FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 19, 1955 DUNN, N. C. RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC *OS 217 E. 42nd St., New York 17," N. Y. Bifcnch Offices In Every Major City SUBSCRIPTION RATES By CARRIER: 25 cents per week; $8.50 per year in advance, $5 for six months; S 3 for three months IN TOWNS NOT SEIZED BY CARRIER AND RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: $6.00 per year; SH.SO for six months; $2 for three months OUT-OF-STATE: $8.50 per year in advance; $5 for six months; SI for three months Entered 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. Stevenson: He Is Not The Democratic Issue Democratic politicos are getting all stirred up over once again as the Party’s standard bearer in the next the question of whether Adlai Stevenson will be chosen presidential election. Political opinions, pro and con, are expressed against a backdrop of the so-called “rebellion” which broke out in the South during the last presidential campaign and which saw four Southern states vault into the Republican column. Governor Shivers of Texas .has expressed the opin ion that the renomination of Stevenson would “stir up another Southern rebellion.” Shivers apparently is placing more importance per sonally on Stevenson than Stevenson deserves. The recent “rebellion” in the South against the Dem ocratic candidate had more important roots than the per sonality of the Party’s standard bearer. One very important feature was the resentment of leading Southern politicians against tlje platform of the convention and the effort to gag Southern candidates with the so-called obnoxious loyalty oath. The revolt was more of a protest against convention steam-roller tactics than it was against the chosen candidate. Stevenson would have run better on a platform more acceptable to the South; and this is byway of predicting that if chosen he will run better in the next election if Southern sentiment is given more consideration in the convention. Southerners are simply tired of being the red-headed step-children of the Democratic Convention, contolled by politicians from the slum jungles of the great northern and western cities. Another factor in the last campaign which cannot be overlooked is the tremendous nation-wide popularity of the man who ran against Adlai Stevenson. Ike Eisenhow er was a national hero and he got a hero's vote that cut across party lines in the South. Whether his record as president has dimmed that popularity remains to be seen if he chooses to be a can didate next election. But politicos who are conjecturing about the 1956 election are overlooking an issue which will be very im portant in November of next year. That is the school integregation issue and the man ner in which the Democratic Convention faces up to it. From this distance we cannot imagine a Democratic platform endorsed by the current bosses of the Party ■ which did not include a strong support of integrated schools. Failure to accord integration this support would alienate political leaders who are counted on to deliver the vote in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit and similar cities. On the other hand the same support of bi - racial schools in the Democratic platform would be a tremen dous incubus in the South to whatever candidate is cho sen to carry the Democratic banner. It will cut more ice in the South than Eisenhower’s farm program, the TVA, and who don’t love McCarthy. It will have a bigger bearing on what Southern states go Democratic and what don’t than the personality of the candidate. From The Fayetteville Observer. Every prisoner who has escaped from the Concord. Msgs., Reform atory since it was built in 1878 has been recaptured. * FUNNY BUSINESS <■ - i \ : m ' m j —— / | ~.\jgs>|»H*» Potatoes still remain the chief crop of Maine's Aroostock County, despite a growing diversity of agri cultural products there. THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN. N U, O O /—v uAt\#Yvm■Mwiwrv w\m ymur EARL Cgpjl | WILSON rag | ON BROADWAY Blfij { BEVERLY HlLLS—Before com ing out here for a few days, I went around to New York’s mam bo palace, the Palladium, to talk to British actress Greenwood, who’s rehearsing there for a TV show. “I look a bit scruffy," she said, sinking into a chair. ‘Scruffy?” "Dirty,” she explained. Miss Greenwood, whose voice has been / compared to Tallulah Bankhead’s, was on Broadway and in Holly wood last year. “It’s jolly nice to be back. New York's hard, at fiast. The noise, and the shape.” 