Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Sept. 22, 1938, edition 1 / Page 8
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PT . > ' * ? The Kings Mountain Herald Established 1889 Published Every Thursday ' HERALD PUBLI8HINQ HOUSE, Haywood E. Lynch ' Editor-Manager Kntered as second class matter at' the Postofflce at Kings Mountain N. C., under tie Act of March 3, 1879, SUBSCRIPTION RATIOS One Year ... ,... $1.5t> Six Months .. .73 A weekly newspaper devoted to the promotion "of the general welfare and published- for the enlightmeat, entertainment and benefit of the citizens of Kings Mountain and its vicinity. REPUTATION ANO CHARACTER The circumstances amid uliichyou live determine jour leputn ton. truth you believe determines your character > RepHtetk.il Is what you. are supIHised to lie; charaeter Is what vou ' ' ' nrjiuiaiiuii in |iiiinuKni|in ( Iwr.u tnr is the face. Reputation Is u manufactured thing, rolled and plated and hammered and brand and bolted; character la a growth. , Reputation comes over one from without; character grows up from within. Reputation Is what you have when you come to a new community; character Is what you have when you go away. Your reputation Is learned In an hour;' your character <]0ea not come lo light for ,? year. Reputation Is made In a moment; character Is built in a life time. J Reputation grows like a mushroom; character grows like the oak. Reputation goes like the mushroom; character lasts like eternity. A single newspaper report gives you yopr reputation;, a ljfe of toil gives you your character. If you want to get a position you need a reputation, if you want to keep it, you need a character. Reputation makes you rich or| makes you poor, cuanaotcr makes you happy or makes you miserable. Reputation is what men say about you on your tcmbsumo'; character Is what the angels say about you before the throne of God. Reputation Is the basis of the tem poral Judgment of men; character Is the basis of eternal Judgment of ?William Hersey Davis. Prize-Winning Fruit Requires iGreat Care Prize-winning exhibits of fruit for fall fairs should be harvested with painstaking care, said M. E. Gardber head of th? State College department of horticulture. Pick several fifties the quantity needed for an exhibit so as to have a wide choice to select from. Extra fruits should also be sent to the fair to provide, replacements tn case any are damaged in shipment. Leave the stem attached. as a stem missing from one specimen In a plate exhibit will disqualify the , entire plate. Frit!* picked from the top of the tree, where it Is exposed to more sunshine throughout the day. are usually better colo.red than those on the lower branches. Do not enter fruit that is off color, net uniform in sJ/e and snare, or which -shows injnrv from insects, disease, or bruises. Such fruit cannot. compete for prizes, end It detracts from the appearance of the entire display. For the plate exhibits, take special care to select the very best fruit, as the Judges examine each specimen closely. Don't make the mistake of, picking the biggest fruit for plate e-vhihltfi hilt tret medium nhail fnilt that are uniform in size and color and are true to type. PruH to be shipped should be wrapped carefully, each specimen in an Individual wrapper, fo keep It from bruising. The fruit may be polished if th'.? cr ' h-? (' inc tv'thc"'. bruising, but it is not necessary as judjges do not usuiily give any extra. credit to polished fruit.. Brief News I* 'us Experiments with Wood'a hybrid com in Wilkes County have not turn ed out successfully, the variety apparent)/ not being adapted to that area. Faj ettovllle. Sept. 20 ?Eeaatder Barnew, 13 year old Cumberland county farm boy, was reported In a serious condition at a hospital here today of Injvcka suifered while he and other boys were playing cowboy. Greenville. N. C... Sept. 20.?Heber Mcliawhorn, 45. of Greenville, died In a hoepital here today of Injuries be suffered when an automobile truck hto as he crossed' a street , ?? Farm tours arranged by the Extension Service have, largeely attended in moat counties and are expected to a how good results. W'?i(( Here and There . . U.V Haywood E. Lynch The aeaaon for vacation viaita ia over, and we are going' to miaa thoae who have been vlalting their old home