Page Two THE PILOT PUBUSHeO EACH FRIDAY BY THE PILOT. INCORPORATED SOUTHERN PINES, NORTH CAROLINA THE PILOT-—Southern PineS/ North Carolina 1941 •'AMES BOYD Publisher KATHARINE BOYD - • . EDITOR VALERIE NICHOLSON Asst. Editor DAN S. RAY - . General Manaoer CHARLES MACAULEY, - City Adv, C G. COUNCIL - - • Advertising SUBSCRIPTION RATES ONE YEAR S3.00 SIX MONTHS SI.SO THREE MONTHS . . .78 ENTERED AT THE POSTOFFICE AT SOUTH* ERN PINES. M. C., AS SECOND CLASS MAIL MATTER. MEMBER National Editorial Association AND N. C. Press Association sure to TB. There could be, of course, no facilities for isolation in the jail. It is not the first time that such a story has appeared in print. We have read of similar occurrences Friday. September 23, 1949 HOME COMING This coming Sunday will be OK TEACHER It is a nervous exp^ience to be Home-Coming at Old Bethesda singled out as an object lesson of Church. On this day come to the any sort, but when it is an qbject V.X near Aberdeen for scorn and criticism the expe- before, but they have been m i • rience is dismaying. Especially "-when the facts are all too true. Last week Southern Pines figured in such fashion in an editorial in the Pinehurst Outlook with the gloomy title “Object Lesson” and some of'those black dots after it more horridly eloquent than words: “Lawd, lawd!” they seem to say: “Mmmmm—UM!” But much as Southern Pines must have lamented such unwel come prominence, there isn’t a other places and we have been' years. From far able to permit ourselves the un-'^”^^ come to^ join to gether in a renewal of those ties which are the deepest bonds 'in the community life of America. Those who come will visit to gether and “catch up” on all the news of old friends, they will break bread out under the old trees and will Join together in a kind luxury of imagining that they could not happen here. Now it has happened, right here in the jail of our .county seat, and all Moore County citizens will feel a surge of shame and sorrow. It should be made very clear that during these months many | reverent service of worship in the e forts were made to get this'old church. But they will do more woman admitted to various sana- ■ ' toria. Those who were in touch with the case, the sheriff, the jailer, and the county medical of- COMMUNIST BEAR TRAP With these words Governor Dewey classified the Peekskill riots and there could be no more graphic phrase to describe what he terms “a shame and a dis grace,” this incident, in which Americans planned such a “trap” and other Americans fell into it. The governor’s statement, though overdue, was wortji wait ing for. In clear language the New York official spoke out for the basic principles of democracy. “Free speech and free assembly,” he said, “are as precious to us as life itself. When those rights are denied, it is the cause of deepest concern for every one of us.” Dewey promised a cpmplete in vestigation of both Peekskill af fairs, saying: “Any action by any one, whoever he is, in violation of these rights, can be and will be investigated to the last limit of the power of the state.” The investigation should be fol lowed with intense interest, though the actual fixing of blame is perhaps a secondary matter. Already attempts are being made to obscure the issue. Robe son has issued a call to “help •fight fascism in our land,” while, on the other hand, a rumor is be ing spread that the whole busi ness at Peekskill was the work of his followers intent on making martyrs of themselves and involv-. ing their opponents in mob-vio lence and “un-Amecican” actions. ficer, whq made frequent visits to the jail, were deeply concerned over the situation,. The Grand Jury noted it briefly in their re port. But the question as to what to do with the womari remained unsolved. There is no place in the county for such patients. It is too late/to do anything for Gwendolyn Wagner. There is no way now ' in which we can make up to her for her suffering and the injustice of her treatment, but there is some thing that we can do and must do if we would regain something of our own lost peace of mind. We must ^ee to it that this can not happen again. How? In two immediate ways, to begin with. We must do all we can to assist those who are work ing for more beds in the state sanatorium. Through political ac tivity and through fund drives we as citizens can-do much to speed this vitally needed improvement. But there is something more. It has long been advocated that cne wing of the County Home be remodelled and set aside for special patients. Our first step should be to insist that such an improvement or addition, if this is necessary, be made and that this be