r .,. .. ...... , j "1 m HERA The:! lino's r m 1 4 . li Kings Mountain, N? CM- Thursda, July 2, 1914. No: 23 u y tt II . M . wLounta PROMINENCE Is Given Kings Mountain Below is on excerpt from "The Southern Banker," which recon- izes something of the speed at whith Kings Mountain progress is moving. "Kings Mountain lias been placed 'more prominently and irmly on the map by the recent action of the Southern railway in naming the observation car of the "'Atlanta Special" in hon - or of tins famous peak. Bankers nn'd other citizens issued an elab orate book descriptive of the town and presented it to the rai road for .library of the "Kings Mountain, " a car of modern con struction and one of the road's latest designs. Kings Mountain Is the home of several of the J i vest bankers in tne Tar Heel State. W. S. Dilling. cashier of the Rings Mountain Bank, and M. E. Herndou, cashier of the People's Loan & Trust Co., at- tended the North Carolina Bank ers' Convention at Raleign and in addition , to making miinj f riSads they inade a number of ." people better acquainted with their home town. Kings Moun tain dates ba-;k from 1780." On October 7, of that year one of the greatest battles" in the his- Tory of America was' fought urojnd the town. . ' , LEGDiE BILL Reduces C The IjegNI sessicn inl, a dessentil as THE I I A bill authoifjll 1 Board of Ai 8 Year Old flobo Has Enough. A lad giving .his name , as , George Halcomb.his home as Greenville, S. C. and his age as oight years was put aboard train No 33 by the chief of police At Belmont S.u'nday; night. His story was rather an interesting - one und was' about as follows: A fourteen year-oid boy per suaded George to crawl into a box car with him in Greenville Friday afternoon for a hoboing expedition. They crawled the; Car and made their way as far as Harrisburg, ; N. ; C. ; -befort they ware apprehended and put off. They walked bacjj, to within . ten miles of Charlie where they'suceeedc&in swinging on the rear of a pVsenger train on ' which they enVVed Charlotte'. They 'slept in Te ''- Charlotte depot Saturday nifAt. Sunday .they walked as far Belmont where tne chief of p5ice took charge of them. The bvjfjs were iriven something to eatVl a - ticket was bought by publVub ; scription for tho smaller boy to his home at Greenville, The boysTiad-Jiad nothing to .eat from Fridayuatil Sunday even ing. . Geo. said. "Thai other boy . persuaded me off buiStae'U-never lo it again, this is his fretti trip. It is my first and my last. . George wore a hickory smrt and pants and cap und '- wai barefooted, He saidii is, father - was a traveling man and sold drugs. The boy didn't look to , be over ight, but wss exceed - nglvbnllianti. His advice, to the boys ntvllstiy at homo - and behave tneflBM&y. '' " ' v ' . .Good Roads Association. ' The Annual eoavention of the Norh'Carolina Good Roads As . uociatlon will be held at Durham . July - 9 and. 10, 1914. A very elaborate program has been, ar ranged and a splendid session is expected. - Addresses - witj be made by such . men' s Goyi ' locke Craig, of North Carolina; Gov. H. Cv Stuart, of .Virginia; and Pres. 'Fairfax Harnsou, of :be Southern . Railway, . And uiimber of others. :. ... -., leguminoi bute this ers of N. ifei productioi In Junom Agricultu directing Agrieultui' j)ly with tl above Act resolution equipped B.,tany a ri a small h facture.o; rial for legumes i such as al bur clow clover, soy bi and soiii Thud material vi tember fir: price will art. acre, as now charge companies-. The StaW cnltiire har comendedj, for the difj inous croc passage of ULATION' sequent fav State Boan prices char; were so hid farmer con chase it in do him muc ever, thank! ive legrslal this State i this niateri they could for $2.00. i We hope these cultu mands but necessary cations at fore the mi Wo will vigorous ci have to be the )rder. . can be ke great lengt . It has about 20,00 material wd year At material farmers $-l( Departmen th e las' Of Inoculation. ture. at its special , passed, without tewhatis known tOWN LEGUMii N' BILL. Thi.s tho N. C. State iiilturo to Manu- Iting material fo'' bps iind to distri rial to the farm- at actual cost of I, the Board of isseil a resolution Commissioner of arrange to com quiremcnts of the obedience to this ore is now being the Dividson of Agronomy of the lentof Agriculture, ory for the manu k inoculating mate. different kinds of n in the State, crimson clover. red clover, alsilre vetch, cow peas, stock peas, peanuts button Of this bgin about Sep ... rhe actUKl cost .about Hty oents ;ainst SO0 an acre by the comtneraial department of Agri- Vtfays strongly re use of inoculation it kinds of legmn- but -prior . to the HE BROWN INOC ilLL and the bus- able action of the M Agriculture, .