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jjU x.ift'a. , ) ./> Hi. \ . ,.pi a TUC Established 1889 |i?% The Kings Mountain Herald *06 South Piedmont Avo. K&igs Mountain, N. C. 28088 ^ newsp8,per devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published ” .•;* ■^t'ltgrhtenment. entertainmnt and benefit cf the citizens of Kings Mountain and lU vicinity, published every Thursday by the Herald Publishing House, hniered as second class matter at the post office at Kings Mountain, N. C., 28086 under Act of Congress of March 3, 1873. EDITOHIAL DEPABTMENT Editor-Publisher c/ Stewart Circulation Manager and Society Editor Sports Edltdr. News Miss Debbie Thornburg Clerk, Bookkeeper N. C. -fhursiiayr May Tfl[. n MARTlif'S QIEOICJNE Viewpoints of Other Editors SO FAR. SO GOOD As American mines bob about By MARTIN HABMQN LOTS MORE SUBSIDY CREAM TO BE SKIMMED in me waters surrounding Hai- “ ministration ol the law that Jim- phong har.;or and other North The shooting Monday of George Vietnamese ports, tlieir lethal its larm suibsidy payments to KINGS MOUNTAIN Hospital Log VtSniNC HOORS DaUy 10:30 to 11:30 AM. 3 to 4 PJ4. and 7 to 8 PJif. Ray Parker Rocky Martin MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT Allen Myers Roger Brown Paul Jadtson Herbert M. Hunter On Leave With The United States Army MAH. SUBSaUPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE In North Carolino and South Carolina months $1.30; school year $3. (Subscription in North CaroUpa oubjeot to tfuee pement sa^ In AU Othor States One year $5; six months $3; three months $1.75; school year 53.75. PLUS NORTH CAROLINA RALES TAX TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739>54^ Wallaoe^ sheeted and .saddened potential so far has not precpt- the nation, including those who tated a crisis with either Moscow ,.1 do not support the doughty Ala- or Peking. After two days of de- ^ bama governor. lay, during which we must sup- pose the doves, hawks and mid- m m dle-roaders a- the Kremlin had their own set-to. Moscow has is- .‘”‘- ™ , sued a condemnation of Presi- bilU.-n a yeai to sup- Governor Wallace, four_ years jjent Nixon’s latest action that Is P'^ces by payments to an lndependent.^cand;datc more n^bfeTofwhft ifdW n^ gigantic farm cor- fer F-esident, is back Tic me wi* ™orations received more than a me D^ats this year and has o^idlmnaUon iTdid conm^^ teeri doi^ very well m the pri- ^here were no threats of re- tallution, even though the Kre.-n- llii termed tlie tlireat to Soviet “inadmiss- was tticre any men tion of the forthcoming summit talks between Washington and .Moscow. maries, knocking off two more Tue.s)d‘^ while hospitalize;! with a wculd-be as.sassln s ha..ir anH h I uliet iti his ^tlier shipping back and ho I3 paralyzed from -hip-, mo,. the waist down. ‘ No announcement has been million dollars each in 1970 sub sidies—and two o f them gjt more than $4 million. The scan dal of these immense pay.Tients flowing out of what was sup posed to be aid to individual farmers and their families final ly reavched Congress, and in 1970 a $5o,0(X) per crop per p-ro- ducer limit was assed. In view of the fact that mote surgery to relieve the paralysis. Hopefully that will result. TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE AtmI iv« knov! that all things work foaafhar for a , ... , ^ for g ood to them «tof love the lord. Roynans 8:28. Run-OfI Season Busy Ths run-off primaries on June 3 won t i.nd the ballot as long as for the May 6 voting but they will be longer titan usual in run-off affairs. It’s Bowles vs. Taylor for govern or, GalLfianakis vs. Senator Jordan for the U. S. Senate, Secrest vs. Ingram for commissioner of insurance, first-named being the leader on May 6. Over on the GOB side (what about that?) there’s a run-off for governor where Jim Gardner holds a small lead over Jim Holshouser. That’s at the state level. Also on the Democratic side of the fence, there’s a four-man run-off for two places on the county commission, the top three in the run-off so closely bunch ed that a mere 100-vote “long” tabula tion error removed Kings Mountain’s L. E. (Josh) Hinnant from second place to fourth when the official canvas was made. Mr. Hinnant led Dwight Tessner, in fifth place, by 438 votes. Second primaries tend to get heat ed. And the races on both sides of the gubernatorial fences, as well as the Democratic senate race, have occasion ed some ascerbic remarks. Challenger