Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / June 11, 1953, edition 1 / Page 13
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Bev. Park H. Moore Elected Grovei lions President In Meeting Monday GROVER ? The Lions Club n>et on Monday evening at the! school cafeteria. Their guests i were Grover school trustees. j During their business meeting, new officers were elected for the r xt year. Rev. Park Moore was i elected president, succeeding R. . E. Hair.br ight, Jr. who has served as president for the past year. The following were also elect- j ed: Gene Turner, 1st vice presi dent; Vardell Neal, 2nd vice pres- ! ident; and Bill Camp 3rd vice i president; secretary, Charles Queen; treasurer, Bill Harry; di- i lectors, Jake D. Hambright and j Franklin Harry; lion tamer, W. i I*., Powell; and tall twister, Hun ter Ramsey. > Mrs. J. B. Royster, Mrs. James Blalock, Mrs. J. D. Hawkins, Mrs. Dreard Shaw, and Mrs. FdyeTes jseneer attended the Stanley Brush district meeting, which was held at the Shelby high school auditorium on Friday evening. They also attended a ^arty at the home of Mrs. Yates | McSwaln on the same evening, j ' Mrs. MoSvvain served delicious re- j fresnments. Rev. and Mrs. W. A. Hoffman i of Gastonla, were dinner guests , on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Char- ! ]es Queen. Pfc. and Mrs. Carson Carner ? of Columbia, S. C. spent the week end with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. Leighton Smith end daughters, Terry and Susan, of Atlanta are spending the week with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Beam. Bill Cockrell, a student at Clenv con college, arrived Friday to spend the summer vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Cockrell. Andy Cockrell graduated at Shelby high school on Monday evening. Miss Peggy Keeter Is spending | this week with Lt. and Mrs. W. j S. Hicks, Jr. and son of Green- 1 ville, S? C. Circle Number 1 of Shlloh Pres- j byterian church met on Tuesday evening with Mrs. J. D. Ham bright. Circle Number 2 met with Mrs. Preston Goforth. These meetings were well attended. Guest preacher on Sunday at the 11 o'clock service at the Shi loh Presbyterian church was Rev. James Grier of Rock Hill, S. C. James D. Newsome, student at Columbia Theological seminary, whose home is in Jackson, Miss., filled the pulpit on Sunday even ing. Rev. Park Moore is attending the assembly meeting at Mon treat. Mr. and Mrs. VV. F. Cockrell and Starr spent the week end with their parents at Statesville. Mr. and Mrs. David Jackson and "Becky" of Charlotte, Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Terry, and Mrs. Ruth Blackwell of Monroe, and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Neal of Shel by were visitors of the W. W. McCarters on Sunday. Kay McCarter of Blacksburg visited Ann McCarter several days recently. Mrs. B. A. Harry was guest speaker at the general meeting of the Woman's Missionary . So ciety at the Dover Baptist church of Shelby on Monday evening. Henry McDaniel, a carpenter, had the misfortune of fracturing a vertebra in his neck, when his foot slipped and he fell from the roof of a house owned by Tom Smith on Grover-Kings Mountain highway last Monday. He is a patient in the Memorial hospital at Charlotte and his condition is 1 fair. He is the husband of the former Dixie Smith and they have two small children. Tommy Keeter, Ellis Tate, and j Ray Goforth spent the week end j at Crescent Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Tyree Keeter j spent the week end at Crescent i Beach. Miss Audrey Hope of Raleigh j is visiting her parents, Mr. and j Mrs. J. Q. Hope. Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Keeter of j Norfolk, Virginia spent the week j end with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hardin of Norfolk are visiting their pa- 1 rents. M. I. Hardin is taking treat- 1 ment at the Memorial hospital, j Charlotte. M. L. Hardin spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Flem mings of New Zion, S. C. Mrs. W. F. Fowell, a first grade teacher, and Mrs. Nell Biser, a You'll be money a heed when yon discover THERE IS A DIFFERENCE IN HOUSE PAINT I In this age of scientific progress, yon ara entitled to house paint oil your home that provides the maximum In lasting beauty and protection. Sherwin-Williams makes SWP House Paint in only one grade. ..the best they kAow how to make. 4 Why risk disappointment when you are sure 6f satisfaction if SWP House Paint