Roger McDaniel Serving Overseas Sgt. Roger D. McDaniel, USA. is a member of Pro v. Co. 2234 Co. D? stationed in Europe. He sail ed for Europe on April 3. Sgt. McDaniel. \\~hp served I four years In the Air Force, ce enlisted in the army in January. He is the son of Mr. ' and Mrs. "David McDaniel of Jacksonville, I N. formor Kin^s Mountain 1 residents. ? His :iddre-\? I-: P.cgpr D. McDaniel. iv'-.u. v'o, 2231. C ?. 1).. ! Ai*t ) b72, < o i'.'siiii.ister. .',e>v i York. Jl." Y,; SSJ0.00D , ? CITY OF KINGS MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA EOND3 Sealed bids will l><* received un- . til 11 o'clock a. m:. Eastern Stan ; dard Time, April 27, 19." i, by the .undersigned at its office in jhc . City of Raleigh, North Carolina, for the -following bonds of the . City of Kings Mountain, North Carolina, for the following bonds I of the CJty Of Kings Mountain, f North Carolina, dated May 1, 195-1 and maturing annually, May 1 as follows, Without option of prior | payment: , . '?.??'I $450,000 Water and Sewer Bonds (consolidation of $250,00 water ! bonds and $200,000 sanitary se wer bonds) maturing annually $8,000 1956 to 1960, $10,000 1961 to 1S66, $20,000 1967 to 1983, all inclusive, and $10,000 1984. $150,000 Recreation Facilities Bonds maturing annually $4,000 1955 to 1959, $5,000 1960 to 1963, and $10,000 1964 to 1974, all in elusive. Denomination $1,000; principal and semi-annual interest ;M and N 1), payable in New York City in legal tender; general obliga tions; Unlimited tax; coupon bonds reglsterable as to principal alone; delivery on or about May 20, 1954, at place of purchaser's choice. There. will be no auction. A separate bid for bach Issue (not less than par and acrued interest) is required. Bidders are requested to namle the "interest rates, not exceeding 6% per an num, in multiples of 14 of 1%. Eueh as, !'I bought my property (real relate) at a sale ordered by %the cou.t; so I know my title Is good." Thousands of dollars are spent annually f<>r the purchase of property be.ld at sales to collect taxes, settle, tes tates, ? and the like, without exam ination of titles because of the mistaken belief that the courts assume a responsibility for the condiiioh of the title. A-ny title attorney will tejl you that, as a class, titles which have been through court proceedings contain more defects than any other. G#ne?Mly, the court has no duty other l/ian to pass on the issues submitted to it. Thb condi tion of the title to property tb be sold is not usually one of the issues. It is up to the buyer to satisfy himself as to the condi tion of the title. To- take a man's land from him and sell it is a very serious mat ter. Yet, this can be done to col lect the taxes due on it, In doing so, however, the county or munici pality must follow closely the pro cedure required by the law. If any detail is overlooked, a sale pursuant to the foreclosure may later be set aside, thereby causing the buyer to give up the land. For example, the law requires that ihe owners of the property bte notified of such foreclosure by a summons which must be per sonally served if the owners can NOTICE TO SHAREHOLDERS Notice is hereby given that, pursuant to action of the Board of Directors, a meeting of the shareholders of First National Bank, of Kings Mountain, North Carolina, will be held in the lob by of the bank on Monday, May 10, 1954, at 4 p: m., to consider and vote upon a program invol ving, along with matters inci dental thereto: The adoption of stockhold ers' resolution and amendment of articles of association re ceived from the Comptroller of the Currency which may be examined at the bank at any time during office hours prior to the aforesaid meeting. The resolution and amendment of articles of association are for the purpose of authorising a) A change in the par value per share and number of shares of the bank's common stock from $l60 and 1,000, respectively, to $10 and 10,000, respectively; b) An appropriate amend-' ment to the articles of associa tion of the bank reflecting those Changes. , L* E. ABBOTT, Cashier. This the fifth /day of April, 1954. . ? > a 8 29. FOR HEALTHY SCHOOL DAYS ? USE? Sunrise Dairy's Wholesoma. Flavorful ' Milk Products: SUNRISE SWEET MILK jwj, ' ?'22BPSLsi*- a* * . Pastevu-ized^ # Homogenized iGAsramj by C bailee W. Daniel for the North Carolina Lai Association he found by diligent -search with' in the state; Often, thia cannot be done because the owner has. a? 1 bundojleri the property and mov ed to another