The Kings Mountain Herald Established 1889 . A weekly newspaper devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published for the enlightenment, entertainment and benefit 01 the citizens of Kings Mountain and its vicinity, published every Thursday by (he Herald Publishing House. Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Kings Mountain, N C.. under Act of Congress of March 3,1873 EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Martin Harmon..Editor-Publisher Robert L. Hoffman.Sports Editor and Reporter Miss Elizabeth Stewart.Circulation Manager and Society Editor Mrs. Thomas Meacharn.Advertising Salesman and Bookkeeper MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT Eugene Matthews Horace Walker Jack Heavener Bill Myers Charles Miller Paul Jackson TELEPHONE NUMBERS—167 oi 283 SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ONE YEAR—12.50 SIX MONTHS—$1.40 THREE MONTHS—75c BY MAIL ANYWHERE TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE Ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy ways be established. Proverbs *6. Farm Bill Veto President Eisenhower vetoed the hodge-podge farm bill, which contained a pay-off for Virtually every farm inter est and the President seemingly got by it very well in this area. The mid-west, of course, may write a different story. However, the President did a little politicking of his own along the way. He talked about advance soil bank pay ments by July 1, invited Congress to pass the necessary legislation, and he had his farm man, Secretary Benson, up price supports for the current year, com paring to about a quarter-loaf in rela tion to the 90 percent parity props sup plied in the ill-fated Congressional bill. All the House members and one-third of the Senate seats are to be filled come November and the desire for votes runs strong in Washington. There will be oth er legislation just as sorry in this ses sion. The Laurinburg Exchange points out that the great bulk of parity payments go to 100,000 large farming firms, while only a small portion goes to the remain der of five million farm families. One concern got a parity loan check last year for $1,219,000. The product was wheat. That is big business. It is presumed this firm did some advance figuring and knew what it was doing. Barring drought or a freeze-out, growing wheat was a sure thing. Soil bank doesn’t make too happy a sound either, for the principle of paying people not to plant contravenes the ba sic laws of nature. A major trouble in agriculture today is the manipulations of the State De partment, perhaps even more than the red-tape filled, personnel clogged Agri culture department. Sell surplusses? Give surpluses away? State’s Dulles yells “no”, contending it will mess up relations with our allies. It is the State Department which re fuses to restrict importation of Japan ese textiles which are made at 10 cents per hour. Taking liberties with the law of sup ply and demand is difficult business and hardly possible of success. Soil bank will become fact in this Con gress and it may work in time, particu larly the tree-planting piece of it. There is no foreseeable end to the need for trees — for lumber, for paper, for many other uses. But if anyone has a key to the latch on the farm problem, he has yet to step up. Registration books for the May pri mary open for the first time Saturday. All in-city citizens should be reminded that two sets of registration books are used in elections here. One set is the city books, used last spring, and providing a list of eligibles to help choose the mayor and board of city commissioners. This year’s contests are township, county, district, state where the county reg istration books are used. Every voting day, somebody comes to the polls, finds he isn’t registered. If in doubt, a check with the registrar should be made. From last week’s news account, it ap pears the hospital auxiliary organiza tion is off to a good start. Much interest has been evidenced in all phases of the work of this group. Our best wishes to Mrs. P. G. Padgett, elected chairman, and to the several other officers and group chairmen. Congratulations to Horace Brown, newly elected governor of the Kings Mountain Moose Lodge. Congratulations to Dean Bridges, win ner of the forensic championship in the division contest of the Westei'n North Carolina High School Activities associ ation. Ostrich Policy It is political season, and, with a three man race on for 11th district Congress man and other contests just around the corner, candidates are accepting regu larly invitations to speak to civic clubs and other organizations. However, the ground rules adopted by almost all civic clubs effectively censors the candidates, which is hardly Constitu tional in the first place, and otherwise assures a certain dullness in the ad dresses which have a tendency to hurt the candidates and to bore the hearers. A Jaycee remarked recently, ‘1 heard both of them and both w'ere lousy.” He referred to two candidates who had graced the Jaycee platform. Last Thursday night, Ralph Gardner prefaced his remarks to the Kiwanis Club by saying he would do his best to make a “non-political” speech. Jack White reported earlier that his man Ba sil Whitener