Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Nov. 15, 1945, edition 1 / Page 7
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* ??? visit * Cough Really ? h Horry You ? *UrnOihi t?r? Act* With 1^ Oa 0m|b On to Coldr But adults cen't expect real results frem tk> same iwmI syrupy ooncooUons that you'd give to a child. Whin jc you want to throw oft a bothersome oough you've Just yet to havs a real w bough medicine; then you should aslc ? ' your druggist for a bottle ot good 1 old Bron-chu-llns Emulsion. fr Bron-chu-llns isn't a eboap cough C syrup mind you, tor first-raters aro nsvsr cheap. But it you want ths best ti sad aro willing to pay a llttls mors tor roal results, gat a bottls today and aottoo how the first doss takes bold right away and gtvos you rsal , relief from ths coughing and sorensss. * Don't Ignore a cough?get relief as a quick as you can. Ask any progressive druggie! for a IS cent bottle of I j3ron-chu-Mne Emulsion r-d 1:?ep this In mln',. '* ? t Joj-'ui / f&'.laBed?iKuit; i i 1 JEingg Mountain Drug Co. ? AUTO ^ FINANCING Quick, Efficient, C r>a ii*% oee "K HOME Finar Gaston: 201 S. Broad 3t. i Mr jff ^H L 'BMI^/j^A A^Magu # k #r zCBSBBfrt. * FBPflI-OOI*A BOTTZJNO C % Taste-Temj That's the order of the d; in foods that are tops in < ?BRING YOUR WA? Blalock's -Phone 11 JUiJi/111 ur A 11XJ TT U ril STOVE, A WAS HE " A Bank L Help You I You don't need to be bol weekly or monthly p&ymei pick it out, then finance a bank, and make your.payi many instances the cash goods will take care of 01 charges. You will find tha quickest, easiest-handled i ! . tviiid jj^jj ' V' f V2& #VV* /?*$? *LsV >' -.'.V,:' > First N,tic . " r'M fr- f.,'foLpg ?ir jdVi' i tiii, ' - g^sw^BHI unior Glasses Give . a* tuch T. Schools " ? I 3 During the last two years the juur classes of King* Mountain High | hool under the direction of Miss i met Scoggius, have donated to the j . hool 50 yards of table lineu whico j J ay be used for school activities, ai , j i, 350 salad plates, 121 cocktail glass I i, nud five flower vases. , They have financed the junior-^ i- . ' ?r banquet for the last twya years' j ithout collecting dues from the pu- ^ ils. The money was made selling re- g eshmeuts at ball games, selling j jv| hristmas cards, and sponsoring enter sinments throughout the year. g ^ 1 Ask the county chairman of the uftr rictory Ix>an Campaign or the county gent about the new 16 mm motion j lictures for war bond rallies. The average farm in North Carolia an( s 65. acres, or 3.8 per cent smaller aVi :han five years ago, says the 1945 1 Jensus of Agriculture. LOANS ' i I sea is chi mn br ns ice Company ? ia, N. C. Phone 2035 ^ IjTOPs J j iT' FOR ^ I tt*55 . m0 i . . , in otto TJamd C.llu V V jAf&Z* fV, JO., OP OHABLOTTE, Inc. {? m }ting Food ? hi ay here. We specialize gc quality and taste s m m fa 1TE FATS TO US? ?J ca ^ uL Grocery a * lin 58 t" ab So be Ian s qu it: can Will | toy Them! i * tor \ ihered with a lot of chi um its. See what you need . ?? no 11 by a loan from the p?' bot nents at one place. In Jg discount on durable gjj ir rnimnnahlfl Int^rast ,t a bank loan ia the v? aethod of financing. Su Hoi ka. Not tfao Hoi K nUUUlAi. m vm axcb oomrosATioir I ^ las I ?5 inal Bank I a KXMfli IfMJMYAXV HBBALDTI igh School Lii ,178 Books Ci be students of the Kings Mou:>> High School have an attractive, j ly decorated library which con- : is .'{,178 hooks aui; 39 monthly audi klv magazine. Since January | l through October, 428 hooks have n added to the liliary. The numof books per pupil enrolled re red by the Southern Assoc in t io . ondarv Schools and Colleges is ?. The number of books per pupil i". K:ngs Mountain Higti ool is 12.6. 'he circulation of books from .ranv through October of this year '.j,9.r>;t. 'our newspapers, The Charlotte Obvcr. New York Times, Shelby Star, 1 The Kings Mountain Herald are tilable to the students. 