Kings Established 1889 A weakly newspaper devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published for the enlightenment, entertainment and benefit of the citizens of Kings and Us viotnity, published every Thursday by the Herald Publishing House. Entered as second class matter at die postoffice st Kings Mountain, If. C, under Act of Congress of March 3,1873. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Martin Hannon . Editor-Bub Usher David Baity.Advertising Salesman and Bookeeper Miss Elizabeth Stewart.-Circulation Manager and Society Editor Neale Patrick.Sports Editor MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT Horace Walker Wade Hartsoe, Jr. Paul Jackson Monte Hunter Eugene Matthews TELEPHONE NUMBERS — 167 or 283 EUHSCRXPflON HATES PAYABLE Of ADVANCE ONE YEAR—$3.50 SIX MONTHS—32.00 THREE MONTHS—31.25 BY MAH, ANYWHERE TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE "For we brought nothing into this world, and it is certain that we can carry nothing out.” St. Paul to Timothy 1:6. Sound Advice “The challenge of the hour is one in which we face adversity for the first time in our history. We face a moral and spiritual adversity within our own bor ders brought on by a general slackening of will, a general tendency to counten ance cupidity and applaud cunning, a general distrust of intellectual pursuits and those who pursue them, each a gen eral vagueness as to national purpose and resolve. We have learned to distrust the intangible, to fear the non-conform ist, to worship the material.” The statement, as quoted in Time Magazine, was that of Chancellor Sam uel Gould of the University of California, in a commencement address at Pomona college. The statement was one of the meatiest any college graduating class heard dur ing the recent commencement season. The Herald was shocked, some many years ago, when a Kings Mountain citi zen made the remark he didn’t believe the American people had the intestinal fortitude to fight and win another war. He amplified by saying that too many of us are materialists and bound by fear. It was a different way of saying the same statement of Dr. Gould’s. The Herald did not agree with its neighbor then, has had cause to wonder since. Most Americans, indeed, are slaves to conformity and with reason. Public opin ion is a heavy weapon, and mass think ing tends to condemn the man or woman who steps out of line. Every Alcoholic knows the painful result of his illness. People who don’t marry know their friends refer to them as “old maids” or “old bachelors”. They haven’t conform ed. Yet this nation grew great through the leadership of its non-conformists. The list of great Presidents include Tho mas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Abra ham Lincoln, the two Roosevelts^ and Woodrow Wilson, not a conformist in the list. The late Franklin D. Roosevelt will be remembered for generations to come for his famous moral leadership expressed, at the depths of the Great Depression, as the only fear we have to fear is fear it self. Sir Winston Churchill, outstanding man of this age, attracted the antago nism of the conformists in Britian. He was low man on the British totem pole from the time he was sacked by the World War I government for his role in the ill-fated Dardanelles campaign and until he was called to be Prime Minister in 1910 after the beginning of World War II and fall of France. His moral leadership enabled the free portion of the world to beat the mad man, Hitler. Too many folk are content to let oth ers do their thinking. But the only scien tific approach is to listen with an open mind to anyone’s thoughts. Any other course can be labeled the “ostrich” policy of burying one’s head in the sand, or sweeping the dirt under the rug. Frank Glass Tho Herald joins his many friends in sadness at the death of Frank B. Glass. Mr. Glass was a longtime Kings Moun tain citizen and one of the community’s more colorful characters. He was an able businessman and well-known through out the community. For many years, he managed the Phenix S*tore, then opened his own business, when the Phenix plant was sold. Though the Herald follows the Dem ocratic faith as ardently as Mr. Glass as cribed to the Republican doctrine, the Herald knew Mr. Glass as one of its best friends and a regular patron. In addition, his firm was one of the several Kings Mountain Herald news dealers. In ill health for the past several years, Mr. Glass relinquished ownership of the business to his sons about three years a go and they have carried on in their fa ther’s footsteps. The Herald always found Mr. Glass forthright, plain-spoken, and truthful, the kind of man everyone honors with high regard. Now For Breathing Liberals of North Carolina breathed a sigh of relief Saturday night when it be came apparent that Terry Sanford had defeated Dr. I. Beverly Lake for the Democratic Gubernatorial nomination. They had feared Dr. Lake, as was well expressed by Sanford himself when he told the loser, “You had me scared.’’ Dr. Lake’s candidacy really messed up the campaign of all the other three can didates. It’s an old axiom in politics that the way to win elections is to get the voters emotional. Make 'em angry, make ‘em cry, make ’em laugh, make ‘em sad. This intangible is one reason newspaper edi tors frequently pick losers, for they seek to base their opinions on logic. Logic doesn’t have the emotional appeal. Back in 1948, when the late Kerr Scott defeated Charles M. Johnson, farmers of the area and over the state came to the polls with fire in their eyes. They were for Farmer Scott and they didn’t care who knew it. One observer said the farm folk had the August revival spirit, and they did. The Herald supported Mr. Sanford and is, of course, glad he won. The Herald will be surprised and sorely disappointed if he does not prove to make a great Governor. A victory by Dr. Lake could have cost the state much, had he carried out his promises on the segregation situation. The state and nation operates under ru les of law and flouting of law has serious overtones. Since May 1954, when the United Sta tes Supreme Court ruled that de-segre gation must be, the Herald has followed one policy: The Herald is against violen ce and head-cracking. As stated before, the Herald’s first feelings about the Pearsall plan, which thus far has with stood the Supreme Court tests, were questioning and full of doubts that the plan would be workable or was a good plan, per se. But a week before the election on the Pearsall plan, inter-racial violence erup ted in Clinton, Tenn. That was the kick er to the Herald’s thinking. The Herald endorsed the Pearsall plan in the hope that its adoption would prevent in North Carolina repeats of the Clinton, Tenn., and Little Rock situations. Thus far it has. Other than on his segregation stand, Dr. Lake certainly deserved the com mendation of his supporters in the fact that he has a quick mind, had the equip ment to be Governor. But every news man has known that de-segregation has been the biggest continuing news story in the South since May 1954. Everything, it is said, works together for good for those who love the Lord and work hard. It is good for North Carolina and the South that Mr. Sanford won the Dem ocratic nomination. He typifies the North Carolina tradition of conserva tive, soundly-based progressiveness. A cordial best bow to Tom Trott, who will serve as president of the Kings Mountain Rotary club during the com ing year. Mr. Trott was one of the club’s charter members and, in fact, was in strumental in organizing the Kings Mountain branch of this international civic organization. Mr. Trott is a hard worker and it is easy to envision a pros perous upcoming year for the Rotary club here. Congratulations to Rev. Marion Du Bose who has been elected chairman of the Kings Mountain Red Cross chapter. Rev. Mr. Dubose is a busy man, as is any minister, and his acceptance of the 1 top spot in the very much needed Red i Cross chapter shows he wants to serve I the whole community, as well as mem- ! bers of Kings Mountain Baptist church, j Best bows are in order for Dr. Thomas Durham and Robert Green on their re cent promotions in the North Carolina National Guard. It is an annual headline of the Herald that the Kings Mountain National Guard unit has won top honors for its perform ance during the summer encampment. Said before, and repeatable, are com mendations to Capt. Humes Houston, the officers and men of the Kings Mountain company. MARTIN'S MEDICINE ly Martin Barmen Ingredient*: bit* of new*, wisdom, humor, end comment. Direction*: Take weekly, if possible, but avoid Theoretically, a person learns something new everyday, if he has eyes to see and ears to hear. m-m Intermittently, my friend Howard Jackson has suggested to me that I write a novel. He suggests that there’s plenty of material right here in the home bailiwick, certanly with the re cords of some of the city's founding fathers, the Falls, Mauneys, Wares, and others. m-m iMiy standard reply is I doubt I’ll ever attempt a novel, for two principal reasons: 1) My writing training is weak in the short story and navelwriting department and my previous attempts were puny indeed; and 2) I like it in Kings Moun tain, don’t want to do a sequel to the late Tom Wolfe’s “You Can’t Go Home Again.” m-m The idea is sometimes intrig uing and my new experience of being a patient at the Veteran’s Administration Country Club, Salisbury, certainly is laden with story possibilities. I must have met at least 100 new friends since I logged in on June 7 and there are some real “characters.” It is said that on ly ‘'characters” are good sub jects for roles in novels. There are some good and smart men who are patients in the Salisbury establishment. Mack, from Ellenboro, is a produce jobber who had a heart attack in the final days of World War II. He sells in Kings Mountain, as well as other places, and tells some really ludicrous tales off how he and a topkick collaborated in making life hard for their Texas Captain. On one occas ion, the company was on the rifle range and the Captain was getting more and more dis gusted with tiie poor scores his men were making. He told ’em to give him a rifle and he’d show ’em haw to shoot, in quite a bragging attitude. Mack hap pened to be on duty as score keeper that day, along with the sergeant. Actually, the Tex an was a good marksman, and each of his shots hit in the charmed circle. But he never knew it. Says Mack, “We wav ed the bloomers, indicating he’d completely missed the bullseye, every time he fired. He got so angry he didn’t know what to do and claimed the rifle was defective.” On anoth er occasion, in Italy, the Cap tain came up with five fifths of choice state-side bourbon. Mack and the sergeant steam ed off the seals, poured a fifth of each fifth in a bottle of their own, replaced the difference with tap water, then replaced the five bottles. Says Mack, “The Captain never knew the difference.” Another interesting patient is Louis, from Blacksburg, S. C.