Qiht Iflntttklnt press MigJtlanits Jllarxmian Entered at Post Office. Franklin. N. C., as second claaa matter Published every Thursday by The Franklin Press Franklin, N. C. Telephone 24 I JONES Editor BOB 8. SLOAN Business Manager J. P. BRADY News Editor MBS. ALLEN SILER Society Editor and Office Manager CARL P. CABE Mechanical Superintendent FRANK A. STARR ETTE Shop Superintendent DAVID H. SUTTON CHARLES E. WH11T1NOTON SUBSCRIPTION RATES Our=s Macon County Iran Macon County One Tear $3 .00 One Tear *2.50 ?u Months ........ 175 8U Month. 1.7S Three Months 1.00 Three Months 1.00 JUNE 16, 1955 Our Centennial 'Light, Stranger To Franklin's visitors, here for the observance of this community's Centennial ? WELCOME! In the mountain idiom of saddle-bag days, " 'Light, stranger, and come in !" As you join us in voicing our admiration and our gratitude to those hardy souls of another day who laid such sure foundations for the Franklin of to day, as we celebrate the first hundred years of municipal progress, we trust you will feel what we know is present ? a welcome in the very at mosphere. Thus words may be superfluous. We say them, though, to make s.ure that those who are here for the first time know that it adds a lot to our pleas ure to have them participate in our festivities. Those who have been here before and so have ex perienced mountain hospitality must know it al ready. As for our kinsmen and friends who have wandered away, but have come back home for the big event.it is as unnecessary for us to say the word "welcome" as it would be for a mother as she greets a long-gone son with hu^s and kisses." To all of you, from first-time quests to cousins and former neighbors ? It makes us happy to have you here. We hope you will tarry. And when the time comes that you must go, we shall bid you goodbye with the earnest hope you will come back again ? soon and often ! A Success Already Will the weather, the three days of Franklin's Centennial celebration, be goodv or bad? Will the crowds be large or small? Will the program be an outstanding success or a flop? As this is written, nobody knows the answers to those questions. But even if the weather should be bad and the crowds small and the program disjointed, in two respects the celebration is a success already. It is a success, first of all, because of the way it has demonstrated the unity of the people of this county. This is a Franklin celebration: the county observed its centennial 25 years ago. But Franklin and Macon County are a unit, a single indivisible whole. So the people of the entire county were invited to take part ? and how thev have respond ed ! The cordiality of the invitation and the spirit in which it has been accepted prove, once and for all, not merely that town and country are interde pendent, with identical interests, but that both the people inside the corporate limits and those on the farm have the good sense to recognize that truth. And the celebration is a success already because it is certain to. be authentic. A few false notes, perhaps, have crept in (that is almost inevitable in a project of this magnitude) : on the whole, though, it will have an unmistakable Franklin color and flavor, because it grow- out of Franklin's roots. Those in charge chose the much harder, but far truer, course when they ruled out professional direction, on the- sensible theory that emphasis should be put on the spirit of Franklin, on its lore and traditions, rather than exterior finish. So if the celebration should prove a bit amateur ish, that is because it is home-made: and if it ap pears home-made, that is because we were deter mined, from the outset, that it should not be just another centennial celebration, exactly like scores Thi* republic was not established by cowards; and cowards will not preserve It. ? Elmer Davis. of others, but something distinctively Franklin-ish. (What, indeed, could be more characteristic of this * community than that very determination!) 'Freedom of Religion Day ' It was a happy thought to follow the three days' celebration of Franklin's Centennial with "Free dom of Religion Day" on Sunday. A happy thought not merely because it is pecu liarly appropiate here, since mountain people al ways have so fiercely guarded their right to per sonal independence. It was a happy thought, too, because we are celebrating, among other things, progress through freedom. And freedom of religion is basic to all our other American freedoms. Those other freedoms, in fact, themselves have a religious background: they grow out of the con viction that every man has the inalienable right to the freedom to develop to the full all that his Creator put within him. And how long would our other freedoms last, once a man's right to worship God in his own way, at. his. own time ? or even at no time! ? were lost? When the Bill of Rights was written, it was no accident that the very first freedom it guaranteed was that of religion. And should we, in this diffi cult atomic age, let go of that freedom, it will be no accident that we lose all the others. Others' Opinions BIG DOIN'S OVER IN MACON (Sylva Herald! Those "bearded men" who have been slipping