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1 Ttoe Y Kings Mountain Herald . established t?M MIMitd Every Thursday HERALD PUBLISHING HOUSE, Haywood E. Lynch Editor-Manager stared as seoond class matter at Ska Post office at Kings Mountain M. C- under tra Act of Marofc 3, ?tl. SUBSCRIPTION RATIOS One Year $1.60 Six Moot he 76 A weekly newspaper .devoted to the promotion of the general wel tare and published tor the enllght sent, entertainment and benefit ol the citizens of K'ngs Mountain and Its vicinity. IUM4w I '' ^^Sorth Carolina ?-A .^r..rw BEST TEACHERS v I'd rutlier see a lesson ' Than hoar one any day. I'd rather you would walk with me Than merely show the way. The eye's a better teacher And more willing than the car. A T1 fl nnnnunl <a r-nnftiolnrr Hw*. 1 . ? . Hut example's always clear. , The best of all the teachers Are those who lli'e their creed. For to see good put In action Is what everybody needs. I can soon learn to du it , If you let nie see It done. J can watch your hands in action. Hut your tongue too fast may run. And the counsel you are giving. ,Muy he very fine and true. But I'd rather get my lesson Hy observing what you do. ? Author Unknown. BE ON TIME The ntun who is dependable is One who Is on time for his job. T.he * punctilio is the one gets the reward The following tells- the results of the fellow who was orderly and "on time:" A young man was commencing life as a clerk. One day his employ er said to him: ' Now. tomorrow that cargo of cotton must be go' out and weighed, and we must have a regular account of H." Ho made his arrangements overnight. spoke to the man about thetr carts and horses, and resolved to begin vefy early In the morning. About ten or eleven o'clock his employer came in, and. seeing him sitting in the counting room, said: "1 thought you were requested to get out that cargo of cotton thlB morning?" "It Is all done," said the youna man,- "and here Is the account of it" The youth never looked behind Itim from that moment. His character was fixed; confidence was established. He was found to be the man to do things with promptness. He soon came tc be one who could not be spared. He was as necessary to the firm as any of the partners. SULFAPYRADINE When a loved one was . stricken with pneumonia a few year& back, and you looked deen into vour nhv stclan's eyes to ask: "Isn't there something you can do?" in moat case* he was forced to ahake his head In helpVosness. In those days dreaded prteumocoocus took 100,000 lives annually. But k new miracle worker ? sulfapyrldine ? has now come into the medical picture, ' and will save the liver of approximately 50,000 pneumonta victims thfs year, according to Stephen J. M^Danough,-. medical Journalist. * Shortly after*he had released "a aulfapyridine press " dispatch ? with skepticism vand crossed fingers ? McDonough found himself deeper ately 111 with the piost deadly type of pneumonia infection. But his phy sician wasn't helpless; because snlfapyridine was Just emerging from its experimental stage, and a supply wise rushed 500 miles to treat his case. Within a week after sulfapyri dine treatments were begun he was out of the hospital. Miraculous? Yes declares this Rotarlan contributor, but that's the way this new cheml eel works. An allied drug of sulfanilamide, which was originally "Just a brick'red powder ? one of the coal-tar dyee used to color cloth," sulfapyrldine is unlike many other germicides, which annihilate germs, McDonough wrtes. "Sulfanilamide and sulfapyrldine smother the disease causing bacteria. -'Most disease germs can grow only when they have enough oxygen, only by first converting it into hydrate en peeroxide, the common gargling fluid Sulfanilamide and suMapyrldine top this oxygen oonverslpn process and keep the germs from breathing until the white blood corpuscles consume themt"?Mtgnroe Enquirer. poring the first six months of 1989, a total of 398 persons were killed and 1,058 Injured on North Carolina streets sad highways. The tout for the lsst six months of the VM* MM U7 killed and 4 til Ik *1 "i ' Here end There . . Haywood K. Lynch) ' ' > I have lAmdthlnn In Mmm?a uAh thfa new A. R. P. Pastor, Or. R. N. Balrd. We both Ilka to find out how married couples met each other, and how long they courted, etc. There Is something fascinating a* bout how two people met each other, fall In love and are married. Dr. and Mrs. Balrd eat across from us at the Legion Birthday party, and it did not take him long to find out how me and the madam, met and married. Then I hear him asking the Keeters how they met, if she was from the extreme eastern part of the State and Byron was from Grover. So, Byron explained that Mrs. Keeter taught school In Grover. The Doctor commented on whet. a. fast wefker he was. It .on|y i esven Ww % ?