An unidentified student at Princeton High School presents a portrait of the Principal, Fred Bartholomew, to be hung in the hall of the high school. On hand for the recent presentation were Mrs. Bartholomew, Nancy. Ricky and Betsy Bartholomew. The principal is a Warren County native and a former principal of John Graham High School. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Bartholomew of Warrenton. Point Of View Washington's Policy Blamed ( IHV W1L.L1AM H. fK I KKMlIN Burrows T. I.undv Professor of Philosophy of Business at Campbell College In News and Observer, Feb. 13 Who is the real employer? I think my answer may be of interest in light of President Carter's $31 billion plan to Stimulate" the American economy with tax rebates and job projects — with more, as I see it. of the very inflationary medicine that got us so sick in the first place. For can we ordinary mortals perform the miracle of turning a ktone into bread?" Those stone into bread words come directly from I/ord John Mavnard Kevnes' 1936 bible of the New Economics. The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. Can we, in other words, create lasting jobs bv simply running the printing I Press" Consider the startling response by H British Prii.ie Minister James Callaghan. I ile told hi, own Labor Party last fall: We must ask ourselves unflinchingly, what is the cause of high unemployment? Quite simply and unequivocablv it is caused by paying ourselves more than the value of what we produce. . . . We used to think you could spend your way out of a recession and increase employment by cutting taxes and boosting government spending. I tell you in all candor that the option no longer exists.. . Higher inflation, followed by higher unemployment. That is the history of the last 20 years." Well, who is the real employer?I hold that that employer is not government: it's not unions: it's not business; and it's not nonprofit organizations like Campbell College. In mv book the real employer is you as a productive consumer, the consumer who works or invests. I stress productive," for clearly consumption is a function of production and not of Uncle Sam stuffing I $50 checks in everybody's mailbox. The consumer is the Forgotten Man or Woman in our midst. Yes, forgotten, notwithstanding so-called consumer advo cates. The consumer pays all the freight of business and government: and if he could send a message to Washington. Raleigh and every other government center, it should read: There Is No Such thing As A Free Lunch. Think about it. Through his decision to buy or not, the consumer, in concert with his fellow consumers across the land, decides what is to be produced, how much and who will produce it. In effect, he decides who will be employed, how much they will be paid, who are to be promoted, who demoted. Businessmen, you see, are the agents of the consumer. They must produce the quality he demands—or else. They must turn our goods and services at the price he is willing to pay — or else. MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMKI nui no irt*f lunrn. mmu you. me consumer pays all wages, including those for Muhammad Ali, Raquel Welch, President Carter and the board chairmen of AT&T, IRM and GE. He also pays the union scales of the railroad workers, airline pilots, bricklayers and truck drivers. Moreover, if there is Teatherbedding" on the job, he pays for that, too. Even so, the consumer is most demanding as to price. Price is it. And wage rates, please remember, are prices. Today the rub, insofar as most of our unemployment is concerned, is that wage rates are relatively inflexible and the consumer relatively unsovereign. The wage price is too high, leading to unsold labor. Now. I don't say the price of labor is too high. The economy says so, through today's unemployment rate of more than 7 per cent. And the consumer says so. How? Through his nonpurchases — through his rejections of high prices, of high unit labor costs. I>et me quickly add that more than three-quarters of all industrial costs are labor costs, direct and indirect. So the solution to the lion's share of today's unemployment is mainly reinvigo rated wage flexibility, capital investment and consumer sovereignty. More specifically. I say that, essentially, unemployment is made in Washington, and hence its solution lies in changes in federal laws trrr labor welfare. Jaws, ,4uWj employment" laws and tax laws. Consider minimum-wage laws. They tend to create unemployment by pricing unskilled labor out of job markets. If the government insists on a minimum wage of $2.30 an hour while the worker only produces, say. $1.15, the demand for the worker naturally falls towards zero. Economist Yale Broken of the University of Chicago and others have demonstrated the lock step jump in teenager joblessness with each jump in the minimum wage. Today black teenager unemployment is at an incredible 40 percent. So for many a black teenager in. Watts, Detroit and Harlem, this situation spells streets, gangs, trouble, maybe prison, certainly poverty. Or consider Section 14B of the Taft-Hartley Act which authorizes states to pass right to work legislation so that a worker need not join or support a union at the