over the line from Macon into Jackson for the past few weeks remind us of the summer of 1951 when Jackson County men went all-out in growing beards for our centennial celebration, and remind us that next week, June 16, 17 and 18 will be Red Letter Days for Franklin, our neighbor town, as it observes its 100th an niversary with some mighty big "Doin's". The three-day pro gram of fun and recreation is designed to bring back mem ories of the past and to mark 100 years of steady progress and development by this, one of Western North Carolina's most progressive communities. Among the hundreds of visitors who will enjoy the occasion with the people of Franklin and Macon County, are expected several dignitaries, including Governor Luther Hodges, Senator Kerr Scott and Congressman George A. Shuford. Whatever success the celebration may have, and we expect it to be a big success, Franklin people can take much pride because of the fact that they have not followed the -plan of most towns and counties in putting on a celebration. No out side people have been employed to help stage the centennial ... it has been planned by local people and everything about it will be purely Franklin and Macon County. The people of Jackson are much interested in their program and we wish them much success in their big undertaking. MR. EDISON FORGETS (Wall Street Journal) The life of Thomas Edison, probably due to his intense powers of concentration, is dotted with stories of his absent mindedness. The classic of the collection, however, has to do with the afternoon he stepped down from his train at the familiar Orange, N. J., station. And the station manager, who'd had great experiences with the inventive genius, said: "Welcome home again, Mr. Edison. Say, you didn't leave any thing on the train, did you?" "Why, I don't think so," replied Edison, looking about vague ly and patting his pockets. At that moment his eyes rested on a window of the stopped train. Mrs. Edison, his bride of a fortnight, whom he was bringing home from their honey moon, was sitting there dejectedly. QUOTE FROM LINCOLN (Bennett Cerf in Saturday Review) Having just come from Lincoln country, the Great Emanici pator was very much in my mind, and I was delighted when MATTER FOR PARENTS7 I somebody told a story about him (credited to author Robert Yoder) that I never had heard before. Mr. Lincoln had bought a seat for a show In Springfield, and arrived just as the curtain rose. His eyes riveted on the stage, he thoughtlessly placed his tall silk hat on the seat next to him, open end up. Entered a very stout lady, who sank Into the empty seat. There was a loud crunch, and she jump up with a cry of fright. Mr. Lincoln ruefully rescued his hat, which now looked like a black silk pancake. "Madam," he de clared softly, "I could have told you my hat wouldn't fit you before you tried it on." ACCENTUATE THE POSITIVE (West Bend, Wise., News) Clear-thinking people have long since becojne aware of the evils of Communism and the dangers of its attendant fellow travelers. However, we sometimes seem to forget ? or fail to emphasize ? those advantages which we have as a free people. We just accept them as we do our dally bread, our pay checks and our new automobiles. But that attitude can harm us greatly. We must remember that all our hard-won freedoms are here for us to enjoy because sometime, somewhere, men fought , and died for them. They died in the early wilderness days while setting up colonies when they were attacked by natives. They died in battle to win freedom for themselves and not (be slaves to a dominating overlord. And then, for generations, these hard-won freedoms were consolidated, defended against those who would take them away, and preserved for those still to come. STRICTLY PERSONAL By WEIMAR JONES Like any milestone that sharply marks the close of a period of time, the Franklin Centennial observance stirs memories. A hundred years! ? how brief a space, as history meas ures time! how vast a period, in terms of change! And since pictures of events and people and experiences are etched most deeply on memory when there is contrast, especi ally the contrast brought about by change, memories today are not for the old only; for this has been a century character ized by change, by a change that has accelerated its pace, year by year; so that, whether one be nine or ninety, he can not look back without being struck by the change-contrasts of this hurrying age. Memories, too, whether of old or young, are likely to grow a bit confused . . . like some thing seen in a dream. For so vivid are the pictures drawn from stories told us as chil dren, by parents, grandparents, or great uncles or aunts, it is easy to delude ourselves into believing that some incident at Seven Pines or in the Argonne, a conversation with an Indian chief in Franklin, the terror of the community when typhoid swept the area, leaving scores of new-made graves ... it is easy to delude ourselves into believing these things were our own experiences. So, strangely intermingled, are a picture of livery stables and hoss traders and one of the way the wind filled out that boy's white shirt as he