lhe Kings Mountain Henaid Established 1839 Published Every Thursday "herald publishing house, Haywood E. Lynch Editor-Manager Entered as second class matter at the Postoffice at Kings Mountain, N. C., under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION KATES One Year . J1.50 Sir Months .75 A weekly newspaper devoted to r.ne promotion of the. general wel .are and published tor the eulight meat, entertainment and benefit o! the citizens jf Kings Mountain and Its vicinity. OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING It lias been said that opportunity kocks but once, and we believe one of the biggest opportunities in the history of Kings Mountain is knock ing now. We have in mind ‘he woik about to be started on Kings Moun tain Battleground. Because of out name and location the Town of Kings Mountain should reap the big gest harvest of anything that may develope from the Kings Mountain Battleground. Citizens and organizations of Kings Mountain, may we urge and plead with you to unite in an effort to co operate with those who are interest cd in seeing Kings Mountain Battle ground improved. nearby chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution have al ready signified their willingness to cooperate to the fullest extent with others interested in this movement. Let's pull together and capitalize on this opportunity to help our Town, The Town that hears the name of the historical battle which history recoids as the “turning point of the Keoolutionary War". Here's a golden opportunity to do some thing worthwhile for Kings Moun tain, The Best Town 111 the State. ’TIS BETTER TO GIVE THAN TO GIVE Everyone should welcome the op portunity to do their part in the an nual Red Cross Roll Drive which will take place next month. The Red Cross is a spending organization, but it spends to relieve suffering and hardships of mankind. Where, we ask the citizens of the Best Town in The State, could they invest their money that would pay gigger dividends in salvaging the lives of the unfortunate for the gocu of all humanity, than the Red Cross —Your Messenger of Mercy ? . The Charlotte Observer had the following to say about contributing to the Charlotte Community Chest, of which the Red Cross is a part. Be cause of its timeliness and busi ness-like thought we reprint it here: A Two-Woy Charity Traffic The appeal of the Community Chest of Charlotte for public finan cial support rest upon two solid principles of life. First, it imposes an outright sel fish obligation. Unwisely we are dis posed to consider that contributions to such agencies as unite in this campaign is a depleting, subtracting and bleeding process, that all the good to be derived front it is for the reeipitnt of our charity. Not so. Sharing with others is a selfish form of personal blessing. Gener ous giving to ttie less fortunate, the' destitute and the underprivileged is a business that back-fires. v The streams of charity carry two way traffic. There is an incoming which is always proportioned to the! outgoing. The law of physics whien insists that reaction is the equivuj lent of action holds fast in the! realm of the social and moral and spiritual. There is a scattering that enriches just as there is a withhold ing that tends to poverty. Bread cast upon the waters does return.. These is such a thing as first having to lose life before finding it. With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again. Give and it shall be given you. In tilt second place, this appeal carries with it the challenge for ;t| constructive sicial service. We be long to the social order. We are a! part of the moral universe and the law of the social and miral kingdom is clear and implicit. It revolves a-1 bout a single phrase, "Bear ye one another's burdens'. This is the com pelling charge that confronts us. The mandate laid upon us is unavoio! able no matter how much we might1 like to squirm out from under it. j Taking adehuate care in vital ser vices of those unqualified in their own circumstances to take care of themselves is a community respon sibility that is both unwise and un safe to Ignore. j It is always a good investment to; put one's money in any enterprise that will create an improved and more wholesome atmosphere for one’s own business and financial in terests. Some Confused, All Amused (By Gilbert Falls) Probably the most outstanding so cial event in college and university life is now at hand and will be dra matically portrayed during the next few days by that group of rising so cialites who awoke one moruiug to find that fortune was favoring them with a bid to some Greek lettered organization of which they knew little, but had heard much. Rush sea son of fraternity court is a period of stress and strain. Small groups of students gather to expound upon the merits, and ignore the demerits, of their favorite chapters, these being the ones from which thev noln n u or the ones to which dad, grand-dad or Uncle Tom once belonged. Many a youngster will uon a tux for the first time and march out into that strata of society which he is confident will add glory and pres tige to his forlorn heart. Banquets and smokers and dances will make every vein in the pledge's bidy beat high with hope—hope that he will survive the entanglement of satin lapels and stiff collors. 