1N9« 2 KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C, Thursday, June 16, t966»^^ Establisl^ed 1889 The Kings Mountain Heiaid - 'Ttonh Carolina i_ 'm^s association! \ Hc"’sp2p»^T devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published for tne enlightenment, entertainment and benefit of the citizens of Kings Mountain and its vicinity, published every Thursday by the Herald Publishing House. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Kings Mountain, N. C, 28086 under Act of Congress of March 3, 1873. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Martin Harmon Editor-Publisher Gary Stewart Sports Editor Miss Elizabeth Stewart Circulation Manager and Society Editor Miss Lynda Hardin • Clerk MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT Bobby Bolin Dave Weathers Allen Myers Paul Jackson Dave Weathers, Jr. SUBSCRIPTIONS RATES PAYABLE IN .ADVANCE — BY MAIL ANYWHERE ONE YEAR .. $3:50 SIX MONTHS .. $2.00 THREE MONTHS .. $1.25 PLUS NORTH CAROLINA SALES TAX TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739-5441 Vote Saturday Have a favorite, or two or three in Saturday’s run-off primary? If so, vote! There are three run-off races in Sat urday’s Democratic primary, for two county commission seats and for coun ty treasurer, and, for Republicans, there is a run-off for United States Congress man fro mthe tenth North Carolina dis trict. Nominally, in Cleveland county the tenth North Carolina district. Dem ocratic nomination is tantamount to election. , Odds are that the “tanlomount" busi ness holds true again this year, though the commission nominees and Congress man Basil L. Whitener, unopposed nomi nee for re-election, have Republican op position. Republicans are not accustomed to primaries and come nowhere near vot ing their strength until the autumn campaign, when it is often too late. W. Hall Young, of Avery county, held a sizeable lead over Challeneger Don Wir- ick, of Gastonia, in the May 28 voting. He has predicted, likely correctly, he will again be the GOP choice to face Mr. Whitener in the autumn. Yet GOP strength in Gaston alone, if put into the ballot box, would swamp Mr. Young. He told Gaston folk as much in recent days. There is no GOP candidate for county treasurer. Thus Democarts will elect a treasurer on Saturday. The prediction is for a quite light vote total, which means that the candidates who get their friends to the polls will be the winners. The Whammy This newspaper, as never, does not ap preciate action of the city board of com missioners in ratifying use of the radar speed control system — better known as the “whammy” — to control traffic speed. From the looks of the Monday court docket, the officers must have done lit tle else in recent days, other than ma nipulate this instrument (or instru ments, since the city has two). The city’s financial well-being does not indicate need for money is the rea son. Or is that the route for employee pay raises; The Hffl*ald would remind the commis sioners, all of whom are sufficiently aged to remember, of the reputation of Bessemer City for harrying travelers in the days of the motorcycle policeman. Nor would any of the commissioners pass through Petersburg, Virginia, or Brunswick, Georgia, could they possibly avoid it. mil White sey. Congratul Varies ed ppesident ihaq^lcal ihd Irvin Allen. Sr. Irvin M. Allen, Sr., is among the bet ter police officers Kings Mountain and Cleveland County has known. He also was among the more shrewd politicians to grace this county. His dic tum: do your politicking after dark. It was reference to fact that, in heat of a campaign, people put two and two to gether and often derive answers of three or five, neither being correct. Mr. Allen’s longtime interest and con tinuing activity in local politics taught him how to read minds and attitudes, and the same stood with him to his seemingly inherent ability as a police officer and sheriff with the detective’s mind — in the tradition of Dashiel Ham- met, Earle Stanley Gardner, and Perry Mason. There is much to remember about Sheriff Allen: 1) The hard-fought Allen-Raymond Cline races for high sheriff of the coun ty. 2) His adherence to and support of tht Democratic party. 3) His determination, after a stroke of paralysis, to I'etain a driver’s license (he did). 4) His farm-grown wisdom. 