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i ,s 'M i:.-r > \ Page 2 , THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Thursday. February IS, 1973 Established 1839 The Einsjfs Mountain Herald 206 South Piedmont Avc. Kings Mountain, N. C. 28038 . w^f‘kly nevvsps^per deVoTcd to the promotion of the general welfare and published .or Ihi enlitClUtvimcr-.*, enteriaininnl and benefit rf the ciilzeiis ol Kings Mountain Jnd its vicinity, pii:»iished every Thiirsday by tlie Ilerati IhiblitililPi; Hou.^e. entered as sevonb class matte:- at ihe ofti.-c t.t Kinvs Miaintnin, N. C., 28086 under Act of Congre.ss o' March 3. 1873. El>ITOETAL DuPARTMEWT Martin Harmon Editor-Publisher Miss Elizabeth Stewart Cirruhitior. Manager and Sf>ciety Editor Gary Sfewait Sports Editor, News Miss Dob«ie Thorncurg Clerk. tkx.*kKecper Rocky Martin MECHAIHCAL DrP.AHTTdENT Allen Myers linger Brown Paul Jackson Herb<*rt M. Hunter MAH. SUBSCRIPTION RATI-S PAYABLE IN ADVANCE In North Cctrcllrso a:id South Corolino One year $1, six months $2 25; three rr.onths $1.5*1; school year $3. (Subscription in North Carolina .subject to three percent sales tax.l In All Other States One year $;5, six months $.3; thre<‘ niontJi.s $1.75; school year $1^.75. PLUS NORTH CAROLINA SALES TaN TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739-5441 Viewpoints of Other Editors A JOURNEY BACK TO PEACE I SHOULD WE CUT STATE TAXES The long journey back to pence, The biggest question facing ; has begun in Vietnam and in the 130th seisicn of the North ! the world. j iCaroHna General Assembly so far ' VVe can be deeply grateful. is w-hat to do about a projected cannot he complac’e.nl. |$200-milUon surplus in the state lliere is at last real liglit at treasury during the coming bien- the end of the tunnel. Amoneans nium. should soon be out of the tunnel On side of the debate ai^ advo- But there is still much work to cates of tax cuts. Some say there 0 done before the people of should be an across-the-board Southeast Asia emei-ege. And rebate on 1973 state income tax- 1 peace as believed to be. KINGS MOUNTAIN Hospital Log visrnifG HOUBs Doily 10:30 to 11:30 AJ4* S to 4 PJ4. ond 7 to 8 PJ4. while that work remains none es. iThe Advisory Budget Com- of us can say wo have mastered! mission has reportedly recom- pcaco. Amended at 10 per cent refund on We n<Hxl to loam how to make this year’s income taxes). Olh- inexorable as war isjers say the two-cent-oer-pack I cigarette tax should tK* rept^aled. 11 *u f 1 Yet another faction wants the soft Mary Baker Eddy the founder ^ eliminated. And theiv Of this nevvspaper ook a strong advocate a liftint; stand on the mediation ot the Russo-Tapanese Mar. Shortly | (governor flol.s.; hereafter she wrote ,n praise o the Association for International, ^ j ar i from none-pres-cnption me<h-j " 'A’inos prior to his election last fall). On the other si<ie of the issue! are opponents of tax cuts. Theyj are arguing that North Carolina, Conciliation: “Blorxlshed, land oppression belong to the dar-; I ker ages, and shall be relegated to oblivion.” A few months be fore the first edition of The Christian Science Monitor rolled I off the presses in 1908 she ela- TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE Avd ICC know that till t/iiiip.s- icork to'jdhcr for qnod U, them thdl ovr Ood, lo them who are the cdIJed iiccors}n<j to U'n i<ui'i4jsv. Romams S::i8. Returning POW's Repriet^e Wo somotimos sooni eager lo L '- lieve the most dismal stories aboRt peo ple, particularly stories of bad Samarit- anism, of cries for help going ignored by citizenry. Last week the wire services sent out reports of a Wyoming motorisi wIto was found in his car by the side nf the road, shot dead with his own .22 p.'stol. His suicide note sounded desperate: “I have been waiting 11 hours for some one to stQp. I can t stand the coid any longer and they keep pa.