-"e?v*?. eie tcok him four months to woo and wed the now Mrs. Balrd. Here's a little "ditty" I focnd over the telephone in Myers' Department Store. It's to good that I juat can not resist the temptation to pass it pn to Here and There Readers, so here 'tis: God gave us two ends, one to sit on and the other to think with. A salesman's success depends upon which end he uses most. It's a case of heads he wins?talis he loses. In my column last week,' 'I manticked that good painter who is working at my house, and I got his name wrong, and he is such a master at his trade that I want to correct the error, his name is A. P. Willis, and he now lives in Dallas, but is a former Kings Mountain citizen, and at.one time helped print the Herald. J. E. Rhodes was in the office this I week to give me his opinion on the | Evrcpean 'war. He said the Allies ' rnd the Germans reminded him of 'wo little boy* about to fight, with both scared and each glad of it. . t'i That snow Easter Sunday was a complete surprise to everyone, but it was beautiful. Just as the rain on Thanksgiving Day keeps many hunt ers Indoors the snow on Easter Day kept many paraders of finery at home. The churches should have cood crowds next Sunday, with those who did not get a chance to show themselves last Sunday. An average of 1.12 percent persons were killed In each of the 839 "atal accidents last year In North Carolina. . .. By GEORGE--Having just returned from a sesion with the Little Theatrers, I'm .trrlbly disappointed. Not. however with tta? members of the cast, It's with myself. Here 1 have built my .tclf up bigger than Oable in my .'.reams, and I find I haven't the dra matte ability of an oak tree. In tuct, far less thati an oak tree ? becuse they do put trees in pictures you know. Cut aside from personal failures on your chatterer's part, this Little Theatre really is going places, it seems. They've picked out n swell play, and Jean Ware is direct in*, and ? well, that's enough for a be. ginning. You'll be. hearing about them later. . ? * 1 Pickle Dame Nature, deluded the prognostlcators. misled milady into donning her . Easter {Kmpet for Church, and then spread a blanket cf glittering white over the face of Mother Earth hereabouts Sunday Sunday, morning. And, were milady I rave.^ enough, despite the'chill pre ceding the snow;- to have worn her Bastpr pumps, she probably had her i>ed~al digits4 dipped Id the fluffy coverlet before 'she reached home rrom church. YT?w*? truly 'a dreary Easter:" The weather men bed predicted "fair but slightly cooler." Yours truly was safely * sconced in bed, looking out at the Bwlrllng flakes when this corner's mascot, Minnie Hehaw came bursting in, tickled as pink as the eyes of the Easter rabbit she was lugging around. Minnie was the one lass In town who set her Easter Bonnet firmly on her cranium, let the blue rtbbln which twirled behind flow away In the breete, and dtpped- Hbr red-nailed toes in the fluffy brink. "Just think," she burbbled, "I can tell my grandchildren that I saw snow on Raster!" Which, after all, la one consoling thought for us chil dree. O. O. White reports that he watched the Queen Elisabeth put into port while he was in New York recently. RAMBLJNG AROUND .. Martin Harmon ie a louse He's more than that . . He's a good journalist That way a streak of en vy has suddenly turned into strip of green Jeakraey a yard wide .... He hits town for a couple weeks and this corner le positively ecllpe ea lor in monun .... it'? urruit < We (epeaklng for doaent of folk*) certainly ere glad that 811m Rhyne finally go{ hitched .... Congratulation* -r? We think Sarah and Slim are both lucky t -.v 'i 