.••/it The Kings Monntain Herald Established 1889 A weekly newspaper devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published for the enllghtment, entertainment and benefit of the citizens of Kings Mountain and Its vicinity, published every Thursday by the 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 David Baity . Advertising Salesman and Bookkeeper Alton Stewart . Sports Reporter M;ss Elizabeth Stewart. Circulation Manager and Society Editor Sandra Plonk . Assistant Society Editor MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT Eugene Matthews Douglas Metcalf Wade H. Hartsoe, Jr. Paul Jackson Monte Hunter Allen Myers TELEPHONE NUMBER __ 739-5441 SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE _ BY MAIL ANYWHERE ONE YEAR — t>3.50 SIX MONTHS — $2.0C THREE MONTHS_$1 25 PLUS NORTH CAROLINA SALES TAX TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE For- I desired mercy, and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings. Ilosea 6:6. The Vote Upcoming Major projects cost money and require time, particularly when they’re govern mental projects, involving all the people of a particular area. Such is the upcoming proposal, to be endorsed or declined by the people, on the building of a new high school plant to serve the expanded district. Many have been impaltient at the seeming slowness in calling the election, but the legal details must be correct - - down to the proper location of the com mas - - to assure the would-be bond-pur chasers that no legal technicalities will be pled to prevent repayment of the bonds. The election has now been called and the voting is soon to be held. The facts are that classroom space is needed and potentially to be more short, minus more buildings, with a growing a rea population. The high school fresh man class is three classrooms larger than this year’s graduation class. The sum of $1,100,000 is a heady one, bilt less so when compared to the aggre gate wealth of the area. Expressed in taxable values, considerably short of ac tual, the citizens of the Kings Mountain school district are worth about $23 mil lions, the county tax supervisor relates from his figures. It behooves all citizens to speak their piece, via the ballot, on the March 10 bond election. As is well-delineated, the Herald favors the bond issue, is glad to see en dorsements from the Junior Chamber of Commerce and the Number 4 Township Grange, agreeing with the latter that full attention and facilities should be provided for vocational agriculture. Due to the requirement of the Cleve land County school act of 1935, under which the upcoming election is called, a new registration is being held. Those who fail to register will find themselves unable to register their opinions on March 10. The books will be open at the eight voting places February 10, ten days hence. ( ___ The Republican party intends to field a full slate of candidates at the county level, Chairman Pierce Cassidy said hero recently, and it labeled “a crying shame” the historical fact of Republican lethargy in the county. The Democrats undoubtedly reioin that they’ve given the county good government for, lo, these many years, which gave no reason or excuse for GOP activity. Meantime, fielding a local team is the onlv route whereby the GOP can hope to effectuate a strong organization. An astrologer predicts the end of the world on Monday, which makes him a likely candidate for the gallery of those who have predicted in error in years gone by. Protecting Watersheds In the past few years, North Carolina has moved in an important direction, that of protecting its waiter supplies for the benefit of all. A prime mover of the movement was the late Dr. J. S. Dorton, of Shelby, who saw earlier than some that the growing population would de mand more and more water as the years pass. Thus the city recently, at the recom mendation of its engineer, W. K. Dick son of Charlotte, moved to protect its only nearby potential watershed of any size. Mr. Dickson looked into his files to find a 1954 engineering survey for the city, which, at that time, recommended Kings Mountain move to Buffalo Creek, as the closest major water supply of con tinuous flow and with a sizeable water shed. The acreage area of the watershed, according to the engineer, is quite gra phic. Whereas Kings Mountain, with its present two resevoirs, is served by a watershed approximately three square miles, the watershed it attempts to pro tect via the state stream sanitation com mittee has 188 square miles. Water, even more than food, is essen tial for life. It is also essential for economic life, as many of the world’s major industries re quire great quantities to produce their products, be they textiles, minerals, paper and many, many more. Only recently, E. I. duPont de Nem ours, the great chemical firm, announ ced it would build a multi-million plant near Brevard for the manufacture of photographic supplies. Editor John An derson, of Brevard’s Transylvania Times, acknowledges