Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Sept. 20, 1973, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE KINGS mountain HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Thursday, Sepfember 20, 1973 ^ Herald *0*11/ C. 28086 lirth Cnrof./iA i IS AS AKiAlHM Census Survey k Underway Viewpoints of Other Editors f *ito: PuDliisnei snorts Edit»»r I kMJKKeepei k^Jcaon The Bureau of the Census will survey a sample of households cl St’ptein- immunization against se*ecU^ diseases, Joseph IR. Nuivvood, director o* the i.u- leaus Data Collection CentOf in ^hralotle, announced today. WARNING TO BIG SPENDERS . .».ui vt-j a auiitpie Ol 1 I in tins area the week i le-1 asking aooul imi FAREWELL, HOT SUMMER The (hanging of the season is subtlt*. natural process that of the U. S. are l;e« je.As r..ans ailemt-i to hold it ^'inning to learn that creeping in to a scludule. It happens in its »» i'i-<?lude to gal- oivn go^a tone*. loping inflation ani that guv-j Man, of course, has tried to emment spending beyond ineo.mc schedule it. The calendar notes the forerunner of rising prices^ that autumn arrives on .Sept. 22 devalued dollars. A nation- winter on Dec. 21 and so on.l'^'*^*^- hidependent survey spon- Tiure is a very good scientific 1*'^' American Farm; HOSPITAL LOG admitted SXJtHi'AY The immunization survey ducted nationally every ’yoar. explanation for" choosing those Federation and involving provides data on immunizafion particular dates, but it applies, *>^23 personal interviews in 24 against influenza, smallpox, po-i^^^y pureliy scientific dis* lio, diphtheria, whooping cough, cussion of the seasons. Scienti- tetanus, measles and mumps. The fically, the winter solstice is Doe. survey this year will also gather,21, but that doesn’t mean' youi information about chickenpox,! can’t call a Dec. 15 blizzard aj diabetes and certain chronic lung | winter storm, and heart conditions. Results of: The confusion is regrettable, the survey provide inldrmation commonplace. There are needed for administration of many familiar terms that acquire health programs geared lo dis-j slightly peculiar meanings when ease prevention. ; used by scientists. "Work” is one ^ . I them. Some of us, for c.xam- questions are in wmuld say that sitting at a iVn'r eScarphyiidsns ‘ woiult'’’ sly! ■ c ducted nationwide b> the technically, that the only metropolitan areas and 11 non- metro counties reveals that 86 per cent of the people favor cut ting government spending to combat rising food prices. If The health addition to the usual ones asked yeau for the of labor. l\ S. depart- . work done most days is when the writ er lifts his bulk from the chair the findings of the survey moan anything at all, politicians are going to find it increasing diffi cult to spend and spend without regard to the taxpayer’s ability to pa..v. As the consequences of their acts are felt in terms of more inflation, they are likely to find it harder to pass along the blame to bu.sinesses, industries, retailers, farmers and w'orkers for what happens to prices •Mrs. Fred M. Arrowood Mrs. Kmma L. Bowen Hulx’i’t (1. (Joinmun.s 'George C. Deck 'I'homas A. Ilamhilghl LMrs. George \V. Ila.skctt Mrs. Garth Hawkins Mivs. Mary R. Hill Riihy Mac Marlin Walter M. .Moorhead Manuel A. Moss Mrs. Julia B. McDaniel Clyde Edward Noblelt Mrs. Rufus Phifer .Mrs. Grace F^hilbeck Robert T. Ruff Joe H. Thomson Mrs. Thomas If. Wells Riley Allen Mrs. Harold D. Farnsworth Haskel Y. Quinn Mrs. ^follie C. Goforth Mrs. Vera C. Goforth Mrs. Worth E. Huntsinger Jerome H. Ray Mrs. Bertie B. Thompson Mrs. Jerry D. Carpenter, 4221 , Westridgd Drive, Cliarlotte. Miv. Tommy Lee Clinton, 200 Afcc uancl SI., Clover. Charles Ray Dostcr, Rl. 1. Box .50, H. Curtis A. Hinson, OIS IJinvofMl Drive, B. C. William Edward Miuray, lU. 1, Bess Town Rd., B. C. Oscar W. Patterson, 2nd .St., Ext.. City. Waller B. Wallace, Rt. I, York ADMITTED MONDAY Th 90) , . .c- matter how many billions ts of the monthly employ-1 . home. Similarly, it’s tech- are poured into social programs, provide data on work when you lift to buy votes, their effect will be Hhe soft-bed three feet for clean- Ci- in the labor force, ?ators of the economic] fl()or if you pit it back ^e country. For exam- i d’s still work to most u of la-ior statistics the July survey I T'hus, thei'e’s no reason to ex employment rate' autumn to wait until Sept, t, essentially tho ^^ appear, the scientists not- e (4.S per cent), withstanding. Citizens and scien- Iflovv' 5 per cent, like Americans and Britons, in a little more, divided by a common Ian- Total employ-1 Nor is there any reason to ed in July autumn to appear before was an in-| then just because the other sche- over July a ' makers think it should. | Many of us start thinkin.g of au- . . 