'i * ' ' -C -V? ' Rotenone WIB Control i K you are troubled wit* Mexican bean beetles ? and almost every I ruck farmer and borne gardner la. I J. O. Rowell, Extension entomolo lit recommends that you duat or spray your plants with rotenone. It Is available at Insecticide dealers all over the State. and Howell strongy urges that It be purchased i <>ady-mixed. t Rotenone Is very toxic to Ineects. but Is not poisonous to humans, the en'omologlst explained. It can be applied on beans at any stage ot MR WHAT WAS ^ SECRET Of MAN m. tQSe Jhtir Jomsr ill| f&l&a; ^SUSShal!5D* [yfj Predectd kf DATnDO |jy UUAStl ( 11 StnoMi: Traveling as a companion in the oouth of JTranoe, i I mot Mam do Winter?a man \ fall of oilont, bitter brooding. > M? employer, Mrs. Van Hopper, , told me of hie famone eetate, , Manderley, which he had not occupied since the death of his ] wife, Rebecca, in a sailing ac- , I eident; when the became ul, we spent many hours together, and I fell completely in love with , Mm. Suddenly, almost surpris- , imply, we were married, and . went to Manderley.- In every- > thing about the great house, in . Max's friends and relatives?I found the ever-present shadow ( of Rebecca. Mrs. Dan vers, the housekeeper, seemed particular- \ ly cold an ', resentful of my replacing Rebecca. But I was , happy with Maxim. I : ; Chapter Three Maxim ?u furious when Z told < him I had gone into the cottage ] on the cove, and when I pleaded i with him not to be angry, he buret | out: "We ought to have stayed < away. We should never have come i back to Manderley! What a fool < I was!" , "I've made you unhappy," I said. < "Somehow, I've hurt you. I can't bear to see you like this. I love ] I'tu so much." i lie took me into his'arms, and i searched* my face. "Do you? Do I ?you?" he said tensely. "Then forgive me..." He kissed me, and said that we i ought to forget all that had hap- I tiened But I *> ffwinV iVaw#- * ley, for there wee something 1 i had to know. We bad spoken but i a few words, but X saw only In 1 Jj^H L TTT? , . ^ irdkodNOy, Jfre. Daevtn skew " Frank the same shyness that oould I understand my own. and I went i to hiss. We talked a bit. add- X I h2PSU5? ^?th? ** 1 on the Rach the 3 htSk5^er? UtU* *?"f* | TTB afraid that cottars piers I tneaw la golag to wrack and rdn. Wtp isn't pyisthlng done about t He UlWtnd ' slowly. after a | psoas. "I think If Maxim wan tad I anything dune about it. he'd tall f ' "What waa the cottage uaad for? I thought from tha outatde It waa a Just a boat houaa." "It waa originally, but kn. da r Winter uaad tt harself." M "Did aba uaa it a great deal?" > Mb*obvlously hoped that I would I not co on. but I did. "What hap- 5 pened tojt?" I aakad. "Waa that S the boat aha waa aniline whan aha : waa drowned?" ? "Tea, it capeiaed and sank. Sha ? waa waahad overboard." "What made K capsize ?" 'It can be vary squally in the a bay. Nobody aaw tha accident. It was at night, Nobody even knew . he'd none out" 'Wasn't aha afraid to co put ? alone?" "Sha wasn't afraid of anything." ? 1 looked at him. "Where did I they find her?" I asked. 5 Ha forced himself away, and ? want to tha window. "They found ? her near Edgecombe, about forty ? miles up channel ? about two months afterward. Maxim want Up ? to Identify her. It waa horrible S for him." ^ * .??uld no longer bear to with- a hold what I waa feeling, what I fi really wanted to tell him. "Please tl don't think me too horribly curl- li oua." I said. "It's only that ? 8 that sometimes I feel myself at & auch a disadvantage.. .All the time ? whenever I meet anyone ? b Maxim's sister ? even the servants ? they're all thinking the "| same thing, all comparing me with c< ?with ? her." * "7?u mustn't think that!" .he * eeld quickly, his voice full 'of P warmth and MuSlin... ??.- ? Tcan* t*H vou how do- M *?. " .*Rt vovt married U It'e yotnjr to make an Hi tha difference to hla 1ife...atod. refreshing to tt find hrimb* llha yourself who la not entirely ? not entirely la tone ' ,K.. \ . 9 t ' "" .'W " UIUMMT, MARCH If. UM M Iwilofwrt wft out tear oi pod*<mlac Wkan the beaas are aerv ed at the Uble. "U la not advisable to uaa cakd na arsenate on baaaa, aa plant In jury often raaulU.' Row ell con tin u ed. 