that water availa bility was a key factor in duPont’s lo cating there. It was the key factor in Olin Mathieson’s locating a plant there a few years ago, and, of course, in Ecus ta Paper Corporation’s being a Brevard area citizen. As long as ten years ago, it must have been, a textile firm expressed interest in locating here, but the water demands were as much or more as Kings Moun tain was then able to supply. It located at Hendersonville. A major direction for watershed pro tection is in clean-up of streams being polluted with sewage and waste, and protection in the future of those unpol luted. As one city commissioner noted, the city’s efforts to protect its closest, avail able watershed of any size may cost the city dollars in building modern sewage disposals plants, such as the one in the McGill creek area. But water is imperative. Depending on the area’s rate of grow th, it may be a generation hence be fore Kings Mountain finds it necessary to tap Buffalo Creek for water, but that day is pretty sure to arrive. Seeking M ©deletion Two Kings Mountain civic clubs, the Lions and Khvanis, were treated to in teresting addresses last week. Thouch the addresses were of considerably dift' erent hue, there were threads of simi larity between them. On Tuesday night, the Lions heard an address by Edward J. Dowd, who man ages a Charlotte area trade association specializing in deterring growth of or ganized labor in the Piedmont Carolmas. Mr. Dowd professed: 1) Unions have limited offerings to their members. 2) Management, if management will, can out-do the unions in providing em ployees these benefits. Prime effort of the organization, Cen tral Piedmont Industries, Inc., which Mr. Dowd represents, is to encourage indus try to establish a climate non-conducive to organizing movement. The Kiwanis club heard Kays Gary. He didn’t mention the labor movement, but criticized 1) the super-patriots who, he charged, are limiting their wallets by playing on the fears of people, and 2) the super-liberals, the inference being the super-liberals do the same. Mr. Gary noted on the Communist scare that many people shout the epi thet at dthers when they don't agree with them, one of the world’s older pro paganda tricks. He also said that the U nited States had more Communists, be fore or since, in the starving years of j the Great Depression, adding that a re cent FBI report showed about 20,000 listed in the FBI files, which would be ■“about one among 9,000 in the United States and probably one-quarter in Kings Mountain.” (Mr. Gary should be more charitable to Kings Mountain’s population of 8,008. That figuring would give us seven eights of one Communist). Mr. Gary’s defense of federal regula tory agencies made sense. Very few of the sometimes-maligned federal agen cies (he mentioned the Securities and Exchange commission, the Federal Trade commission, the Bureau of Public Roads) could be abolished, he contend ed, without giving the Russians cause to cheer - - but without causing Mr. K to lay down his 100-megaton hydrogen bomb. It’s a point to remember. Both addresses were thought-pro voking and the similar hue seemed to be a plea for moderation, for letting the neighbor live, if through different ap proaches. Dr. Bennett R. Willeford, Kings Moun tain connected, is an outstanding resear ch chemist. His award of a fellowship to study abroad next year is a high compli ment to the ability of the Bucknell Uni versity Professor. MARTIN'S MEDICINE By Martin Ham on Ingredients: bite of new*, wisdom, humor, and comment. Directions: Take weekly, if possible, but avoid overdosage. A letter addressed to The Kings Mountain newspaper” last week stirred friendly mem ories. A lady in Sterling, 111., which the dictionary reports is a community of about 13, 000 folk in the northwestern part of that state, named Blan che Long, was seeking the whereabouts of her cousin Horace (Rudy) Rudisill, who for many years was pianist for the Jan Garber band. m-m Unfortunately, I had to re ply that Horace had died on Thanksgiving Day 1960 at Daytona Beach, Fla., but with the aid of (Mrs. Vera Mauney Cooper, also kinfolk to Miss Long, I was able to supply names and addresses of the four surviving members of the eight-member Rudisill family. m-m Miiss Long also suggested that Jan Garber was from Kings Mountain, but he isn’t. m-m I never had ithe pleasure of hearing the Garber band in person, but remember his good music on the late evening ra dio broadcasts in the thirties from Chicago’s Trianon Ball room. m-m I mentioned the letter to Mrs. Paul Hendricks and teas ed, "You should be old enough to remember the Gaaber band.” She laughed, “Yes, I’m old enough.” Then she remember ed as a Wirtthrpp college stu dent going to a June German at the University of South Car olina with Garber furnishing the music. m-m Tjaifier, talking with Joe Mc Daniel about the letter, he says, “No kidding. Jan Garber's playing for a Shrine dance in Charlotte Satuday night. And he has a beautiful girl