fage B KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD, KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. y,MMdillL IHt WOMEN'S HEALTH By ELIZABETH STEWART Women's Medical News Service An old saw maintains that the only certainties wo ali face are death and taxes. Now a third can be added for many of us: Over weight. According io some eslimatL*s. about 25.0(X),(MX1 Americans more than one in eigiit ol us are overweight. Wo weigh be tween 10 and 20 |)(*rcent mcno than is healthy. Apart from b<*ing an aesthetic problem, ov(*rweight can lead to sbrious medical j)iobl<*ms. Heart trou’de. high blood prt*ssure, hardening of lh(* arteries, diabe tes — all seem to 1h* related in some way to overweight, al though scientists are not certain why. According to Dr. Michael H. K. Irwin, Medical Officer of the United Nations and author of a Public Affairs jjamphlct on over weight, {H‘opie wiio are ovim - weight may have a shorter life span than those tiicir age who are not. The mortality rate, he says, is 8 percent higher for a middleaged fK»rson 10 pounds a- hove thenormal weight for his height, IS percimt higher if lie is 20 pounds overweight. If you want to remain a long- .Ktemmed Amt*rican twauty ami live longer walfh y )ur weight. Eat sensibly, exercise, and if I you gain weight for no apparent ; cause, see your doctor. I * « « 1 A study of the relationship be tween the rate at which infants suck pacifiers and the rate at which their hearts boat has been made by Dr. John J. Boehm of Lexington, Ky. Dr, Boehm stu died the sucking rate of 30 ba bies ranging in age from a few days to two months. He found that many infants suck in exact time witli the beat of their hearts! o ♦ ♦ President Johnson made an IS- word promise in his Slate of the Union message that was heard round the world - in many places with thankfulness. Tlie promise: "I will seek new ways to use our knowimige to help deal with the REMEMBER — Nutt Memory Course on How to Remember Names. Faces & Facts Tuesday &; Wednesday March 23 and 24 Two-Night Course wm WILLIAM V. NUTT "The Man Who Won't l<et You Forget" Shelby Junior High School Auditorium 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Now over 200 Men and women executives and employees have enrolled SOME OF THE COMPANIES ENROLLED ARE: Firs^ National Bank. Union Trust Company. M&J Finance (Company. .1. L. Ruttlo. Jr. & Co.. Inc., Shelby Mills, Inc., Piltshurgh Plate Glass Co. Fiber Glass Division, Dover Mill Company, Cleveland .Sa\ings & Loan A.ssodation. First Federal Savings & Loan A.ssociation, Shelby Sav ings & Loan A.ssociation. Crawley, Chevrolet Co., Inc., J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc., Sears Roebuck & Co., Porter Brothers, Inc. 86 Tickets Still Available—Enroll Now Before It's Too Late HOW TO ENROLL: Companies may enroll their executives and employees, both men and women. Individuals may also enroll as long as tickets are available. You can pick up your tickets at Suttle's Drug Store in Shelby. The cost is only $20 for both nights. It is guaranteed that the Nutt Course will improve your memory for names, faces and facts or money back. P'or further information dial HU 7-5378. Sponsored and Guaranteed By Shelby Junior Chamber of Commerce explosion in world population...." \ Commenting on the President’s statement, Dr. Alan F. Gutt- macher, one of the nation’s most distinguished obstetricians, and head of Planned Parenthood, said: "We have the knowledge and the means to help ensure that the world we bequeath to our children and grandchildren will ; be a better place to live, a world : in which every child will he wanted--and will therefore bo well-born. Family planning is the key." * * * Most of us think of syphilis as exclusively an adult’s disease but, alas, it is not. Adults can and do pass it on to infants at an alarming rate. Between IfHiO and 1963 syphilis among the newborn-to-one year age group jumpetl nearly iso percent, ac cording to the U.S. Public Health ; Service Communicable Disease i Center, reflecting the rise in I syphilis in the adult population. I To protect babies and mothers. I Dr. William J. Brown, director of j the center’s Venereal Disease I Branch, urges thefollowing: I AH pregnant women should I be blood tested for the disease ; both early and late in pregnancy so prompt treatment can be started if necessary. Treatment during the first 18 weeks of preg- ] nancy will prevent infection of i the baby. Propi'r treatment even j later .may cure the baby although ' it can’t prevent possible damage I to bones and teeth. I —Careful examination of ba- I bies whose mothers have had no prenatal are or who gave birth without medial attention. —Reporting by private physi cians of all cases so that these can be treated and followed up. If there is even the slightest suspicion that the disease has been contracted, see a doctor promptly. You’ll save vourself and your child — a lifetime of heartache. Lime Now For Fall Pasture ! H. R. Clapp, county extension j chairman, says about six months j are needed for lime to dissolve in the soil. Therefore, fields to be used for hay and pasture should :e limed now so they will be j ready for seeding this fall. I Mr. Clapp further states that lime well mi.xed with tiie soil re acts quicker and does a better job correcting the pH than lime broadcast on top of the ground. If row crops are limed before planting, regular cultivation practices