j I UJi t Jfimnklin tyrts a aiti* ?1* t Migklaiiits JttnrjmiRit Entered at Post Office, Franklin. If. C.. u second elm matter Published every Thursday by The Franklin Press Franklin. N. C. Telephone 34 WEIMAR JONES Editor BOB 8. 3LOAN Business Manager J.P.BRADY News Editor MRS EDWARD CRAWFORD Office Manager CARL P. CABE Mechanical Superintendent FRANK A. 8TARRETTE Shop Superintendent DAVID H. SUTTON Stereo typer CHARLE8 E. WH1TT1NOTON Pressman SUBSCRIPTION RATES Outside Macon Countt Inside Macon County One Year $3.00 One Year $2.50 ?lz Months 1.79 81x Months 1.75 Three Months 1.00 Three Months 1.00 Strange Paradox Where does Senator McCarthy's strength lie? The vote in the U. S. Senate last week, when that body censured the Wisconsin senator, casts interesting light on the question. The crucial test came not on the censure motion itself, hut in an earlier vote on a substitute motion made by Senator Dirksen, of Illinois, a McCarthy supporter. Senator Dirksen's motion would have had the effect of clearing McCarthy of the charges against him. That motion was defeated, 66 to 21. An analysis of the roll call vote on the Dirksen motion shows that : 1. Voting against that motion were such conserva tives as Ferguson (R.-Mich.) and George (D.-Ga.) and such liberals as Morse (Ind.-Ore.) and Doug las (D.-Ill.) Thys the censure motion brought to gether conservatives and liberals of both parties. 2. The 66 senators who voted against McCarthy on the Dirksen motion come from 41 states. That is, opposition to McCarthy's ideas and methods, as expressed bv the senate vote, is widespread. 3. The only states from which there were no anti-McCarthy votes are Maryland, Idaho, North Dakota, Nebraska, Nevada, and Wisconsin (and in the case of Wisconsin, neither senator voted). With the exception of Maryland, all these states lie in one region ? the Midwest, 4. While there were pro-McCarthy votes from 16 states, 15 of the total of 21 senators who voted for McCarthy come from only 11 states ? Idaho (2 votes for McCarthy), North Dakota, Nebraska (2 votes), Nevada (2), Wyoming, Arizona, South Da kota, Kansas, Illinois, Indiana, and Iowa. All of those 11 states that furnished nearly three-fourths of the pro-McCarthy votes lie in the Midwest. 5. Of the 22 senators from those 11 states, 15, or nearly three fourths, cast pro-McCarthy votes. (And the figure really should he 16. because Sena tor Capehart, of Indiana, was "paired" in favor of McCarthy ? that is, he was absent and did not vote, but was recorded as favoring McCarthy.) If the senators' votes represent the sentiments of their constituents ? and senators stay in office by doing just that ? then it seems pretty clear that Senator McCarthy's strength i.s largely sectional, and that the section that gives him his strength is the Midwest. That presents a strange paradox. Because it is that same section in which isolationism has flour ished for half a century. And isolationism and mc carthyism arc in sharp conflict. Isolationism grows out of the conviction that America is the best of all lands; that it has the best people, the best ideas, the best government, the best economic system. Furthermore, your isola tionist would be among the first to say that the thing that has made it the best is its freedom. Mccarthvism ? and the senator is only the sym bol of a philosophy ? on the other hand, is a denial of all freedom. The McCarthvites are not the only Americans who recognize that there always have been spies and traitors and that todaV is no excep tion. The difference is that mccarthvism grows out of the conviction that the only way to have secttr .itv is to abolish freedom. S-D Day Most of us have had the experience of setting out, some one day or week or month, to see just how much we can do along a certain line. Usually we surprise even ourselves. Then, having; ,prove< to ourselves how well we can do, we have before us a reachable goal 1(1 shoot at ? and possibh pass ? in the future. That is the thought behind S-l) Day, next Wed nesdav (December 15). S-D Day has been suggest ed by the President's Action Committee for Traffii Safety, and it will be observed next Wednesday al over the United States. Of course every day should be Safe-Driving Day But the idea is if we will set out, just one day, to see how much we can do about the