1 ne nights are bright; the parties are gay; the soeialiteh, intoxicated with delight, rush home in the wee hours of the night, hoping to com mune with Morpheus. But lo! that ■ math, that language, that theme. So for the first time many of these boys see the morning sun creep over the eastern horizon and swing high er and higher into its orbit. Of this the dormitory inmate knows little. His interest is not ful ly aroused, nor his attention attract iid until the period of initiation nears the climax. Then he experiences a spontaneous overflow of mirth as the newly pledged run hither and thither, some counting aloud the thirteen links in a chain, others hoi lowing coo-coo, until the hill-side knows but the one echo. Others at tire in robes and banners of such gay colors as would persuade Gypsy Rose Lee to reuounce her country men. But this soon passes and an at mosphere of dignity again envelopes the campus. More attention is devo ted to class room studies and li brary research by both dormitory and fraternity men. Here their in terests are combined, thus paving the way for a more cosmopolitan spirit and a more versatile life. 4 H Boys Compete For Scholarships Three one-year scholarships to State College will be awarded this week at. the annual North Carolina State Fair to 4-H Club boys exhibit ing prize farm aniimals. Awards will be based on records kept by the club member and on the appearance of the animal when judg ed at the Fair, declared L. R. Havrill State 4-H Club leader. Scholarships will go to the mem bers exhibiting the blue ribbon dairy calf, the best baby beef calf. and the outstanding pig. Only bona fide club members from 10 to 20 years ot age will be eligible to compete. In the dairy calf contest, type and condition of animal will count 35 points, showmanship 15 points, fi nancial gain 30 points, dairy manage ment 10 points, and leadership n. tivlties 10 points. The final three s.-,. ,>tfi'>5irjons will be obtained from the club member's record book on the auuAiUi. In the baby beef competition, con formation and condition of the ani mal as judged from a slaughter standpoint will count 50 points. From the record book, the other 50 points will be determined. The same basis will be used in the con - test for first prize among club bo>s exhibiting pigs. The scholarships are being award ed by the North Carolina division of the National Cotton Seed Products Association. Strawberry growers of Columbus County are being urged to set 12, 000 to 15,000 plants per acre durng September in order to assure them of a profitable crop next spring. Guarding Our Guarani it of Liberty By RAYMOND PITCAIRN National Chairman -Sentinels of the Republic _____ Since our inception as a nation, the proudest boast of our American Repub lic has been its guarantee of civil and religious liberty. That guarantee is written into our Constitution. It is the first article in our Bill of Rights. It is the lodestone that has attracted to our shores, through successive decades, men of faith and character. It is inextricably woven into the whole American tradition. Above all things, it is that guarantee which differentiates life in America from life under the new European dic tatorships. whether of Individual men or of favored groups. It remains a keystone of the structure which pro tects free democracy from the assaults of intolerance and oppression. The citizens of our young Republic recognized all this when they wrote into the Pederal Constitution a dictum that: “Congress shall make no law respect ing an establishment of religion, or pro hibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of griev ances.” Modern Americans must recognize it too. and continue—as dtd their fathers —the defence of this national tradition from threats In any form, or from any source. Eternal vigilance remains today, as in the era of the Pounders, the inexor able price of liberty. And to that high ideal of liberty— both