'The shape?” "It holds a lot of noise, the shape. But one's quite homesick for it after a while away.” Miss Greenwood’s here to appear in The King and Mrs. Candle” on NBC tonight. For this tshe’ll receive a packet. “In London the tawp fee now’ is about 150 pounds - - and that’s the taw’p, tawp,” she told me. I "Quite a lot of fi}m is being can ned up. By the way, when you were in London *w r ere you at the Caprice? That’s the waviest place.” I must have looked puzzled. "You surely noticed a lot of dis creet waving. It’s so crowded now’, there’s not much room to wave.” Miss Greenwood, who’s about 33. with sort of champagne-colored hair, then told of being ordered, while in a plane, not to take some medicine given her by a London physician. "I have a funny wart on my too which I caught here in Ameri ca from a bathmat last year," she said. "It wouldn't go. I was persuaded to go to a homoeopathth He gave one some little pills. One took them. "When one started back over here, one Was given more pills. The chemist put poison in them by mistake. "One got a radio message not to take them. One hadn't taken them, because they were in the hold of the plane. "But it was jolly good, the way they handled it. Jolly intriguoig. They were livid though, that I wasn't carried off dead. Probably one won’t be able to leave the country because of having those pills.” Miss Greenwood'll return to En gland after she, Cyril Ritchard, Richard Haydn and Irene Manning do the TV show. “One will miss New’ York. Upchurch Electric Co. WIRING. HEATING AND AIR-CONDITIONING FREE ESTIMATE ON ANY JOB. GET OUR PRICES BE fqre you Build, it WILL SAVE YOU MONEY. NO JOB TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL. SATISFAC TION GUARANTE E!D. PROMPT SERVICE. PHONE 5181 BUIE’S CREEK, N. C. though,” she said. "I wish it would get smaller, that bit of sea between j us. Why can’t America be just down the road a bit? One would love being more neighborly. Would n’t one?” THE MIDNIGHT MRL IN N. Y Bob Mitchum and Brod Craw ford had a hunk of trouble with Paris gendarmes one convivial night recently . . . Peggy King got! an offer of her own network show while the George Gobel strategists were delaying over her option . . . Neal Lang, popular gen. mgr. of die Sheraton-Astor, is considering a big Detroit job. Gloria Swanson's happy about an Italian film in which she’ll play Nero’s mother . . . Serge Obolen sky’s dtr., Sylvia Vander meersch, was with the Maharajah of Jaipur’s son at the Amassador Embassy Club , . . Arlepe Dahl denied to intimates that she's in the hospital because she’s expect ing. Atty. Melvin Belli’s lawyer friends will try to halt publica tion of Robert Wallace’s book about him and accident cases, “Life and Limb." Dean Martin's new Capitol al bum has no mention of Jerry Lewis in the cover notes . . . Cleo Moore gave movie exec Charlie Simonelli a 20-carat star sapphire ring . . . Morgan, the famous TV dog, became a poppa - - eleven lit tle Bassets . . . Singer Ann Mc- Cormack, who toured Australia with Abbott and Costello, is re suming her career here. Audrey Meadows is dating TV quizzer Peter Arnell . • • Descrip tion of "Pete Kelly's Blues" with Jack Webb: 'Dragnet' in ragtime’ ... Young Philip Crosby's auto crash may keep him in a cast for six months ... A top Democrat bet $5,000 at even money that Adlai Stevenson will be the '56 candi date. Earl's Pearls . . . Someone has said that we must speak up to be heard, stand qp to be seen and shut up to be ap preciated. WISH I'D SAID THAT: The reason most people don’t do their Christmas shopping early is. how do you know who your friends will be by Dec. 25?” - - H. G. Hut cheson. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH Pub licist Jack Tirman walked out on a bad film and said, "I think 111 Give Us A Trial J. P. LEE'S TEXACO Now Open In The Quinn Shopping Center. We Wel come You To Dunn's New Ultra Modern Service Sta tion. WASHING GREASING COMPLETE TEXACO LINE «■ The ■» WORRY CLINIC By Dr. George W. Crane Jim’s wife had driven him to liquor and was heading for a di vorce, chiefly because her biased mother had given her the wrong information about a wife’s proper j function. So study this case care- ' fully; then send for the booklet! below’. It has stopped thousands of' divorces. : Case 0-388: Jim J., aged 38, is! a construction engineer. He boarded the airplane at Lou isville and sat down beside me while I was flying back from At lanta recently. "Aren’t you Dr. Crane?" he asked. "Yes. but how did you know ” I replied in surprise. "Oh, I recognized your picture from the Indianapolis Star, for I Jollow your WORRY CLINIC regularly. "In fact, my home is much hap pier nowadays because of your col umn.” “Thank you, I’m glad to know that,” I answered. "But just how l did my newspaper column make your home happier?” "Weil, I have been married for 12 years," Jim replied. “But my wife and I never saw eye to eye cm marital relations. "She was my college sweetheart