'Arsenate of load should never be used on bean foliate because se rloua injury and reduced yields usually follow its application. Thirty five fatal accldenta in North Carolina last year involved cars being driven on the wrong side of the road. * I . t I More' highway fatalities occur on Saturday than any UlllCl day. THf~TF*| DMtfY |^J| 1MAI frtttnU mmwimkI 1ITCHCOCK . SELZNlCK^^B&Sl^yfl HTHtWMO" ffMtf AMTtSTS % ' I ?shall wa say, with Manderley." "Thank you, Prank,'.' I said. "But may I ask Just one more question?" He stared full at me. "what eras Rebecca really like?'* He loolesd ahead reflectively, end spoke ilowly: "X suppose she was the moot beautiful creature I ever mw.IP, my lire." One moraine Maxim phoned to ley that he would be staying la London until evening, which one jf the servants reported to me. I left the morning room for a stroll toward the sea, and as I stepped outside chanced to see an unfamiliar, flashy - looking roadster, parked at a bend in the driveway. I walked on a bit, wondering, when my eyes were drawn to the west wing of the house. I could clearly see the figure of a strange man and Mm. Danvers. standing Oeslde an open window. I went Pack into the house. Coming Into, the hallway, I could llstlnctly hear a man's voice, and Mrs. Danvers1. They were talking softly, and apparently not expecting to see me, for Mrs. Danvers Irew up when I appeared. The man was young, with rather obvious rood looks, and impudently selfassured. He had a certain charm, it which he seemed well aware. "This is Mr. Favell, Madam." Mrs. Danvers said. I sensed that the would have preferred we did lot meet There was an awkward illence. "Wont you stay to tea?" I asked. He smiled broadly, to Mrs. Dangers. "How Isn't that a charming invitation?" he grinned. "Tve been asked to tea. Danny, Tve a good nind to accept" There was a warning look In Mrs. Danvers' face, which he caught "Well, per^ # id me wwyUMsy la the sworn. uaps you're right Danny ? ws m^t^Josd thi^ m-l<lbe r suddenly- resolved to see thd v com at tw.WiMt Win*. With Juss?i*.'v^s"a.s,"tkrase lor. to th? floor.* X op*nod it. and . I Indln* th* room dark, draw the Mad. To my amazement, X aw hit Hi# room wic coz&Dtately fur* sisb''sssss/r , all. to th* fresh flower*, la th# p 'hefl. I ehw the initial: "Jl" ? I V^^^1you wish anything, MaIt was Mm. Danvera My frinht nd bresthlessnesa ware fuel to the riumphnnt fire m her eyes. Slowr, methodically, she) showed me verythlnx hi the room, described lie magnificent rows* and furs ad eilhe sad beauty which poured rom every drawer and corner. Car matter-of-fact votes took on a iw, nuistlcsl pitch. Not able to ear IV X stumbled to the door. She was beeide me. "You wouldn't ^XMssrjsiiXJ^t maely. "Sometimes when X walk tfllML ihd wirri/lnr T dsn hsad Ka* ist behind bm. ffi not only In ni room ? if? In alt tha rcoma i tha houaa. Z can almost haar : OOW.. .Do Item think thi dend (HHa back ana watch tha Vvinerf" "NO! NC Z acroamad. " Z don't lleve It!" Sha was smiling, whlsnerln*'. Sometimes X wonder If she rtoe?nt una back bar to Manderlev to etch you and. Mr. da Winter toether." I could haar tha surf minding, and har voice, co * on. Ton look tlrad. Whv dnv>'t you lay hare awbola and re**" TJ?m to the aea...lt's so son ng... ten...llttan to the see 1 broke Into aoba, w" 1 fed from ? (To bo o&nHnu?d.> I '; ^ " : \ . ': -*: - . < i I * ' ' " o * * ' ! ' IrrrgBA I HQ wjm y I Iff IWHI Ail ft '-M^l i LJ??S ^V.^&L|S ? hI 4? C^1/ e "Don't Run. Mister, That I ?* Washington Sm (Cont'd from front page) t won't look so big then. t The come-on bait to farmers and small businessmen, of course. will j be that the present business reces- t slon is serious and that it will get s worse unless the government goes c in for putnp-primlng. It will be con- J tended that the farmer and business c man will be able to sel more of c their goods if the government puts e money into the hands of the unemployed. c But several fallacies in that argu- t ment are pointed out by other more t moderate -New Deal economists, i First, they say without hesitancy c that the current recession will be \ over by May and that 1940 aas whole will be a better year tban ( 1939. Thus, they say. pump-prlmlng even if it did good, would