will mix lime with the soil. The need for lime should be determined by a soil test before any is applied. If testing indi cates an acid condition the soil must be limed, especially if le gumes are to be growm. Bacteria that fix nitrogen on legume roots cannot work well in acid soils. When soils are limed to the op timum pH these bacteria can soon fix enough nitrogen to pay for liming. Low calcium leveU and other factors caused by an acid condition will make it al most impossible to maintain a good stand of clover or other le gumes. Proper liming increases the a- vailability of phosphate and the capacity of y^ur soil to hold pot ash. Both of these elements are necessary in largo amounts if you are to got high yields. Our heavy textured soils tio-v.p phos phate and our thin soils do not hold much potash so liming is necessary to make the most pm fit from purchased fertilizer. How much lime does your soil need? It is not too late to find out from a sod test in time to lime this spring. Get sampling supplies from the Agricultural Extension Office and send yam- sample to the Soil Testing Lab oratory now. Highway Litter D^es Create Higiuvay litter, if laid end to end, would create the world’s record traffic jam. In fact, it would bring traffic to a dead stop along the prefer red 3000 mile route between New York and San Francisco. That’s what KiX'p America Beautiful, Inc. says. KAB is the the nation’s premiere anti-littor organization. In North Carolina we can be lieve what they say for highway workers annually collect 20.0(K) truckloads of debris from our roads each year. If all of the rubbish dumped on thestreets and highways all over the country last year were concentrated it would bury the transcontinental route a foot deep in discarded wrappers and cat tons, paper cups, plates, tis sues, cans, bottles, garbage and sucli assorted ti’ash as old mat tresses and auto parts. KAB based its graphic picture of the national "litter harvest’’ on an estimate from the US Bu reau nf rublie Roads that up to 20 million cubic yards of litter was dumped on the nation’s streets and hi^liways last year. The estimated price tag for cleaning up the mass was over a hundred million dollars. Everyone can lend a liand l)y putting a litterhag in their car. When thebag is full empty it in a receptacle along the way or take it back ho.Te and get rid of it there. It may seem like a little thing to do. But today’s highway litter jam is made up of "litter things’’- millions and millions of them. If each person would just dispose of his owh litter properly there would bo no highway litter problem. Mis. Wilson's Rites Conducted Funeral rites for Mrs. Annie Lee Wilson, 78. 220 Walker street, were held Wednesday at 3 p.m. from First Baptist church, interment following in Mountain Rest cemetery. Mrs. Wilson died Monday af ternoon at 2 p.m. at her home following several years of de clining health. A native of Gaston County, she was the widow of Jasper Wilson who died in 1953. She was a member of First Baptist church. Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. James Cole of K:ngs Moun tain; and four sons, Haskell Wilson, Harry Wilson and J. U. Wilson, all of Kings Mountain, and Dalbert Wilson of the U.S. Army in Germany. Also surviv- are 14 grandchildren and 12 “f Rev. B. U Raines officiated at ! great-grandchildren. I the final rites. OWN YOUR HOMEl NO DOWN PAYMENT . , for veterans with a GI Loan. NO DOWN PAYMENT . for non-veterans who own a lot. JUST 3% DOWN FHA LOAN. See us immediately. We’ll be happy to handle all the paper work for you. Let us show you our large selection of floor plans. We’ll help you select the ideal plan for your family. SEE FZELDS YOUNG — 125 N. MORGAN ST. SHELBY, N. C. Telephone 482-1461 3:18-4:8 Hc'mf at Beitff \ Jlur t / I i SPECIAUY PRICED! creamy, lustrous PEARL* INECKLACES lp[^ ft plus 10% fed. fox 2 OR 3-STRAND CHOKERS MATINEE LENGTH... OPERA LENGTH.,• UP TO 30" They look so costly, so eltgonl^ you’d never believe they were so low-priced! In fashion lengths, most ore uniform pearls* in youF favorite 8mm size, some grodu- a;ed 4 to 9mm. Every necklace is richly clasped with sparkling rhinestones. Motch’ng torriitgt, 10% f»d. la* SALE! Complete 63-Pc. Houseful / V You Can Purchase 1 -jimi 13-Pc. Bedroom Group *169” - J I Everything you !l:.i Any Complete Room^ Group Separately! ^ NO MONEY DOWN AT STERCHI’S! Just 12-PC. BEDROOM WITH MAMMOTH TRIPLE DRESSER • 9>Draw*r Triple Dresser with Tilting Framed Mirror • Dookcose led * SpcKieus Chest • Dresser iomp • 2 Shredded Foam Pillows * Dedspreod • 9 PictvrM • Mottress ond Bexspring 12-PC. MODERN SOFA-BED GROUP • Sofa-ted In Viscose Tweed • Matching Choir with Foam Cuihloil • 2 Modern Ind Tables • Modern Cocktail Tablo • 2 Modern Toble Lamps • 3 Beautiful Pictures • 2 Sofa Pillows • All Ixpertly Censtructod 39-PC. DINEHE ENSEMBLE INCLUDES DINNERWARi • 7-Pc. Chremo Dtnotta • Lorge Toblo • 6 Matching Chairs • d2‘PCa Dinnorwora Sat ... Servlco for S ■ ■ - '.vd / J- MAKIS A COWOAJABLt \ sro fOA TWO t Sofa-Bed Group 169' FREE DELIVERY HERE AND TO ANY SURROUNDING COMMUNITY—OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT. UP TO MONTHS TO PAY ON APPLIANCES at STERCHI’S! 39-Pc. D:netfc Ensemble .SqQ75 Phone 739.5451 Kings Mountain '/A'// THE SOUTH’S LARGEST HOME FURNISHERS PHONE YOUR FRIENDLY STERCHI SALESMEN- HENDERSON HERNDON AND DON RARREH

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