Page TWO THURSDAY. MAY 1. 1958 “I’m Stuck—It Just Ain’t In The Cards To Win” ILOT Southern Pines ' North Carolina “In taking over The Pilot no changes are contemplated. We will try to keep this a good paper. We will try to make a little money for all concerned. Wherever there seems to be an occasion to use our influence for the public good we will try to do it. And we will treat Everybody alike.”—James Boyd, May 23, 1941. A Town - Supported Public Library Directors of the Southern Pines Library As sociation have decided to put before the town council the request that the town take over the institution and operate it as a public li brary. . The reason for this request is simple: the library can’t make a go of it financially un der the present system. This is no particular adverse .reflection on the people of Southern Pines. Few libraries anywhere, unless heavily endowed, can exist, thrive and grow on private funds alone. Pub lic ownership and operation, with all taxpay ers sharing the cost, is a logical method of operation. Support of the library has devolved on a relatively small group of people. It is too much to ask that they continue to attempt to keep the library going indefinitely for the use of hundreds of other readers who contribute little or nothing to its cost. That is too pre carious a method for both the library and the public. More important, it results in prevent ing the library from fulfilling its potentialities in the community. While the library has shown a steady rise in book circulation, it has steadily had to cur tail book purchases because of lack of funds. It is a situation of more demand and less supply. This obviously‘can’t continue without disaster for the library or an intolerable bur den on its Association members. Just what public ownership would mean as to taxes, we don’t know. We are given to un derstand that it would not impose any great increase in the rate. We presume all this will be brought out when the request for assump tion of public ownership is made to'the coun cil. The library directors have acted wisely and for the best interest of the institution in mak ing their decision. We trust that the council will also see the wisdom of the plan and will welcome the responsibility to rescue and maintain this valuable public service. Mental Health Group Needs Support During this nation-wide Mental Health Week, The Pilot recognizes the activities of the Moore Cotmty Mental Health Association and urges support of its current membership campaign. The Moore County group is aligned with the National Association for Mental Health, Inc., which has brought the fight against men tal illness to nation-wide attention in recent years. The National Association has brought home to the American people the fact that “mental illness remains the nation’s number one health problem,” with 750,000 mentally ill persons hospitalized and 16,000,000 Americans suffering from some other form of mental dis order. Local mental health associations, such as the one now conducting its fund campaign in Moore County, form the key to progress in efforts for mental health. A local association provides a reliable source of information and assistance for the troubled. Here, organization and support have not yet reached the stage wjiere operation of a counseling clinic—the long-range goal of the local group—is pos sible, but through the local association al ready hundreds of persons in Parent-Teacher and other groups have been given a better un derstanding of the importance of mental health and of some of the situations involved in or causing mental illness. The physicians and laymen who are giv ing their time and efforts in the cause of men tal health in Moore County deserve the ap preciation of all our people. Any one interest- ' ed in membership in the Association or in supporting its work should communicate with the campaign chairman, James S. Baird at P. O. Box 145, Southern Pines. Humane Slaughter Law Should Pass Adding its voice to the many that have been raised in recent weeks on behalf of humane slaughter legislation before Congress, The Pilot quotes herewith from an editorial in. The New York Times which succinctly sums up the purpose and the status of this legisla tion: “If you have beef, pork or lamb for dinner today you may be interested to know that the animal fromi which it comes was very prob ably slaughtered in a process so revoltingly brutal as to nauseate you if you stopped to think about it. : “There is no good reason why the American people should put up with the kind of need less cruelty practiced in most—though not all —of oxm slaughterhouses. It is a hopeful sign that, in reporting a moderate humane-slaugh ter bill, the House Committee on Agriculture noted that, ‘the volume of mail ... on this subject is the largest the committee has ever received on any single matter.’ “This measure (H. R. 8308) recently passed the House. It is admittedly a compromise; but it does establish for the first time as national policy that livestock should be slaughtered only by the ‘most humane practicable meth ods.’ It requires the Secretary of Agriculture to determine such methods, and it provides that the Federal Government shall purchase meat only from! packers who use such irieth- ods. This kind of pressure should eventually force the entire industry to abandon present cruel practices. “The House bill is now awaiting action in the Senate Coiiimittee on Agriculture, of which Mr. Ellender of Louisiana is chairman. Alternative measures to provide for addition al ‘study’ of the situation are merely devices for delay and are entirely unsatisfactory. The humane slaughter legislation ought to be re ported and passed as is. And after that, an- 'other mild bill (S. 2489) providing for humane trapping deserves equally favorable consider ation, to put an end to the unspeakable agon ies suffered by millions of fur-bearers every year in the merciless jaws of the steel trap.” The treatment accorded animals is said to be an index of civilization. Can the United States be content to reifiain on a barbaric level in this respect? The Highway Meeting And Local Needs L^st week’s English Division highway meeting at the headquarters building in Aber deen was an interesting aspect of North Car olina’s new deal in highway administration— and we must say we like this out-in-the-open, question-and-answer method of doing busL ness. Certainly the meeting brought to attention, through press reports on the session, more in formation about proposed highway work and highway problems than has ever been public ly aired before. This is not to imply that highway folks pre viously have been secretive, as we have found them always cooperative in explaining projects or giving out information. We simply mean that such sessions as the one held last week, when county and town officials from four counties were present, with the press invited, bring out and put before the public a greater amount of information about road matters than has been the custom heretofore. We got from the meeting a much clearer idea of the magnitude of the tasks faced by the highway folks. The necessity for them to evaluate requests and assign priori ties was amply apparent. And we believe that the current highway administration is sincere ly trying to do road work on the basis of es tablished need. • * • So far as the two matters brought before the meeting by Mayor W. E. Blue of Southern Pines, The Pilot goes on record as according these requests our heartiest support. Something should be done in the cause of both safety and sightliness at the Morganton Road-Broad Street-Old No. 1 highway inter section at the Shaw House corner. And the paving of West Pennsylvania Avenue Exten sion, running northwest from West Southern Pines, is an improvement long overdue. Town officials have received a number of complaints about the Shaw House comer sit uation, where two streets, S. W. Broad Street and Morganton Road, enter the old highway on a curve, with highway traffic into South ern Pines having to turn left into Broad St. across a north-bound lane of traffic and, inSi- mediately thereafter, across the Morganton Road intersection. Removal of No. 1 highway through traffic to the new parkway has alleviated the situa tion somewhat, but traffic on the old highway remains heavy and often fast. Coming into the intersection from the west on Morganton Road, there is poor visibility in either direction, creating another dangerous situation. So far as the sightliness of this intersection is concerned, every effort should be made to make the area of the old Shaw House—one Of the town’s most interesting attractions for vis itors—as good looking as possible. The inter section is also one of the main entrances into to^n from the South, as the directional sign at the southern entrance of the parkway sends Southern Pines traffic into town by this route. Beautification of the area and a safer, niore efficient traffic control method at the inter section could and should go hand in hand. Carrying out of any such plans appears to depend on the cooperation of nearby property owners—a cooperation which, it is hoped, will be forthcoming in the public interest. 1 G N !§1 IR, [El iC, E Oi NJ □ rtoi—: BETTER NOT RUSH CAREER DECISIONS Liberal Arts Education Defended (From "Belter Schools," a nationally circulated publica tion devoted to the interests of education.) As the high school graduate and his parents cope with the col lege decision, the career question usually arises, and it is reason able that it should. But career considerations are of limited rel evance in choosing a college, and the limits should be respected. Career considerations should not be ruled out, but they should not be controlling. Many parents fear that youngsters delay too long in set tling on the one thing that they wish to do. But the opposite er ror is at least as common, per haps more common: they close too many doors too soon, and fail to keep open a sufficiently wide range of possibilities. Most young people have potentialities in more than one direction. No one has the wisdom