The News-Journal UTOtlAL m PsIliiUMd Every ThnrMlay at Baelord, N. C. SubacriptioB Rataa In Advance Per Tear S Months —$2^ 3 Months —|L2S PAUL DICKSON Editor and Pnblisher Entered as seceed-class mail matter at the Post Office at Bneford, North Carolina, under the Act of March 3,1870. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17,1959 “Let us have faith that right makes might; and. in that faith let us to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it”—Abraham Lincoln. Jown's bond considerable Regardless of the fact that less than 24 per cent of the eligible voters made the decision, we consider it to be of far- reaching significance to the Town of Raeford that the decision was made to issue the $480,000 in bonds for improv ing the water and sewer systems of the town. As a matter of fact, a little figuring shows that less than 14 per cent of the town’s voters favored the spending of the money enough to go to the voting place and cast a ballot. That’s just as much a decision as if 94 per cent had made it, however. A great deal more will be accomp lished in the years to come by the de cision of these few for so many than the mere provision of sewage disposal without odor or stream contamination, and the assurance of enough water the next time all of us want to shave or make coffee at the same time in the morning, or of enough to fight a fire for that matter. The decision was actually one of whethef the town should plan to move forward and grow, or to move backward and start a slow drying up process,- al though probably neither of these re sults would come about solely as a re sult of this one election. To take the positive way of stating Tragedy is brought home Wind whipped like a frenzied demor across the wreck scene that was a liv ing nightmare. The big truck lay on its side ,two other vehicles showed signs of having been hit, and the station wa gon was a crumpled mess. The child’s car seat lay on the gray payment, a bright happy ornament pitifully crushed. Under a khaki blan ket the woman lay awaiting the ambu lance. You always read the statistics and you cluck sympathetically. You say; Something should be done about these highway accidents. And then you see it and the scene knifes into the heart and memory. These are neighbors or members of the same church or the same club. It is much more frightening when the people are known. Tragedy is tragedy under any circum- • stances; when it strikes friends and neighbors, it is doubly so. Accidents on the highways do pass with little concern when those involved are strangers to us. And the indiffer ence felt toward accidents in the next state is likely to make those in our own state more frequent. And still the toll mounts. It would be rankly presumptuous to offer a rea son. No one seems to have the answer. That is all the more reason that any trip by auto, to New York, to Charlotte, or to the drug store for cigarettes, must be undertaken with the grim realiza tion that automobiles are deadly and the odds are against us. —Jay Woodard AIJ lose under compulsion strike in basic industries have rais ed a question as to the validity of free collective bargaining. Some feel the government should intervene with com pulsory arbitration. The trouble with this in the words of Secretary of Labor Mitchell is that, “As soon as govern ment fixes wages. . . it must go on to determine conditions of work, fix hours, hear grievances and. . . dictate details of production. And does anyone think for a moment that the government can determine what wages are fair. . . without eventually determining what prices are fair. . . a government can not assume tne power to fix wages without eventually assuming the pow er to fix prices. . .” The principle involved in compul- *ory arbitration ia not compatible with • free society. It would mean the end of the free market. Eventually it would cripple the magnificent mass retail dis tribution system which as a partner to mass production has built a standard of living in this country that is the envy of the world. So no matter how fearful the pros pect of the resumption of a steel strike may be. we must think long and well before we consider solving it worth the sacrifice of our precious freedom, which will be ours only so long as we continue to hold it precious. 