CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES I Carter** Coimty'i Wiw^iipwr EDITORIALS FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1960 More Than Meets the Eye The wave of so-called "anti-semitism" which erupted Christmas eve is pene tratingly disturbing. While police, gov ernment officials, and newsmen grope for the motives behind the painting of swastikas on synagogues and homes of Jews, the practice continues. Periodically, throughout the cen turies, at different places on the globe, waves of feeling against the Jews erupt. The sociologist and psychiatrist can tell you why. There is evidence in this most recent outburst, however, to indicate that in Europe it is being UBed as a lever to prevent the re-arming of West Germany and to quench sentiment for reunification of East and West Ger many. The Communist government may or may not be behind the action. The sec ond world war and the fear of Ger many is still quite fresh in Europe. You can't walk down a street and see three walls of a former house standing, with weeds growing where once the kitchen was, and not remember the bombs. Even a modern apartment house recalls to mind that it is there because what was there before was blasted out in the blitz. In this country a side road off a high way may lead to a picturesque histori cal spot. In Holland or Germany it is pointed out as leading to a former Nazi concentration camp. The hell of war is still very close to the sruface and it takes only a symbol, such as a swastika, to make hate and fear bubble over. The hate in this current outburst is not so much against a minority as it is against the nation which persecuted that minority. As years pass, the mean ings of symbols change with the atti tudes of men. Some of the world hates the symbol of the hammer and sickle. Some abhor the cross. Some hate the swastika. To achieve a goal, propagan dists may make use of such symbols, because they quickly generate a certain feeling from a large mass of people. The goal sought, however, may be far removed from the conditions out of which the mass feeling first grew. The swastika is the symbol of a pow erful German Reich. That power will always be remembered for its butchery of the Jews. You can't use the symbol somewhere without dragging with it the misery it caused. Some have inter preted the so-called "anti-semitism" as a revival of the Nazi movement. If that is so, and certain German youths want such a revival, they're certainly pro moting it in the wrong way. How to account for the spread of the swastika - painting to this country? Hoodlums, vandals, and others are al ways ready to take part in a fear and hate campaign. We have seen such in the Ku Klux Klan. Sense of responsi bility disappears in the cloak of night or behind a white sheet. There need be no sincere motivation for irresponsi ble actions, just the thrill of causing trouble is sufficient. Anti-semitism? Perhaps. But this present outburst is more than that. Cheers for What? The steel strike was settled two days before congress reconvenes to 1. Avoid stringent laws the public was demanding to end crippling strikes in the future. 2. To bolster Republican hopes for victory in 1960. The current settlement is just a patch in the dam. The country will be faced with another major steel strike July 1, 1962 when the present contract expires. The nation will suffer. We will relive the six months just past. How many times must the American economy be raped by powerful labor unions before laws are passed which will prevent placement of the nation in jeopardy? The steel strike settlement evokes cheers only for the moment Not for the future. Reason Enough If ever there were events to spur the hunt for the cause of cancer, those events have occurred in recent months. The cigarette companies now have some genuine sympathizers ? the poul try industry, milk industry, cranberry, cosmetics and candy industries. All are under suspicion as using drugs, pesticides or other ingredients which may be cancer-breeding. But nobody knows for sure. It re minds us of the witch hunts. When man doesn't know th# cause of his ill-for tune, he lashes out, flails in all direc tions, blaming this, blaming that. He must find solace somewhere ? but the solace lies only in himself, his willing ness to pay the scientists to rip back the shroud of ignorance or his inter est in going into the laboratory him self. Hundreds of thousands of dollars are being poured into cancer research. But progress would be so much faster if more money and more minds were available to work on the problem. We do not agree with those who say the government should not have taken off the market the allegedly tainted cranberries. The Pure Food and Drug agency was established to protect the public and it is conscientiously trying to do that. But the witch hunt won't end with chickens, milk, cranberries, lipstick, black