Taylor even has denied ever having close association with Governor Bob Scott, which may or may not be good politics. Mr. Taylor was undoubtedly smarting over the Governor’s publicly- given advice not to ask a second race, a little injudicious on the Governor’s part. With all the primaries for president going on and getting nation-wide ex posure from the communications media, it is reasonable to guess that the nation —always enjoying a varied entertain ment diet—will be glad to take a little test, as the tired candidates undoubted ly will be. State Republican Chairman Rouse averred the other day the GOP guberna torial run-off should have a healthy ef fect. A run-off, he feels, will get people active and pay off with votes in Nov ember. The Democrats have Figured ft that a long time and it works, a fact the big city news folk don’t seem to understand. The loyalists fight hard and tough in their family fracases, but they close ranks in the autumn. The Sewage Programs Chief of Police Tom McDevitt re marked jestingly at Wednesday’s city commission meeting, “Looks like we’re in the sewer.” Indeed three of the six items on the agenda concerned sewage matters. First is the more immediate item, diversion of some of the waste going to the over-loaded McGill Creek treatment plant, and for which the city is planning to issue $113,000 in bonds, as the city share in making the diversion, under the three-steps-foi ward-two backward rule. A government agency can borrow without a bond elecfTo^n two-thirds of the previous year’s net debt retirement. Hindsight being superior to foresight, it is possible the city erred in not issu ing the full $1,300.000'w'/d for the sewage program a few years ago, rather than the million, the exFra $300,000 bor rowing authority having expired at the end of five. Conversely, with the city getting a federal grant for the differ ence, it may be the Local Government Commission would not have permitted the extra. Next sewage item was the city’s endorsement of ther egional sewage sys tem concept. The professionals fn the “clean water” business are sold on the regional concept as cheapest, most efficient and the answer to cleaning polluted streams and rivers on a mass basis. Indeed, E. C. Hubbard, assistant director of the Water and Air Resources Commission, said as much to Mayor John Henry Moss last August and urged him to promote the regional concept in this area. -w ^ contrary, preparations , made deiinitely about nossible White House than halt the subsidy .payment.s uaue uejinueiy aoout possiwc Kremlin oti.lcials in bath were bemg made to the 15 per Washington and .Moscow to set “nt ot farm ownerships with the scene for the summit meet- ktinual sales of more than $20,- ing. (K>3, the $55,000 limit seemed high “ ™ and there was a spirited debate Events on the scene in Viet- about making the limit $2,000. The Charlotte Observer had an support the evidence of Sov- if* time to look at the proposal interesting feature Wednesday on restraint. Four Soviet ships again, for a new study by the the history of pTe.sidents, presi Haiphong harbor before tne General Accounting O f f 1 c e dential candidates and othei American mines were activated (OAO) has unearthed the e.xplol- public figures who have been Thursday morning. Otheh Rus- tation by some farm, companies felled by assassin’s fire. ships on the way to North of loophcles in the 1970 law. Ac- Vietnam are reported to have cording to the Department of James Lee Bagwell Mack Lee Conner 'Harley R. Gore Walter M. Moorhead Bessie M. McClain Shuftord E. Packett EfHe Mae Peterson Graice Aiut Philbwk Mlrmle Bell Quinn Mrs. Ooniey Schrono? boitnit 'M. Summers __ Luoinda Surratt "" Mrs. J. H. Thomson Jennie 3. Velton Marga.-ot Bennett^ Mrs. Nebion O. Boo’nn Alda L. Deal .Monzo G. Goforth Mrs. Bobby L. Heffner Guy Henderson LucUle Ivey Mre. Charles F. Williams iCtorence L. Black Mrs. Wray D. Farris Mrs. Clyde K. Jackson Mrs. James O. Mason ADMITTBO THURSDAY Lawrence E. Putnam, Rt. 3, City ADMITTED FRIDAY ■Mrs. Saimuei H. King, PO !Box 917. Bessemer City David R. Rice, Rt. 1, Grover Flos-sie Self, 814 iFlrst St,, City , ADMITTED SATURDAY -Mrs. Reece L. Abernathy, P.O.^ Box 876, Bessem<*r City i Mf7. John M. Bnmme, 714 A* Street, Be-ssomeir City Dr. Waldo K. McGill, 404 Belli (■! St., Clover, S. C. William .M. .McCarter, Route i, \(irk, S. C. Dorus C. Piiyseur, 009 I^inwoid Dr.. City Rt. ,t, A RESOLUTION WHERflAS, it is recognized that Law Enforcement is a vital need in our present society, wherea.s ADMITTED SUNDAY Mr.s, LfimucI M. Camp, City- Ruby Glb;:3n, Rl. 3, Cliwor, .S, c •Z 'tH ‘uos.