0 "Radio Russia says that America is a hysterical topsy-turvy country where people eat upsidedown cake, doors go round in circles and everybody has an inside outhouse.” —Sangamon Co. (Ill.) Bulletin V irC'GWLME LSlEr.J m o ri \ I -- decision is of significance it, the town will now be able to adeeju- ately take care of sewer disposal for the most optimistic residential and indus trial growth for some years to come. The same will apply to water supply, with the added assurance that fire in surance underwriters will not be look ing this way with a frown nor the rat ing bureau with a sharpened pencil to raise our rates. Of much more importance to the fu ture of the town, however, than these purely physical and obvious benefits is the fact that the town, by this vote, has showed itself to be progressive ,able to look at the facts, and not afraid to spend money when the necessity arises. There are towns this size today who could not say the same in years past when the occasion arose, and we figure this is a good key to why they are still the same size. Raeford can now look any contem plating business, resident or industry squarely in the eye and say, “We are going to do what needs to be done to make this a good .town, spend what needs to be spent. You may not live here more cheaply than in some places, but you can probably live better.” This vote has just put us into a class with communities that we are modest-, ly proud to be among. Ike I)) ■ The Puppy Creek Philotopher Advises Rest Of World Not To Hold Back OifiAccount Of Him, Mongolia Editor’s note: The Puppy Creek Philosopher on his Bermuda grass discusses a deep subject this week, but not too profoundly. Dear editar: One of the reporters following President Eisenhower on his tour of the world has wired back that a leader in one of the more backward, or to be more diplomatic, less forward coun tries pointed out to him that “as long as one spot on earth is underdeveloped, the rest of the world is held back that much.’’ I’m convinced of that all right, but is the rest of the world? For example, take my Bermu da grass farm out her e. Re gardless of how you stretch the truth, you can’t stretch it far enough to cover the fact thi^ place is underdeveloped, yet I’ve been watching the rest of the world, from my nearby neighbors on out in all directions, and if any of them are being held back by me, I can’t tell it. I can’t understand it, but some people have a tendency to ignore this basic law and forge on a- head, little aware that I can prove it to them in writing that they’re being held back by me, Afghanistan, Mongolia, the Afri can jungles, the frost-bitten North Pole, and several people whose names I won’t call and you wouldn’t publish if 1 did. Understand, I don’t blame them. I don’t mind saying, if the rest of the world is looking back over its shoulder wondering when I’m going to catch up and free it to move forward, it can stop looking. 1 don’t intend to budge. If disaster is going to hit the world as a lot of leaders are fealing, I can’t see any differ- enoe in sitting still and waiting for it. than in rushing forward and mjeeting it, except that the former is easier, lejs expensive, and you can do it sitting by a warm fire. However to tell you the truth, I don’t really think disaster is going to hit, at least not in my lifetime. Man is pretty smart, all right, lots of times his guided missiles shoot straight, but not having created himself, I doubt if he can eliminate himself alto gether. When that foreign leader claims that as long as one spot on earth is underdeveloped, the rest of the world is held back that much, I understand what he’s getting at, but I doubt if Washington can afford it. Yours faithfully, J. A. This Is The Law By Robert E. Lee (For N. C. Bar Association) ORAL MORTGAGE Joe Jones owned a farm that was worth $50,0(X). Needing $2,- 000, he went td see Tom Tucker for the purposes of negotiatin| a loan for this amount. ' It was orally agreed, in the presence of several witnesses, that Jones should convey his farm to Tucker by an ordinary deed and that the delivered should stand as a mprtgagi secure the loan of $2,000 Jones should have as muc: three years to redeem the sal Jones executed and delivered deed and got the loan of $2,1 on the basis of this agreem Two years later Jones tei ed to Tucker the $2,000, with i*- terest, and requested the re-con veyance of his farm. Tucker re fused to re-convey the farm. He had decided, subsequent to the making of the oral agreement, that he liked the farm and want- ted to keep its ownership. Does Jone have a legal reme dy? No. Jones has conveyed to Tucker his farm by an absolute deed and Jones no longer has any rights of ownership in the farm. He has disposed of his $50,- 000 farm for $2,000. This was an actual case decid ed by the Supreme Court of North Carolina. Jones and his witnesses were not even permit ted to testify as to the terms of the oral agreement at the time that the deed was delivered. In North Carolina that which appears on its face as an absolute deed cannot be changed by oral evidence into a mortgage except upon proof that the clause of re demption was omitted by rea son of fraud, mistake, or undue Influence. There is no fraud, from a legal viewpoint, merely from the fact that a person has failed to keep his promise. . Jones knew, or ought to have known, that he was conveying his land by an ordinary deed to Tucker. The law requires mort gage transactions relating to land be spelled out in writing. Igno rance of the law is no excuse. Jones would have been pro tested if he had used a mortgage or a deed of trust. Instead, W vised an ordinary deed of con veyance. The meaning of a deed cannot be varied by an oral a- .