peril of his or her job. North Carolina and 29 other states have passed such legislation. But Secretary of Labor Marshall and AFL-CIO President Meany have come out for repeal of 14B. And Mr. Carter said he would sign a repeal bill if one'arrived on his desk. Yet 14B is a key to human choice and dignity as well as wage flexibility and job creation. Again, the productive consumer—not unions, business or government—is the real, employer. Chinese Restaurant Is Drawing Area Customers To Henderson Residents of Warren County who have developed a taste for the Oriental cuisine may not have to travel the long distances as they have in the past to partake of their culinary delights. The Peking Restau rant on the Norlina Road in Henderson has recently opened adjacent to the Lake Drive Motel and is enjoying a brisk business and its patrons are extremely complimentary over the service as well as the Peking-Cantonese American menu. So far. the restaurant has been successful in drawing its customers, not only from the Henderson area, but that of Warrenton, Oxford. Norlina. and South Hill, Virginia. Although the Cantonese and Peking styles of cooking vary considerably, both are given an American flavor to make them more attractive to the Ameri can dinner. Even this might not especially suit the fancy of the more youthful diner, so the Peking Restaurant has a special children's menu from hambur gers to fried chicken. The restaurant is operated bv Mr. Charles Song and his partner Hung Ju Yu, both recent residents of Tampa, Florida. Neither has spared costs in outfitting the 8000 square foot facility with the latest in food service equipment to provide their customers with the best in oriental food and sanitary food service. Chinese dishes are prepared in a Wok. fired bv twin 750 decree gas jets which provide a 1500 degree cooking tempera ture. Mr. Song reports that only minutes are required for each dish to be prepared individually, and that all are prepared to order in contrast to the restaurant trend of today to move to precooked foods. All of the meats are prepared either by use of fresh seafood shipped in from Norfolk and/or imported foods from Hong Kong and Taiwan. Beef is imported from Denmark. In order to make the meal complete, the tea is served in a special earthen teapot and the tea is a special imported blend. Fifteen employees are neces sary to provide the special and efficient service needed to present a relaxed atmosphere and insure that all meals are served piping hot. Dishes are even preheated in a warming cabinet to prevent unnecessary cooling of the delicious entrees. In order to keep the distinction between the Peking stvle cooking—usually promin ent in spices—and the sweeter Cantonese dishes, it was necessarv toemplov two expert chefs, each majoring jn the specific courses. Even the decor in the 150 seat capacity dining area is decidelv Oriental. The restaurant hours are 4 to 11, seven days per week. Mr. Song said the present energy crisis has required them to close on Mondays until further notice, and week day opera tions will be reduced one hour to ten p. m. The upcoming weekend will afford customers a special delight due to the pending Chinese New Year on Friday. Fehruarv 18. During this time, the Peking will offer free Chinese Soup, free almond and fortune cookies and free Chinese Cocktail Cake with meals. Also, one free dish will he included with orders taken at each table. The celebration will extend throughout the weekend encompassing Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Song also has offered to explain anv of the methods r>f preparation of the oriental dishes and provide recipes, as well as give tours to persons interested in increasing their culinary knowledge. The Declaration of Indepen dence was not signed on July 4, 1776. The last signa ture was put in 1781. Local Plant Holds Has Dinner Cochrane Eastern held a dinner on January 25 in honor of their five-vear employees. Jerry Cochrane, president of Cochrane Eastern presented an award to the employees. Men received a tape rule with their name engraved on the back and the ladies received a key chain engraved also. Attending the dinner catered by The Carriage House were James Bowman. John Russell. Charles Sommerville, Dorothy Robbitt, Asa Adkins. Gilbert Crotts. Millard Richardson. Elton G. Lvles, Willie Algood. Louise Langston and Curtis Alston. Honorees not attend ing the dinner were Willie Arnold. Oliver H. Yancey. Sr., and Fred Harris. Ralph Cochrane and Richard Mullen from the Lincolnton offices attended the ,dinner. Special guest was General Claude Bowers whose interest and assistance helped locate the plant in Warrenton. People who are afraid of losing their vision can be re assured by this statement from The National Society for the Prevention of Blind ness: Half of the blindness that occurs is preventable, given the right medical at tention and proper safety precautions. RICHARD J. RENDER FERTILIZER and CHEMICALS Tri-Chemical Liquid Fertilizers Custom Application PLANT BEDS GASSED Located % mile north of Ridgeway on SR 1224 8-5 Five Days a Week (Mon.-Fri.) 0PEN 8-12 Saturday Licensed Dealer For Pesticides No. 1342 Pesticide Application Ground Lie. No. 1469