E»tiJbU«lie4 1889
The Kings Mountain Herald
206 South Piedmont Ave. Kings Mountain. N. C. 28088
A weekly newsps.per devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published
for the .enlightenment, entertalnmnt and benefit cf the citizens of Kings Mountain
and Its vicinity, published every Thursday by the Herald Publishii^ House.
Entered as second class matter at the post office at Kings Mountain, N. C., 23086
under Act of Congress of Mtirch 3, 1873.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Martin Harmon Editor-Publisher
Miss Elizabeth Stewart Circulation Manager and Society Editor
Gary Stewart Sports Editor, News
Miss Deboie Thornburg Clerk, Bookkeeper
«
MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT
Ray Parker Allen Myers . Paul Jackson
Rocky Martin Roger Brown Herbert M. Hunter
• On Leave With The United States Army
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYAW.E IN ADVANCE
In North Carolina and South Carolina
One year $4; six months $2.25; throe months $1.50; schorl year $3.
(Subscription in North Carolina subject to three percent saxes tax.i
In All Other Sit ies
One year $5; six months $3; three months $1.75; school year $3.75.
PLUS NORTH CAROLINA SALES TAX
TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739-5441
Weather Is Boss
Controlling Noise
Popular Government in its recent
issue has an exhaustive article on noise,
but acknowledges it has found no con
clusive answerers to the over-all prob
lem.
The comment is made that the na-
tives of the African Sudan have better
hearing at 70 than a New Yorker does at
20.
Noise is measured in decibels.
Would one believe it? Kitchen noises
are among the worse. There Is the clat
ter of pots, pans and dishes, also silver
ware, plus the noise of the dishwasher,
crackling frying items of food, and even
the refrigerator adds its measure.
New York has passed an ordinance
limiting jackhammer use to specific
hours and other cities and some states
have passed anti-noise ordinances, which
Popular (Government says are difficult of
enforcement.
Dump Agnew?
Speculation that President Nixon will
dump Spiro Agnew and find a new run
ning mate in 1972 may be true — and
may not be true. The President isn't
talking.
The Vice-President may be more
valuable as a campaigner than some of
the others being mentioned like Nelson
Rockefeller or John Connally.
Agnew is an in-fighter, is a highly
capable man with words, and his broad
attacks to the enemy Democrats bring
him critici.sm.
But there is another side to the
coin. Politics being an often-times erne-
tional pseudo-science, the Agnew typo ol
hatchet man can get folks firea up
which means bigger turnouts for tlie
loyalists.
It has always been the presidential
candidate’s prerogative to choose his
running mate and Mr. Nixon may
switch, but in Agnew he has a man who
has firmly supported and advanced Ad
ministration policies, _
There’s an old saying: there’s no
use to argue with the weather.
Residents of this area, if they doubt
ed it before, have had two recent weath
er events that proves the point. First
was the ice blanket and the second the
heavy snowfall of Friday which made
roads very tricky and which stranded
many a motorist throughout the snow
area.
Josh Hinnant had a speaking en
gagement in Raleigh Thursday night
and was advised by his wife the follow
ing morning he might do well to stay
in Raleigh until the thaw. Josh figured
the Bronco he was driving would go
through any kind of weather. Josh was
right in a measure. What he hadn’t fig
ured was his windows to ice up, which
they did. The trip home required eight
hours, about twice the time a Raleigh
trip nominally takes. Near Greensboro
Josh saw a 15-car pile-up. He was hold
ing a stear.v pace, with time out to
scrape ice off the windows. Many cars
who speeded by him ho later saw strand
ed.
Speed, snow and ice don't go togeth
er, as many learned painfully.
It is good that the Merchants As.so-
ciation has been able to reschedule the
Christmas parade for ihe coming Fri
day.
The weather meant hard and ardu
ous work for City Hall and for state
highway department employees.
Vernon (Peanut) Smith, the city
meter man remarked, “It got us a wee
bit behind schedule.’’
Roy Pearson and Gary StewaiT were
also able to ro-schedule the first Kings
Mountain invitational basketball tourna
ment and it was quite successful. The
action was fast and, of course, the home-
folk were happy to see Gardner-Webb
win it.
Morion Entry
Hugh Morton, the Linville impres-
sario of Grandfather Mountain and one
of Noi-th Carolina’s topnoteh photo
graphers, has made it official that he is
indeed a candidate for governor in the
Democratic primary May 6.
