Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Aug. 12, 1965, edition 1 / Page 10
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Page 2 KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Tliurs<lay, August 12. 1965 Joan Fontaine To Star In Next Show, "Unexpected Guest" At Summer Theatre Miss Susan Wiggins, Charles Putnam Pledge Vows In Double-Ring Rites Bessemer City’s Holland Me morial Baptist church provided the setting Sunday for -the 4 p.m. wedding of Miss Susan Ann Wig gins and Charles Wayne Put nam. Rev. Oscar Costner heard the couple exchange vows of the double-ring ceremony. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of silk organza and Chan tilly lace, styled with a basque bodice and trimmed with lace appliques, extending down the side of the bell-shaped skirt. The gown had a full chapel Train. Her silk illusion veil was caught to a princess crown of pearls. She carried a nosegay of yellow roses and wliite carnations. Becky Kennedy of Kings Moun tain, the bride’s cousin, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids wore Billie Blackburn of Bessemer City. Jer- rie Goodman of Gastonia, Peggy Putnam and Ann Putnam of Kings Mountain, sisters of tlie bridegroom. All the attendants wore floor- length gowns of yellow whipped creme material and carried sin gle long-stemmed yellow roses. The bridegroom's father was best man. Ushers were Dale Put nam and Glenn HieJes of Kings Mountain, the bridegroom’s cou sins, Eddie Robbs of Kings Moun tain and Ernest Raduly of Shel by. The bridegroom’s parents en tertained at a reception in the fellowship hall after the cere mony. The j'ellow and whire theme of the wedding was car ried out in decorative details. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter J. Wiggins of Bessemer City, the bride is a graduate of Besse mer Ci’y high school. Thf bridegroom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Hoyle Putnam of Kings .Mountain. A graduate of Kings Mountain high school, he is employed by Harris - Teeter Super .Market in Kings Moun tain. Bes.semor City will be home for the newlyweds. The Charlotte Summer Theater presents Agatha Christie’s mys tery thriller “The Unexpeeted Guest” starring Joan Fontaine, beginning 'fut'sday evening, Au gust 17 and nunning tiirough Sunday evening, August 22 at CK'ens Auditorium in Charlotte. In the cour.w of a distinguish ed Hollywood career, J(jan Fon taine has starred in more than fifty films. She is the recipient of the film colony’s coveted Aca demy Award for her |>erforni- ance in “Suspicion” and the an- fiuai citation by the New York Film Critics’ Circle for her per formance in “Rebecca", she also earned Academy Aw'ard nomi- natic-ns for "Rebecca" and “The Constant .\ymph". Among her other notable films have been "Jane Eyre", “Affairs of Susan”, "The Emperor Waltz”, "Ivan- hoe", "September Affair", “A Certain Smile" and “Tender Is The Night". On the stage. Miss Fontaine has starred in “Tea and Sympathy”, “Hillary”, “Su san and God" and “A Severed Noon Rites pondence course from a school in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She is employed by Mineile Mills hi Grover', The bridegroom is the san of Mr. and Mis. Griffin Gobi of Shelby. A 1984 graduate of Shel by high school, he was gi’aduat- ed this spring from .^Vuto Diesel Mechanic’^ .Scho.)l in Nashville. Tennessee. Ho is employed by R. D. Hord Garage in Shelby. After a wedding trip to Gatlin- burg, Tennessee and Nashville, the newlyweds will make their home in Gi’ovoi'. BWC Circle Group Held Supper Meeting Members of the BWC Circle of Temple Baptist church gathered Monday night for a ham supper at the home of Mrs. T. B. Yarbrough. Mrs. Yarbrough presided at a .short business meeting. Church Groups HERE ARE SOME DECORATING HINTS iMMd By GENE TIMMS From time to time, we are plea.sed to bring you some decorating sug gestions which we trust you will find inter esting and per haps useful. Here are a few that we presen’^ this week: Don’t over-crowd your rooms. Most rooms contain too much furniture. Furnish with the least amount necessary to do the job — not the most. In your living room, try to arrange your furniture ac cording to your family living habits. And, there should be a conversation group so that people may face each other while talking. II your telcvi.sion set is