Page TWO THURSDAY, J\ 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. Faith In This Area Remains Writing the obituary of the Mozur Lace plant project has not been a pleasant task for this newspaper—just as it has not been pleas ant reading for a eommunity which had cen tered on this project its hopes for a welcome industrial operation. The project failed because of the inability of the Mozur firm to reach a satisfactory agreement with a contractor. This was a mat ter that was out of the hands of the local in dustrial development committee—and certain ly out of the hands of the residents of the Sandhills who had pledged some $180,000 to help finance the cost of the proposed plant. The feeling of this community was well ex pressed by Robert S. Ewing, president of the local development corporation, when he said last week: “We have seen a wonderful spirit de veloped among our citizens. People in A Successful Half Century The Pilot joins the many other newspapers, organizations and individuals who are con gratulating Carolina Power and Light Com pany this month on the 50th anniversary of its founding. Elsewhere in today’s Pilot is an article trac ing the history of this company ■ that now serves about half of North Carolina’s 100 counties as well as a large area of South Car olina. This article is interesting: we commend it to readers as something most Americans love—a success story. It is a story that has involved each one of us in the company’s territory. It is a story that shares in the sweep and drama of Amer ican industry. Seen in perspective, after half a century, the accomplishments of the Caro lina Power and Light Company, like those of other American businesses which have ad vanced technologically while constantly ‘To Make A Better Community’ The announced purpose of “The Voice,” a new mimeographed information sheet to be published monthly by the Civic Club of West Southern Pines is “to stir up the minds” of its readers “so that they will become more alert to their opportunities to become better citi zens, to make a better community.” This is an aim to which all of us, on which ever side of town we live, can subscribe. We are pleased to see this renewed evidence of enthusiasm and activity by the Civic Club of West Southern Pines, an organization that has played a part in community affairs for the past 20 years, “to increase the public in terest in all matters relating to good citizen ship.” We have frequently heard Negro spokesmen in town council meetings, appearing on behalf of some need or project, who have presented themselves as speaking for the Civic Club of West Southern Pines, thereby giving their requests or ideas considerably more author ity than if they spoke for themselves alone. While we would not deny the need or the effectiveness of racially militant organiza tions which are focussed primarily on the pro tection and extension of Negro rights, we see an equally important place in any Negro com munity for organizations such as the Civic Club of West Southern Pines which apparent ly directs its attention to the ways and means of good citizenship as such, emphasizing the responsibilities that are incumbent on all good citizens, Negro or white. This ties in with our conviction that there will be progressively less hostility to Negro rights drives, such as the schobl integration effort, as Negroes demon strate increasingly the responsibility that or dinary citizenship implies. T Was Bom July 4,1776. •. ’ One of.the most original and interesting July 4 items to appear in the nation’s press this year was the following, called “A Nation’s Credo,” which was published in the Chicago Sun-Times: “■‘I was bom July 4, 1776, and the Declara tion of Independence is my birth certificate. The bloodlines of the world run through my veins because I offered freedom to the op pressed. I am many things and many people. I am the nation. I am 165,000,000 living souls —and the ghost of millions who have lived and died for me. “I am Nathan Hale and Paul Revere. I stood at Lexington and fired the shot heard ’round the world, I am Washington, Jefferson and Patrick Henry. I am John Paul Jones and the Green Mountain Boys and Davy Crockett. I am Lee and Grant and Lincoln. I remember the Alamo, the Maine and Pearl Harbor. When freedom called, I answered the call and stayed until it was over, over there. I left my heroic dead in Flanders Field, on the rocks of CorregidOr and the bleak slopes of Korea. “I am big. I sprawl from the Atlantic to the Pacific, 3,000 miles (before Alaska) throb bing with industry. I am more than 5,000,000 farms. I am forest, field, mountain and desert. I am,, quiet villages and cities that never sleep. . . You can look at me and see Ben jamin Franklin walking down the streets of Philadelphia. I am Babe Ruth and the World Series. I am 169,000 schools and colleges and 250,000 churches, where my people worship God as they think best. “I am a ballot dropped in a box, the roar of a crowd in a stadium and the voice pf a choir in