done immediately. There is one further step. Look ing .back on this tragic case, it seems that if publicity had been given to it, something might have been accomplished. Almost surely than that. They will share in a I cne who could deny that it was richer, deeper fellowship not only deserved or that the editorial was with those about them but with'not a very fine one indeed. It took those who lie out under the green the words right out of the Pilot’s turf and the old oak trees and cedars cf their final r^ing-place. There is a feeling of com munion of the spirit in . Home- Coming Day, and not only in the richness which memory brings, in the recalling of vivid and love ly personalities, the kind and gra cious men and women who have gone before. There is a feeling of continuity, here, of the traditions of the past carrying on into the future. And to many among the Home-comers there will seem to be, at Old Bethesda on this spe cial day, a spirit not only of the past and of the present but of the future, too. For on that day the veil -between time and space, here and hereafter, grows almost transparent, and those on either side of it seem very close. There will be gay meetings oil Home-Coming Day; there will be renewal of friendships, jokes and fun. There will be words of wis dom from the speaker, the be loved friend of many and former pastor of this descendant of the “Church at the Head of the Rock- fish.” There will be sad hearts there, too, quietly hidden under a friendly smile. Old and young and middle- aged, and mostly with fine Scot tish names, the people will gather there on Sunday, and when the old hymns are sung and goodbyes said and rtle day is over they will go back to their own homes, re newed and strengthened again in mouth; (“we were JUST going to Grains of Sand A chain letter has started up again, with good luck as the only reward, as opposed to dimes, dish towels, other people’s wives and all the other prizes promised in previous letter-links. . . But no' matter what you get (or don’t get) they’re still against' the law. Postmaster A. Garland Pierce ad vises. We get a “Chain of Good Luck” letter the other day “started in Africa by a French qfficer under de Gaulle and now going around the world for the first time. . .A private in the Philippine army say that very thing!”>; and thel^omply- next step, in the matter, clearly,'ip® with the chain . . . Mr. D. is a reprinting of the good, if dis-was elected for the third mal, editorial. As follows: 1^™® President of the United OBJECT LESSON (From the Pinehurst Outlook) Liberty is never stolen. It is surrendered. Democracy goes by default, not by decision. An object lesson was presented two weeks ago when the town of Southern Pines was polled on a $275,000 bond issue for improv ing the water system. The issue was approved by 77 voters, or 10 percent of the qualified electors. A total of only 95 cf the 661 reg istered voters took' the time and trouble to go to the polls and reg ister their opinions. We are not concerned here with the merits of the proposed im States 52 hours after he mailed this letter. . . Captain Homes who broke the chain died after he re ceived this letter. . . Detective E. Villaneuve in the city of Begui, who Idughed at this chain, met instantaneous death in an acci dent on June 14, 1948.” The strange part is, this letter came to us from somebody we always thought had good sense. In the Mailbag: A welcome let ter from Mrs. James D. Marler, who with the two little Marlers recently left Southern Pines to join her chaplain husband on Guam—“One of the things .we Williard Moores Buy McLean Home Mr. and .Mrs. L. L.'^McLean have sold their home on the cor ner of Ridge street and Pennsyl vania, and moved back to their home community of Cameron, whence Mr. McLean commutes daily to his work at the Pilot of fice. Purchasers of the • attractive small home^ of rustic architecture, set de'ep' on a large wooded lot, are Mr. and Mrs. Williard Moore, formerly of Mt. Airy. Mr. Moore has been connected with the Brown’s Auto Supply stores, headquartered in Sanford, for some time, and has worked pre viously in the Brown stores in Aberdeen and also in Lexington. His new position is a supervisory one, in which he will work with PIANOS Cole Piano Company NeiJl A. Cole Prop. Piano Sales and Service Phone 92-L Three Points Sanford Britain’s king is forbidden by law to enter the House of Com mons. J. AUBREY SMITH Jeweler Watch Repairing Tel. 8691 Aberdeen, N. C. Drs. Neal and McLean VETERINARIANS Southern Pines, N. C. provement program. The factithat since leaving Fields Plumbing & Heating Co. PHONE 5952 PINEHURST, N. C. i All Types of