? J Friday, October 31.1947 JOB PRINTING?Phones 167?283 PRESCRIPTION I SERVICE We Fill any Doctors' Prescriptions promptly and accurately at reasonable prices with the confidence of your physician. Kings Mountain Drug Company ITHE REXALL STORE We Call For apd Deliver Phones 41?81 rbr. lames OPTOM1 JP' Examination. Diagn< J8 Office open each Frith 250 FIRST NATXOK lMMIBaHaaMHMaHpBBa|aH y QUICK AS A Your automobile can become in one knows when or where they : bad wreck. We can't prevent a v dent policies to prptect you fin should strike you. ,r 8 The ftithnz * ALL KINDS O Phox AUTO L *,' "J t ' FINANCING?1 ! Quick. Efficient. C See "I Home Finan Gaston; Main Street In Fro \ Phon fe | *1 SVICfcSo'Ln Wtwi i-Li..au-i?.'i?.jiu- ij J" " . ?u "We find they am moi . . Jfoliu* tOSfoPm I ^pp^" I I II1" ^ w m- , c , JL Oil \#' \ y ' ' 4?, V^L -?^T I Two Local Men Enlist In The Army Air Force Two Kings Mountain men enlisted In the Army Air Force last week according to an announcement by I M-S. Truman A. Billingssley, local j recruiting service man form Shelb j sub-station, Charles Hutchins, of 31 Walker ' street,and Calvin Miller, 19 Waco road, both enlisted for the first time in the army for a three-year peroid. j' Both young men were ordered to Lackland Field, San Antonio, Texas, j i Methods that will prevent sheep j from becoming infested with inter- . nal parasites, together with improved control measures, are to be sou- , ght through a research project under the Research and Marketing Act I of 1946. S. Bailey . I j :trist " ; 3sis> Glasses'Fitted 17 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. I rAL BANK BLDG. FLASHI volved in a serious accident. No may be the one to suffer from a vreck, but we can offer you acci- v anqially in case this misfortune ? ' j v; . , Hay Agency F INSURANCE ? 188 OANS I REFINANCING onfidential Service iocs** ; ce Company laN.C. N ( nt of the Postoffice I b 2035 ; i I Sm I ^ r* li?M with a loaf ,v.of IMIN ENRICHED Bread. I I MT Im jfm?mM&ilrk I CijHbJ# tr:> 'Ajy^- '"S^-'^ ^ I i THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HE! H. Y. Belk AND HIS NEWS OF NEBO VAIXET Had a letter frqm N. A. Belk in India this week. Lee Doster from Pineville spent :he day Friday with his brother,, 5am. Mr. Lee Jenkins called to see your I eporter Wednesday from the city, j Some men do awful things. ?' >nce knew a young man to steal a >eautiful young girl and then did tot want her. Gave her a divorce tnd then tried to get her to marry tim again. Better keep what you jot boys. Did you folks ever read about hem old fools that feet out to build Hthe tower of Babel. so great it sank into the earth 7 miles, the mortar and faul in the building and confused the whole works of the ools who had set out to outwit God Umighty to get into Heaven by the lew way. We find today just a host ?f people trying to go, we don't enow where we are going but Bless jvu wt ttjc uii uic vv<xy A gossiping lady is one that de'ours facts that aren't so?must be i lie then. Since Truman kicked Wallace out if the Cabinet we don't hear much ibout the milk business any more. Vallace proposed to put a quart of nilk on the doorsteps of every home n America. Oh, God, for crying out oud. The whole world today is in an up oar because of ever-soaring prices. The merchant is not altogether to Uame but he gets his part of the jrofits. We ar# the lendingest and spendngest nation on the globe today. Truman says that good men are tard to find and such few as there ire all come from Missouri. Mules io too. Paul says to us in one of his writings: A little wine for the stomach's sake. Back in the 3^8 the Lickerites said if Prohibition was swept off the earth we would have peace and sobriety. Crime would vanish and the United States would be like heaven. For God's sake look today on the highways,, clogged with drunken drivers, the Jails full of drunks and the drunks have taken to the air raising hell. Dadgummed pocr condition to set out to teach the milIons of the world to be decent. Behold God's masterpiece?man. He brags, lies , capers around, yet come down to the real facts, he's nothing but a big blowoout?not much of anything, plain facts. Its just as near to hell from the moonshine still down on the branch as it is from the ABC whiskey shops on your front streets in the city. ft takes but a short cut up the aisle of the church to get the string tied but it takes a long trip to Reno to get the string untied. Oh my dear Sisters and Sisters. More than S3,000 year* ago David a man after God's own heart wrote: the tool hath! said ta his heart there Js ncr/God. Add wSehouldtbtak the Chtlittan churchi founded b#glorious opportunity to save the world. But the church In the closing years of the 19th century la doing very little to :change the tool in his heart. I doh't know what'! ' going ? come, of a lot of our preachers. Theyjfre letting lots of men go to hell. Are their partly to blame? I hope not ' Three