5) His fine family. Mr. Allen always clowned during po litical seasons, but those who jousted with him in both victory and defeat would attest he was never a clown. In a coma prior to the May 28 pri mary, he aroused thereafter to under stand that his son had been re-nomi nated as sheriff. It can be safely surmised that Sheriff Allen died at peace. Price Of Eggs (Milk) The Charlotte Observer made big headlines out of the news story that the price of milk likely will advance by two cents per quart come August. Why not, or as the ‘pourquoi non”? French say it kings Mwiataiiu is-trying to stretch up and does not need to develope the reputation of being a hick town. Via U. S. Bureau of the Census edict Kings Mountain 1) qualified for “city” desig nation by attaining 5,000 population in 1930 and 2) showed population of 8,256 in the recent special census of the bu reau. The farmer has been one of the more protected souls of the United States. Reasons are several, including the na tive rural background of this nation, fear of the farmer by urbanites, the farmer's native conservatism and con sequent appreciation of protectionism as represented one time by his tariff policy, today by his willingness to lean on arms of government for marketing quotas, farm extension services, and, in this state, the milk commission. TODAY’S BIBLE VERSE And me knom that all things xoork together for goad to them that love God. to them icho are the called according to his purpose. Romans S:28. MARTIN’S MEDICINE Ingredients: bits of news wfedotn, humor, and comments Directions: Take weekly, »; possible, but at'oid By MARTIN HARMON Death Valley Days Bill Bridges, the barber, was teasing Dr. John C. .McCiill re cently about a sign liis wife and daughter found on his oHice door recently. m-na The text read sQ.T.cthing like this: “Wanted; Cowboy for im mediate employment. Good work ing conditions. Fringe benefits'.* cut-rate medical care (milk fev er, broken cones). Apply inside, leave hoi'se liitchcd outside. ■Rancher’ J. McGill.'' m-m John’s cows in neighboring j South Carolina had crashed j through the fence cUid taken | French leave. At the time, an j even dozen were .still AWOL. I m-m I Author of the joke was Bill's! j barbering cousin, Roy Cridge.s, | and he was merely repaying | John for an earlier prank per petrated by the doctor. Shortly after the barber shops started closing all day Wednesdays,! i John was .going to a reunion on I a Wednesday and w.as' in dire j need of a trim, both for general | good grooming and to remo\ e | sore five years worth of gray. I But no shops were open John! put a sign on Roy’s emporium j reading: “For emergency hair-1 out service, phone the j number of course being Roy’s | home phone. | in-m Pop Simmons, the county com missioner. paid call recently to buy some campaign advertising. We started talking about base ball and Pop re.T.ained more than an hour. I told Pop my first memory of him was when I was TO gov's MANSION SO THIS IS NEW YORK By NORTH CALLAHAN With people living ever closer together, with automation noisi ly abuzz and still with human natiure requiring the same a- mount of relaxation and repose, sleep has become one of our ma jor problematic goals. There, just is no sucstitute for, it and as far as I know, medical slj^cnce is not even trying to find one. I shall never forget what our football coach said to a group of us once, after we liad been out late on a week-end and sliowcd up at practice bleary-eyed and wobble-legged: “Boys, just re member this. There’s nothing that will put it into you like sleep;’’ The importance of slum ber can be found in the writings of our greatest literati. Mark Twain once defined a snorer as a “sound sleeper” and wrote one of his incomparable essa3's on wonderment of why snorers coiuld not hear them.?elves saw ing logs. Then there was the lady who became exasperated with her husband instead of talking in his sleep, he just grin ned. -3- Viewpoints of Other Editors MUNICIPAL ELECTRIC SYSTEMS NEED RELIEF FROM 1965 LAW It is now abundantly clear that a youngster and he was making' the 1965 legislation setting ter- regular calls next door to court j ritorial rights for private power my beautiful blonde neighbor j companies and rural co-ops 'was Helen Collins Pop had the un-' passed at the future expense of welcome news that she had suc cumbed three years ago. m-m The first money Pop earned playing baseball was for the Margrace semi-pros of 1923. He the 73 municipally owned electri cal systems in the state. This peace package for the co.r.panies and the co-ops was widely hailed as a major tri umph for the Moore administra- EARLIER TO SCHOOL The most famous sleep in America was said to have taken place some miles above here at storied Tarrytown but some