THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Fridayi*>January 27. 1950. THE PILOT Published Each Friday by THE PILOT. INCORPORATED Southern Pines. North Carolina 1941—TAMES BOYD. Publisher—1944 KATHARINE BOYD Editor VALERIE NICHOLSON Asst. Editor DAN S. RAY General Manager C. G. COUNCIL Advertising Subscription Rates: One Year $3.00 6 Months $1.50 3 Months 75c Entered at the Postoffice at Southern Pines. N. C.. as second class mail matter Member National Editorial Association and N. C. Press Association For Health and Hope It is probable that Moore County citizens, as they face the March of Dimes drive now get ting under way, hardly need the added spur of Chairman Blue, that ^‘we are all morally re sponsible to help this cause,” to impel them to contribute. The memory of the epidemic two years ago, when the hospital beds were crowd ed with polio patients, and the knowledge of what the Foundation did in caring for them is still fresh in every mind. Many causes come before us every year. To one this may seem more important than any other; to another it will take second or third place to what seems to that person a greater need. Sometimes the knowledge that a cause has national backing will give it added validity in one person’s mind, while, again, that very fact may emphasize, to another, the greater need, because of less wide appeal, of a purely local charity. The March of Dimes has a very poignant ap peal because of its cospcern with children, be cause of the dramatic quality of the dread dis ease itself, and because, also, the healing ef fects of the treatment which the funds raised by the polio organization have paid for are often so miraculous. However, though these obvious points may bring the quick response, there is another side to the picture which might, if it were better known, make that response even more gen erous. This is: the long grind of the treatnaent and care that must take place, in so many sad instances, where, because of factors not yet dis covered in the study of the disease, the crip pling paralysis hangs on, or if it is at length overcome, leaves irreparable damage. These are the saddest cases, and they are, very often, the ones that eat up the funds. Their care must go on. These children cannot be given up, to shrink back, discouraged and sick of heart, into the pathetic ranks of the crippled and forlorn. The clinics which keep watch over them, where 'they come for their treatments and for the strengthening drugs, and food that may help, must be maintained. Never must it be said: ‘-Don’t come back . . . there’s no use com ing any more!” And that means that we must give all we can. Give to fight this disease through research; give to fight the epidemic that swoops down without warning, like a black cloud on the hot summer day, give for the miraculous cures of desperate cases, and keep on giving to ease the long weary stretch that lies ahead for those unlucky ones whose suffering disability may be permanent, but for whom, always, there must be hope. Our Accredited Hospital Appearing in the state papers, and carried in the Pilot, last week, was a report of the list of accredited hospitals in the state. Among the 85 listed was the Moore County Hospital. What does it mean for ,a hospital to be on this accredited list? At a time when the public is being asked to contribute towards the enlarge ment of Moore County, it might be a good idea to find out. It means, first of all, that a hospital has been approved by the American College of Surgeons. There are certain basic things in the way of facilities involved, but it may well be that a good many institutions not holding such approval could qualify as to such physical facil ities. It appears that the physical equipment is secondary: the main thing emphasized is su periority of medical and surgical care. The standing of attending physicians is care fully scrutinized by the examining board. Their qualifications to perform the work they are called on to do is the first point, but next to it must be demonstrated that staff meetings are held regularly, that there is free discussion of cases, and cooperation between the members of the staff. That there is consultation with out side specialists whenever this is indicated is an other point made. Clinical records must be kept up. The administration of an approved hospital is obligated to furnish the full clinical reports of all patients treated for the examination of the board. Further: analyses are made of the work done in the hospital’s laboratory, to de termine whether careful study is made of each case for proper diagnostic purposes. That this laboratory work must be done by qualified per son, properly supervised, is stressed. The same is true of the Xray department: records must be kept, qualified personnel must admin ister the department and it must be shown that this aid to diagnosis or treatment is being used to the fullest extent. Again, a hospital, to be approved, must show that a certain number of autopsies have been performed, and attendant studies made. In other words, a complete picture of a hos pital from the angle of patient treatment js what is desired, and it is upon this ground that the board of examiners makes up its list. To put it even more simply: is the hospital “a suc cess,” is it doing what it is supposed to do, what the people who built it and who back it meant it to do. . . this is what the examiners want to know. And it is significant,' and as it should be, that they are