to know precise ly which of these potentialities should be encouraged and which left uncultivated; no one is wise enough to say that some of the doors open to the young person should be closed at this early stage of his career. The great strategy with young people is to keep their development suffi ciently broad so that when they become mature enough to make a choice, it may be a choice among many significant possibil ities. Full Range This is not to say that it is wrong to make career decisions early. Many distinguished and creative men have made early de cisions. It is simply to say that indecisiveness is not to be de plored. The young person has the time and opportunity, of which he will have little later on, to scan the full range of human ac tivity, review his talents, and come up with a variety of choices. One of the great arguments for a liberal arts education is that it enables the young man or woman to move in any of a great variety of directions. Parents bent on a vocational course for their boy or girl are apt to think of a liberal education as an experience that fills the youngster with ornamen tal but useless cultivation—ad mirable, no doubt, but a waste of time. Nothing could be wider of the mark. Basic Fields A liberal arts education en ables the young man or wohian to range widely over the fundamen tal fields of knowledge. These fields are basic to all effective use of the mind, and must pre cede all sound professional edu cation. These are the fields that equip a man not only to be a more intelligent wage earner but a more valuable member of the commimity. They are the fields that aid a man to understand hipiself, to comprehend the world around him, and to be wor thy of the responsibilities democ-^ racy thrusts upon him. Every young person should ex pose himself to as much of the liberal arts as is possible within his limitations of time and money. If he concentrates nar rowly in his vocational specialty, he may be slightly more market able in the first year of his work ing life, but this is by no means certain. In any case, the proper role of college is not to prepare him for the first year of his work ing life. It is to prepare him for an adult lifetime. More Important Job skills will be only a part of the equipment which he will need for that voyage. And any job skills he acquires in college may be out of date by the time his career is in full swing. Much more important will be his cap acity to use his mind effectively, his xmderstanding of himself and of human relationships, his com prehension of his heritage and the world he lives in. The more able the young per son, the more insistent he should be upon the liberal arts ingredi ent in his education. The fact that he will go on to advanced work in a special field is added reason to receive a broad expos ure to the basic fields of know ledge. In the transition from high school to college most young peo ple are ready to take a long step in , the process of growing up. They are prepared to put behind them a whole world of adoles cent fads and fancies and to as sume a more adult role. They ar rive at college ready to adopt new attitudes, new values, new ways of looking at the world. Such a time of rapid growth is immensely important in the life history of the individual. 'The youngster may take great strides toward maturity in a short space of time. He may also stumble and take some rather bad falls. If he is emotionally immature or at the mercy of impulses and traits which he cannot control, it may be important that he be assisted through this period by friendly hands (not necessarily those of his parents). Under Own Power But under normal circum stances, parents will not wish to interfere with this process of growth. Every intervention by them is an invitation to return to an earlier and more dependent role, a reinvocation of the web that the youngster should have broken out of. To the extent that parental pressures are successful, growth will be minimized. If the youngster is to move to a new level of maturity,, it must be un der his own power. Going in the Not-Raising-Hog Business (From The Tar Heel Banker) Sometimes it takes a bit of hu mor to comprehend how silly we’re being in our attempts to solve our problems. Here’s a let ter written by an Arizona farmer to his U. S. Senator regarding a part of the government’s farm program: “Dear Mr. Senator: My,friend Bordeaux over in Pima County received a $1,000 check from the The Public Speaking Dogvvoods Inspire Verses To the Editor: Maybe I can share “The Public Speaking” in writing this verse about our gorgeous dogwood scen ery, and in this way I answer the request of friends for the follow ing poem: MOONLIGHT MAGIC The dogwood in the moonlight Is such a lovely sight In Southern Pines it seems to me ’Tis God’s most wondrous might; There’s nowhere else that I can find His handiwork so free and kind. He hangs this lace of snowy white For everyone to see and know He lives and loves' above the night. This Dogwood pattern, all aglow! MRS. DAN R. McNEILL Southern