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. f V ' * ' - " .# * 1 The i Kiiiffi Mountain Herald Established 1M9 Published Evsry Thursday HERALD PUBLISHING HOUSE, Haywood E. Lynch ' Editor-Manager n tared as second class matter at the Post office at Klnca Mountain N. C? under ue Aet ot March 3. M7?. . . ' SUBSCRIPTION RATKS Owe "Tear $1.51, Btx Montbc .76 jk wo^TBPy uo w p|wypi uptviw lU the promotion of the general wel tare and published for the enllght lent, entertainment and benefit ol Ike citizens of K'nga Mountain ant! FRIENDSHIP Until I think of other tilings Of greater worth to me. 1 must content myself and say That things just have to be. I've set myself* to helping those Who seem to be in need, I've governed all my selfishness; That seoins the only creed. To lend a hand, and help a man Who tfeeds you at the time. Has often been the ways and means Of making one fee) fine. Spirits rise when help is near And courage sees no end. For after all a man should he Another man's best friehtT. ?Fred floods. : EDUCATION Wo need not' more education but better- education ? education that will produce fruits in the soundness ?f men soundness of mind, sound ness of body, and soundness of chari actor. With this- changed eniphasif_ in education we may. 'expect to brotii a reasonable percentage of scholars and thinkers who will have some of the power to originate, creative ideas for the coming generation and who can speake their message concerning tftese and . other great matters, with some of the authority that has belonged to these authentic spiritual and intellectual founders of every great age in the past. We need such nvinds everywhere to day, men with the . vision and the courage to become explorers of the political, economic, and moral frontiers of the world.?,Dr. W. P. Few. DON'T BE AFRAID OF WORK The following .paragraph was wri ten as advice from a father to his eon. but It Is a good condensed "set mon" for anyone: "My son. remember you have to work. Whether you handle' pick or wheelbarrow or a set of books, digging ditches or editing a newspaper ringing an auction bell or writing fun.i> tilings, you must work. Dc not be afraid of killing yourself bj over-working on the sunny side ol thirty. Men die sometimes, tut It i: because they quit at 9 p. tn. and dc not so home until 2 a. m. It's the in tervals that kill, nty son. The wort Kives you appetite for your meals; It lends solidity to our slumber; It Klves you a perfect appreciation ot a holiday. There are young men who do not work, but the country U not proud of them. It does not even know their names; it only speaks of them as So-and-So's boys. No body likes them; the great busy worll doesn't know they are b'erC. So find out what you want to be , and do. Take oft your coat and make dust in the world. The busier you are, the less harm you are apt to get into, the sweeter will'be your Bleep, the brighter your holidays, and the Setter satisfied the whole world will be wit you."?Morgantou News-Herald. Farm Questions Q.?Is it too late to seed pastures? A.?The best dates for seeding in the spring is from Feb. IS to April 1. Carpet grass, dallis grass and les pedera hould be seeded during this period and may be sown on top of other grass** and clovers plfcnteid the previous fall. Bermuda grass seed is rarely used in this state, but if the seed is used, they should be planted iu May or June. Cuttings from this crop are usually set out in February or March. * i Q.?When should culling be start ed in the poultry flock? A.?For best results. culling should be a continuous process, tout In the young flock" the birds should be culled when 8 to 12 weeks o^d. This Is especially true when cockerels are to be raised for breeders. All through the growing period the birds ahould be carefully watyfted and all cockerels or pullets showing lack of vigor and development should be discarded. Select only those birds that are alert, vigorous, and show a- healthful development. Rnrninsra of farm nnn Ir\rr? on />nm. I ? ? ? ? - pmuiit vu'>'' panics declined aharplv In 1939 Com pared with those of the two precexT ing yearn as a reflection of lower farm buying power. i'iv, TBI By GEORGE--BIRTH OF A COLUMN: Alarm ringing; few grunts roll over, clock , says seven-thirty .... roll over .... . Just a few more winks, please, Better not. Up, pull on shoes, shirt, oth- , er apparel. Already seven-forty. Breakfast, two cups of hot coffee. , Up and at 'em. Peek out of window shows beautiful day starting