jelly beans, gum drops and lico rice. Tomorrow it will be something else and next week something else, un til the public is so confused that, as with the cigarettes, they just say what the heck, and go on doing as they did before everybody was screaming, "Can cer!" The only way to end the epidemic of cancer scares is to isolate the true cause, or causes, of the disease. The public has the opportunity to do just that every April during the Cancer Crusade. Kindness Counts A little old lady stood at the curb of a city street, fearful to cross, recounts Bert Barnes in The Pick-Up. One ve hicle after another passed. The drivers who noticed her were too intent on their own affairs to care much about her plight. Occasionally she made a hope ful start, only to return to the safety of the sidewalk. Finally, along came one of those enormous cement trucks. The driver, a husky fellow, apparently touched by the woman's show of despair, slowed down, steered his machine into a posi tion where all traffic was stopped, and motioned to the lady to cross. That evening at the dinner table in her home, she related the incident to her son, an executive in a large cor poration. When she mentioned the name of the cement company whose driver had been so considerate, her son's face brightened. "I am glad you told me about this," he said. "Those people are going to get an order for a large quantity of cement I'll be need ing." ? Sunshine Magazine Carteret County News-Times WINNER OF NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION AND NORTH CAROLINA PRESS ASSOCIATION AWARDS A Merger of The Beaufort Newi (Eat. 1912) and The Twin City Timea (Eat 1836) Published Tueadaya and Fridayi by the Carteret Publishing Company, Inc. 504 Anndell St., Horebead City, N. C. LOCKWOOD PHILLIPS ? PUBLISHER ELEANORE DEAR PHILLIPS - ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER RUTH L. PEELING ? EDITOR Hail Rates: In Carteret County and adjoining countiea, $8.00 one year, $6.2 5 nine months, $4.S0 six months, $3.00 three montha, $1.50 ooe month; elsewhere $0.50 one year, $7.25 nine montha, $5.25 six montha, $4.00 three montha, $1.50 one month. Member at Aaaociated Press ? N. C. Press Aaaodation National Editorial Association ? Audit Bureau a I Circulationa National Advertising Representative Weekly Major Markets, Inc. 10 Eaat 40th Street, New York l?. N. Y. > Ike Aaaociated Preas is entitled exclusively to uae for republication of local newt printed in thia newspaper, as wall aa all AP newa diapatcbea Entered as Second Claaa Matter at Morahead City, N. C., Under Act of March I, 1IT9 BITING THE HAND Security for You... By RAY HENRY From D. J. of Los Angeles: "I reached 65 this year and retired about Jan. 1. A friend told me that the government allowed cer tain tax privileges on the income of people over 65. Will I be able to claim the privileges this year on my income or aren't they al lowed to people in the year they reach 65?" There are a number of federal income tax breaks allowed to peo ple 65 or older. You're considered 65 and eligible for the breaks if you reach that age anytime during 1959 or on Jan. 1, 1960. As tax paying time draws closer, I'll ex plain in a special series the privi leges available to people 65 or old er. Watch for it, late in January. From Mrs. E. V. of Pontiac, Mich.: "My husband died two years ago, leaving me with three small children. Because he was in a job covered by Social Secur ity when he died, the children and I have been collecting monthly payments. If I should go to wrk next year ? I haven't been working because the chil dren were too small ? will the Social Security payments stop entirely?" No. The check you receive is partly for you and partly for the children. If you go to work and your earnings are beyond certain limits, the portion of the check which is paid to you will be stop ped. But, the portion paid to the children will continue to be paid until they die, reach 18 or marry, whichever event occurs earlier. Also, a child who is seriously dis abled before reaching 18 and con tinues to be disabled after that age, can continue to collect Social Security as long as the disability exists. From A. O. P. of Cleveland, Ohio: "My father retired last March when he reached 65. He was getting Social Security when he died in September. My moth er who is seriously and perma nently disabled will be S2 next February and entitled to pay ments from Social Security as a widow. I've been handling her finances for her. May I have her Social Security checks sent in my name?" Yes, if your mother is actually incapablc of handling her money, you can ask to have the checks made out to you. When it's time to ask for payments, explain the situation to your Social Security office. An investigation will be conducted to establish the facts, but this is routine and done mere ly to protect Social Security money from getting into the wrong hands. From