Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Sept. 5, 1946, edition 1 / Page 10
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ys Top * j?.'n ' sBHEISSu* s, frv-,? u r I - UUjg^fl MiMManul ; VIVE of the nattoii'i top boy crafts' 1 | nan, each winner in the 1946 , j ' Napoleonic coach and model car f dsslgn competitions of the Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild, arc pictured hero with C. & Wilson, president of General Motors. Tory are, !fat row, ITafjer H. Dotting, 14, of jXMnbit, winner of a $5,000 schcler oMp for,, his Napoleonic couch; ' Wilson, and Leo. C. Peiffer, 1? of ihsat M0M< balls of cotton freai Mt yqa*fe' wrap ia North Carolina WM4MMI three gh preparation and tHh%aaal ltrpe leaaea to the farmer : - | if \ Don't Get Behind ; WITH WHAT'S '3 ] GOING ON j. AT Trnirg Special School Tear ; Subscription To The / | Herald $1,50 I H KRA T iT) PUBLISHING f*r' , HOUSE 5- . ^ I Dress Up | I Had you thought hovi might add to your car? you needed convenience or a set of Lyons sidew, beauty of your car. It's the little things tl Sprtfr everything you want f< S?RVI03E * quantity of ft 1 carta, scooters, tricyc ft I wheel goods. fl _ I CENTER " '' "' . '*ni? Boy Crafiansn ? , ' < % "Kt? ' * * ] I : > i: gfe.?;-; - : ; J $** " ?" ? 1 i > v -.-v. Cedar Rapids, la., who also wun a $5,000 wholnnliip for his coach. In the second row are Vincent J. Rauth, 19, of York, Neb., who v.n a $4,000 university scholarship for his model car; Robert J. Hartlicb. Jr.. 16, of Allen town, Pa., who tied v. ith ! 13-year-old Virgil Max Eicr.er, Jr.. of South Eond, Ind., for junior c.ir , building honors, both receiving a ! S4 000 scholarship. ia some cases $10 a bale. i The losses may be still heavier this year because of the greater differ ential in grades. lAsricultunil engineers of the Extension Service at 8tate College say 1 that there are six principal points to j remember in preventing this damage i:om a harvesting stanpoint. 1. Pick ntto' as dry as possible. 2. Keep out trash." Ii. Pick the crop before weather damage occurs. 4. Keep good otton separate from the damaged cotton. 5. Don't carry cotton to the gin unless it is dry and in good condition ' 6. Don't ask the ginner to speed ut> , the ginning of your cotton or to git jl it too closely. North Carolina ginners have instal- j led more than $400,000 worth of new equipment this year, besides their j major repairs and improvements on equipment in place. The ginners are anxious to do a good Job of ginning ' on every bale and prevent rough prep oration in ao far as possible, but regardless how good their equipment is they cannot gin cotton properly that is not in the best of condition when , brought to the gin. Will North Carolina cotton growers lose a million dollars this year because of' rough preparation of the * f:op? Only time can tell. As the engineers say. pick it dry. keep out the i trash, and carry it to the gin in good condition for ginning. ???????? 1 I Federal funds for the school lunch program averaged $" per pupil last year and there was about $11 per pupil furnished by States and toealitles. I Secretary Clinton P. Anderson says 22 million tons of wheat and 4 milion tons of other grains will be needed in the famine areas before the 1947 harvest. Your Car I r tvtunVt a avMA 11 a ' 1UUMI Ok oninu auuuooui y An extra light will give ( i in fog or bad weather, ills will add much to the I I hat count and you'll find ' >r your car at CENTER' r STOCK? % doll carriages, kitty;les and other childSERVICE For The Oar " igned for ittit HINTS TO FASM HOMKKAKKRB ,...iw six to li iade heavier t By Huth Current handle|| diffem -- - iii handed and lei Good cooks don't boil. "Boiled" market, ham is not boiled by good cooks to- . .. . . lay. Neither are "boiled" eggs bo'^ fc_ n ***'.. ?d. nor is "boiled" fiab cooked by * ar*L B, this method. Instead, these proteiu cU ln? e 8 . . , . per or cardboar locals arc simmered ? that is, cooked . ... , ... . ,r heavy string in water just below the boiling point. \ ,, . . . , . " should b Home economists explain that the . ? . nigh heat of boiling toughens protein. a8e#* #l8f . .. ? r , .-ilon heavy fat . renter tenderness results from cook- .... , , . . . likely not only u.g longer at a lower temperature. .. ' ? ' V. c . > them. Once spri Keen "boiled coffee is a dated . , ? , . entlv I'.ainageil jUrasc tliot no longer means quite . * , . . . v.. . _ . , ipritiR or break what is says, the tuiest flavor is col Tee is achieved bv having the water iust below boiling. brewing tests ? t ______ have she 1 The common use ot "boiled" for these foods is simply a case of att i l term that has lagged behind mon- fl i rn -linking knowledge and te-hiu KrS/ss. [U/W< Mil' li u*ni niU' h a1'UsO<l? that i> ti e story of snwrn nod ?hoars in many limulnilN. say home n.