(lit* Jfitnnkiin nttit ?hr Migltlnnits JKattfruatt Entered at Poet Office, Franklin, N. C.. as second class matter Published every Thursday by The Franklin Press Franklin. N. C. Telephone 34 JONE8 Editor I 8. SLOAN Business Manager J. P BRADY News Editor MISS BETTY LOU POUTS Office Manager OA&L P CABE Mechsntoal Superintendent PRANK A. 8TABRETTE Shop Superintendent OA VXD H 8UTTON Stereotyper CHARLES E WffiTTIN OTON Plfisfiisn SUBSCRIPTION RATE8 Outside Macon Couwtt Insxbs Macon Couwtt One Tear $3.00 One Tear ?1J0 Six Months . . . 1.73 SU Months 1.73 Three Months 100 Three Months 100 We Call It Freedom (Excerpts from a talk by the editor to the Ahoskie, N. C. Rotary Club, March II.) Secrecy in the conduct of public affairs is just one phase of the purely negative side of a big ques tion. The real issue in America today is the thing we call freedom. We in North Carolina should be peculiarly in terested in freedom, because North Carolina has an extraordinary tradition of freedom. It was North Carolinians (and South Carolin ians), many of them back- woodsmen who weren't even enlisted in the army, who gathered at Kings Mountain, and there broke the back of Toryism, and turned the tide of the American Revolution. It was North Carolina (along with Rhode Is land) that refused to ratify the Constitution of the United States, until the first ten amendments, which we know as the Bill of Rights, had actually been written into the Constitution. And it was North Carolinians, remembering the tyrannical rule of some of the Colonial governors, who carefully limited the power of their executive. They refused to give him the power to veto legis lation. North Carolina still is unique in that respect. In the federal government, and in the government * of each of the other 47 states, the chief executive may veto a piece of legislation, may force a second look at it, a reconsideration of it, by the legisla tors, who then can enact it only by a vote greater than a bare majority. This executive power of veto also has the effect of forcefully calling public at tention to a piece, of doubtful legislation. But in North Carolina there is no such check on the legis lative branch; in this state, when the two houses of the General Assembly approve a bill, it becomes ' law. For that reason, legislative secrecy, always V?ad, obviously is more dangerous in North Caro lina than anywhere else in this country. The freedoms those early North Carolinians de manded he written into the Constitution ? free dom of religion, of speech and the press, and of as sembly ; freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures ; and the right to a fair trial by a jury ? are fundamental. But today there is a disturbingly large body of evidence that these basic freedoms are in danger. The point can be made without referring to Sen ator McCarthy and his methods. Aren't our basic freedoms in danger when an other United States senator, hiding behind his Con gressional immunity, can publicly make preposter ous charges, without a shred of evidence, against a man like Karl Warren? Walter Lippmann, one of the most intelligent, one of the most careful and re sponsible, one of the most scholarly commentators in the world today, points out that Senator Lan ger's charges against Warren were unsupported and unexamined. Yet seven of the ten charges, made publicly, if they were proved would call for prison terms. Lippmann commented : "We have gone as far as we can go without en dangering profoundly the peace and order of this country. . . . This is an intolerable outrage. It violates the first principles of our law. . . . This lawlessness on the part of a senator is a threat against the power of the law to protect the liber ties of our people." And remember? it was only Karl Warren's rep utation and stature that kept the charges from harming him ; a lesser man would have been de stroyed. Aren't our basic freedoms in -danger when the United States government seriously considers legal izing what it already is doing without legal author ity?wire tapping? For' if wire tapping is not an invasion of the freedom from unres^onable searches and seizures, without a warrant, what would con stitute such an invasion? I Aren't our basic freedoms in danger when there # is plainly to be seen a growing trend among Amer icans to spy on their neighbors, and report every conceivably suspicious word or deed to the F.B.I. ? Does that sound like America ? or Soviet Russia? Aren't our basic freedoms in danger when you and I ? plain, average citizens ? find ourselves stop ping to think, l>efore we voice an opinion, if that opinion by any stretch of the imagination could be interpreted by someone as subversive? Ask your self: "Do I think and speak with as complete free dom as 1 did ten years ago?" And if you are in doubt about the answer, ask yourself this question: "Would I be as quick today, as I would have been back in 1944, to insist a Communist on trial be given all his Constitutional rights?" Would you not hesitate for fear of what someone might say about you? And what is perhaps the greatest danger of all is the fact we are becoming accustomed to these things, coming to accept them. Why are some of us .so frantic in our search for Communists, real and imagined? Why are so many Americans ready to toss overboard the safeguards that are basic in the American tradition of free dom? There is an ancient Anglo-Saxon axiom that it is better that nine guilty men go free than one innocent suffer. Why are we reversing that ax iom today? Why do so few of u$ .stop to ask our selves: What shall it profit America to win the contest with Soviet Russia, if, in so doing, we lose the one vital thing that differentiates America from Russia? Isn't it because we are afraid? afraid of the mili tary might of Soviet Russia? afraid of her .spies? afraid, most of all, of Communist ideas? t And isn't our fear, in the last analysis, a confes sion that we have last faith in America ? that we are afraid the American tradition and the American way and the American system are too weak to stand up against Communism? * * * This American freedom of ours is indivisible. If we surrender any one of these basic rights, we shall soon lose the others. How long, for example, do you think we would keep the other freedoms if freedom of religion were taken away ? for democracy basically is a religious concept. How long would we keep the others ? and how much would they mean? ? if we lost freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures^ and the right to a fair trial bv a jufv? And how long would the other freedoms last, once we had lost freedom of speech and of the press? Without those two, we not only could not vote intelligently, on candidates and policies ? in our ignorance, we could and almost certainly would be persuaded to vote away ? to legally abolish ? those other freedoms?without knowing what we did. ... It has happened in other countries. What do YOU have at stake in freedom of the press, you business men, you farmers, you profes sional men? I suggest to you that that freedom ? the freedom of information, and of the press to disseminate it ? is the freedom that in a very special way under girds and makes possible all the others. 1 suggest that your stake in a free press is far, far greater than that of newspapermen. For if freedom of the press were wiped out, all we would lose, as news papermen, would be our businesses ? and there are other businesses. But you, as citizens, would lose your freedom ? and there is no substitute for that ! ? * * What I have been trying to say is this: Our basic freedoms are in jeopardy today. Our freedom is indivisible ; if we lose one, we lose all. Freedom of the press, is the weapon with which you, as citizens, can protect the others. And that freedom is endangered bv secrecy: it is but a step from one to the other. Finally, the problem is not one for the press alone, but for all good citizens. Others' Opinions SIMILAR (McDowell News i The merchant who doesn't advertise has nothing on the man In Jail. He isn't doing anything either. CENSORS AND SHAKESPEARE (Washington Post) Since Eve's day we have known that censors stir more inter est in the forbidden f.ruit than all the world's press agents combined. But the thought has seldom been so well expressed as by Henry Percy Boynton in a letter to the editor of the Atlantic Monthly. Mr. Boynton's father owned many sets of Shakespeare and could recite many scenes from memory. "I once asked him about the background of his Shakespearean interest," Mr. Boynton wrote. "He answered that at Oberlln College, In his day, reading of Shakespeare was strictly pro hibited, as tending to Incline the youthful mind toward the stage and Its Iniquities. The result was that he departed from college knowing most of Shakespeare's plays by heart." WHISTLE vs. HORN (Winston-Salem Journal) News that two more railroads have abandoned the honking horns of diesel-electric locomotives and have re-lnstalled other warning devices .recalls that year before last the Southern Rail way started to substituting the old type of whistle for the blast of the new locomotive horns. Southern has experimented with several types of whistles and has adopted one which sounds much more like the traditional whistle of the steam engine. Changes are being made from the horns to whistles for two reasons: 1. The loud horns grate on peoples' nerves, so