r Page 2 THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Wednesday, December 22, I97r $200 DOWN FHA 235 PROGRAM STOP sicm V scDjn I r buy a new home FOR AS LOW AS $18,650 ITOTALPRiCi 30 yaar mtfrtgaga • 360 piyi^t* Annual parcentaga ratt 7^ Ur ii]! ISK^I N»i.| OPEN EVERY DAY 1-8 ASHBROOK PARK Ashbrook Park is the prettiest part of town. Space. Comfort. Large, prety lot. They’re all yours in Ash brook Park...a very special place to live. Waco Road, Just Beyond Temple Pork—Turn Right on Sterling Drive You don't need much money. There's nothing like a National home for living space . . . beauty .. . quality. All priced to meet practically any budget.^ It's better than paying rent *, Timber-Lake Builders. Inc. sterling Drive Kings Mountain, N. C. Telephone 739-4906 Buildtrt pf HOMIS' SI Yeert ef LeedtrsMs MORE FAMILIES LIVE IN A NATIONAL HOME THAN ANY OTHER HOME IN THE WORLD The Gastonia Social Security Offite. aloru: with s(K:ial security offices in 850 oomrmunitics around rile country, has been appointed by Secretary of lleaith, EJacation, and Welfare, Elliolt L. Richard son to serve as a local center to receive complaints at»ut sub- rtandard conditions in nursing lomes. Poisons who have infor- ."nation about instances of poor quality care, neglect, unsanitary, or unsafe conditions in a nursing home may give that information to the nearest social security of fice in person, or by letter or phone. If desired, the name od the person making the coertplaint and the name od the nursing home patient wlH be kept confi dential, Lex G. Barkley, So/cial Seouritiy District Manager in Gas tonia, noted. The social security offioe will see that the complaint gets to the proper Federal, State, or lo cal authority for investigation. The designation of the Nation’s social security offices as “nursing home listening posts” is preliiru- nary to a plan announced by Sec- retaryRichardso n for the estab- li.sliment cf a spteial grievance committee in the States. This ocmmiittec would take camplaints and suggestions about nursing home care and make sure they get to the right people. They would also find out what nursing hcl.-ne patients Itiink — not only about the facilities where they live, but also about alternatives to nursing home care — ways in Which older people may be en abled to stay in familiar sur roundings instead of being insti tutionalized. Among steps already taken by the Department of Health, Edu cation, and Welfare'to guarantee a decent environment for the old er person who is a nursing home patient, Barkley cited Medicare enforcement activities under wihich more than 100 extended care facilities have had their ap proval terminated because they failed to meet health and sa.'<.ty standards. As of last week, he said, an other 43 facilities are on notice that unless they meet the stand ards they will be cut Off from Medicare funds. On the positive side, more than 4,000 Medicare surveys in the past year have 1^ to the correc tion of deficiencTes and the up grading of care — not just for Medicare patients, but for all pa- m Mil? 3^! ■ if' t-v? IN THE TRUE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT. WE JOIN ALL MEN OF GOOD WILL IN PRAYERS FOR LASTING PEACE. GRATEFULLY. WE THANK EVERYONE FOR THE TRUST AND CONFIDENCE THAT HAS BEEN EXTENDED TO 0.. Traffic Deaths Are Mounting During this Christmas .holiday, peace on the highways and good will toward other tirivers will help keep you out of the 1,400 traffic accidents which the N. C. State 'Motor Club estimatse may take 26 lives and injure 800 other persons on North Carolina’s streest and highways over the long we^end. The state will count its holi day highway toll from 6 p. m. Thursday, Dec. 23, through mid night Sunday, Dec. 26. for a per iod of 78 hours. In a similar span last year, the casualy count came to 31 killed ILS on Christ mas Dayl and 656 injured in 1,- 145 accidents. (Leading causes of accidents were speeding, driving left of cen ter, failure to j'ield and dliving under the influence. "Out uruffie deuLiis livls yeui are nmnirifj' well ahead of .1970,” said Thomas B. Watkins, presi dent Of the motor club and the National Automobile Association. ‘Tt will take a near miracle in the short remaining to prevent an Increase in highway fatali ties for the