had been strictly under wraps in a speech to a civic club in one of the neighboring communities. The Herald refers, of course, to the rule, sometimes formal, sometimes in formal, which majority of civic clubs in voke. It requires a candidate to lay off politics, stemming from the policy of all clubs to be non-partisan. The Herald suggests that the policy is somewhat akin to that of the fabled os trich, which supposedly buries his head in the sand when danger looms. In the instance of the current Congres sional contest, one of three men will re present the district in Washington. It is an important position. Thus it is impor tant, too, that citizens get to know the candidates and to know what they think about the many pressing issues of the day. In turn, the civic club members are going to choose at the ballot box, not en bloc, but individually. Civic club rostrums, of course, would be no place to deal in personalities, nor invectives, but the candidates should get relieved from the “no politics” restric tion. A Kiwanian remai’ked the other day, “We know the candidate is against sin and for motherhood, but that doesn’t set forth the candidate’s views on many an other issue of the moment.” Opening the club rostrum to all the several competitors in a particular con test should meet the civic clubs’ “non partisaij” test. Teacher Commuting City district school trustees have vot ed to alter—for a one-year period—the rule requiring faculty members to main tain residence in Kings Mountain during the school term. The rule had a worthy aim — encour agement of teachers to become a part of community — but like almost all rules certain exceptions appeared mandatory and, indeed, were made. The school board is correct in encour aging in-city residence, even though e liminating the mandatory requirement. Teachers who know the people of the community can do more effective work and can also do a most helpful public relations job for the school which they serve. The first basic test for any teacher is, “Can he teach?” implying as the ques tion does both mastery of the subject matter, ability to impart it into some- i times unwilling juvenile crania, and ef fectiveness as a disciplinarian. Resi dence would fall several steps behind in relative importance. Draw a liberal check for the Cancer Fund. A best bow to Dr. John C. McGill, newly elected director of Kings Moun tain Building & Loan association. YEARS AGO Items of news about Kings Mountain area people and events THIS WEEK taken from the 1946 files of the Kings Mountain Herald. Kings Mountain high school was rated superior in six fea tures of its nine-feature opera tion, according to a report of the evaluation committee of the Southern Association of Secon dary Schools and Colleges re ceived here this week. Members of the Kings Moun tain Kiwanls club will honor I their “Kiwani-Annes” on the oc casion of the sixth anniversary of the founding of the civic club at the annual ladies night ban quet at the high school cafeteria . at 7 o'clock. Social and Personal The annual Junior-Senior ban. j quet for Kings Mountain high ' school students will be held to morrow night from 8 to 10 o' clock in the high school cafeteria. The theme will be a Mexican fiesta. Girl Scouts representing the four girl scout troops in Kings Mountain are selling Girl Scout plantation cookies this week and report that sales are good. MARTIN'S * MEDICINE By Martin Hannon Ingredients: bits of newt, visdom, humor, and comm mt. Directions: Take weekly, if possible, but avoid overdosage. It is a better than even wa ger that the womenfolk’s read ership of the nation’s front pages of newspapers escalated heavily last week as two ma jor celebrities got hitched. In the middle of it, if anyone had dared to suggest it, I would have decried any idea that that sort of stuff would appear in this piece. m-m I saw so many pictures of the moustached prince ( I’m not much of a moustache man), I got bored te .ears and even the glamour and glimmer seemed to be stripped off Grace Kelly. m-m When I heard about 450 yards of cloth in a wedding gown, I threw up my hands at such a seeming waste. Then I was reminded that a wedding (again) is one of the three big and usually final events in a person’s life, and the only one the person knows about* The other events are birth and death. m-m At any rate they are mar ried and, I hope, will live hap pily ever after as did Cinderel la and the handsome prince, not to mention Snow White and Sleping Beauty. Scarlett O’ Hara didn’t do too well, though she did manage to wind up filthy rich. m-m The wedding of the other celebrity, Margaret • Truman, was most decorous and, I thought, in immense good taste. The new Mrs. Daniel, recently added with Zebulon, N. C., con nections, merely the daughter . of an ex-President, was able to carry her big moment off with out all the pomp, circumstance and fanfare, which, the televi sion man reported, Prince Rain ier had to go through. Think men, of going through TWO ceremonies on successive days! I had a hard time making the singleton demanded in the Uni ted States. And the Prince showed the strain, too. He was squirming around, the camera revealed, like a man in most acute discomfort on the initial day’s civil