community, and his residence (s unknown to county officials. When the property be comes more valuable at a later (date, the purchaser finds it is al most impossible to avoid bavins ! the property taken from him by the?former owner who, can show i that, if county officials had made ja diligent search, they could have served a summons on such former owner. Often the executor of an estate finds it nedessary to sell the real estate for the purpose of obtain ing funds to pay. the debts of the deceased. In doing so. the execu tor must remember that the real estate belongs to the heirs of the deceased and not to the estate itself, or to the executor. It is ?merely subject to the call of the j executor, who may sell it to pay debts if the .personal property of the. deceased is insufficient for | this purpose. In making such sale, however, the executor must | 'give to each heir proper notice ithat- the sale will be made, must | prove the insufficiency of the per sonal property of the deceased to pay the deceased's debts, and ! must otherwise comply with the requirements of the law authoriz ing such sale. A failure to do any. of these things may create a de fective title to the property sold. Correcting such defects is diffi cult and often very expensive if thfcy are not discovered until after the estate is closed. In addition, the purchaser of property which is sold under or der of court usually gets a deed without warranty, so if the title is found to be defective, the owner, has no one to whom he can turn and demand payment of his dam ages. Every attorney has seen dozens of clients invest life savings in property having defective titles such as outlined above. Your at torney would much rather chargte you a small fee for examining your title and protecting your in vestment than a large fee. for try ing to clear a cloudy title. More about title search next week. 26 At Craftspun Finish Course On Plant Saiety Twenty-six Craftspun Yarns, Inc., employees have completed the ten-hour safety course of the North Carolina Industrial com mission, according to FWix A. Scroggs, of Asheville, who taught the course. Mr. Scroggs, an Industrial com mission safety representative, said the course includes a history of accident prevention in indus try, causes of accidents, care of accident injuries, new employee safety Instruction, and off-job ac cidents. The job of the safety division of the Industrial commission is to reduce accidents in injury, Mr. Scroggs said, and other ef fort r, in addition to the safety course. Include safety talks, safe ty films, and working with local plant safety committees. He said that in textiles alone. North Carolina had 1,715 acci dents in the fiscal year 1951-52, at a cost of $746,000 and 90,174 days lost from work. For the same year all North Carolina in dustrial accidents resulted in 148 deaths and 128 permanent disabi lities among the 97,000 accidents. Competing the ten-hour course at Craftspun Yarns, Inc., were: Russell Owensby, Doytt Falls, Ed win Dixon, Harold Falls, Johnny Chaney, Norman Roper, Harold Phillips, Kenneth Hullender, Fred Kiser, Edward Anthony, James Huffstetler, Wesley Kiser, Wil liam Goins, Odrey Ernst, Jan He Martin, Helen Falls, Yates Ross. George Wright, Andy Huffsietler, Beulah Hudson, Winston Spur Ung, Wesley Thompson, Ruth Owens by, Willis Bagwell and Ray Morrison. ABTHBITIS? ?- I have /been wonderfully biass ed in being restored to active life after being crippled in near ly every Joint in my body and with muscular soreness from head to foot. I had Rheumatoid Arthritis and other forms of Rheumatism, bands deformed any my ankles were set. Limited space prohibits telling you more here but If you will write me 1 will reply at once and tell you how I received this won* derful relief. Mrs. 1*1 a S. Wier MS Jtsbar Hlk Drtrs ? P. O. Boat Wt5 Jackson 1. muslilliH Veterans Urged Tc Enter School ; Before Deadline Post ? Korea veterans. released ' from military service before Au gust 20, 1952, had hotter start making plans now if they intend ; enroll in Korcin.CH BUI tr.-in ,1ng 1 v.turi ,i fast ? approat-iim\> deadline; Veterans Atlmirtistra tion. said. . ? c'nde:*- the law, thc.^c veterans 'actually must bejiin training he. | fore this ? coming Axrgust 20, in order to continue aftocwaids. For many of the vr vans, sum jmer- terms' in getting [under tt'&y in ab<>u. two n'.o; ihs - Will be their "rist ?'