-the ffl for the. material phat the average not afford to pur flicient quantty to "good. Now, .how to really progress- in, the farmers of n get as much of j for fifty cents ps t six months ago North Carolina Sloppy With Opportunity 'Nnrih Carolina Sloppy With Opportunities What can the Press do in Developing Them?" The Subject of Illuminating Address by Bioa II. Butler, of the Kaeford Journal, on The State's Possibilities and the Vari ous Ways the Press May Aid in the Development That must come, Deliv ered at the Opening Session of Press Convention at Wrightsville Beach Last Week. Iii?3tntly. I said one day in tho News and Observer that North Carolina is sloppy witli oppor tunity.. That, expression has"been brought back to me to set the pleasant task of pointing oat some of the those opportunities and telling how the newspaper men may help in the develope ment of them. 1 Thirttwo years ago this sum mer I caught my rirst glimpse of North Carolina. At that time I had seen enough of the indus trial developexent and progress of the United States from Texas Kansas and Minnesota east to to New . England to appreciate what developementmeans and to recognize the opoortunity rfor developement where ;it ap- psupplyv thRs hav $30,009 Adde88 cations to, if (I lAgriouiuu1,' i Laboratonj j Name anQ 4 Si .... iii oiusn oe v App,ov(flJ , Corny aim m Mi i i r R 1 o nave enough of s to sup'ply all de- will be absolutely send in all appli ast one month be rial is to be to used. nd out only live, f nres and they may ade after receiving pne of this material on hand for any of time. . :en estimated that acre bottles of this e used in N. C. last rJ.OO an acre this lould have cost tho 000. Had the -State been in position to demand, it would saved' the farmers easoitr- l orders.'and appli- e po.rimiBsioner of care .".puce seed Raleigh,. N.,0. di'ess Of applicant ittea very plainly. L,-Burgess, , onomisfA Botanist. . Sraham.r . 'iissioneof Agr. Thii-ty Baptist. tbajn.$10(i missfonsj have- ars ago the Southern nvention .rail 00 a yettrfar i; jf tho state 1 1 brtioned , : thi $100,080 fj V this cause 'una year. ed less foreign Texas msclves newspaper work was passed as a writer of the progress of the biy industrial expansion in.. the Pittsburg territory where hig things are done. That gave me a further insight into what opportunity is. and what it is wortHi -It is more than twant. years ago .that I commenced to write in tho -Pittisbnrg Times stories of opportunity in North Carolina. In that twenty years I have been showing people what I see hero, and in going out to show them. I. continually ; ; fall over more things to show. I did not discover North Carolina all of a sudden. It has been i gradual finding of new possibili ties until it is easy to see that no state in the union today can present so much of the oppor tunity as North Carolina, Tnis is said in all deliberation, for unsutjoor.ted claims are of : no use to anybody. It is folly to de ceive ourselves. I make thia claim after an acquaintance wilh almost every community of consequence in theUnited Slates. The chief factors that are put ting North Carolina in the front are clinrate, rainfall, waterpower transportation, convenience to the markets of th Unitea States and of all the world the per manent supoly of raw material for factory use, and a population of intelligence and upright char acter. I do . .no ; include those temporary resorces like timber. minerpl deposits, etc. - which valuable in themselves, and of of great , importance, arh still temporary, and not in the same class ' with those permanent things that are ot everlasting worth.".. . - ! .... ... " In hunting a place for a : per manent home for!' myself and my family I picked North Carolina deliberately from all the rest of of the country because it offered a bigger inducement in .natural advantages. . It has the best climate and', the best, rainfall. Climate makes a state fit to- live in; Rainfall 'and mild climate makes it an agricultural possir ability. Soil is a factor, but ier tility can be made. Kansas and California and other1 states of thetWest are not so fertile, now as when' I first knew them. North Carolina is more fertile. Fertility is under the control of man. Climate and. rainfall re upf.' , , Therefore wo must regard North Carolina ns om- of the foremost agricural possibilities on earth: The story of tho last fifteen years bears this out. In tho last census period the State mora than -doubled its farm proaucts. in tne last live years it has almost douoled t again This surprising record if kept Jip another ten years will put North Carolina among the first three or four states of the tlnion juui aeveiopement is limy as rapid. Fourteen years ago the state factories produced about 60 milLpn dollars worth of goods. Now they make three imes that value. Factories are springing up to, build the widest variety pf products.