It brings the number of announced
candidates to four, including also re
cently - resigned Senator Hargrove
Bowles, Lieutenant-Governor Pat Tay
lor, and Dri Reginald A. Hawkins, the
Charlotte dentist who was an unsuccess
ful candidate four years ago.
The Morton entry most surely will
assure a second primary.
Two months ago he stated in Shelby
that he was aiming his campaign to fin
ish second and would win in a second
primary.
Some observers doubt that he will
finish that high largely because he was
a late-comer and many voters had al
ready committed to the other candi
dates.
The decision of Attorney-General
Robert Morgan not to run probably en
hances Mr. Morton’s ch/nces. He lives
at Wilmington as well as Linviile and
should inherit a portion of East North
Carolinian Morgan’s indicated support.
The polls show Messrs. Taylor and
Bowles the current front-runners. All
three are men of proven ability in gov
ernment, Taylor and Bowles in elective
office and Morton in a variety of state
appointive jobs which he handled capa
bly.
Of course, only one candidate can
win, but it is enheartening that men of
high caliber are seeking the office.
Drugs, Liquor Equated
It was greatly publicized at time of
passage, but the General Assembly
did what should have been done long
ago.
In amending the driver’s license
laws, the assembly included a provision
that makes it unlawful to drive while
taking drugs that impair the motorist s
ability to drive, just as it is for the mot
orist who is too full of alcoholic bever
ages.
In the past, many dererwants came
oT f ee by producing witnesses that
they were under the influence of drugs.
It was a defense plea sometimes per
haps spuriously used.
If a driver is under the influence of
drugs and his reactions impaired he is
equally as dangerous on the highways
as the boozer.
Sally Holden, of RaleigH, in a letter
to the editor of Time magazine, wrote:
“When the 16 Governors at the South
ern Governors’ Conference received gifts,
it was called a favor. When the police
receive gifts, it is called a bribe."
That all depends on who the giver
might be.
Certainly the State of Georgia
which gifted the governors would ex
pect no special favors from the visiting
' " state. Nor are all gifts to police
men in the bribe category.
In New York’s corruption - ridden
police department ttie gifts from people
in the rackets were made for favors
which protected the givers — clearly
bribes.
It really depends on the back
ground of the giver. Does he want and
need special favors?
Congratulations
Congratulattons are in order to Ed
ward H. Smith on the Smithwick Cup
aw’ard he received as first prize for the
writing of an historical! article at the lo
cal and county level.
Mr. Smith’s article on the Battle of
Kings Mountain, published in the Herald
on the I91st anniversary of the battle,
w'as adjudged best of all those entered.
It w as a very interesting feature and
revealed some interesting facts about
the battle credited with tunimg the tide
of war in favor of the struggling colo-
nistn.
MARTIN'S
MEDICINE
Viewpoints of Other Editors
SEEPING
REPUBLICANISM
MRS. GAND&'S
BIG MOMENT
By MAR'HN HARMON
One of North Carolina's Dem- Those who dorjihtod that a
ocratie candidates for Congress woman could manage the af-
was expressing nicely controlled fairs of India had best keep quiet pen in the hand of the
apprehension the other day these days because whether j hi ^ ‘
about what he desiTlhed as what she ds doing or not
j To be literal about it, siu'ks
and stones are no more titan
words. They ne\er do anything
either. They are as Inanimiite as
the most blistering invective;
they cannot break bones.
To explode another myth, a
■ ■ most
fervent editorialist hardly can
enerate the pexs. asi veness of a
eefl r lODicnu.
AieFading ;
Mrs.
the most amitaitious and, .so far,
Thousands of Tar Heels for successful power-politics opera-
years have been voting Demo- tion since Russia and ithe Unit
The seed prOltlems corn grow
ers faced last winter have fad
ed in the fa'ce of a gixxi 1971
...a. .s .... .. ,, crop and an allout effort by
Indira Gandhi U running sword wielded by an e(|uall>- ,.ompanies to produce
. I i~.. hhght-ix'sislant liyhiids.
zealous crusader.
The difference is tliat between
thought and action. Sports look.s
Tlxere will be a plentiful sup-
m-m
The magazine We the People of “seeping Republicanism."
