! no! just a REPUBLICANS! EDITORIALS Never Forget That These Edit oriole Are The Opinions Of One Man, — --— And He May Be Wrong. The Importance of Voting No matter who a person votes for In a second primary, they should exercise that duty. Voting in a first primary is, of course, important too, but in the fi nal analysis the vote In the second primary is the one that actually selects the office holder. This pa£er does not belong to that “get out the vote” school of thinking, with repeated beggings to the public to wte above all else, we believe that a person should take the time to Inform himself of what the Issues and Indi viduals are and after that vote. If a person is too busy, too ignorant or too lazy to Inform himself he ought to stay home and wait such time as he can inform himself to vote. The most dangerous segment of the voting public is that part which merely votes be cause “voting” is a public duty. Voting is a serious business and should be approached/ta just that manner. And -in that serious vein, we urge as strongly as we can that .everybody who voted in the first primary on May 29Sh go back to the polls on June 26th and make that final seelction. The first pri mary was only a preliminary skirmish, the one June 26th is the one that - counts. More On Court Decision to calm us by remindng that “This -isn’t going to hapepn overnight. Don’t :get too alanmed. The Supreme Court is n’t going to rush this thing on us. It’ll take years to put it into practice. The court was merely pointing out a princi ple.” These platitudes and many more have been aimed at us, and those who think like we do. My answer to them has been and still is: Nuts. Wo one with an ounce of knowledge of what is going On in this aiMair can sin cerely believe that any such %low process Is going to be permitted. This has been pointedly and repeatedly stated for all to see by Walter White, executive secretary of the National Association Star the Advancement of Colored People. At a meeting this past Sunday in Dur preparing petitions asking Southern school boards to abolish segregation with out delay. The petitions have been com pleted by the organization’s legal de partment and are 'being sent to local branches.” \ Spouting further, White added, “There is a pathetic futilUty in the recent agreement of certain Southern governors not to comply voluntarily with the Su preme Court’s anti-segregation de sion.” If rids is the language of a group “satlsified with establishing a legal principle and not wanting to end seg regation any more than white people” then we are guilty of a complete ignor ance of the meaning of the English lan guage. In a speech delivered last month by Walter Troban, buerau chief of the Chicago Tribune in Washington, which is reprinted in full in this edition of Tax Supervfc with it. Du: ' and rate are comparable to tax coats In other areas where they have plants, so they’re happy. The Du Pont company ’— * —iputaition of wanting to pay its fair share of taxes everywhere that it does business. And, of course, it’s good public relations to pay strictly local taxes ad they are deductible when time rolls around to j>ay those “exhorbitant" *"i“™\l taxes. ve often wonder if the public is not exposed to TOO MUCH inforxation. We have so much shoved at us by radio, TV, the printed word and plain rumor that we have little or no time to digest any of what is put before us. Hather as if we have Indigestion, of the brain from .over “eating,” Our mindis are so crowd ed with ‘Tacts’ ’that we are frequently unable to penetrate the mists and see through to the principals and principles acually involved. ' It might be an enlightening thing lor Americans today to play back some old recordings of Hitler’s. Whether one speaks German or not, the similarity be tween the sounds-Hitler made and those Currently being made toy Senator Mc Carthy is most evident. The same forc ed gutterals, the same tone of hysteria, the same phonetic posturings are. there. Of course, even more enlightening would be a comparison of the actual subject matter.v " 1 * *»' Speaking of taxes, the five cent cut voted for 1964-56 by the Lenoir County Board of Commissiohers is no doubt wel comed by one and all. We get more for our city and county tax dollar than for any other money we spend, but no mat ter how much we get we are always hap py to pay a little less so long-as we still get the many services that the city arid county provide. From reading curd listening to the Indo-Chinh attitudes of our leaders it appears that the American mind is now being conditioned for another Korea. Alii of the subtle tricks of the propa ganda trade in America are being used to get the public “use to the 001100 ” Hope we are wrong, however. Novelists who make money either write things that make them blush or shame their grandchildren. “Freedom” they have been given by their so-called court and use at least a little ofit to go to the north where they claim they are accepted as equals and with open anus. -..' - JOURNAL go too Jar Into ; up to the opposite direction, so that .the purpose the paper started out for backfires. This column may ,be of that nature. I certainly hope that It does npt for I feel very seriously on this spe cific subject and surely hope that this cohtoto does not backfire to the detri ment of the cause which I hope for. The people of Lenoir County are fac ed with a choice on June 28th between Clay Broadwoy and' D .F. Wilcox Jr. for the important jdb of Sheriff of Lenoir County. This is the highest police job in the county, although in recent years it may have been somewhat dimmed by the lassitude of the holder of that of fice. • Nevertheless, the Office of Sheriff is a high and constitutional position of great trust and great importance to ev ery man, woman and child who lives in, visits in or passes through Lenoir County. The voters of the county have a solemn obligation to seek for the truth in the campaign between these two men and to do their best to find which of these men would be the best tor this job. This Is not an attack on D. F. Wilcox Jr as an individual. I have known him most of my life and personally like him and have never gotten along with him in any but the best (way. We have never had any “falling out.” But this Is rather an atack upon the official position Wilcox has held In the present sheriff’s administration and the part he has. played or MOT played in that de ptUTUDeuI. &*$$$$ ''-Nv-/' This ,1s not a personalized effort to drag all, or any of the personal affairs of Wilcox Into the public eye. I have heard a great many charges against him but most were largely of a personal na ture and practically all came flrom peo ple who were not themselves as “pure as the driven snow.” Because of the per sonal nature of many of these charges and because they were made by people who may have had an ax to grind I must put them aside and In my effort discuss things as THEY AIRE and not as somebdoy SAID THEY WERE. Among the things I have found, with out too much effort that exists, to the detriment of Wilcox are mostly sins of "omlssslon” of the present department In which he Is chief deputy. I know fun damentally that She responsibility for these sins of "Gsnlssion, 'rests most large ly upon Cherlff Sam Churchill for he Is, at least In name, head of the depart ment. But Wilcox cannot escape re sponsibility In these mutters for he has had fuU authority to do just about as he has pleased under Churchill. ___ * ’ .. The No. 1 fault I have found, and still find with his department is that it has not done the work for the county that it should have done. A current report reveals that fees paid to consta bles during the first nine months the sheriff had five deputies and three ra dlo-eqdiped can amounted to $4,429.80 while fees paid into the county treas ury by work done by the sheriffs Six-man department amounted to only $308.50. I do not maintain, for one minute, that the Sheriffs department could have done all of this work, could have served every one of these papers btft I do contend that It could have done ftur more than an average of $36 worth