a cathedral. I am an editorial in a newspaper. A letter to a congressman. I am Eli Whitney and Stephen Foster. I am Tom Edison, Albert Einstein and Billy Graham. I am Horace Greeley, Will Rogers and the Wright Brothers. I am George Washington Carver and Daniel Webster and Jonas Salk. I am Longfellow, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Walt Whitman, Tom Paine. “Yes, I am the nation. I was conceived in freedom, and, God willing, in freedom 1 will spend the rest pf my days. May I possess al ways the integrity, the courage and the strength to keep myself unshackled, to re main a citadel of freedom and a beacon of hope to the world. This is my -^irish, my goal, my prayer on July 4, 1958—one hundred and eighty two years after I was bom.” Comforts And Pioneers That news story out of New York about the trend to “sissy” Boy Scout camps is a sign of the times. National Boy Scout leaders, the story says, are worried because about half the Scout camps over the nation are “babying” boys with such comforts as dish washing machines, potato peelers, hot showers, deep freezes, air mattresses, heated cabins and even vacuum cleaners. We hate to say it, but we’re inclined to be lieve that the advocates of the “pioneer spirit of self-reliance” are waging a losing battle. Many years of gadgetry have made us a na tion that will take our comforts with us, wherever we go, whether as infants. Scouts or adults. The fact is, the pioneers lived roughly be cause they had to. If they’d bqen able to have hot showers, vacuum cleaners or a potato peeler, don’t think they wouldn’t have used them. As the American frontier advanced, a com munity had no sooner been settled than along came scads of ingenious fellows who turned out, in the 18th and 19th centuries, an amaz ing series of inventions to make work easier and existence more comfortable. Many of these things seem crude today, but were heaven on earth to the hard-pressed people they were invented for. We don’t say all this emphasis on comfort is good for the nation’s moral and physical welfare. It probably isn’t, but people, even Boy Scouts, won’t give up their comforts, ex cept under dire necessity. OMl(^6to(cbool;i^H\TITWAS WAS HUMAN NATURE this area want industry to help round out the economy and I don’t believe we’ll stop now. . . This is a blow to us all, but it isn’t the end of the world and I assure you that every member of the committee stands ready to work even harder when we get another opportunity to have some thing good locate here. . . ” To this we would only add—knowini that we speak for the people of Southern Pines— our appreciation for the time and effort de voted to this project by members of the local committee and others who worked with them on the lace plant project. This community should stand behind them, as well as the larger Moore County Industrial Development Committee, in subsequent in dustrial projects which may be undertaken. Our faith in the diversified economic future of Southern Pipes, the Sandhills and Moore County remains unshaken. 'ncc Upon a time there was a BIG BIG1X)P starring Uncle Sam and headlining such BIG important things 05 a COLD WAR, DlSARVyVA\EKT, ASPACEIIACE^ and I don’t i^owr what all... THEM CAME AUTTLE BITTY SIDE SHOW— ^ADAHS’eOlDFIHEAPPlE growing, seem almost incredible. It is a story that has its human side—whether it be the constant courtesy of company employees or the feats of linemen and others at time of emergency, illustrating a type of selfless serv ice that has become a legend in and out of the industry. Speaking locally and for ourselves alone, we at The Pilot have had the most cordial relations with CP&L people at local and di vision offices of the company. They have been frank and cooperative in all the varied con tacts that a newspaper has with a public util ity, taking time always to supply us with re quested information, sometimes on occasions when we know it must have seemed to them that they had more important things to do. Again our congratulations to CP&L and our appreciation for its high quality of serv ice to the public. AND DISAPPEARING ACTS, ^ FATHER OF BOY IN FATAL WRECK SAYS, 'NO' Should IS-Year-Olds Drive Cars? Worthy of attention by all parents of teen-agers and by young people themselves are the following excerpts from an article written by the fath er of a 16-year-old boy who was the driver of a car that went out of control at high speed, killing one high school student and injuring five oth ers, including the driver. City Councilman W. B. Myers of Tampa, Fla., father of the boy, was asked by the Tampa Times to write his reactions to the tragedy. It was a wholesale tragedy. We realize that Tommy must face the fact that the boy lost his life in the car Tommy was driving. There is nothing in the world to compensate for the loss of a life. If I could I would give my own life for that boy’s. I surely would. I feel that with aU my heart. Whatever charge they place against Tommy he is going to have to take it. I’ll stand by him as a