v. : ? -^v - ? ' ' "' . ' .< . ; f 31M ' " Kings Mountain Herald Established IBM Published Every Thursday HERALD PUBLISHING HOU8E, Haywood E. Lynch Editor-Manager fettered as second class matter .: the Postofflce at Kings Mountal N. C, under tre Act of March ? 1879. UU INSCRIPTION RATES One Year lit Sir Montbc .1 A weekly newspaper devoted I Xt> promotion of the general we tare and published for tb^ euMgli ment, entertainment and benefit t tLe chlzens of K'ngs Mountain an Its vicinity. i . i... North farrtlinn v Jl mss AssociAiiowj^ TRUE WORTH it makes no difference who sang th sons, ' - '/. if only the song were sung, 1\ makes no difference who did th , deed. It matters not who won the. race i?,o long as the race was run; So why should the winner be pfflTf of JTitnself Jhrause it was he who "Won Jl tlie son was sweet and helped soul. . _ : What matter* the singer's name The worth was in the sorig itself Arid not In the world's acclaim.. Tiiii song, tint race, the deed are one, if each be done for. loci1: I/OM- OI Ull- W Or K - - II il I lOVe III Sibil Ami the' score is kept above, " ?Rxchang* . ? YOU CAN WRITE There has been quite a discussio going in The Publisher's Auxiliar recently in regards to whetlier th tin sentday editors are getting K(>1 or not. We have been following th pros and cons''of this dlscusstoi with a great deal of interest, an are very much in accord with th idi as of Kdltor 11. R. Fox. publishe of The Madisonville (Texas) Metoi who had the following to say: "To tell the truth, if the count Judge is a scoundrel. I've never ee able to see why the editnd shoul "scorch hint it) print any more tfia the banker or the blacksmith shoul After all. the county judge's oftic is just across the street and If tli blacksmith wants anybody to kno\ 1he judge is a scottndri I all he ha to do is yell out, or better sMl v.dile tlic editor a letter and it'll b published so long as it's not libe ous.. "I've bail lots ?of people come t< me and say so-and-so ought to b< burned up in print and why don't get in after him. My answer is tha ill tie glad 10 print anything y<> have to say about so-and-so. Jus write me a letter and sign you name and it'll be printed. One hur died limns out of out) hundred tha fipishcs it. No sid, he'll yelp, 1 cei btinlv don't want my name slgnee to it. As a matter of- fact, the crusadin type of hew paper is generajly oil moded. particularly in small towni The newspaper of today is aa ope forum and if anyhody in my tow doesn't like what's going on in th court house or the city hall, he ca just so up to the judge od inayo and tell him. or write my paper l?-tter. But I haven't got time t work up a ease against the Judg had then publish it in serial forti ft lid I don't consider t my job." So. readers of The Herald, if vo have something that you 'thin shottld.be exposed to the publli jus' write it out sign your name t it bring it to the office and we' personally see that it's In the nei issue. (loud prices were paid growers i !." cars of peaches bought lecontl h. ihe Surplus Marketing Adinini '.ration in Surry" County.' repor (unity agent It. II. Smithwick i the N ('. State College K.xtensh Service. I ... CALL OR SEE KENNON BLANTON At Terminal Ser. Station PHONE NO. 10 STERCHI BROS.' Representative in Kings Mountain Territory * * ' * ;. * ' .'-r \ ", * * V '!.'< * > Jr ' " . V : . '. - . -.. i ' *"' - ' '' ' . * 1 >: ''' ItrtflSiifl"'-''"* ,?... TOT Here end There . Haywood E. Lynch) "* Here's a report on that fishing trip to Morehead City that ye editor wai a party to. We caught some i fish and had a good time, 'nuf said. White we were down in the sea coast town, 318 miles away from 11! home we bumped into Mr. and Mrs. O. O. 'Walker, former residents of ' the Best Town In the Stale, who are now living in Morehead City, - and several others from Kings , Mountain, who were there on a fishiO ing trip. We had the pleasure to ' transact a little business with Mrs. Walker at she subscribed to The Herald, te keep up with what is goio ling on In Kings Mountain while her 1- husband is building up the eastern t- part of North . Carolina. j We met up with Mr. and Mrs. { Georg.e Lattlmore over at the beach ' Saturday night, and optimist P. D. ; Herndon promised them some fish, 1 and he was as good as his word, so Sunday afternoon on our way out ' we stopped by and delivered the goods. J s . Here and There is glad to wel- i ' come the teachers back to Kings I ' e Mountain, as they add greatly to the ( i beauty of the Best Town in the J State. e I almost talked Banker D. M. pa- 1 ker nto buying several of us in the ' Barber Shop a Coca-Cola Tuesday Tuesday afternoon . . . don't iverlook that ALMOST. I had the pleasure of recently ' I tajlking to the two oldest citizens of Kings Mountain. I met Mr. Lee a Ramseur down town the other day with Mr. Ross Roberts. It happened ? that it was Mr. Ramseur's 89th birth day. Then yesterday I bumped into | Mr. Daniel Fulton who is 85 years old. The two gentlemen are fine old-1 men. they both wear van-dyke ' beards which adds to their distinguished appearance, and they are two ?y:.'