, let us say upon which could depend victory or defeat In time of war. According to the rules of gentlemanly conduct, one should not repeat outside what one hears at his host's table. But am I a free person In that respect? Am I free to be gentle manly if I even suspect that in this silly, blow-bard, namedrop ping conversation lies peril to my family, my country, my civilization? If I see a fire in somebody else 1 * borne, must I not turn in an alarm? Shan I play safe and mind my own business and hope for the best? These are question* of moral re apoMttmty which aome can dodge with ease because they believe that the Eleventh Commandment to the greatest of *B, namely, to mind one's own busbies*. dr as the i rawowimt it. Stpm imfc into The OWedJtoimer Case, so far ; Apip&lf PMfc* espionage; ltd—* ; theeT^ 1 * ' flB DAILI SBCOftD. WIW. H. t MISTER BREMEN A 1 dwUERH-60-ROM * M Ml» muw Washington.—Here is the inside story behind Chinese Foreign Min ister Chou En-Lai’s secret talks with Indian Prime Minister Nehru and Burmese Prime Minister U. Nu Technically, Chou En-Lai was in vited to both countries. But actu ally the Chinese Communists slip ped around in advance, hinted that Chou would like to pay a visit, and fished for the invitation. It was then given. The chief object of Chou's visit was a nonaggression pact with India and Burma before we can get them signed up in a Southeast Asia defense pact. The American Embassy reports that Nehru was simply charmed by the Chinese premier’s sweet talk about peace. Note—One of the most tragic mistakes of the Eisenhower admin istration in the Far East was the removal of Chester Bowles as am bassador to India on the eve of some of the most important dis cussions we have ever had with that country. Bowles, an intimate of Nehru’s, was by all odds the most popular ambassador the U. S. has ever sent to India. George Allen, who replaced him, was doing an A-l Job in Yugoslavia. But it takes entirely different tactics to deal with Tito, the dictator, than with Nehru, the philosopher and mystic. —SENATOR THYE ACTS— Some senators don’t like to tan gle with big business in their home states, but Senator Thye of Min nesota has been pressuring the Federal Trade Commission to in vestigate the big flour and soap companies, Including one of his own supporters, General Mills of Minneapolis. Some of the big flour and soap companies have been promoting each other’s products by cross couponing. In other words, a box of soap will contain a coupon good for a 10-cent reduction on a bag of flour. As a result, small soap and flour producers complained that they were being squeezed out of business by this cross-couponing between the big companies. As chairman of the Senate Small Business Committee, Thye was all set to demand an FTC investiga tion when his staff pointed out that General Mills is one of the worst offenders! But even though Gener al Mills has been one of his big backers. Senator Thye refused to pull his punches and wrote to the Trade Commission demanding the investigation. cuiss .“Have you ever^ MOLOTOV TO MALENKOV Here is the latest story going the rounds of Capitol cloakrooms. Foreign Minister Molotov asked Premier Malenkov: “What do you think of this fel low McCarthy?” “I don't think much of his aims,” replied Malenkov, “but I sure like his methods.” RUSSIAN BEAR GROWLS U. S. Ambassador Bohlen in Mos cow warned the Pentagon that the Russian high command may order destroyers to escort all Soviet tank ers and marchantmen in Far East waters. The Russians are furious because Chinese Nationalist warships in tercepted and seized one of their best tankers, and they probably will retaliate by daring the Nationalists to take on the Russian destroyers which will accompany them from now on. The Russians know that the United States had a naval seaplane circling over the Russian tanker most of the time before it was seized. The plane was In direct contact with the Chinese National ists and tipped them off where to pick up the tanker. However, the United States did not have one of its own warships involved. HEYDAY FOR POWER BOYS The Federal Power Commission is now so anxious to please the private power companies that It actually threw out 10 hours of tes timony by its former chairman, Ice