Plumbing, Heating, / (G. E. Oil Burners) * and Sheet- Metal Work an overwhelming majority of the few who did vote approved the bond issue would indicate that the proposal is a highly desirable one, and meets with the full ap proval of the people of Southern Pines. What we are concerned with is the utter indifference of the voters. Democracy is not founded on the expressed opinions of 10 per cent of the people. It is born out the States is the association with the hospitable people of Southern Pines. . . We are very happy to have pur family united, and have found Guam to be a lovely and interesting island, but we shall go on remembering our very pleasant stay in your lovely town, and shall always be enthus iastic boosters of the Sandhills and particularly Southern Pines.” The mailing address is Ch. (Capt.) James D. Marler, 0514627, of the fullest expression of every ^46, care shade of opinion, and nourished Francisco, Cal. at the public polling station funds would have been donated to | for the years that lie ahead, hire someone to care for this poor sufferer. The pressure of public DOG WEEK opinion might also have accom plished what individual efforts were unable to do in- getting the woman admitted to a state insti tution. Thinking of the goo’d- These are familiar communist hearted church groups'Yight there tactics and undoubtedly played a major part in the affair, but there appears to be no question that the actual violence can be laid to intolerance, hot-headedness and in Carthage, always eager to help in a worthy cause, and of the many welfare committees all over the county, we must believe that only failure tp let these people Every dog shall have his day, according to the old saying, but this year every dog is going to have seven days. This week has been set aside, believe it or not, as National Dog Week. Now this business of weeks has always seemed more than a little ridiculous, not to mention more than a little commercial. But if it r n ^ °n|know Of this tragedy in our midst is going to be done, has anyone possible. The officials got a good reason to give why we ®ur public work are hard shouldn’t have Yfational Dog Amermans defied the police and pressed, it would be well if they tneS to take over their authority could understand that help will IS the inost serious aspect of this]be forth-coming if they will tell whole affair. ■ This, it would seem, is the first This story is a sad confession lesson to be learned from the of failure on the part of civilized Peekskill riots: the fact that those people to make civilization work, who opposed communism acted exactly as the communists hoped they would, by so doing making the fight against communism all the harder to win. Another point to be noted was the extremely efficient organization of the com munist cohorts. Though these guards behaved with discipline, as the governor said, and took no part in the violence, the fact of their existence has sinister im plications. The main thing to do now is to study this affair so that we may be on guard against similar hap penings. The task is not an easy one, for this is a delicate and deeply dangerous problem. There is no doubt that these people are NICE WORK The Pilot steps out of character, this week, gets down off his bridge and takes to the woods, to pay tribute to Alex Fields, friend to man and animals, now retiring from, twenty-one years spent as game warden in Moore County. - They say “a man’s job is the man in the job.” That’s the way it ought to be but seldom is in these days of assembly-line pro duction. But, luckily' for Moore County, that’s the way it has been with Game Warden Fields. The job itself might have been a Week? 'We can think of nobody who would be brave enough to suggest it unless it might possibly be the dogs. Dogs are modest •people; that is, except for a few of the effete and esthetic types who pretend to trace their descent back to the Ming dynasty in China or the As syrian kings. But then, with the other dogs, there has always been some question as to whether these types should be counted as dogs at all. There is little doubt that to real dogs, praise and publicity is repellent. As to what so often goes with it in the way of brush ing, curling, shaving, tricks and showing off by misguided .own ers, the Ibss said the better. True, a respectable dog will take honest pride in his position. . . that is only to be expected. Such a dog knows his place, he knows what is due him and he accepts it with proper dignity, but that is a dif When the people themselves re ject their franchise to vote, when they waive their authority, dem ocracy sickens and dies. The fact that 77 persons ap proved