Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / June 20, 1947, edition 1 / Page 5
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HERALD ! ? 1 CoD Society Editor. House 3 Mr. anil Mrs. J. E. Muneycu spent the weekendw ith relatives 'v Hendersonville. Mrs. Kyle Lyrieri is or a nv weeks-visit at Benton, KentQcky. ? ij? Mrs. Hjenry Sum/mit and Miss A nie Laurie Summitti Jell Monday f a week's stay in Norfolk, Va. Mrs. O. W. Myers is in New Yo this week. ?-O? Attorney V. G. Gorey and Mrs. C rey of Washington have bee:, vis) lng tlie letter's parents, Mr. and Mi Qulnn Wells. ?o? Mrs. Qulnn Welle' mother, Mj Sherrill of Gastonia, has been su fering severe pain as the result of , Mr. and Mrs. Basil Francis we recent guests at the home of Mrs. L. wells. I Among those attending the funer last week of Mrs. R L. Mercer we two ol her granddaughters, Miss Caroline and Betty Fowke of Augu ta, Ga., another granddaughter. Mi Paul M. Harper of Barnwell, S. i and a brother-in-law, R. L. Gan also of Barnwell. Mrs. Carl Davidson left Tuesday I Montreat where she will serve tt - summer as one of the hostesses f the church camp. Mrs. W. D. MGDaniel and Miss D lore?e Mc Daniel cA Charlotte spe a tew days here this we^k with n atives. Misses Marion and Deggy Artb were recent visitors in Greens be wnere uiey hucuucu i'? Cctlfci.fit Horse Show. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Herndon, Jam and William Herndon and A. T. C< reM of Spartaiiburg, S. C., return Tuesday from n tour of Canada. Misses Virginia and Frances Sui mere and their father, F. R. Sui mere are expected to return the li of the week from a trip to Philad< nil in Nau/ Vntlr nr?H ntho** Knrthh r""*? **v" *w"? v tern points of interest. .. , ?o? ?, .' '.? , . > . ' . .Miss Ruth Ledford Is recover!] satisfactorily from an operation & , underwent last week at Gaston M * mortal hospital.. ,. ? **** v Misses Shirley Arthur and Elean Myers returned Monday from Myrl , Beach whehe they spent the wee end. Prior to going to the beach, th had been guests of Miss Patti Ai Netsler at Lake Waccamaw. BuddyWlillaihs, tech student State college is pending -the sui mer vacation wl{h his. parents, A and Mrs. Charles Williams. Mrs. E. A. Shenk has as her hou guest Miss Linda Wharton of Albai N. Y. . . .v "*.L" t'jMis. Llla Lrviri has as her guei her sisters, Mrs. Ida Hardin and M Lum Shaw ahd 'her heice, Mrs. Nc bit Harper, all of Augusta, Ga. , ??? Dixie 'y FHSMY Double Feature Program "Pilgrim Lady" Adelr Mara V Waxen Douglas gIac "Philo Vance Returns" ... llm fSevMB . Tattv Auiiiu V' t: ^C\ Iflortoco Lot* 8how 10:30 with Sorial k - f / RATUBDAY DouU* Featatt Oiogiau ( "SantO Fe Uprising" Alloa Lad* - Bobbr ?**? ' ?1M Tama and the Amaseos' * Jobsny WtiwuU*t Bnuta Joyce. ,-VW , ' V > ^ ' ". , Carttoa ' * Sorialotll I WKC. and THURSDAY t-: ! I I 816001* K ft Jo: ?* * lltVI ^ u. ' ? >; v ' ^ Tiffiiaw PERSONALS 57-W, Office 167 . 1? v ' . !?> ? i,i ill. i BweWBcaaaesaH'ti.i itt Dr. Marie Cooper, optometrist of in Thomaston, Ga.. is a house guest ol Annie Ervin. oMrs. Dill Davis left Saturday f or Albany, Ga., where she will, join her '? husband. She was accompanied by or Mi and Mrs. J. R. Davis as far as Athens, Ga., where they spent the weekend with relatives, rk ?o? Misses Adeline and Alice Ridenhour of Dallas, spent the weekend o- with Mfvs Jean Davis. rs. Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Gnderwdod, of ,? | Dhahran, Arabia, and daughter, Pat a I student at Rollins College, Winter- ? park. Fla., left Tueaday for Florida rf~ after spending the weekend with Mr , 11' ' and Mrs. Charles Williams. Mr. Un- [ ? ... * " i aerwood is with the American-Ara- ' I... I.I - ,^-v, -n.