The NEW BERN PUBLISHED WEEKLY ‘■2' ▼HE HEART OP '•4 NORTH ■'^r/ -Oor. ' ;r* ^0 VOLUME 15 NEW BERN, N. C. 28560, FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1972 NUMBER 5 Yesterday was when a bottle warmer was just the thing when it came to serving Junior his formula feeding, but it took a boiling poUticai pot to assure him of extra special affection. Tliere’s been no change in the pattern. Office seekers currently on the prowl are unanimously anxious to Mss any infant in sight, poMng a greater menace to defensd^ babies thana bad case of diaper rash. Good or bad, young or (dd, fat (x: sMnqy, a pmtician develops an overwhelming love for children the moment be throws his hat in the ring. Nothing shmrt of chicken pox will make him keep his distance. Naturally, any candidate would rather cuddle a freshly scrubbed Md who is right out of the tub, rather than a brat who has just come up for air out of an ice cream cone that is inevitably chocolate. And of course it is easier to muster enthusiasm if the child’s nose isn’t overdue f(xr attention, or his bottmn wetter than an ocean iiner at the far end of a six-day cruise. Such favorable conditions are rare. Be that as it may, in New Bern and every other city, town and hamiet in America, a lap youngun would have to look worse than Frankenstein’s monster to get the brush off. That is, if either parent is around. A toddler is safest if he is alone, when the office seeker spies him. A politician doesn’t waste much time on a child who isn’t accompanied by an adult. The exceptions are recognized offspring of a known registered voter. To criticize New Bern and Craven County candidates for indidging in this sort of cam paigning might be proper, but hardly realistic. You don’t win in politics by passing up any gimmick avaiiabie, in the stress of battle. Kissing babies too young to protest or protect themselves is just like slipping a quarter to a panhandling drunk, in the h(^ that he’ll be momentarily sober on dection day. It’s all part of the business. If it disqualified a man for , George Washington, Abe Lincoln, and a lot of other guys of more recent vintage never would have gotten their pictures on postage stamps and l^al cwrency. Maybe there’s a guardian angel or a good fairy, up there in the sky, shielding the young and innocent. To our knowledge, no bal^ has every contracted measles, mumps, or even the itch firom a cardwing candidate. lUs we can apiMreciate. Less understandable is the kind of good fairy who bothers to protect the politicians from disease in much the same manner. it be that office sedcers are blessed with built-in inununity? What plagues North Carolina’s canmdates on the state level, as May 6 ap proaches, is the strong evidence (Continued on page 8) THE WAY IT WAS—Independence Day conies and goes now, without so much as a i^ple of ex« cUement. No parades, no fireworks, no bands, no racing, and no patriotic speeches to set hearts to pounding and spines to tingling mi the Glorious Fourth. Except fnr young folks heading for the beach, and old folks staying oH crowded highways, you*d swear it is Just any old day. To give you a rare glimpse how it used to be, in 1901, we bring you this picture of pretty New Bern i^ls and starchily-cessed small boys, perched on a fire wagon. We feel sure that one of our dear friends, Mattie Turnbull, now past 90, is included In the smiling group, and maybe she can identify the others.—Photo from Albert D. Brooks Collection.