North Carolina, in its recent an
nual Industrial edition, contained
a feature on the history of the
Alcoa Aluminum Company’s Ba- JratTc on’me“7tatrievel a^'‘to to th® motivated athlete who - M.-esisimt
dtn works near Albemarle. me prlvucl of ^e ^tfn^ S^th f be specta- does the pob on the field, not the ply of seed o bhsht-t as,slant
me privacy at tne voting booth, tors rather than operators on stu^nt of the game who hybrids for planting m 1972.
“ for%r“esidenf"*n t PT"*- me riS ITves. In ^'.ese hybrids are adapted to
Oinne 1 once lived in Albemarle m™s aU the way bacrmi^ ‘"“re erudite athletic circles this growing concUtions.
,d ^ mTnv fTne v^ith Sve the clL The C^mgressi^ ^ execution. This is the This is part of tlio optiimistic
the S irUcle fl candidate noTed th^fphenom- ^ Product that brings fans to .^ed con, o.dlook compiled irona
® enmi n.efollv and wen, on to 'balance of power on the In^ their feat. ^ survey of four major sup^lers
subcontinent which has existed To put this another way: A ^onh Carolina seed—Coker
since the end of British rule, friend who has a small foreign pedigreed .sieed Co., Pioneer
That balance of power took the ear Mt about to repair the sick qj McNair Seed Co. and
form of a Pakistan which oocu- little thing himself. iHe got out parms.
pied both northern flanks of the manual and tocat^ the sec- jj^rveyexi by Gene Sullivan, ex-
enon ruefully and went on
say:
was eap&cialiy interestin
m-m
The beginnings were around
the turn of the century. An East- “The thing that concerns
ernor named Whitney had min- is th.;t a lot cf State Democrats
ing interests in Rowan and Stan- National Republicans will con
the Yadkin as a source of electric sense to put a RepOblic-an in the
power for his operations. Whit- white House and then sadd'e Hindj India. Mrs. w Umuble to follow step one
to break the link between the tinaime lo roii^ «ep one.
ley counties and decided to dam c-ltde that it doesn’t make much Mu^im tegarT*^ insU^' Ven.sion -seed sitecialist at North
- - - — capalble of squeetdng ffPla^etit he^^by ins^^^ „te
c I u*ijw step one he foui' suppliers indicated Jhat
ney’s plaas did not come to frut- him with a Democratic congress 'o break the link tet^en the execution, only 100 per cent hand-detass-
tion, as he ran Into financial - the .situation wc have now. two arms of the Muslim pine- ^Alll of which brings us to a well- eled adapted hybrids will be
troubles and was bankrupted in . n,. intended observation in The Fei- sold.
1907. North Carolina Electric & --phe possibility that really „ .. “ low. the periodic newsletter of
Fewer Ctimpany beI'.glit the Whit- ^jothesr me is tliat the Republi- wrm of tniw cllviistona cjf tioops United. Writing in They do not plan to offer for
ney leaivings from the receiver crats, as I oall them, wUl not xtom West Pakistan wl^h “The Chairman’s Corner,” the . „ Kjends of T cytoplasm
and subsequently sold It to a only vote for the Republican can- ’flown to East Pakistan 1^ j{,ev. B Joe Parker had this to . /.vtonla.sm tvues T cyto
French Company, Aluminum des didate for president but, as a spring in an effort to sUbdue ana .h iyiop.a.n. ,
liro.
But
ave
k) F
SUJJI
TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE
Happy Is- the man that find^-th insdurn. and the vmn tlmt ^eth understanding. Proverbs
3B1S
Francais, in early 1913.
m-m
The 1913 date sticks in mind
because the late Ed Biddix, with
whom I lived in Al'oemarle, w'as
logical extension, also vote next fh® separatist movefnent-
year for Ropublitans for the Mrs. Gandhi has tiumed tljat 'What do you do? What do you
-Congress and the U. S. Senate, deployment into one of the great do, when, you have soingthlbg on
They v,iUl, of course, remain mistakes of the limes. She has your nilnd, and you knpw that
loyal Democrats in marking the mousetrapped those three divi- it is soiRethfiiig njost pi^Ie in
ballot for state offices, since the sions between a local native the. onraniuhity would like to see
Well, you look at it
pjasm is directly related to
blight susceptibility and N cy
toplasm to blight resistance.