- ( ^ ' Mr. and Mrs. D. McGill of Kannapolis wew in town lrtr* Vhurs day to attend the funeral of Mrs. Robert L. Meroer, the **nert sister. al Miss Maggie Bennett entered Shel re by hospital Tuesday afternoon for e8 treatment. is- 0 ? Mrs. Jake Early and children, r.'* Judy and Bobbie, left Thursday by plane for Washington where they will spend the weekend with Mr. Early. or lis ' ? or Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Blalock spent the week end In Radford, Va., with Mrs. Blalock's brother, W. D. Miller, ie- and Mrs. Miller. nt 9 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allran and son, Michael, of Mt. Airy are spendIng this week with the mother of ro the former, Mrs. A. L. Allran. AjJ ?o? * Mrs. Charles Kulton, miss winiirec Kulton. Mrs. W. R. Everhart and Mrs Grier McDaniel were dinner guests on Wednesday of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh ^ Hoke in Lincolnton. Mrs. James Edward Littlejohn has returned to her home and is con' valescing after undergoing an oper atlon at Gaston Memorial hospital at, * " Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Hicks spen icvciui udjFB hi Aiiaiua nuu uuicr. southern cities this week. - Mrs. Carl Davidson will serve thi? ^ reason as one of the hostesses in fhe - dining room of Assembly Inn' } at Mon treat. j'j lie WOW Circle Plansj ** Picnic At Lake * in Members of the Woodmen of th( World Circle planned a picnic a' their regular meeting which we? at held Inst Friday evening at the WGW hall. The picnic. v'Uch ?"*P he lr" next Wednesday, June 25, will be At Lake Crawford. All members of the circle and their families as well jgs lge members of the WOW are invited to attend. The picnic will be from 5 uh til 7 o'clock and all who niar " >. ire requested .to be at the ?Kings ,tg Mountain Drug store not later that [rg 4:30 since the picnic group will leavt !8. 'from there. During the business session, the circle members voted to change M 'heir meeting time from the second > Friday in each month to the third Friday in each month. ' Mrs. Dick LeCrande haa returned to her home In Shelby after a week'r visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Ware. While here, Mrs. LeCrande was recuperatng from an op eration. v: ^ Mrs. Dixon Hostess To flrnftantin HlnK Mrs. C. T. Dixon, sr., was hoetest on Saturday, 'June 14. to members ind guests of the Craftspun club. After, the business session, the birthday anniversaries of three mem beta, Mrs. DiXon, Mrs. English and Mrs. Hope, were celebrated. The honorees received lovely gifts after -vhich a delicious covered dish sup- ) per was served. Mr. end Mrs. M. C. Gantt were , guests at the meeting, t - ' JW ? M ? inurcn N6ws BOTCK MEMORIAL A? CBUtH ' William L. PresMly, Minister /assess for all age*. JSZTp?a'unktt sejvk*at Luth- V] r****",-, i|j ,10:00 a. m, Sunday echoo|J/0';: y a WSfSflR?* -?"WP { 8:00 p. m. Union service at Luther Ah church. />TA8llMMt 1 yjumwi KdMi*^ J?J LSH ' ciblmtt porf**i*in-top utility tt-1 | gjj S / * 3S MOUNTAIN HERALD, Friday, ar wl to J ^Pfl Cl ^ L J?. M PPip^nLjl di i^_ JP I I " HI "*% i \ '^m ' " 2l V i!7? * .. v {.">? dc N ^ HIDE-ELECT OF 28TH?Miss Go- ci eta Hedgepeth. whose parents, Mr. nd Mrs. John Hedgepeth of Gas- ai mi a. (mnonnrt her engagement to si ufus J. Bell, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. in . Bell of Route 2. The wedding will c< ike place on June 28. sV ln ' 1 ' - " ' I M?g Old British Trtts Witamsd | l* Mmv Fsntsnc Hlttsris Event* h ?, 1 d( Many of Scotland'* trees recorded -pppening* of historical conse- a> oucnce. ' Three hundred years ago $ a yew tree at Ayrshire's Loudon js . .