Pines. Government this year for not raising hogs. So I am going into the not-raising-hog business next year. What I want to know is, in your opinion, what is the best kind of farm not to raise hogs on and the best kind of hogs not to raise? I would prefer not to raise razorbacks, but, if that is not a good breed not to raise, I will just as gladly not raise any Berkshires or Durocs. “The hardest work in this busi ness is going to be in keeping an inventory of how many hogs I haven’t raised. My friend Bor deaux is very joyful about the fu ture of this business. He has been raising hogs for more than 20 years and the best he ever made was $400 until this year, when he got $1,000 for not raising hogs. If I can get $1,000 for not raising 50 hogs then I will get $2,000 for not raising 100 hogs. “I plan to operate on a small scale at first, holding myself down to about 4,000 hogs, which means I will have $80,000. Now, anoth er thing: These hogs I will raise will not eat 100,000 bushels of corn. I understand that you also pay farmers for not raising com. So will you pay me anything for not raising 100,000 bushels of com not to feed the hogs I am not raising? I want to get started as soon as possible as this seems to be a good time of the year for not raising hogs. “P. S. Can I raise 10 or 12 hogs on the side while I am in the not- raising - hogs - business—just enough to get a few sides of ba con to eat?” Crains of Sand Super Progress Gadgetry (if there is such a word) never ceases. While peopledike us are sitting on their porch steps watching bees \vork over the azalea flow ers and feeling more or less at peace with the world, somebody is thinking up another fiendish way to make life easier, yet at the same time a great deal more complicated;, for simple souls. The fruit of some such gadge- teer’s efforts was illustrated in a New York department store ad in Sunday’s papers: an electric fixe lighter. Can you beat that? It’s a ring of metal on a handle. You plug it in and the metal gets red hot and lights your wood fire “every time.” Well, reckon some folks would like it. For our part, we wouldn’t swap a few lightwood splinters for any fire lighter that was ever manufactured. Questions Sets you to wondering. Where would you keep the electric fire lighter—on the hearth along with poker and tongs? You’d probably have to have a new baseboard outlet installed within reach of the fireplace. Would you hang the gadget from the mantel, like a broomstraw hearth bmsh? Or would you keep it furtively hid den away, so nobody could see it? If you left it out, wouldn’t you get sick to death of explaining to visitors what ’ on earth it w^ls? And, of course, they’d want a demonstration—even in summer. They’d say it was marvelous, all the while looking at you as though they thought you a mite touched. Which is exactly what you would be. And suppose, some time, the lighter didn’t work. As with any thing mechanical, there’s always that risk. Big Moment Picture a beautifully clad host ess, guiding her guests to the liv ing room for coffee after a lovely dinner. The fire is laid, but not lighted, on the hearth. The big moment has arrived. A dutiful husband, dressed for the purpose of our fancy in a well tailored dinner jacket, stoops to plug in the Little Gem electric fire lighter and hands the precious instrument -to his spouse. Guests gaze in awe. Milady flicks the switch, bends gracefully to apply Little Gem to the awaiting paper, kindling and logs. She smiles mysteriously. The rite that will make her unique as a modem hostess is about to be performed. But—nothing happens. Nonchalantly, she clicks the switch again, glances to see if it is in the “on” position. Little Gem stays cold and lifeless. Ruined Evening ■ Then, to climax the humilia tion, some oaf steps forward with a match. The fire blazes up. Mi lady, blinking back tears, excuses herself and flings Little Gem in the garbage can. The evening is ruined. The first of May is a poor time to write about fire lighters any way. Let’s forget the whole thing. Really Fresh It’s being told how one of the winter visitors to the Sandhills stopped at a roadside stand in the country to buy eggs. The woman in charge told him that they were sold out but that her husband had gone to get more. The buyer then asked if she were sure they would be fresh. This really amazed the woman who at that moment saw her hus band come rapidly out of the hen house. “Well,” she said, “he’s a-run- nin’, ain’t he?” The PILOT Published Every Thursday by THE PILOT, Incorporated Southern Pines, North Carolina 1941—JAMES BOYD—1944 Katharine Boyd Editor C. Benedict Associate Editor Vance Derby News Editor Dan S. Ray Gen. Mgr. C. G. Council Advertising Mary Scott Newton Business Bessie Cameron Smith Society Composing Room Lochamy McLean, Dixie B. Ray, Michael Valen, Jasper Swearingen Thomas Mattocks. Subscription Rates: One Tear $4. 6 mos, $2: 3 mos. f 1 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N. C^ as second class mail matter Member National Editorial Assa and N. C. Press Assn.