1 tumn when school begins. But [d by indivi- the teachers and pupils who I the sui-vey slowly roasted the first week of .law and is classes know^ the season didn't get statistical a copy of the school board’s cal- I ondar. viewers' ffoes. Autumn doesn’t in tbisi®*^‘"'^ baseball ends, be- , H. Go- crushed along with the hopes of •beneficiaries iby the roaring ex* press, train of inflation. In the end, the groups oJ people that free-spending politicians have lounted on most to keep them in office will become the most ven omous in demanding retribution. —The Cherryv ille Eagle. 1307 IM THOSE “BLACK BAG JOBS" •How far are Americans will ing to get a government agency commit burglary in the name of national security? As the po tential prizes worth the corrupt ing effects? Such a stern protector of the Nation as J. Edgar Hoover ap parently came to the conclusion ADMITTED THURSDAY 'Mrs. Alden Cook, 901 St., Clover. Rev. EcLvard O. Gore, Rt. ty- Mrs. Eugene Lofev'er.s, 5 Ben nett Dr., ADMITTED FRIDAY Mrs. Billy K. Humphries, 119 Center St., City. Mrs. Daisy p. Ledford, Mrs. Emma L. Ramsey, Lackey St,. City. iPaul Richard Sanders, Falls, St., City. ADMITTED SATURDAY i Mack Ray Camp, Rt. .3. 353, City. Mrs. Timothy Childer.'^, Church St., City. ! William P. Childers, 300 Stowe Acres, City. Fred G. Hamrick, 925 Church St.. City. Mrs. Carrie Lutz. Rt. 1, Box i ‘Mrs. James A. Belt, ; Woodidde Drive, City, i Mr.s. Bobby W. Scruggs, Rt. 3, I Dallas. i Mrs. Mills M. Short. 13 22nd St., City. Mrs. Virgie M Cole, 908 Grace ' St, City. Mrs. Annie M. Proctor, 56 Wj ' Avenue, Greenville, S. C, Coot M. Inman, 46 Chestor- ' field Ct., City. I Mrs. James M. Cocran, Rt, 6, I Box 733, Chapel Grove Rd., Gas tonia. Burlin T. Broome, Rt. 3, Clo- Main ver. ' Jimmy David Crawford, Jr. Rt 4. Box 120, Allen Rd.. City. Joseph T. Allman, 1-127 N. Wel don St., Gastonia. John William Karris, Rt Lincolnton. ADMITTED TUESDAY 'Mrs. Phillip W. Lingerfelt, Rt. 6. Box 938, Gastonia. 103! Box S1.3 Nathan H. Davis, 210 Morri.s St.. City. Burman C. Bryant, 1002 First St.. City. yea Lull had hare coat jier ot t and Max Daniel Ingle, P. O. B(»x 265, Forest City. Mrs. Annie B. Jolly, 222 Wai ker St., City. Harry R. Hughes, Rt. ?, Bo.x 435, City. Joel Max Whisnant. Rt. 2, Bos Mar ,hel S. I cause baseball lasts practically t it could survive without break- till winter. And it doesn’t arrivelins by the P’BI. He stopped them ^0, City. 1443. City. Samuel E. Puckett, Rt. l, B. C. -Mrs. Ora D. Mauney, 2S09 Go Jay R. Spen>-ing, Rt. 3, Box ble St., Gastonia. 40GA, City. ' ] hav< ills liav husl when foottall begins, because in 1966. The nation did surviv’e. football now starts about the same time as summer. The fact is that th(» seasons defy the best attempts to ordain their arrival. Thus, while vv(» certainly did not predict that autumn would arrive yesterday, we feel safe in , announcing that it did. The morn- . ing was not only cool, it was brisk. The early skies were not I onl.v gray, they were that men- ■acing slate-gray that will later m(‘an snevv. And as the day rip ened and the thermometer drop ped, the w'ind swept away clouds *0 produc'e the kind of late after- oon that is just right for vvalk- ig ba-k from a football game. ' It big-time or neighborhood. All the signs were there. It ooked like fall, it felt like fall, t even smelled a little like fall except for the absent* of nurn It should be made impossible for the FBI to I’eturn to the discontinued "black bag jobs” re cently described by formei* FBI men under previous administra tions. The black bag operators were allegedly taught how to make their own burglar tools and instructed to use them only when not carrying identification. Their purposes included gening information, often codes from foreign chanceries, and planting eavesdropping ‘V:jugs’' for domes tic intelligence an(i criminal in vestigation purposes. Break-ins must have .seetnod reasonable during the all-out ef fort for national suiTival in World War II, when President Roosevelt reportedly authorized them. It is only in such ciivum- ng leaves). After a summer that they should even be )ackeci most of its boat into iis j ast 10 (lavs, the change was per-: However, the break-ins arc said} I'ect. It even made Monday i i>earable.