.-cal $ot|lhern gentlemen y/ho : have Uvea good lives and are still | enjoying living. Banker Baker was ready for the arrival of the school teachers Tues-i day'.. He had several packs of chewit ing gum in his . pocket waiting to be y d stributed to the ladies who contrie bute to the educational life of Kings 't Mountain, e n Add to your list of excellent outdoor cooks: Byron Keeter. * And to your list of persons who r really like to call up someone over the phone: Clarence Carpenter. y I don't like a person who is so n nice to you that you. know he can't #1 KA ninrArA. - I'll Bet You: 2 to 1 that Ridge Street Is, not paved befdre Christ1 mas 6 to 1 that the High School | Stadium is not completed in time to play baseball in next spring"..,/., |( 52 to 1 that Kings Mountain needs p a hotel and an up-to-date eating es! tablishment more than any town in the State .... 7 to 4 that Kings Mountain is not deriving as much ; benefit as she should from the P ! Kings Mountain Battleground .... f 11 to 8 that the gas shortage is not near as critical as some of the gov- ; Ill . I { ernment officials are trying to make | out .... 7 to 6 that Irvin Allen runs r , for some political job next election l|*l ... .3 to 2 that Con. Bulwinkl$ will have opposition next election ...... ^ ! 80 to 1 that if half the Government , Beauracrats were cut off the pay roll, both government and business would operate more efficiently .... 40 to 3 that the trains operating ' : thru Kings Mountain go entirely too n! fast .... .10 to 1 that if we printed n all the information sent out by ths n. . .... j government agencies rne Herald " would have 20 pages each Issue. a Ita not often we tell three subo sorptions to one man at one time, I? , but yeaterday morning R. L. Plonk, I. i who is already a regular subscriber, stopped in the office and ordered u The Herald sent to his two daughK j ters, Martha, who Is a teacher In. e. Newland. N. C., and Virginia, who \ o teaches in Matthews, N. C? and also 11 his sister-in-law. Mrs. Laura Wolfe, (t , in Bethesda, Md. , . ; | MICK1E SAYS? !?f j - ' * * . ly [. ^ \ VJB TRW T'GIT ALL \ OUR HEU/S CORRECT, n BUT SOME TIMES' WE A RE*MISINFORMED By 7V' VERW PERSONS WHO SHOULD KUOW* WE ALL MARE ^MISTAKES J / Y7H) $ ^ " ill } P^ //I yf? i r ; ' i-'^TI 'it-' ri T^iMfiiliiiMii 11 KINGS MOUNTAIN HKKALO THT7T THC KEAftNK? STRIKE The CIO strike at the shipbuilding yards at Kearney, N. J., caused three weeks delay in 1500,000,000 of much needed ships and' kept 18.000 men eut of work for that length of time. . \ \ " ' : \N..? ' The workers were satisfied With their wages and working conditions but union leaders, tnost of whom were not employees of the shipbuilding plant, insisted that every worker Who failed to pay dues to he union should be discharged by the company. The strike was not on behalf of tht' workers but on behalf of those vho collected union dues. it was a strike to deti.v individual freedom to workers who did not visit to give part of tlieir earnings 0 union officials. .President Kposevelt refdsed to ' it * a word in Itehalf of such rights Hid placed the navy in charge of Ihe yards, which means that those A'ho refuse to pay union dueij will j je discarged. In u time of national emergency, 1 group of dues collectors are allow I'd to suspend the building of much leeded ships and" the chief executive >f the nation upholds them iu deny, ng Individual freedom to workers. it would be difficult to imagine a nore disgraceful or a more un\merican proceedings.?Textile Buietln. ???????? . ' 1 1 '? | " WALTER Winter f^ "na mwiji i ILtKUl What Has Gone Before: When Jill Baxter, wealthy young -American divorcee, slops at Dartmouth College to change. trait is en route to Montreal, she ' meets an old flame, Professor . i Johnny Weldon, to whom she i was once engaged. Her Inter| est in him decidedly re-awakenj ed, she decides to spend a day . at Dartmouth, where