The Kings Mountain Herald established 1Mb Published Every Thursday HERALD PUBLISHING HOUSE. Haywood E. Lynch ' Editor-Manager stared as second class matter a the Poatofflce at Kings Mountain H. C-, onder tie Act of Msrch 3 1S7S. ' / SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year ?1.6i Six Months ; 7t t ' i A weekly newspaper devoted U. the promotion of the general wel Care and published for the enllght sent, entertainment and benefit ol the citizens of K'ngs Mountain and tts vicinity. THr MOMS T you scan the weekly paper rom , your ol' home town. It tells you all about who's sick an' those who come and go ( Likewise the comln' vendue at the farm of Jabei Stowe. The burnin' of the cidar mill be. . Ion gin' to "Hub" Brown, ?eta a write-up In the paper from 1 your ol' home town. ' I There ain't an entertainment or a ' meeting where they play, Rut what I know about it tho I'm living far away, If the chicken pox ia ragin' or the munrpe la goln' round 1 peruse it in the paper from my ol' home town. ' I read the mornln' papers andi the evening papers, too Au' 1 sometimes pick a novel up an' eont of skip it thru; But when I want some pabulum, which no where else is foun' I unwrap the little paper from my ol' home town. They say our good and had deeds aro recorded up on high fco that God can classify us when it comes our time to die If that be true. I knew a man who's goln' to yrear a crown He's the gent who runs the paper in my ol' home town. ?John Kelly In Chicago Tribune. BOOKS Many of the finer things are to be found in books if we profit J>y the opinions of learned1 people.- The following expresses the estimate of a few writers as to value of bocks: Channlng said: God' be thanked for books. They are the voices of the distant and the dtead. and make us heir of. the spiritual life of the past agrs. Tn the beet hooks, great men talk to us, give us our most preclcus thoughts, and pour their souls Into ours. Carlvle said: All that mankind has ?ione, thought or been, is lying as in magic preservation in the pages of books. They are the chosen possession of men. Emerscn said: Otve me a book, health, and a June day, and I will make the pomp of kings look ridiculous. Philip Prooks thought that , four , kindfe of books should he In every library. Memoirs. biography, pro-1 ] traits and letters. Good books cost you little In money, but they may i cost you years and decades of toll! and labor and energy If permltter to pass through life without knowing the finer Ideal of life revealed In books. All of these estimates en- 1 florae the value of a public library.? . The Uplift. COUNTRY EDITOR , Those who are appreciatively aware of the major part he haa play- i *d In the development of a nation' realize, following a vacation visit to the "bHI home town," that the country editor Is belatedly coming In J ( to his own. A new. conservatively , pray suit has replaced the shiny. serge of yesteryear; a modest car la j parked1 before his recently painted ' homo or office, and he exudes a gen ^ crnl air of well-being mere convinc-: , Ing that the boldest bold faced' type ! ?these are evidences of a securltp ' which he has modestly refrained , Pxm menttonlng in his paper on the theory that It Wmil'Unt he 'news." 1 Although It has ohroblcled assldu- | ously the doings of Pndnnkville. the , commsrs ano goinvs ct ne rehio^ms, Ms marriages. the repainting of Us | tiomM or the building of new ones, the rural newspaper has omitted an all-Important Item ? the gradual change tn the status of Its editor. In an earlier day he was frequently a "one-man newspaper." since he not only gathered news items and solicited advertisements, hut, this phase of Journalistic activity completed. set them Into type, made up the forma and. with a robust assistant. ran off the meager edition and carried M to the poet office for malltaf. Hte writing* Invariably radfeteff an optimism he moat sometimes have been far from feeling, afnea ha would interrupt an editorial advocating a four-figure expend!tale for a water works system to Here and There . ' (By Haywood B. 1-yncd) On* of tha boat places to got tho ccol publio aontimont la In tho bar. bor oh op. Tho main topic of conver. ration for tho pact aovoral dayo haa seen the war and hotel. Just about ?veryon? who cornea in haa the way to win the war all figured guU The conversation dlh change for juet a few minutes Weoneaaay morning fr<>m war and hotel to dove