vocal ist, his own daughter.” m-m Glee Bridges attended the Shrine banquet at Charlotte. Seated across the table from Glee was a pretty lady, and, befitting a man who’d spent most of Ms life in retail bus iness and 20 years as a coun ty eomimlissdoner and mayor, Glee introduced himself and asked the lady’s name. She re plied, ‘T’m Janice Garber.” She told Glee her father is 72 (Clyde Whetstine, also pres ent, says he doesn’t look any where near that age), proceed ed to 'sing two numbers for the banqueteers. m-m Speaking of 'Germans, Jack White tells an interesting tale on himself. When he was a Wake Forest student, he and some other lads went to Rocky Mount for its famous June German. The dance and atten dant festivities make quite a social occasion. At times, two big name bands have furnish ed the music and the dance doesn’t begin until midnight, continuing to dawn. Jack, on this occasion, said he was like most financially-thin college boys, but put on his tuxedo and went along. By dawn, says Jack, his assets were re- j dueed to a half-dollar, insuffi- j cient for a hotel room, so his 1 only choice was to hitch a ride •home. m-m A friendly trucker, impress ed by Jack’s evening dress in daytime, broke company rules to take Jack as far as Raleigh, Where he deposited Jack on a busy street corner. “That was some crazy sight,” Jack re- j members, “me on a busy Ral eigh street corner at 11 o’ clock in the morning wearing a tuxedo.” m-m Tom BoSt, Jr., Who works at : the University of North Caro- ■ I;na and is a UNC alumnus, is ‘ pretty sure the present crop j of college youngsters has gone i to the dogs. His reason, as re- \ lated to me a few months ago: ‘Martin,” says Tom, “they j don’t have big dances any more!” To me this is at the least heretical, if not down right communistic. No big : dance weekends at Chapel Hill!” “No,” Tom continued, “they | had Louis Armstrong: here not | too long ago, paid him $5,000 for a two-hour concert. He got his check and left, and the kids tlien got into bermuda j sihorts and danced to juke-box es ait the fraternity houses.” m-m The youngsters don’t know what they're missing. Tom, I and others not only went to dances which always ended promptly at 1 a. m. Fridays and midnight Saturdays, but later, after the post-dance sandwich, sat on the campus giving out with barber shop harmony until the wee hours of the morning. m-m Life is change, mutation being the law of life, but that’s a change I can’t fathom. Had it not been for the big dances I wouldn't have ever seen and heard Larry Clinton, Paul Whiteman, Kay Kyser, Jan Sa vftt, Vincent Lopez. Hal Kemo, Tommy Dorsey. CSenn MaUer and many others. And there were the beautiful vocalists, ‘‘They come in three sizes: small, medium-small and confidential!” Viewpoints of Other Editors MOSCOW'S MEMO TO NOBODY On December 27 the Soviet Foreign Ministry handed a me morandum to Dr. Hans Kroll, West German Ambassador in Moscow. It was the subject of much speculation in Bonn and elsewhere. Now German Chan cellor Adenauer says the docu ment was “without address, with out signature and without any indication as to who wrote it.” This, seems, on the whole, rather clumsy attempt to drive a wedge between West Germany and its North Atlantic allies, par ticularly the United States, Bri tain and France. The paper char ged that West Germany's part ners have no real interest in the unification of Germany. There is, of course, a long-ran ge danger that the Communists, after having blocked reunification for more than a decade, may in substance insinuate to the Ger man people, “If you want reunion with East Germany, you will do better to talk with us than with your NATO allies.” Some such implication is la tent in the present memo. It sug gests that Moscow, having here tofore denied West Germany any voice in the fate of W^st Berlin, now would be wiiling to talk to Bonn about the status of that city if Bonn’s negotiators would leave their Western friends at home. Chancellor Adenauer’s govern ment has flatly stated it is not having any of this. And it is not likely that such a bid would be muse the Social Democrats. But there are groups in Germany which either for business or for ideological reasons might be swayed. It is clearly to such groups and with a desire to broaden their ap peal among the West German people that the undirected, un signed memo from the Moscow foreign office is aimed. An over whelming majority of West Ger mans can be expected to under stand that any separate dealings with the Soviet Union over Berlin or Other matters would only be at their own ultimate expense. Figuratively they will mark the Moscow memo “Returned because of Insufficient address.” — Christian Science Monitor. A CURE FOR RSVP Every time you get around to cleaning out the desk, you find all those unanswered letters you filed and forgot where. You feel you've found half a conversation, and you feel a bit ashamed. But so many times, when you re-read your mail you find sim ple statements of