one has observed that the twenty- year siesta of Rip Van 'Winkle was not disturbed by loud tele vision sets of neighbors. Benja min Franklin, who had some thing to say about virtually everything, commented that I “sleep is the best medicine, fa tigue is the best pillow.” And JOB CORPS JITTERS The New Bedford City Coun-; what schoolchild doe.s not recall declares the co.tpetition was tooltion. The voices of the municipal heavy for a fellow of his youth Tties unfortunately were all but in that era. He chuckled about drowned out in the approbation Badcye Guthrie, one of the star those who benefited, pitchers for Kings Mountain. While it was highly desirable “Man, he was wicked,” Pop re-|to C-fect some kind of truce be- called. “He would have cursed the private, taxpaying his grandmother had he thought | companies and the tax-subsldiz it would produce a single strike rural cooperatives, the inter- on the batter.” Bill Saunders, e®ts of the cities were given lit- Bob Southwell’s father-in-law, ! consideration, was playing manager, Rfunt! Moore, who urged Lowe the catcher. Snag Ormand, ^he territorial agreement, obvi- Charlie Moss recalls, was releas-: oosly did not understand at that ed by Shelby, walked from Shel by to Kings Mountain, signed on the Margrace team and de feated Shelby the following day. Shelby fans found it hard to un derstand whj' Snag could lose 'for'Shelby and win for Mountain m-m When my wife was about age ten, her church had a visiting evangelist. At one morning ses sion the subject was alcoholic beverages and attendant ills. Near the conclusion, the young sters were invited to sign a pledge that the.v would never use alcoholic drinks in any form nor vend it. Anne didn’t sign, and won the accord of hergrand- The federal government has continu ally excluded the farmer from the'min- imum wage law. The farmer, unlike th€ grocer, is not required to report as in come for taxes, what he removes from inventory (his products) for the home table.* There comes a time for reckoning and the prospect of an increase in the price of milk is a harbinger. 'The Hemld regretjs the departure of William H. White, asistant city attorney and solicitor of recorder’s court, to the Brevard law firm of Hamlin and Ram- No longer can a man become a farm er with a mortgaged mule, an in-ad vance crop lein for his food, a plow and set of plow points. Those wild worked with him closely maiii him M step step ahead of the average yolfHig lawyer. Best wisNto •ttehd him and his family in Transylvpjh County. His investment is large and his tools are complicated. His onetime tenants are now in so-called public works. Many dairymen, selling quantities of milk in bulk, go to the super markets for their dairy products. Why should a child be requir-■ ed to wait around until he is six | cil’S demand that the Federal j memorable, Early to bed to go to school? Educators are j government close the Ford Rod-j early to rise, makes ^ finding that small boys and girls man Job Corps Center has quite | wealthy and wise. Al- will do much better work in the j properly been rejected by R-i j. known to have, first grade if they have attend-1 Sargent Shriver. died from it, insomnia can be a ed kindergaren, and still better . . . ' if they have had experience in Admittedly, a small minority | health hazards, loss of vitality what is termed “prekindergar- center s 2d0 trainees be- j and even illness. In the Biblical^ ten” classes They think children embroiled in skirmishes I book of Proverbs there is a say who begin this kind of prepara-1local youth and the police, jing, tion when they are four are less’ But the answer to the problem likely to fail in later grades. j does not lie 1" But only about half of the na- j tion’s five-year-olds are now in \ water, kindergarten. Less than 25 per-1 ^ article in the current New cent of the nations school dis- j Yorker magazine by John Bain- tricts offer classes. A much bridge on the Job Corps Center smaller numl'cer are enrolled in'^t ca^p Kilmer, N. J., vividly nursery schools. Project Head | illustrates both the same pro..