out. Ah. spring' l.tfaavnllr?.r Start out ...... Up vV est Oold and around at Plonk's, same panorama. People busy getting early morning shopping done. Jihers going to work. Margraee bus ! passing. Typical beginning in Town.1 Up to Drug, where people are al- i ready busy, l-au-st Joke proves that Confucius Sayings are on the way I ^iT.'VnTT't t U il li>"*VTOliTtTrgx'itirr ~ ~ on the way in. The latest of trese J I'limos from fhi? off If** uiinvi the 1 _ _ ? ? . Drug. "und ilbc'i' ii burn Mr. Hunes j tip?! Dhy well under way, and other stuff (hut conies in gets thrown just vherever it will gc. (Sometimes it . loesn't eveu go.) Stuff that gets thrown around: j Someday, 1 hope, I'll learn to not .rim my nails so close that they | turf.... Right now, I have one that's giving me a tit. And is burning the typewriter up with about twelve words a minute Along with the other things that come with spring, we usually can xunt on at least three or tour A Capella Choirs .... The Lutherans have one coming,, and US Methodists have one coming before very long .... Gene says Haywood E. has been moving ?>? No wonder It is Impossible to find him -??- Deadlino Doldrums is undoubtedly the moat terrible disease ever to prey upon mankind Here I -sit trying to turn out something that's fit to print (Ed.'s note: 'Don't da any Wiig that unusual!), and can't tbink of one small thing (o say raybe it's because I'd rather be fishing somewhere..... That baseball team surprised a few folks Friday It was a neat walkaway .. Considering the fact that they lost to Cherryvllle. and F. City beat Cherryvlle .... That Gons lad is a neat pitcher .... Honestly believe that they'll give Newton' a fit here Friday ...; I GIVE UP! - . College Recommends 3 Blue Mold Controls Three, and only three, methods 01, controlling blue mold are recommended by the State College Exten 3ion Service and Experiment Staion. I>r. Luther Shaw, Extension tlant pathologist,- says farmers hould play safe and adopt a con.tol method which has been proven in laboratory and field tests. The first of these, and the most effective in the majority of tests,, is unugaticpi with paradiclilorcjben.eiie. This material consists of solt! white crystals. When purcfiasea n 100 and 200-pound lots, the price tinges from 12 to 15 cents per lb. Hie crystals are spread over the tgular seed bed cover and a heaver cover is then placed over the en ire bed and fastened securely to i re vent escape of the vapors. TTie second recommended treat-1 j nent Is also a fumigant. It Is zenzol (benzene) and comes in liquid form It also requires tight plant bed covers. The cost of zenzol is usually 20 o 30 cents per gallon. The third tratment la a sprqy, ind there c|e two formulas recom ner.%d. One consists of 6 ounces of yellow copper oxide, 6 ounces - of a reliable spreader, such as Voseol OTC. Orvus or Lethane; one qquart of cottonseed oil, and 26 gallons of water preferabl from a pond of stream. The other formula calls for 6 ounces of yellow copper oxide, 1 quart of self emulsified cottonseed oil, and 25 gallons of water preferably from a pond or stream. If the spray treament Is used. It d'ould be Rtarted when the plants trp the size of a dime. or larger. The fumigants a^. best applied when blue mold makes its first appearance in the community. |Egg Cookery Has Its Right and Wrong Way There Is a difference between "hard boiled" and hard cooked" eggs, says Miss Mar/ E. Thomas, nu tritlonist of the State College Ex' tension Service. Likewise, soft boiled eggs may be hard cooked, she says. In discussing the "how" of egg i cookery. Miss Thomas offered suggestions In connection wltb the second week of the Sprlnghthne Egg Festival, a consumer - producer cam palgn to Increase the use of' eggs, U'lifok Ko rrln n aw?41 11 TV io n mvu ?I*I ii A use un?c has the support of C. F. ParrUh and other Extension poultrymen of State College. The Southeastern Chain Store Council, through P. D. May, Its North Carolina reprosen tative, Is also active in the Egg Fes tlval. Miss Thomas explained that eggs should always he cooked slowly, at KOTOS MOUNTAIN HOOTS TIT moderate, even heat. High cooking tewfperatures make eggs tough. it 'For either soft cooked or hard cook a ed eggs with tender whites,'' the e nutritionist saftd, 'the eggs should b in boiling water and then e the vessel should be set back front p the heat where the water will slnitner but not boil. For soft cooking, leave the eggs In the water six minutes; for hard cooking, allowing 20 g minutes. t] .fl WHAT WAS 