in the living room, your main seating pieces should face the set. Bo sure to leave open pas sage-ways so that you can easily walk from one room to another, and from one part of a room to anothc'c. After deciding on your furn iture arrangement, color sch eme. styles, etc., try to select furniture you can enjoy living with and using, aside from furniture you like to look at Don’t furnish in such a way that the living room is re.serv- ed for company and not the family. The average family furn ishes a home just a few times during their lives, so try to select quality and style that is lasting. We are here to serve you — and help you — and we look forward to talk ing with you when you are ready to shop for any furni ture or furnishing ideas, and remember you always get dis counts at our store, whether you pay cash or buy on time, we will save you money! Picnic Sunday Members of the Intermediate and Junior Departments of Mid view Baptist church sponsored a wiener roast and picnic Sunday at Rankin Lake near Gastonia. Members of the Adult and Pri mary classes were also invited to attend. Mr. and Mrs. Vester Page and Sunday School Superintendent Lalan Franks chaperoned the group. Gregorys Announce Son's Arrival Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Gregory announce the birth of a son. Wayne Edward Gregory, July 27th. The baby was named for his maternal grandfather. Kings Mountain grandparents are .Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Greg ory and Mr. and Mrs. Hoyle Ed ward Owens. Wayne Edward is fourth grandchild of the Gregorys and second grandchild of the Owens family. SOCIAL CALENDAR Parties Honor Bride-Elect Miss Viola Ellison, bride-elect of Sunday, was honor guest at two parties this week. Mrs. J. D. Biddix and Mrs. Ol- lie Wheeler entertained together Friday night at the parsonage of East Gold St. Wesleyan Metho dist church at a bridal party which carried out the wedding theme of blue and white in both decorations and refreshments. The 15 guests showered the h o n o r e e with miscellaneous household gifts. Miss Ellison received a corsage of blue and white carnations from the hostesses and an honor gift. SatnnUiy: 7:30—The Margrace Woman’s Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Grady Rhea. 7:30 - Rehearsal for the Bry- ant-Harry wedding in First Bap tist churcli followed by an after- rehearsal party to be given by members of the bridegroom- elect’s family at Kings Mountain Countr>' club. 7:30—Rehearsal for the Elli- somKilgore wedding in East Gold Street Wesleyan Methodist church. 8:30—Mrs. Bertha Ellison is honoring Miss Viola Ellison and John David Kilgore at an after- rehearsal party at her home on DUling street. Sunday: 3:00 -The wedding of Miss Viola Magdalene Ellison and John David Kilgore in East Gold Street Wesleyan Methodist church. 4:00—The wedding of Miss Head". ‘The Unexpected Guest” has already enjoyecl enormous suc cess in London, and is being pre sented at the Charlotte Summer Theater as part of its pre-Broad way tour. 'J'he intriguing mystery play has received enthusiastic reception in all its engageme^lts the summer circuit. Agatha Christie, the world’s foremost writer of mystery plays, has woven a suspenselul plot, liberal ly sprinkled with humor, a;.out the efforts of Miss Fontaine, with the help of an “imoxpected guest" to unravel the mystery of her husband’s death. In ty'pical Christie style, the finger of sus- oicion points at one time or an other to ev'orvone in the play, keeping t h e audience guessing and gasping to the final curtain. S u m m e !• Tlieater producer Stanley VVaren, encouraged by the success of last season's pre- Broadway production "The Way ward Stork", has booked Miss Fontaine in “The Unexpected Guest” as an exclusive for the Carolinas audience. “This is the first time we’ve presented a 'whodunit',’’ said Waren, “and I feel ceiiain we won’t be disap pointed. ‘Tile Unexpected Guest’ has been setting attendance rec ords all summer. Of the many Women’s Health PERSONALS ' Perry, and Mrs. Ivey Roi>erspent i Ih.st wet'kend at Myrtle Beach, S. C. Sherrill Spears has returned to' Chicago (WiMNS): Much of the e^T.otional upset that follows surgery for "female complaints” Is due to lack of information. This finding comes from a gyne cologist and a psychiatrist who studied the reactions of