thinking more of those who care for the patients than of the physical facilities. They go on the theory, in other words, that great healing is accomplished through the wise use of the means at hand. The surgeon and the doctor come ahead of the pills or the scalpel. As we contribute to this drive for funds to build the new wing of the Moore County Hos pital, we may do so, then, in the full confidence that the hospital has met the standards and has the approval of competent and careful outside opinion. The basic requirements of a fine hospi tal are already there: the men, the staff, the or ganization. What we shall be doing is to give them better tools to do still better work to help ' a greater number of i)eople. An Un-American Activity There are a good many un-American activi ties besides the ones which the committee of that name has investigated. One might be: the procedure by which the Rules Committee of Congress has kept legislation from getting to the floor. Such an attempt to put over minority rule, and a fractional minority, at that, is un- American, to say the least. Another activity which is just as far at vari ance with the principles of our democracy is the imposition of censorship by pressure groups. Such was the "ban imposed on the publication. The Nation, by the city authorities o-f New York. Because the magazine had published articles critical of a religious group the Nation was banned from the public schools of New York and, even though the articles ran for only a few months, the ban has not been lifted. At no point before the decision was reached was the Nation, or any interested individual or or ganization given an opportunity to be heard. The case is not alone, of course. Similar in stances have been noted through the years, notably in Boston where the Watch and Ward society has in the past succeeded in having cer tain books banned from sale. But the case of the Nation has been conducted in such a man ner as to arouse the concern of a good many people. Among them a group, headed by Archibald MacLeish, has formed a committee to work to get the ban lifted. The statement issued by this group, which reads as if it might be the work of the distinguished chairman himself, strikes us as being a very fine exposition of the proper American attitude toWard this un-American activity of censorship. We print below the main body of the statement for the thoughtful con sideration of our readers. ^ “The school system in the United States provides the most important training ground for American democracy. For the majority of our youth the high school is the last formal period of education—educa tion for citizenship in a dynamic democ racy. “The basis of a dynamic democracy is the citizen’s capacity to exercise indepen dent judgment. Cultivation of this capacity involves the opportunity to read, see and judge for oneself from the whole range of divergent and controversial materials. The ideal product of education is the precise op posite of the standard and uniform human product which dictatorships labor to pro duce by imposing a cordon sanitaire around the preconception of a government, of a party or any other institution. “The danger, if the ban on The Nation is maintained, is that the youth in our schools may come to regard censorship of a publi cation obnoxious to a particular group as a normal and desirable practice in a dem ocracy. Further, that once the principle of an area of forbidden subjects is established, that area, under the pressures of one or an- » other group, may be extended to threaten freedom of expression on about every mat ter of importance to society, if that matter is controversial.” ,It looks as if the Rules Committee had lost out in its attempt to keep a stranglehold on the democratic process of legislation. It is to- be hoped that this other un-American activity' of censorship will suffer similar defeat. No Abstract Journalism No two methods of expression are farther apart than a newspaper and. an “abstract” or non-representational painting. The former deals in a carefully checked and arranged series of facts. The latter deals with forms and colors that have little or no relation to the world of men and nature and that depend for their “meaning” entirely on an emotional reaction to their shapes and contrasts. We thought of this when we chuckled, as mil lions of non highbrows must also have chuckled, at the recent news story telling how a child’s daubing—in which the kid’s kitten had rolled as a finishing touch—^received favorable and very weighty comments at an art exhibit in England. There is nothing the ordinary man likes bet ter than to get a laugh on a highbrow. While we do not by any means advocate universal scorn for unconventional art, we do like to see a pontifical critic confounded. What a wonderful thing it would be, if we could occasionally turn production of The Her ald over to, say, a couple of the carrier boys and their dogs and cats—and then get praised for it. But, alas, we do not live in the shadow world of abstract art. The little black letters must still be placed one before the other in a way every one will recognize. We must stand or fall on what they say in plain English and there is no way to interpret our efforts but by the inflexible yardstick of common sense. —Sanford Herald Report From Britain If you are looking for advice on this business of carting a sizea ble family around the world, I’m ,| the guy to come to. Week before last we packed our bags in Aber