- mother, who said, ‘,‘You were right for ‘never’ is a mighty long time.” A recent eveijt confirms her grandi.Tiother’s good judg ment. i» tb. itbn, Jr,, newly install- Carolina Phar- __ loh; flSjc.,. tapped for the su- To keep in business, he must raise his prices. m-m My Wife owns a few shares of Liggett & Myers Tobacco Com pany stock. Wiat I thought was the regular quarterly dividend check arrived on proper sched ule. I didn’t open the letter and delivered it sealed to Anne. ’That evening when I arrived home, she declared she was going to sell Liggett & Myers. m-m Wasn’t that the regular divi dend check?” I inquired. Oh, the check was enclosed, she replied. Then what’s the trouble?”, I queried. She handed me another enclosure which was an an nouncement that L & M in late May had acquired The Padding ton Corporation. Paddington’s claim to fame is that it » sole distributor in the United States for high-toned J. & B. Scotch whiskey, and in turn controls another company which markets two other "premiiuih” beverages, including Bcimbay gin. m-m “I've always had a mental reservation against being a par ty to selling that stuff,” she de clared. m-m Mrs. O. J. Coffin, of Chapel Hill, ^dow of the late Skipper of the journalism school, is na tive of Haywood County and full of what many consider native mountain wit. Her son had ■bpooght her to a press dinner but couldn’t remain himself. Two cents on 30 is 6.67 percent, shade higher than the President’s hold-the-llne 3.2 percent. lu^t project at Wes- .Oavid Wilson, 1966 Green Post 155, t^nnual Boys’ Stete. But itr is hardly likely the increase will bankrupt many — even a guy like Senator Robert Kennedy with nine youngsters to serve with milk, ice cream and butter. >What did her son do? "He took my advice” she replied. “I al- wdsn told him not to try to sell something people didn’t want much of but to sell something they'd take away from him, like liquor or tobacco. He works for American Tobacco Com pany.” time the possible consequences to the city systems. His recent comments about their predica- iment reveal that in 1965 he was merely engaging in some wish ful thinking about their welfare, Kings' than assuring it through ' provisions of the law. Prior to passage of the 1965 law, which permits non-munici pal s.N'stems to serve consumers within 300 feet of their existing lines, even when the lines are within cities which have their own systems, the municipalitie'- were reasonably able to expand their systems as city limits linee were expanded. The standard practice when an annexation took place was for the city to purchase existing fa cilities from private power co.t.- panies or co-ops, usually at a negotiated price that took de preciation into consideration. The 1965 law has all but end ed that practice, and in the pro cess has ended much of the in centive and desire for cities to add to their populations and areas by annexation. Ironically this comes at a time when citie* hard-pressed for revenue depend more and more on expanding utility revenues to make ends meet. Cities all over the state have reported either no definite re sponse or flat refusal from co operatives, Carolina Power and Light Co. and Duke Power Co. when they sought to acquire fa* duties within their limits or in areas to be annexed. There was a slight bre.ak in this pattern this week when i( was reported that Duke would negotiate with Shelby for the sale of facilities serving six cus tomers inside the city limits Shelby began seeking these fa cilities in 1964, but all progresf on the matter stopped after the 1965 legislation was passed. Now. after direct contact with Gov, Moore and Duke Power’.* president, it appears that the sale will be worked out. Still pending, however, is a decision of Shelby to annex a substantia’ residential area, a move that could not proifitatly be made un lets there was some assurancr that its electrical sales can be expanded as well. 'This Is only one case, Gov Moore now says that he ,gave nc firm assurances to cities but sim ply had no reason to believe that the power companies and the co ops would refuse to sell under the new law. It is with good reasem, then, that the N . C. Munidpally Own ed Electric Systems organization plans a 1967 amendment to the territorial - agrcs.-nent law. It would proyida.itiat sfsteni-ovn Start, and the like. It is encouraging to note ^ growing movement among edu cators in favor of extending pub lic education downward to the very young. The National Edu cation Association’s policy com mission has just recommended that free preschool education be jffered to all the nation's chil dren at the age of four. ■We approve this objective. There are indications that lack of preschool education is one cause of the high dropout rate in elementary and high school classes. But these recommendations raise a question. If preschool ed ucation is made universal, will it be the right kind? Are there enough teachers who know how and what to teach very small children? As the mendation makes