town. Moat of them alwaya come by The Herald Office to viait the Editor. Oliver Ramseur, of Fullerton, Pa., who wotka in Allentown, ,ia one of the moat loyal vacation visitors to The Herald Office. He ueed to work in the paper and is one of its moat enthusiaatic readera and- .boosters. While here tnia summer he snapped the editor's picture, and if it turns out good, and Oliver sends me a print of it, I will publish it in The Herald. Another person who always comes by when in Cleveland County is John B. Ware, who ia with the Pennsylvania Railroad and Uvea in Washington, D. C. Mrs. Frank Thompson of Dallas, Texas, who before her marriage was the daughter of Mrs. C. D. | Hunter, who also lives in Dallas, - came by to inspect the new plant of the Herald. She praised KJn'ns. R(ou!ri!aTn*v?ryTMjplyforTt?^Pu^ He Library. She said aha had been keeping up with the progrees of the Public Library thru the eolumm of The Herald. We are alway* very glad to have former resident! stop in when they are back in The Best Town In The State.. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Horo have ' a very cute little boy and an intelligent one, too. He ie only eight months old, but the other day his dad started to pick him up, and as 1 most babies are at that age. was wet. His dad asked him how many time* he had wet his pants and he I cistinctly replied, 'three." He is , also starting to follow in tne Tootsteps of his parents by liking to play- bridge. He already naj his favorite card picked out which is the seven of clubs. This sounds unbelievable, but I saw it happen. We put several carda in front of .him and he reached down and picked up his card, the seven of clubs. Correction: The dove hunt reported in this column last wee* ; stated one bird had been killed. This wa* a mistake, not any were killed. The one reported killed had been shot the day before and was found dead by the big game hunters. Another sure-shot marksman went out one day last week and shot up all his shell without getting a single feather. I am not going to say who this fallow Is but he spends his winters in Florida, is a Draahuisrlaii alen a nnl Itirian nl note, a big man in the Building A Loan, and was formerly a big cog In the lumber buelneee in The Best Town In The 8tate. Pretty Sight: That new Fire Truck. The Bill of Rights By RAYMOND IMTCAIRN , 1 A year ago the American people observed with nationwide celebrations the !E0:h anniversary ot our Constitution, written during the summer of 1787. i 'A year from now they will probably : observe with impressive ceremony the scsqul-oantrnnial of our Bill of Rights, which was adopted September 25, 1789. And at this time?the 146th anniversary of the Bill of Rights?many thousands of Americans pay their tribute I to the guarantees of liberty which those first ten amendments wrote Into our | National Charter, Such tribute is well earned. For, to I the original Constitution the Bill of I Rights added a determined expression j of that spirit cf personal dignity, independence and self-reliance which has I teen the outstanding characteristic of I theArue American throughout the century and a half of our history. Here are seme of the rights which those ten amendments assure: Freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of speech and of peace| able assembly. 1 The riant to trial he tnrv (hp Hrht | to petition the government for rod rem i of wrongs, the right to own private | property, and all other right* not expressly surrendered to government. Protection against Imprisonment without legal process, against being twice 1 tried on the same charge, against exI cesshre ball or cruel and unusual punishment, against unreasonable search or seizure by government authorities, and against the quartering of soldiers on householders In time of peace. Retention by the states, or the people, of all powers not expressly delegated to the national government by the Constitution. These are rights that our fathers wrote Into the Constitution. They are rights upon which successive genefatlons of Americans have insisted. They are rights which must be guarded now as loyally as they were guarded In tpe past.. They remain our strongest bulwark against the threats of "Isms" and tyrannies, which today threaten so much of the world, whether from without or