1 - ' ^Friday. December 31. 1348 YOU W - KID 1 BY VOTING AGil LETS FAC I Many conscientious p outlawed in oui county | I lection carries against 1 THIS IS 1 ' is. . % Anyone may still poi beer legally in this cot legal sales. The only tli sales of beer. State law five gallons of beer in a suming that such beer i safe. When a person he suxnes he has it for the f 1 ttfc LAW TO JrltOVE I Ions of beer in his home not touch him unless it < lor the purpose of sale. YOUR LAWYER. X . -. A 1 A VOTE AGAINST ' ' 1 STOPCONSUMP 14 v. Law-abiding citizen! without violating any 1 it in defiance of ALL the HERE'S WHAT YO CAL SALES"! wwmmmmmamy 1. Public revenaes taxes. * ? * Lm ah opportunity i lug o! beer. . mmm * _ A Jul' opportunity t .' / ' ?. i * : 4. All opportunity I cated persons. d. I ne opportunity temperance. __ STUDY THESI The Welfare of Ton* Yi ty Depends on Your D( I I II gWHrWI'. HI-.' El || . "\ THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HE AM'T rCT It vn i uci IF BEER IINST LEGAL CONTROL 1 THE FACTS eople think that beer will be ' if the coming local-option eegal sales ol beer. NOT TRUE ?> . 7 \ \ A * . . ' f . * * ssess, transport and consume inty should the vote go against ting outlawed would be legal says anyone may possess up to dry county without the law pres possessed lor the nurnose ol is over five gallons, the law preturpose of sale?BUT IT'S UP TO L A person might have 1Q0 galea elsewhere, and the law can:an prove that beer is possessed IF YOU DOUBT THIS. ASK LEGAL SALES WILL NOT TION OF BEER IN THIS OUNTY i may possess and use beer laws. And bootleaaers will sell i laws. UR VOTE AGAINST LE- jj WILL" TAKE AWAY: 1 from excise and license I to control sales and drink- I * * i to pievent sales to intoxi to teach and promote true " I FACTS CAREFULLY Mir Family and Year CommunAtcUl?iW? Think Logal Cmm tral bin Way. Don't Yon? - . . . i ?County Citinu Committee for T tjnl Control of Boor RALD, KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. ?f\ LOOKING TTi AHEAD ' GEORGE S. BFN SON mIIb Pundent - - Ma rJi *$ Celitgt' J j ' II . . T T ? ? now to Lose uut The government lost $2,000,000 9 J day while running the nati< "s rall1 roads in World War I. That's not ] hay! The government operators got I rid cf that money even though they ; found it necessary to jump freight j rates 110 por cent! This sad experience gives you a real-life picture of what happens in America 1 under government management of i industry. Every time we try it in , Amerira, the nation as a whole is j the lpser. ; j Compare that tecord w.ith the railroad management's record in World War II. This time we kept' 1 private operation and management. There was no increase in freight rates, and the' railroads paid ?4,000 000 a day. to the federal government in taxes. This means that under private management our people were ahead at- least SS.OQO.OOO ? - L 0 uar, 11.m a uver.i'.vu uiuion dollars a year! To Suffer Most Net long* ago 21 railroad uhions 1 ! came cut with a proposal that- tie government take over.the railroads permanently. Surely, somebody is terribly misguided or misinformed. If our union" people will study the . records of government management in this and other countries, they will make rio such demands. Actually', the railroad unions themselves would be the groups to suffer most under government manegei merit. ' ' Our workers have a huge stake in the American way. If private ownersnlp of industry is worth saving. then we mu<-t do everything we can to stave off those tendencies toward Socialism and Communism. Best Service. .More Pay Railroads in the ' United States and one Canadian line are t*'p only railroads in the world that are hot government owned or govt nmont controlled. Where do you have the' Its'* railroads ar.J the best service? In America. Our railroads offer better service at lower cost than, you'll iind in any other nation in the world. This is