--'V saw .lohn. Earl of Loudon, c i pi'fy the Act of Union be. ween r, "oeln^d crd Scotland. Prior to that lj l,:dortc?l day t>w Ixjudon yew t? heard nnanv a dark plot hatched be- p; r?ath its Ivno'V by Scot* hostile to p ilc folk nc-c-v V->e bolder. Beneath this very tree T^ur hyndred vears nreviouslv the Scotch hero Bruce ^ hooded the castle to the Loudons. Another frmoir* Scottish ye*v is *al that standing in Cruxlon castle law grounds. It hewd the sows ex- 194 change^,rby Mary. Q->eon of Scots and Darnlcy: indeed, it was be- fli neath its green arches that the illfated queen promised to marry Darnley, and, with the romantic heart of a woman, she caused the episode to be recorded for posterity by stamping the image of the tree on her coinage. A yew with an equally intimate and sad knowledge of royal lovers is that at Ankerwyke house. Staines. Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn courted beneath that thick green roof: the tree, a solid veteran of many Btorms. proved more stable than the king's love, for Anne died by the axe. But Britain's ancient trees have witnessed historical happenings of greater significance than the amours of even royalty. For instance, the Ankerwyke yew's first connection with history was at the aigning of the Magna Carta, the agreement between king and people on which is based the British conception of citizen's rights. -1 - ? - - - Hot-Bed at Soath Window Of Basement Proves Wortti For the gardener who has a basement window ,with southern exposure, it is possible to build a practical hot-bed which is more easily watched, aired and watered than the standard type. In front of the window make a shallow excavation about a foot deep. The size must be figured carefully. so that a frame set is this excavation 'ee^t be covered by window or hot-bed saah. As ih the case of other hot-beds, a glass substitute ipay be used oh the sash, if desired. Build a frame to fit in the isxeavation. The sides must slant sharply from a point above the window, almost to the ground. Fit the sash on this frame, using hinges at the top so the sash may easily be raised for ventilation) Earth may be banked around the frame to keep out the cold; and the sides should be as tight as possible to keep out the wind. Heat is supplied to this bed by opening the basement window, and 4 """ "I wic neaiea casement air to enter the bed. The window is left open at night, and may often be closed during the day, when the sup is shining on the bed. Hotbeds of. thisi type have been tried and test ed, and although tney do not maintain temperatures as high as other kinds the heat will be more even, and the vcJ-tilation much better Dishwashing can be made easier, end even pleasaiit, if one is wining to study the problem and take the lime needed to analye H. , Heading the list of important considerations is the height oWthe sink and work space with adjustments to the height of the worker. If the counter is too high, the shoulders have to be lifted and the muacles soon become tired.. Too low a surface causes stooping which alao Urea the worker; 33 or 33 inches from the Boor to the bottom of the sink is * tolMgctory - height washing wium. u i U4inei yunnca MO- I rd, a wooden rack may b* mad* at I Uatt to At the bottom of the I ink: hom*rrahern'?i>J^ a atnk that I L? too high may wiah to hare .a solid I platform buiH tor tMm to atand o* I in front of the efcnkr IUght-hantf*4 I people. should have the kitchen ar- B yS 1 10* ct the rink, When waahed^jl Say B* r rinsed at the left of the . ' * -: *: 4 ' ;' ; V-I *f June 20,1947 __ i*1 Rtw Nctfeodt Hr UneartA Original