. . - tJ
P«^ 8
ICINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD, KINGS. MOUNTAIN. N. a
TKurs3ay, 3uly 2T, 1965
The world’s most disastrous
earthquake was in 1737 in India
when 300,000 lives were taken.
KEEPING PACE
mu PROGRESS
When you bring your prescription
to us, it's filled by our Registered
Pharmacist who received
professional training in the
science of Pharmacy. He is
familiar with a minimum of 7,000
presciiption items and adds
hundreds more to his store of
knowledge each year. His
constant study, combined with
his.exknsive.sJiilLaj'fllraihlng,
enables him to serve you in a
most efficient manner.
Your Pharmacy
Kings Mountain
Drug Company
PHONE 739 2571
I
live up to their motto To Make
the Best Better’.” ■
One of , the featured speakers I
will be Gov. Dan Moore who will,
speak to the 4-irer3 Wednesday'
morning.
Several other outstandng
speakers will appear during the ;
Some 1,500 Tar Heel boys arid week. Chairrellor John T. Cald-1
4-H Club Week
Begins July 25;
Bvents Slated
Social Security
Benefits Reach
9vei $5 Blillion
girls, each outstanding, in 4-H
Jlub achievement, will be ,at
•forth Carolina .Stale Univci'sity
fuly 23-28 for State' 4-II Clu
WeeTc.
Before the week is o\'er the
youmjsters w ll attend classes,
'tear
elect
well. North Carolina St?»te Uni
ve.sity, will deliver an address to
^he 4-H’or> at the opening as
sembly Monday' night.
Dr. II. Brooks Jame.5, deah of
the School of Agriculture and
l.ifo Sciences at N. C. State, will
outstanding speakers and, deliver an add'’css at the Thnrs-
officers f'.r the coming day morning assembly. His topic
A total of 7,755 people in
i Clcvoland County received a to
tal of $5.44].356.1X) in .‘■'bcial se
, cui ity benefits in 19o.'). Li'x G.
Barkley, social security distric'
Tan.agcr in Gas’.onfa, reveale
to(l:«’. an increase of $'>"<’0.37(5.0
and 519 people over the year bt
fore.
year. A highlight of the week
will be the seity.tion of state win
ners in over two dozen 4-H dem
onstrations ami projects.
Other activities throughout tliej
week will be devoional programs, i
group singing, sightseeing, tal
ent performances, and m.any
forms of recreation. i j
Each of the snte's litO
dcs will be represented at the
’nni.'al event, accordincr to Dr
T. C Bhiinck, * s ta te -
leader. He called the
will be “Education For Modern
I Living.”
Salem Rizk, auth.ar
of
A large part or the increase ir.
payments resulted from changes
the, made by the social security a-
book “Syrian Yankee,” will talk! mondmonts of 1965, Mr. Barkley
to the group at tl>e Tuesday said. Those changes which were'
moaning assembly. He will speak 'in addition to the new program
on ‘America Is More Than A | of health insurarfce for the aged.
Country.” ; includt'd a 7'! Increase in month-
Jira Beatt.v, famed track star ■ l.v benefits retroactive to Jan-
^’^'’’’'land Democratic nominee for the ' oar.v 1965; benefits for. .yidows
* * House of Representatives from early as age 62; benefits for
Mpcklenbuvor Co'cnty. w 1! deliver full-time students between 18
4-H -Club:, bh“‘T^iN’Vl«tTFimess“ -and-22; benefit for some divore-
week “an the 4-H Health'Pageant Tues- women; benefits for .some
excellent example of democracy evening,
in action.” '
Getting more specific, Blalock i Some cf the other highlights
says th^ annual meeting offers of the week will include a per-
people over 72 who hadn’t work
ed long enough to get social se
curity before; and the payment
of disability insurance benefits
the 4-H’ers the opportunity for formance by the Flag Pageant to workers who are unable to
personal growth and develop- Group from Pensacola. Fla., and vvork zecause of a disability that
ment, and “serves to motivate the Honor Club tapping cere : lasts 12 months or more,
them to strive ever harder to mony on Monday night, the dress | addition to the people who
' ! review on Wednesday began getting benefits in 1965 be-
Tho t.s4lpnt narAfip nn Thtirsdav »>
Health And Safety Tips
A/1C RICHARD A. LYNN
, . On Duty In Vietnam
(U. S. Air Force Photo)
FIRE LOSSES ARE ENORMOUS
The yearly damage toll to homes and property from fires
is appalling. You can, however, protect yourself from
disastrous loss with adequate insurance. SEE US!
WE WRITE INSURANCE FOR ALL NEEDS
THE ARTHUR HAY AGENCY
•ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE'
PHONE 739-3659
the talent parade on Tluirsday pause of these changes,” Bark
evening. | ipy continued, “a good many old-
iLibby Cooke,. Rt. 2, Cleveland.who. upon applying for
president of the State 4-H Coun- f^^y J'^re eligi-
cil, will preside at the opening | for regular social secu^y
session. Other council officers in-, bnefits. too. All in all, the 196o
, elude Larry Hancock, Seagrove. ^ Cleveland County m
; vice president; Donald White. Rt.
i 1, Siler City, secretary-treasur-
I er; and Linda Hunt, Denton, his-
1 torian.