1 P StCMlT 75* MANI Vto^ReU k uunoMX tuvoxw Ac% L DirttUd by ALFRED HI Mill AS ID MMfcy|k imrrrn n j???????????1 pi Synopsis: When I first met ci Max de Winter, he was brood- a ing bitterly over the death of 8 hie beautiful wife, Rebecca, in di a sailing accident; my own shy- *1 ness and naiveto?and my un- on hidden love for him?made Mm cl pay and happy. He asked me to fi marry him, and we went to b Manderley, his famous estate, a Everything about the great tl house bore Rebecoa's influence, ix and Mrs. Danvers, the house- ] keeper, seemed, particularly to a resent my taking Rebecoa's t* place as the mistress of Man- s] derley. Surprisingly, she sug- s< gested a costume for me, for the Manderley Masquerade Roll; d but when J appeared in it, Max b furiously sent ma upstairs to a change. Mrs. Danvers waited h there, smiling, to teU me it was a the same costume Rebecca had wornt Suddenly there was com- h motion outside; a sMp had gone ashore, and a diver had discovered Rebecca's sailing boat, u Chapter Five h ' 0 1 stumbled across the beach, h looking for Maxim. I found him, f, In Rebecca's cottage. Cl When I saw him, he was stand- d Ing near the strangely blazing fire- h place, dishevelled, his evening 8j clothes of the night before stained e with sea water. His face seemed -j blank, yet ravaged with the look j, of a man who could not bear to g see more. "Maxitn!" X called. "Max- . found another boat ? " "I know. Frank told me. Bo- t< becca's boat..." v "The diver made another die- p covery. He broke one of the porta and looked in. There was a body in there ? Rebecca's." k "No, no!" X screamed. ti "The woman that was washed H up at Edgecombe' ? that wasn't C Rebecca. It was the body of some p unknown woman. I Identified it, fi but I knew it was not Rebecca, n It was all a lie. I knew where tx Rebecca's body was! Lying on u that cabin floor, on the bottom of the sea." q 'How did you know, Maxim?" u He turned to face me. "Because d ? / put it there!" He stepped n nearer me. "WUl you look into r my eyes and tell me that you love n me now?" he said bitterly. "ToU h see ? it's too late." lc I could not sneak, with the hor- bi tot, the stunning surprise of what t< he had said. And then I could it not resist throwing my arms around oi him. "It's not too late!" X said desperately. "Tou're not to say that! le I love you more than anything tl In the world.. .please, Maxim, kiss w me, please. We've got to be What a: we've never been?together, ctoee! r How could we be close when I knew you were always thinking ?i of Rebecca? How could you ask p me to love you when X knew you n loved Rebecca still?" f, "Tou thought I loved Rebeesa? a Ton thought that? I hated her." ri I could not believe my ears 11 Then he poured out what wad In "They told mo I wu the lueMoot ?* on earth when I married ?-or. -oho was mo lovely, oo tsoom* *,.- * ' . ' " ' * ' ' * "" ' ' l u.m .?.J. ? JF '&' DRBDA.T. APRIL 11. 1M? The ttme general method la ag In poaching egg*. That Ja, rater should bo boiling When ggs are got la, but the hoot ah o lowered immediately aod ggs cooked at the simmering era Lure. The United State* farm n age debt, in the fall of 1939 a tie smallest In 20 years., , mi Mi IAI frtsenU ccajg^B im ? you haven't had any sleep." g He turned to me. and with a ? strange tenseness drew me close. 4 "You've forgiven me, haven't a you?" I said. "Forgive you? What have I got k ? .to forgive you for?" S "For last night ? my stupidity T about the costume." f< "Oh, that! I was angry with a you, wasn't 1?" s : 19 "So! Nor J exclaimed. "Bhe he "Yes," I whispered. "Oh, Haxlht, el can't we start all over again?" I li burst out. "X don't ask that you tl love me...I won't ask impossible things, in he your friend and a companion...X*U be happy with took my face in his hands, lb "How much do-you love me?" he 111 asked, his voice tortured by seme- sf ' thing I did not know. . "< "Maxim, mast I teU yeu...T" "I'm afraid ifs too late, my daillng.he said slowly. "It's all a over new. The thing's happened? a the thlag I've dreaded." ft "Maxim, what are you trying to d tell me?" E "Rebecca has won." W ? w ?" ~ ~ ~ X coma oniy Win* of his love a '?r ,h?r- bow I had lost. y ?f "?adow baa been between v Sg,. *be time?he went on. n "She knew that this would hap- n pen." v "What are you saying?" . fcl "They sent a diver rfrmm n? - ?vm. k?iu, a iuubu mai. wnon >ld you aboutRebecca. It's gone.. i a few houra.. .You're ao mud tder." At the Inquest, Mr. Tabb, thical boat-builder, pointed out tha le