Honor Roll F
Kings Mounts
I Central Primary
Firet grade: Patty Parrlab* Juantta
Gunnella*, Lavon Thompson*,
Betty Casb, Dorothy Cook, Dorothy
Fulton, Jeanene Mailman. Patricia
Prince, Mary Sue Weaver, Gene
llauney. Robert Edena, Jimmy Cobb
j-, vl.tuu tMtrretl*. Hurr>
pean Short*; Eobb.v Moore*, Barbara
pettmar.
Second grade: Billy Allen*, Harold
England*, Harvey Bly Hamrick*
Grady Tate*. Betty Falls*. Joyce
Fall*. Sarah Katherlne Full**. Norma
Falls*. Ruth Hord.
Third grade: William Hrrndnn
*?:- tf,f TOT "ft.Ilia,n' ^'rMET'T
Martha Ann Cox, Margie Lou Ihckey*.
Charlotte Jenkins*. Pnrv
Anne Mauney*. Bllle Sue McOanlel,
Peggy Joyce Jackson, Jan Reynolds.
Ernestine Maloiiey, Carlo
Mitmgardner*, Floyd Carroll, Lee
Meredith, J. B. Weaver.
Central High
Grade 8: Harold Glass*. Auther L
Jackson*. Grady Watterson*. Glee
Bridges*^ Malcolm Patterson*, Bil'
ly Kennedy.
Grade 9: Jaiiette Mabry, Betty
Moore, Margaret C. Ware. VirginiaRoberts,
Edgar iDeese,' George Lattl
more*. A. G. Sargeant*. James
Thornburg*.
Grade 10: Billy Thornburg* Fran,
cee Crousc. Rachel McClain. Juanl- j
ta McSwaln*. Betty Lee Nelslor,
^ NanCy Nlckles*. Betty Patrick. Boris
White*, Bobby Allran. i
.Grade li: Frances Dettmar, Ju
| ablta Hudspeth, Violet Laughter,!
Bill Gantt*, lAdd Hamrick, George
Thomasson, Gloria Cornwell, Eollne
Keeter, Alice Betty Mauney. Fay
Moss. Marie Moss*. Mary Julln Pol (
lock, Carolyn Prince, Patsy White 1
a Central Grammar Grades
Grade 4: Nelllne Mae Ellison'".
J. " Colleen Falls. Frank Summers*. Al- j
da Jean Davis*
Grade 5: Shirley Splvev*. Bobby
Jean Bridges. Arizona Davis. Becky
Early. Betty Jackson, Thelrna Ryals
Donald Glass, Earl Morgan.
Grade 6: Jack Prince*. Jean
Deese. Opal Prultt*,. Katie Co'rnor.
I M^^L/CAi^iss rM
t ^valehtinW
: C Hollingaworth'e Val- J
H t entine Heart Pack- )
(_ mgm am obtainable ?\
/? containing you* far- o:
Va orlta assortment. J
V Prioea rasas from ). .
Q 28a to $8^0 each.
So Regular Holllngs* J
( worth's packages J
( may also be had with ?\
>? Spsoial Valentine o/
^ \o decoration. J
I*
ft Kings Mountain
Drug Co.
I MICKEY AND HIS M
. satesys*' 5s&?:
K
Ill ?
I
1
or |
lin Schools
_ ,
James Herndon', Earle Myers, Mar
garet Cole*, Nancy Dickey, Jacqueline
Falls*, Laura Sue Randall,
Mary Helen Hord, Pauline Murray*,
Frances Summers', Avis Male War
lick'.
Grade 7: Hatel Aliernathy*, Ret
ty .Davis*. Virginia Summers, ilous
ton Black. Clavon Kelly.
West School
First grade: Mary Hayes, Charles
ana Logan. Dot McCarter*. Ophelia
Phillips, Almond Bice. Carl Cole,
Jake Hord, Jr.*. Bobby Jean Martin'.
Jim Yarborq.
Second grade: Billle Falls Patsy
jMii Hflvfuwi 'ni'iVv io .vfoi;?: itr."
Patterson*. Doris Saunders*
Third grade: Barbara Jean Ware*
Louise Moss*. Mary Beth l^ogan.
Jack Matthews. Donald Eng. Hay
PHno fhtrloa nlantAet
>vt> Minn wu
Fourth grade: Bmogene Bridges*
Margie Gordon. He mice Harrison*,
Myrtle Murray, Rcutah Rhea, Jean
Webb*. Maxlne llord.
Fifth Grade: Cole'te Man in.
East School
Third grade: Jvery Roper. Ruth
Shytle, Doris McDantfT, Retty Joe
Lynn. Chariee Cook. Pauline Cody.
