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PAGE TWO lit? RECORD PUBUSHnS COMPANY - ,; A$ 131 But Canary dtrari NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. \ m-m K St, New M 17. N. X. ■w* Mw U «W| MUX o» l SUBSCRIPTION RATES p CAWUERi M Mk fir wnk; f&H fat year in sidvaMet M tor rix wMkw !» far tkne mwiiha « town NOT SERVED BT CAUDDt AND ON NUI [ BOtmtS INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: fOJg Mr IW! SB far Si nftr; «S far three A *~ 7T-QP-gTATK: JUS per year la tfnaM) R hr * mrateo. to far three lithe I ted «s second-class matter to the Port Office In Dunn, I under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3,187 ft I r Every afternoon, Monday through Friday. Untlemen Don't Curse || Front Os Ladies I Concentrating on cleaning up the language of Arm&i I es personnel, Edward L. Wetheim, a former YMCA sec- I cy whose hobby is trying to talk people out of swear- I deplores the prevalence of profanity among WACs, I es and lady Marines. I "Women have leaned the words from men,” he added. I i amazed at the way women swear. Profanity spreads l a lot of weeds. It’s a perversion of prayer. It's a vio- I n of the Third Commandment.” ' I A judge commenting on the subject of swearing had* I to say: “Many men cuss sometimes. I do myself, but lin front of women. I was reared to believe such ac -15 were unbecoming in gentlemen before ladies.” I He gave a defendant a 60-day suspended sentence for I g harsh language to his wife. One of the disgusting l ets of present day “cussing” is the people who are ha lilly profane have little regard for their surroundings l a they begin uttering foul talk. This is particularly laeable in public places. The presence of women in a B ering seems to serve as ho deterrent. lAs a matter of fact, members of the opposite sex as ffir as not are the offenders. And it is difficult to imag lanything more revolting than a woman giving utter ly to her sentiments to the accompaniment of a-choice jjtion of profanity. ■Perhaps the greatest sin today is that of having s«n lities. Actually it is difficult to tell. From The Jack- Pilie Hmes-Union. / f Socialism "Good Politics'? Hit has been widely believed that, it is “good politics” F candidates for high office toj include public power Hits in their platforms, on the theory that hordes of brs will find this particular variety of socialism irre rHowever, it begins to look as if the belief needs a new ■thorough examination. In many elections, in widely ■ißtOd sections of the country, public ownership zeal jhave met defeat and men who see virtue in encour- Bg private ent#prise haye been victorious. |*A particularly noitahle example has just occurred in gjjOregon Republican primaries. Oregon is in the cen pf a region which contains some of the largest of the giree, tax - subsidised federal power projects, notably Bieville and Grand Coulee. The incumbent governor Bed the Administration’s “partnership” power pro ■jL, under which private industry is to play an im ipnt role'ln hy**oelectaric development. Re was opposed B Well known political figure, who has held high state* ges, who went all out for monopolistic federal devetop- K, The incumbent won by almost a three-to-one mar landsdde. . gSThe other major contest on the ballot involved Con gNonal representation from the county where most of mil’s population is concentrated. The incumbent Con- Rjpnan had held office for many terms, and had once [g consideijed virtually unbeatable. He also endorsed all [Sfcderal power development. IBs opponent was a rela wftewcomer to the political arena, who strongly backed [ipartnership idea, and who looks with favor cm pri- The newcomer beat the veteran handily. ilunaged with other and pre^- are going Iw ■ "I»«:■*>■>■■■■■ r»N>i..h I -■« ~ Farr- ■■■■■■■■■. ...•mi ■■ i f - InrmAfi Ml y^LJL Narmon w, fMicriois y«ttNOTON (OP) - Marine rß.'Harry R. Ritchie of Ktags !