3ooks can be checked out at any le during the day. When needed, < library is open to the students af school. \ book can be taken out for 11 ys and can be renewed for 14 ys. A fine of a cent a dav is as tfeil for book? overdue if the fine brought with the book. If it is arged, the price is two cents a Jay. Central school library, along with my other libraries in America, eel1 sitcl the week of November 11-11 Natior.al Book Week. Posters were icoJ on the library Joors anil thllotin boards were arranged to pr? it the celebration to the students ?*\LOOXING *T| AHEAD Ksn GEORGE S. BENSON President?Mardinf CoKefc Set ref. J rktntu - Oil and Mold Apostles of government ownership ! business agree sometimes thai rivate management can do bettei ith Httle things., .When it gomes tc ling prescriptions, mending shoes making clothespins, they admit, rivate operators may be more efr rient. Not so with the big stuff, tey argue; coal, iron, oil, railroads e different.- These lost beg for bu? mucratic bossing. Of COUrM hi0 iniiiMirioa ??? ? __ Q *VU U1 C lllWiV teresting to politicians because ey employ large numbers of peoe and affect the daily lives of milins more. The fact remains howrer, that government can and does ake mistakes in the operation ol g industries. Moreover, appropria encouragement from governant in relatively small enterprises is been known to result in much iod. Significant Decisions Since government enterprises tend timately to become monopolistic, istakes in them can be far more teful than private blunders. Our ivernment made two important desions in 1942 which illustrate the se perfectly. One, to take a specative flyer in Arctic oil, has cost nerican taxpayers 300 million ;ood-bye" dollars already. The tier decision had to do with penicil u Penicillin is a drug, a mold exict that most people know less out than they do about gasoline, me perfectly astounding cures are ing worked with it, including cure meningitis. It was discovered by English scientist, Sir Alexander eming, in 1929 but production was lious, slow and costly and conseently few sufferers were helped by tor 13 years. In Mass Production 3y 1942, our first war year, some fierican capitalists had taken a ad with marked success. The xluct was costing $20 a bottle tn, and the average patient retred three bottles. Government thorities realized that war would tate a need for it so they guarand a large market and provided ;>ital for mass production. Hisy will record the splendid results. Vith the government's big purise of this successful item, volle production started. Now there ? 20 factories. The largest cost ire than 3% million dollars but licillin is costing less than $1 a tie, $3 per treatment. Many lives re been saved and more will be. nkind will be healthier and hapT. Government ?? I business proved wise and beneaL Smell el the Tokoa low different was the Canol oil iture. The Army drilled wells the Mackenzie river, built a 27llon-dollar refinery at White rse and tied into Fairbanks, Alaswith 1,000 miles of pipeline, thing was gained. Gasoline from white elephant plant at White rse costs Me a gallon. Oil comilss can ship a better product re from the states for ISo. The tore has been abandoned, he Canol experiment foiled. Very street obstacles made foe operai tee costly. Known sources of ply ere better and 100 million lars Si taxpayers' money is gone, remnant's support of one baneildrug can't Justify its manatfext of big business. What official, ten* public money, la eantfbta .thorough like a private inveetor i Me own monsyT Never hea emment management sohieved efficiency ot American private ITTRSD aV i*6VWflM? 