true even though .the pay envelope of the American railroad worker is far greater than that of railroad workers in other 1 I nations. . | ! It would be much wiser for our i unions to call for less government strangulation in the form of taxes, not for more control It is quite ; possible for a slow strangling 1 prdcess to bring on complete govI ernment control of railroads. We : must not permit that. Our workers I must continue to receive the good , 1 wages and benefits that come from j railroads controlled by the railroad ] industry, not by an agency of the 1 | government. Experience. Not Folly Operating expenses of railroads have soared during the' past 30 years. Yet, the railroads under nrntofa :? ; j vuiv. vmici.tiwF iictvt? increascQ I their efficiency, to serve the public i better at lower cost. Two things ! have resulted from this efficiency: higher wages and lower costs to the shipping and traveling public. Nobody would expect gov ernnoent managed railroads to do these things. And they wouldn't. Under government operation there is no call for initiative. Competition is not allowed to play its part in keeping us. on our toes. We have high standards of living in America simply because we have freedom to act and to look opportunities in the face. We invest savings and earnings, not tax money, for better tools and modernization. Our ways have paid off. A look at natiohs r around us shows the folly of government ownership. . Local power systems financed by REA added between 475,000 and 495' 000 new consumers during 1948. This is by far the largest total ever connected in any one year by REA borrowers. 1 For Best Pinnae] Also specify Pinnae Feeds for any parp Wi . I i .Hilton Is Named "Man Of The Year" I . \ Largely bceaus.' .?{' '& :>' ytfan* to .' ptqrrvxe 'the i>r<>riuvVu-!iV;.if ](#. >;ock in ifc?? S:a':e, Or.Jaine* M Hil- ' ;on of .State Coi.egti.ha>-- 'hoop nani- ' * (; ()' "1348 Man of The Year ip Sor x vice to North. Carolina Agriculture'' % by :ht; Progrt'SfShe Farmer., J. On'.y- 11 North Carolinians' have ' previously fetch ef' the hopur. vDr, Hifton is dean of'the School' of l fjoulturn ait State College and three 1 tor of the North Carolina Ex peri-', men: Statoinn. .<1 A native of Catawba County, Dr.' ' Hilton is-.48 years 'old. He-at tended Statjp College, Iowa State, the tiniversjty of Wisconsion" (tnd Purdue. University, speolklUjng in livestock dairying, and animal nutrition. After making art outstanding re-' \ cord as. assistant, chief of animal' husbandry at Purdue, he returned td North Carolina. State to .become head-of..the an,ma) industry de--' partmenr in 1945. lie. was named dear of; the School of Agriculture and director of the Experiment Station a year ago., ... Last year Dr. Hilton served as chairman of a Governor'? commit- . tee appointed to study North Garo? _ . , r_ . ' o'_ i' /X \ I 7\ "1 always make this jump bac steady since I started eating 1 ed Bread I*' BEST FOR dU BRE Results . ?Use? I _ I _ _ le Laying :Ie Big Hpg Feed and oth one. SEE YWR DEAL! Manufactured By IRE&SO Qngi Mountain, IV. C. /"TJ ' . ..v. f : ' ' Pnge Seven ilia's agrk'Uiiiiral sysuni and re.v>inimcHi'l a U?nji-;orni corrective pea :mm. H?- has written of iteipoii vrilo more than 30 Wont t i fie artio1 developstroiVjj- \vin'ef ind summer short entir?o.x ' \Vhieh v.*i! help farmers and m -hoys vltb t'iitt'jt .take die regU\ir f> nu-yoar ourses.. Ho is also antvinos ti> ?eO t'orth farojijia*move\uj> from- the. disgracefully low position' of ;29ih dace among the.'siaie* in Cash fafrn ncomc received-from livestock. Dr. Hilton is married to the form r Lois Baker, a graduate of low* ttnift :inH fhrtf h ??'L ?h .i.ii-'l ' ?SUBSCRIBE TO THE HERALD? St nil r Kick ?t imp*'#" hr?d??-he and neur?l- * - ''J via w ith C. Mft ' ^ .. 1^^ wl B I ' * - * '. s. > kwards. My nerves are iOLSUM Vitamin EnrichTOAST 9. oumz AD Mash er mixed -'' ' J *' ' ' - . % ER 4 m INS