-. The-factories are N. C. EDIT Meet In Annual Convention. AVOID FEVER On Your Vacation. peared. Fifteen yeaK of; myffliversified to scores of different lines. They will deversify more because they have the power. In a dozen years the developetnent of waterpower in North Caro lina has been marvels of the in dustrial world. What is ahead npbody can guess, but almost Any gug "seems snfo enonffh. The State is gridironed with power wires how and in that respect has no peer on tlie globe. Ours is the one state that is self contained and self providing. It has the farms on which to feed the people the factories in which to emoloy them, the pow to run the mills, the yearly crop of raw moterial for the factory, the river and sea to carry the freight to market, the railroads in all directions, besides the surplus of product eagerly sought oy other stat s. Rising the highest monneains eact of the Rockias, North Caro Una rivers Have more fall to the sea, a greater annual rainfall to arry down, and agreater area to drain wrter from tlian any otterstateof-tlre East.- How mueh. power that means is pure guess. It is a limit we cannot overtake for years. We have no idea of the, limit of our ability to produce cotton lor the ever growing needs'of the wrrld, or or of fruit and vegtables for the rapidly growing North, or of anything. We have . so idea where we are going but we are beaded 'i aome-' ere, and are rsnning away on half a dozen roads at one time. i It is no use for me to point out. to you the opportunities of North Cah-olina. Five thou sand people could find oppor tunity in jonns county to go to raising cotton. As many more could go to the mountains to raise cattle. As many more could go to Guilford to raise .corn to Moor to raise soppernongs for the grape iuice plant starting there,- - to Henderson to raise apples: to Robeson to raise canta loupes to Cumberland to raise tobacco, peanuts for oil, -sweet potatoes to muke-starch for the cotton mills and alcohol for the arts . and forthe automobiles j when" gesolene is scarcer s V y Every , county in the ' state could ylace ten thousand people as fait as then eoald' come, and opportunity?. would await them. One of the greatest, of ad van - Continued on Editorial Page- - The convention of t!it; North Carolina Press Association which met at the Oceanic Hotel, Wright sville lii-ach last Wed. till I'll. was accounted by the older mem bers of tho organization as best in its history. It would bo use less to undertake to go into tho details of the several sessions but suffice it to say that more than a hundred of tin? state's leading uill .drivers met there and labored earnestly fur the common good of Tar Heel .loiinn alism and its constituents. The addresses were all on" a high piano as will be seen from time to time as we shall publish some of them in the Herald. Sun bathing, trolley riding, and fishing were enjoyed fully and the river trip Friday to South port and Fort Caswell was a splendid feature. Crops Poor. The editor having traveled over the Seaboard from Char lotte to Wilmington and over the A. C. L. and Southern from Wil mington by way of Fayettevilie and Greensboro back to Kings Mountain and having talked witn- editors from all parts of the state within the past ten days is pretty well posted on the farms of the. state. As a whoje the crops are poor. Corn is better than cotton but in muuy places the corn rrop is way be low an average crop The drought has been general all over the state with; few exceptions, and in some places hasn't beoubrok en . yet. I he section sintering worst are on the A. V. L. in the vicinity of Manchester "- where a large portion of the oukHrees have died for lack of moisture. Some places through there look as if fire hhd swepfc through th0 forest. Another section , nearer Greensboro shows a like appear ance but not nearly so bad. , Both those setcions, however, have