clear, pre- school teaching must not be merely a simplified version of first grade work but a program “uniquely adapted to children of ages four and five.” It must be free of regimentation, giving rein to a teacher’s imagination and spontaneity. It would call for a vast recruitment effort and many new courses in teacher colleges. All this is obtainable in time. But it is important that any pro gram adoped on a nationwide scale take into account these basic needs and not overleap it self. With a view to the future, preparation for earlier education should begin now—on a national scale. Christian Science Monitor le.Ti and how to solve it. . . Jerome M Ziegler, director of the local center, pointed the way to appropriate corrective action when he asked that “our neigh bors in New Bedford... meet us and above all get to know you (trainees) as individuals.” What happens at Rodman, as Ziegler said, “may well affect the whole Job Corps program of the coun try.” Boston Globe “Drowsiness shall clothe a man in rags.” Many figures of V, speech have originated around ; the idea of sleep. For example: 1 “Now you have made your bed, sleep in it.” There is an old cus- ■ tom of stuffing money into mat tresses, references to getting out of bed on the wrong side and re marks about sleeping with one eye open. AMBASSADOR OF UNITY We’d conceded Linda Louise Sheerer of Kings Mountain to be a lovely and gracious recipient of the Miss Shelby title well in advance of reading the results NEA recom-}Of staffer Pat Borden’s girl-to- j girl interview, which was pub lished on woman’s pages of last Saturday. It appears now that she’ll be an ambassador of unity as well. "You know,” she told our re porter, “I hope my being Miss Shelby this year will help Kings Mountain and Shelby form some sort of unity. It’s about time and I hope I can help in some way.” It is about time! Beauty and youth just may be the perfect antidotes for long- stanciing two-way cussedness. At any rate, ' Miss Shelby of Kings Mountain has our best wishes for a reign of unity. Shelby Daily Star After a nation-wide survey, the National Association of Bedding Manufacturers have come up with the conclusion that one reason people have trouble get ting to sleep is that their mat tresses are too small for them. Statistics show that millions of Americans are taller than their fathers but are still sleeping in the same short beds. Sixty-five years ago, only one out of every 25 American men between the ages of 25 and 30 reached the heighth of six feet or more. To day one out of every five is six feet tall, and with all the milk, orange juice and vitamins, to day’s kids are growing even tall er. More roomy beds are neces sary and king-size mattresses are coming more into demand. 'Though the big beds are more expensive, this is said to repre sent a good investment in the sleep and rest which are so es sential to today’s fast pace of life It is well, the manufacturers urge, to meaiiyr? the mattresses of your growing youngsters to assure that they are long enough for them. acquire power facilities within hieir existing or expanded city limits through the right of emi nent domain. The principles of municipal franchising authority and miunic- 'pal operation of utilities in this state are well established. They were not given sufficient consid eration in 1965 when two natural enemies,, the private power com- oanies and the co-ops, bowed to gubernatorial pressure to sign a territorial agreement. The governor and the legisla ture are obligated to correct that oversight if the companies and the co-ops fall to come to some agreement separately with mem bers of NCMOES The Charlotte Observer TEARS AGO THIS WEEK nmms of news tibout King Mountain area people am events taken from the 195 fVles of the Kings Mountaii fTenOd. Basil L. Whitener made up his first primary deficit to Ralph Gardner with plenty of room to ■pare last Saturday as he won the 11th District Democratic Ostogrsssional nomination by ing.,-munidpalltieB would be ablel 1106 vote*. KEEP YOUBIAEIO PIKL1^ AT Kings Mountain, N. C. News & Weather every hour on the hour. Weather every hour on the half hour. Fine entertainment in between \ 1 E - stad: where Above home S+ac C( morial mittin school Thom T Thom two s the S tion i with. T year who ! son, V hostir on Se A turn 1 conte with 1 plete( const the fi C Mour an a^ the S tion. \ shoul clubs lettei back Me ] Mon( plent three shou er y( ular- finis] ] Medl time in ej a tri runs Conr hits play atter of tl brea with last to tl Me can’i in 1' ton, gam strrl( the :