^sing me by. ’ The item was immediately picked up by the press, radio and television stations and exhibited as a thorn in the national conscience. When television reporters on the evening news came to dosing linos. “That’s the \^'ay it is on February 6“ they seemed to bo saying “that’s * the way Americans are.” Not Quite. “Time Magazine" reports that with some further checking, police determin ed that the man’s car had stopped only a mile from a gas station, on a chilly but sunny day. Motorists who had pass ed bv the same spot. Time sa'-^. only two hours earlier swore that the car wasn’t there. The sheriff’s office con- oluded, “He was off his nut." Said “Time", “The amended story was just as sad, but at least it offered a reprieve from the country’s verdict on itself.’’ Today Last Day Reminder: Late purchasers of N. C motor vehicle license plates have until 5 p.m, today to meet the deadline. The Shelby office is located at 4(X) S. Lafay ette street. Motorists have until mid night Thursday to get the tags on their vehicles. The lines were long Monday when a Herald staffer picked up his plates and the Shelby office had issued a total of 31.2f)4 motor vehicle tags. There were 21.372 for private cars, 454 for motor cycles, 4,951 for private trucks, 580 for farm trucks. 3.726 for trailers. 59 for taxis and 12 for rental vehicles. LME MAGAZINE When President Nixon announced several weeks ago the long-awailed end of the Vietnam War, many Americans no doubt didn’t take the news seriously. After all, the conflict was said to be over back in October. And. even after the cease fire was announced, fighting continued, perhaps oven more than ever. But in the wee hours of the morn ing Monday, Americans wore glued to their television sets as 143 Ameidcan prisoners of war stepped off airplanes into freedom at Chuk Air Eas(' in Ihe Philippines. For many of those prisoners, it was the end of eight years of hell. It was a moment of happiness for them, their families and all persons who love this nation. The POWs appeared in good spirits and good physical condition but who knows whal kind of effect the adjust ment to current conditions in the United Slates will have on them? One POW is returnmg home only to find that his wife has obtained a secret divorce. Others are returning to find their children have grown up and everything around them has changed. America owes these returning POWs the right to adjustment without pres sures of the press, television and frirnds wanting to know what went on in tho.-e communist I^OW camps. Kings Mountain did not h;ive a son held prisoner in this war but v. o .slio:u 1 j'.dn other Americans in striving for a lasting peace. Scvt'ral of oui’ men 'dierl in Vietnam and even though many Americans felt this was a useless wai’. they, like the POWs. should not be for gotten. The Price ol Rebuilding Csngmtuicstiens Hats off lo a number of Kings .Mountain citizens this w'eek: Mrs. F. R. Summers, honorary chairman of the City of Kings Mountain centennial celebration committee plan ned for 1974 on the city’s lOQlh birth day. Mrs. Rita Caveny Mangum, Young Educator of the Year in Wilson, N, C. Kings Mountain Little Theatre, who presented another successful show, “Bull in the China Shop". Under The Influence .. . Local law enforcement officers wrote this editorial. Two drivers dead, one seriously in jured. All had been drinking. Typical holiday accidents? Not i-oally. A trio of experienced volunteers had agroccl to participate in a