father, but not as a public official. If every parent of a teenager who drives could stand by help- Broomstraw Used For Eggbeater You know Old Timers who will tell you sincerely that wood- fired cook stoves bake the best biscuits. And in some homes deep in the woods and along the creeks of Eastern North Carolina there stiU dwell housewives who cook their men biscuits three timies a day and on wood stoves. That line of thought develop ed upon reading about a New York Times interview with Al fred Lunt, 64, on French cooking. The actor holds a diploma from Cordon Bleu Cooking School of Paris. He was bragging on his newly-acquired souffle secret: • “Egg whites are beaten by hand with a wire whisk or not at all,” he said. Some of you good cooks prize your wire whisk for beating egg whites. Most of you long ago succumbed to thfe electric beater. And before that there was the ro tary beater. You turned a crank that was geared to beaters which whirled like some miniature heli copter. When I was a boy, however, broom straw made the best egg beater. Aunt Connie was the cook of our house who went in for such rarefies. She would select three or four strong straws from the handle of the broom. It seems she tied them together near one end with thread, and then one of us children was assigned to do the beating. At the start it was a real adventure. But often before the eggs had been beaten to suit Aunt Connie’s taste our arms were tired no end and we wish ed we hadn’t been around when the idea started. —Goldsboro News-Axgus lessly in a hospital and see their children lying on an operating table, wondering if they will live or die, I’m sure they would wish that the automobile had never been invented. Yet you realize that you can’t lock your children in the house and tell them they can’t be a part of society. And you can’t be with them every minute. So what is the answer? I know that much of the prob lem is centered around speed. Ever since we have had a tele vision set in our house, all I can remember seeing on automobile ads is power, speed, pick up . . . How can you explain to a child, or even an adult, that he has to go under 40 (the limit where this ac cident occurred) when he is con stantly shown examples of cars which go more than 100? My son had been told not to HERE'S A VOTE FOR THE ROSE What For A National Flower? By Rena B. Lassiter In The. Sinithfield Herald Newspaper coltimns that are usually cluttered with political wranglings, crime disturbances, weather disasters and the like have recently had stories of a different sort of bickering. Not sordid or unpleasant was the controversy that had to do with recommending a national flower for these United States. It was a group of women who did the dis puting and no less a group than the General Federation of Wom en’s Clubs in its 67th annual con vention in Detroit. One faction upheld with ardor and spirit the rose. An opposing faction championed the com tas sel. Rose supporters pointed out that the rose could be grown in small gardens as well as in large ones, and that a poll has shown the rose to be the favorite flower of a majority of the people. Min nesota delegates were quite as ■outspoken for the corn tassel. TROUBLES OF INTELLECTUALS In several of the intellectual enclaves along the. Eastern Sea board, places like Nyack, N. Y., Bucks County, Pa., and others, the drive for STA’TUS does not miss a single beat. The big thing there is NOT to have a television, and the folks are having a pretty rough time of it, hiding the set in the broom closet every time the door-bell rings. The reception is very bad, too, because they wouldn’t think of installing an out-side aerial. Now if some smart yokel or hillbilly invented a sort of invisible aerial or one that could be hidden down the chimney, he’d be doing the intel lectuals of the North a very great service. —^Harry Golden in The Carolina Israelite Grains of drive fast, not to exceed the speed limit, to be careful and look out for the other feUow. One of the problems confront ing me now is whether to let him drive again. Frankly, I don’t know if I’ll ever let Tommy drive until he’s 18. But it wiU be a long time before I have to make that decision, due to the extent of his injuries. I think that except in extreme cases a boy probably should not be permitted to drive until he is 18. The two-year difference be tween 16 and 18 will give him much more maturity and common sense. The law gives a child 16 years old the right to drive. But I feel that each parent should ex amine his own child as an indi vidual and determine whether the child is fit from the standpoint of maturity and common sense to operate a lethal weapon such as the modem car. I Thai: Nightmare Again Well, the home safety press re leases from the National Safety Council have com^ in again—and they’ve just about spoiled our quiet summer. Makes us think we’d be better off trying to sail a 3()-foot boat across the Atlantic, join an expedition to study the head-hunters of Brazil or maybe even volunteer to be the first per son shot at the moon. One thing about the good old Safety Council is that it doesn’t pull its punches. Opening its nice white mimeographed folder, we read: “Mrs. Housewife—there’s a killer in your home!” We close our eyes and shudddr. Then: “The killer? Poisons. 