|Tßan., has adopted a Korean |||to of Gls aboßt HR gw. H factor U as his foster father, who°2 mrmm «*% fritßUL-l 1 I Et klb Hf» 1 ‘i “They said we did a good Job." Ritchie said “but it was mostly waated come The sergeant wrote to his family wad to the Methodist minister in his home town. Also to the Jus government “I suggested a student visa," the sergaaht said. “The answer was no. Xte quota was filled and be *to fia outm t Kim at this moment Ja happily tofarfMntoe Ritchie of family, 8-year-old Isabelle These Days By SoJudAluj OCR ENORMOUS STORES What will the United States do with its store of *3.500,00QD00 of agricultural commodities? Even the slightly flexible price support bill, which Secretary of Agriculture. Ezra Taft Benson, has fihaliy got through the House of Representa tives and probahly the Senate by the time this is printed, will not solve the problem of our enormous stores. Obviously the United States needs to stockpile minerals and materials Which may not be swiftly accessible in time of war, but agricultural supplies in the United States are available annually, and generally in enormous quantities, beyond our necessities. How shall these enor mous stores be disposed of? For instance, the United States owns 422,220,000 lbs. of butter, 401,982,000 lbs. of cheese, 282,530,000 lbs. of dried milk, purchased by the Com modity Credit Corporation to sup port the prices of these commodi ties. The cost of these items is 2492,830,000; what their actual value Is no one can say. They may have to be given away for nothing to make room for more price-sup ported items. The United States owns 721,166,- 000 bushels of wheat and 370,079,000 bushels of corn. The cost of these commodities is $2,494451,000. Prac tically speaking, our government has run out of storage space for Wheat and corn. Some of it is put in the bottoms of ships that lie in cur livers doing nothing (the mothball fleet is another story). Secretary .Benson has opposed rigid price supports without reject . ing the entire doctrine of govern ment aid to farmers designed to safeguard them from the drastic Operations of the .law of supply and demand, which historically has a tendency to reduce fanners to peasants. The American farmer is an equal citizen in a free society. Essentially, parity means more than its definition in economics; socially it means equality between the farmer and the city dweller; it means that the fanner is to have as good a heme; that he is to own his tools; that his children are to have equal opportunity for educa tion. But parity can never mean that food prices for the cities are to be held up unconscionably and that the entire nation is to be taxed so that God-given food shall jot in warehouses, never to be used, not even ps charity for the hun gry. * (Here is a dilemma of plenty. Usually it has been the opposite, poverty, shortages, hunger have faced « people as a serious prob lem. In the United States there is ho poverty (this is categorically correct by any comparative meas urement) ; there are no shortages of agricultural commodities; there la no hunger. Yet the plethora of ag ricultural production, this plenty has become a major economic and political problem because no one knows an* better what to do with top much with too little. In most countries ,pf the world, this paradox is-not only not under standable, it is mot believed. How fa ft possible, it might be asked, .tint a farmer will grow more than be can dispose of? A Chinese or an Indian peasant has enough trouble raising what he needs; a Cambo dian peasant in fgm River delta knows exactly where he will sell his surplus rice. All of Asia is willing buy it Yet the United States keeps in storage $8X85.000 of rice, which be- fjTsqjSHw t art|fcUflly which this country consumes com-, paratively little. cannot be a rice shortage in the United States and if there were, it would hardly affect the food supply of the Amer ican people ' Another curiosity of this situa tion is 4toM ihaee to consume thernTtaportg of*aw2 products are coming into the Unit ed States from Europe and Canada lean product'. Notorfly fast, ‘but been applied politicly to «xr* , MB CTCPftP. PCWW. ft ft ■ astern DfiCAen «t,.. . “Good morning, gentlemen, I represent the O. K. IN* DIRECT Lighting Fixture Company .. . i cLmmm »Uanr-«0-R0M M f w»iw WASHINGTON Just two mem bers of the current Senate were members of the 1929 Senate that took the last vote of censure a gainst one of their own members. They are: George of Georgia and Hayden of Arizona, both Demo crats. The man they both voted as bringing “dishonor and disrepute on the Senate” exactly 25 years ago was Hiram Bingham of Connecti cut who had placed Charles L. Eyanson, of the Connecticut Man ufacturers Association on his Sen ate office staff and let him sit in a meeting of the Senate Finance Committee. The standards of the Senate seemed considerably higher in those days than during the current de bate over McCarthy of Wisconsin. One year before, the Senate had vote<| to expel tipo of its own mem bers, Vare, of