highly con trolled experim.mt to demoastrate the dcaflly effects cf mixing drinking with driving. Each participant downed three of bis favorite alcoholic concoctions at a “joll.v hoin-” before climbing behind the wheel of a stationary simulator car. The drivers were confronted by specially filmed traffic situations re quiring sound and speedy judgment. The film segments were excerpts movies used regularly by Aetna Life & Casualty to teach good driving tech niques lo thou-sands of high school and college students as well as military per sonnel throughout the U. S. After ail hour the drivers’ reaction time had deteriorated sharply and the average driiing performance, as meas ured by Aetna's Drivotrainer system, had plummeted 50^/f. In fact, if these drivers had met on the road the situa tions they mot in the simulator — two ivonld be dead. . .the other seriously hurt. Their “fatalities" could have been avoided. The Ariorican Medical Associa tion .says flatly that three drinks in an hour ar;' too rn ich for anyone who in tends to soon i;tep behind the wheel; for some people, two are too much. A driver is considered legally drunk in most slates when his blood alcohol level (BAD is .lO'r. But many fests show a driver’s ability becomes impair- when the BAL exceeds .Oo^/c (the BALs for the three volunteers were ,07G', .065^r, and .055^^). Suppose you have one too many. There’s no quick way to get out from under—^just wait. An individual’s blood alcohol level will drop .08% each hour. prayed daily that there be no moie war, no more barbarous slaughtering of our fellow-beings; f prayed that all the peoples on j earth and the islands of the sea has plenty of pressing needs for', James Ajnbrase .\dams Mrs. Boyd Beasle>' Evtyelte T. iBridges Staqy Joe Bridges Tracy H. Bridge.s Albert G. Broome P'hilUp Edward Brown Mrs. Charlie F. Cairptmter (Mrs. Minnie C. Ca.shion Blain M. Champion Charlie Copland Mrs. Martha R. Deese Mrs. Annie M. Dellinger James H. -Fields James L, Hallman William George Haskett -Mrs. Della P. Huffstldder Mrs. Bertha C. Hullend<“r Mrs. Paul Jackson Mrs. Emma L. Jarrett Walter Lewis Mrs. C. M. Lovelace Mrs, Ora D. LMauney Walter M. Moorhead Mrs. Juli^l B. McDaniel Mrs. Grace T. Philfoeck Mrs, Lillie E. Reynolds GMrs. Tom Roberts Mrs. L(*slie M. Uohin.son Mrs. T. Frank Shtfdey Lt'slie 'B. Sproust' Mrs. Leslie B. Sprouse Kdwin D. Dxon Carlton B. Harris Oscar B. Prie(» Mrs. Eu.nik’o H. Kay Mrs. K. W. Spenct'r Mrs. Forest William Wr'igiit Mrs. Buren L. Dellinger Beauford L. Doi>bl'n.s Clareiree \\ Ledford L('no T. Morrison Mrs, L. D. Black Mr.s. James H. Payne ADMITTED THURSDAY 'Hie most recent debate over the Viol Nam \vai‘ has centered on v/hethei’ t.'ic U.S. was justified in bombing Hanoi ill its attempt to achieve a truce. Now tiial tile truce i.s here, and now that the budget and the dollar crisis have be come urgent news, the debate on Viet Nam has shifted to a new question: should the^U.S. spend billions of dollai s lo help its former enemies? No specific sum has yet been requested, althougli unofficial eslimatos have gone as high as S7..a billion over the next five years lor Ihe reconstruction of ail Indochina. t:ongre.ss is already -balking at the idea, so i)olh f'resid(.