lOS wom en ranging in age from 20 to 50. The emotional stress, the doctors say, has several causes: • Ignorance of female anato my. Since almost all the wo.ren liad only a vague understanding of their physiology, they' had many foal's aFoul how their oi’- gans would function after sur gery. • Fear of cancer. Many women mistakenly believed they had cancer <*specially if there had b<»en internal bleeding. They were highly "cancer-conscious.” • Worry about femininity. Many' were so coiu'ornc<! that their femininity had been affect ed that they asked that their hjsband.5 not be told the nature of their operations. They feared the husbands might show less nterest in them or stay away from home >rore frequently. The investigating doctors ob served, h vvever. that men who were well informed were more also harms the esophagus, ac- ' spending 10 days with Mrs. cording to a senior medical in- ’Adams' parents, Mr. ami Mrs. vestigator at the Veterans Ad- ' McDaniel Mr. and Mrs. Charles Adams and son, David, of Falls Church, rsfew York City after spending a week's vacation with his paients, Mr and Mrs. Goldman Spears, and other relatives. Va., returned home Sunday imlnistration Hospital here. The esophagus is the canal linking the pharynx to the stomach. Green<» A study of 12.589 patients showed that very few' non-smok ers had abnormal esophageal colls. In contrast, almost 9S per cent Df cigarette smokers had abnormal cells. The heavier the smoker, the study showed, the higher was the percentage of ab normality. Mi^. Adams is the former Mil- ; died McDaniel ! Mr. and Mrs. Oscar ' and family spent the weekend in ! Kinston where they went es- Mr. and Mrs. Deck Fulton have attend tuneral serv- returned hame after spimding * Sunday for Mrs. Greene’.s two weeks with their daughter | Matthew Moore, who died and son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. ; Saturday. Cornwell in Cleveland. q Mr. and Mrs. Harold llunni- —o - |(.utt spent Iasi wiH-'k in Boone Mr. and Mrs. George Nolen i where they saw the and children, Renae, Ginger and |“Horn In The West. ^ Giles Ohio. drama. new scTipts I have read, this is j likely to give emotional fai and away the JTost exciting | juppQjt to their wives. in a very long while". Featured in the cast of "The Un expected Guest" are Dennis Pat rick, James Coco. Myra Carter. Guy Spaull, Eleanor Phelps, Steplion .Scott, Herbert Foster and Ian Wilder Performances for "The Unex oected Gue.st" are at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday eve nings and at 2:30 p.m. for the Saturday and Sunday matinees. August 21 and 22. The Sunday evening performance on .August 22 is a special extra one and is at 7:30 p.m. There is still time to see the current production of ‘The Kin ? and I” starring Betty Johnson, which runs through Sunday eve ning. August 1.5. The box-office of the Charlotte Summer Thea ter is open at Ovens Auditorium daily and Sunday from 10 a.m. are also 4.UU—inc vvciiLung Reservations Margaret Lou Br.van| ami Oscar | phone-37( Johnson Harry in F'irst Baptist church. Monday: 7:30-Spiritual Life Group meeting at Central Methodist church. 8:00—Women’s Society of Christian Service at Central Methodist church. Mrs. Bill Baker entertained Tuesday night at her home in Lincolnton at a bridal party honoring Miss Ellison. The 16 guests were school friends of i Miss Ellison and mothers of chil- i dren she had taught in the 1 schools last year, i A green and white motif was j carried out in the decorations ' and on refreshment plates. The bride-to-be received a cor sage of pink carnations which she pinned to her party dress. Mrs. Wayne Goforth, Mrs. Ber^ tha Ellison, mother of the bride- to-be, and Miss Ellison went to Lincolnton for the party. Herndon-Sparrow Invifafions Issued Invitations reading as follows have been issued in Kings Moun tain: Mr. and Mrs. Harold HcmnMght Herndon request the hon<yr of your presence at the marriage of their daughter Lynda Sue to Mr. Bruce Bdvxvrd SparrO/tv on Saturdayt the fourteenth of August One thousand nine hundred and sixtp'fwe at seven^thirty o^clock David Baptist Church Kings Mountain, North Carolina Blackwell Family Had Reunion Sunday Family reunion of the decen- dents of the late Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Blackwell of Kings Moun tain was held Sunday at the home