needless killing and maiming on streets and highways, we'll do so well we'll be challenged to keep on doing well on succeeding days. Goodness jcnows it's time we did sometihng about traffic accidents; because in last year's traffic acci dents, we Americans killed one person every 14 sec onds. And for every fatality, one man, woman or child was totally and permanently disabled. It's a national problem, of course. But whose job is it ? in the nation? The answer seems to be that the nation is made up of states, the states of coun ties. the counties of neighborhoods, and the neigh borhoods of individuals. Thus, boiled down, the re sponsibility is that of individual men and women ? of you and me. And the solution really is simple. It doesn't cost anything, and it isn't hard or complicated. All you and I need to do is : 1. Observe the letter and the spirit of all traffic regulations. 2. Be courteous to every driver and pedestrian ? just practice the (iolden Rule. 3. Give our full attention to driving and walking ? be as careful and considerate as we'd want the other fellow to be. Let's try it next Wednesday. Let's hope it will be a successful demonstration all over the nation. But let's prove we can eliminate traffic accidents here in Macon County. Xext Wednesday let's not have so much as a scraped fender ! '? / A Good Job North Carolinians have good reason to be proud of their Senator Sam J. Ervin, Jr. Senator Ervin, a member of the committee that recommended Senator McCarthy be censured, has handled himself well throughout the entire proceed ings. He had the courage to .stand up to McCarthy ? without losing his temper. He had the intelligence to state the censure vote issue clearly and simply ? without over-stating it. And he had the good sense to laugh at McCar thy ? without losing his dignity. ASK ME ANOTHER! ? How Many Can YOU Answtr? " Here's a game to test your family's knowledge of the facts about automobile accidents and, at the same time, familarize everyone with those facts. The quiz is distributed by the State Department of Motor Ve hicles and was adapted from a pamphlet issued by the Lum bermens Mutual Casualty Com pany. Check your answer; then turn to back page, secorid section, to see how many you got right. 1. What is the minimum safe distance, in dry weather, at which to follow another car? a. 10 feet for each 10 miles per hour b. l car length for each 10 miles per hour c. 20 feet d. 3 car lengths for each 10 miles per hour 2. What was the condition of the streets or roads on which at least SO per cent of last year's North Carolina traffic fatalities occurred? a. wet b. dry 3. Do more accidents happen in good weather or bad weath er? a. good b. bad 4. What is the safest proced ure to follow if you become fatigued while driving? . a. Speed up to make your destination before falling asleep b. Pull over to the curb and rest awhile c. Stop and eat a heavj meal d. Take some pills 5. What is the fastest, safes! way to stop a car? a. Slam the brake peda hard | b. Ease the hrake pedal t< , / a deliberate stop c. Pull up the emergency brake and depress the foot brake pedal d. Pump the brake pedal gently but firmly 6. When a tire blows out, what is the most advisable thing to do? a. Apply the brakes quickly b. Apply brakes gently, or not at all ri Pull off the highway d. Speed up to counteract effect of blowout 7. There are four specially en graved invitations to death on the highway. Which is the greatest cause of death? a. Reckless driving b. Not having the right-of way c. Wrong side of the road d. Excessive speed 8. Where is the best place to put an old tire which you think might blow out if driven far? a. Either front wheel b. In the garage c. Spare wheel d. Either rear wheel 9. Drunken drivers, or driven who have been drinking, ar( involved in orne out of how many fatal accidents: a. 24 ? b. 6 c. 18 ? d. 106 10. In addition to the specif! wording on the signs, the shap< of highway signs has signifi ' cance. Indicate the shape of th signs which have the followin meanings. t a. Stop b. Caution . c. Railroad crossings d. Reduce speed 3 Correct Answers on Back Pagi Second Section. / 'MEN OF DISTINCTION' (Christian Science Monitor i Yet another portrait which the distillers who sponsor the series of big whisky ads will never seek: The Oregon youth