*nt iNixon and Secretary oi Stale Rogers have tried lo .sell the concept as an “investment in peace." Most Americans appear lo be caught in the middle, somewhat baffled at tin' pi’ospect of paying taxes to rebuild what they so recently paid taxes to destroy. Yet in the final analysis there is hardly room for argument. Lyndon Johnson committed the U.S. to recon struction back in 1965, and the truce accord makes that commitment binding. The real question is not whether (he U.S. will provide aid, but how much will b(' provided, and in what spirit it will Ir* given—and received. The Herald sides with the lat- i ter viewpoint—that North C7aro- still has much to do to; I make life better for all its citi-i LETTER TO THE EDITOR which that $200-million surplus could be used—citing the need for I a statewide system of public kin dergartens, for purchase of add itional state park land, for up grading mental healfh and pri- jlme one Gcd. ono Mind; i":;| "on facilitios to name just a few j G(xl supremely, and love their' ^ ' neighbor as themselves. National disagreements can be. and should j ':c. arbitrated wisolv. fairly; and ' ... u * n . •' - . fLiUv settled ” i make li.e better for all its cm-1 Q,f the new-spapt^r our 4-H before we can start talking | grown considerably. We Why, a cynic has a right to about substantial changes in the j our club will be twice ask, have declared followers of skate’s tax structure. j lartro the end of 1973 Dear Mr. Harmon: The memlbetrs of the Dixon Community 4-H Club would like to say how much we appreciate the ^ea-aUl advertising 4-H throughout the year of 1972. With Jesus an^l ^Buddha l>oen letting :.:lnod with such ferocity for so many years in Indo-China. Ob viously they have not lived up lo their beliefs. Only now, in wear iness and stalemate, have they <»ven begun to “arbitrate wisely” with an eye toward seeing that a bitter generation-long quarrel is “fully settled.” And in Vietnam there are leaders on both sides who would still prefer to try for final settlement via warfare. Much arbitration still lies a- head — both in Indo-China and elsewhere in the playing fields of the superpowers. We can But if the legislature concludes' Thank'’you very much for help- ing ^promote 4-H in Clev'eland that tax relief is in order, the paring knife b<? turned on j North Carolina’s tlinv-per cent! Sincerely, sales tax on food and medicine, Margo Green The Herald opposed a sales taxi Retiring Reporter on food and mtxUcine when it' was preposed by the administra- m tion of Governor Terry Sanford- I HPIII in tlie early 19li0s and later ap- * proved by the Genera! Assembly. A sales tax in any form is a gressive tax, hitting the poor mucii harder than upper-income 1 K. T. McNeely, Jr., local Rev- Mrs. ’Mack Ray Camp, Rl. 3, Box 353, City Wilburn J. Campbell, P.O. iBox 121, Bessemer City Mrs. Clara L. Harnill, Rt. 2. Box 29, Bessemer City William Otis Peeler, 1070 Elam Road, City ADMITTED FRIDAY Sf., Gaslonia ^ ADMITTED MONDAY Ml'S. Rudolph C. Brid;^es. GiW t Sell Stri'el, t'henyville i Mrs. Ruth 11. Gentry, 540 Baker Sr.. I’ily Mrs. Waldo K. Faires, Ut. 1, Vurk. .S. V, M'S. Tommy E. C<x>k, 000 Pine Stre(‘t. Blacksburg, S. L. Z. Dobbins, 215 Linwo .i Drive, City Mrs. Hugh A. Luigan. Jr., Ill X. Pi(‘dm(mt Avenui*, City Delvii Ann Sprousr', Rt. 3, Box 538. City Liny A. W*>odall, 215 VV. Ohio ' Avenue, Be.ssemer City 1, 10 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK liniifi cf ncirs about A'bJpN Mountain v/cu propir and eiX'Hf.s- taken from the JOdd filen of iht KintiK M,tmntalu Ilrrald. Kings Mrs. Kelson Badgoir, Rt. Whiteside Road, Gastonia , Mrs. Susie D. Clea-o*. 7190 Mid-1 ^ , pines, City i L Wilson Crawford, Curl'iai W. Riddle, Rt. 1, Dallas | Mountain realtor and bu.'4irw*s‘)- Arcie O. Lutz, Rt. 1, Gastonia 1 man. was (dected pn'Sident o| Highgway, fi(\ssem(‘r Clity i the Kings Mountain Chamber ol ChesteiT G. Smith, Rt. 2. Box Commere at a dinner meelin" 4B, Barbbursville. West Virginia • of the organization Tuesday at ADMITTED SATURDAY | the Country club. Heart Sunday this week Will I Is Available Mrs. Majy P. Harmon, 120 E. Georgia Ave., Bessemer City Joshua W. Gill, Rt. 1, Kings Creek, S. C. Mrs. James C. Boheler, 319 Faulkneir St., Clov’or Mrs. Majy K. Lipford, 106 S. Piedmont Ave., City Joe Alexander Rushing. 