The evening assemblies
at 7:30 in the William
Reynolds Coliseum. The pu'olic is
invited
elude among others, 3,496 retir-
j cd workers, 644 disabled work-
i ers and 2,619 wives and chil-
I dren of retired, disabled, or de-
i ceased workers. The averaige
start! monthly social security benefit
Neal • for Cleveland County b^neficiar-
j ies amounted to approximately
i $58.00 in 1965.”
A/IC Lynn
Now On Duty
In Vietnam
with"^ u.s.
COMBAT AIR
FORCES, Vietnam — U.S. Air
Force Ailman Rihcard A. Lynn,
son of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. •Lynn
of 513 Cleveland Ave., Kings
Mountain, N. C., has played a
vital role in a record-setting air
lift in Vietnam.
Airman Lynn is an aircraft
mechanic in a maintenance
squadron for C-123 Provider air
craft at Tan Son Nhut Air Base.'
i The Providers set the new rec
ord in May when they flew 4,247
combat support missions, trans
ported 8,773 tons of cargo and
20.340 passengers, and dispenser!
1199,450 gallons of defoliation
I chemicals for a total of 3,064
I flying hours. The May mark bet-
I tered previous records by more
i than 20 per cent.
The airman is a member of
the Pacific Air Forces which
provides air offensive and de
fensive units in Southeast Asia,
the Far Eastand Pacific.
Airman Lynn, a graduate of
Kings Mountain High School, is
married to the former He
G. Moller.
Bed wetting on the part of
older children is a nuisance pro
blem that plagues untold Amer
ican families
Bed wet-ting is messy for the
parents, who have to clean it up.
It is uncomfortai ie and humili-
ating-for the child. And it can be
very difficult to stop.
One of hundreds qf letlers on
this theme received annually by
Today’s Health, the magazine of
he American Medical Associa
tion, begins: “I have four chil
dren, ages nine, seven, five and
four, who have never achieved
the ability to stay dry at night.
AH still have occasional acci
dents during the day.”
At least two separate studies
n hospjtal clinics, says Today’s
Health, revealed that incidence
of bed wetting among 1,000 pa
tients over five years old was as
high as 25 per cent. Also, there
is evidence^ from- several studies
that bed wetting can be a heredi
tary as well as a psychalogical
problem.
The parent is advised to ex
plore with the physician the var
ious means that might be taken
to train the children—either to
enlarge their bladder caacity so
they could go through the night,
or to respond to the feeling of
fullness and wake up before wet
ting the bed.
Several possibilities exist: use
of drugs ta relax the bladder;
use of salty foods at bedtime to
cut down urine secretion; train
ing the child to voluntarily re
frain from urinating for longer
and longer periods. The family
physician may suggest other
measures which may prove help
ful.
]jMx. Thombuig's
Rites Conducted
GREAT
1 PUY!
OVAL
RUGS
Funeral rites for Love Andrew
Thornburg, 79, of Charlotte,
Cleveland County native, were
held Sunday at 3 p.m. from Beth
lehem Baptist church, interment
following in the church cemetery.
Mr. Thornburg died Thursday j
night at 9 p.m. in Green Acres |
Rest Home fallowing ‘ several |
year’s .illness. He was son of the :
late Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas |
Thornburg of Cleveland County, i
SPECIAL THIS SALE ONLY! HURRY FOR
BEST COLOR SELECTIONS! —
Rev. James Graham, Rev Love
Dixon and Rev. J. J. Thornburg
officiated at the final rites.
Surviving are his brothers, J.
T Thornburg of Milledgeville,
Ga., Charles Thornburg of New
berry, S. C. and Miles O. Thorn-,
burg 'af Gastonia; and, two sis
ters, Mrs. Clarence D|xon and
Mrs. Will Wilson, both of Char
lotte
With an
Accutrori®
timepiece
it’s never
about 4:30.
It’s 4:30.
$125.00
UP,
How can we be so sure?
All the parts that make a
watch go fast or slow have
been left out of the Accutron
timepiece.
It has no balance wheel, no
mainspring. Instead, it uses an
electronic tuning fork that
vibrates 360 times a second
and keeps time so precise, the
Accutron timepiece comes
with the first guarantee of ac
curacy ever given,*
(The same movement is
used as a timer in satellites,
where an error of seconds can
amount to an error of thou
sands of miles.)
So with the Accutron time
piece, you’ll never know about
what time it is. _
'Vbu’ll know exactly.
Accutron by Bulova *Tlie
Accutron timepiece is guaran
teed to within a minute a month.
We will adjust to this tolerance
if necessary.Guarantee is for one
full year.
Other Watches $12.95 UJjj
JEWELRY
BB
52?
CONVENIENT TERMS!
Handsome Early American oval rugs that give you
double wear because they're reversible. Gay,
heartwarming colors, tightly stitched to keep
their good looks. Four-for one low price!
See these fine rugs today at Sterchi'sl
Open Evenings By
IT COSTS LESS AT-
PHONE 739-5451
Appointment — FREE
Delhrery To Any Surrounding
Community
PHONE HENDERSON HERNDON
THE SOUTH'S LARGEST HOME FURNISHERS
KINGS MOUNTAIN
fc. L
YOUR FRIENDLY STERCHI SALESMAN
BIG 17 CU.FT.
PHILCO
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ert*?*’*
bar
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This is * licsimils o( tht NEMA sell. When the ictuat
seal it allixed lo a reliiierator It slinillis that the net
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published are ctrlllitd accurate by tht National
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Center Service
118 YORK RD.
PHONE 739-3216
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