charged with setting seven fires, one of which caused $100, 00( damage. Detectives say that after signing a statement admit ting his responsibility he explained: "I had been drinking al night long ? and if I hadn't this wouldn't have happened." I OUR DEMOCRACY R/SKS OF THE ROAD In me EAUiy dwc or out country, thc cmi*f oangus Or THE ROAP WrU HOSTILE INDIANS ANOMOCO-UP MEN. ? A*3m ,| _ u, . . . . ? ? ?. TDOAV.THE CHIEF DANGER IS THe PERSON WHO DRIVES CARELESSLY ? ^PEEDING, WEAVING, FOLLOWING OTHER CArjS TOO CLOSELY, CUTTING IN, DROWSING AT THE WHEEL. AS MOTORISTS, WE CAN HELP REDUCE HIGH WAV ACCIDENTS BV OBEYING* THE TRAFFIC LAWS. LIGHTS AND SIGNS. SAFE DRIVING DAV- DECEMBER. IS COMMUNISM AT THE UNIVERSITY? (U. N. C. Daily Tarheel) Batten down the hatches, men, we're heading full into a hard hot wind from the South. Ralph Long, a former campus Com munist who is at present busily engaged in saving humanity from the Red scourge, showed up in Miami Tuesday before the touring House Un-American Activities Committee. And what revelations did he make? He said there was a small Communist cell here in the late 40's, something every body knew at the time. He named five part-time instructors as "faculty Reds." All five were known to the FBI then and' still are; all have long-since left Chapel Hill. He exclaimed the University "made no investigation, did nothing about it." There was nothing illegal about being a Communist at the time, and by Long's own testimony the group operated openly, not as a secret conspiratorial organization. Long and his Communist friends in Chapel Hill in the late 40 "s succeeded only in drawing a few chuckles from the com munity. Now that he is a professional testifier, however, we suggest he is doing more harm to the University than he coulc ever have done as a Communist. He has revealed nothing thai the FBI and, hi most cases, the public, did not already know Unfortunately for the good name of the University, he ap pears to be enjoying the role of anti-Communist crusader ant between him and Nell Battle Lewis, we are likely to be breath ing a good deal more of this hot air for some time to come. STRICTLY PERSONAL By WEIMAR JONES It is my strictly personal opinion that Franklin has some streets and sidewalks that are mighty dirty. And Christmas is coming! With the holidays will come a lot of our young people. Will their home town look unkempt and down-at-the-heel by com parison with what they've been seeing elsewhere? And will their opinion of their home town go down in proportion? Suggestion: An old fashioned Saturday night scrubbing be hind the ears for Franklin right now would pay handsome divi dends in the future. ? * ? I have never seen Mr. Vernon r Ward, of Ransomville. I do not know who he is. Until last week, I had never heard of him. But my hat is off to him. Because Mr. Ward has said, and said well, something that once was taken for granted in . this "land of the free", but ? which a lot of people seem to . have forgotten of late. s In a letter, published in the 5 Greensboro Daily News, Mr. Ward said, in part: "I wish to protest the arrest of Junius I. Scales. I am not now and have never been a member of the Communist !, Party, but I respect the demo cratic right of Junius Scales to be a member of the Communist Party and his constitutional rights to speak, publish, and as semble freely and thus to per suade as many people as he can to adhere to his movement. "Under the first amendment, Junius Scales has a perfect right to teach and advocate anything under the sun, includ ing the overthrow of the United States Government by force and violence, for the Constitution specifically states that the rights of free speech, free press, and free peaceful assembly may not be abridged. Thus, only when Junius Scales and other Communists commit acts of force and violence can they be legally restricted. Those who in terfere with the political free dom of a Communist or anyone else are themselves overthrow ing the Constitution and are themselves traitors to American democracy. "Since every officer of the United States Government has sworn to uphold the Constitu tion, including the first amend ment, he perjures his oath of office and becomes a traitor to the country if he arrests any one at all, whether Communist or McCarthyite, for 'teaching and