513 K. Lee Street, Bessemer City Je.sse Ray Mos.s, Jr., Rt. 4, Box 201-C. Gastonia Thf>mas L. Wilson, 211 Thorn burg Dr., City Mrs. Fannie Belle While, Box 484, 'Bessemer City ADMITTED SUNDAY Earl Thomas Liinders, 507 E. Maryland Ave., Bessemer City Blryont Harris, Rt. 1, White ^ Jenkiins iRd., Bessemer City Mrs. Connie A. Knight, 214 N. Sims St., City Mrs. Walter Reid Panther, P.O. Box 12392, West Gastonia Hebron L. Davis, Rt. 1, Freedom Mill Road, Gastonia John L. Lomick, Rt. 2, Be.sse- feature a door to door canvass in Kings Mqunt-am for gifts for the 1963 Heart Fund. W Tommy Plonk. Eagle St'oul of Troop 294 and mm of Mr. and . Mrs. Clarence Plonk, won his Bronze Palm Aw’ard at Thursdays * Court of Honor. Thomas A. Tate, s(\Tetary- . trea.-?urer of Home Siivings & | Loan A.ssoeiation, and Bob Souiii- well. manager of Southwell Ford, have bt*pn nominated lor presi dent of the Kings Mountain Mer- chant.s .Association for th(‘ com ing voar. SOCIAL AND PERSONAL r families. But it is an especially enue Collec?tor for the North Car- unfair tax when applied to food olina I>epartment of Revenue, ad- and medicine basic necessities' vises that personnel to assist in whit-h all families must have I'C-, the filin<T of State Income and wc must apply the lessons of ■ jraniJoss of incotnc or ability to Intangibles -tax I'eturns will be a- \ ietnam to the period ahead: pay Smithfield Herald. . vailable on Monday & Friday of that it IS wiser to pray dady i — leach week-through April 16, 1973. and work hear for peac'e than MORE MAN-MADE FOODS? Persons desiring assistance in fil to grow complacent and slip, i in«T these returns are retiuested to back onto the treadmill of war., Tins week's flocxling along the ' office is located * iNeuse river in Johnston countyL.. p. w^^rren «vtreet on this lor ro e—lin'Nf'^suppHcTtTn u^ouMedly triggered byOffice hour/ are rote mumnung oi supplication torreraiai rams unstream. Yet,o.«^ ^ to 5*30 nm Mr Mo hurled hopefully mto ,ho a.n thrs, eonvincin^ evidence .hat taxpayers tnis pariKular flood tnudil with them the pre-addres- more than an unavoLlable act of mailed to natute. It appears to have been, from Raleigh. Completed re- man-made occurrence. | should be mailed directly mer City Charles D. Stiles, 508 N. Grov'e.s Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burris KetHer of Grover announce tin* engagement of their daughter, * Florence Sue, to OtU Biinkston , Hyler, .son of Mr. and 'Mr.s. Otis' j| Hvler of &:iluda, C. j 'Mrs. Paul Hendricks led the ? study course. “Edge of A.sia” at : Monday night’s general -meeting ^ r>f the Women’.s Society of Chris- > tian Service at Central -MethodW ciliuirch. 'X ' form moans nothin should be the most practical, the mo.st normal approach to any problem. For national leaders and citizens alike it should mean j an opening of thought for .solu tions. a tuning in to mankind's purpose. Su'h prayer should re lieve the statesman of the cliclio notion that he is “too riusy fight ing brushfires” to have time to “think architecturally” a:out sol- I ution.s to basic problems. It should lift his thought, and his people’s, to see ways in which the brothei'hood of man can be furthered. Prayer in its most practical I form is vitally needed as Ameri- j cans emorege from the anguish ’ of Vietnam. fall V\e didut have enough rain-1 j^^pg^tnient of 11 here to cause the hause wa-; Raleigh. North Carolina or along the Neuse and its iri- ,27611.” :utarjes. The floodwaters came from the Raleigh area, where, ACTION tX)MMENDABLE (Christian Science Monitor) LEGAL JUSTICE? America is the only country w’here toy led prisoners go home four or five inches of rain was ■ recorded with.n a few hours last j The Food and Drug Adminis- Friday. j tration is to be commended for Of course low-lying areas of I ordering this week that labels Raielgh were flooJtrt immediate-! on fgood list the calories, fats, ly. But why did all that watch vitamins and related nutrients rush downstream to Smith field in each solving, such such amazing force and* . . , speed? (The Nease crested about | This will greatly aid consum- 10 feet above flood-stage within P^f^^kasing foodstuffs for -19 hours of Raleigh’s rainfall a tkeir families by giving them remarkably .swift downstream, "^‘^^^’^sary information in select- j ing f(x?ds for a well-rounded diet. The culprit appertrs to be the ' governmental action rapid urlian development that is vyon t insure healthy taking place in the Raleigh area, i clioices—it will be up to each Land has been cleaned of h^s ! krtividual to read the informa- and undergrowth and 'paved overU*®*^ the iatjels an(i then with shopping centers and apart-' *^koose what is best for them. and lock up the jury American ment complexes, huge parking Opinion ONLY ‘YANKEES' VVEAT BOW TIES That was a curious statement which the writer of the prolile on new vSecretai'y of Transportation Bru<re Lentz used in The News lots and more streets and high ways cannot retain and soak up rainwater as it did when unde- developed. So the water rushes swiftly into streams, filling Nearly all packaged food will Ix' affected and the new labels could start show ng up In a mat ter of months. However, as we understand it. some segments of the food industry have already SHOWS WED. - THUR. > 3:00 - 4:30 - 6:00 • 7:30 - 9:00 WALT DISNEY productions Cm pinmm AOf, TECHNICOLORS IlfiMiHkylUINAVISTADISTmiurfONCO.iNC 0117} WillO.ixtyPrirfuctwiH SUN. SHOWS 1:45 • 3:30 • 9:00 MON. - TUES. - 3:00 - 4:30 - 6:00 - 7:30 - 9:00 THEY THOUGHT THEY WERE TOUGH TIL THEY MET THE BRIDE OF SATAN "WERE WOLVES ON WHEELS" RAtER (R) IN COLOR * AAihSOA TtNTURE rilM pROOucro ev iTOOO-A0 3S 'MUCES STARRING ? P0t§r S0tt0r$ -tovrarruffisiv aVDP®EIUAND FEATURING Fiotts Fullerton e$ “Alice'* them beyond their drainage cap- j K(>ttPn a jump on their competi- acity far (juicker than in the pa.st. And when these large amounts tion and have started to change their labels. The FDA says the entire program wall be in effect Sun-|^^ water reach floodplain areas'll Ike beginning of 1975. .and Observer on a recent day. ! vvhicii urban development has al- In the opening paragraph of with mountains of fill dirt, me Ter Heel of the iWeek article! and more water is forced the wTite said that Lentz had gone into office with two strikes against him. The han.iicaps, or liabilities, for the Secretaiy were lasted as (1) he’s a Republican and (2) he wear bow ties. In the first place, being a Re- publicran in 1973 is no handicap but an asset. In fact, Mr. Wouldn’t be in office if he wasn't one. In the .sec'ond place, we just can’t ,Relieve that 'bow lies are a handicap. Then Secretary' Lentz made it worse. He said bov^ tie* are "Lan- koe symols.” He's from Pennsyl- Viinia. “Yankee symbols,” indeed. Thad Eure and all those old South ern colonels wdth their black string bow ties are not going lo stand for that.