people say. 2. Yet, contradictorily, the horns don't have the carrying power that the old-style whistle possessed. You could hear the shriek of the whistle for miles. That means better warning for motorists, pedestrians and cows on the track. Perhaps psychologists could profitably explore the real rea sons why some people prefer the whistle to the ham. Maybe Its a yearning for traditions, reluctance to part with the mem ories of long ago. About the only thing left of the old wood burning locpmotlve, with billowing puffs of smoke from the stack and steam hissing and sizzling from the boiler, is the whistle. And that was lost at first and had to be retrieved from the dleselizars. Perhaps in another generation people will forget their nostalgia for whistles and then the railroads can experiment purely on the basis of the most appropriate sounds for warning purposes. It is difficult to accept the premise that the shriek of a whistle actually is preferable to the honk of a horn. If that were so, we would find that automobile manufacturers would find it expedient to Install whistles rather than horns on new cars. It must be remembered that the car can become accustomed to almost any kind of noise. In railroad towns, the jingle, the rumble, the roar and the shriek of locomotives don't bother people. In fact, such noises are music. Tfte story is told that one man, who lived near the place where a fast passenger train passed each night at 2:36 a. m. and sounded the whistle as it roared down the tracks, was able to sleep right through all the noise. But one night the train was late. No shrieking. No lumbering. The man sat upright in bed and broke the sil ence. He said, "What was that?" The whole difference between construction and creation is exactly this: That a thing constructed can only be loved after it is constructed; but a thing created is loved before it exists. ? Gilbert K. Chesterson. Babbl in" About ? Chain Letter 'N Courting ? ? J. P. Brady Boy! the things that wind up ' on a newsman's desk . . . reams i and reams of literature, pub- i iicity, and just plain hokum 1 from all over the world. Most of it is given a hasty once-over (happened to toss a check in , the wastebasket one time) and promptly pitched into the of- , fice catch-all, good ol* FILE 13 (64 cent word for wastebasket). While pouring over this kind of stuff this week, I happened^, across a letter, addressed to me, and mailed in Franklin. At first glance it seemed destined for a just and timely death in FILE 13 ? but wait! Let's look at this again, we say to ourselves. It's a chain letter, but un doubtedly one of the most un usual and surely the most unique I have ever encountered. Now, I'm just as gullible as the next person when it comes to a chain letter, and, although they are in violation of the law, I have never been able to resist one since, when in college, I was fortunate enough to receive 1,204 pairs of ladles panties all silk yet. I never did find out who put me in the chain. Come to think of it, I never did ques tion it. After all, 1,204 pairs of panties weren't to be sneezed at back in the post-war years and I rolled along on a wave of popularity for several weeks. But back to this new chain letter. Here 'tis: Dear Friend: This chain letter was started by a man like yourself, in the hope that it might bring relief and happiness to tired business men. Unlike most chain letters, this does not cost anything. Simply send a copy of this letter to 5 of your businessmen friends who are equally tired. Then, bundle up your wife and send her to the man whose name is at the top of the list, and add your name to the bottom of it. When your name comes to the top of the list, you will receive 16,478 women ? some of them will be dandies. HAVE FAITH . . DO NOT BREAK THE CHAIN. One man broke the chain and got his old lady back. Sincerely, A Tired Businessman P. S. As of this writing, a friend of mine received 183 women. They buried him yester iay and everyone said he had a smile on his face for the first time in years. Well, that's it . . . and if any one can come up with one bet ter I would like to see it. Unfortunately though, I must break the chain. I checked with the income tax boys; 16,478 women can't be listed as dependents. * * ? To use a little of this atomic age lingo, things were "reai gone and crazy" over at Frank lin High School this past week The young ladies over then have been indulging in some brand of "reverse courting" They call it "Twlrp Season' (what ever that is) and ] frankly watched with moutt ajar. Now get this: the girls weri asking the boys far dates; wen promising to cover the cost o: sjiid dates; were opening door for the smug males; and sorn< girls even carried