of action and of spirit—America still is dedicated. Demonstrations in which TVA tri ple superphosphate is being used are showing good results in Rockingham County. In the United States, one travels north or south for climate variations is mountainous Colombia, one trav els up or down. Museums in Rome, London and the United States have bought many of the oil paintings of Percy Crosby, a comic strip artist. Sir Walter Scott, Scotch poet and novelist, died in 1832. LET’S LOOK BACK From The Kings Mountain Herald NINETEEN YEARS AGO OCTOEER 17, 1918 Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Fulton ana little daughter, Ellen have returned from a visit to Rock Hill. The waste house at the Dilling mill was burned Friday night and several bales of waste was destroj ed. I Jwmul PRESENTS The play that thrilled the nation becomes •n even greater film, starring SYLVIA SIDNEY • od JOcL Me C fit A, with Hr nphroy • . . Released through United Artists . . • Fiction bod by VIRGINIA WARREN HASTINGS What Has Gon« P.sfore: Dave Connell realises his love for Kay, a rich man’s darling, is hopeless. Tommy Gordon and his gang of gutter arshins play fully lure Philip Grisuiald, a rich boy who lives in the East River Apartments, into a deserted warehouse, beat him up and rob him. Meanwhile "Baby Face" Martin see* hi* mother, who slaps hie face, call* him a Hiller and beg* to be left alone. Drina, Tommy’* sister, who ha* been picketing with the girls in her factory, tell* Dave a settlement is imminent; now there is a chance for her and Tommy to escape the evil influence* of Dead End. Chapter Four Griswald was ordinarily ft quiet, composed little man. But when he heard how the six young rough necks had attacked and robbed his son he was white with fury. He led Philip by the hind out into the street. “Thero they are,” said Philip be tween sobs. He indicated Tommy. "He’s the one. He’s the leader." Griswald strode over to the wharf and grabbed Tommy firmly by the arm. "Why did you beat this boy?” he asked severely. “What did you do it for?” Philip screamed, “He'i got my watch. He’s got my watch.” IMM, W KUUU WUi Uiai ! do?" 1 "It will do this much good: it l will get the little gangster before I he can do more harm than this.” “But he can be punished some? other way,” Drir.a pleaded frantical • ly. “I’ll see to it. I mean — I'll ! speak to his mother.” Griswald turned from her brus quely and entered the apartment i house. Mulligan sighed wearily and ; scratched liis head. “Well, well. And who does this ! guy think he Is, anyway?” I The doorman smiled knowingly. “Judge Griswald’s brother. That’s all. Just Judge Griswald’s brother." To Mulligan's questioning, Drina, and Dave preserved an Impassive silence. Mulligan was nonplussed. It would be a tough job finding the brat, and if he didn’t, that judge would probably break him. First thing he knew, he’d be pounding a beat in Harlem. This precinct was bad enough. He confided his troubles in a conversational and friendly way to two men who were loitering outside of Pascagli's. Mar tin, with a price on his head, took a special delight in talking to Mul ligan. Hunk stood by nervously. A girl had sauntered down the street towards them. Her lips were smeared with rouge in a futile at tempt to disguise an unhealthy pal lor. She wore a chei p, scanty dress which revealed every line of her body. “Well,” she said, addressing Mai' tin and Hunk. “Who’s the import ant guy wants to see me? Come on. I’m busy." "Let me go," said Tommy. "You’re breaking my arm!" "Don’t stand there,” Griswald barked at the governess. "Call a policeman.” Tommy, who had been sil • through* all this, was now t!>, . t ughly frightened. "I ain’t gi.l the watch,” he told Griswald. ‘Get me go. I'll get it for you. Honest I will — aw, mister, don’t call the cope. I won’t touch him again. We do it to all the kids and they do it to us. Please, mister. Hey, you’re break ing my arm. Let me go, you —. ” Over on the sandhopper Drina and Dave had heard the commo tion but had paid little attention at first. When they heard Tommy’s yell, they came running. “What are you doing to him?" Drina demanded excitedly. "Let him go.” “Do you know this boy?” Tommy interjected quickly, "No. 1 ain’t never seen her before. Mind jour business, lady.” He writhed with pain as Gris wald renewed his hold. With his free hand he drew a pocketknife irom his trousers and opened it with the expert motion Martin had tr.ught him. Griswald saw the knife and tried to grab it and in that in stant the boy’s hand moved up and •lashed his wrist. Griswald uttered a groan and released his hold. In a flash Tommy