shooting. W. A. Ridenhour reported ha -tad not kilted a single one yet, while others have shot the bag limit. My moustache had been trimmed jntil it was too near tho siae and shape of Hitler's so, I had Pat Tig. lor to cut it completely off. The first person I met after I left tne barber shop^was Oec Griffin a"d he noticed it right off. Unless my wife reads this It will be several days betore she observes the absence on my upper lip. Byron Keeter broke ground for hit ncw home on Cleveland Avenue thii week. m down town Wednesday. He cams down to get a hair cut. Leslie McGinnis, former citisei but now of Richmond. Va. stopped by to see me Saturday and we had.a fine time talking about soma of the big Oct. 7th celebrations that Kings Mountain used to pull. It seems tc me it is about time for another one, and neyt year, 1940, will be ths 100ih anniversary of the histoHca oamc. l.ci ? gci du?j. Records Of Farm Business Important A farmer is a business man ?ant Mho a scientist, a merchant, a finar tier, a manufacturer, and someiimei weather prophet. A business mar keeps records of his profit aiid loss and a fanner should do the same says R. W. Shoffner, farm .manage ment specialist of the. State College Extension Service. Money invested iu land, equlpmea and buildings is no different from that invested in stocks and1 bonds Money invested In stocks and bond) Is expected to return the owner pro. fit. Likewise* an investment in land and farm equipment is expected tt jit Id a profit or give a return or the investment, the specialist do clared. In order that weaknesses in th< farm set-up can be determined ant a basis for future opeiat.ons can b? worked out, farm recc-rds are highl) important, Shoffner said. With s good farm record, one can detenuim as a general rule, scurces of large* receipts, most costly items, returm for the year's work, and the offloler cy of capital Invested, which, li turn, is a general measure of man agcrial efficiency. County farm agents are heipin; scores cf North Carolina fannwi to keep records, and in many case) aro furnishing free the record booki necessary for figuring the farm ant lahoi in come, return on investment chcnge in inventory, and other vita far tor ft Afffar.finir nrof it or Ioah WHEN YOU COME TO KNOW A FELLOW When yc,u come to know a fellow, Know his Joyst and cares. When you've come to understand him, And the burden that he bears: When you learn the fight he's making And the troUblee In his way- ? Then you'll find that he is different Than yo,u thought him yeeterday. You'll find his faults are trlval And there's not eo much to blame In the brother that you Jeered) at When you only knew his name. When you get to know a fellow, Krow his ?very mood and whim ? Y'ou begin to f(n1 civic affalrf Instead) of peraUtttng ?ltn to merely chronicle them, the soir.muntty is paying a long-deferred lebt.?The Christian Science Mo>Hor. W. s. Rlohaidus, of Bellalr In Graven County, believes them la locking that Improves land an much n a crop of valval bean* plowed inder. says Assistant Farm Agent *au' Cox. r. * - rm KINO# MOUNTAIN RIRALO TH If arris Says To Sow Lawns In September Green grass In winter means sowlng Italian rye grass and ?the.- lawn t mixtures in September, advises John < H. Harris, landscape specialist of i the State College Extension Service.1 s lu his list of suggestions of Whatj | to dc In September ? to oeautlfy t I the home grounds, Harris para> mounts sowing of grasM seed. ( * He also recommends preparation > of the soil for fall plantii^ of bu'bs 1 removal of lead limbs from decidu- t out trees, planting of peonies, re- ^ making of lily of the valley beds, and I the cutting back of Iris that is in- i i fected with leaf spot during the mon ? : the of September, i In his discussion of winter lawns, 1 i .Harris* says: Most people get better 1 > results by raking In the rye grass ' i seed rather than leaving them on * top, of the summer sod. A good 1 scratching of the summer sod will not damage the existing grass, but . will improve If for the next year, " ' espec'ally if a liberal application-of 1 fertilizer Is applied1 when the rye grass seed are, sown. . { "Kill aif^'liy' , > The newly sown lawn should be < mulched with wheat straw, which I prevent wanning, retain* moisture I (or the grass, and protects tender I grass from the hot sun. The straw i thorld be resoved when the grass I Is well established. I To prepare soil