within. , They are the rights that made America. And . to preserve them is. ear i responsibility. ? ' The net pioductfm of meat am male, t ittle, sheep, and hogs el&ugh tered In North Carolina in If3? w*: valued at over I2g.000.000v report W. H. Rhodes, chi?f statisttctou ffr the State Department ef Agriculture Of this amount, the nets^psdtietlei Ot hog* Slnugbsered ooofythuted are I $22,000(000. r v.1 t , THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD1 AAA Offices Prepare Cotton Market Cards Cotton marketing cards will be 4s sued North Carolina growers b: county AAA offices as soon as pons I ble after it has been determinec whether they have complied witt their cotton acreage allotments. E Y. Floyd, AAA executive officer a State College, has announced. Growers -who have kept withit their allotted acreage will be glvei white cards that will enable them t< sell tax free all the . cotton the; glow this year, plus whatever cottui 'hey may "have on hand from previ ous crops. Those who have overplanted thel acreage will be 'given red cards With the red cards, they can sell ta' free all ttye cotton covered by theli irirketing "quotas, but will have t< pay two cents a pound tax on al cotton sold in excess of their quotas Growers who plant more thai their allotted' cotton acreage will al so be subject to deductions frou their agricultural conservation pro gn ?n payments at the rate of tt\< fins ? uPBfwywwmf111! jui'uimiwrif.f mat yield of the excess acreage. Growers who have excess acreag' may secure white marketing cards Floyd added, if <1| their total pro ductlon won't exceed I.UOO pounds 12) their total production does no : jgL**- H Released thru United Artiste J WHAT HAS &ONE BEFORE Pepe le Moko. continental jewel thief, le eluding the Algiers police by hiding In the mysterious Casbah, or native (fuarter, 'where hie friends keep him safe from harm. But Pej?e chafes for liberty, and his longing for his beloved Paris is intensified when he meets and falls In love with the exquisite Qaby, a Parisian tourist. Pope's interest in Gaby enrages his native sweetheart, Inas; but it gives an idea to the foxy inspector Blimane, Casbah detective, whose one aim ' is to lure Pepe out of the Casbah where the police can seise him. When Pepe's favorite friend, Pierrot, is killed by the police, Pepe rages all the more at his captivity, and Blimane taunts Aim with his inability to , escape from the Casbah., Prying put that he can be free if he wants to, Pepe rushes out of the quarter, and into the open town, daring capture and death. Chapter Fiva Inspector Louvain answered hi j angling phone, listenod intentl with no comment but a few grunt t f comprehension, then hung uj "Inspector Slimane," he announc cd to the waiting detectives in th I M "Suddenly / waJt room. "He says Pepe le Moko 1 coming out. Get going." Without word, four men rose and filed ou . 4 Pepe, rushing wildly through th streets of the Casbah, came to th gate that led to the main town < Algiers. He paused a moment, lool ing down at the town, now real! ing fully what his desperate qu burst might mean. Then, drawin a deep breath, he stepped outsld the gate. But rUnnlns! behind him ?>ni Inos who, never far from Pep had seen him start on his ma Journey and bad raced deaperatal after him. She caught up with hli now, and threw her arms abo\ him. holding him back. "Pepe! Pont, go! Pleaae, plow don't go. I didn't want to tell yo ii.it, but ahe's up there now ? I your houae ? waiting for you!" Pepe turned back. Without word he walked slowly back to h! house with Ihfes. He looked ihrbug all the rooms, but. no one ws there. "Where la aha?"' demanded Pep Titen Ines quietly confessed t- hli that she bad lied. Gaby had m corac back to the Casbah, but Ine ' desperately .wanting, to hold Pug bnck from risking kl? ;Ufa, aa Knowing that be would.not hav dcua, It fur her eake,. nad asm him to do It for the sake of th otl.tr .girl.." " To her surprise, PepO tras'm angry. . He saw his folly, admitte fc, comforted and qateeesd In* And Ines, ItrTft mofoent, *55 happy (hgaln. ^ J ^ ^ But Oaky name hasp to eeePep : i - Krat ey\S t , thai - for twt>^aars rirebeen iS .vi * I-UJUI j.ii.i j|ijMiwp miuipivi THURSDAY, 8 HPT., 22, 1938 "letts" look back" From Thi Kings Mountain Hsrald ? mm mrmm ? NINETEEN YEARS AGO 8EPTEMBER 28, 