OPINION missed To the editor: Kings Mountain has lost a wonderful man and an excel- lent doctor. One of the minis- ters at Dr. Durham's service said, “He loved his patients.” Well, his patients loved him! Dr. Durham has been my family’s doctor since 1963. On April 22, 1964 he deliv- ered my oldest daughter three months premature. She weighed one pound, 12'1/2 ounces. The Lord and Dr. Dutham saved her life. For this I will be forever grateful. His calm manner and friendly smile always made you feel comfortable ‘around him. I always appreciated his medical opinion on questions I'would ask. Dr. Durham will truly be missed! “To his wife Casey and the rest of his family, you have my prayers and deepest sympathy. Jeannine E. Fisher Kings Mountain Letter Policy We appreciate your letters to the publisher and encour- age you to write. We limit the number of let- ters that any one person may have published to one a fit Letters must be brief d to the point, and con : eres 00 words or less onl Ah ; AER mately two pages double- spaced or one page single- spaced). Handwritten letters will be accepted, but must be legible. We will not publish letters from anonymous writers. Names, addresses and phone Bumbeis must be included. Se right to edit ne f; punctua- tt ok tived on : con Monday a are to be ublished. Mail letters to The pubtioned. PO. B6X 769, Kings Mtiitain, ‘NC 28086 or fax Aege: {gos 780 0611. SHR ar Sorbet & any Hisribs /Stant ial.efrofshal’ Appear in ‘Henewspaper oriclarify any eat Hat ‘are unclear. ‘feqesta: Correction or elatifieationscall the editor at i NES. 74 6petiveen 8:30 pl Sl Mone Willig Nietptosh;, Chm. 219 Ney Bethel Church Rd. Lawndale; NC 28090" Fhetst £28, 3768 Salat »w om Brid ges; IY =, gn ewodd Dr.” a ‘NC 28086 482- 2747 ‘Ronnie Hawkins £ £P.O. Box 639, . “316 Codnttride Rd. Kings Mountain, NC ‘Home Phone: 739-7078 fork Phone: 739-2591 Mary Accor \ 944 Dixon School’ Rd. Kings Mountain, NC 28086 Home Phone: 937-7508 Work Phone: 734-5623 he Kings Mountain Hemid ALAN HODGE /THE HERALD Rev. Doug Petersen (left) and Jack Hutchins were checking out some cool season garden plants at Bridges Hardware recently. Even though nights are still chilly, warmer days are just around the corner. The Good Lord helped her Everybody said she was so little and frail. If you saw her the last several years of her life you would assume she was. On the outside, maybe. Inside, no way. Letha Stewart was a fighter. She had more faith and determination in her little finger than most of us will ever know. By human understanding she should have left this earth years ago. In the second year of her marriage she survived the typhoid fever that took sev- eral other members of the Stewart family. The fever caused her first child, Lib, to be born three months premature, so small that she could fit in the palm of a grown adult’s hand and sleep on a pillow. Doctors and others who diagnosed and ob- served her condition couldn’t measure the faith inside her. That seed was planted by an old grandfather, Ephraim Jackson, who raised Letha Bell and her younger sister Alma (Sellers) on practically nothing. Their mother had died when ixand three years ald, respectively, Sungifather, thougha godly man him- self, was Li mature enough to raise two young girls on his own. When he remarried the girls were getting bigger and they looked upon their grandpa as their father, so they stayed with him. They never had much money. But they had a lot of faith and love, and that’s priceless. Everybody called Mr. Jackson Eaf (rhymes with leaf). He died just a few weeks after I was born on May 6, 1946. They say he was hanging on til I was born. In those days, momma often said, doctors ad- vised women not to take a newborn outside for at least a month. “If I'd known then what I know now I'd have taken you for him to see,” she said. Gary Stewart Frail? No. I learned as a young lad that my momma, though she never weighed more than 135 pounds, was tough. She kept a big Hickory switch on the back porch to prove it and if a spanking was needed before she could make it to the back porch she could apply a pretty stout open right hand to your backside. Despite what others, particulary my sister Linda, tell you I didn’t have to be punished often. But I was always the type that when I erred it was in a big way! Tough? You bet. Momma never worked at a regular job, but I don’t know of any profession more noble than raising a family. That, which included strong spir- itual guidance, was her role. On the rarm, part of that included a lot of hard work in the fields. I was the youngest of five chil- dren and farming was on its way out by the time I got big enough to do any real work. But I got my love of gardening from momma. I still know that you “plant taters with the eyes up.” I also know that even in times of drought you keep on plowing and hoeing. “You do your part, and when the Good Lord's ready He'll do His,” she said. That was a quote handed down from Eaf Jackson, and as I matured I realized it doesn’t just apply to farming. Frail? 3 The last ten years of momma's life were tough. In July 1991 a dedicated doctor, Scott Mayse, and some specialists in Charlotte discovered that her arteries were severely clogged. One was clogged right at the wall of the heart and there was no way to bypass it. They said at her age, 75, and her frail condition, she would never survive surgery. Take her home, they told us. If she lives til Christmas it will be a miracle. She lived not only til that Christmas, but nine more. Most of them were good, but she survived some more tough times including the death of a great-granddaughter, Kayla Newton; a grand- daugher, Kathy Brown; and a son, Herman “Buck Stewart.” We were sure that would kill her. By that 10th Christmas, though, we could see it would be her last one here. Instead of the usual routine of everyone coming to my hose, we had to go to her’s because even getting one foot in front of the other without assistance was becom- ing very difficult for her. “Lord, help me.” In my older years I've come to know more ful- ly what the writer in Ecclesiates was talking about when he advised us to remember Our Creator in the days of our youth. That's not just about c coming to Christ at an ear- ly age. If we're blessed enough to, Jive a long life there may come a time when the silver cord will break and if memory is not.completely gone it certainly won't be what it used to be. Ten years earlier when those doctors diagnosed congestive heart failure and told us to take her home, they said one day she might just be sitting in a chair and stop breathing. The last several weeks were tough. Yes, the body was frail outside. Maybe inside too. Breathing, even with oxygen, was a harder task than any she’d ever'experieticed on the farm. “Lord, help me. Lord, help me,” she said over and over. The memory was almost gone, but deep down inside she knew the Lord was the only One that could help, She fell out of bed two days in‘a-row. On the second day, Thursday, March 22, when my wife and I went oyer to her house at 5 a.m. to help Lib put her back iff bed, she said, ST ‘mijust going to leave this old world” About six hours later, the Lod granted that persistent plea for help.’ ! The greatest miracle’ - eternal’ healing - hap- pened. . annual payroll to $400,000. Editor: Gary Stewart 739-7496 March 29 2001 Section A, Page 4 ow ARS SE a Ray Hicks lives like a prince on next to nothing The other night I saw a man on TV that had his act together- literally and figuratively. The story was a documentary film about a guy named Ray i! Hicks who lived on the side of Beech Mountain with his wife. «© Now, that might not sound too unusual until you examine the; lifestyle the Hicks family enjoys. ’ The house that Ray lives in has neither electricity or running water. Heating in the winter time is provided by chopped wood. Water for washing and cooking has to be carried from a creek. The ma- | jority of the Hicks’ food comes from vegetables they have grown and canned or that they eat fresh out of a little garden. For clothes, Ray favors bib overalls and an old slouch hat. At the time the film was made a few years ago, he was getting up in years and trekked the hillsides with the aid of a cane. Alan Hodge Taking a movie crew along, Hicks could name : every plant in the fields and woods and tell Staff Writer what use they could be put to. Besides his knowledge of what it takes to get along in the hills, Ray is also a genius at storytelling. His sing-song rendi- tions of “Jack tales” have endeared him to thousands of folk fans at festivals all over the mountains. The thing that impressed me most about Ray Hicks and his | wife from watching the PBS special was their utter lack of pre-", tense or “airs.” They were as open and honest in their way of life, and as simple and yet profound in everything they said and did as to be on a plane of existence equal to what the Romantic poets worshipped as the “natural man.” This past week I envied Ray Hicks. Like everyone else, I had to start 10-digit dialing. Sunday afternoon while trying to have. some peace I was aggravated by a telemarketer. My car got hit , in a parking lot and had to be taken to the body shop, my com- puters both at work and at home acted up. Surely you can add , these and other irksome occurrences to you own list. In my opinion, Ray Hicks and those like him such as the Amish people who live close to the land and are not encum- bered with “stuff” know true freedom. Though practicality and obligation prevent me and most other folks from taking the plunge to live a lifestyle of this nature, it’s still nice to see some- one who is content to live the simple life of our forefathers. Way we were in 1961 Herald headline news for March 30, 1961 announced that the town of Grover was planning a $125,000 water bond election. ‘The system was supposed to upgrade Grover’s facilities and in- cluded a 100,000 gallon storage tank. Other front page news for; that issue of the Herald includ- ed word that Foote Mineral Co. was getting set to give their workers a five cents an hour raise. The raises boosted Foote’s Martin AMON cola ji Fa the March 30, 1961 Herald had several interesting tidbits and thoughts. With the 100th an- in meal bo niversary of the Civil War at hand, Harmon told of the 28th o KiNG $ MOUNTAIN North Carolina Regiment and specifically about Co. B “The Gaston Invincibles.” According to: Harmon, there were several Cleveland County lads in the group including Pvt. John Blalock who lost an arm, Cpl. John Falls wounded at Chancellorsville, and Cpl. Frank Thompson said to! be “too thin for the Yankees to hit.” Society news in the March 30, 1961 Herald as reported by edi- tor Lib Stewart featured a piano recital by students of Mrs. L.E. Hinnant. The concert was performed at West School by talents that included Judy Barham, Helen Goforth, Debbie Timms, and Brenda Garmon. Other social activities included installation of * Mrs. Addie Bridges as Worthy Matron of the Eastern Star and Boyce Memorial ARP’s annual egg hunt. a Sports writer Neale Patrick had several interesting stories in */ his section of the March 30, 1961 Herald. One feature revolved * around Jake Early and his attempt to organize a local softball league. Another story took a look at the upcoming baseball "1" brawl between Kings Mountain and Cherryville. Getting praise from Patrick was John Gamble and his pioneering work in get-'" ting a junior high conference established within the scope of the Southwest Conference. = The Easter fashion parade brought out a spate of ads in the March 1961 Herald. For m’lady, shoes at Plonk Bros. were in the” latest styles and priced as low as $2.99 a pair. For the crowning” glory, McGinnis had hats ranging in price from $1.98 to $5.98. Gents could be outfitted at Page’s Men's Store with suits start- ing at $39.95. Rounding out the Easter offerings were candy- filled baskets from Rose’s at $3.98. ER eee ee SIDEWALK SURVEY By ALAN HODGE Kings Mountain Herald What do you think is the most dangerous highway in the Kings Mountain area? place is the intersection of Road. A very dangerous Highway 216 and St. Luke's Church Michelle Leigh Cleveland County | think Highway 26. \ I go pretty Any road around Highway 74 Business is dangerous. . « . vsw fast on Highway here is dangerous where it comes off of People fly on that 216. - especially I-85 is dangerous road. Highway 216. because the speed | limit has been : lowered recently Kevin Bennett Keith Robinson Jeff Moss Chip Hambright' Cherryville Kings Mountain Kings Mountain Kings Mountain RSS