the famous ' Winter Carnival is in full swina. ~~7TJT intrigues Johnny intoproposing to her again, but when she refuses to settle down and live permanently in the college town with him, their old quarrel begins anew, and Jill decides to go on to Montreal. Meanwhile Jill's younger sister Ann, up at Dartmouth for the Carnival, is acclaimed Carnival Queen, just as her sister was Six years earlier, and chooses ! young Mickey Allen, Dartmouth . ski champ, as her escort. ^ Chapter Five The dance was on in full swing at the fraternity house. Ann tried to appear casual about' her newfound glory as Queen of the Carvinal, but Mickey Allen realized J ji "Aren't you going to introd that it had quite gone to her >ead. He realized it better than vcr when she permitted the dashing Count Eric Von L,undborg to cut in on their dancing tor the fourth time. In matters of romance the Count was not one to let grass grow wilder hie feet. He informed the breathless Ann, almost giddy with the excitement of the evening, that he had found out about a y.-ifectly lovely Intimate little road house across the river. She was ready to go there with him..; And after that? "We can keep right on going." said Eric smoothly. "My boat doesn't sail until Tuesday.,.Even that doesn't have to be the! Rid," fthe smiled up at him warmly as they danced. When Ann went to the Improvised powder room she was oiled to the telephone. Jill was ??01ing her from the station to congratulate her on having won the crown of Snow Queen. "Goodbye, darling. You can come *??er and visit me in Europe next simmer, If you're a good girl." "If I'm not," boasted Ann flippantly, "1 can get ' there before That, You might even find me waiting on the dock." She proceeded to tell her sister, half Joking, half boasting, about her "conquest" of Count Von Lundborg. -who was ready to do anything iwlth her, take her anywhere. Jill remonstrated, pleaded, threatened. but it was no use. "Thanks, but I'm not going to be a rookie forever," concluded Ann ? "and T don't need any more advice than roc did.. .Goodbye ? Eric's waiting tot me. Have fun." Jill frantically rang another - jnimber, and ordered a sleigh. "Boy! Oet a toad of that!" "What a baba! Answer to a Mafe prayer!" "Dent bold me back!" The stag line bad taken on a new lease of life. A ware of fevered excitement rushed over the un^jttaebed boy? ? and those with taDAY. 6KPT. 4. 1941 LOOKING FOR TMtIR FUNDS Max Caldwell, as head of the Chicago Retail Clerks Union, collected $910,000 over a period of four years but when he was recently ousted as ' treasurer. $60 was found in the treas .ury. The confiding members, aroused by that discovery, secured the legal right to drill open Caldwell's safe deposit box and found therein $30. 000 in jewelry and documents relating to the purchase of $25,000 In deal estate, but most dt Fhe funds of the union have disappeared. | There were records of the purchase i by Caldwell, of a $45,000 mansion in Florida. His sulary was $125. per week. It is the old. old story of trusting souls' turning over funds without requiring bonds or' safeguards.. If some unions In the South would suddenly cull for an accounting or require ' those who collect funds to1 furnish bonds, as is done in the business world. some other empty treasudies might be discovered. ?j Textile Hulletin. Two new Greene County AAA mattress making centers have been opened, one at Snow FtTH ^and one at Walstonburg. says J. W. Grant, assistant county agent. Dry weather and shrinking pasture feed has retarded raw mild pro duction in Durham County, reports f I County Agent W. 11. Pace. j. tAxmlli i *Hh " ARD CARLSON MUT AIMSTMNfi - fHKMA JUM t3? ' , rfkrcaum mimi L ? TMKU IHITU) mum tl partners as well ? as all eyes t turned toward the entrance of the dance hall and watched the a*?" rival of the ravishingly loveig j I1 blonde, wearing u decollete mote j j. extreme than any other in the J room.' Jill deftly eluded the crowd < / stags who pressed around begging { for a dance, and made her wag i directly to where Ann and Vo? P LiUndborg were dancing. Ann, see g ing her, stopped in her tracks an* j stared. . .' "Darling!" caroled Jill, sailii># " elffhi ..wv J ?-? 