Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Jan. 27, 1950, edition 1 / Page 9
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?Quality Cleaning? That's The Brand You Get At WEAVER'S CLEANING Phone SM-I not * a worry in the world Bright idea for bright moderns! Slipcover* that are Showcrpruf! Your colorful slipcovers stay bright and gay, looking like new when they've been treated with Showerpruf. It's modern magic... an inn libit prottctivt film applied .*? 1 rigttt iff The cleaning. btre's the Itig (but fells you it's McCURDY CLEANERS-DYERS Dry Cleaning and Laundry Service "COMPLETE ONE-STOP SERVICE" WE DELIVER PHONE 257 The Herald. ? $2.00 Per Year Y??, It look* Ilk* ? vary ?malt Iron lung. You can help maka It powerful beyond Its else. Your dimee and dollare flllln^ thl* iMM>. laturo Iron lung will halp empty real onee In hoopltale acroea the country. Join the March of Dlmea, January 19-11. / A total of TBI Tar He*l farmers participated in the production of certified seed in 1949. ? v 1 PRESCRIPTION SERVICE We Fill any Doctors' Pre : ?C| iptiots promptly ana accurately at reasonable prices with the confidence of your physician. Phones 41 ? 81 Kings Mountain Drag CVmpany THE REXALL STORE We Call For and Deliver Now you can save up to $125 on a new Dodge " Job-Rated " Truck. Every Dodge "Job-Rated" Truck at these new low prices is the same truck with the same equipment? as before the price reduction. These new low prices have been made possible through the great public acceptance Dod ge "Job- Rated" Trucks have enjoyed. You continue to benefit from the advantages of such exclusive Dodge features as proper weight distribution to carry your load better . . . short turning diameters for easier handling . . . shorter wheelbases and shorter over-all lengths to accommodate standard bodies. All of this means greater truck value than ever before! It means lower delivered prices? plus unmatched Dodge economy, j^rformance, and dependability. Come in today! Get the new low delivered price on the Dodge "Job Rated" Truck that fits your job? the truck that will save you money today? and every day you use it. rs H. Y. Belk ? AMD HXS NEWS OF NEBO VALLET it looks like for a fact we will soon have the new road. I count ed five and six men out on the road with ? pole*. One man looking through a little glass thing. Another ft&f} a timekeeper. One man dr Irving >p stakes like he was fixing to stake out a cow. j I can't see no new road they got ? its on paper. Guess they will have to take the road and show It to Scottie. Once early In the fall I began to think I would have to go Into hibernation. Now vts so hot I can't, make my calculations. Done throwed away my long handles ? got no Shorts. Mr. and Mrs .Tommy Brown are In (Florida for the rest of the win ter to recuperate and fish for suckers. , Miss Margaret Louise Wood from Greensboro visited your re porter 'last week. She's a student In Woman's College, Greensboro. MLss Mary Ethel Pierce Is visit ing tier brother, Arthur Pierce, In Cherokee, Kans. This must be ground hog wea ther as hot as k Is. I hope It cools oft in the Spring. I Recall the saying 'by those of old: Pjride go eth -before a fall, which I saw ?deme*ttrate4 -Jpy a coincident in our town. A use less dude who specialized in strutting the streets of our town. As a show-off suddenly slipped on a (banana peeling and fell flat on die ground. When he picked up himself, he was asked, Did you tear your shirt? He re plied, Worse than that. I bu rated my brother's borrwed brand new pants. That reminds a news butch like me that a bird never mounts so high but k must flop and ascend to the ground to Xind a resting place and refeed the ww: that goes on wim|k'-;.:: One day I oostfl-ved a'lpompoua rider in a fine constructed horse - MUl carriage some call a car. of! climbed from his lofty seat and entered the'church dining room. The ladies invited the man's cheauffer to come in for dinner. The big hell-cat protested saying rapt' he didn't eat with his flit*' ployee9. What I Mild to that mo ney shark. I fear, if you ladies saw it you'd faint. Oh, worse than that by gosh! Now I don't h^.ve any mor$ ap pointments. I have" disappoint ments. I dislike disappointments. But we must have disappoint ments so we <vill appreciate ap pointments. M< my called but few chosen. The flwn srvallije last and the last shall fee first. I may not understand what I read. Th? poor we have with us from the beginning of time on through ages unborn. I understand why the rich man eauawrthe -poci help less R.on and women, to labor to build up his fortune. It would be very good for the rich man to pile up great hords of wealth but he can't take a rusty cent with him. So the poor devils don't have any worry about making reser vation for all this earthly Junk. Not got nothing. Believe I -rather | be a poor man. Tho' it would f>e so fine to be a rich man's dog and ride around. , Its a true saying ? a fobl and his money soon separates. 