be unnecessary. . And a number of these Washington economists point out that when money is taken by the govern m ment. for pump-priming it comes, of necessity, out of the incomes of those who have it. It is a wellknown fact, they say, that there aren't enopgh wealthy people to bear the burden and the load, there fore, must be put upon the financial middle class, namely farmers, smalt busfnesmen .and white collar worh- ers. The extremists argue, of course, that borrowing isn't bad because it simply constitutes a mortgage on the future which will be paid ofT when times get better. But the oth- j ers retort wnn tne important tact v that to<lay taxes amount to 21 cents 1 out of each dollar of Income against ' about 12 cents In the 20's. And, a they add. in the 2Cs everybody was making money so they were in a much better position to pay taxes. ??? . Speaking of Jobs and better business, there is a case now pending in the tofcrts which Illustrates an in * H Our Business is makttif:0ld shoes like new. Try our service hbw. vncsimna ; ~ ruoxano . SHOE SERVICE Phone 154. We Deliver ?; . , SAVE AN I ' , Your deposit^ need hot the important thing. Will "Many strokei though w down and fellj the hardes game sense it is true thai ' small, will grow into a su , people could acquire in i* Besides being the most cumulate money, m IMItK advantage of constant come lit and start an accc turn out to be the most ir ever taken. First Natifl Member Federal deposit 1 I - r-< : < '.' i'.'b ; > 1 >*4 .Jh'V> i - r y I . v ." .. ~ ~ ' V* v * * " 1 . ' " ' c-; i ' '- ' ',. V . '/ .-. - I ??? I i" mmrnrnrnmP *' ay oemcAWt V. , m/ /y ^?7 Xs ^ Kflji ?..? "jft 1 v"-;j^M *>z Won't Harm Your ipshots J inwholesome attitude that exists in fl lome Washington quarters. The case Involves a lumber coor>any which was accused by the Naional Labor Relations * Board of lome unfair labor practices. It was 1 >:dered by the Board to pay some :M >150,000 in hack wageR to former 'mployees who allegedly hod been liscrlmlnated against and dischargid because of union actlvltes. The company took the case into ourt. insisting that it would have H o sell everything It owned an*t hen go out of business entirely if t paid- this $150,000. Such a move, >i. course, would deprive men, now corking of their Jobs. The court, over the Board's proest. has taken a more reasonable ittltude and designated a third per on to determine how much the ompany could pay }w$rtfhout ggofn^ iut of business. Paint with?DUTCH BOY WHITE LEAD Kings Mtn, Mfg. Co. Store The Old Reliable 'or the relief of upset stomach, exess acidity, Indigestion, dysentery, olitis and similar' stomach' aitnenu\ Separate (prescr\ptlon foa^ dults and children. How One Woman Loot 20 Poinds Of FAT Lost Her Prenaineat Hips j Lost Her Doable Chin ' Lost Her Slugrishneee Gained a More Shapelv Figure and & Increase In PhyAal fW ^Viv^ciou^se fat and losing thetr apPKUtjust be cause they do noiTtnouffwhst to do. Why not be mmfg/L-- do what thousands of JTOnpwvhav* done to get off poudids -.of-Wnwanted fat; Tske a haif teaspodnful ofKrusche'n in n glass pf hot water first thing every/'niorning to gently acttvato Hr^t'r,bowel%and kidneys?-cut down, your calorie intake?est-wisely and witisfyingly?-there need nevpr be . hungry moment! ' .; /? Keep this plan up for BO days: Then weigh yourself and see if you haven't lost pounds of ugly int.' Just see if this doesn't prove to.be the sunrise of . your life and make. you feel like shouting the good hews to'other-fat people. And best of all a Jar of Krutchen. that will last you tot 4 weeks costs but little. If* not '< Joyfully satisfied?money back. ?-? ? 1 ? ? D HAVE . _L_ be large. Regularity fa. | liam Shakespeare wrote \jm Hh a little axe, how. \ t timbered oak.** In the A t many deposits, though 1 bstantial sum that most I 9 other way. hv convenient way to a)caccount has the added availability. - Why noft rant here now? It may nportant step yon have i tnal Rtt?dr I r??MA UailXl Insurance Corporation . . . ' i T ? Jt I.; |H iH kl . i 1. . . I, , i (, . 3 . I . ?.? L : ,c...r. .. >.y .. , ,1 v ? ^ ;
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 28, 1940, edition 1
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