„ native American of German extraction. For ten years fol lowing World War II, Louis owned and managed “The Scri'be,” a fancy bar and res taurant on New York’s famed "Steak Row.’’ A neighbor res taurant was the “Pen and Pen cil.” “Why the newspaper nam es?” I asked. Louis said his place on 45th street, between Second and Third Avenues, was across the street from the New York Daily Mirror. One of his regular customers was Dorothy Kilgallen, the gal re porter who is a regular panelist on television’s “What’s Mjy Line?”, as well as her father, also newsman. The location is also close to New York’s “ad alley.” Louis, now over the half hundred mark, found that the tough, confining restaurant business was a younger man’s department and sold out. He bought a farm at Blacksburg, now is raising beef cattle. His missus I met subsequently and she is native German. Heading for the USA, she was caught up in World War H, spent the duration in Hamburg, where i Allied bombers and riflemen were responsible for the death of 56,000 civilians. Louis is a patient for observation and ex amination in connection with1 the VA’s intended cancellation of a disability pension. One of Louis distant German cousins let him have a rifle butt in the teeth during the hostilities, m-m Another character is George, 1 a Negro, native of Whiteville, but an employee of the Senate ] postoffice in Washington, D. C. George says he does extra duty by weekend chauffering for Senator Sam Erwin. Mack rcmerrtbers George from a pre vious co-stay at Salisbury, re calls that George’s I. Q. was 126. The Doctor who told Geor ge his score, had remarked, “Yours is higher than mine Which is only 119.” I know one thing, George plays a fast game of hearts, usually manages to let me catch the point-loaded queen of spades. ua-m Another patient is from Nor th Wilkesboro, says he worked on the big VA plant when it was being built He remarked ruefully, "I never thought I’d see it from the inside out” Log Rolling Contest Viewpoints of Other Editors TRANSCONTINENTAL STROLL Two British paratroop sergeants have just proved that two British paratroop sergeants can walk a cross the .United States in ten days’ less time than any Amer ican stroller has ever managed. They did it by covering the 3,022 miles between San Fran cisco’s Golden Gate Bridge and New York, Columbus Circle in 66 days, 4 hours, and 17 minutes. Average speed: about 4 1-2 miles per hour (as compared to nor mal British paratroop marching speed of 3 miles per hour.) Ob stacles: Sierra Nevada moun tain, deserts, rain, hail, traffic, autograph hunters. If any American thinks this is ; a simple hike, let him try it. A mericans, in fact, seem to have got out of the habit of walking across their country. Thirty-four years have elapsed since the last try. And the previous record was set in 1910, when 71-year-old Ed ward Weston paced from Los Angeles to New York. (His 77 day, 3,483-mile trip actually was made at almost the same speed per day as that of the sergeants.) At any rate we are delighted to see Britons walking America. It’s a fitting rejoinder to all those Americans swimming the channel. And it might even serve! to remind some Americans of the values and pleasures of thlat! nearly extinct old art of walk-1 ing. The sergeants deserve a good' ride home. — The Christian Sci ence Monitor. HOW TO BE HAPPY The University of Michigan’s survey Research Center, after a searching nationwide inventory on what makes people tick, came up last week with what seems like a fairly obvious finding: the1 major reason for unhappiness in! this country is not enough mon ey. In addition to children, the survey showed the major reason1 for happiness was enough money. Among other findings: Only 17 per cent of those in terviewed said marriage alone made them happy. Only 14 per cent cited their jobs as a major source of happi-! ness. Only four per cent said they! were unhappy in 1957 because of world tensions and the possibili-1 ty of war. One interesting sidelight turn ed up in the survey: college ed ucated people suffer from anxie ty ailments — headaches, loss of appetite, insomnia — more often! than people in lower educational levels. The logical conclusion to be drawn from all of this is that your best bet to achieve substan ! tial happiness in this world is to I accumulate a couple of million dollars while avoiding education like the plague. Hmmmmmm. — Chapel Hill Weekly. HOLDING THE LINE When can a county or a state afford to “rest upon its laurels”, and do what some politicians call “hold the line.”