JMttfUlUtt wtt9$ ?ljf Higfjlattite Aanmtan WEIMAR JONES Editorial Page Editor THURSDAY. JUNE t, 196* ON WATER ISSUE Think, Then Vote This Saturday (June 4) the voters of Franklin will decide whether the Town shall or shall not issue $350,000 in water bonds. There are three facts every voter in Franklin should remember: 1. If the bonds are approved in day-after-tomor row's election, the money will be spent on the Car ioogechaye project. 2. The question will be decided by a majority of the votes cut. 3. If you don't go to the Town Hall Saturday and vote your convictions, you may get the oppo site of what you want. Tf you favor the Cartooge chaye project but don't go vote for the bonds, the proposal may be defeated. If, on the other hand, yotl oppose the Cartoogechaye project, but don't go vote against the bonds, you may get a water system you don't want but will have to help pay for. Usually, the people are right. But they arc right ?only when they, first, do their own thinking, and, second, vote the way they think. If all Franklin voters do those two things Sat urday, the decision, whatever it may be, undoubt edly will be the wise one. Those Census Figures How explain those Franklin and Macon County wensus figures? A good many people here feel there is 110 satis factory explanation. A number of responsible pub lic officials and private citizens say of the figures : "l just don't l>elieve them !" What the preliminary figures show is a popula 1tion gain for Franklin, in the decade 1950 to 1960, . Had she loaned them? NO. "Maybe you've forgotten." "I wouldn't have forgotten since yesterday morning." Then we remembered that the day before we'd been out of town most of the day, but left every door wide open. ? I found it hard to believe there were sneak thieves in Franklin. But where else could the spoons have gone? Maybe. I thought, somebody who badly needs money took them. Maybe, if we offer a reward, with no questions asked, we'll get them back. So I put a want ad in last week's Press to that effect. Came Thursday night and the phone rang. It was Mrs. L. J. Neal calling. What kind of spoons was it Mrs. Jones had lost? Hiey were de scribed in detail. "I have them here at my house," ' said Mrs. Neal. What had happened was that Mrs. Neal and Mrs. Jones were to be joint hostesses, at Mrs. Meal's home, to the Music Club last Fri day evening; and Mrp. Jones, who never puts off till tomorrow any thing she can do yesterday, had taken some things to Mrs. Neal's a week In advance, including a dozen ice-tea spoons. In picking them up. she also had picked up the heirloom desert spoons. Mrs. Neal, when she read the ad, had a hunch. She ijent to the unopened package of things Mrs. Jones had taken to her house, and took a look. Then she telephoned. The moral? Things usually will show up. give 'em time; for there's no tell ing what any of us may do, in advertently, sometimes. And the other moral, it seems to me. is this one: Don't be in too big a hurry to think the worst of folks: to assume somebody has stolen something, for instance. I really am ashamed of myself for thinking that was even a pos sibility. And Mrs. Jonep and I are just as relieved to know It wasn't a case of theft as we are to have the spoons back. ? ? ? P. S. After the Music Club meeting was over and Mrs. Jones had all her things gathered to ' take home, I suggested to Mrs. Neal (who didn't claim the $25 reward) : "If I were you, I'd make a point, this very night, of counting my silverware." Spring Migrants ? CHICAGO TRIBUNE ? By the thousands, bodies ol migratory birds were found strewn on Indiana beaches following a recent storm at night. Exhausted by wind and battered by rain and hail, the migrants were forced down and drowned. This is a sad reminder of the spring migration, now mounting to its annual dramatic climax in these latitudes. For the most part, the estimated seven billion birds in the United States come and go without front page attenion. Yet the occasional specific disasters are just episodes in a continuing story of great majesty and mys tery. Normally, a wild bird's life is short and dangerous. Weather is a PILLS TO MEET TODAY'S NEED Our nomination for the quote of the month: Dr. William Menninger. saying that people are swallowing too many tranquilizers: "What the world needs is some 'do give a damn pills.'" ? Greenville Delta Democrat-Times. By Ray TUCKKR G. O. P. May Have Lost First Half Of 'Peace, Prosperity' Issue Reprinted From PUTNAM COUNTY (Trim.) HERALD WASHINGTON ? President Eisenhower may have to perform a diplomatic miracle to preserve the "peace" issue as a Republican asset in the presidential campaign. And an angry Nikita Khrushchev will have to cooperate to streng then Vice President Nixon's new position. Until May Day. when the Powers plane was shot down and oiy International spying activities belatedly conceded by the White House and State Department. ! President Elsenhower had oeen i hailed throughout tne world as i the foremost champion of world i peace. 