Pennsylvania, and Smith, of Iflihois, lor sending too much money in their election cam paigns. Senators at that time felt keen ly about the prestige and dignity of the body to which they belonged. "The view I take of the ques tion,” Senator George told the Sen ate, "is simply thjs: that the of ficial act of each one of us has a public quality, and that act it ei ther in the interest of the public good of it is contrary to the inter est of the public. It either promotes confidence in the processes of gov ernment or it tends to weaken pub lic confidence 4n the processes of government.” Senator Bingham argued elo quently in his own defense. "No Senator is to be criticized,” he said, “if he chooses to place members of his family in these cousins, nieces, sons or daughters." Senator Smoot of Utah, a Re publican stalwart, introduced a re solution calculated to spare Bing ham somewhat. It omitted his name. But George and Hayden, a mong others, were opposed. “My interpretation of the reso lution fa this," said George, refer ring to the fan opt Amendment, “end with this understanding I «hyi) Vote the substitute, because I tegArd that as meaningless some think like the poetry at the head «f Kipling's chapters, it has not anything to do with the real issue bean-raise & her t. -with the public morals, with the public InterfesVthe <s&Uty ,bf offi cial conduct and act the maimer In which that conduct or that act • K IP I 1 MSb EHHW|Aiilii ,/'ft y , ft! |,| ffjßM fSmt x muam affects the public welfare.” The vote, 54 to 22, decided that Senator Bingham’s action was “con trary to good morals and Senatorial ethics and tends to bring the (Sen ate into dishonor and disreputf, aid such conduct is hereby condemned Note Twenty years later, a Democrat, President Harry ; Tru man, performed a great act of re habilitation by appointing Bing ham, a'Republican, as chairman of the top loyalty board. Bingham had learned his lesson. He acqaltied himself well. “FLEXIBLE FLANDERSI Vermont’s rugged Sen. Flanders, once head of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, who owns a thriving tool factory and has de veloped 29 industrial patents, good naturedly complained that Sen. Lyndon Johnson has been pestering him. Johnson has advised Flanders not to be too rigid, to permit some give and-take regarding his resolution of censure against Senator McCar thy. The persuasive Senator from Tex as was so persistent with the stub born Senator from Vermont that Flanders remarked to a friend; “It looks like lying-down Lyndon want# me to be Flexible Flanders.” KNOWLAND REVERSES Senator Knowland’s buttonholing of GOP senators to stifle the Flan ders resolution has got him on something of a hot spot. For two many Senators remember how, no later than February 24, Knowlaad announced that the Senate' should abandon its present system under which senior members of commit tees become chairnfen. “They should be chosen, instead," Knowland said, “in accord with tW policies of the majority party." No man has bucked the majority party more than the Senator from Wisconsin. He has pilloried its se cretary of the Army, criticized its Secretary of Btate, set himself h bove the President. Nevertheless, Knowland has now completely reversed his position of February 24 and does not even want the Senate to vote on a censure re solution by a fellow Republican. MCCARTHY' - GO - ROUND Paul Hoffman, the Republican who rebuilt Europe as he«Ji of the Marshall Pkm, has been patiedtly trudging round the Semite Office Building telling jEtiafonii ancf for the Senator Potter of Michigan, who McCarthy on the firing of Roy . . , '»wDy fIF WiKII m By Dr. George W. Crane Millions of tken-agen have the some worry that Lois complains about. Bat many middle-aged i folks are likewise becoming pre maturely senile In their look* by failing to follow the advice be low. Yea grandparents eon try that book-on-head strategy, too. BY DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case K-363: Lois M„ aged 18, presents a common teen-age prob- I'm. ‘Dr. Crane, how can a- person get o'er being rdund-shouldered?" she • iked directly. “I am becoming more round shouldered every day and it is a great worry to me. “When I try to straighten up, I feel so awkward and conspicuous. And then I imagine everybody is looking at my bust, and this em barrasses me. “I know a lot of young people who have this same worry, and some of them are boys, too-” POSTURAL PSYCHOLOGY Social timidity tends