for the fall plant- t UCDOm HQ . IN TICHI what has gone before: If 1 When Lieutenant Barry Faver) a ham resigns his commission on . the eve of hie Regiment's departure for Egypt to Join Oen? oral Kitchener's army, his three brother officers, Durrance, WUIbughby and Burroughs, send him each a white feather as an > expression of their scorn. Be plucks a fourth white feather . from the fan of his fiancee, 1 Bthne Burroughs, when she i withholds her approval of his action. Anxious to redeem his cowardice, he goes to Egypt, 1 disguises himself as a speechless Bengali, and rescues Dur> ranee from death after the latter has gone blind from the * intense sun. Durranoe, who is \ also in love with Mthne, re, turns to England, and Bthne decides to marry him. While Durrance is relating the story > of his rescue by a "dumb native", Bthne discovers; that the -native- returned Hie white feather to Mm, and reaHxea that * It mint have been Harry Favereham, whom she thought dead. X t r M 3 1 t Chapter Five $ In the dirty, unkempt market t place In the town of Omdurman, l stronghold of the Mahdl, great x I I i 1 (M M t "If / hod my hands free for toi _ "/*d strangle the port was in progress. Two Bng- a llsh prisoners, brought from an ? outpost for Incarceration In the t Mahdl'l dunireAn rrfinrh*/) In m wooden cure on. a low platform t wagon, welting until It pleased t theTr guards to throw them Into t the prison. Around them surged c and pranced a yelling, jeering e crowd of natives, prodding them e with sticks, spitting at thorn and s creaming Imprecatlona a The prisoners, ragged, bruised and exhausted by months of ill- P treatment, bore It with the stolid * endurance they had learned. "Good of them to entertain us J for nothing!" muttered Willoughby 1 under bis breath. "If I had my bands free for ten -J seconds," grated Burroughs, 'Td J strangle that fllthy little blighter ? with the flute!" h i The "fllthy little blighter" was indeed one of their worst tormen- r tors, capering up repeatedly, spit- * ting at their faces, blowing dert- 5 i slve little swirls of music under * their noses with his Instrument But suddenly Burroughs pricked up Ms ears and looked at the o fellow amsmedly. He was playing fi a snatch of "Rule Brlttanla!" tl As the two looked ad him, he h again blew Ms flute k tksdr tie ess, o holding it direct!* w4e kdr. eyee. And then the* the ? ecrlption. rudely aerate**** w ? the side of the Idai'- *?. ? -DAWN TOMORROW. WATCH h rOR Hr rtvrr"^ ? e UfUtyDtAY, SEPT. T. 1W lets" LOOKBA^lT Prom Th# Kings Mountain Herald MiftMnniwifWHMfmfvMnfw*#* NINETEEN YEARS AGO BPT. 9, 1920 Mrs.. Grfer Me Daniel and children ire visiting in Rock |HHIMrs. Paul Peterson went to Atlana Tuesday to buy fall millinery. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. M^uuey and umily returned Tuesday from a vlst to relatives at Conover. Mlfes Winnie Vera Mauuey has en. ered Fasalfern School at Henderson dlle. ng of bulbs, the State College sped iliBt suggests the afpllsatlcn of well o'.ted stable manure several weeka >efore the bulbs are planted. The nanure should be supplemented with i complete fertiliser such as,- 6-8-6, ipplled at the rate of three or four >ounds per 100 square feet. Guernseys Sold A registered Guernsey bull has repy NfeiiTer'To Ray Wbistnant. Also, a registered lutrnsey bull lias recently been sold >y Mr. Neisler to 8. C. Henry of Charlotte. N. C. The former animal is Arcutmie a roremosfr uu i ut he decided to reserve a more ubtle kind of punishment for his tew prisoner?a punishment that I I HI I' i' tiecondt," grate* Burroughs, little blighter.* rould be shared by all the others rho were already languishing In lis dungeon. "Have him thrown into the rison." he ordered his interprear. "And tell him, so that he may ell the others there, that if Klthener dares to attack this city, very one of them will have his yes burned out with a hot iron, j nd his arms cut from their. . ockets." At nightfall the bleeding, halfonscious Faversham was flung llo the cell. wWrnln on he floor, he tank into a heavy tupor. The prisoner*, to whom his was a common occurrence, aid little attention; but Buroughs and Wlllougbby recognized im as their benefactor, crept over a where he lay, and scrutinized is face. "Wllloughby, look!" cried Buroughs in an excited undertone, s he lifted the man's turban from Is forehead. Took?It's Barry? Carry Faversham!" * ? e All during the night, while the ther prisoners slept, the three riends feverishly filed away at Is chains that bound their Mads wether. And while they ?r ut on the desert VeeaS *ur3"dTC2i!r?3: 3SZ ZS. . f; tfetwere aV v the enntNeftia ?? K)tehs***'e sis1 tlticn The fyvkh warriors ere: messing, tea of ?ym to & Sot tu M m M luhtoiri nut of itiibOn >al^ dw# 4V m slijia moea !?