Killing Air-Borne Bacteria PU? New methods of air ptarificatior j Thomas JefTei e now being widely tested. If sue. | contributions to a ssful in practice, they will reduce I lifelong belief in r-borne respiratory infections, j first and most p lich cause about 35 per cent of al! 1 arts were given dustrial absences due to illness | H'? discovery in id injury. In crowded New YoiK original wooden ty, six p>r cent if all working proved plow inv Tie is lost because of respirator ] H?n s third presii seases. *be century. Air sterilization methods, used j Julian P Boyd, one or in combination, includf ; s'ly librarian ai tra-violet la nps, use of glycol j definitive 50-volur (pors, and use of an electrostatic I forson s writings, ist precipitator, which knock? | The models of I >wn bacteria along with the dust, j described by histi terest is currently focused or I 8r?at fundamen otecting places of public assein-1 before the advent y; working places have received) P'?^s about 1840 st attention, and other sites of : ?y Howard C gh infectivity may be treated ill to the American irrent experiments are successful. | ant* e represer Ultra-violet lamps in schoolrooms \ f?rsorl Papers in id hospitals have reportedly cut na' P'ow r-bome infection, including by Jenerson to I lumps and measles, by 25 to 30 per authorities about c;_ ,u- II-.: ? In ' >? ? ?** uimx ?iic i uuiuiiun can aneci y tin and eyes, lamps are usually Jefferson, Dr. istall-v! nbove the head level. farmer all hi iinpt iTof^JiwycircidationTr "IWfil-t.1 flM"WWt lually adequate, though bacteria upon his farms, irking in any dark spots are not ?e?ds, plants an estroyed. Most common use of the introduce the mi imps at present is in hospital oper- country; was a ting rooms and nurseries, where ?' power machir tey have proved effective. In one effectively with irge-scale instal*tion, 99.5 per region largely < snt of the bacteria entering the hausting tobaccc ?mi were reported destroyed by ?l i*?81 ? centur imps placed in the /ventilating sys- ^ practicing c mi. Cross-infection by the occu- prevent erosion. ants of a room, however, is not revented by such an installation a bountiful sup . . - feed Is thefirat r< cessful livestock tforth Carolina gained 12,902 ms and 124,289 acres in farm- lt ,8 Mtlmaied t ids during the period from 1940- put down 350 boi 15. " " floor! r? in oneei/ Myers June Dr At Greatest Pzii t Misses - Won i 20 > ' . ' \ reductions on all Si is an event you hai and just in time to vacation wardrobe. * A large assortzne Chambrays - Gii "**< ' My Dress * Page Bit j| the Jefferson plow, ?#*->'. < ; arians as "the last KL-; . -^ah Ky^9 development" rjjwjefij^ V?k . L of efTicient inetul -a . were discovertd Ki'-e Jr., attached hH^V^mS Embassy in Paris of the JefFrance. The origimodels were aent rrench agricultural V the time his KjdTSiirt.... . .m.awaiMM ;>rr,,T mil u irn^m '? T^ ^ v'trV "T He imported new Christian Impeicttee. d trees; helped to frino sheep in this Bi^SSHG?9sK?HI^HBEh pioneer In the use . . , tery; experimented AlDlOSt crop rotation in a r levoted t.; soii-ehi Lveryone > culture and was * t y ahead of his time _ _ _ ( ontcur plowing to Kings. Mountain ' 1 -?? ? Reads iply of home grown ?qulrement of suf- TVis? ~ production. " * i Kings Mountain hat one man can Herald krd feet of six inch ght-hour day. MB?B5IKlj!5HKS3p^[PUF i ess Sale 1 ? - I aen - Juniors | ,0/ Wo immer Dresses. This y re been waiting for 1 help you plan that j|. Bt to select from! J? ighams - Crepes | er's ' I | Jliop I
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 20, 1947, edition 1
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