-p.M 'H iliao.w Be.ssemer City Eugene F. Slapp, 802 Kathryn Ave., City Mrs. .Vrthur L. .Montgomery lit 2, York, S. C. George W. Fortenberry, 503 E, Lee Ave., Bexs-semer City ADMITTED MONDAY IBeuuXord Leslie Crawford, MicK- ley Ave., Be.ssemer City 'Billy Gene Ro’ths, Rt. 1, City Barbara F. Mecllin, 511 E. Third Street, Gastonia Mrs. Walter S. Kuykendall, 60S N. 13rh St., Be.ssemer City- Mrs. John L. White, 108 Pied mont .4venue, City Mrs. Joseph W. resseneer, 407 N, Can-sler St., iC:ity Oland A. Hum, Rt. 3. City Rex Eugene Dye, 802 Henry .St City Doris Queen, Rt. 1, Grover the gunman who fired at Presi dent Truman. Presidents Abra ham Lincoln, Jehn Garfield, Wil liam McKinley, and John Ken nedy -ivere Kc.leJ. Tneoaore kojs- evelt -was hit but the wound wasn’t too serious. I.P , . savings of only $2,180,- .<iuit in the ,cairying-out of the tured in a pregram of eo-pei^B singing Saturday night at 7 p.m.^ at East Side Baptist church in Blacksburg, S. C. Andrew Jackson W£Ul the first of reparted damages to at least OOO, a small dent in a multibil- pc-esident to be ilred at, in 1837> fwo Soviet freighters during iondolar program, but the gunman missed, as did American raids on Haiphong in The U. S. Agricutural Stabil- the last few days. Ization and Canservatlon Serv- These facts all point to sever- responsi- al likely trends in current Krem- seeing that crop pay- Un thinking: accurate and duties cf enforcing our laws, and whereas it is ifelt -that the Police Department of Kings Moun tain. N. C. excels as a result of the Leadership of Chief Tom Mc Devitt, and whereas it is the duty of all citizens to uphold the dig- KIWANIS PROGRAM The Kings Mountain high school Cii-rus will nresenl a Tile writer of the feature rc- feirred to Huey Long, Bobby ■Ker^' nedy, MakoJm X, and r;mL. in Rcckwcil, atl killed, and Frank lin D. Roosevelt, shot at and missed, but the bullet hit Chicago Mayor .4nion Cermak who uled from h'is wounds, it was enree weeks before Rcsse'celfs 1. Moscow places more strate- compliance witjj law. On the nity and respect of Honest and musical program at Thursday sic value on crystallizing its sit- f"® GAO found cases Ctjnsciotts efforts to .serve, it is night’s meeting of the King? nation in Europe than on rolling . which farmers have used sdb hereby resolved that the Kings Mountain Kiwanls club at the Asian political water, at fo spread the $55,(X)0 Mountain Rotary Club whole- P-m, at the Woman’s club. this point. The Bonn pact is al- around among relatives, heartedly si^ports Chief Tom Me most ready to jell- Moscow does partners, or new corpor- Devitt in his time of grief over ELECTION NIGHT atlnn.Q nr nartnorshino M’rkro/^tr^.r e-u.*- .<* us. 4X1 KJiS C XX. bX VX^ X I X f 1U W -X * ♦ , . . a not want to jeopardize that critl- partnerships. Moreover, tht tragedy resulting from his Thursday Night is Election cal treaty in any way. county ASCS oonnmittee actions in the Line of Duty and Night at the Kings Mountain looked the other way while this encouraged him to continue in Kiiwanis club’s regular meeting 2. Along he same lines, Mos- finagling was going on, the the Leadership a’the Kings .Moun at 6:4.5 at the Woman’s club. cow wants very much to bring GAO contends that higher lev- tain Police Department. the strategic arms limitation e's of the ASCS organization Be it also resolved that the METHODIST TOPIC talks to a fruitful sage. It hopes did nothing. Kings Mountain Rotary Club ex- “What -Can Cne Man Do?” will to find a way out of the never- 'When a Mississippi farmer can presses its heartfelt sj-mpathy to bo the sermon topic cf Rev. N. f. inauauration Or vva,'endin;; nuclear weapons spiral lease most of his 5,000 acres of the family of .Mrs. Sencra Hughes Bush at Sunday morning worship ermak-' that is draining itg military, tech- cotton allotments to 45 other per- Williams, whose lass at th-L time .-Jfrvicp .it 11 o’doek at Giaii- actually .Mayor Cermak? The writer noted one exception —William .McKinley—to an ether wise basic trend. AU but McKin- United Methodist church. Birth Aiinouncements nologleal and economic capaci- sons, sj that all qualify for sub- is most grievous, ties. At the same time, it waits sidy payments, there’s a break- KINGS MOUNTAI.N to open the rade doors o buy down in administration. A tough- ROTARY CLUB needed echnologlcal hardware er law would help. .Surely a $20,- 11 May, 1972 from the American market. 