their boj friend's books to and fron school. Naturally I was intrigued b; the idea. "Times do change, don't they?' I remarked to Principal Ralpl L. Smith. A look of futility and a re signed shrug of his shoulder gave me the answer. Anyone for chess?? ? * * Three Franklin men recentl; had to leave town to land t big string of fish, but their trl] to Lake Placid, Fla., seems t< have been well worth thi trouble. These intrepid anglers weri R. Roy Cunningham, Bol Oalnes, and Walter Gibson They were guests of Law.renci Simmons, the former residen of the Holly Springs Commun ity, at Lake Placid. All of them hooked some nlci flippers, but for the sake o eternal peace, I've got to tel that Roy hooked and landed ; seven-pound big mouth bass. If you've got time to drop ii and wet a hook verbally witt Roy in the Main Street ston he frequents (between cups o coffee), he'll give you all thi glory details of his do-or-dli battle with the bass. News Making As It Looks To A Maconite ? By BOB SLOAN I The other day I heard a man comment that signing your name could be either the most pleasant or unpleasant thing that you do. If you are endors ing a check payable to you, h?y4j said, it was the most pleasant, but if you were signing a check for some one else it was the most unpleasant. I said that I felt that there was one exception at least to that. When you sign the check to pay your Income tax it should be listed among your most pleasant duties. Certainly you get more for your tax money than any other money you spend ? and I think that applies whether you have a Democratic or Republican administration ! ' Also it is one of the times that you have the chance to take an active part in the government we live under ? with all Its faults the greatest government on earth. No other government is doing as good a job of render ing service to its people and we should all feel proud to have a part in its support. I know that it is fashionable to cuss the government and to consider it some antagonistic body that we are in a constant struggle with, but I don't be lieve that deep down inside many people feel that way de spite the many propaganda forces that try to sell that line. THIS IS OUR GOVERNMENT. Our forefathers fought that we might be a part of It. When we regard it in another light I am reminded of a man who is in a struggle with his own con scious. Such actions bring up the sight, for example of a man demanding better schools, bet ter roads, better police protec tion, better public health serv Continued On Fage Eight Do You Remember? (Looking backward through the files of The Press) 50 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK Franklin is now connected with Waynesville by telephone, the Waynesville Telephone Company having completed connections last week. The Nantahala Company sent a case of locust pins of their manufacture to Raleigh last Monday to go with the North Carolina Exhibit to the St. Louis Fair. | There was an old time quilt ing at Mrs. Susie Leach's last Friday. It was the occasion of Mrs. L's fifty-ninth birthday. None were invited except elder ly ladies. They met and stitch ? ed and quilted, and talked of settlement affairs, and ate a ? fine dinner. It was a reminder > of "ye olden times". We learn that Mr. E. D. Franks has been appointed ? carrier on the Rural Free De I livery route to commence April ? 1st. , 25 TEARS AGO \ The town board last week ad vertised for bids for the town ? hall to be erected on the city's [ lot just north of the Baptist i church. The hall will be 38 by 70 feet and will face on Iotla , street. ? Airplane models are tested in ' a wind tunnel. They might get , a dandy tryout in the N. C. ? senate chamber. i The first week in April has been suggested as Clean-Up f Week. If the citizens of Frank lin have any pride In the town ? they will cooperate with all j concerned In making Franklin spotless. It Is understood th*t the s county commissioners have as signed the ladies' rest room at the court house to the county agent for an office. The fact y that Mr. Sloan is single prob j ably had nothing to do with j this assignment. 3 10 YEARS AGO g Mr. James L. Young, of Hick ory Knoll, who has been a e faithful Sunday School superin 3 tendent of Hickory Knoll '? church, left last Friday for a J six-months' vacation with his 1 brother, John, in the state of " Washington. e Rev. and Mrs. J. F. March f man, Mrs. Sam Gibson, Mrs. F. j E. Brown and Miss Jarvis Led j ford, spent three days last week in Charlotte attending the ^ H.M.U. Convention. l Members of the Christian En- / e deavor recently enjoyed a pic f nlc supper and song service on b Sunset Rocks, with the Rev. L b H. Smith as program leader. (Highlands Highlights).