1919 I j Mrs. La thou Ware left Morula} i tor1 her home at Denver, Colo. Mr. Dorte Ltttlejohn in In Char t loMe talking a course In Ignition and storage batteries. ? I Attorney J. H. Davie has bought i Wiley -Atkins farm south or town. j '* exceed their normal production, (3) I they put up cash or bonds to cover the estimated amount of the peualty Involved for excess marketings. r Floyd also stated that ginners are f required to keep a record of all eotten glnneJ this year, with reports } being sent to the county AAA office II at regular intervals. Buyers ure warned not to pur,(chase cotton from any grower who 1.1 cannot Identify It. with a marketing f card lest they In* subject to a tine Of >jHct more than $500. '"^TJP"TTP"pnuclp3^cottotiprodiicing i stutes. the coat per acre in North ? Carolina Is mere than any other i. state, reports the N\ C. Department i* ot Agriculture. On the other hand, i, the cost per pound U lower than any 1 other state. ^ The swift drama oPao m adventurer's last stand. \lGIERS |fOf >||| J M CHARLES BOYER in tha Walter Wanger production with Sigrid ? A Gurie and Hedy Ldmarr ^ ^ a 1 1 ' "J You know what you are to me? Paris! The whole town ? a spring of morning in Paris!- You're so ai lovely !'p , Vi She raised her mouth to his kiss; * a kiss that lasted a long time. ad But not too - long for either of d? them. She sprang up ? "I must go. a it's late." ar "Suppose you don't come tomor- ? row?'' 'Suppose I don't. Can't you ever get away from the Casbah?" a "No. I'm caught here like a bear M in a hole. But if you don't come hack I might do anything.. .come al down to the hotel and get you." ,i "Til come, Pepe. Tomorrow.'" . "Tomorrow?" He -repeated the word like a pleading child, search- cc Ing her eyes, afraid she might not have meant It. Tomorrow. And I never break a promise." as. M Pepe was hie old self now. Now 'u he could sing once more, as he had been wont to do. He wandered >f through the Casbah streets', singing nc a gay Parisian ditty, waving to the . " shopkeepers and housewives, tho la Casbah people all of whom were his friends. Not a care in tho ?i s world ? she was coming back' y tomorrow. >- ' s SUmane fell into step alongside >. him, smiling his innocent, halfapologetic smile, e "You've seen her again?" W r< I ? HL 4 "a L ^ <? OT ^ J 811 BK :im fa I sll it. \V PBI ai * up ? that's youl" o ta "Wouldn't you like to know?" i, * . Oh, If you don't want to confide t in me ? " murmured gllmane, who *P knew perfectly well. >V ie Pepe laughed merrily. "The _ ic trouble with you, inspector, is that >f you inspect too much. Now don't w t- breathe a word of what I've Just tb - told you ? it'a Just between ourS| selves." Pepe turned into a cafe. Sltmsne d< Te thoughtfully looked at his watch, fr and went down toward the town, ie a e. Inspector Sllmane had on his A best smile, for he was paying a ly call on M. Etlenne Qiraux, Gaby's m a fiance, at the hotel, it "My mission," he explained, "is a rather delicate one,.,but necessary. i? I merely wish to suggest that your u fiancee Is a little too fond of the? it shall we say, the local color ? of the Cask ah. * Qiraux blinked at him ? stupidly la at #l_t it. SAW a a- _ a -a -- ?* m??v, utvu wiiu wio ovKinning* ? of comprehension. "The Casbah," k continued Sllmtq*. is hardly the place for, a woman alone. She at-1 tracte too much attontlon ? dxn cites too much deslrt. We naturally >t wish to protect her from any eine. barraaament, ?o please ? * 5 Glraux new understood perfectly.. ~ |Ie turned to the,door of .CUbys J Adjoining apartment and knocked. - srjaif s: .v fbturied. Out; for a walk ? eomeJJ where. a There was a brief, bitter arg-u- _ M meah. Oiraux forbade her to go to Uie Casbah. undbr the threat of > breaking off their sngafemsut. . Contemptuously, she started for tho , . * EsSfto^rv*u*d' i k. touching'.hgr arm, I 4 eapture, ,t*ep? Te Moke th^s aftcrL pftHe waa ^ Uk^. ft trS^etkflag etralgrht her! | * (Te W oeaoluded) | ITT '**: \f .