wait until they make this into a mdvie.” Comic Morty Gunty complains, I was driving my fish-tailed Cad illac through Main - - and it got harpoohed thtee times.” That’s earl, hrother. Hatcher & Skinner Funeral Home Phone 2417 ESTABLISHED IN 1912 Dunn, S. C AMBULANCE SERVICE Charles Skinner Paul B. ->rev SPECIAL NOTICE While S. Clinton Ave. Is Under Con struction Please Use Rear Entrance Thru The Alley. Auto Glass - Auto Painting Wrecked Cars Rebuilt HENRY'S BODY SHOP 306 S. Clinton Ave. Phone 3474 Dunn, N. C. at Butler University and Is one j of the most charming girls you; would ever be able to meet. "But her mother poisoned her mind about men. So we led a typical cat & dog' existence. T had even taken to drinking, too, to get away from the nag ging and arguments at night. "T.ien you wrote a frank col- 1 unin one day about marriage. That morning we had had another quar rel. So I tore the column right out of the STAR and laid it be side her plate at the breakfast table. “There, read that and get wise to the facts.’’ I said angrily, and j then put on my hat and headed j for tlfe office without even say- | ing goodbye. "Well, Dr. Crane, I guess she j read to more than once, too for I from then onward our home life changed. “She later told rue she thought I was just making up all the ad- | vice I had tried to give her before ' that moment, but when she saw yoi\r statement about basic differences in erotic appetite be tween men and women, she decid ed maybe her mother had been wrong. "Your column that morning had started that Jacob had four wives and that modern husbands are likewise geared to have a harem. “So you advised wives, if they wanted to hold their husbands’ undying devotion through the Golden Wedding, to feign more ardor and see that their husbands were fed an ample supply of ero tic calories as wed as the gastric variety. f’ve qiiS drinking and stay home for I have nothing to flee from. My wife is charming, sweet and satisfactory, so I don't need a whiskey flask to drown my miseries.” WIVES, TAKE HEED There is an axiom in psychology to the effect that neither man nor animal will voluntarily flee from pleasure. So if your home life is happy, you don't need dread the com petition of neighboring taverns, dance halts, poolrooms or immoral houses Men stay home when they are happier there than elsewhere. A sweet wife who adequately meets the usual husband's need for gastric as well as ero’ic cafo ries, seldom experiences the pro blems of a drunken husband. But many wives have a narrow, warped idea of what constitutes j a wife's proper functions. | Sometimes a divorced mother ar I spinster aunt has so vividly im , pressed their girlish minds, tha: j the wives fail to use the strategy ] that makes man-rage permanently happy. I So send for my booklet, "Sex Problems in Marriage”, enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. It gives you the true facts from both the medical and psychological angles. With this knowledge, any aver age wife can hold her husband’s devotion through their Golden Wedding Day. Chief He Wants Out SIOUX FALLS S. D. 'IP* M*n l nehatia County authorities kept a wary eye on an Indian prisoner who believed in living up to his l ame. They said that Adam Makes Room for Them had broken out of another South Dakota jail five times. Fair view Flower Center “Call Us for Every Blooming: Thing" ,1 Phene 3791 Ellis Are. Dunn, N. <1 AMBULANCE SERVICE CROMARTIE FUNERAL 7 HOME DUNN, N. C. Mr. Farmer: 3/ or winter, too-i< 3 . >\ we have finb. now to take care y° ur Tobacco Curing Oil Needs. | fMA'tnc] Chiropractic for Rp r T" Back Injuries i yyHBHF V - msoat -- - % i Back injuries and sprains < in many cases produce lungs— j displacement of one or oveb cl more of the spinal vete- brae, this producing nerve c irritation, muscular con- -c : j traction and pain The log- -<_ ical and most natural way Vbladder -c to correct this is through BH '{limbs-------c- !■ chiropractic spinal adjust- Wflßf ’ Lla ments, which have proven a boon to thousands of these p,. .. | cases. See your chiropractor. House Calls Made am Over 500 Insurance Companies Pay H wffltj/l Chiropractic Claims. DR. GERALD JAMES CHIROPRACTIC PHYSICIAN Office Hours: 9-12 A.M. 2-5 P.M. NIGHT CALLS BY APPOINTMENT LADY ATTENDANT ON DUTY Dunn, N. C. Phones: Office 3031—Res. 3660 X-Ray Laboratory That's just typical of many p:>cß cuts on Homort Ensembles until Sept. 3rd. T u e above ensemble in your - choice of beautiful colors with our Best lavatory, toilet ond tub, complete with fittings. •i » FRFE 1. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO- # A fcfr , I t. i.roau M., Dunn, N. ( . I fi/ IjXfOJAJJS I Pl.oi. tend m* your Plunking liwtoiloti.B Seek f-1 1768 end | j ..... no. ir i M«Mr rr*nr ny