eea cocka bad been opened nd that thla could not have beei n accident. The coroner oalle< taxlm to the etand. "You must understand," h* d^i that .thla new evidence ra - . t&< oaalblllty that Mra. de \fl..te lay have taken her own lite. Pain il ae It may be, I must aak vo\ very personal question. Wen ilatlone between you and the lati (re. de Winter perfectly happy?' Theiworda began to buzz In m; ira. The courtroom, the myriad o lapee, whirled wildly. X fainted. ** *e mmMled) W FONTAINE IWiCfl [TCHCCXjK^ B THUS inm 11 shed, so amusing. I believed her impletely ? but I never had i moment's happiness with her.., be was Incapable of love, or ten erness, or decency. I found out bout her four days after we wen tarried. She stood there ? on that I Iff at Monte Carlo, where yoi rst baw me - laughing, her blacl air blowing In the wind. She tolc te all about herself ? every Ung.. .things I'll never tell a llv ig soul, we made a bargain ? tie would play the grand mlstres: t Manderley, and I would- be abli > save 'the family honor'." H< poke the last contemptuously earching my face for beuef. "I kept the bargain ? and s< Id she ? apparently. But then sh< egan to grow careless. She tool flat in London...began bringing er friends down there. There wa cousin of hers ? Favell." "I know him," I said. "He cami ere the day you went to London.' "Why didn't you tell me?" "I didn't like to. I thought 1 rould remind you of ? Rebecca.' "Remind me! As If I neede< emlndlng! favell used to visit he; ere ? in this cottage. It wen n, until I couldn't stand it an; >nger. One night I came dowi ere to have It out with them. : jund her alone? Fa veil hadn' ome. She looked ill ? queer. Sud enly she got up." Maxim got t< Is feet. " 'When I have a child, be said, 'neither you nor anyom lse can prove that it wasn't yourp "ou'd like an heir, wouldn't you lax, for ybur beloved Manderley? he began to laugh. 'What a thrll ar you, Max, to watch my soi row bigger day by day and t< now that when you die ? Man erley will be Ms/' She laughe( gain, and faced .me. She said Veil, Max, aren't you going ti ill . me?' And then I struck hei he moved towards me, laughing 'hen suddenly she stumbled ant ell. When I looked down, shi 'as lying on the floor. She hat truck her head on a piece o m isn't won/ Ska hoewt . . .f hip's tackle. X rtmtmber wonder why she ?u *tlll ami ling.. .Am en I rwllMd Dm was dead." "But you kill bar. ..it wa a accident!" Hi wist on. recounting how b ad put bar into tba cabin of ba oat, aallad a safe distance fron bore, opened the aaa cocks am anktba boat Maxim,"'I asked toes anyone know of tbiaT" "No one ? except you and me. Frantically, I began to taU bin 'bat wa must do. that wa mue y ba made a mistake in identl ou the body, that Rebecca wa ead, add could not boar wltnesa La was not listening. "I told you once that I'd don vary selfish thing In marry in, ou," ba Said, holding my arm try tightly. "You can understan ow what I meant. X'va loved yoi ly darling ? I shall always lov ou ?r but I've known all alon, aat Rebecca would win In th nd!" "No! No!" I exclaimed. I cluni > him. "She hasn't won! What ear happens now ? ehe hasn' ron." e e e Slowly, surely, as Maxim ha< nown, the web of the past drei ghter In the days that followed Llndly old Colonel July an, th hlef Magistrate for the County erformed his duty most respect illy. Maxim said that he h&i taaa a mistake in identification, tade Maxim agree to my attend kg the inquest. All right," be said. "X don' kind this wholt thing ? excep >r you. I eant forget what it' one to you. I've been thinking o thing else since it happened...' [e lifted my ohin, and looked a ka intently. "It's gone forever...' e sold, 'that funny, young, los >ok that X loVed. It won't comi s? w a? % - a s??a a- ? . ' ' .V t*^Pr *hTN 'as tji& j\ 1V ' } *' VI ft "3 \ tW V m r fl||V ^ 1 "JF 1 ' jVj | <^rvii_ -If I Give You a Penny Will \ "Aw, Gimme a Buck an' D< \ On_ I Washington Si (Cont'd from front pa>?o) tne government to go further lnt< debt or raise new taxes. The caUX is that it doesn't have to act lintne diately, because the debt now is on ' > ly $42 1-2 billion, or $2 1-2 billion ui der the limit. So the strategists have figured i out this way: Congress will go a head and preserve what remnants i can of; economy. It won't do any thing about taxes or the- debt limi until after It meets next January. Thus when election time rolls a ? round next November, voters won' be especially conscious of the final cial dilemmn. And Congressmen o political