\ ; . IIIIIIIIBIIIWIHWWW?.WWWI J^ST^HUA^ilS ' jI < VVi\ vt.' 5v > "How Did He Get tt "Bumped Against a I ?,a OPEN FORUM p An open forum for our read- ( ere, but no letter can be pub- r llahed If It exceeds 500 worda. ' e No anonvmoui commil^'naHnne . _ will be accepted. ~*\m name of ! d the writer will not be publiehed ti however. If the author eo requests. mm wmmmmBtp mi ^ tags Mountain Herald: ? Having spent several years in-otic the Xc~th Atlantic St-'es who? r moat e\?ry city and town has its ' anicipuil Airport and observing the j Ivantagi.v different communities , uive from thein, would1 like to sayfew words in teg'ards to securing i adequate field for Kings Moun- * <" t Quite recently there was a meetg to decors tbe furtherance of tr Air M<a?l System. Notables from 1 over the country we-a iwattfcqi-j ice, and It was determined to es-l * blluh feeder lines from different^ | 1 unties in the different statesf to " ek up mail to'be concentrated at f ntral Airports on established Air ait routes, there being only one ch. Airport in each county. . r Our Ttown is located In a section f country that for beamy isn't sur- j. iissed t>y, Jiay other In our East At- otic States. We ate located on an established ir Mail Route, al?o on the main te of the Souithern Kailwav. We are on Sf3te Highways carryg traffic. North, South, East and est. We Have the new Federal vk at lite Battleground carrying e same name thit our Town fell ii'.ural heir to when it was founded. Any one planning a tour by Air. tid touring by Air has reached mar proportion a,'.' would in looking J l the maip seeking the Battle-1 omul, would quickly a-3oclate the o and finding it equipped with mauie Airport mane ?8e or tnat Ct. . | There is land near town that icnild be available. and the VV. P. A ready to help secure and develop It is of /general opinion that the P. A. will only function for a peod of two more yeters, so it is beat r ua to get In, our be?t licks now id not wait for some other town y beat us tn home. Only through the generosity of aj .al young man were able to partic* ate in State and National Air Mail reek by having pick up flights here hlch was an asa^t to the Town and on us State and National recognlin. being; mentioned In one of c/ur adfng Philatelic Magazines, and no >ubt, Atr Mail cover* flown from om here will In the future sell at premium. An Airport will. attract travel i Southern Rait POPULAR EXCUF ATLAN1 CCDTeiiorn O' w??r ? >am wh.n W Rcund trip fare from H $3.fl t Rouiul trip ticket#'?old for nil recu 38) Set .opitoer 2S an# 24, 1938. Ticket# good In coache# oply. Daylight or n^ght trip In both dlreci Fltiel limit rettirnng Sunday night, No baggage checked?No stopovers. Round trip eewurslon tickets also oi Oreenaboro, WlltetooTS#Jem, North ' Chartot-?, Blacksburg end lnteraved< Agent# for farca. Don't nrtsa thin opportunity to apca* *: ??7-.. --o., coNauivr nca ill. I. . ?. I . . " . t. ** , ' v . ' By GENE CARR I* Black Eye?" Rollin' Pin, I Heard!" i-cm towns not so adequately equip* ?1 as was proven then. Jt would place Kings Mountain on lie list of towns welcoming process along with the thing that will ventuulty lead as a mode of travel nd one of our country's leading Inustrlcs, also our strongest weapon 11 case of War. Bx. Sgt., Air Service. **.-. ' . I.4" J Jrief News Items .William V. Farmer, one of the de* nonstratlon farmers of Madison 'ounty, bus Improved his pasture so hat one acre will keep one animal init well supplied with grass. Duplin County cotton glnners are less'.mistlc over prospects this seaon since weather condition have icen unfavorable for the production f cotton In their section. Cotton on Cleveland County land hat has a good crop of leapedeca urned under Is holding Its color ouch better than cotton on land de* leient in humus. Several Johnston County poultry* nen are planning to have their locks blood-tested so that they may le able to sell their eggs to Statepprcved hacheries. I IYflakes i mwr-~ ;STOCK?MORUNS IOC i SAVES , ELASTICITY MLIFEBUOY Ifor'b.o! o For 19r I PROTECTS o r or life fSRINSO cToV?Vs 3 F?r 25c sf^rkuno Large 23c jl LUX SOAP hA?J5L 3 For Me AMD waff MARGRACE STORE PAULINE STORE nuy oyawn ISION FARES fA, GA. > AND 24, 1MB Lln?s Mountain, N. C. 0 lar trntus (except trains 37 aad lions- , ' (ept. 25til, 1938. ? ??? ? ?. a sale at all etaOona, ReMasMle, WilkMboro, SaUabury, .MaS, late stationa. CMl on TMiat ' ' - , ' . t Cm aaasloaad In Atlanta. JPT ACUEtnfe ~ " I iv-jv.drt . ?V. iv a.' . ?n^.. ?%> ' f , , ; ; : t , j
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Sept. 22, 1938, edition 1
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