1 * i0iav up anu nlBDIilK l\Vl\ 119 good to sec you. I didn't think f* be able to Ket here!" At the shim time she Rave Eric a soft, linger- h ing look that plainly intimated Io*? c at finSt sight. b "Aren't you going to intro-id appropriated Eric for the r? uainder of the dance. The young Count, experience though he was. was- no match f?? the cleverer and more experience Jill Baxter. By the time the daims was over she had him regar.!r"e. her younger sister as a mere br.t-? t unworthy of his polished at <"? Hons; and she had as much : * agreed to cancel her passage an4 I | woe met" said Count Brie. cross on the tame boat with the Count. "And it doesn't have to end there..." "Darling, isn't it terrible?" Jill grinned wickedly as they re-Jolned Ann at the edge of the dance floor. "Eric made me promise to cross on the same boat with him? maybe you can come over and visit me after, school closes this summer, if you're a good girl!" Ann. in tears, rushed off to the bar for a consoling sarsaparilla ? her romance shattered! Jill then turned easily to the Count. "Eric. I have, a confession to make. May I?...In all my-lifc, I've never met a man* quite like | you. Really, it's quite an achievement to have stuffed bo much conceit . into so few years. Goodbye, and thanks for the dance!" * Jill, having changed bach to her traveling clothes, emerged from the dressing room to find John | watting for her. Ann, meeting him at the bar to which he had come i from the railroad station, had told him about Jill's "betrayal" -of her. Weldon was moved to genuine ad- | miration of Jill for the workman- i like bit of "surgery" she had performed in sa ng her little sister from followin,, in her own footsteps. He put his admiration into words. He did more than that, as a matter of fact. It was well after midnight. It was only common decency for him to drive her to the Morgans to be lodged until the next morning.; < "It was a wonderful ride home. , John." whispered Jill when he i milled Mil In fmnt e\f **? Mnwran house. "And that little house on . Lime Rond Just m lovely as vou maid. .Will It etlU be there in the morninjc?" ( "Uh-huh. Ife weathered Its flrat hundred years. Everything'? built to last up hero." Her arms wont slowly around his neek. "Tm all through traveling, John, ru oven dry dishes your way. (To he continues) * ' < I I I ~-jpiJ***1" ' ? c bandy?"Don't Throw That Boi ll -b?c,l E dOME It 18 more than brick and mortar, vlth a roof to shed the storm; It is nore than walls and windows, with i i hearth to keep us warm. * It Is more than just a tavern rhere hungry mouths are fed r or, | rhen the Journey's ended. wberfc re rest our weary head. It isn't just a hangout when there i nothing else to do; or to whien |. re wander slowly when the nightly dates" are through. It's a haven when we're battered y the temptest of the day; where I hero's peace anil understanding hat will chase our cares away. Its the place our hearts fytjarn o. though our errant feet may oam. its our earthly bit of Heaven j ts that paradise called Home. ?j [ Exchange. , . j ^ ( .Davidson County farmers will com lete orders for 100 cars of AAA vunt-of-ald limestone by September 5 says County Agen P. M. Hen..i?i... * - . L IICKft. ) 1 A small -army' of experts, num-; j erlng more than 4,000 . persons, is onclucting the British Lease-lending i ? uving program In this country. J4tmuWxJd/t When you feel well. It Is miae Have you ever dragged throug by a Headache, Neuralgia, Mute Menstrual Pains?a day when c kept you on the job? Dr. Miles Anti usually relieve Headaches. You also in the relief of the other i above. mm A package of these prompt acting pain re- iu Levers may save you hours of suffering. . Y I Rn< fall dlr#ctl?M ? in pwkwi. . Hard To Make Both Ends Meet? JUST GET? A SMALL LOAN FROM US * ' An anchor in financia Storms. Always At Youi Service. First Natic 2 PERCENT PAID ON S . - , V By GENE CARR ? I ' [tie. I Kin Get Two Cents fee r_*.\rrr .it 11' (V Dab a Day keeps P.O.* away! ('Underarm Pmrtpiration Odor) YODORfl ' BEOIOmnT'CREflfB -isn't stiff or sticky! Soft?it\ 1 sprssds like fscs cream. q ? is actually soothing I Uee right after sbaVIiig?will not irritate. < ?baalight, pi assent scent.No sickly ! smell to cling to fingers or clothing.1 ?will not spoil delicate fabrics. ( fat tests in the tropics?mads by nurses ?prove that Yodora protects under tryng conditions. Is Sitae arfar*Mc,2S?,40a. AldCataaa A lac* IrMlf^trt, Caaa. icj. uTturi i ry when you don't }i a day made miserable alar Pain* or Functional wily your sense of duty -Pain Pills will find them effective lagging pains mentioned alar PtdiM* Takfcu. U* Mar Fwkift TafcWU. llJtt MBl. "'* * % , ? *'*'/? >. ... >* , . / r I? ' j I.,,. I iTsSl ' . K3?J > >nai Bank SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ' PIMinRMiiMP^