deen, Scotland, prepared to grab the 9:15 a. m. train for London, with reservations through to Italy. During the night Betty decided to continue the family’s campaign to wreck the British National Health Service, with the resulting loss of four teeth and five days from our schedule. We negotiated the intracies of London traffic and channel cross ing with the aid of doses of Dram- amine and rolled through north ern France without seeing it. The journey will always be memora ble, though, because of my first try at a combination of high- school French and Indian sign lan guage—which netted a couple of beds for the kids. Missing and changing trains in Switzerland sheer joy because of the gorgeous countryside but put us into Milan at night unmet and apparently un wept. My major accomplishment of the year came in getting through Italian customs, changing stations, and arriving on schedule by local train at Canzo, Provincia di Comb, some twenty miles north of Milan, without meeting a single person who spoke English. What About Conditions? For the past week we have been soaking in this rare Italian at mosphere and George Carbone, my colleague from Ole Miss, and have been swapping notes on Britain and Italy. We have come to some tentative conclusions. Italy is a tourst’s paradise. Meals are out of this world and stores are crowded with merchan dise, including almost every lux ury item you can dream of. There are few controls and prices aren’t too far out of line for the Ameri can who can afford to come over DR JAMES W. SILVER, Southern Pines, University Mississippi history professor, now instructing in history Aberdeen university, Scotland, on a Fulbright scholarship ^awarded by the State department. His “Report from Britain” will ap pear in The Pilot during his year abroad. here. Plenty of sugar, steaks, but ter, chocolate, eggs, cigarettes— everything. Bread is particularly cheap and meat runs about the same as in Britain or the United States. As in Britain, rents in old er housing are controlled and reasonable but sky high in new buildings. Gasoline costs twice what is does in Britain and four times the price in America. Ciga rettes run about a third more than in Britain where they bring two- and-a-half times what they sell for in Mississippi. The catch to all this seeming abundance is that the workingman in Italy simply cannot afford the standard of living available to his counterpart in Britain where ra tioning and price controls divide up supplies on a fairly equitable basis. Italian workers cire lucky to get enough lire to take care of food and rent. They buy few new clothes. To help with the house work, the Carbones hire a woman whose husband is a metallurgist who doesn’t make enough to keep his family going. The gulf be tween rich and poor is definitely closing in the United Kingdom but is more than holding its own here. Beyond that, unemployment raises its ugly head in this Med iterranean country, especially in the south. Forty-seven million Italians are just too many for the resources of their country. Passion For Peace Britons and Italians are ex tremely grateful for economic aid from the United States and are. aware of its source. Both have as their supreme passion the contin uation of peace. They realize that in the next war, as in the last, they will do the fighting first, in their own countries. They want no more of that. The scars of war are probably more in evidence in Milan than in London and new construction is going forward rap idly in both places. Probably an eighth of the Ital ians have been driven, largely by extreme poverty, into the fold of Communism. The vast majority repatriated from Russia not so' long ago. Met at the station by ef fusive Commies, they proceeded (Continued on Page 3) From the Pilot files: TEN YEARS AGO Mack’s Five and Ten moves to new home in building recently completed adjoining the Arcade building. Miss Janet Davidge Wiggins and W. A. Leland McKeithen are married January 20 at Middle- town, N. Y. Members of Vass Baptist church, discussing fire insurance after Sunday service, notice church on fire and quickly put it out. feels as did the Italian prisoners Flag.” TWENTY YEARS AGO Robert N. Page, of Aberdeen,, sworn in as a lieutenant governor of the Carolines district, Kiwanis] International. Benefit concert nets good supn for library building fund. On thej program: Mrs. Gertrude W. Page,! mezzo soprano; Miss Margaret Bishop, violin; Charles Pier, ceUo; Mrs. E. Ellsworth GileS^, piano; A. B. Yeomans and Miss Mary Yeo-, mans, playing in a quartet with Miss Bishop and Mr. Pier. Miss Natalie Wheeler wiU be local contestant in American Le gion’s oratory contest on “Our Unless the members of the' Southern Pines school band keep on working hard and playing pretty, they may lose their direc tor, J. G. Womble. . . For another career opened up to him not long ago, one in which his princely manner and old-world courtesy would truly shine. After the Morehead City games a couple of weeks ago Guy went down to the Southland hotel to visit with the Morehead coach. . . He was still dressed in his re splendent band leader’s uniform of white with touches of blue and gold. . . The clerk was temporari ly absent from the desk and as Guy waited, two men came in, discussing whether or not to spend the night in Southern Pines . . . One of them, spying Director Womble, said, “Boy, will you take care of our bags for us?” “Certainly,” obliged Guy, bow ing from the waist. . . He was sad ly disappointed when they deci