> W MXMTV |WlVDp?OiB O* UMVBHUli CSV he Msdsfatr I ' _ . . . i- * #* ' # V,. JUST HUMANS -3 J I ufi jB ^pr. i JAhlXAT Willie Jones Owes Jimmie John Out in Ride? Voluntary Patriot 1 Pointed As Best New York, N. Y., Sept. 6.?(IPS). --A program through which Ameri- , cans can best maintain "voluntary < patriotism" was advanced here re- , cently by A. W. Hawkes, President of Congoleum-Nairn, Inc., Kearney, N. J., in a nationwide broadcast sponsored by the General Federation of Women's Clubs. Mr. Hawkes. a National Vice- Pres idiot of the National Association of Manufacturers, declared that there are two main divisions of patriotism the "voluntary" and involuntary' kind. 'No real American can doubt the frreat value of voluntary patriotism as compared with involuntary pattiotlsm,' he declarod. "Voluntary pa tiiotlsm is founded on individual lib erty, freedom, and the pursuit of hap' pitiess, including freedom of religious worship and the right of assemblage and free speech. Whereas In\ oluntary patriotism is the result ct force and coercion, wherein the state or the master of the state defines the conduct and life of the individual. * ,i "Voluntary patriotism can only exist through support of the principle that Right makes Might, and. eternal vigilance in seeking and main tnlning Right can toe the only way to support the type of voluntary patri"tlsm which should domlnlate the hearts and minda of our people. Vol yetary patriotism should never result In a war of aggression ? seeks tlie counsel table and seeks the | peaceful volution of differences ? !s all-powerful in defense of Right. "There can be no high-grade patriotism In our people unless.we are inltei on fundamentals and the support and protection of a true Intert? elation of our United States Constation and the basic government mmmmBm rrs time to have those white shoes dyed. We are experts in dying shoes any color you want. We call for and deliver. FOSTERS SHOE SERVICE i Phone 154 I Monev ( i * :: BUT NOT ON TREES! 1' ' O . ^ ' . < . , ' I Hhere's one place it does ; bank account. Here where > ing, they grow gradually I minimum of risk taken. . I will grow Into a large, ui ; We inrite your accounts. il I! FIRST NATK ; Member Federal Deposit Deposits Insured * jfcrfr/'i n'uftv . _ ___ . - - . ?: . By OBNK CAfUt ?Vh- I* .^3* * ? 55 ifl I ^ *?* -? ? ' ?j8 %._ . ;JI ' "'' ' . dent. ^kr*. " * son a Dollar, so. He's Tallin' ItT formed under It. "There never was and likely nev? er will be a period when the ao lions of all of 130 million people (ould possibly please all those people all the time." he added. "If I un>* derstand the cause for the establisV iritnt of our great country, It had innate In It a fair regard for the rights of others and its founders renlkcd that for the greatest good' of the greatest number certain rights must be surrendered and certain obligations assumed by all members of ou~ society.< It was intended that the people of thlB great country should ciily surrender that small part of fieedom of action and liberty necessary tp give their creation ? the government ? power to protect and preserve for all, the Inalienable rights prescribed in the Constitution." $ FOREIGN FAIR PARTICIPATION , New York.?Twenty five foreign? governments have their own pavilions at the Nerw York World's Fair anl 47 foreign countries are represea ted In tbe Hall of Nations. Opportunity^^ ^ KnocksjS^ ry ^ HEAP the ADS J CONCENTRATED | RBfel SUPER SUDS Mgt IN THK I BLUE BOX Palmollve, 3 for 20o Small 8upar Suda (rad box) 3 for 28b Small Supar Suda (blua box S for ISO Largo Supar Suda (blua box 8 far 47o Octagon Soap (giant) S for .. 88o Octagon Soap (amall) 10 fbr .. 23d Octagon Powder (largo) S for , 28o Octagon Powder (amall) 10 far 830 Octagon TollaL 4 for ......... 130 Octagon Claanaar 2 for So Octagon Granulated 2 for .... 18b Cryatal White Soap 3 for 14o Hollywood Baauty Soap 8 for .. 14o Blalock's Grocery SrttUrs- ;t grow?and that's In a | s your dollars are work- ? and safely?with the $ A small weekly deposit | iible tun. ' ' i )NAL BANK : *Insurance Corporation op to $5,000.00 i