things I'm sure a woman can do: Make a hat; Start a fuss; and out-talk any man. Haircuts up to 69c. Reminds me of the Met, I'll taxe one every six months and ?lft the women folks pull the rest of It out. So if you and yours and us and ours submit and set in silence and keep feeding the foreigners and star ving our home folks. How do you like it Hiram? Must like it pretty well. I don't hear very much complaint. Millions of pounds of meat and wheat being sent weekly over the pond to feed millions that hate us because we don't send more provenders. Its a dam poor idea Hiram. You never thought I'd be a poet: THE OLD COW? How dear to our hearts Was the old family cow. What fond recollections She brings to me now. Milk, cheese and butter, f The best that was ever, < Those fond memories cling And nothing can silence. Three tobacco haras were lost in Montgomery county this season by Ore, according to a report from the county farm agent Martin County farmers are deflgram in view of the expected cut in tobacco and naanuta for anothei RALD, KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C Farm Mortgage Debts . In State Show Gain | North Carolina's farm mortgage | debts increased 13.6 per cent during i 1946. according toC. Brice Ratchford, i in charge of Farm Management for ! | the State College Extension Service. This was by far the largest increase of all southern states, except j Florida, where mortgage debt increased 33 per cent, Mr. Ratchford said. For the United States as a whole, farm mortgage debt increased 3 per cent during 1946, which is tile first increase since 1927. Farmers assets increased over 12 million dollars from January 1, 1946 to January 1, 1947, he said. i Physical assets which include real estate, livestock, machinery, crops I stored on farms, and household equipment were valued at 89,132 million dollars on January 1, 1947, which is 10,639 million dollars higher than on January 1, 1946. Real estate was by far the largest item and much of the increase in physical assets was due to increase in real estate values. Financial assets which include deposits and currency U. S. Savings Bonds, and investments in cooperatives were valued at 22,077 million dollars on January 1, 1947, which is 1,962 million higher than a year pre vious. Liabilities which include mortgages and other debts increased 565 million dollars during 1946. Total liabilities were valued at 8,414 million dollars on JanuaTy 1, 19^7, Mr. , Ratchford said.' V', ' " , . ii e r, , New Apple Varieties Show Promise In State Showing promise from a commercial standpoint to Tar Heel apple growers are two varieties of apples not commonly grown in North Carolina, says H. R. Niswonger, in charge of Horticulture for the State College Extension Service. These varieties, Turley and Weal thy, are now fruiting among other new varieties on trial tests in the Brushy Mountains area, Mr. Niswonger said. The Turley resembles the Stayman variety in type and flavor and does not crack at the stem end. The apple is solid red in color and medium to large in size. The tree if vigorous bears at an early age, and matures along with the Stayman variety. The Wealthy, although not exactly a pew variety, but new to many commercial growers as it is rarely' found in our present commercial orchards, is a very red apple, moderate in size and of fine quality. The tree does not grow to a large size and can be used as a filler in plantings where a pollenlzer for other varieties is needed. It bears early and is ready for the market in late summer before the Delicious variety, Mr. Niswonger said. During the molting period of laying hens, it is essential that the diet of the molter contain all the food factors necessary to build feathers and also build back body reserve as these have been used up by the last year of lay. MiIIC v if I Look through\ cooking would it dozens of wa the good taste* important in y your family is 1 mm'.W\ -V Fuge Seven Prompt, Efficient, Courteous AMBULANCE SERVICE HARRIS FUNERAL HOME j Day or Night Phone 118 IN BOTTLES AND AT FOUNTAINS V ComjtmD, Low# I$Utnd CUy, N. Y. Fianchiaod Dealer: Pepel-Cola Bottling Co., Charlotte, *-.uU - . I | WHEN YOUR PULLETS BEGIN TO LAY CHANGE THE MASH TO CLEVELAND LAYING MASH * . This ration is made carefully with the very best Ingredients so as to maintain the health of the flock, as well as to get fullest egg production. iV I Listen each day Monday through Friday to Kate Smith ' I at 11 KM) in the morning. I i*S The CAROLINA MAIDS at 1Q'3S I Saturdays, I >. Sundays, The SISK QUARTET at 9:39 I Station WOHS 1 EAGLE ROLLER MILL CO. 1 SHELBY. NORTH CAROLINA I four favorite recipes and imagine what i be like without milk. You probably use j - ? t *? ,y? eacn aay? ior mil* is asnecessary to \ of food as it is to health. Because it is so our diet, be sure that the milk you serve the richest, purest milk available. ^ ; ( 'i SUNRISE mm y

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