The Transylvania Times Published Every Thursday By TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY Brevard, N. C. THE NEWS THE TIMES Estab. 1896 Estab. 1931 Consolidated 1932 Entered as second class matter, October 29, 1931, at the Post Office in Brevard, N. C., under the Act of March 3, 1879. ED M. ANDERSON... JOHN I. ANDERSON. HENRY HENDERSON IRA B. ARMFIELD_ FRANCES WALKER.. _Publisher _Editor _Mech. Supt. Business Manager _Ass’t Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES PER YEAR In the County, $2.50. Out of the County, $3.00 . MEMBER NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION National Advertising Representative Newspaper Advertising Service Chicago San Francisco New York PRIZES AWARDED TO THE TIMES First place, general excellence, North Car olina Press Association in 1942, -1944 and 1946. Second place, general excellence, Na tional Editorial Association, 1943; second place, best editorial. National Editorial Association, 1946. Third place, best editorial. North Carolina Press Association, 1946. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1948 Democrats Should Compromise The Dixiecrats, it now appears, expect ed and claimed too much. They spoke with assurance of getting enough electoral votes to throw the election of the President in to the house of representatives, where they hoped to exercise the balance of [tow er. But Mr. Truman upset their calculations. Governor Thurmond made a vigorous cam paign, but carried only four states. His showing was so disappointing to his fol lowers that the Dixiecrat movement may vanish. President Truman is said not to feel an imosity toward the Southern rebels and al ready efforts are being made to reestab lish the national Democratic party in South "Carolina and possibly other states that supported Mr. Thurmond. His party is be ing accused of “betraying” the national ; panfry and in South Carolina Chairman Mc 'Grath is endeavoring to reorganize the Democratic party around a group of men who did not go along with the Dixiecrats. The outcome of the election makes it clear that a compromise on the civil rights issue is about the best the South can hope for. The Pickens Sentinel, we read, has favored that policy from the beginning and it says with considerable force: “The South refused any kind of com promise on African slavery and by its wil ful attitude suffered untold anguish and financial loss trying to justify an issue which was practical in a sense but morally wrong.” The President, the Pickens editor con tinues, “has essential justice on his side” and remarks that “ours is a defensive jus tification based on practicality and local necessity.” The Pickens editor contends that South Carolina citizens can yield gracefully on the poll-tax and anti-lynching proposals and with regard to the F.E.P.C. he says that if it has teeth in it, it will prove dis tasteful to Yankee and Dixiecrat alike while if it lacks them, “it will not be in tolerable.” Much depends, it might be pointed out in this connection, on the man ner in which any F.E.P.C. law adopted is interpreted and enforced. As to segregation, Editor Wyatt remarks that “laws won't take care of that any way,” and he goes on to say: “Honor, self-respect and common hu manity, applied to the tendency of like social groups to flock together will solve it. Even Truman does not want to do any more. Leaving out oi consideration Henry Wal lace and his pinks and reds, it might be ob served that the national Democratic lead ership has elements to placate other than the Dixiecrats. There are a host of people in the south who approved of the states rights program, but who would not bolt the party. That being true, it would ap pear that it is incumbent on Mr. McGrath to take the initiative in working out a com promise that would not only placate the Dixiecrats but would at the same time over come the objections of these sympathizers. It is to be seriously questioned that any progress can be made in this direction by dickering with leaders of a minority fac tion as Mr. McGrath is doing in South Car olina. True he can, and he may, set up an organization to represeht the national par ty, but until there is a radical change in sentiment it will not represent the Democ racy of the state. Given tact and magnanimity on the part of national Democratic leaders and a will ingness on the part of the President to modify the more obnoxious features of his civil rights program, there is a strong like lihood that the South can ber won back to its traditional allegiance. If, on the other hand, Democratic chieftains follow a nar row and vindictive policy, it is virtually certain that a few years hence the party will face another insurrection which may go much farther than the revolt led by Governor Thurmond. More Text Books Needed In a report to the Governor concerning the findings of the State Education Com mission has'been called to the fact that North Carolina children are not getting enough textbooks and other study materi als and ample funds for these should be provided immediately, according to the re port of the State Education Commission. The commission found a “serious lack of materials” in both elementary and high schools and said that “the condition is ex treme in the areas of audio-visual facili ties, science and health materials, and ma terials for experiences in practical and fine arts. Although printed materials are among the most important tools of the teacher, the inadequacies in these materi als present significant problems for the school program. The supply of basal text books, supplementary textbooks, periodi cals, and other printed materials is inade quate in more than half the schools.” Several studies in this connection were made by the commission. Some 11,000 