to make one cringe and stoop. A different look on people will thus actually help your physical posture. So Join my “Gompiment Club”. Form the habit of looking at peo ple with a view to picking out some virtue or “merit”. Then smile and pay them a bit of honest praise. Soon you’ll enjoy meeting folks, instead of shying away from such social contacts. For you’ll have a ready means of starting conversation. And you will be delighted with their pleasure in your honest compliments. They'll soon begin to like you. And all of these experiences will give you more confidence. So you will lift your head.higher and ele vate your chest. Automatically, therefore, your posture will im prove. Shoulder braces used to be pre scribed for this condition, but this -new, aelf-amured mental outlook even heads shoulder braces. HOW MODELS ARE TRAINED If you were to enroll in a profes sional model’s school, you would also be taught to march Around with a book balanced on your head, for this creates better carriage and a straight book. Military training often produces the same desirable posture. Many a gangling youth thus oomee out with an assured step and erect mil itary carriage. But you girls can practice dili gently at home with the book on your head. For you will soon over come your self-consciousness about your bust. f Whenever you do anything it Os your usual routine, you feel very conspicuous. That holds for smil ing at people, as well as far -paying compliments or even standing bract, with chest high. But soon these new habits win become so well intrenched fast you wUI forget your self-consciousness. So praotice by the hour at home until your good carriage is tire real “you”, instead of an assumed tem porary posture. MEDICAL ADVICE Some teen-agers are also afflicted with a cartilage ailment in the bock which tends to bend .them forward, like an old lady of !90. itopfade your hands on etevofad If you am taller than your crowd, you may brad to stoop to meet «*e average. That fa especially unat tractive in girls. So be glad if you are tall, and train yourself to have an erect, graceful body. cially at home. And send tor the closing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. jgggjP rWlfx AlWlßroOll, gUtJf W( • 881 . It | iimif l/FRFIfa <- IN NEW YORK CBS people admit they’ve been looking for a spot to move ode of the dobs ofa the Godfrey show (maybe two) to Mar in her own program. “The show hdb too many girls and they often don’t get on. etc” . . , Godfrey eon pay them only so much and he wishes t’hell they could better themselves . . . Don Lamoth (hot dawg vendor at the {opes Beach show) and Slneta Pelkey (the disappearing water-ballet gad) eloped ... The Reuben Gomez’s (of the Giants) expect their baby next week ... Big rumor, around Ltady’s: Nick Condos (Martha Raye’s ex) married Jeseefs lone-time amour, Abigail Adams, at Vegas. (Wm mmmm, could be) . . . Coral Records exec Bob Thiele and Jane Har vey reported a last Thursday merger. Second time for both . . . Does Marilyn still deny being enceinte? ... What a thrown-bottle brawl St the Meteopoiet Marline Coral, tbs French girt 88 million Americans would Bk» to meet, fat her gvosm have ported . . . Carol Leigh, the ingenue in "Beautiful Sea,” has Gloria Ddtoim’i estranged breathless ... Erie Remarque's romaadrtoks are mm exclusively Eras Wahlberg’s . . . Mag gie Whiting and Diek Gray are In tune . . , Lance Fuller and Rita Brewer (Psltsmt saelalovely) ore In Fairdise ... If yeu*ro looking for an apartment the Savoy-Flam has asm for only SIBO,SM a year ... Uncle flimssn fa caring s femme White Rusvlsn refugee translator at the UN. May sons up with an irrefutable Unk to the Red atom spy ring that got Mr. Oppenheimer into all that trouble . . . Brick Tone, the model, and her most hashand had a baby girt . . . Add Spindle top remanoto: Singer Mere Griffin ASM band vogaltet Rita Voneß. Mld dle-aisle-bound. The Lindbergh kidnap case will flare up again via a million 8 libel action. Jerseyite Raul H. Wendel is plaintiff over a statement in a story about ex-Gov. Hoffman . . . Diet A tty Hogan is exploring the sale of thirty NYC Marshal’s Jabs (at $1,500 each) and the peddling of a Magistrate post for 30Gs . . . FDR, Jr’s plan for picking delegatee fa ahead of adhed. He has 240 (27 counties) all Ustod as sure-ihlngg. Needs MO to get the nomination . . . State Troopers here (and in N. J.) cracked down on motel trade. Sixteen raids over the July 4th holi days . Many of the swank mid town places have been warned about selling hooch to minors. The crackdown is coming . . . Decca is com ing out in the Fail with a special long-player of Bing’s platters. 