000 payment ceUlng would be o . , 1. o .u ... to persuade a farm fam- SLUMMY. BUT , 3. As for its Southeast Asian ty to keen a field n... r>f nred.i- sw i ley were strong and controversial interests Moscow may feel airly tinn f7* a ^ produc- of course it is true (hat Pic- Mr. and .Mrs. Elden Biddix, men, leaders who excited the peo- confident that the end is in r./ .. „ cadilly Circus today in “rather 812 Grace Street, announce the pie with both love and hate. Me- sight for the Vietnam conflict ^^^y and slummy,” as one Brit- birth of a daughter Tuesday, Kinley was an amiable man, not and hat North Vietnam Is gniog newspaper says. But it is .May S, Kings .Mountain h.s..iiai. a strong leader, not particularly to take h-me most of the ma^ instance still the endearing hub of Lon- Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Peterson, cc.ptroversiai. ^ bles pmbaWy s^Zr than l^ter' Department of Ag- don. and any modernizing of it Smyrna Road, Kin^ Creek, S. WMie^J^emtaing of North that does away with ifs eJ’sential C.. announce the birth of le of North Viet Fr, , 7mat does away with its essential announce tne mrth or a son, nam’s waters Sas a sting af- teintinSra^.'^Sj^uls^^ie^rw'^ atmosphere would be ^fficult Tuesday, May 9. Kings Moun- Most of t-h front, Moscow has doubtless al- jer-J urnai for most of Uj to swalli^. o Most of the gunmen were emo- readv stockrJled viMnnmese j -uinui. wonder that an outcry hac Mr. and '.Mrs. Steve Greene,®) ■jn.'.Ilv o,- ... T— atiw cnouot ^ ~ ari.sen tn Rrittan over tiie in ck, 305 F. F. Kings .‘^Ureet annonnnn ally with enougli military sup- POLICE PATROL TANDEMS ticuiaily unstable, a.s were Lee Harvey Oswald and Sirhan Sir- harLd aa evtiTneeTn^ CilJ“ ARE LEA.ST wFcIn 55: And if need be, it can try to re- The de.'jsi m .hv the -Arthur Brenfer, the man who shot negotiate Wallace, is. negotiate otifltA iiRo nf thA DotiMfYjLTa a/t e j i* .1 *'*4*€o ano innuman nave Deen nuri* <trj« .virb. marvin jonnsoi “al ro^r much as if fat the plan. The developers Rt- 2, announce the birth of iue “ enough extra policemen to ride would convert the circus into an daughter. Wednesday. Mav i Theodore Wilson Gomble The sudden passing of Ted Gamble, who suffered a massive stroke, sadden ed a legion of friends. Ht was a man of wit an9 wihait ia generally referred to as good, old-fash ioned horse sense. Born in fhe Bethwarc community, he came td town, .so to speak, and has been here most of the time since. Back Home Willie Mays, the great star of two decades with the New York and San Pranclsco Giants, ha\ returned home, having been sold to the New York Mets. At 41, Mays’ reflexes are hardly what they were a few vears bad- v>,it he did smash one out of the park the other night to beat his old Giant team mates. And he’s earning his $160,000 pay at the gate. The Mets, playing winning ball, were averaging only 10,000 custo- imers per game. On the night of Willie Mays’ first appearance In a Met uni form, 44,000 were in the stands. Some think Mays should hang up the spikes, but one baseball fan poses the question, “What would he do?” And there was a fellow a few years ago named Big Jawn Hlze, who ended his playing days with the Yankees. The pinch-hitting purposes. He won ’em ball Yanks kept him around largely for games and a World Series. not dislike that alternative. arisen In Britian over tne la.esi 305 E. E. Kings Street, announce plan to redevelop Piccadilly, the birth cl a daughter, Tuesday, can trv to re- Tho epithets as "horrifying’’ May 9, Kings Mountiiin hospital, ry The deusim by the Kings and ’’inhuman’’ have been hurl- Mr. ;ind Mrs. Marvin Johnson. a - — would convert the circus into an daughter, Wednesday, May 10. n,.m — ‘ I ® a®P«‘^aliy at ultramodern, monumentaltype Kings Mountain hospital. So far, Mr. Nixon appears to nignt, seems to us to be a sound complex dominated by high-rise Mi. and Mrs. James Morton I have never been a iGeorge have played his cards adeptly. Based upon two recent po- office and apartment towers. 