advocating' or (an act even further removed from violence i 'conspiring to teach and advo cate' anything the human mind might conceive. "It is impossible to conspire to teach and advocate in a country wherein teaching and advocacy are themselves consti tutional rights. So the Smltli Act, under which Junius Scale: was arrested, is obviously un constitutional, and the only waj it can be made constitutional Li by amending the U. S. Consti tution." In other words, Mr. Ward, ir the realms of religious, political and economic thought anc speech, we either are free or wi are not free. And It might be added tha we cannot be "half free an( half slave". Either all of us even Including the Communist ? must be free to think wha we please and say what w think, or none of us can b free. News Making As ft Looks To A Maconite ? Br BOB SLOAN J Adlal Stevenson got to the root of the problem racing us In Asia when he said: "The number one problem In ? Asia today Is not communism but that millions of people want a better life and have discover ed that poverty, hunger and pestilence are not the immu table destiny of man. "If they can't make progress by the voluntary democratic methods of consent, they will turn to the Involuntary methods of coercion, as China already has." The titular head of the Dem ocratic party made this state ment in an address to a group of Democrats at a party meet ing last Saturday night, but the nation as a whole would do well to ponder its substance. We must recognize the fact that for years, since even be fore America was a nation, mil lions of people lived in Asia in serfdom ? a life little better than that of animals. In recent years these people have learned that life can be different ? that it can have a meaning. Each taste of a better existence, no matter how slight, has brought an increased appetite for more. Just as the American people were determined to gain freedom and later the countries of Europe revolted to change their forms of "government, the people ? and we mean the masses ? are determined to find some way to exist in a better way and pull themselves from the mire of serfdom. They will do It by some means. The real job of the United States is to show these people that the real way Is the path of a democratic government and a free enterprise system. Russia will do her best to lead them along the quicksand path of Communism. inese people are gviug w nove. America, more than any ?ther nation, must be blamed ( the merits of our system are tot made to shine so clearly tnd brightly that any other vay will appear as darkness. We must reach these people ind show them the way. They ire a mass of millions, and which path they take probably rill determine the kind of life >ur children's children live. ? ? ? Now that the McCarthy hear ings are over it seems to me that the two outstanding men in the arena, were Republican Senator Arthur Watkins and North Carolina's own Sam Er irln. Senator Watkins displayed terrific courage and Senator Ervln, though new at the game, handled the Wisconsin pug in such fashion that he had no come-back. Few have been able to do that. Do You Remember? (Looking backward through the files of The Pre" i 50 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK The lower room of Mr. J. B. Pendergrass' new store building is practically finished, and he moved his stock of goods into it last Wednesday. Dr. W. H. Higgins made a business trip to Clay County last Wednesday and returned Sunday. 25 YEARS AGO Messrs Raymond Dalrymple and Norman Blaine attended the Mercer-Wake Forest football game in Asheville on Thanks giving and while there, visited Harold Dalrymple. The Rev. and Mrs. L. B. Hayes, of Shelby, spent Thanks giving with Mrs. Hayes' mother, .Mrs. Sam L. Rogers. ! Bill Moore, Dean Sisk. and t Frank Murray are guests of Judge J. B. Willis at Crystal Springs, Fla. They have gone i for a two weeks' fishing trip. 10 YEARS AGO Mrs. Ella Siler Freeman of West Asheville, spent the past week visiting Miss Amy Harri son at her home on Harrison Avenue. Pvt. Clyde J. Holland, who Is stationed at Fort McClellan, Ala., is spending a 10-day fur lough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Holland and fam ily, at Cullasaja. Mrs. T. M. Keener left Mon day to spend several weeks in Washington, D. C. ? Highlands item.