is used for painting your home? There are substitute house paints that sell for less than SWP. but don't let that fool youl Insist upon SWP and be sure! Know all the facts. Get your FREE copy of our booklet "The truth about House Paint" For infer/or and txfrlor dm . > ? f-W PORCH A FLOOR BNAMIL Durable finish for porches, steps, kitchen and playroom floors. Withstands rain, snow, sun, sand, hard wear. 9 rich color*. PHIFER HARDWARE L Battleground ? Phone 46 Family Security Comes From What Yon Save While incomes ore steady, we invite you to save a ? part of each week's earnings and you will be surpris ed how fast the account will grow. If you have saved $100.00 or SI. 000.00 and wish to invest this lump sum for a regular cash income you may do so and dividend check will be mailed out to you July 1st and December 31st each year. The. cur rent rate is 3 p*r cent. Your account with us is always worth 100 cents on the dollar, free from fluctuation. ' * > V ' ? ' 'v ? ? ? All accounts are insured up to $10,000X0 when in vested in the BLUEJACKET HONOR ? Avia tion Machinist Mate John Robert Smith, stationed at Chincotague, Va., is shown before bis ride in the Jet aircraft carrier, "The Shooting Star". Smith was re cently commended by the U. S. Navy command as "Bluejacket of the Month,"* the honor con ferred upon the most outstand ing non- rated man. Smith has served with the navy for 19 mon ths and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Ray Smith and husband of Mrs. Betty Jo Mauney Smith, 22 Elm street. second grade teacher, took their pupils on a picnic to the park near the school on Thursday. Thomas t Butch) Harry is re covering from the mumps. Joel Roundtree is out again after hav ing the mumps. Mrs. Edna Jackson of Shelby spent the week end with Mrs. C. M. McCarter. Mr. Grady Ross, who is employ ed at Aiken, S. C., spent the week end with his wife and family. Misses Dorothy McC^aw and Lowell Ellis, elementary teach ers, who live in the teacherage here, have moved to their homes near Clif fside for the summer va cation. Water Big Venture For Potato- Growers Myer Levin, sweet potato ship per of Williamston, says the only thing. wrong with his electric hot bed is that "I didn't build more." One day last week when Henry Covington, horticulture special ist; Howard Ellis, in rl.arge ?f engineering; and J. P. Woodard, peanut specialist, all of the State College Extension Service, stop ped by levin's new farming ope rations at Everetts, his tenants were. busy pulling plants for the 35 acres that he devotes to sweet potatoes. This year, for the first time. Levin had constructed an electric hot bed, 30 by 6 feet at a cost of $75 He likes everything about it except that it is too small to sup ply plants for a commercial ven ture. Next year he hopes to reme dy this. Water is a big problem to Le vin now, and the plants were be ginning to show their thirst. Le vin has to bring water in large tanks, mounted on a fagon, to his plant beds. Ellis thinks he might solve his problem by sink ing points about his beds in such a way as to assure an adequate water supply and still permit ro tation of the beds. Pitcher pumps might be used to bring the water "P. \ ?: vv.JJ** Covlp,^^n ^0jd LeVin "lit Iher* wai little to the old theory about watering at night. The only thing you might save by this is a little water, but the cost of keeping labor up at night wipes out even this, they said. FOB jSALE * i ? - .? ? ' ? Construction PAPER * . 11 colon r ALSO CARD BOARD and ' OTHER PAPERS - if HERALD ? Publishing HOUSE A- !>? ?? . VV. i/v. Sf Phonos 167 ?r College Students Take Tom LAURINBURG ? A group c)f more than 40 North Carolina State College seniors were guests of McNalr's Yield-Tested Seed Company Thursday for its An nyal Agronomy Farm tour.' The seniors, all majoring in Agronomy, spent half a day tour ing the vast McNair Farms in Scotland and Robeson counties. Visitors included Garland E. Still, Jr., Kings Mountain. The. farm tour began with an inspeotion of the Seed Company's large corn processing plant near Laurinburg where' the group saw how hybrid seed com was stored, treated, cleaned, graded, packed, and shipped to market. The college sertiors next visited McNair's experimental farm where they were shown latest tests being made with corn, to bacco, cotton, and other crops. Al?o shown were plant breeding experiments, fertilization prac tices, weed control, and irrigation tests. The remainder of the afternoon consisted of visits to a large re claimed ladino-fescue pasture grazing a herd of Hereford beef cattle; an anhydrous ammonia demonstration; and a large land clearing and reclamation project. The final stop was at the Hal bert Jones Farm in Robeson County where a farm overseer's cost accounting records and a de monstration of a complete farm unit was featured. During their stay in Laurin burg, the seniors also visited the Dixie Guano Company plant and Laurinburg Milling Co. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the po- I wer of sale contained in a deed I of trust given by Frank Guinn and wife, Ruby Guinn, to the undersigned as trustee for the Home Building and Loan Asso ciation on the 27th day of April, 1950, now on record in the Reg ister of Deeds Office for Cleve land County in book 366 at page 234 to secure the payment of the indebtedness therein mentioned and default having been made in the payment of the same and at the request of the Home Building and Loan Association, I will sell for cash at the court ?> house door in Shelby, Cleveland County, North Carolina, on MONDAY, JULY 13, 1953, at 10:00 o'clock a. m., or within le g^l hours, the following describ-. ed real estate: BEGINNING at a stake In D. C. Mauney's line, corner of lot No. 1 and runs thence with line of lot No. 1, 84 1/2 E. 213 feet to a stake; thence N. 36 E. 180 feet to a stake; thence F. 84 1/2 W. 231 feet to a stake in I>. C. Maun ey's line; thence with his line 31 W. 188 feet to the BEGINN ING, containing 1 acre, more or less and "being lot No. 5 in Sec tion B of the James Rice prop erty as will appear on a map or plat made by A. P. Falls, Sur veyor. This the 8th day of June, 1953. B. S. NEILL, Trustee. Davis and White, Attorneys. 6:11?7:12 , Negro Wheat Field Is Community Pride The crop pride of the Eagle Rock community of Wake County seems to be thfc Atlas wheat <ie monstration on the farm of Mil lard Perry, according to W. C. Davenport, Negro County agent for the Agricultural Extension Service. < ? I Davenport says Perry, a young \ and progressive Negro farmer, \ decided tp use both the better practices and varieties of wheat this year. The approximately four-acre .plot stands uniform in growth with large heads on "just about every stalk In the field. Davenport says the crop is ex pected to be the lu'st ever pro duced on the Perry farm and j perhaps the best ever produced j in the entire community. ? j After a field meeting with) othjpr Negro fanners recently on : I ho Perry farm, Davenpoft says it has beea easy to get others to do a fetter job of. growing wheat. Perry is president of the commu nity Older Youth Club and the county Older Youth Council. April 1 stocks of edible vegeta ble oils were 35 . per cent above ;i year ago and a record. Custom Feed Grinding and Mixin: .With | . . t * ? - ' f;' I ' Molasses Mixer We have all the equipment and ingredients necessary to make your home grown grains into a finished feed for your livestock. Our Big Modem Equipment Includes A 125 H. P. Hammer Mill Equip ped With Magnets And A 3000 Pound Feed Mixer? Plus A Molasses Mixer, designed To Apply Molasses In Any Proportion With Unfail ing Evenness, To Dry Mixed Feeds. f ' In addition to a full line of Proteins and Minerals and Concentrate Supplements, we carry a complete stock of Farm Feeds. If you are using feeds you will be inter ested in the service we are equipped to offer you. Kings Mountain Cotton Oil Co. \ Manufacturers of COTTON SEED PRODUCTS ICE COAL COTTON GINNERS Phone 124 SO POWERFUL! cknkHAl PRICK* EH.Hr J SO LOW IN PRICE ! fudge Pontine purely from tk)> rt Midpoint of | w _ _ _ . / quality and It's JHtfrd to believe that it it actually "a low-priced car. Certainly it's as ?distinctively styled as any car on fhe road? and its beauty carries 'through into its luxurious, roomy Body by Fisher. Performance wise, Pontlac is second to none, with power to spare that whisks yon througV city traffic or cruises with remarkable economy. And Pontlac is a big car, with * long, 132-inch wheelbase. But Pontine' $ outstanding feature it its price? a price so low that If you can afford any new car you can afford a Pontlac. Come in and get the facts that prate tfcardollar for dollar you can't beat a Pontlac! Dollar for Dollar you cant beat KDfCAID PONTIAC PRONE 9-2571 BESSEMER CUT
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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June 11, 1953, edition 1
13
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