land Olds, when he opposed the Id aho Power Company’s plan for damming the Snake River. Ex-Chairman Olds testified that the government should construct a high dam at Hells Canyon, which in the end would be cheaper for the taxpayers and would mean cheaper power rates for Idaho - Oregon users. After testifying for two days, however, all he was able to get into the record was his name and address. Everything else was struck out by the presiding exam iner, William J. Costello, at the request of the Idaho Power Com pany. They claimed it was irre levant. Costello also threw out the heart of. the testimony by Clyde Ellis, manager of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. Ellis also supported government de velopment of Hells Canyon and op posed the Idaho Power Company. This is another example of why the Federal Power Commission now has the worst reputation In Wash ington for selling out to tba pri- + The ♦ WORRY CLINIC By Dr. George W. Crane Bill almost lost his wife because he wasn’t a good marriage me chanic! Men are usually scienti fic minded but sometimes they ignore the simple laws of me chanics which apply to their own wives. You can easily avoid di vorce by following the formula below. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case H-341: Bill L„ aged 28, re cently consulted me because his wife was debating a divorce. "Dr. Crane, I can see now that 1 made many mistakes in our 6 years of marriage,” Bill began. “For I was jealous of Dorothy and she was pust as Jealous of me. So we didn’t poin a church or be come active in any civic roups, al though wehad come from church homes. “And I never took her out much, far we were working so hard to lay away enough money to buy a farm. "We pinched and saved, and worked long hours. That may have been due in part to my wife’s in security as a child, for she has a phobia about ever being without funds. "But now I find that money doesn’t mean anything to me any more. For she has developed an in fatuation with her boss. So I feel that there is nothing else to live for.” LOVE'S MECHANICS Marriage is a complicated ma chine which operates according to basic laws of mechanics. Love is the gasoline which furn ishes the original motive force. But gasoline is not the machine itself, even though it is a vital factor. It also takes oil and grease to lubricate the parts of any machine. In marriage, daily compliments serve as the "oil.” If you forget to pay your mats a deserved compliment, then fric tion soon develops. And friction leads to heat, sparks and screech ing metal. Similar disadvantages appear In a marriage. So every new husband should realize that he must use some mechanical judgment In run ning a happy home. Another of these important me chanical aspects of marriage Is the necessity of a check-up at frequent intervals. Bill failed in this regard, too, for he said he never was very talented In expressing himself, so he Just sulked when things went wrqng. "And Dorothy would Just act In different to me when her feelings were hurt.” he added. "Sometimes she’d sit and look out of the win dow for several days and not say a word and Td never know what Td done wrong.” That is always bad policy. For newlyweds should talk things out. And never let a quarrel go beyond bedtime! ALWAYS make amends and talk thlnn over and apologiae, even though It irks you to do so and you must FORCE the apology across your clenched teeth. MARRIAGE MECHANICS And don’t indulge in Jealousy. Jealousy usually indicates that you feel Inferior to others of your own sex. so you dread le«t a better man come along and thus wean your wife away from you. Hie sex bulletins offered via this column will show you how to satis fy your mate completely. And a fully satisfied mate to not shopping around for flirtations or candestlne affair*! When you first marry, learn the sexual art required of husbands and wives. Far most divorces start in the bedroom. Then pay your mate at least one compliment every day. Don’t miss. Also, Join a local church and be come active TOGETHER therein. Talk out your problems, business and personal, together and never let a quarrel go past bedtime. Run your home on a budget And have your children early, prefera bly spaced about 2 years apart to they can play together. Bend for my 900-Item “Tests for Husbands to Wive*” enclosing e stamped return envelope, plus a dime. Use them for monthly check ups. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long 9c stamped, addressed en velope and a dime to cover typing and printing coats when you send for one of his psychological charts. rate interests. Nbte The electric power lobby Mend* mere money to Washington toan any other to inftaenoe Oon treto —a total of about half a minion, depart avaar mm WMfchuimJeill^to WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 9. 1954 ■ ' • . *. Walter Wioehell oil at 21W an • wile . * it, swMnt accidental deitt/at playwrigln Russell'Rhodes y ; .The Courtney Burrs’ divorce. He’s the producer. She to songwriter Dana-, Suesse, now in Reno . The reports the Bal let ls bqjdrawlng Girlesk shows in Pittsburgh.: !* . , The pubUahed item that Willie Stevens (of the long-age Halto-MUla Merger mystery in Jersey) was kin U the Army Secretory . . . The British comedian* who still in the qelp: "America gave England mil lions ot dollars and then sent her actors over to take it an beck!” . . . The mwdered Willie Moretti’i lawyer John Selser, who was erdered by the eenrt to name sU on the mob’s payroll. He plans to invstve highly exalted Jersey politicos, who allegedly made fortunes “protecting" gam bling syndicates . . . Queen Elisabeth’s visit here October 29th. Just i before the Congressional elections . . . She will tepee at the Waldorf (until the elections end) and then dwell In The White House . , . Mrs. . Gus Edwards, to* iIL At the Waldorf . . . Bernard Wolfe’s now book, . "The Late Risers,” which deals with Broadway "ineluding a fast-talk ing eotamnist. Who is net.” says a blurb, "Ww” . . . Who, then? r 1 ■" ■ Locals are buzzing about the comic who slugged a show-gal at the . Old Roumanian . . . H. L. Hunt, Sid Richardson and Clint Murchison, . reportedly the richest men in Texas (and publicized a lot in recent i times), who are not mentioned in Who’s Who . . . Barbara Hutton's property in Rubtrosa’s country (the Dominican Republic) for which she , paid some (900,000 and which can now be bought for half . . . Mrs. W. r Pegler, who to okay after an operation . . . Those two huge figures of , a nude male and female on the Bond Bldg, which are now called Jane I Russell and Sunny Ihfts . . . The alleged Reds arrested In Boston last s week. One was Mrs. Barbara Rosenkrantz, niece of Max Lowenthal, Truman’s advisor for years. He auth’d many articles (and a book) rap t ping the bejabers outta J. E. Hoover’s FBI. The N. Y. Stoat, which originated the alleged "preferential treat r meat at Ft Dix” for Fit Sehlne. Sent reporters there after "reeetf Ing complaints” from other soldiers, etc . . . That paper keeps yipping for McCarthy to reveal sources ot his confidential information . . . Why l doesn’t that newspaper set the Good Example and make known the i name* of their informers? . . , Earl Conrad (his books are good) work ing on a novel abent an American Journalist over s M year period . . A composite of various reporters of note, including Floyd Gibbons, Mark Bellinger, Damon Runyon “and others I can’t name,” he adds . . . The penbtent buns that Patti Page win marry Hollywood’s Art Fellows, but moot locals believe her heart belongs to another. Tony Martin (tailored Impeccably) strolled about midtown explain ing: *T always wanted to wear a straw katy the way Fred Astaire does 1 and walk along sth Avenue” . . . Holiday mag's full-page nude (a love ly blonde) wean only a hat (You see her often at Table 51 in the Cub) 1 . . . Dean Jennings, he auth’d an article about Barbara Hutton for La • dies Home Journal (and her lawyers threatened to sue If published), i allegedly concealed a tiny German wire-recorder (under his craqpt) while interviewing her . . . Cohens to Kellys Dept: The Runyon Can : cer Fund’s 906th and 207th bequests came from the wills of the late Emma L. Cohen of L. t and Gertrude P. Kelly of Bklyn . . . The Natl Guard, we hear, would sigh with relief if Roy Cohn resigned, which he . wou’t . .74 mags (mostly screen) faded in the lest, a montn. By Rheumatic Victim of Mental De i presrisns, Feels Diet Is A Factor; I Ask* Information. ■ DEAR MARY HAWORTH :I suffer [ greatly