(Dte Slmttklin |ms nttb i Iht iHtgJtlnit&s ffintaninn Entered at Post Office. Franklin, N. C., as second class matter Published every Thursday by The Franklin Press Franklin, N. C. Telephone 24 WEIMAR JONES Editor BOB 8. SLOAN Business Manager J. P. BRADY News Editor MRS. ALLEN SILER ... Society Editor and Office Manager OARL P. CABE Mechanical Superintendent FRANK A. STARR ETTE Shop Superintendent DAVID H. SUTTON Stereotyper OHARLES B. WHTTTINOTON . Pressman SUBSCRIPTION RATES Outbids Macok Countt Iran Macon Couwtt One Year . . . $3.00 One Year >2.50 Btx Months 1.75 Six Months ~"l~75 Three Months 1.00 Three Months 1.00 MAY 26, 1955 A Lot To Do --"--a Just four weeks from today, Franklin's big cen tennial celebration will open. We're going to have a lot of visitors. What will they see? The first thing they see, unless we get busy, and get busy now, will be a dirty town. There's a lot of paint that needs putting on; there are a lot of banks and grass plots that need mowing; and there are a lot of vacant lots that need clearing off. There are a lot of streets here, too, that are disgraceful ; streets in the heart of Franklin that have litter ? rocks washed down from banks, broken glass, paper cups ? that has been on them not weeks, but months ! Isn't it about time we started on the big job of getting ready for the big event? The Best Governed On the one hand, we have science's miracle, the Salk vaccine. On the other, we have millions of parents eager for this answer to desperate prayer. In between, is the government ? muddling, if -ever there was muddling; moving forward, back ing up, moving forward, then changing its mind and backing up again. Maybe some government administration of this program was necessary. In theory, it seemed high ly desirable. But it is hard to see, to date, a single constructive contribution that has come from gov ernment. The situation recalls the suggestion of old Tom Jefferson to the general effect that the least gov erned people is the best governed people. Something Irreplaceable The Masonic Hall on Church Street belongs to the Masons. Since it is their property, they have a right, of course, to do with it what they wish. ? / ? But none of us can live to ourselves, and their plan to raze the structure effects 'the whole com munity ; for if and when the Masonic Hall comes down, Franklin will have lost something irreplace able. This is one more in a long line of instances, it seems to us, suggesting that Franklin i.s 40 or 50 years behind the times, in one respect. Because in other sections of the country, the value of the old and the historic has long been recognized; they not only save the old buildings, they restore and preserve them. We, in Franklin, on the other hand, ?cannot tear down the old?fast enough! The Masonic Hall is one of Franklin's few re maining old buildings. It has seen ? and been a part ? of a -lot of history. But it has something in addition to age and his tory to recommend it. Architecturally, it has a grace and dignity that are not likely to be dupli cated. Anybody can put up a modern new build ing - ? usually something exactly like other new buildings to be found , all over the United States. But who, once it is gone, can restore the gracious old structure on Church street? It gives distinction to the entire town. There are many people here, we suspect, who hope the Masons will reconsider iheir decision. In the world we live In, freedom once lost is lost to stay Tost. ? Elmer Davis. Why Poppy Day? Saturday will be Poppy Day.' The annual observance is in the nature of a me morial to the American boys for whom "the pop pies grow, beneath the crosses, row on row", across the seas "in Flanders field". (And, more re cently, for those who died in World War 2? as well.) How better remember those Who gave their all than by serving their buddies? So the American Legion Auxiliary annually sells poppies, using the funds in the service of disabled veterans of both wars, and of the children of vet erans. ture For purely selfish reasons, an owner should paint hU tenant houses. A* lot of people In this area seem to think that the way things have always been done around here Is the ^ay they ought to be doqe. That's not the case at all. Such people ought to travel In other parts of the country or other parts of the world and see the value of trim and painted houses and barns. Paint, I believe, is an Indication of pride, self-respect. Inter est and progresslve-mlndedness. We need a lot more paint In Eastern North Carolina. And I'm not In the pay of duPont, Sherwln-Wllllams or Pittsburgh or any hardware store or building supply firm. Poetry Editor EDITH DEADERICK ERSKINE Weaverville, North Carolina THOUGHTS IN SPRING Others' Opinions YOUR LINE MAY BE VERY BUSY (U. N. C. Daily Tar Heel) The scene is a cluttered room in the Senate Office Building, and the actors, members of the House Judiciary subcommittee, have deserted the stage to make room for a wiretap expert, who is demonstrating his equipment. The senators are holding hearings on proposals to permit use of evidence gained from wiretapping in federal court cases, and the wiretap expert shows how easy it is to eavesdrop. A telephone "bug" allows police to record telephone conver sations when the receiver is lifted and general room con versation when the receiver is down. Another microphone can be hidden in wallpaper. And a third type receiver is the size of a pack of cigarettes. "It costs less than $10 to convert a home telephone, radio, television set, or phonograph into a wiretap device," says the expert. "In some respects, it's all rather frightening," the ex pert adds almost proudly. And the senators sitting on the sidelines of this demonstra tion in electronic eavesdropping nod their heads in agree ment ? because it is "all rather frightening" to know that the government may probe into one's private life and con versation, without warrant or warning. Beyond blue seas, pale towers rise . . . Beyond the drifting foam Lie the lands my forebears knew, The moors and mists of home: > A part of me Is over there In a wet. sweet English lane Where hawthorn buds and