1 Even Khrushchev had differentl atefi him from the individuals and circles whom he insisted on brand ing as "American militarists." Eisenhower, and inferentially Vice President Nixon, was heralded as the simple and friendly man who miRht terminate or alleviate the "cold war," as he had helped to wind up the Korean conflict In his first term. That was studied G.O.P. strategy, along with prosperity. The Republicans had entertain ed the hope that he could jive Nixon a great send-off by match ing his 1952 promise that "I will to to Korea" with a similar state ment concerning our far more dangerous differences with the Russian and Chinese Communists. Assuming that domestic eco nomlc conditions remain stable until late October, the Republicans had planned to run ? and win ? on the attractive slogan of "peace and prosperity." They would have appropriated the chant of "He kept us out of war," which won for Wilson by a hairs breadth in 1916, and of Truman's 1948 argument that "You never had it -so good," and "Don't let them take it away." Political technicalities and de ficiencies aside* the Republicars felt confident of victory because of these emotional and economic assets in the foreign and domestic fields, respectively. But the sensational develop ments on May 1. the Communists' historic holiday for celebrating in advance the crackup of the capitalistic system, has tarnished the colors of this, picture of peacc and possibly prosperity. Barring a softening of the new spy-in-the-sky crisis. President Eisenhower may be forced to ask Congress for larger military and satellite-spy appropriations (the Samos and Midas. > and also for higher taxes to finance intensified preparations for war and the promised - defense of our Allies against Moscow's threatened re taliation. Thus, unless President Eisen hower can calm Khrushchev and the latter's "militarists" in the grumbling army, the presidential campaign will be conducted in an atmosphere of tension approxi mating the strains of the Wilson Hughes contest in 1916 and the Roosevelt-Willkie struggle in 1940. Although the Democrats are generally backing the Administra tion's strong stand, they cannot but hope and believe that history will repeat. They recall that Wil son's "He kept us out of war" was a winning cry in 1916. And so was FDR's "again and again and again" assurance In 1940 that "Your boys will never be sent to fight in a foreign war." War came to our shores soon after these pledges, but they served their political purpose. Meanwhile. Republican brain trusters and ghost writers now are Uying to think up a new and more timely slogan. constant hazard. Unseasonable pro longed ice and snow are killers. For countless numbers, the Gulf of Mexico is a far greater hurdle ? than Lake Michigan ever is. Predators and bad luck account for many. Infant mortality is tre mendous; a British study esti mated that the number of young birds leaving the nest was only about half the number of eggs laid. Small birds who do get launched have an expectancy of only two to six years, thd large birds in captivity may live longer than many men and women. One owl of record attained the age of 68. Then man presents further diffi culties. He does away with more birds by destruction of habitats than by outright deliberate killing. Especially on nights when the cloud ceiling is low, birds collide with high structures, especially ir they have fixed lights. A number of New York skyscrapers turn off some of the most 'alluring lights during migrations. During one brief period one autumn not long ago, an estimated 100,000 birds, forced down from normal half mile high flight lanes, perished in collisions with structures along our Atlantic coast. Most menacing of all. chemical pesticides take a tremendous toll. Allan D. Cruick shank, a noted authority, has pre dicted "disastrous effects on the birdlife of the entire nation" un less use of these poisons is soon strictly controlled by law. ? So the pathetic windrows of little bodies on the Indiana beaches represent the loss of lives destined to be short in any event. Surrounded from the egg by ap palling dangers, both natural and artificial, a bird can well do with out awareness of its dangers. How ever gorgeous the plumage, beau tiful the song, enviable the move ments on the wing, wild birds arc unaffected creatures, innocent alike of the pride and worry that characterize us people. Being a wild bird Is a short but intense experience A rapid heart beat packs a deal of living Into every day. The vital spark burns brightly if briefly. Persons who study birds, especially if they gA beyond mere recognition to some knowledge of bird behavior, have a heightened interest in the an nual returns of spring.