.h.ance start 01 ;t saining in time. ( fai.'s S.h-jol terms begin ate It doesn't pay to wait until "> r. last minute before taking action, VA emphasized,... Once a veteran has decided to train under the Korean GI Kill, ? he must choose the school and course tie wants. He must make certain that the course is Gl-ap proved. Any VA Regional Office can furnish him information on this point. Then he must be sure that the school will accept him for train ing. His next step is to file an appli cation for Korean GI Bill train ing with the VA, or with the ap proved school in which he wishes to enroll. Since all these steps take time, i veterans should act promptly to avoid disappoint rr ent. For veter ans requesting VA counseling to help them decide on an objective and a training program, prompt action is a "must"; the counseling process adds still another step that is necessarily time-consum ing. VA reminded veterans that the < August 20 deadline applies to ve- i terans planning to take on-the job and onthe-farm training, as well as to those who intend to go to school. This August's cutoff date applies only to veterans who left the service on or before Au gust 20, 1952, VA said. Veterans separated after that time have two years from the date of their separation in which to begin Ko rean GI training. QUESTIQN ? May a sellter charge me more for a ^house than it has beten appraised^ for by the VA, if I buy it with a GI loan? ANSWER ? No. Under the law i Anyone who tries to grow to ma toes in the Spu th is concerned with the problem of wilt. There :;o two kinds of wilt which com r tomatoes ft.*- * t;: i r ? a. ..I bac'>oriai wilt ? - eanso/T dij fi;:ont organism-- W'm;h .. v f?>' ?i f?ii jij ?> . . | of ihi<- staio, ' jivith <-art t< ; -.-vc .. 11) tvy:* *H*il ^ ? I *'> -??>*'?< iV . ^ ..mm wi;'t . ; , : u 5iv?? i;V, ?" ! v : jj'sJf iff v.jlt P V? J V r ,.??? #iv still .. ,i ?'.i' VH ' iirk Hut seem to. fiivtf'Voi'y *iivt ?i? ;.|vjii^t?tnct*. to t.ht? I'l.csrnt stt.un> ii{ filial join i.it. There .110 at pi went no - \ a ; leiie.A available v iiieii. .no jes?s tant to baeteriai *\vtit.- That is why when you jxJani a variety re commended t<> you as will to sis tant. the plants jtiay air die of. wilt. Bacterial ' wilt is commonly known as Cfranvillc wilt where the purchase price may not ex ceed the reasonable value deter mined by VA appraisal. It is il legal to pay more. Total United States acreage planted to feed grains in 1954 will be above 1953 and the 1948-52 average if farmers carry out their March 1 intentions. " Local & Long Distance Truck Service Agents For B. t on lo<* '.ox shed v. aermelons. Tlr. N"c\\ HarnpSltre Midget, variety ! Which prows ', i the iwof a citi* 1 i uiiipt' Ivis' i>v' "tic1 quitO .i: - i.- ivj: ;>r i 1 >k<*' as live f?v? ? ;> 1 1 . A I . .. '? 1 * . i ? t;' l)e? ?ii. i'ii. ?v is? ? 'Aiiwihe^, i ?'! t.iel ? ?*i the 1 I iie.j v.irle ? t J\ VV'Jiicfl H"lll :tln>: t HI to 1_ ; hm !iu; averrvui? it has deep* red -fVfh and |.?:nek seeds. The l>e*i ofdhem.' all. in n v <>p;?i Ion; is "the Japanese ^"et V\ v.UI :avo"i-?'?C I r*>m * to U poniiis in -weight attii ijs n't e\ iX'.ili'Ut quality. There ai*e seldom qjcfre tb an a dozen ma! tire seeds in a melon ? the rest of Jhc seeds are'. undeveloped 'and may.be eat en with the melon. Seeds for planting are quite expensive almost 5 cents per seed this year ? but the results are worth it. As of January 8, 1954, the Com modity Credit Corporation had outstanding loans on 5,739,512 bales of 15)53-crop cotton. Lions Broom Sale Declared Success Chairman J. W. Webster, in a report to members of the Kings M aintain Lions club at the April 1.5 meeting, described the club's annual Broom Sale a "success". Chairman Webster said the V;V*? members tihd already sold Inpotr ;; : ' ? "'m >V" don ? ? ' p.i|-tii\ut:'c-fa < ? jiii .V t* , >vaiHl, aM l'aiil Kiv?- for. th ? \ lesman'shtp., 1 Ip -.1 stated ap "W. preciation to C. E. Wo r lick fop .furnishing storage space for the 'brooms and for serving as chief bookkeeper for the project. Following Mr. 1 Webster's re port. the club applauded frequent ly an entertainment program pre sented by the Pan topi imers, a group of Kings Mountain high school mimics who imitate the Sunshine Bays and intersperse their vocal pantomime with vau deville type sfc^s Included in. the group are Palmer Huffstetler, I'-itiddy Mny'es. K usnie l?ayton and Horn ) 71:1: JIL'KALD Feel Brighter Tomorrow! DRINK Cheerwsne TODAY! CHEERWINE PROVIDES NEEDED ENER&T Drink to your health. Drink for toste thrills. Next time and every time, drink delicious CHEERWINE. Cheerwine is in tune with joor ?u