first time in three years—but it can be done! "The Highway Patrol will be out CO curt) speeders and drunken drivers. The traditional holiday parties will bring out the real menace — the social drinkers whose vision, reflexes and cau tion are Impaired by just a small amount of alcohol. (Have a (Merry Christmas, bud if you drink at all, let someone yho doesn’t do the driving for you!” TheVeteians Comet iBdltor’s Note: Be!"w are au- swers by the Veterans Adminis tration to some of the mai y current questions from (former servicemen and their families, further information on veterans benefits may be obtained at any VA office or your looal service organization lepresentatiive. Q.—My husband, a World War n veteran, passed away recently. Is he eligible for a headstone? A.—Yes. Any deceased veteran of wartime or peacetime service whose last period of service was terminated honorably is eligible for this benefit. Q. I draw VA oontpensation, and would like to know whether I can have pajments on my VA insurance loan deducted from this j compensation? A.—Yes. If you wisli to use llii.''' method of repaying youi' insur ance loan, get VA Eoim 29-8SS j from your nearest VA office, com plete It, and forward it to the VA I office to which you pay your in surance premiums. Q.—J am a Vietnam veteran interested In training under the GI hill, but am not sure what courses I shoud take. Can VA as sist me? A. Yes. If you are eligible for training under the GI bill, you may lereive vocational counsel ing, without cost, at your nearest VA office. A counselor will help you to better understand your in terests, aptitudes, and abilities, and piovlde information on occu pations you might want to con sider. I tients in the institution. Actions are also being taken to obtain State enforcemen of Med icaid sandards. Since the Federal Government pays only a portion of the cost of nursing home care under Medicaid, the Federal Gpv- ernment does not have direct en forcement authority. Fred Jackson's Bites Conducted 'Funeral services for Fred Jackson, ot Bay St. Louis, Miss., formerly of Kings Mountain, were he'd Saturday afternoon from Sisk Blast Chapel in .Bes semer CSty, interment following in Bessemer CSty Memorial ce-1 metery. • j A native of Kings (Mountain, | he died Thursday morning in a: New Orleans, La. hospital. He was son of the late Ed and Lou- ella Smith Jackson of Kings Mountsdn. Survlvlntg are his wife, Mrs. Peggy Gillespie Jackson; one daughter, Mrs. Yates (Huntslnger of Dallas; one son, Carl Jackson Of Mississippi; one sister, Mrs. Mildred Bagwell of (Gastonia; one brother, Woodrow Jackson of Mississippi; and four grand children. • . 1 • ''J.** !0ere's hoping that you tune in on a happy and healthy Christmas season. We’re grateful for your many IBVIUMIN TV & MUSIC RADIO-T.V. SALES-SERVICE ^Ibday you’re using K) times as much electricity os you did 30 years ago. iW WyTyou^p^ 0^10,232 kwli, Ctwt! LfiW/kwh (I2m^ .ndkig Aug. 31, JSJif: Ilf .1960 you Cp»f: l.W/liiMf i tyotf I But you’re only payirra Sfti as much per kilowatffiouK Although the cost of things you buy has been climbing, the unit cost of electricity has dropped— until lately. Todoy—even with the recent rote increases—the overage Duke Power residential customer pays less per unit than he did 10 years ago or anytime before. Then why is your electric bill higher? As you see in the above illustration, our average residen tial customer uses about twice os much electricity per yeor now os he did only ten years ago, and ten times as much os in 1940. * Yjur •iKtric Mi i« bu«d ON Hw Mxnbir ef kilewoH- Nxn (kwli) you iM*. Ont kHewottNowr in the emownt oi •lecirktty fquirnd te ligM ten 100 »i»ti lenyi onehowf. ofene 100 lOtt fony tef ttnhewri. Most of this increase results from the many necessities we now take for granted. Water heating, for exomple. Refriger ation. Cooking. Hooting and air conditioning. Also color TV and the more than 100 other electricol products contribute to increased usage ond our high standard of living. To meet the ever-increasing demand for electricity, we’re constructing still more generat ing plants. It's very expensive, but absolutely essential. We intend to continue to pro vide all the electricity you need at the lowest possible cost. Corl Horn, Jr. Prosid.nt