had flown up the 6trect and disappeared. The door man of the East River Apartments bandaged Griswald’s arm. In the excitement no one noticed the ar rival of Mulligan. "What the matter here?” he in quired with the authority of the law. “An accident,” said Dave. Griswald snorted. “I wouldn’t call it an accident. One of these hood lums on the block cut me. I want you to find the boy and arrest him.” Drina said placatingly. "I’m sorry you got hurt, but he didn’t mean to do it.” "What’s the boy’s name?" inquir ed Mulligan. "I don’t know,” said Griswald. “Ask this girl. She seems to know him.” “I don’t know him,” said Drina quickly. "I never saw him before. But I live around here and I know these kids are wild, but they don’t mean any harm, really mister." Griswald exploded. “If they don't mean any harm, then a beating, a theft and a stabbing are pretty good all in one day!” Mulligan brought out his note book. "What did the boy look like?" ”'lh>n and dark and — oh. it sho ddn't be hnrd for you to find Mm. x want him caught and ar eested.” At the sound of her voice Martin looked up in amazement. “Fran cey!” The srirl turned to him sharply. 'How do you know my name? Who are you?” Her puzzled look slowly changed to one of amazement. "For the love of — Marty!” “Yeah. It’s me." “How are you, Marty? You did something to your face.” “Yeah. Plastic, they call it.” Mar tin jerked his head, indicating to Plunk that he wanted him to beat it. Hunk moved reluctantly off a little way up the street. Martin grabbed the girl, but she evaded hi3 kiss. “What’s the matter? Ain’t I good enough for you?” "Aw, no. It ain’t that.” “You know, Francey, I never for got you. Remember the night on the roof? A couple of crazy kids we were! We were going to get married. I bought a ring at the five and dime store.” He laughed with pleasurable reminiscence. “Listen,” said Francey nervously, “You better get away from here—.” “What’s the difference where I go? They’ll get me some day. I only came back for you.” The light in Franccy's white face had gone out. “I wouldn’t be good for you. I’m tired. I’m sick. Can’t you see it? Look at me good. You've been looking at me the way I used to be.” Realization dawned on Martin and he recoiled from her. The nos talgic dream was finished. His face filled with disgust. | “Well,” she shouted at him fierce t ly, "What did you expect?” They stood awkwardly silent for a moment. Martin reached in his inner pocket and drew out a thick roll of bills. He peeled several and gave them to her. “Here. It’s hot. Be careful where you spend it. And keep your lips buttoned up. Now beat it.” She turned, with his harsh dis missal, and started up the street. Then she retraced her steps and spoke to him again. “For old times’ sake, will you do me a favor, Marty? Will you kiss me, just once? For old times' sake?” Seeing his hesitation, she came up to him and pressed her cheek against his lips. He pecked at it distastefully and turned away scow ling. She laughed bitterly and walked quickly away. Slowly, vici ously, he wiped his face with the back of bis hand. (To be continued) Copyright 1NT djf Unit*4 Artist* Ctanv The Kings Mountain Herald — $1.50 A Year In Advance JUST HUMANS By GENE CARR I A. c'S?:,); as*,, t “Now What?" “He Wants a Tooth Out, So s He Kin Stick His Tongue Thru It Like Mary Jones!’’ PATRONIZE HERALD ADVERTISERS ❖ ❖ 3 Big Days Only DEEP CUT PRICES ON DRUGS f ; / THURS. — FRIDAY — SATURDAY Save With Safety At Your Rexall Store See our Four Page Circular which lists the many items you can Save On. SATURDAY SPECIAL iBANANA ROYAL 10c Kings Mountain Drug Co THE REXALL STORE We Fill Any Doctors’ Prescriptions I HAVE PAINS IN ^ MY MUSCLES AND PAINS IN MV HEAD INSTEAD OF OUT SHOPPING - | SHOULD BE IN I USED TO SUFFER THE SA'AE WAV UN-1 TIL, I FOUND QUICK RELIEF | IN AN ANTI PAIN PILLl ANTI- PAIN PILLS BEYOND QUESTION RELIEVE - BUT DON'T CAUSE INDIGESTION Did you ever take a medicine to stop head ache and have the headache stop and a stom ach ache start? We’ll wager you didn’t take an Anti-Pain Pill. Anti-Pain Pills do not upset the stom ach. They take effect quickly too—and they taste like wintergreen wafers. You can’t do good work—you can’t have a good time when you are suffering from Neuralgia Headache Muscular or Periodic pains don’t you try the Anti-Pain Pill way to We believe you will be delighted with the results. Thousands of others are. It will not cost much. Anti-Pain Pills sell for one cent each, (less in Economy Package) and one pill usually relieves. Why relief? Get Anti-Pain Pills at your Drug Store. Regular pkg. 25 for 25c. Economy pkg. 125 for $1.00.