^j|y*emeht of the parties. Zj,§iidelines... By The Staff always jolts us to see sas’’ written instead of ChHstmas. * * * * We figure there’s enough smoke at Ivy Bluff to indicate the presence of some fire. • • * • Now here’s a switch.. .a man who actually admits being a can didate for political office drops out of the race. Eisenhower should have joyed his “Song of India”. en- We have become so accustom ed to slaughter on the highways that a weekend death toll of 13 on the roads doesn’t even make the front page. * « • * , Those horses at Meredith prob ably had to go hungry for a day or two this week. • • • • How long before Raeford will get an Early American food store? Those who ire worrying about the population boom take heart Mark Welsh I FARMING AROUND I By Mark Welsh I Thinking of buying a used baler between now and next sea- j son? A quick check of three key I points can tell you a lot about ssj'iS the machine and maybe s a v e unneces- - 3 '5s sary repair bills ‘ and headaches later on. The knotter is a pri- m a r y trouble spot, so look for worn, broken or chipped teeth. If the worm gear has been adjusted recently, it might indicate ex cessive wear. Check the needles for proper alignment and make sure the plunger blocks fit close together in the bale chamber. If they don’t you may have to re place them. B • • Farm Weather Reporting^ Farmers may some day receive' special kinds of weather reports, i Wisconsin scientists are trying to And ways to measure the amount of water given off to the air and evaporated by plant processes, so it can be compared to the amount of moisture put into the soil and serve as an indicator for irrigation needs. They also are working on instruments that would. measure and record soil temperature, dew fall and wind velocities. Researchers believe there’s a need for specialized farm weather reporting because present reports are not always suitable for farm interpretation. For instance, wind velocities are usually measured considerably above crop levels and many oth er observations are made at air ports where conditions may vary greatly from those on farms in we area. ,, In ' 1950, approximately 340 million hens laid an average of 174 eggs each per year for a total of nearly 59 billion eggs. This year, we have about 301 million hens but average output is up to /or an estimated total of 64'i billion eggs. More! eggs, fewer hens, less feed.... I wonder if man’s efficiency is im proving as fast? / (Editors Note: Dr. Mark Welsh is a former university instructor and state livestock sanitary service director who has spent a lifetime in agriculture. He now is agricultural consultant to American Cyanamid Company.)^ © Mark Welsh, 1959 One of the national news maga zines has word of a solution. There is talk of a bomb that will equal a trillion tons of TNT and will wipe out a whole conti nent . 0 9mm This head was carried on an article in a New York city paper; “Deer Season Ends; 27 Hunters Killed” Is that over the quota? That "Titan” missile to be less than titanic. -0- proved There are about 44,(XX) farnt ponds in North Carolina. thoughts in passing. • ••• A recent column in one of the daily papcTS carried some start ling contrasts between the way we live and the sort of life led by most of the peoples of the world. Reprinted here in its en tirety the column was written by Ralph McGill, editor of the At lanta Constitution. He says: There was a line in a story which said President Eisenhow er in India and Pakistan, rode between solid lines' of people whose massed numbers portray ed the poverty and misery of Asia. What did Khrushchev see in this country? Fabulous supermarkets, - with food from all the great produC’ . tion areas of the world on their shelves; a magnificent net work of truck-and-automobile crowd ed highways, railroad systems and airlines; a healthy, overfed people, the poorest of them rich beyond comparison with Asia’s millions; homes, apartments and farms. Not-even teeming, tense Harlem was so badly over-run as some of his own densely populat ed urban areas. He saw, too, some of our stor ed agricultural wealth ... $6 billion worth of cheese, wheat, com, butter, powdered milk, cotton. And what did Khrushchev think? We know he cannot have fail ed to think that if he had had all that surplus of food and fiber he would have made' political capital of it in Asia. He had al ready seen the multitudes of Asia and had looked upon, and smelled, their misery and pov erty. Let us summon two more wit nesses—two more pairs of eyes who have seen what Khrushchev and Eisenhower have seen. One of these is a Congressman, Hale Boggs, of Louisiana, a con servative. He is just recently back from Southeast Asia and the Middle East. What did Mr. Boggs see? “I found,” he said, “an almost savage desire among peoples of such lands for the comforts they know are available in the world .. the Communist propaganda is telling them that the Marxist JtT Woodard way ia the quickeat aai nred road to obtaining Rwm.” (It M a good phraae—if a frigktaalBg one...