teachers were asked the question, “Are teaching supplies adequate?” Over 3900 teachers answered “No.” The answers of principals were in about the same ratio. Responses from one hundred county and city superintendents to a questionnaire showed that the average expenditure per pupil for supplies for the year 1946-1947, exclusive of textbooks, was 75 cents. These superintendents estimated that an everage per pupil amount necessary annually for providing an adequate supply of materials is, at present prices, not less than $7.50. Praise For The Work Horse The results of a nationwide survey of public opinion in respect to the railroads have just been published. And they show that the people, by and large, have a pret ty sound idea of the importance of our ba sic medium of transportation. First of all, the poll indicates, the coun try is overwhelmingly in favor of private operation of the industry. Only 13 per cent of those questioned favored govern ment ownership. Seventy per cent said they considered the rails to be the transportation system most vital to carrying on the business of the country. Of those who knew that rail road freight rates have been increased re cently, more than two-thirds felt that the increases were justified. A growing preference for rail travel ov er other means was also expressed, on the grounds of safety, spaciousness, and free dom of movement. The high regard in which the public holds our railroad system certainly isn’t a result of accident. It is a tribute to mag nificent performance by the industry, of ten under conditions of the greatest dif ficulty. The lines have made every freight car and every passenger train perform peak service. They are putting new and better equipment into duty as fast as th.e manufacturers can deliver it. They are the tireless work horse that keeps the Ameri can economy going. Farmers Urged To Vote Thursday, Dec. 2, is election day for farmers regarding the PM A committee men. We urge all farmers to go to the vot ing place in their townships and cast their votes for the men, whom they believe will best help them in the better farm prac tices carried out under the auspices of the PMA. The farm improvement program is an important one. And the degree of effect iveness in which it is carried out not only depends upon the farmers themselves, but the committeemen and others in the ad ministration of the work. We urge all farmers to register their interest by voting. — OLD CHINA "HAND" >• ^ V fu.SAlt>\ 'TOCHINA ) >wi COl?RUPTiO> “These Days” : > By George E. p Sokolsky THE “LIBERALS” Rogers C. Dunn o£ the Dunn Survey makes an interesting joint: “Self-styled ‘liberals’ in the Re publican Party are obviously blind to the fact that the more they succeed in making the Republican party ‘liberal,’ the more liberal, or leftist, the New Deal is forced to , go.” That has now happened in three j campaigns. The Republican party I lias been moving toward what is called “liberalism,” by which is j meant timeliness as to policy based I upon the probabilities of popular ity; this means uncertainty and flexibility as to principle. The Democratic party, on the other hand, has continued an inner strug gle which began with William Jen nings Bryan, the struggle between populism and conservatism. The Democrats have steadily been mov ing in the direction of what in Europe is called Social Democracy. The third party in the United States is the Communist party, by whatever name it may momentar ily be called. Across this ideological simpli fication run the complexities of American life which are inevitable in a free society. In a word, men do not fit rigid categories. Such persons as Ches-' ter Bowles and Paul Porter would anywhere else in this world be regarded as Socialists; here they are only Socialists in certain phases or political expression; in others, they are actually conservative. The reason for this lack of clari fication is that most Americans in politics do not have a philosophic basis for action; they are generally opportunistic and take winning po j sitions. That is they “play politics,” as the phnfse goes; they are not ready to be martyrs to a cause. This was obvious in the last elect ion. When Dewey refused to defend the 80th Congress, the Taft-Hartley Act, and so on, he forced Truman to move closer to the Wallace pro j gram. Truman, who wanted a | fighting campaign “to give them hell.’’found that his principal op ponent would not fight back. This was sheer opportunism on all sides. Dewey felt that he could win by his pattern; Truman felt that he j could win by his pattern. But who I slood up for any principles in | volved in the election? The real danger in this oppor tunism lies in its leftward trend. II the Republicans continue to push the Democrats into Socialism, the gene r a 1 American population, which is conservative and capital | istic. will be without representa Wanted to Buy SCRAP IRON AND METAL Scrap Iron, per 100 _• $1.00 Cast Iron, per 100_$1.50 Mixed Scrap, per 100 .1.25 Junk Batteries, each 3.50 Get our prices on scrap metals. We always pay the top. Siniard’s AUTO PARTS Phone 337-W t'on altogether. Certainly on ba sic questions, Dewey and Truman i were closer than Truman can pos sibly be to such men as Chester Bowles and Paul Porter. Senator j Barkley is ideologically closer to i Senator Taft than he is to Sen- j ator Pepper. There is a falseness j in the alignments in both parties, j an inability to formulate princi- j pies and a lack of resistance to j leftward magnetism. This we need i to understand before the 81st Con- j gress gets to work. The word “liberal” has come to cover a multitude of confusions, j When one speaks of a Republican j liberal, precisely what is meant? ' Ilow does a Republican liberal j differ from a New