ded hot to stay after all, but to move on to another town for the :iight. We are sure he would have given the best of service. . . And collected a handsome tip. The Mattocks family claims a new boarder for 1950 but hopes she won’t stay long. . . It is For tune’s daughter Miss Fortune, who has been busy around there since the New Year came in. To start the year off with a bang, and tve do mean bang, she tripped up Mrs. Mattocks with an ottoman in the living room. Try ing to avoid hitting a child seated on the ottoman, the lady of the house lost her balance and ' fell face down on the floor, sustaining a compound fracture of the nose. • The son Gary Mattocks, on his return to Greenbrier school in West 'Virginia, got flu, along with an infected heel. These were ac companied by a severe case of homesickness. He has recovered from all but the last ) Then last Wednesday night, Miss Fortune decided it was son Dick Mattocks' turn. . . She rush ed him into a volleyball net which extracted his two front teeth. . . And he’s hoping not to have to wait till next Christmas to get two more. ^ _ Have you wondered what these initials “F. X.” stood for, in the name of Proprietor F. X. Credle of the Hotel Charmella at "Vass? We didn’t, as we were sure they meant “Francis Xavier”. . . We’ve known of a good many people with that name, that of a great Catholic saint. But in Mr. Credle’s case, they stand for Fenner Xyvon. . . And in Xyvon, the X is silent. Where his parents got this name for him he’s not quite sure, but it gave him an unusual start on an unusual and diversified career, which we hope to get around to writing up some day. He’s an A. B. and A. M. in agri culture, having secured both de grees in the same year at Virginia was a county agent. Chamber of Commerce secretary, and Army chaplain, with captain’s rank. . . Now in the hotel business. A big, good-looking bachelor, he says he’s looking for a woman He didn’t say a word about marrying the gal, just wants her to help him run one of the best little hotels in this part of the state. . . The Charmella is fine, he says, but for that one thing. . . Needs a woman’s touch Of course, the gal might have some ideas of her own on the sub ject . . Line forms at the right, ladies, moving slowly forward. Billy Buchan, of Pinebluff, has left the University of North Car olina (where he was taking a journalism course) to go to work for one of the most unusual news papermen in the state. . . And one of the best. His new boss is Billy Arthur, editor of the Onslow County News and Views, published in Jackson ville. . . Billy is pint-size in phy sique, full-size in mentality and experience. . . Also in the esteem cf everyone who knows him . . He’s a miniature to you only when you first meet him, and from that moment on assumes his full stat ure in all essential ways. . . He has served his county as their representative in the General As sembly, and in businesslike man ner puts out one of the best small papers in the state of North Caro lina. Billy is just one of the Sandhill boys to seek his fortupe in Jack sonville. .,. Herbert Eastwood, of Lakeview, is mayor down there at Jacksonville, and Clyde Cook went from here last May to be chief of police. . . Both doing fine, Billy told us at the Press Institute at Chapel Hill last week. Maybe the Postal department is trying to negotiate a loan. . . Anyway, they have honored the bankers with their latest com memorative stamp, which Post master A, Garland Pierce tells us is now on sale at the Southern Pines post office. . . It’s a hand some three-center, known as the American' Bankers’ commemora tive. Southern Pines has several col lectors investing in U. S. com- memoratives as they are issued. . . And it’s a real investment, be sides being a. fascinating hobby . . . A U. S. stamp is one thing whose value never goes down. . . And some of them go up in value, a little or a lot . . Thing is, you never know which Ones will do this! The collectors buy a single stamp, a plate number block of four or a whole sheet, according to what they can put into their collection as it goes along. . . One I know who started collecting about 20 years ago has put about $500 into the stamps, which are now worth $2,000 at a conserva tive etsimate, and will continue to increase in value. And if you get tired of collect ing the stamps. . . You can always ’ ^0utl|Frn (H. A Private School for children under fourteen. Music, Handicrafts, Sports. Resident pupils received Kindergarten Department MRS. MILLICENT A. HAYES, Principal JOHN C. PARRISH 4 Plumbing and Heating Day Phone 6893 Southern Pines Night Phone 6814 ^ . - DR. DAVID W. WHITEHEAD OPTOMETRIST EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED Hours 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. daily except Saturday > (Wednesday afternoon, close at 1 p. m.) Telephone 6982—Hart Building—Southern Pines. N. C. TYNER & COMBS CONTRAGTING Painting and Wall Papering SOUTHERN PINES. N. C. O. C. Combs Pinebluff 313 G. W. Tyner Southern Pines S804 ANTIQUES ALLiE McIntosh ., I Southern Pines 675 South West Broad Street Telephone 6452 DRY CLEANING SERVICE PROMPT MODERATE Valet V D. C. J^EN ANGLOW TWEEDS Hand Woven Tweeds By The Yard Polytechnic. Taught at VPI, use them for postage! Original Models and Custom Tailoring By Our Mr. Frank Tweed Hats and Bags Sport Jackets for Men and Women Slacks and Skirts Cashmere Sweaters Sales Room on Road Between Pinehurst and Southern Pines Phone: Southern Pines 5812 — Pinehurst 4832