olio and the nearest Catholic
prie.st was at Salisbury. The rail
line at that time stopped at the
Tu-ckertown community several
miles from Badin. On one bitter-
regular
The three Pakistan divisions ®(?ltition
The seed companies also say
they wlU not offer for sale
flint or flint-dent types. These
turn It over in 1®*® de.sirable types, along with
jpu r^lze that there second generation and open
rndian than yQu expeel^. pollinated seed, were pressed In-
Suddenly It's git^ous what the to use this year due to the
is. Ah, then (he real shortage of blight resistant.
visions o(f the
“As a Democrat running for -army.
iCongress, I’m really concerned. The un^ r«uvu>wi.i vuv„»uiu3 - ..j u . . -i. j —j i
As a matter of fact, I’m more are now being squeezed to ,a
conwrned about the -general combined guerrilla plus Indian “The Something" is low wages Although farmere should eas-
ly cold day in the dead of win- army operation out of the toim- jn the Jftm-gsville community, ily find plentiful supplies of
ter Ed was dispatched with horae 5^°“^ primary, tryside and into the mam cities jijj, rea# to quote stat- the kinds of seed they want,
and buggy to Tuckertown stelUon ’I" North Carolma that s a switch of East Pakistan. And India jstic?. But how do you gp about prices wdil probably be higher
to meet Father Leo who was com- alarming proportions. jjas control of the air at^ sea getting them ral^ to a higher than they were prior to the 1970
lanes which feed those cities and level? Do you HHike the sugges- bUght epidemic. Most of this
There is a thin chance that everyone in them. tion to (he TJown Board? Make ejiange in price will be due to
the candidate’s concern is well Thus Mrs. Gandhi has tlie phy- a trip to the mayor? Write a y,e cost of havlife to hand-de-
pilaced. But today’s strange poli- sical power right now to destroy letter to tlje Chamiber of Com- tassel the N cy^lasm seed
tical siti^tion argues strongly or release those dtivisdons; or al- mepce?. Call the mills of Moores-
against it. most. Concoivalbly, like Xeno- ville in for a little cl)it-chat?
phon’s Greeks in classic times. Talk aboqt the utoon? What do Based on survey information,
ing down to hold Mass.
SKj
“Th
ore
Tufr
Mrs. Biddix tells the story.
Ed met Father leo and they
began the cxtJd ride back. The
priest asked if there were any
springs along the way and sug-
In
tog together to simplify the oall-
Would Mr. Biddix like
libation. He would.
We do happen to have a Re- or the Czechs In Russia at the yvu do about this skeleton
publican president pitted against end of World War I, they might our comrounity closep permit the maximum
a ‘Democratic congress. The dis- fight their way out of the trap. , The solution is simple—raise of men to talk,
sprm^^ong »ne way anu concerting thing Is that the pres- it seems highly unlikely. P®y l®vel. Getting xt done is
fton^d^nd^ti^ ^ri^t ^*^nfd ® Democmt Mrs. Gandhi has done her dip- Last year-, more than 1,000
stopped and the priest opened congress often smacks lomacy as skillfullv as her inili- - . ... P®f ^®y throughout the
the black satohei he Wc^ carrying Q^aj-d Republicanism, tary olanninc. The only outside ,'Y®ri]y, verily. VVe resize xts Christmas season were oompleted
Who would have dreamed of a riower caoable'of alvlne Pakistan "*l''rtctong, but we would point from Vietnam for off-duty serv-
Would Mr. Btddix like a liHle j^gp^^Iican president applymg waf^jrf iPe"
tot'^R^'cton" to" toe ’ Prmms Many servicemen oall from
Natiom at the expense of Taiwan, w ? downlovvn
Mrs. Biddix says, “I think they and planning personal detentes ® j ■ i. i. ^ <^1* bo
must have stopp^ at every spring in Peking and Moscow? A Dem- to brin-^ some of wotJd sutomxt the prob- tals and service centors at bases
along the wiaTfor whw they ocratie president embarked on troops down from her lem you refer to is not a skele- placed from a number of hospi-
reached Badin both Ed and Fath- such adventures would have been Chinese frontier to help in the ton in our closet, but a millstone elsewhere in the country,
er Leo were roaring drunk.” branded immediately by Repub- trapping of the Pakistan diva- around our necks.
licans, including the Old Nixon, si®"® •" Bengal. China was tak- But executing the obvious solu-
m-m ‘as a traitor. At the same time we ®" out of play by Russian. Rus- tion is nonetheless difflt^t. As
is on India’s side anj'way. vvlth so many “obvious" ailments,
_ , . „ ,, , „„ , rv ~ j have a democratic congress erect- sia
The late Capta.n .Meek Ormand t^arrers, assaulting And the United States is far low pay merely is one sympton.