--Sam Ragan in Southern Pines Pilot. downstream until receiving creeks and rivers are swamped out of their 'canks. Apparently, that is the process that started in Raleigh Friday and spread to Smithfield over the week-end. The key to the problem is floodplain development. Every time a floodplain is filled in for commercial or residential devel opment, it means more w’ater will be forced downstream dam aging low-lying property that once was safe from most flood situations. Basically, that’s why all com munities need land-use controls restricting if not prohibiting flood plain development. And that’s why we believe it’s Basically the new order re quires nutrition laijels on all food fortified by the addition of a nutrient or for w^hich a lebel- ing or advertising claim is made involving nutrition, such as ref erences to protein, fat, carbohy drates, calories, vitamins, miner als or dieting. The nutrition lab els must be to the immediate right of the main label on the product, except where the con tainer makes it necessary to put the nutrition list somewhere else. The new requirement stems from two years of hearings by the FDA on how to tell consum ers v/hat’s in the food they buy, and to try toget them to become more nutrition-conscious. Nutri tionists have claimed Americans are ignorant about what’s good for thorn, and according to .them, the food companies haven’t been \ H'e untorgoltablt fun for adults artd chlMran allka at tht worfd'a third bast aallirtg rtovtl txplodat to Ufa.... —WED. ONLY. ADULTS $1.50 - CHILDREN $1.00 SHOWTIMES • 2 - 4 • 6 . 8 Priducl of ® American Nationil Enterprises Inc. 9-217b downtown kings mountain UVTE FLICK FRL - SAT. - 10:30 P.M. FOR ADULTS "WEREWOLVES ON WHEELS" (R) ALL SEATS $L25 COMING NEXT WEEK - "THE LEGEND OF BOGGY CREEK" QUOTES OLD AND NEW the town of Smithfield’s responsi- ^ I helping th^ srtuatVon" iNouie anHs Xta^rre""' he^e"! action is another in I particularly the Neuse 'onghinds * ® Mnsim NO bird soars doo high if sides of Highway 70 just gaining strength in the soar.s with his own wings--Wii-1 west of tav\m. » » & lam Blake. i Smithfield presently has CON- j D( conserv'ation District ) zoning The people are to be taken in; for most of these floodplain veiy small doses.—Ralph Waldso, munity ahead of most Tar Heel Amerisnn. i; nation. Drug companies and other manufacturers are now be ing required to prove their ad vertising claims with substantiat ing data. The public is demand ing more and more that it be municipalities in oneof environ _ _ - . 1 1 * 1 protection. But the town! truth and we think it's Injustice IS relatively easy to board must continue to resist' * healthv trend The Shelbv bear, what stands is justice.-H. pjessure to re/on-e these CON-D aTOly StL. L. Mencken, | areas for commercial develop-! ^ - - ment, or else floo Ipliaiin develop- downstream what Raleigh's tirban We don’t know life: how can i ment in the Smithfirfd area will 1 deft^elopment has done to us. — we know death ? Confucius. someday be doing to communities Smithfield Herald. Keep Your Radio Dial Set At 1220 WKMT KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. News & Weather every hour on the hour. Weather every hour on the heif hour. Fine enferfainment in between Thui 2?: ] urea a cha they the ] I /oun .uild X jrool- berth Ihom, J iv;th only be.ng (.)ta\ I Colist ■i}ast > thi Uffs, 1 i^'frvc ^If we Ol go .T Conf<? inJep with Distri —4?! G has t'i Ail ot S be 4U Sut ij confci an4 j berfhj says} shoif wil) y ■ J North “All ( h dogs the I: “We’i and V |nB b urda> Abbe; victoi High I in on happ3 nlaye fouls. ir oh th him,’’ a lot had p callec the C felt tl er in will < play about result think wasn’ stand tactic -A c stand the A “Stu . and ( quite game F in th( rival TheS ly an Hugh Clyde Moun with and I sit 01 North now J secon feclin which 'and ^ must team, a litt I thif I ramc Mary son h again } drive
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Feb. 15, 1973, edition 1
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