faiths who have helped ti end the economy drive won't be cal > ed to task. Only one major change may b made in this strategy. There i some talk about creating a specia Commission to study the whole ta: and financial problem alter Con gress adjourns. Thus the voter could be told that they had nothini to worry about because this Com mission would solve the problem. The solution still will be higher ta: I es and a cut in federal handouts, re gordless of'what the Commission might do or of which candidate win in the November elections. While all this talk and plannim proceeds, the debt contnues to rise The first 261 days of this fiscal yea the federal government spent an a\ erage of $10,471.76.3 ^a day mor than It took in. That amounts ti more than $7,000 a minute. Of course, too. this means that the tax future will remain uncertaii for more than another six montht This is the time of year when a lo w of employers ordinarily make plan 1 for expansion. But they don't knot what their tax burdens will be an< * they won't know for months. They probably don't feel very ha r py about It, because next year's ta 1 Will 1*1 1? - * * 11. uiii will mtiKc ?igui uc w ia.\ law I. enacted in the last nine ye&rt ? There is some comfort for the wea a thy. and big corporations in the f&c t however, that the strategists Ai J Washingon agree privately tha i. most of he new taxes must come on of tho so-called middle in com % brackets. Taxes on corporations and th NOTICE Notice is hereby given that th e Connie Mill Store is now owned an operated by J. E. Aderholdt wh" r will be responsible for all bill '* made after April 8, 1940. This the 9th day of April, 1940. d W. K. Mauney, Sec.-Treas., * Bonnie Cotton Mills, Inc. i SAVE i I Your deposits need n t the important thing. V "Many strokes, though down and felli the hare I same sense it is true tl I small, will grow into a people could acquire in Besides being the mo cumulate money, a bai s advantage of constant - . unuc in ana siart an ai i turn out to be the most 1 ever taken. \ We Pay 2 Percent Into ' annually. First Nati I \ i * Member Federal Deposi - ,^^-JIIHD'u PI MMM TO -r,-!K--. ~ ~~~- - . i ? .?~f. t.l.t* 'ou Lose It?" in I'll Have Somethln' T'hold Tol" lapshots rich have reached what tax export* s call "the point of diminishing re< turns." That means that the rates i* are so high that the rich won't' in vest their money because if they*. 1 make a profit it is more than eaten up by taxes. So the white-collar ' group will get it next ? folks with > annual incomes from arouiul 11.OO 1 up to about $50,000. t. " NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the 1 Mauney Mill Store Is now owned J and operated by Mrs. A. L?. Allran who will be responsible for all ? : Ills made after April 1st. 1940. This the 9tli day of April. 1940. W. K. Maundy, Sec.-Treas. . Mauney Mills, Inc. s ; FSH Pains in s Tilt I tl^P Mwwy Back lilt Ltud IF IT FAILS And Other Fnnetlonal Symptoms ?f * KIDNEY WEAKNESSES Take XIDAKS new and l?H?? suHeoa? .and discomforts oI Backache and Ltg Pains ?Frequent. Scanty and tuning Passage? S Unnatural Odo*?Lose el Energy?Healaches. Dirsineri. Nerrousneee?caused by tutactional Kidney and Bladder Disorder*. 5 Teke KIDAN8 when Kidneys end BUi, der need help?when functional kidney (inorders permit poisonous waste* end acids r to remain in the blood. Relief often comer with the first treatment. In a few days, the symptoms should entirely disappear. They P will make you feel better and look better. . Take KIDAN8 in time. Functional kidney 3 weakneaa may prose serious. Remember K1DAN8 must satisfy or the trial is free. MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! Deposit $1.00 with tour druffht for two boxes of K1DANS. Use oho box. If not n entirely * ??*.*? wpflTiTS. rotura othei and your 1. . mon. . KtOAHS g Kidnt > ... o ii sold |?T 8 KINGS MOUNTAIN DRUG CO. v ' J VpHj Ak |l I e Our Bualnegg la making old 4hoea d like new. Try our service nbw. j FOSTERS SHOE SERVir.E .. ! Phone 154. We Deliver VND HAVE ot be large. Regularity is William Shakespeare wrote with a little axe, hew lest timbered oak." In the liat many deposits, though substantial sum that most no other way. st convenient way to acik account has the added availability. -Why no ccount here now? It may important step you have ; "*- *. * * jrest Compounded semiional Bank t Insurance Corporation
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 11, 1940, edition 1
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