Dorothy Carpenter, Donald Ellison,
Jimrnf Carpenter, Norman Rolin,
Gene Ford. Dorothy Pressley, Ruth
Harrelsou, Martha Brown. Mildred
Hawkins. Alfred Price. Darrell Skin
ner, Glenn Dbllinger, Clinton
Brooks. Fourth
grade: Margaret Bridges.
Mary Mcdliu. Margaret Skinner.
Fifth grade: Mary Frances Payne
Dolores Cunningham. Betty Carpen
ter. Howard Tate.
Sixth grade: Grayson _ Brown.
Page Grose, Clinton Wood. Edna
Cook. Bertls Sdnders.
Seventh grade: Annie Ruth Hawkins.
LIONS LOOK GOOD
IN PRACTICE
The current edition of the Dions
Club basketball team looks exceptionally
good in practice. Coach
Smart seems to have his eye for the
basket sharpened up and is dropping
them in from all corners of the
court. Two newcomers. Gold and
Crisp, from Grover, are showing up
so well that It looks ,as if they
might steal the show from some ol
our more seasoned veterans. As
for. the rest of the fellows, all 1
need to say is that they look even
better than last year.
The Lions have purchased some
flashy new uniforms for their team
this year. These new uniforms arc
the latest, most up-to-date one"
that could be obtained. They arriv
this week and when the fellows oul
for the team saw them, competitloi
became even keener.
The managers of the team ar<
scheduling games that they feel thi
rana would like to see. All gamei
will pit our local team against th<
best semi-pro teams In this sectioi
of the state. It has always been thi
poliry of the Lions club to brim
you the best basketball possible
Playing these high class teams mak
es It impossible for our team to wii
every game, but It Is felt that ev
eryone would rather see a bard
fought, well-played game whet he
their favorite won or lost, than t
see a one-sided, practice contest.
The Lions open their season Sal
urday night of this week by goln
to Shelby to play the Shelby Liom
Look for the announcement of th
first home game in the next Issu
of the Herald.
The Old Reliable
For the relief of upset stomach, e
cess acidity. Indigestion, dysentei
colitis and similar stomach atlraen'
Separate prescription for adul
p and. children.
IA
roPthSMTrtCwirf ^ lissom wot*. j>
-roryoHSovt y $
M\ :
'ha graat laaaon for paopla who
rant to bo healthy without apendng
much money is to drink PASTEURIZED
MILK, It represents more
laalth par penny than any other
ood or drink! i
( MCH,ri*?SM 1
V mdQOLOtN
\ DCltVERED TO /
Bp \tW0flM /
r- i ? . , " |
HE KINGS MOWIfTAIff HHRALp 1
C?r Tarns Over
j Into Fill
The only wreck reported as the|
result of the snow and ice In Kings
Mountain was the one in which the
car of Will Williams, colored shine
boy of thd Central Barber Shop was
overturned on Cleveland Avenue
near the homes of J. B. Keeter and
Haywood K. Lynch. Williams was on
his way home Friday night from
Bessemer' City with several members
of the Davidson Hi Baskethall
team, when to avoid hitting a
parked car as he was blinded by
lights of an .approuching car. tie
turned too quickly and his car skidded
on the ice covered highway,
turning over as it went down the
[ 2d foot embankment.
It was necessary for the occu[
pants to cut the top out of the car
| ulouft. but no one was hurt,
The night following the wreck, be
: fote the car was moved, two whlt??
men, Wiiliard Ross and John Floyd,
were alleged to have stolen a spare
tire and other eouiument from the
I car. The couple was tried and found
' guilty In Recorder's Court in Shelby
Tuesday and each given a six
months suspended sentence.
Train Wreck
Inspires New
Industry
Washington,->-(IPS).? Because of I
a freight train collision near Sclien-!
ectudy, N. Y? an idea was born and
patented and a great industry sprng
up in Pittsburg, Pa., giving jobs to
many thousands of persons in a
plant .that expands now over thirty
six acres.
! That industry is the Westingnouse
Air Brake Company, and its growth
was the culmination of an. idea eonj
celved by young George Westings
. house when he was fresh from an
engineering school.
Just before the turn of the last
century- young Westinghouse was a
1 passenger on a train between Schenectady,
and Troy, N. Y. The train
was delayed because of a freight
collision and It set Westinghouse to
. thinking that if trains had automatic
brakes for all wheels such accidents
could be avoided.
j
"The first plan that came Into my
mind," he recalled, in later years,
{"was to connect the brake levers of
each car to its draft-gear so that an
.! application- of the brakes, to the lo1
j comotlve ? causing the .cars to
; close up toward the "engine ?would
i i> nnl ?f n Ki?ol?.l***? * V% ?, t
I I "KH'J ? ut HKillg 1UIVC UllVUgll . IUC
, couplers and levers to the wheels
. ol each car."