fact that need no answers. Yet we are stuck with the RSVP code of ethics. RSVP is French that in modem translation becomes “reply by re turn mail." A New York lawyer has come up with a perfectly splendid re medy for all these guilty feelings about unanswered mail. He and a small knot of fellow crusaders are pushing a plan they say will save just about everybody time and money. Govemmentto-people and money. Government-to-peo ple and govemment-to-govem ment connections will save sim ply bushels of money, paper and postage, the promoters explain. Under the signatures of routine business notes written by this courageous group are the letters DBTA. The letters abbreviate “don’t bother to answer." The technique is that simple. Sounds like a fine idea. We could extend this DBTA courtesy in many business transactions. Like when we run short and mail the bank only half the house payment. — Moareaville Tribune. Ginny Sims, Bea Wain, and Marion Hutton. Pearl Bailey was a tit too heavy to be ac cused of extreme beauty, but she was beautiful when she opened her throat to sing “Please Be Kind." WHOSE "QUALITY" IN EDUCATION? There is no doubt that in many American elementary and high schools, the quality of education could toe improved. As long as this is so, it is pretty certain that somebody will want to do something about it. So we find the Administration in a do - something mood, plan ning to present to Congress a new “quality secondary education” program to improve the caliber of public school education. The cost is estimated at $100 million a year for an as yet undetermin ed number of years. The program would be in addition to the elab orate assortment of school aid measures, costing billions, al ready advanced toy the Adminis tration. Though President Ken nedy did not elaborate in his State of the Union speech on what he called a (bill to improve educational quality, some of its features have already been re ported. The new program proposes Federal 'Scholarship grants to teachers for study at colleges and universities; grants to states for such special projects as devel oping new types of instruction, improving equipment and librar ies, and advancing methods of teaching gifted as well as prob lem pupils. Hardly anyone can quarrel with the plan’s general aims. Butj something is decidedly wrong with a theory that the best and only way to improve education is through the application, from the top down, of more Federal money. Indeed, everywhere there is ev idence that 'better education is not basically a question of mo ney at all. Localities across the U. S., rebelling at the wishy washy effects of years of “pro gressive” education techniques, have on their own initiative been upgrading elementary and high school curricula, teaching mater-, ials including books, and meth ods of instruction. This has been * going on in the absence of any Federal “quality secondary edu cation” project. To be sure, all these local ex periments may not be perfect. But one can see on all sides a healthy ferment of ideas and ac tivity, (brisk interchanges of ex periences and stimulating rival ries between communities in the process of raising the quality of instruction. If the Federal project is a dopted all this grass roots ac tivity is going to grind to a halt while the localities wait to see just what its implications are. What, for example, will be the Office of Education’s concept of "quality” education? Will it be better than those standards of quality being worked out by lo cal school officials? And if the Federal standards turn out to be the wrong ones — as have, for instance, many standards embra ced by “progressive” educators— where would that leave the lo calities? For make no mistake about it, the Government will be the one to determine what is meant by “quality.” And if experience has taught the taxpayer anything, it is that a Federal ‘ quality second ary education” program would in the end result in education of secondary quality. — The Wall Street Journal. I-1 TEARS AGO THIS WEEK 10 Items of news about Kings Mountain area people ana events taken from the 1951 files of the Kings Mountain Herald. Charles Connor, Kings (Moun tain insurance salesman and Bruce Thorbum, Burlington Mills personnel manager, will serve as co-chairmen of the annual Kings Mountain district Boy Scouts fi nancial campaign. Social and Personal Mrs. Maary Lovell and Miss Mary McGill are in St Louis this week on a buying trip for Plonk’s Department Store. A NEW SERVICE AT OUR STORE BORROW WITH CONFIDENCE From one of North Carolina's Oldest and most reHdble lending Institutions Amount You Pay Monthly Payment 121 N. LaFayette St._Shelby LINCOLN LOAN CO. PHONE HU-2-2434 8:17-tfn. KEEP YOUB RADIO DIAL SET AT 1220 WK MT Kings Mountain, N. C. News & Weather every hour on the hour. Weather every hour on the half hour. Fine entertainment in between Hamgaparty? Serve CHEERWINE -with food - in punch -over ice cream HARRIS FUNERAL HOME —Ambulance Service— Phone 739-2591 Kings Mountain. N. G