“an almoot nrafe da;»- nre.") Call the next witnecs—the hia- torian Toynbee. Mr. Toynbee, what is the most exploaive lopment o four age? •J ’ “This qingle fact—^that mU* lions of backward people in the remotest villages of Asia, Africi and Latin America have a new awreness of possibility— a new hope of escape from the old vi cious memory of poverty, hun ger, and disease. These milliont are rising to demand a better ■ life, a new personal dignity, and • expanding opportunities. Their' awakening is the paramount fact - of our itme.” It would almost seem that Con- • • gressman Boggs and Historian’-* Toynbee had traveled togetheir and compared notes. But they did not. What they have seen is what every person has seen who has been to Asia where the great • compulsive world changes are most apparent. What does Ike think? ■ We can imagine. He certainly-: will come home with a sense of'-' orgency. He will have amend- - ments for ol dplans. He will be stirred and moved by the sight of so much humanity, flowing a. like rivers through the streets,- much of it nearly naked, and'- nearly all of it thin and most bl it hungry. : Can America be dripping with'- fat and remain safe while the.% vast revolution of which travel- ' er Boggs and Townbee ' have-: spoken and the President is see-' ing goes on about us? Can we. ■ destroy the image of America as a land of free peoples and' equal opportunity? Can we argue •" about the rights of all citizens--- to vote and have housing and ' education on an equal basis? Can - we enjoy the luxury of strikes ' and production stoppages at a time when om: economy must ex pand to give us momentum and power? Ike in Pakistan, Ike in India,' Ike in Africa—poses a question the real one. What do we think? SCHOOL And Your Child By John Corey Scientists are made not born. The sooner they start on their way the better. Elementary school educators realize this and efforts to teach scientific concepts and principles through experiments and other activities begin as early as the 1st grade, explains Dr. David Middleton of Appalachian State Teachers College. Professor Middleton conducts workshops in elementary science for teachers wanting to improve their instructional skills at var ious localities in the state where his services are requested. Actually few children are ex pected to become scientists, says Dr. Middleton. The important re ward from science study is that it molds young minds toward the scientific thinking way of doing and understanding things. Scientific thinking involves solving problems step by step, using first-hand simple materials, thinking clearly and logically, asking the right kind of ques tions, supporting conclusions by fact. Such a conditioned frame of mind helps a youngster in every activity he engages, emphasizes Dr. Middleton, from reading, arithmetic and spelling to just plain living. Yet science suffers as a field where many parents and some teachers lose confidence and are apt to say, as the child docs: “1 can’t.” Opportunities .for scientific learning, however, lie all around us, both at school and home.' Taking advantage of them can be plenty of fun. They’re found in the soil, weather aq^ gro\Y,ing plants; in the teakettle that Imilvthfl steam engine that puffs its cloud of smoke, the egg beater witj(i its interlocking gears, the ai^lane zooning overhead, the keesaw on,^ the playground, the rabbit in the ^ pen. Children inevitably ask about the “why’s” and “how’s” of these things. When they do, elemen tary teachers and parents when possible should sidestep text- bookish explanations and set up, simple experiments. -Children find experimentation delightful, states Dr Middleton. A simple experiment, for in stance, to answer the commocr question from where rain conibc, Would be to boil Wafer and Ibt^; the youngsters see the steam ri^-; and the water evaporate. hold a piece of glass over thw steam and see the water con dense. This makes more understand able the concept that water eva porates under certain conditions. And once established, the con cept can be built upon. Then children can see why clothes dry and mud puddles disappear. From this they progress to un derstand that water also evapor-, ates from ponds, streams and oceans. Then they understand the water cycle. And finally^ some understanding of weatherilY Yes, elementary folk can havp fun with science and most Im-^ portant learn more about scientie': Editor’s note: Those having questions concerning any aspect s of education are invited to send inquiries to SCHOOL AND YOUR CHILD, ASTC, Boone, A Start, at Least f- V -Vyf. W-WEAPONSt TPUTY