'They lurk every where . . . They take a steady toll throughout the year—about 120 lives a month. . . ” 'Then comes one designed to cheer the old folks. The Council eases into, this horror story in a tone that reminds us of the sepul chral, booming voice that used to announce the March of Time newsreels: “The pattern is pretty much the same: “The time—July or December. The place—the home. Or more specifically, the bedroom. The victim—someone 65 years of age or older. “Yes, that usually is the story of home deaths from falls, which take about 14,000 lives annually.” Then we turn a few pages and one of the Council’s new slogans— we know it’s a slogan because they put it in quotation msirks— leaps at us from the chaste white page, as though ■written in letters of flame: “Let’s not kill off the man in the home.” “Women can keep their men alive,” goes on the Council pon derously. “Encourage your hus band or boy friend to play it seife when working around the house.” Play it safe? You bet we’re go ing to! And our first step to safe ty is going to be to quit reading press releases from the National Safety Council. No matter what else happens to us then, our nerves will not be shattered by the Coun cil’s good advice. Yoo Hoo! Look Whal I Got! Readers across the nation should be grateful to Helen G. Myers, the Long Beach, Calif., elementary education supervisor who collected first graders’ des criptions of everyday things over a period of two years. For example: “Arms are to hold your hetnds on.” something ^ which may be found in all parts of the country. It took a standing vote to decide the recommenda tion of the Federation, and the rose won. In Congress This does not mean, however, that the rose will be chosen as the national flower. It will have to be fought out on the floors of both houses of Congress. Resolu tions have been offered in Con gress favoring both the rose and the com tassel. Whether Senator Margaret Chase Smith, who fav ors the rose, will have more in fluence than Representative Wal ter H. Judd, who is for the corn tassel, remains to be seen. Hal Boyle, New York column ist, advances the cause of the lowly dandelion. He calls it the “gqlden democrat of lawn and pasture, a true all-American flower, a rugged individualist that stands above class or creed, or local partisanship.” He points out that Congress may cause statesmenlike heads to roll like petals of the first frost, as Con gressmen undertake to name an official U. S. flower. “Garden lovers are a passionate folk,” he says. “Knock their favorite flow er and it’s worse than kicking their dog around.” None Lovelier As far as I am personally con cerned I’d sooner name the nut- grass flower than the dandelion. It is just as persistent a grower if not more persistent, and it will certainly grow anywhere. But without. any facetiousness, I am wholeheartedly for the rose. If there is any flower lovelier than a perfect rose I have never seen it. Our North Carolina flower, the dogwood, has its points. I am glad it was chosen for our State. All of the flowers chosen by the other States have something to recommend them. Three states— New York, Arkansas and Georgia —saw fit to select the rose as their state flower. I am for the rose as our national flower. “Eyebrows are women shave off.” “Little stones are big rocks chopped up.” “Cats are for dogs to chase.” “Dogs are made to like people.” “A door is to answer.” “A dream is something you think when you’re asleep.” “Ears are something that big people put hearing things on. . . Ears are to wriggle.” “A face is a thing that holds your head and hair in place.” “Ground is to grow grass.” “A hat is a thing to tip and say, ‘How do you do!’. . . A hat is for magicians to take rabbits out of.” “Mashed potatoes are things tp have steak and gravy with.” “Mountfdns are a place that’s hard to go up and easy to come down.” “A mustache is something old men get. . . A mustache is some thing else to wash.” “A package is sorfiething to say, Yoo hoo! Look what I got!’ ” “The world is where you jump up in the air and always come down again. . . The world is something to come down to after you’ve been tip in space.” Commenting on this list. Pub lishers Auxiliary, a trade news paper that is read by most of the nation’s editors, draws the con clusion that editorial writers could learn something from the “sparkle, enthusiasm and clarity” Of the youngsters’ definitions. The PILOT Published Every Thursday by THE PILOT, Incorporated Southern Pines. North Ceurolina 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 Year $4. 6 mos. $2; 3 moe. $1 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N. C., as second class mail matter Member National Editorial Assn, and N. C. Press Assn.