had rain recently, V j As a rule where corn Was put in ahead of the dry weather 'it j is looking fine, although, wej heard of at least One instance! whereJiarlyxorii is Jailing .down ,Vacati.)n. ;s t,h; talk of thfe season. Every nine out of ten peoplo are planning to- take a vacation trip, sometime, some where during the summer. Where to. go is the question. He this, understood: The-most picturesque and otherwise at- tractive resorts are not always -the safest. Your first consider ation should be:' Where can I , find rest and recreation without ; jeopardizing my health? un. , making your choice look well to : these fac ts: 1st, That the sup ply of drinking water, comes not , from snallow Wells or- from -other sources likely to be pol- Inf..,! Tl... 1 mn:vi. ..mi, i mil. nice, ,uju U1US-. f (illifofiA- nrp u-nll fif.roonail arrninof . .;.Pr1 Tllllt. tllflfU Bra Cnnitnlo awt . rangements for the disposal of i' sewage. Know these things and - your cnances lor navingtyphola ;,: malaria an I many other diseases - will be greatly diminished. , Tlie vacationist by .all means ' should he varVMiintari ntrnnt typhoid. Tliis ,' preventative ; measure .is so , simple and . yet so effective that no man' or " woman should consider himself ( ready till he has taken this treatment. You can get the ty- . phoid vaccine either by jwriting ; to the State Laboratory of Hy-. giene, Raleigh, N. C. or by ap- ' plying to your own physician. -In ejtlier ..case allow yourself . plenty of ti 'no. Four weeks at least are necessary in which to ., get the vaccine and take the treatment. If further infonna- ; tion regarding tins treatment is r' desired, write tlie State Board of nealth, Raleigh, N. C. But .' wherever you jsppruLyour . vaca-., ; tion be sure to have the Herald sent to you each week. . The Butcher's Lament. The meat inspector is mine enemy, I shall not like him. . He maketh me shoo out and no rain yet. Late corn didn't come up mucli and Vhere it did it has grown very slowly, The prospects for cotton are poor with the exception of Hoke County where the seasons have been fairly regular and the crop shows from 95 to 100 per cent. Lots of the cotton fields pre sent the spectacular appearance of a few scattering stalks in 'bloom; while major part of the crop Ts about" half as large or just coming up. - Another very serious phase of the finning situation is the fact that so many acres are lying idle. There are all over the state large fields that have not been broken and it is now too late to put in corn or cotton. Most stubble land is lying idle. This same condi tion exists in portions of Virginia, remarkably so about Lynchburg. Mrs. B. M. Ormand delight fully entertained a number of her friends on Thursday last at a dorcb party.. Tne cool, vine shaded -porches were uery at tractrive'with flowers and potted olants atone side-Miss Allien Ormand the pretty young daugh ter of the hostess served refresh ing lemonade from an attractive ly decorated punch bowl, while Little - Sara - Kate ' served - ice water throsgbout the afternoon. An elegent ice course with wafers added to the party, mak ing a whole afternoon of "much pleasure 'to a'll present.', ' ... . all the flies and cover the sausage mill,;.'. . ; He showeth in e the meat I shall se'l and that I shall not. Yea verily, tho' I scrub the ice box twice yearly, he sayeth it is not clean. ' . , ' HeTkTcYeth MI lteep "hogs "in tlie backyard and sayeth . it is unsanitary. . v . ' He smelleth of my sausage and heaveth' it in the slop barrel, een tho' it be but slightly, sour. He deniandeth that I use not the larnyx snd mammae for sau sage. ;. '. .. . . .. ,: . And he speaks in harsh tones if I disobey him. I. bring my meat to his office for inspection, wrapped in tree tot's, ...,,'tl, , , ;. He turaeth it down and insists that I wrap it in clean, white, cloths. , ,; ( ' Yea, i verily, tho' mine hog , grew up in ' mine own orchard, hevcondemneth it for cholera , and fly-blows, and I lose twelve dollars arid a half, He- hurls threats at me' if I bring not the livers and lights, and if I am slow about paying ; my'bllls at the months end, be maketh me bring the money at the time of inspection. ( ' He anndiriteth my livers witl kerosene, and insistetn on seeing the hides . and ear marks even tho' I. tell him there are; inone. 1 Surely, the words "clean , up ; and stay clean" . will be burled ' tu0 all "the' day$of myijife. and I shall live in fear of the in- v, specter forever and ever. Amen,, .w-Y.MulfordVetj Bulletin. ' r