87 of them. They will sell far $27.50 and play 4% hours .. Cal Gov. Goody Knight weds widow Virginia Carlson Aug. 6th. They say you haven’t lived until you’ve seen Marion Brando’s mim icry of Überace . . . less Barker belted rat a nuisance . . . Mrs. Ster ling Hayden has 8 private-orbs tolling him to connter-attaek the di voree . . . That was quite a scene at Le Ruban Men the other day. A loud, argument fanch Jangwidge, ladies!) between on* of the world’* richset (eM) woman and her ehady-tody pal . . . The New Yorker Ho tel fa home far the Washington, Baltimore and Athletics teams . . . Black fingernail polish is the fashion among leading modolls. (Dat Ole Blackkkk Majjlc) ... A Undytte’s Idea of a Day in the Country: Walk ing aerem the Held 1 Ms way set of the Palo Grounds . . . Latest hegwssis (No. MS and *l4) to the Runyon Cancer Fund: From the late Carl Jorgrunm and Helen M. Shaw of NYJC . . . Coral Phelps and toere director MB Morris were Jrit wed . . . Cong. Modal of Honor Man -Scooter” Burin (of Ark.) Is now Capt. Burke . . . The High State of Jam: Three of the top names ra case marquees In midtown wen In the eßnk only recently . . . Boy Cohn wfll be guest of honor at a Mg tootlmratil dinner in the Aster July 28th. McCarthy will be a speaker . . . Bond Otar Ralph Flanagan, arrested for allegedly strolling at At lantic City Beash ntifald (carrying his trousers over an arm), nufat have sera 4ha cartoon of a man doing the same thing hi the current New Tasker . . , lt,Nt wfll hoar paid Lavaße conduct the outdoor con cert tonfaht In ltsiisofrtl*r Pfasa .. A disc-jockey and p crooner were warned by the Mob to stay away from their drib or face the gnnse- A straight line is not necessarily the aborts between two points. Airlines fly "Rhumb Lines” which lom.-* the curvature of the earth 1 * safoce. tUmif Hawrtk’A Bry 9rifgossol Cotißdrit^w New Emflfege *terind By ghadfa n_l< Ushra irn illi m * Boa a* *».— a hUi ■ W9m BCCtIOH Supervisor DEAR IfARY HAWORTH: I am a technician fat a fairly large hos pital laboratory. Many women ore employed here, and this letter con cerns, one of the young women is the section over which I am super visor. Miss X fa Approximately 40, and somewhat overweight, but not unattractively so. Bh* fa very loud, swears a great deed, fa quite a show-off and sulks for hours if her wgck is critiefagtf. Time after fime I Jwfae given faer suggestions that would facilitate her work; but no. she doggedly gges her .own way.’ She usually achieves satisfactory results in the Entire^soctlom tmW to critiefae Jh* work qf otter Miff. X has been fal our fab about infbfapce wt is long as she wiftw. We dent bold this rar; gAd our feelings pose now fa to get advice, on -how to bring about * better working B 5.““ Once in fa while some Os us get together for dinner, and we surely hipped a to f£s'.s©tSlflT®€i Wtsk MfCtlfstlfE twk^g Dexore Rf poscpcmee ni* earlier re aafcfckffi of efestii*® Mgfiift&m ksM f In relation to her, both on the i Job and off, you fael disgruntled, or at a disadvantage. It seeau. i Thus inclined to be critical and-or . backbiting—in a patronizing, tboe t earing way, porhape? Maybe pn . consciously you are vyiifa withfatg i for VIP (“very important person”) . rating in your section, inasmuch as i, you are section supervfaor. And the t a new employe with a mind fat ifar , own, known to have family pdH k with the front office. r As section supervisor, yon are « leader of sorts, presumajgy, jtelir . skills of a diverse stertf, fat hoa r dling a common (or coUeotite) jpti,- j tern of work. Tact and jjigsriton. s an Aptitude for teaching, and firm. : ssws irassus; . are required of a person in your ’ Bs&ttttssaics i on the Job, in the cose of Miss X, ’ at wny rate. r If Miss Xis out or etep with the i staff, mulishly impervious to your i suggestion, bent on proving her ■ own thearfa, end otherwise a dts ’ turbing element in your workaday ! Jurisdiction, it becomes your assign i meat to bring bar into Has, gentle her down, educate her to a mote Or admit your personal failure in i a trylpg situation. - .. "".'■T’,.*""* —rr Ill# AwUis cmlaxfue bhwsr > snTaZlaato* T*-rrrrrri^T-riftrtlrm*
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 30, 1954, edition 1
10
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