... ,. ing trade bari ers, assaultmg nna me unnea taiaies is .
wag condu-otnr on the spm line ^.j^g N-ations, and sandbag- away an<j presently engaged to "®1 diagnosis
Ring fore’rn air—exercises that disengagement from far foreign '‘•ille Tribune,
friends with the French, tmd te- f^r^erly had been Republican adventi^. '
party articles of faltti. So President Mohammed Yah-
ya Khan back to Islamabad is ments have nuaterialized.
Moores-
Moore also advised the fami
lies and friends of Americans
stationed in other southe.ist
Asian count rSes to make ar
rangement for the servicemen to
o.rlginate their hoMay telephone
calls, since they too are often
difficult to locate.
ing in t!he days when dams were
built with mules and drag pan.s,
The
Rates on telephone calls at
St Louis was a mule center and The strangest part of all is vdrtuaUy at her mercy. His army most serious holdout is the poll- all hours between the United
Oaiytaln aflifi hnuffht head many of those who are not in West Pakistan is minus those tloally well-connected owner of Vietnam are $9 £ot a
on one oeca-ilon ~ st.-aitjacketed in a partisan sense three divisions he so foolishly sn amusement park who P®"' Ih-t®® ‘ -stotion-to-stataon
feel somehow safer with the sit- sent so far from home. If he at- iodicaUy threatens to biuld a call and $12 for a llweejnlnute
to-m uailon as it is. They reason that tacks from the west in Kash- industrial park ^rson-to-^^n
as long as one party holds the mir Mrs. Gandhi can close her O’" riverfront acreage. men can call oolleot so that the
Had it not been for World War white House and the other party fot on hto thr^ lost Xlsiom Represents- messages can be paid , for at
I, the French might still be at conirols the congress, they will “d toen ron^tomte her whX
Badin. When war began in Sep- wind p in a standoff, leaving g-rmy against West Pal^n ‘p T'
tember of 1914, France put an mo Republic a decent chance of S tMs Mgh^ lavoS mili- eastern standaird time
embargo on money and -the survival. For all we know Mr. ^ cit.viRon ^uasitlon at H^taway
French at Badin were immobiUz. Nixon himself might also feel sitimtioi^Mre. has aj,d thus enaiWe the Ftederal gov-
ed. Additionalily, many of the top .'more secure with L Democrats
engineers and other personnel controlling the Congress. (To three trapped^* outright. Ten yeaxs of broken
were Flrench army reservists and -give yourself a nice case of the '’‘*1®"® It looks very mitoh like promises and avariciottf haggling
wiere called to active duty. horrors, picture a Republican f diwkmate. If he rrfiwes he ovw easen^ts are qtote pnwgh.
president 'blessed with Gerald loses East Pakastan and his three It is time for the National Park North Carolina increased from
.Ford as speaker of the house, divisions. If he accept he stiU &rviice to oommit itself on this $14-24 per hundred pounds in
Vietnam is 13 hours ahead of
HOG COSTS -UP
The cost of producing hogs to
Hugh Scott as majority leader to loses East Pakistan for she, not g«ue 1961 to $15.87 in 1970, according
In 1916, Alcoa bought the iplant the senate, and Strom Thurmond he, wOl be alble to shape what tokTd^iti^^ Stale University extension eco-
and produced the first aluminum as spiritual leader of the party happens next in Bengal. neanngs ana take aennnive
ingot to come off the potlines. cauciisi. The final test of Mrs. Gand- ^ , . , . , _ , estimates by North Carolina
dhi’s skill in power politics is dewloptment op- nomists. The largest single in-
m-m A rational citizen who can pid ®he c^ an^ will, now KtleC, an
cause to vote for a Republican help Yahja Khan get out of tower overlOolung Cettviburg other than feed. These include
Sample of the [»wer require- for president still would not the trap of his own making. If yjg prog-poot of a supermarket at items such as repairs, auippJies,
merits m .toe atotoum-^eitmg necessarily feel in any way com- she piwh^ her advantage too the enrianoe to the Roosevelt .medication and ^ek onerrilon
process is fact .toat eight killo- polled to vote for a Republican fast, hard and openly—she wBl home at Hyde Park—the threats operation
watt hours of electricity are re- candidate for congress. In fact, force him to a desperate final to the nation's jutilowed ground ®*P®"®®®-
^uired to produce one 50-ipounti there is every reason for split- throw of toe military dice. And are seeroihgiy endless. OiSi^^s
ingot. ting his ticket for federal of- that would be very dangerous could coilistxiulPtively celebrate the
rices as usual. for all concerned. If she now nation’s bicentennial by devising scenic a'pproaches to all the na-
m-m opens the hand of magnanimity a law to provide comprehensive tlon’s historfe sites.—INew York
FVir all toe candidate’s con- and lets the man save face— and reUa/ble protection for the Times.