? In the light of current events in North Carolina it might be! well for the people of the state to ask themselves that question. Certainly, North Carolina is not in that position today. With a rating in the bottom ten sta-i tes so far as education is con-! cemed, with a standard of living somewhat below that of much of, the nation, and with an average; per capita income which should make us blush, it is no time to! speak of holding the line. There is only one direction in which we can go very far — and, that is upward. It isn’t far to the' bottom, in spite of our boastful statements about the greatness of the “Odd North State." North Carolina has problems,: OUR TONY HAD TUTTI-FRUITTI There is an ice cream truck which rolls slowly through our town. It is an ice cream factory on motored wheels. As it rolls, a mechanical bell tolls its approa ch to the small fry. I said “tolls” and that is the way it sounds to these ears. Its never - changing dang, dang, dang, repeated at five-second in tervals has the call of a dirge or of the church bells ringing their last call for a departed one. The tolling bell has none of the happy individuality of the bell which Tony,, the small, wiz ened Italian-born fellow had on his ice cream pushcart as he rolled it through Monroe when we we were young. There were a couple of large cans of ice cream sunk into wells in Tony’s cart There must have been crushed ice around the caps. To one side were the cones, 1 centers, 3-centers and whopping big 5-centers. To the other side was a recep tacle into which Tony plunged the scoop he used in taking the ice cream from the cans and put ting it into the cones. Never did Tony have more than two flavors. Dim recollection it, though, that on special days he had tutti-frutti, a two-on-one flavor, as well as vanilla. Tony always wore a long white apron. He stood between the two handles of his cart to dish out his delights. He smiled easily. But he talk ed little. Maybe he was fearful lest we urchins find his faltering accent funny. The life of this quiet one and his family must have been lone ly. Save for Sam Lee, the laun dryman, they were just about the only foreign-born citizens. — Henry Belle in The Greensboro Daily News. but it also has potential. That potential cannot be realized in any way other than through de termined effort. Where would North Carolina be today with regard to educa tion if Charles Brantley Aycock had said, in effect, "I would like for the state to have good pub lic schools, but we must hold the line.”? What sort of highway system ■vould we have had if Governor D. Max Gardner had comment ed. “I know we are in grave need of better roads, but we must bold the line.”? Would the farmers have ever gotten ‘‘out of the mud” if the late W. Kerr Scott had said, ‘‘We need farm to market roads but -ve must hold the line.”? So long as we, as a people, are not satisfied with what we have we cannot afford to hold the line. We must strive to go forward xlucationally, industrially, ag -iculturally, and culturally. — Stanly News & Press. TEARS AGO THIS WEEK Items of news about Kings Mountain area people and events taken from the 1950 files of the Kings Mountain Herald. Kings Mountain citizens, along with the nation, and the world, vere watolling the Korean War ivith crossed fingers this week. The big question was whether the invasion of South Karea by Communist troops of North Ko rea would furnish the match to light the i rae of another World War. Social and Personal Mrs. W. K. Crook and Mrs. I. G. Patterson entertained with a series of parties, beautiful in ev ery detail, last week at the home of Mrs. Croc*. Members of the Duplicate Brid ge club held a meeting Monday afternoon with Mrs. George Hou ser as hostess at her home on Ridge street. Your home ris insured... but what dbout its contents? That new TV, hi-fi, dishwasher — anything you’f* bought since you last checked your insurance—prob ably isn’t protected. And a fire or other disaster could damage or destroy this investment in minutes. Don’t be caught unprepared. Call us for a complete prop erty insurance checkup ... today. C. E. WARLICK INSURANCE AGENCY PHONE 9 203 W. MOUNTAIN ST. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Milk Is Cheaper In (Hass If your favorite gro cer doesn't stock this handy container. Call Sunrise Dairy UN-7 6354 FROM WHERE YOU SIT.... This probably looks like an advertisement-and, strictly speaking, it is. But to me, an advertisement is little more than conver sation in print. An attempt to talk to a good ipany peo ple at once — to offer them some product or service of possible value. So to begin with— I’m in the Mutual Fund business. If you don’t own any stocks or bonds now, if you don’t ever want to, and if you couldn’t care less whether you never learned the first thing about Mutual Funds— then don’t waste your time reading this. On the other hand, if you would like to start a long range investment program of your own, or if you just want more facts and information about Mutual Funds then I certainly feel I have something to offer. v I will be happy to show you a detailed program of in vestment for any particular sum — large or small by the month or one lump sum. Simply call, or write— BOOTH GILLESPIE P. O. BOX 267 TELEPHONE 26 MEANS BETTER, LIVING Cotton-the South’s symbol of better living for many generations-continues to play a major role in North Carolina’s economy. Ranking third in total crop value, our cotton is produced mainly on small, family-owned ! farms of 15 acres or less. Yet its importance to our economic well-being may be measured by the fact that! more North Carolinians directly or indirectly depend on cotton for their living than on any other product! Other evidence of the better living concept to be found . in North Carolina is the enlightened approach to the ! i “legal control” system for the sale of beer and ale that has long since proven its merits in the best interests of temperance and moderation. North Carolina Division riTITED STATES BREWERS FOUNDATION, INC. Ow-th MMteufot Subscribe To The Herald—$3.50 Per Year