the expenditure of more than a quarter of a million dol lars is a clear indication that con cern about the creeping Welfare State must become more than simply a subject for indignant bridge stble conversation. The Ainerican' who regards himself as too busy to vote today may wake up lomorrow and find the polling booths shuttered and barred. I The Public Speaking pretty cut-and-dried thing, or it , , . * - could have been not much of any-r^^®*'^ matter. Publicity and con- ready to, do all in their power to thing at all, if that sort of a manr®^^®'^. showing-off have no lures light the fires of violence where- had l^een in it. But, from the r°T ^s the sort of ever they can reach. To pose as start, Alex saw the possibilities. National Dog Week martyrs in the cause of freedom Game laws were few and far be-l'^®^"? would be the first will be their endeavor and it is]tween when he took the job, but ‘ he knew the woods and he knew a safe guess that we shall see thd Peekskill incident repeated in varying ways while there are stupid or over-zealous patriots to fall into the communist beartrap and the urge to bigotry and vio lence is- latent in men’s hearts. Forebearance under the most extreme provocation must be our course in dealing with this prob lem, and that is not an easy as signment for Americans. The temptation to jump in and give these people what they are asking for will be almost irresistible. That must not happen, but to prevent it wiU call for self-disci pline and citizen responsibility of a high order. ,isedgi TRAGIC STORY The tragic story of the death from- tuberculosis of a woman in the Garthage jail is deeply shock ing. Adiriitted in April, “because there was, no room in the state sanatorium,” this woman, inno cent of arty crime and critically ill, was kept in jail for five months, until her death last week. More: although suffering from an extremely contagious disease, she was kept in a cell in which others were placed, to whose pun ishment as criminals was added the dreadful, injustice of expo shooting and hunting and he knew game. He realized what- was need ed. He enforced what laws there were, often under great difficul ties, and he tried to teach good hunting procedure and the con servation policies that, later on, became the keystone of the state laws. Those who have - hunted this country during the past years have many fine things to s&y of Alex Fields, and there are some, no longer here, who in their time were his friends and his well- wishers always. Among them were James and Jackson Boyd, who started the Moore County Hounds and, with them, hunted the country for many years. Alex Fields was their friend and ad visor and a constant help in get ting the hunt established. The Pilot wishes the best of luck to Alex Fields, Moore Coun ty is to be congratulated in hav ing for so long enjoyed and prof ited by his service. No more fit ting ending to this simple tribute to a fine public servant could be found than the closing sentence of the letter of that fine sports man and the Pilot’s good friend, Julian Bishop, published in an ad joining column. The Pilot is proud to echo his words: “Nice work. Alex; a job well done.” to object. It ought not to be. It ought to be a lot,of different things. Good walks every day in nice squirrelly places,.fresh water in the water dish, steak bones, and nobody prying to see where they are go ing to be buried and laugh, or chase the burier out of the flow er-bed. It ought to include a good daily scratch and NO BATHS. It ought, if possible, to offer at least one good cat-chase, with the firm understanding that no return en gagement with specially selected enormous Toms be staged for Na tional Cat 'Week, if'there is such a' thing. Unfortunately, one thing has gone wrpng in setting the date for Dog Week: the moon is not cooperating. . . There should cer tainly be a full moon for that bar bershop harmony to roll out at its fullest and finest. The Pilot will maintain to the last, though, that National Dog Week is totally unnecessary, though it may be all very well for those who like such things. But there isn’t a week or a day in the year when many thousands of dogs are not being thought about with affection and high es teem by many thousands of peo ple. Or would it be millions? To the Pilot. Congratulations to The Pilot on the fine article in regard to the retirement of Mr. Alex Fields as county game protector. It has been my good fortune to have served under Alex as a deputy game protector for many years. We have had some great days in the hunting field together. One cannot find in the whole state a better sportsman, nor in fact a better shot, than Alex. Some years ago he and I were shooting over near the old Har rington place on Deep River, near which Alex was born and raised. The dogs located a nice covey right on the edge of some pine woods. We walked in on the birds. Up they sprung. It was such thick cover only one shot was 'fired— that by Alex, as the birds got up on his side. We went on through and found three dead quail—yes, sir, three dead birds with one shot!