S. H. of Oklahoma City: "I'm getting Social Security old age payments. Recently, due to a bequest, I came into a sub stantial amount of money. I don't want to get any Social Security which isn't rightfully mine. Should I tell the Social Security people about this money, or do they care?" They don't care. Only money you receive as earnings from work will have any bearing on your right to Social Security checks. From O. R. of St. Petersburg Fla.: "In a recent column you described the help the federal government will give people over GO in buying a home. How can I get official information about the program?" Get in touch with the nearest Federal Housing Administration office. You can get the address by writing to Federal Housing Ad ministration, Washington, 2S, D. C. When you write, also ask for the free brochure called "Housing for the Elderly." (Editor'! Note: You mar con tact the social security repre sentative at the courthouse an nex, Beaufort, from (:M a.m. to noon Moadayi. He will help you with your own particular prob lem). Free Wheeling By BILL CKOWELL Motor Vehicles Department It's a wise practice to lock your car every time you step out of it, even though you may be in your own driveway. Absurd? Not at all, for while children are not sup posed to play in the family car there have been instances where a small child has released the brakes on a parked vehicle and suddenly found himself moving down the street. You are not immune to this sug gestion even though there may be no small children in your family. One of your precocious neighbor children might suddenly develop an adventurous mood and try to take your car for a spin. It pays to lock your car when ever it's left unattended. PASSING . . . You're at the wheel now, traveling moderately along a broad four-lane road. You're in the outside, or extreme right hand lane. A car ahead is in the left lane, going slower than you are. You speed up a little and pass him on the right. He is mildly startled and shakes his fist at you passing by. Wat he justi fied or merely showing bad man ners? Apparently some Tar Heel driv ers are similarly puzzled about the always ticklish business of passing on the right. But the motor ve hicle manual has some pretty en lightening paragraphs. Most of the rules are based on common sense, like making sure the way is clear before executing any move in traf fic. In the example cited, the pass ing driver could rightfully, if in elegantly, stick out his tongue at the tut shaker and drivg on. For the law, in certain instances, makes it perfectly permissible to pass on the right. The governing rule says in effect that on high ways of sufficient width, designed for two or more lanes of traffic in each direction, passing on the right is okay. Also when a vehicle being over taken is in a lane marked for left turns, a right hand pass is per missible, too. In any case adequate sight dis tance ahead is a good factor to keep uppermost in mind when un dertaking any passing maneuver right or left. SUDDEN THAWT . . . If drivers would put some of the blame where it really belongs then the "other fellow" would be less of a menace. GO KARTS . . . Those cute little motorized cars that children 7 years up? and down ? are driving can be deadly toys. In fact a group of authorities in one city called the latest craze "mass infanticide." Safety leaders across the country are speaking out again&t the go cart races, maintaining that the miniature cars and the "speed" at titudes they build can only add to the nation's safety problem. The Department of Motor Ve hicles warns owners and prospec tive buyers that the small vehiclei cannot legally be driven on public streets or highways. SmiU a While After installing a sprinkler sys tem, a hotel warned its guests: "Please do hot smoke in bed? you may drown yourself." ?The Spotlight Captain Henry Sou'easter I heard about some folks who took menhaden roe to Florida over Christmas. They introduced it to their friends as Carolina Caviar. The 8-year-old girl in the family looked at it doubtfully, dabbed at it with her fork and announced, "It looks like fish eggs to me." I guess by now Gray and Charles llassell are fully recovered. Gray's daughter, Rae Frances, who is also Charles' niece, chose New Year's Day to get married. THE day her Uncle Charles always goes hunting and THE day her dad always watches football games. That same night her brother. Butch, and other members of her family were due on the basketball court. Well, they all made it Gray, Charles and Mama Evelyn included. But it was a struggle. I was talking to one of our sen ior citizens the other day. She takes a dim view of all these mag azine articles about active people "over 80" and "over TO." I'm over SO and about 20 years younger than she It and I agree with what she said. People are still reckoning "old age" in the terms of what was "old" a quarter of a century