-Charlotte Nows. j I rights struggles. According to NEW TWISTS ' ret^ent reports, their authoriza- IN CONSUMERISM tion went no higher than FBI di rector. Eonner Attorney Gen eral Nicholas Katzenbach and Ramsey Clark said that they knew nothing of such operations Kennedy and We Americans are proud, inde- mdent people, and history has ■oven that we will not tolerate ry much government interfer-, oc in our lives. This helps e.x-1 P'esiflont.s in why projects run on a priv [ . local level, such as the Bet- The risks of doing witliout such ' Busine.ss Bureaus, find a six*- tactic.s in the future are less than a place m the hearts of the the risks to the very integrity of t r. country if Mr. Hoover’s To watch the Better iBusine.ss termination of them is reversed. A potential benefits of the Wat ergate upheaval lies in reducing any passive public tolerance for govcinment break-ins. There has be(‘n a valuable exposure of the lireaus in action is to better Idcrstand the American mind, ^r the HEB’s are an excellent ample of the spirit of volun- rism which we hold so dear. ' ver since their inception six ?cade.s ago, the BBB’s have suriupting ramifications of a I political attitude that accepts ought to upgrade the perform-1 such means to an end nee of the American market- f'lace without government help )'-nd now, with the Council of I letter Business BureaiLs as a heal coordinating agency, the f mil’s are stronger and more reffective than ever before. This [cohesive group of businessmen, r^tizens and professionals, operat- I ing In 137 U. S. cities, has come The 1970 White House intelli-l gence plan, with Its recipe for | illegal entry, was rightly knocked ; down after brief authorization by President Nixon. And he was right in his Aug. 22 press con ference not to pursue the Ehr- lichman line of justification for the White House "plumbers” up with some important new ^^^sberg psychia- twists in the consumer movement j List’s office — w^hich was, in called Consumer Councils. I Mr. Nixon’s words, "illegal, un ■Nearly 2.000 consumers have'^^^^®Hzed as far as I was con- eagerly joined tho.^e councils, t completely doplor- working in such diversified activi- ■ * in YOints FREE i i I ‘ i fi mus tion iirda yard a Ta U I land Coni seas this "Your Guide To Monday Night Football" j Read This Book Before Yon See The Blays rcco ACC Tar 15 gi Hi t( in Hi an 2 Bapl dim chur Pick Up Your Free Copy At Our A.ssociation. We're Co-Sponsoring The Monday Night Pro - Foot ball Games On ABC Television. We Know You’ll Bo Watching. And We Know This Free Guido Will Add To Your Enjoyment Of The Games. You’ll Read i Scouting Reports On All The Teams Playing, PJu.s An Analysis Of Key Player Match-Ups. Plus Much! More. Get Your Book Now At for 1 hit 9 now so 1 Now Kisei im Savings & Loon Atsoeloflon P. 0. BOX 74« KINGS MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA 2«OU | Heel J tes as invostigatvo shoppng. mediating and conducting con- [sumer (xlucational programs for senior citizens and the poor. Each local Consumer Council is upn- ider the guidance of a consumer ^ j specialists who has been trained by experts. The Bureaus that have tried such a progiam report But when Mr. Nixon was ask(xl about his authorization of the 1970 plan, he was wrong if he in tended to justify it through pointing out that ‘in the three Kennedy years and the three Johnson years through 1966 when burglarizing of this type did take place, when it was authorized on community understanding of BBB' a very large scale, there was jo goals and methods has grown I talk of impeachment and it was through public involvement. I quite well known. So it is that we have been able' This unelaborated statement to keep the free enterprise sys-'did serve the purpose of torn on its toes, without “Big! prompting the press to find out Brother.” The Better Bu.3iness; from the former officials that Bureaus can state, "We have FBI bre.ak4n had indeed taken validated our basic premise lhat placx? during that period—though once consumers know that busi j report€?dly not on a "very large' n^ss cares and that business of-(£cale,” or "quite well known” fer.s vi.'»i:le alternatives for solv-'Hhey were vcPr' secret), or "au ng the problems of buyer and thorized” except by Mr. Hoover. (Her. consumers lespnnd posi-i But this was not a time for veL* to voluntary regulation.” , Mr. Nixon to try to get off the he Tran.sylvania Times. , hook by asserting that other administrations had done wht his Drivers under 25 years of age had been criticized for doing or- tld 18.7 per cent of the driver planning. It was a time to say, I enses in the eountry, according "Mr. Hoover was right to stop' the Travelers Insurance com- the break-ins, and they will nev-! nies, but were involved in 29.5 er be resumed so long as I am; r cent of 19T2's highway fa-‘president.”. — The Christian, ties. I Science Monitor. | Keep Your Radio Dial Set At 1220 WKMT KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. News & Weather every hour on the hour. Weather every hour on the holf hour. Rne entertainment in between
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Sept. 20, 1973, edition 1
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