rites. Next day, he seemed more accustomed to the vow ordeal. At any rate, it was in the Prince’s squirming that I felt a kindred spirit, and the objection to the moustache re lented. Some waggish husbands would add, in the presence of menfolk only, that the Prince’s squirming had just begun and would increase as the days and years go by. May be. m-m I also felt a bit of kindred spirit for Clifton Daniel, the New York Times newsman, who married Margaret Tru man. Daniel preceded me and many others through the Uni versity’s journalism school and was something of a hero in the department’s faculty and stu dent thinking by the time I first heard of him. He had a , job. This was in the middle and middle-plus thirties, and anybody having a job was something of a somebody. And Daniel had a job which appear ed to be supplying not only the meat and potatoes, but occa sionally, it was opined, a new suit of clothes. m-m Oh, well, back to war, crime, tragedy, and politics, which is the regular diet of front pages these days. It reminds of the story about a Yankee paper during jhe Civil War, which ran a humorous story on the front page, because the editor figured the clientele had had such a run of bad news it need ed. and badly, a change of diet. I forgot the paper, but it could have been the New York Times. m-m I served as chauffeur last Saturday for a trip to Greens boro and the state piano con test, and it was my first trip, via four lanes, to Greensboro. The new stretches of limited access U. S. 29 make a real dream road, leaving only Gas tonia. Charlotte and Salisbury un-by-passed. And the Charlotte district commissioner of the highway department recently envisaged and cited the need for a six-lane boulevard to Kings Mountain ... at any rate, the four-lane arrangement is most helpful, for we didn’t have a single close brush with accident ash-heap all the- way down and back. (I cross the fingers as I make that state ment, for fear of future repri sal.) m-m Saturday night we stopped at Hotel Albemarle and found the accommodations, service, and cuisine quite excellent as usual. When I called for room ser vice next morning, old friend Bob Richards, the manager, answered jovially, "Little Wal dorf." I’ve never had break fast-in-bed at the Waldorf Astoria, the deluxe New York hotel, but I don’t believe the Waldorf’s scrambled eggs could have tasted any better. Eclipse Viewpoints of Other Editors CAPS ARE BACK Here, for a change, are some spring fashion tidings of interest to the male of the species: dress caps are being made again. All over the country, moribound cap plants are being bombarded with orders for a type of headgear which had all but disappeared from the American noggin, ex cept as an article of sportswear. Who can tell what initiated this cap renaissance? It is said to have started in .the colleges, where the Juniper Joes are al ways thinking up some new thing. Trim, close-fitting, short visored, and with no rear over hang, the cap has overrun the campuses of the land and is in vading commerce and industry. The ‘*Ivy League,” as the new style is called, has a rather gay design. Probabjy something more conservative Will be devised for the solid citizen. It is too much to hope for, that the financial dis tricts of our cities will soon be crowded at the noon hour with bankers and business (executives going forth for their cratkers and milk in caps with zebra stripes. What caused the cap to fall from favor? One theory is that the public had come to identify it as an article of gangster wear. Certainly caps were worn by all well-dressed movie thugs of the Twenties and early Thirties, but who copied whom? Never mind, the dress cap is proper wear again, and it has many merits. Hats get out of shape easily. Moreover, just about the time a hat begins to get comfor table, women start campaigning against it, demand to know WHEN the wearer is going to get a new one? *A cap can baffle them a long time, (even if it gets sat on now and then. Let us all lift our hats to the cap and throw the hats away as we welcome a ntew fad that makes sense.—The Providence Journal. WHAT THE ILLINOIS VOTE SHOWS The final returns in the Illinois primary apparently will show that the Democrats and Repub lican parties polled almost the same number of votes. They will also show, on the basis of nearly complete returns, that President Eisenhower and former Gov. Stevenson ran an almost even race in preferential votes with a slight edge going to the Presi dent. Adlai Stevenson led in Demo cratic Chicago and Cook County by a vote of approximately 2 to 1, but the President won strong support in traditionally Republi can downstate to make just a bout a dead heat of it. No one can bo sure what this portends for November. Yet it is clear that the Republican vote has fallen off markedly in terms of the Democratic primary vote. In 1952 the Republican total was approximately 1,400,000 while the Democratic total was silghtly under 900,000. But this year it ap pears that each party has cast something more than 700,000 on arr even-Stephen basis. This Republican declinb must be explained in terms other than that intra-party contests brought the Democratic voters to the polls. Gov. Stratton, who has won renomination, had