229 .Nassau Place, Gastonia an- WtllliCC —— - t . . j. * Itoa <-tf P i/wvv> 1— . - * ’ him rightly wth the press. Newsmen have ing of the waters as a “■gross oiaion seems an absolute safety else left of Piccadilly" as wo Pruitt, 504 N. Broad St. Gas- their share of ego and oft-times violation” of international ship- matter. ,o„jg announce the birth of a try to put woros in the mouths Piag law). That risk, of course, is know all too well Quite apart from the aesthetic daughter, Saturday. .May 13 of people they interview. Its a yet over. Should a Soviet ®°ma °f fhe arguments against aspect, -one of the strongest Mountain hospital, trait I attempt to avoid, as 1 ship hit an American mine, the sa^^h tandem riding In patrol arguments against the plan in Mr. and Mrs. John M Broome don’t consider it fair or even hardline faction in the Kremlin, f^ars. Primarily, and most gener- that It would provide for a 50 714 A. .Street, Bessemer city, an-’ gc.-.d reporting. There’s nothing Whose strength recently has ®hy, the argument is that two percent increase in vehicular nounce the birth of a son < Sat- His service station was something of a gathering place, like the country store, where friends would congregate, to buy gas and oil, or just to talk. Mr. Gamble was a good host, a hard worker, a good man. Congratulations to Steve Crosby, whoh as been voted the Outstanding Brother award by his fraternity broth ers at Eastern Carolina University. A best bow to FranlTtase, elected .senior vice-commander of the fourteenth North Carolina district. Veterans of For eign Wars. It costs money, but Kings Mountain i.s not so poor it can’t afford two-man night patrols, and the city commission was wise in implementing the reouest with additional officer.s. As Dick Shan- ey, the former highway patrolman, told the commission, he had .some close calls but law enforcement is a meaner job to day than when he was an officer. Senator B. Everett Jordan announc ed Wednesday what he termed an im portant breakthrough on the projected Ciinchfield dam in Rutherford county, the result of an envirornnontal impect study. The Haiphong Mining As happens on controversial deci sions, President Nixon’s decision to mine Haiphong harbor has attracted both praise and criticism. ’The hawks liked the idea of the calculated risk, while the doves cSd not. One reason the continuance of the American presence in Vietnam has at tracted as much criticlsrn throughout the nation is that thedoves want to pull out and the hawks have been frustrated, ir. the historic-United States tradition that a war worth fighting is worth wijr.i- ning. Anyone who has ever served in a shooting war knows that superiority in men and material are the essential keys to winning. Another is control of the real estate. One of the sorriest episodes in the Vietnam action was the chewing up of a Marine outfit ordered to capture a hill. They captured the hill, only to be pulled out a few days later. The ene my said thanks for the invitation and reoccupied the hill. The mines will be re.spected. Most navy men say they’d rather be torp^o- ed than mine^. According to Time Mag azine the mines are vari^ type, includ ing both acoustics, which can be deton ated by propeller noise, and magneftics which are attracted by a ship’s hull. The acoustics, said Time, can bo set to al low up to nine ships tn pass in safetyj but the tenth one gets tWe me'dicine. wrong'wim the searohing ques- 'been in greater evidence might officers in a car causes personal- traffic though the square, and urday. May 13, Kim's Mountain tion, which Is what reporters ar -upset the existir-r power lineup, "y conflicts that adversely affect this at a time when many urban hospital. for. But Governor Wallace han- But so far, so good. The summit attention to duty. Another planners are urging that traffic Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Ros.s dies hamself nuite well in such meeting is less than two weeks argument, often voiced, is that a be kejH away from city centers. 1256 Baugh Street, Apt A, Gas^ situations, picks up fhe ball and away. We earnestly hope it takes second officer is no assistance Piccadilly’s spell is an intang- tonia, announce the birth of a throws It bac'k. place, for the benefit of every- such instances as that in Bes- ible thing, closeJy bound up with daughter, 5iaturday, May 13 one concerned. — The Christian aemer'City,-(but instead might its history, its associations, its Kings Mountain haspital “ Science Monitor. ")can two officers shot instead memories. You can’t measure it Mr. and Mrs. James Ashe of one. And yet another, some- in terms of brick and motar or 3743 Acres Center, Gastonia an^ CARTELS AND THE 1“”®® advanced but not too loud- the value of real estate. nounce the birth of a son ’sun- PUBLIC 'y- .