18, 1M8 Wary Contains |! irculation High Mrs. W. T. Weir's 12th gradej 1 home room presented a chapel pro-1 <gran-. appropriate to the celebration 0 before the student body on Tuesday j t morning, Nov. Id, and to the Parent-, r ; Teachers A*so> iation in the evening. I1 Each student in the school was gt v ven a book inHrk. The grammar grade library. attra"-'C | tivelv furnished, contains 177* books. J ; 2M of which were bought this ycai., f $342.00 were spent for the new books 11 j and for magazines, newspaper-, and ' supplies. ] 1 i i t i School Scribblers i \ 1 Write Service Men ! ! l Uncle Sam's Scribblers Club, com- I posed of girls in the high school, was < I organized during the 1942-34 school < ! term for the purpose of writing to ! j the boys in different branches of the I service. 1 During the years following their , organized during the 15*42-43 school j , tribute'! much to the war effort bv t I'i^M SK2Z3Z23K HOW WOULD VOLI'LIKE VOUR E^S^SLRVro -VZ^ (There's definitely a diffei TURE CO. That differen have a large selection of own and that you can afi ? i ! r------! Lookir I Pul| J America' A I " ?v WOODS WOULE1S HAUl | YA1D WORKERS Ktf And ma I \ skilled vt Al >A. LHk i VICTORY P0L1 1 \ DON'T WASTI PRICK r.?gjf# i' ' ; V ' ? lord's Ship Never failed To Do Job ; Pearl Harbor, T. H.?Jerry K. Hord { lachinist'? mate, third class. I'SNK. 17 Fulton street, Kings Mounta.n. N. and other crewmen of the Fleet . iler I'SS COS*ATOT. who*" operaions have taken Tier from North Af- , iea to Okinawa, never fu.led to comlete an assignment successfully. Na v records here have disclosed. ' Commissioned in April. IPC;. the | "OSSATOT was assigned to the , v'orth Africa run, fueling i:c*troy(. , snort* in merehaut convoy*, stopping ,t Oran, Birerte and Casablanca. Bhe was transferred to the Pacific n December, 1944, and assigned to a ask group. Since that - :> oured as much as Sl.oou barrels of 'uel oil a day into units of the force. ousting the morale ol* servicemen hrough sending them letters, paok-' iges, and newspapers. These men in lude all who have attended King* Mountain high school since 19."!t?. The members, under the spousor?hip of Miss Janet Sn-oggins. faculty tdvisor, have sent 190 packages, 3. 500 letters, and 5'i newspapers during the last school session and up to the present time. ^NONE WHATEVtR^I F &EnrrvsuE/^y 1 ?. ? * ?, rence in furn iture from the ce is quality furniture at r< fine furni ture ... furniti ord to buy. .1,* Jii kim J i ? ;-> ig for a Jol p&Pa| s 6th Largest I )BS IN THE WOOD ibs v 1x0ckebs?(klfebsl ^THEM,uj In room voiou mechanics ' |ny other opportunities for rorkers in an industry with problem and a great p< Apply U. S. EmpSoyi Cut tku <*4 ? Mail it tc Hwka or anybody who it 1< i job at good wages. !; FWOOD COMMITTI Byron Kootor Hilton Buth Haywood E. Lynch Hit TIMI CUT TC * in addition, she serviced the Fleet with large quantities of dry and Fresh provisions, lubricating oil, paint ?nd other items essential to a ship's >peration. The COSSATOT came closest to iestruction while fueling ships for he Okinawa operations. A suicide |>lane. taking advantage of a heavy *moke screen, got to within 1,000 card* of the ship before being discovered. The antiaireraft batteries o|>ened up. ami the Kamikaze exploded elose to the ship, plunging down in flames 200 yards from the oiler. ...? r-wwid Symptoms of Ci>traas Arising from STOMACH ULCERS due to EXCESS ACID FrecBookTatisofHomeTraatowetthot Mast IMp or ttWIU Cost YooNothlos Over two million bottles of the w iiXARD TREATMENThavebeen sold for relief or symptoms of distress arising from OSMaasli and Oiied?si Ulcsrm due to l?m Acid? row Plgsstlsw. Sour or Upset ItonutS, Ossein#**, Heartburn. klssplastnses, Ma, duo to Excess Acid. Sold rni5 days' trial! Ask for "Wlllsril's f 'stt <*' s i'Ii fully emii'.it i KINGS MOUNTAIN DRUG CO. Bessemer City, N. C.: CENTRAL DRUG STORE Then serve mine on a Thick pipcc^ d. f. hord furnieasonable prices. We ure you'll be proud to. tail ----- - - T - a * b? Try i per I ndustry J LOAMRS J ? JJOADUIS * HANDLERS skilled and un> . i no reconversion I aacetime fixture. I mmnt Stvicm "j i a serviceman, war " ooking for a steady I I % IP QUALITY WOOD J .J
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 15, 1945, edition 1
7
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