' I
1, When he learned that this Idea
had already been conceived by others.
be discarded it and set out to
I ; find something even more efficient
j and practical. He tried many theo>
ties, but they, too, were discarded
s after nuioli expeit'nientlng. AVeats
Inghouse, discouraged, dropped his
5 experiments and turned to other
H j work.
B i A magazine subscription played
s the next role in the drama of the
' development of this new industry.
Two young women are said to have
II persuaded the young would-be in*
ventqr tq subscribe to a monthly
publication. Although Westingr
house was little interested in the
0 publication, he glanced through the
! first issue that came to him. There
he i;ead an account of a tunnel opet
p ation under a mountain in which
compressed air was conveyed thrt
* 3.000 feet of pipes to operate ma
e chlnery. <
Westinghouse instantly leallzec
that the power brake Of which hi
had dreamed could be alade to worl
?by air. If compressed air COUll
j be carried 3,000 feet in pipes into i
I tunnel, he reasoned, it would be pip
* ed Co the brakes of ever car in <
y train, no matter how long the train
ts
ts He drew up plans for bis airbraki
Patent rights were filed and i
? friend helped him finance the cob
1 1 structdon of the first brake fpr <
test. Railroads, at- first, were skep
tical but finally a railroad oxecutlvi
was convinced of the practicability
of the brake and furnished an en
glne and eight coaches for the test
A day was set for the test. West
inghouse and bib'helpers worked al
k/v# iV- a . ? a a _ 1 iw,
ui^uv. UC-IUI c iiiv ie?i IU iiisici 11
the equipment, An engineer ? Dan
lei Tatt was his name ? stepped 11
to the cab Wtth young George Wes
inghouse the next morning in Plttt
burgh and the train moved out o
the station^ Emerging for a tunnel i
few miles down the track, ihe engl
neer was startled to see a horse
drawn wagon start across the tracl
The horse, apparently frightened b:
the locomotive, stopped on th
track. ,
Engineer Tali grasped the brak
lever. Then, to everyone's amast
ment ?* for no one believed th
train could be halted in time to i
void a collision ? the train came I
a qnlck stop just foqr feet from th
horse and wagon. The air brake wi
a success An industry ? and his
mm CTf ? made! ,
r.KC nSflKT, FEB. 1,, M40.
Plonk Motor Company
Moves Into Nw Home
The Plonk Motor Co.. local Ford
Dealers, are now. In their new perWanent
home on Battleground Road
Tne building has been under con?i
struct ion for the past several months.
and is a two-story fire-proof,
building, and is modern in every re- j
spect '
' ." ?
Mr. F. W. Plonk extends a cordial J
Invitation to everyone to stop by
and inspect his new building.'
Canning Requirements
Thirty two quarts of vegetables i
and L'4 quarts ot fruits should be ;
canned for each member of the fam .
?Jtexr.i. trltionist
of the State College Fx-1
tension Service. She also recom-1
tnends 10 quarts of canned meats. |
10 quarts of canned meats, 10 lbs
of dried vegetabes. two quarts each
of preserves and Jam. and one quart
.each of jelly, kraut, pickle and relish
for each person on the farm.
"fanning is the simplest and
most satisfactory way of maintaining
the year-around health of the
rural family, and is essential in the
economical balancing of the food j
budget." Miss Thomas declared.
.
Your I
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i Wholesome
The Family 1t
V iKimm V A/
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N^*?M im^/^
Jj^jMgaLg"*aj?y: .WHSJ;
is the right riiilk to select for the
It's good and it's good for daddy A
well as for little brother or sist
your bottle today. Our friendly <1
glad to leave that Delicious Goldei
your door each day.
Margrace 1
Phone 118 Kings
Mewspap
Are YOU a subscriber?
-V - *' b '
All the news of Kings Mountaii
people of Kings Mountain ea
out each Thursday morning. S
per year?75c for half year.
t #
rinting:
Well equipped printing plant
printing in artistic and first
short notice. Give us your p
your interest in home enterpri
money at home.
?
tising:
The only way live merchants 1
of their merchandise. Our rat
#
everybody. Try a display or v
issue. '
Mountain H
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Food
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entire family.
LND mother as
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Iriver will be
w Guernsey at
dairy
Mountain, N. C. 1 ''
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ubscription $1.5i
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to turn our your
class manner mt
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rinting?it shows
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