Dealer? How do Senator Tobey and Senator Aiken differ from Senator Pepper and Senator Glen Taylor? In what | fundamental concepts are these I men different? Why should one! be a Democrat and the other a Republican? It would be interesting if these four men u'ere to write on paper, [ say, in something the size of this i column, each one’s philosophic j concept of American life. These men would prove to be close to each other, but all would be very far from, let us say, Senator Taft. On the other hand, such a man as 1 Senator George, a Democrat, would j not be far removed from Senator Taft. Unless the Republican Party can I formulate a definite and clear phil- i osophic program, it cannot return j to office. It has now failed five j times, four times because to the ' conservative voters it did not have ! enough to say. The last three elec-! tions were marked by Republican j abstention from voting. These Re-i publicans did not stay away from 1 the polls because they were “lazy” ■' or “overconfident.” They stayed away because they were dissatis fied with the position of their par ty, with its so-called “liberalism,” with its running on the heels of the New Deal in the direction of state socialism. When in Ohio, 300,000 vote for either Governor but cut both Presidential candi dates they indicate a distaste for their party’s national policy. The early Persians said “Happy New Year” by giving colored eggs, much as we now send gay New Year’s greetings. Designing and publishing a | Christmas card requires 15 months j and nearly 100 different processes, j -— -l When you think of prescriptions, | think of VARNER’S.—Adv. Enjoy Good Coffee? Or perhaps it is an enjoy aba luncheon or a full din nei you want. In any event, come to Galloway’s, where it : ! is always a pleasure to serve ! you. I Galloway's Cafe PETE BIKAS, Owner Brevard, N. C. ————■—--—— + The Everyday Counsellor By REV. HERBERT SPAUGH, D. D. 3' “Christ is our peace.” This in scription written in German has been painted in rude letters in German by someone on the bot tom of one of Berlin’s prize monu-1 ments. Travelers report finding it there, and say it was painted since the destruction of Berlin in the last war. This huge monument was one of Berlin’s prize exhibits. It was erect ea at tne con clusion of the Franco - Prus6ian War which brought defeat to France, and the beginning of the united German military empire. I have just exam-i ined a volume of] Stoddard’s lec-l lures published in 1897 in which the author describes Berlin as he saw it at that time. Writing of the city he says, “Mars, the god of war, seems to be the divinity most worshipped here.” Of Ber lin’s chief street “Unter Den Lin den.” he says that it is a “kind of Triumphal Way and suggests cour age. victory and conquest ... at every step the dullest cannot fail to comprehend that he is in a na tion of warriors. ‘Chief of all the fine memorials of war, which Prussia’s capitol contains, is the imposing Monu ment of Victory.” It is on this mon ument, now surrounded with all the rubble and destruction of war that this rude inscription stands, “Christ is our peace.” As I read Sloddard’is description of war like Berlin at the height of her power, and then read the description of those who have been there recent ly, the words of Jesus come to mind, “They that take the sword shall perish with the sword.” Almost 2,000 years ago St. Paul wrote: “He( (Christ) is our peace.” Now 2,000 years later an unknown writer inscribes it on one of the world’s greatest monuments to war. How difficult it is for us to learn the lesson that love is the most powerful force in the world, that the use of force begets its own destruction. The same St. Paul wrote, “Be not overcome of evil, but over come evil with good.” This is the divine pattern for conquest. It is the only one which will lastingly succeed in any struggle whether it be in the human heart or between the nations of the world. Christ mas proclaims Christ as the Prince of Peace. Is He the Prince of Peace in your heart? References: Matthew 26:52; Ephe sians 2:14; Romans 12:21. YOU'RE TELLING ME! -By WILLIAM R!TT Central Press Writer NEW YORK gendarmes report tPle arrest of a burglary suspect who claims he kept to a swiping schedule of eight hours a day. five days a week. He must have meant nights. Anyway, the guy was loyal to his own union—even if it did J have but one member. It must have a terrible strain | to pass up an unlocked door while on his lunch hour. U. S. tailors have selected Ike Eisenhower as No. 1 among the best-dressed men in the coun try. Gosh, and just a couple of years ago his clothes didn’t look any different than those of 10 million other Americans. Iloyt King’s theory of election results is that, maybe, the Repub licans were asleep at the switch. Food continues to be a chief problem of the Japanese. Could it be they’re suffering from Diet deficiency? A Northwestern university re search director ups and announces that it’s the high grade morons who make the best automobile drivers. Now let’s hear, again, how you’ve never had an accident. LET US DO YOUR JOB PRINTING Here’s when to get GENUINE PARTS and EXPERT SERVICE One thing you’ll like about the Ford Tractor . . . it’s simple in design and built right. Doesn't take much servicing. Yet when it needs something done here or there, it’s easy to do. For example, we can reline brakes in almost no time . . . don’t have to pull the axle. Trans mission, steering . . . everything is designed for efficient service. With this new Foru Tractor, you won’t need us often but when you do, you’ll like our work. We service all Ford Tractors, and Dearborn Farm Equip ment, with genuine parts. I Brittain Tractor Co. W. W. Brittain A. D. Brittain Copyright 1948, Dearborn Motors Corporation