THE DANBURY REPORTER Established 1872 Interpreting Timely Topics Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot? The Hon. Cameron Morrison, con gressman from Nocth Carolina, got tired of the continual lambasting of Roosevelt and the New Deal by north ern Republicans. At last he rose and lifted his voice, clear and unafraid, in the gilded halls of the House at Washington. It rang like cymbals in a band. The devil and all his sycophants are defied when Cam Morrison becomes aroused. They had ranted about the administra tion's spendings, and its bureaucracies, and its wastefulness. The gentleman from North Carolina said: "You stole more money from the gov ernment under Harding's administra tion than the Democrats have wasted in ten years of war preparation." We don't know nothing about all this, b 11 *" we are confident that Congressman Cam Morrison will be elected the n ex t United States Senator from North Car olina. The people of North Carolina will stand by Cam Morrison, the man of good faith, of matchless integrity, and the courage to speak out in defense of his State and the Democratic party. This newspaper was for Morrison when he was defeated by the champion of the unthinking mob of the Thirties, who crazed by national disaster, discour aged by the hungry and despairing times, desperate from the universal chaos that threatened, voted by an enormous majority for a parody on statesmanship, a joke, a clown, against a dignified tried representative. You can fool all North Carolinians part of the time, you can fool a few North Carolinians all the time, but you can't fool all North Carolinians all the time. Burlesque has had its day. The Hon. Clyde Hoey is an able, highly cultured Christian gentleman, a fine Sunday School teacher, a suave and pa lavering politician. He was the speak ingest governor we ever had. But the people are tired of so much speaking and palavering and suavity. They want more guts and steel. They are certainly fed up on hereditary ownership of State honors and the roar of the Shelby dyn asty. The Gardner - Hoey monotony should be allowed a rest f.tokes county has her memories. Szokes county went down the line for Clyde Hoey as probably no other county in North Carolina did. The Governor himself acknowledged that Stokes coun ts incidents killed Dr. Mac Donald. But when Stokes county panted *' she didn't got it. Instead the stood off Volume 72 Danbury, N. C., Thursday, Nov. 25, 1943 __ .. Seasonal Warning She was very beautiful. She was of the svelte type, that species which makes the world go round and round, and the heart go pound and pound and pound. He loved her, he adored her, he idolized her, in fact the people said, we quote: "He was a damned fool about her." She resembled Sappho, he said, being blithe and lithe and lissome, and also light. She had an undulating sinuosity about her which drives many people to a sad end in an insane asylum. When she walked she swayed swan like and swank-like, and shank-like. She seemed to be hunching something with her shoulders. She had lovely talons whose varnish harmonized with the color of the nail on her great toe, which peeped so cutely from an aperture in her sandal. The affair went on this way till fall. There were parties. She never got quite as drunk as some of the others. He was very proud of this. It showed poise. She cussed beautifully. This made her, he purred, so interesting. While she may have been what you call rapid, she was never vapid. She was at these times very full—of verve and sugared virility. His love deepened and widened until it threatened to surge out of the levees of his ideological system, until late one evening at a dinner he watched her eat ing her possum, and saw the grease run ning out the corners of her mouth. After that he seemed to lose zest. Glam our, enchantment, allure and charm went off somewhere and sat down to gether on a log, gazing up into the No vember night with a faraway look in their eyes. like a poor relation. We asked i'ox'a lish but we got a stone. Stokes cuuiity never had a chance like other counties in the battle for roads. We saw a chance to get a showing in roads, we wuiiced a road from Meadows to Ger manton, from King via Capella to Dan bury, fiuiii Danbury v;. Sandy Ridge to Madison, to give u, a ~~unty-seat, by county-seat hock wit! Rockingham, like c h;ul These ] . ; *v-.yc: V.CCU * "t'lt I, " ,r 4iU a W3 1 o-": •*- '.C ' cc.nc:* tumor! US Cii A V 1 / * "syn r " .>L«.: V •'."••• C T- 1 "* v .V.i ••• r heV v... tt!•••*•• h ' »*e c imtv p. ? ;x A)irw counl,- ..111 1 1 > Hoev ' -• / ?!• ?. ' H y m ., ■ ;in«; 4 h\ •:£ ll.fr tv P"i' ' ■rt •• nr EDITORIALS PUBLISHED THURSDAYS Thanksgiving A hog: eating acorns under a large oak, never looked up to see where the food was coming from. It is a mighty low order of human be ing who does not look up with thanks to day to see and be profoundly grateful for the blessings that are ours in th i s terrible time of blood and tears, when nearly all countries of the earth are the scenes of battle, except America. Never before possibly in our fair Southland have crops been more abund ant or prices for them higher. As th-3 . farmer basks in the sunshine of this wondrous prosperity, he may look around him and see a people who are able to buy. Labor is enjoying remark able success, too, and good fortune. Ev eryone whether the small or large busi ness man is reaping line returns on his efforts and investments. While taxes are of course unprecedentedly high, on account of the war expenses, yet the net profit is great, and helps to make up the 150-billion income of the nation. But above all things, we should be thankful that we are citizens of so great and glorious a country that is able to stand the shock of war and to defeat— as we certainly shall defeat —our ene mies. That we are in the enjoyment of life, health, the pursuit of happiness, and that the principles of freedom and the right to live in our own way stand firm as the rock of Gibralter. Freedom of the Press, Freedom of Worship, Free dom of Speech, and the unshakable rights of the poor man as well as the rich, shining examples of our liberty which shall never be overthrown. Unfortunate Affair The report about Gen. Patton striking and cursing a wounded soldier in a Sici lian hospital, is distressing, and greatly to be regretted. One report is that the General apologized after being severely called down by the general in chief, Eisenhower. Another version is that he has never been reprimanded, and has not apologized. If the story is time that the General compoiiod himself in such a disgraceful way, he is possibly crazy, or suffering mental dislocation from shell shock or from the strain incident to the terrific experiences through which he and the armies have been passing. However, if he just went off his balance through un governable temper and irritable temp erament, he should certainly be suspend ed from the honorable position which he is holding. T: is h.->r£ President lrmsplf and O *-«]] have proper investigation made o-f this exceedingly regrettable episode * * * Number 3,729.