of Mrs. J. D. Montgomery in Grover. Mrs. Montgomery is a granddaughter of the Blackwells. Relatives from Cramerton, Gas tonia, Lincolnton. Kings Moun tain, Grover. Blacksburg, S. C.. Greenville, S. C.. Easley, S, C, and Macon, Ga., attended. Tommy Yarbrough Notes 5th Birthday Terry Yarbrough, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Yarbrough, celebrated his fifth birthday at a party Thursday, August 5, which carried out a Flintstone theme. A decorated birthday cake was served with party refreshments. Guests included Ed Anthony, Ricky and Pam Lemons, Mark Eakers, and Scott and Robby Yar- bro. Terry is grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lee and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Yarbrough all of Kings Mountain. Baptist WMS Met Monday The Women's Missionary So ciety of Second Baptist church gathered for a program, "Co iLaborers In His Service” Mon day night in the church fellow ship hall. Mrs. Helen Tate led the pro gram, assisted by Mrs Lankford. TTie evening prayers were offer ed by Mrs. Redmond and Mrs. Bessie Ham. Business of the meeting includ ed election of officers and an nouncement that a study course would be held by Circles 1 and 2 on August 23 at the church. Members sang the hymn, "Je sus Calls Us”. Thirteen attended. 376-4821 and by mail. The next, and last attraction, at the Charlotte Summer Thea ter is "Never Too Late” starring Dennis O'Keefe and Betty Field, August 24 through August 29. Mrs. W. F. Brewer and daugh ters, Andra and Paula, retiurned to their home in Falls Church, Va. yesterday after spending several days with Mrs. Brewer’'- sister, Mrs! Harold Hunnicutt and Mr. HUnnicutr. Paula spent the summer at Camp Greystone at Tu.xedo, N. C. Miss Laura Page is spending the summer at I ake Camp. Yel lowstone Park, Wyoming. - 0- Mr. and Mrs. Jack Still and family will return Friday to their home in Largo. Fla. after visiting Mr. Still’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Garland E. Still Detroit (WMNS): The later years of a woman’s life will be more comfortable and heallhy 'f she is treated from menopause ')n with the female hormones es trogen and progestogen. This is 'he view of Dr. F. P. Rhoades, who believes that hormone sup- olemcnls will prevent or mini mize wrinkled skin and disease.^ associated with aging, such as high ';;lood pressure, hardening of the arteries, and "thinning” of the bones. These same hor- I mones are the components of the widely-usod contraceptive oil’. East Orange. N. J. iW^INSG Cigarette smoking, already a orime suspect in lung cancer, ! Mr. and Mrs. David Moreau of Cambridge, Mass., are spending this week with Mrs. Moreau’s narents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Page. They will spend next week in Jackson, Mississippi and re turn the following week for an other visit before returning to Cambridge. Mr Moreau is at tending Harvard University. « CLEAN THAT GUN KEEP HUNTING A SAFE SPORT PREVENT FOREST AND GRASS FIRES STAY ALERT WITH A UM2/ fyy a ioAm> 7mtL£^ 'lOJUR CAR TAR£iU)H6£R TO STOP OR ACCeLERRrB, /S RAROCR 70 COMTROU es s^S’-Aou/sr voue P^WM6f Th BARRY TEAGUE NIGHT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18 KINGS MOUNTAIN HIGH SCHOOL GYM 7:30 P.M. First Union National i.s pleased to announce Barry Teague Night in Kings Mountain. As you may know, Barry recently graduated from Davidson College and is now associated with the Trust Department of First Union. After four years of starring on the basket ball team, we are delighted to have him on our bank ing team. Barry and his friends will be on hand to meet you Wednesday, August 18 at the Kings Moun tain High School Gym at 7:30 p.m. Some basketball films will be shown followed by a basketball scrim mage. GET YOUR COMPLIMENTARY TICKETS NOW at First Union National Bank in Kings Mountain. Sorry we cannot fill phone or mail orders. DOOR PRIZES: Free tickets to Davidson Basketball games in the Charlotte Coli seum during the coming season. ... o mist progressive bank ■IHIlUtOCmKStmSTSTEU • MIMlIft TEOIKAL OimiT mSUKANCl CMP0RATI3R CLEAN SWEEP SALE Final Drastic Reductions On All Summer Clothing SHOP ALL DEPARTMENTS AND SAVE! YOU'LL APPRECIATE THESE BARGAINS
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 12, 1965, edition 1
10
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