Atcoa gets most of its b.auxi.te <®®r". seeping Republicanism Is she will have what she wants—
the ore from which alumimim is ® present dan- a dominant India on toe subcon-
3«nt(
awai
smelted, from South America, g®r-—Mooresvilie Tribune,
transporting the bauxite to Mo
bile, Alabama, to company-own
ed ships, then using railroads to
get it to Badin. There are bauxite
deposits in Arkansas, if I correct
ly recall.
A NOTE OF PRIORITIES
tinent—and a uitary Pakista
which is not forever a mortal
enemy of India.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Gandhi has
confirmed what several women
proved before (EUzaibeth I,
committee Theresa, Katherine the
In addressing „
meeting of the U. S. Conference l^reat, and Victoria) that a wom-
m-m of Mayors held recently in At- ®®" often outplay a man at
lanta. New York Mayor John power poUtics.—Christian Science
Though the French for the most Lindsay argued that Congress Monitor,
part went home the French im- °'»8ht to incre^ the five-year g,. -
print is stdU very much on the fku HISTORY FOR SALE
-TJ—J{_ j-ij-Ln.-1-nminiiifir HHIho 5 bllliOfl dOllSPS frOlTl 3-1 ibll” ..-t- xi » . r a i i
Badin commun4t>. -The residen- With the nation’s bicentennial
ajic n«r»c 'rh<» rAntiA«it vviLfi me naiions oacentenmai
^neh”'“‘^""‘‘"" ible eJ^ghgiven the continued f
expenditures for highways of sev- tonlshin(T that toe U-nlted States
er^ times that figure. y®* environs
jn-m °n® ®f is historic treasures,
‘Whether the Nixon administra- Mount Vernon. There was a brief
I ran afoul of the law on one <4®"’ alone Congress, would upn®®" (recently) when the Sov-
occasion in Badin. The Alhemoinle along with hls_ propo^^
was nm-
is let government sought to potr-
doulbtful, however, for while Con- chase the estate ‘adjoining Mo’jnt
has authorized $900,000,000 Vernon as a recreation center for
.. mass transit expenditures **®, Washington emlbassy em-
this fiscal year, toe administra- P‘®yees, a proposal which became
tion wants to cut that figure by >"001 when the owner withdrew
one third to about $600 million, ^n® property from the market.
Yet across the Potomac river
No doubt toe »president has a there remains a distinct danger
told me to cease and desiat, fhait .better use for the money as, for that an industrial or commerdal
third shift workers needed their example, the 4 billion dollars he development may nito toe view
sleep. wants to spend this fiscal year which is now m^uch as it was in
on military assistance to forei; n George Washington’s time. Cbn-
govemments, a figure almost sev- gross thought it had solved the
en times his pr<H>os®<l mass piriUem a decade ago when it
Needless to say, I ceased and transit expenditures.—St. Louis created Pisoataway I^k. But not
desisted. Post-Dlspptch. all of the promised scenic ease-
Merchants association
ning a special tr’-’' -
and I, w”'- ■ . .
er • ■ ibg l ie Badin
s ouiidtog up the forificom'
ing sale days, and was ihalled
down by a deputy sheriff who
Keep Your Raedio Dial Set At
1220
t
aftt
of th
SC01‘
clut(
WKMT
with
mad
a go
KINGS MOUNTAIN, N., C.
Sout
can
N. C
Ed I
I doi
News & Weather every hour on the hour.
Weather every hour Ion the half hour.
Fine entertainment in between
and
any
chbii
long
rick
this