-ononiits. fsd> kitcootalas J > ssnrs ami sluars ro '1os:*ik.i rot different ?se<. Sr;s?ors generally an (o Cultfi, <0 < smaller ? three to six inches l^ng. dinn,cottoo tp h:iM* hoth handle* alike and sharp \ points. They are mnde for snipping iml trimming. Shears, whieh are de- KINGS MOl 1 CREEP] ? I For several centuries man has i freedom. The founding fathers of ed liberty and were willing to pi I which liberty demands. Free men America, in the short span of a Ii1 a century and a half, the greatest history of civilization. I This precious freedom, which th and won, will be lost if the majori pie listen to the visionary promii who Beek the destruction of Fn I Free Labor, and the substitution i I ment-controlled Economy. I The CIO'S P.A.C. plan is for sin my. It provides for five major poi. attack to bring it about. They art 1. Whoop it up for all "spendii 12. Encourage strikes and econ< 3. Agitate discontent among re erans. 4. Arouse racial and group pre 5. "Smear" all who oppose the THE COMMUNIST FRONT 18 NOW! Communists are working in 1 forming clubs and naming local will "turn on the heat" for all gove ing legislation. They are trying greater power through a steppedtion drive, by which they intend t or pressure on the Administratis gress, under a threat of a solid They are staging. strikes> regardle tracts and no-strike pledges. Tl ists believe that if a lie will serve tell it! So they, the CIO, claim tin Communist controlled. COMMUNIST DOMINAl Earl Browder, in an article apr>c Communist," the official publicatio inunist Party, July 1943, stated: unite with the CIO behind the 1< Phil Murray and clear and direct the labor movement." / I The Fai m:.I a m P. O. Box 815, Bock Hill, S. 0. \ .. "9?^ . ?!*/? * :..N "<, lfif fabric, are ordi- scissors or a&eara never shoul I iiu heu loug, have one ed to pry things open, hau the other, ana Protect aciMors and shear illy shaped. Both right rough knocks by hanging thi t-handed are on the keeping them In a box. In di jther they may need to be ] . i against rust bv wrapping in good scissors an j,aper. qu them every 6 mon iy damaged. The fine ' i dulled by use on pa- ! d, flowers, wet cloth, [. Inexpensive utility Almost two-third* n ?he fi e kept on hand for ,he ,oun,rv are now n ?oil 1 lors should not be u? ( ,ion d'htriets. iric because this is j to dull but to spring j ing, thev are peruia j. f#^a ^ XlfcJ I. Dropping, also, may! blades. Points or j msm l Jlmls JNTA1N OO 1NG COMMl struggled for "In Europe the America want ated from the Ax iy the price umong their most have built in in such liberated < ttle more than munists. It is the nation in the nist Political Acti< Americans do. not litical trend." ey bought for ty of the poo- Note that the " |M Of UOM AaflAoiafinn" to a ? Enterprise, therefore, Ihe CIC of a Govern- must be au Ameri< and taking orders In a 200 {two h eh an Econo- gross, the PAC w; tits of tactical Front," which wai ' gress." ig legislation. John L. Lewis, imic unrest. "Philip Murray is Communists in hk ituruing vet- , .. ___ him and the CIO i ecutive Committee ^U(*ice' he can do about it >ir program. badly off. Both oi the Communists, o: ; MOVING There is no que file of the membei ocal districts, citizens. However, leaders who by an executive b "rnment spend *?P heavy with C< to build up up organiza- These milhons ( 0 bring great- into subversive pc 1 and Con- guided by a Comi Union vote. ine m0SI 8K1U 88 of con- existence. The ind iaup rioniniiin? oandon Ins sacred their purpose t rate himself befoi it it is not LISTEN TO T ION "Here highly re God shall have a sarin b'in "The Give your moral n of the Com- . . , "We must campaign to prot. jadership of empl?yee, the program for preserve our econ prise; which is be rmers' States r * *'?; - v" 'V j;. . association Inc. ' % - d be ni' With fewer wHeat three kings ul | corn shucking* these days, rural peo? from pie are turning to old fasblorod ptc3m up or iiice. barbecues, and chicken stews imp wea-. for needed recrreatiou. protected waxed ths. ^ ) I SHORT i irms in ORDERS i| Our Specialty I ?Curb Service? If HMYHEW I GRILL Corner Cleveland Ufl Ave. and King St. JN1SM I people of every .country liberis have put forward Marxists trusted leaders. No movement countries can make the Comhigli mission of the Commu3ii Association to prove that lag far behind the great poCommunist Political Action H world-wide movement and >'s Political Action Committee can branch of that Association from Moscow, Russia. H undred page report to Con- H , as labeled a "Communist H s attempting to "subvert Conin a public statement, said: today the prisoner of the 3 own Union. They control through their seats on his .Exi. There isn't a blessed thing . Sidney Hillman is just as ' them have to play, ball with r die." g I stion but what the rank aud rship of the CIO are patriotic H , their activities are directed oard of 49 members which is :>mraunists. >f loyal workers were forced 'aavavma luvTVxnC'iit VV 111^X1 XD nunist leadership, disseminatlully organized propaganda in ividual members is told to aheritage of liberty and prosre the altars of unknown gods. I HE IMMORTAL LINCOLN: I solve that this Nation under new birth of freedom." l and financial support to the ect the God-given rights of I employer, and the public, and iomic system of free enter- | Rights I ^ * '' ' " Charlotte, K. 0?|^ ' HHHHBHHWIHMH E|j&^
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 5, 1946, edition 1
10
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