from mental depression ■ caused fay poor health. Doctors don’t agree as to Just what all’s me. It ap pears to be some form of lnfect : ions rheumatism, which one doctor 1 calls a recurrence of rheumatic fe . v*r suffered In youth, another cans ‘ rheumatoid arthritis, and a third to vaeue about it However, an agree there is no ’ cure: that, nothing can be done to help me. I have given, corti sone. Aeth and recently a new drag: ■ hutazoladin* In my own mind I f*el sure that diet Is Involved. I feel wore, for Instance, after eat -1 ing sweets. I have asked doctor* a r bout diet, but they Just aay, “Eat a normal diet.” In a recent maga zine article I read about research with Vltomin-E. which seems to help . some persons with mv symptoms. I am trying to find a hook writ r ten for laymen that discusses diet , in relation to rheumatic trouble, j Can von help me? For mv deores t «ion I have read books hv Emmet Fox. Norman Vincent Peel and , Claude Bristol: »l«o the Unity pub lication* and other metaphysical ; works. I should be saturated with nositive thinking: but. the truth to : I atitl get discoureoed ! HAS DITTY TO FAMILY 1 know doctors can be wrong. I | was once prononeed a hopeless heart invalid and recovered sufficiently to do all forms of Ugh* activity I am not even «irre the "rheumatoid" diagnosis exnlstne anything. The pain usually isn’t too bad. Mv chtsf svmptow is extreme exhaustion some days. I sit hi a sort of daas: it i« an effort to “mik around; and I pemvtre from weakness Ts there were only myself to con sider I would lust give up. But t «tm have children to raise, so I can’t “let ro.” Can von heln me hv nam. In» any mod bocks that deal With diet and rheumatisms CJ DIET AFFECT* -BLOOD EDGARS "»4R A J.! Jn Mitt, the Henry H«L rmbHehlnv eorrmsnv brought out • Nsetnsttng carefoPr docu mented book titled -Body. Mind and Sugar * wMh deals throughout with bodily states The haMr tt a «oHa horgttm study, prenared hv Dr E NT Abnthf>m*on t hiJJWfaI sumHal tot. With the help Os A. W. Pfet ' ——— TIUTI ”*?.*■ _ . a professional writer. As the authors explain, "This book was conceived through a doc tor-patient relationship Abra hapiaon having diagnosed Pezet and ; his wife as being victims of hyper lnsullnism (sugar starvation). The lav member of our collaboration ’ (Pezet) experienced more than clini cal Interest In the diagnosis and - ensuing treatment Why had he i wandered through countless consul tations and diagnosis and treatments i for more than a decade without < relief from his curious symptoms?. “Peaet.) was determined that a : knowledge of hvperin««Mnl*m and : its ramifications should be made available to the wanv who were suffering aa he and his wife had i suffered." And here mav I sav 1 that, the author* estimate hv the i disorde** dlscuaaed In thl* hook. But i to continue with the authors’ fore . ward: mews wtttirwwi FOR ARTHRITIC* "The medical ctfllaborsitor had ahead* written aome half-dor*n > scientific monograph* on the anb [ tact, nubltahed in various medical Journals: he had long wanted to nreaent. the f»ete to toe lavmeo end to the hhvalclan unreached hv the i technical treaties. The result: this bonk. It hs« been written In lan guage understand able to the lav men. Tt is honed, however that tho*» nhvecian* who mav read thl* win be imoeHed to consult on- sources thee** which we present” Thus ends to* »”thor*’ preface. Ip Canter 1. oaee 174, the anther arrive* at vmrr point of Inmilrv nawelv what new* for arthritic*? They *av. "a patient with rhenrna t'd arthritis was mbfacted to toe six hour Glucose Tolerance That" *nd * ease of «nheilnical sugat starva tion we* disclosed “Conclusions cannot be drawn from a single case, of caume. . . .Work to test the validity of our sssnmn. (ton l* now in proerem* ” ther add. “On comntatlcm it win he re ported m * standard medical Journ al Naturally we hqne tost ws mav fa* able to heto srthrltle* slmt to* same line* tost have heen so effective for the other conditions”— of hyperinsulin (or sugar starva tion). >a yiatos Jhis is toe bock for yen. her cchnim*ne?by mall or paraonel httervtaw. Writ* her in earn of The Daily Record. -- : -• Imm ftflr tettln* out Dm inronnwi* M the rtHttw. Mini tPT^VMPrf

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