a contest with State Treasurer Warren E. Wright, and Republican Secre tary of State Carpenter, who al so won renomination, had a fight from Alderman Nicholas J. Boh ling of Chicago. So there was just as much reason for Repub licans to go to the polls as for the Democrats to vote in the race for nomination for Governor, won by Cook County Treasurer Herbert Faschbn. If Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee received any substan tial write-in vote it will not come out until the official canvass. On the basis of unofficial returns, which do not show all the write ins, The Tennessee aspirant for the Democratic presidential no mination received relatively few write-ins. The Stevenson total, matching that of the President with all the latter’s prestige, gives a new impetus to the for mer Illinois Governor1 s cam-1 paign. Minnesota, Wisconsin and now Illinois make it plain that as of April 1956 the Republican appeal. PILLS pills'live up to the prespectus, they will undoubtedly be a sum mer’s boon. But they still leave a little to be desired. A pill filled with 8-MOP pro mises to help you get a suntan without a sunburn. It builds up your natural defenses against blistering and (encourages that first pleasant pink to mellow in to a nice tan. The veriest pale face can soon emerge as a stylish charcoal brown, exuding health all over. And we will have lost our last defenses. Come the crocus and the robin we’ll no longer be able to remind the lady of -the house what the sun does to us. We will be hard put this year to put off spading that unshielded south west comer. Come the crab-grass and the dog days, we’ll have faint excuse to flee the trowel for the hammock. The plea that a writ ing man needs moments to medi tate has long since worn out, and now we will be told just to re member to take our pills. We are sure that a healthy tan is a happy thing and we are all for pills that produce it. But a happier thing would be a pill that tans while snoozing in the shade.—Wall Street Journal. BARBER SHOP RACKET Saturday morning in a crowd ed Chapel Hill barber shop a man in a hurry came in to get a hair cut. Since he didn’t have much time to spare from his business he was about to leave without sitting down when he saw his ten-year-old son and found out the boy had befen there a while and was indeed next in line. “I’ll just trade places with my son,” the man told the barber whose chair was being vacated. “I’ll take his place and he can take mine when it comes up.” This was all right with the bar ber, but not with the boy, who objected so strenuously (and so loudly) that the father left the shop, saying he would come back for his haircut some other day. Another man waiting his turn said he was reminded of a bar ber shop racket he had as a boy. “I discovered it by accident,” he said, “when a man in a hurry of fered me ten cents for my place in line. After that I'd go down to the barber shop almost every Saturday, and as often as not somebody wiuld buy my turn. Some days I made as much as thirty cents. That was a lot to a boy in those days. “But the barbers didn’t appre ciate it. When they saw what I was doing, one of them went to my father and asked him to make me stop. - Anothey thing about those days was that boys had to do what their parents told them, so that was the end of my little racket.”—Joe Jones in the Chapel Hill Weekly. EXPLANATION IN ORDER While a judge may be an indi vidualist of the first order, as suming that he has the right to temper justice with mercy, even to the extent of completely for getting that justice has any part in the proceedings, it becomes in creasing evident that many a judge .needs to have his reason ing put on a sound basis once more. Over in Charlotte, two men were caught red-handed selling drugs illegally to truck drivers and teen agers. These drugs, varying in effect, were calcula ted to stimulate or "produce sleep. There was no question about the guilt of these “vermin” who would sell any sort of drug to a teen ager, yet the judge gave them one year each in prison, the sentences being suspended upon the payments of fines of $500 and $300. We imagine they were back in their illegal business before sunset, and in less than a week had made enough money to pay the fines. The public has a right to know what Peasoning a judge follows in reaching a decision to impose such light punishment. We be lieve he should be asked to ex plain.—Stanly News & Press. does not enjoy popular favor in the same proportions as four years ago.—The St Louis Post TispatcK ■ ■ ■ Automobile Junk Yards Are filled with evidence that auto accidents happen every hour of the day. If you have an accident, are you prepared to ipay damage claims? If not, better see us today.. The Arthur Hay Agency ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE Phone »82 CARPET Beauty You Can See Quality You Can Trust Prices You Can Afford Distinctive installations by certified mechanics. Call or write us for samples and prices. No obligation, of course. PERRY FURNITURE & CARPET CO. Shelby. N. C. — Dial 7426 HARRIS FUNERAL HOME —Ambulance Service Kings Mountain, N. C. Phone 118 Famous Family Favorite ET sit ...for delicious. 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