ago. Today, it's not unusual for a man over 70 to be making wood cabi nets, building boats, going fishing and playing a good game of golf. It's not unusual for a woman over 70 to be on the dance floor or wear ing pedal pushers. Yet articles by the score acclaim these as outstanding achievements . . . something all of us "can do if we want to." Improvements in health practices and advances in medicine make this possible. What would be interesting to folks over 60 these days arc stories about what the folks over 80 and 90 are doing. Arc THEY still ac tive and enjoying life? Maybe they're doing nothing, the most of them, and that's why no body writes about them! Officers who blow up stills are respectfully requested not to set off dynamite when there are duck hunters in the area. It scares the ducks and puts the duck hunters in a state of shock. Incidentally, the duck season ends today. Shed a tear. Lovers' Lane By WALTER WILUS Harkers Island Are you roaming the path of lovers' lane. Or arc you groping in the dark? Are you beating the bush, just standing around And breaking someone's heart? Lovers' lane is a very wide road With trees sighing in the breeze. As you walk along, please sing one song And someone's heart you may ease. Sometimes this lane has a winding curve i So watch your step, my dear. The slower you go, the better it ii, And then you have no (ear. This lane is sometimes far too short? The end, it comes too quick. Careful walking should be done Or else you'll be sitting in the ditch. Lovers' lane has two ways to go, One is good and one is bad. So take the one that leadi to good And make no one blue or lad. This poem is ending and has great meaning. So stand up straight, and don't be leaning. Watch your step as you roam the lane, And keep your sweetheart one ?wcet dame. Education is what a man get* when be sits in hit living room with a group of tccn-agcrs. A ? 1? ? ? Words of Inspiration MOM'S APRON How dear to my heart was Mom's old-fashiooed apron; Its uses were myraid and ample its size; For the drying at tears and the wiping of noses, For lifting hot pans from the oven, hot pies; Convenient for bribing in eggs from the henhouses For carrying kindling or corncobs as well. Waved at Dad in the field, It said, "Come to dinner," Just as plainly as did our old dinner bell. It kept her hands warm when departing guests lingered, And the child standing by could hide 'neath its folds; There's something nostalgic about an old apron With the memories of Mom and our home that it holds. How I pity the children whose new fashioned mothers Wear practical aprons of plastic so neat . . , Though they serve the same purpose . . . protection from soil With Mother's old aprons they'll never compete. ? Ida M. Yoder SHE LEADS THE BAND "I'm just a housewife," the mother said. And you know, she sort of hung her head. "Oh, I wash and iron and cook and sew, And do all the wifely chores, you know. We do things together, my family and I . . . Together we work and play and laugh and cry. I know we're happy as can be . . . For our house is really a home, you sec." Again she slowly hung her head. "Still I do nothing important," she said. Oh dear little mother, dear little wife, You're living a most important life. These things you're doing are special, you know, It's these little things that make us grow. It's these little things that do the most, Toward spreading success from coast to coast. You're truly the greatest one of all, You're the belle of every ball. So lift up your head, and put up your hand . Three cheers to the housewife who leads "her" band. ? Mrs. Hugh Blackburn F. C. Salisbury Here and There The following information is taken from the files of the More bead City Coaster: Friday, Ian. 6, 1922 The death of Mrs. Nellie Bell Bonner, wife of Dr. K. P. B. Bon ner, occurred early this Friday morning. Funeral services will be held from the Baptist Church Sat urday afternoon for Mrs. Bonner, as well as her aunt, Mrs. Lucy Webb McLean whose death occur red Thursday night. Mrs. Bonner was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Bell. Mrs. McLean was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Silas Webb. The Stewardship Institute of the Neuse-Atlantic Association will be held in the Baptist Church on Mon day and Tuesday. Marriage licenses issued last week: James G. Murdoch, Wild wood, to Lillian G. Tcasley, More head City. Troy Willis to Eva Mae Piner, both of Williston. Harold V. Taylor ty> Grace Fulcher, both of Williston. James Cox to Min nie Simmons, both of Beaufort. Deputy J. W. Odom was shot and painfully wounded Friday night by a gang on N. 11th Street. Ike Dud ley was arrested in conneetion with the shooting. Odom is re covering from a charge of No. 6 shot. Mrs. Ben Royal and little son, B. F. Jr., left this week for Four Oaks where they will visit rela tives for a few days. The Misses Ruth Reed, Lucy Goodwin and Lillian Paul left Wed nesday for ECTTS, Greenville. Mrs. Ernest Odom and little son of Dunn arrived in the city this wetfk to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Webb. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Taylor Jr. returned this week to Raleigh after a visit to relatives in the city. Gordon Webb returned to Por ter's Military Institute, Charleston, S. C., after spending Christmas with his parents. From the Bookshelf Invitation to a Beheading. By Vladimir Nabokov. Translated from Russian by Dmitri Nabokov. Putnam. $3.95. The Real Life of Sebastian Knight. By Vladimir Nabokov. New Directions. $3.50. These two novels antedate by 20 or 25 years the Lolita which roused up the great Nabokov audience. More European, and in fact writ ten abroad, they are nevertheless by the same intriguing artist in every character on every page. If you complain that you didn't hear of them before, partly it is not your fault, partly it is Behead ing haa just been translated, and by the novelist's son; Sebastian, however, was there to read in 1941 when New Directions first brought out what it now reprints. Sebastian'a half brother tells the story of Sebastian, born in Russia, studied and lived in England and France (Nabokov was born in Rus sia, studied and lived in England and France). Sebastian, author of several books, has achieved enough renown so that at his death the narrator "V" feels he owes him a biog raphy, and sets out to probe to the bottom through his writing, his ex periences and his mistresses. What he uncovers may be his own self, for identities fade in and out and overlap mystifyingly? the revelatory letter written by some one not Sebastian who yet might have been Sebastian, the vigil mounted beside the dying man sup posedly Sebastian though he proves to be Mr. Kegan, and *'V'i" final suspicion that he himself is Sebas tian, so that we arrive astonishing ly at a kind of Steinian reiteration: Sebastian it Sebastian is "V" is Nabokov. In Beheading, Cincinnatus C. in a Russian prison cell awaits ex ecution for the monstrous crime of "gnostical turpitude." or the most ancient of sins. He is resigned psychically to his death, which he anticipates, in one of those grue some figures in which Nabokov re veals, as a sort of crunching den tal operation, the head in the role of the aching tooth, and the body, the Inflamed gum. Luckily he can escape momen tarily from reality in a release, allied to Sebastian's, into another identity; but it is only to return to the mother who bore him to an un known father, or the promiscuous wife, who explains apologetically that it's such a comfort to a man. So he atays where he can see his prison director Rod rig, his lawyer Rodlon's little daughter the age of Lolita, and his dear friend who will bccomc his executioner. Beheading is not quite so accom plished and subtle as Sebastian, but both are black and white sur realistic creations. Here Nabokov, letting his weird fancy run, focuses his entire at tention on the ineffable adventure of words. The Stones of Florence. By Mary McCarthy. Harcourt, Brace. SIS. Florence means a lot of things to a lot of people ? Tuscany, the Arno, sculpture and architecture and Brunelleschi and Michelangelo, Savonarola, Medici, Dante, Uffizi, Ponte Vecchio, leather goods, bam bino, hot weather, Maggio musi cale. This almost limitless diversity provides a sharp contrast with the encompassable substance of Ven ice, the waterside museum and re sort city about which this author wrote excitingly a couple of years ago in "Venice Observed." Twen tieth Century Florentines are able very handily to do without the his toric and artistic past that inter feres with their present desire to live positively and worthily. Their treasures use up more money than they can afford, the tourists bring in a little but not enough to make up for being a nuisance or to pay for the upkeep of monuments. So Florence is a contradiction, to most strangers a dead and even dull past despite its Athenian qual ity, to most residents as much a home here and now as your city or mine. It's the residents who win out, says Miss McCarthy who ad mires what they have done and what they now do. The city which had a magnificent rise and a fall has become a city on its own, in habited as other Italians say by "the most civilized people in Italy." Miss McCarthy associates social and artistic achievements reveal ingly, and matches past and pres ent to get at secrets no one else had discovered. Florence in a large sense is a man's city; at least in its greatness it never was really a woman's. That makes this book all the more remarkable. It is superbly illustrated with 128 black and-white photos and 12 in color; they are mostly by Evelyn Hofer. Just in Passing . . . 0 Some foreign countries are con sidering levying a tax on American tourists. Probably another way of trying to make tham foal at ham.