—a feat any hunter^can be proud of. Alex’ continuous hard work to wards the preservation of game, and enfpreement of our state game laws has been outstanding. Now at the end of 21 years’ active duty, he can put his head on the pillow any night, and I’m sure hear voices saying, “Nice work, Alex—a job well done.” JULIAN T. BISHOP Miss Miriam Willis of Hamlet had a chance at winning $25,000 in prizes on “Sing It Again,” CBS quiz program, on a recent Satur day night, but couldn’t identify the tune. . .- Miss Willis was call ed at her home. . . What she can’t figure out is how the program got her name, as the phone is listed in the name of her father, the Rev. J. B. Willis. Looks like FCC is going tp have the dickens of a. time getting those giveaway programs off the air, if they ever do. . . And why they should, we don’t know. They provide listening fun for millions, even when they don’t get any prizes. Someone said the same kind of thing is going on in Washington, where you win a deepfreeze but answer the questions afterward not before. Dr. J. B. Rhine, Duke Univer sity parapsychologist who made a personal hit with a talk at the Pinehurst Forum last winter, ap pears as a character in Upton Sin clair’s latest novel, “O Shepherd, Speak!’’ ... In this book the fic tional hero’s adventures are en livened encounters with real personalities, who take part in the action under their true names . . . Whether by permission or not, we don’t know. Dr. Rhine, called an “architect of fate,” fs first called into the plot to give an address before a Peace Program” and to broad cast some of his views on what extra-sensory perception might do to improve the chances for world peace. In a style typical of Rhine, Sin clair quotes him in a fictitious speech; “If we can push our in quiries far enough to discover how to develop conscious control over extra-sensory perception, we can take all the secrecy out of warfare and expose all plots that are hatched by , warmakers around the globe.” “A religious appeal without the label,” are the terms used by the author to describe the address. “But,” he asks, “how many peo ple are there in America willing or able to recognize religion when it comes to them without clerical symbols?” Something of an author him self, Dr. Rhine’s scientific writ ings about extra-sensory percep tion or the “sixth” sense have been of great interest, placing his books high on the best seller lists. His latest book, “The Reach of the Mind,” is a best seller in the U. S. and has been translated into six languages. (iVrfe (H, COUNTRY DAY AND BOARDING SCHOOL I Complete Elementary Course with French and Latin if desired. Music, Handicrafts, Sports. Sub-Primary Department. I Season Opens October Third PUPILS FOR MUSIC ACCEPTED AT ANY TIME Mrs. Millicent A. Hayes, Principal PINE NEEDLES GOLF CLUB Summer Rates $1.50 Daily Summer Membership $30.'00 Russ Birch, Pro. GOLF LESSONS CLUB REPAIRING From the Pilot files: TEN YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. Ralph K. Trix of Lake Placid, N. Y., lease The Pad- dock for the winter season. Keeping America out of war is chiefly a matter of public opinion. Judge Hubert Olive guest speak- ^esday to Helen Reed, our neigh KiwaSs^b ®^ts 'gets younger with every birthday, Dortq a spreads more and more hap- Ss MLa.S“ Si"™””""' highly successful season ahead. | j TWENTY YEARS AGO ephone service to Southern Pines, ^ Many happy returns of Wed- The federal government is a $40,000,000,OOO-a-year business. Mayor D. G. Stu^z announces that a new freight depot will be built in Southern Pines at. a cost of $15,000. Improvements now being made are expected to give finest of tel- Knollwood and Pinehurst. A committee of the Southeast ern Florists association visit the Carolina Orchid Gardens, and de clare themselves greatly impress ed by its facilities. Auto Loans $50 to $1500 Financing — Refinancing COME IN, WRI-TE IN, OR PHONE 976—977 ROCKINGHAM, nIc. For Information in the Aberdeen. Southern Pines. Pinehurst Area, see Mr. Herbert Cameron, or Mr. A1 Hewlett, or Phone 8802—5311. Southern Pines. N. C. Prompt, Courteous And Confidential Service E. B. Stone Finance Co. Of Rockingham, Inc. Rockingham, N. C. Phone 978 or 977 Br. Of^ce Hamlet. N. C. Phone 877