*^at the cost of a tandem It dty developers can rejuven- day, May 14, Kings Mountain tp , —t , • °Peraion is too much. ate the dreus by freshing up hospital. rest’ “i ® fl"’ k'os- what now exists and getting rid Mr, and Mrs. Joseph W. Tes- as it fe sometimes benefictai to auction foe personality conflicts of the slumirty look, all well and seneer, 407 N. Cansler St., an. be the unde.-dog in a political Maritime c;uld arise, we believe this to bo good. But please don’t destroy nounce the birt., of a daughter, race. ^ in a political Ci^isslon will be investigat- a solyeable problem that should the Piccadilly we all love. .Monday, May 15, Kings Mourn —— —■ tain hospital. There has b<>en speculation that the shooting may attract e sympathy vote to WaJlace, which it just migh. iMs human to want „ to help the feUow in trouble just terest? mm will be investigat- a solyeable problem that should the Piccadilly we all love. not interfere with conversion —— ■ —^— Seven North Atlantic shipping to the tt,o-officer concept, espec- lines have signed an agreement ialfy at night. Ot course there are / ■ ■■ Case in point occurred in a putting it mildly, other safety precautions w.hioh county election a few years ago. akarply limit competition. The officers, when riding alone, and , ines already fix rates, through police departments 'i; general carrier conference and with Mar- can take, such as extreme care .4 political leader wa- angrv at Commission approval, but in approaching venie'es .at . 'rlit the incumbents on a partioular agreement goes much farth- and ir. identifying tlie veliie''*.s in matter and cut them in the first j advance. Yet, it almost seems to .perimary. Then the political 'lead- ® carriers us to be tempting fate not to er had some second thoughts. will pool revenue on a prear- have a second officer ride shrt- Was be piroperiy analyzing the ^“"^ed basis, instead of each gun. abU'ities of the fellow he" was ‘^'’'•ier keeping the revenue it Some larger cities, certainly, cutting against the m'an be was g®"erates. The lines will also get have found that tandem or team substituting. He decided he wasn’t ‘^^g^^ker to decide what sched- riding has worked, and they fig- and switched in the second go. and what ports to ure the two-officer approach day serve. .and night is a nece.ssity. As wo, “ “ Fortunately th e agreement as rural and as small as we may Alas, it was too late The in So into effect without be in comparison, .become m:jre cumbent was defeated ^— Maritime Commission approval, urbanlzer’ as to crime, we are In the agency’s Investigation it going to have to adopt larger- mm will have to consider questions city measurer two officer pa- Sn -n u,- as these: Will the seven trols in all figures is a carriers gang up against lines trol, sheriff’s cLxflcult task. If they are public, that were • foolish department and -- or unlucky local poUee department —seem enough to remain outside the the least we can do for our of- litevl to rtn agreement? Will the seven pre- ficers, who are the bases oflaw- of secret ^ent carriers from serving cer- and-orders in our communities, or toen i® 'not neej tain ports or divert cargo from Two officers to a oar, even in one port to others, just the hours of darkness, essarily sufficient does mm It seems likely that the answer not mean considerably more ex- . In each case will be **yes,'’ if such pense to the taxpayers, but if the A presidential bodyguard said a course promises to be profit- taxpayers really believe in good ^ter Brtsident Kennedy’s death One fact that the commis- law-and-order, they will not hesi- he had accompanied him an a sion should keep in mind as it tate. The Kings Mountain exam- ^ip to New York two weeks be- starts its study Is that cartels pie should be studied by other imagine, rifles are set up solely to proect car- law enforcement agencies, and protruoing from any number of tel, not the general public.—The to follow the iflngt Mountain skj'scTapcr windows. Wall Street Journal. decisions should be reached soon Keep Your Radio Dial Set At 1220 WKMT KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. G. News & Weather every hour on the hour. » Weather every hour on the half hour. Rne entertainment in between I’nu I ^ a.i be
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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May 18, 1972, edition 1
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