1 guess have a very good tLne whilg we are fooling it away. :M us suppose we all had 10 million. What could we buy? A hundred and fifty million people li? Amer ica. Weil it just wouldn^t be wor th the paper its write on. Then its a good lead that each one has to scramble for all we get. Then we go and spend what we get and then go and get more and spend that. Well, we must spend > to win. I'm glad one man can't have it all nor a woman either. Henry Ford was the richest man to live in modern times. Now he's not got a dime. I've got money and a watch. He's not got a car ? Uncle Sarp got all the 'money, 'but he knows how to tax and get more; I wish I was your Uncle Sam. I'd build a country home and get shut of all the loafers and bums, ] and -build a railroad to the moon. 1 ?h just wait and see what I'd do ' afore long. Always more room f6r , more fun. Uncle Sam can tax you and make you come. He keeps books on every 'one and has his fun. The thrifty man gets a pleas ure out of his money when he earns it, and again when he cav es it. The profligate man gets pleasure out his money Mien he spends it and then gets a head ache When he thinks about where it went. Money gives you lots of .fun, and lots of trouble too, but we want it so ? so we can buy and spend. ",| We tried Mr. Logan all the way round for sheriff. He did so well, lets keep him in for another spell. Never change the old for the new. Let's draft him back, in he knows how its done and he does it well. Let's give him flow ers?and not ibrick bats on his nead. My Rosebud, l>e said, tenderly, as he pressed his unshaven cheek against tier's of sott velvet flesh. My Oactus, said she, reproach fully, why don't you shave my dear? War is hell on dead beats. While pleading with ration offi cials for extra gasoline stamps my eon Jacobs reached into his pocket and accidentally spilled coupons good for 100 gallons of gasoline. Then as the old Dutch man says, more hell to pay. I never did like to he caught at my own tricks. Its fine to catch the other fellow at his dirty tricks. Most at us figure we can do our dirty bricks and get toy. Its all right if we do. A reader asks, what Is the real meaning of SOS? Well my dear, brother, k means SAVEOUR, SAUARIES, AND GO BUSTED?* Ideas are stronger than armies, . but ideas put in words makes ar mies, guns and planes. . Reforms as well as Charity shoutid 'be^in at home and remain therfe There is only one thing that is more dangerous than playing ' with a rattlesnake and that is playing miible peg with Joe Stal in. Look out, Barry; I read for a fact that Solomon's Temple' cost nine trillion dollars. But I also read where the New Deal is costing the taxpayers three times that much. Now we build Joe Stall in a temple with rubbish we gave Russia to keep Hitler from linking w; boats, a | that dtdn't beat Ha Hell, Texas. Hiram, I don't know; k is well to want things. Free dom from want was one of the] rankest of delusions offered toy the New Dealers. It 1m also well ??. sattsly,-ttoese tkkJ ean only toe done toy. . the ' sweat of our brow and not toy (he I benevolence of s governm-jit. It Just wont work sny other way. No 1 sir r Hiram." ? iM tdii never thought I'd poet ai)d for once climb to fame and rsaown: ? v This ous Country Tls of Thee, Blest America, Land of the free, ft* have kits <* fetopathy, H the nation should collapse. Like ok) AocK... And the Lord hut will forgive, Bulletin Emphasizes Role Of Farm Credit The importance of credit in bringing about profitable adjust menu* in farming is emphasized in a new bulletin piJblished this Week by the North Carolina Agri cultural' merit Station. It is Technical Bulletin No. 89, 'In vestment Credit to Improve Far ming Systems," copies of which are available from the local coun ty agent or from the Agricultur al Editor, State College Station, Raleigh.' The ^bulletin is based on a' study of farming1 systems in Polk, Rutherford, Cleveland, Catawba, Lincoln, Gaston, Iredell, Mfccklen burg, Rowan, Cabarrus, Stanly, Union, and Anson counties. The ?ffrojecfwas carried oOt Jot ivfly by" the Experiment Station and . the Bureau of Agricultural Econo mies, U. S. Department of Agri culture. The authors ? Donald F. tbach, agricultural economist, BAE, and G. W. Foster, head of the Depart ment of Agricultural Economics at State College ? assert that many farms in the area studied need to make major adjustments ihat will yield higher Income. In many cases, however, these ad justments cannot 'be undertaken without the use of credit. "Appropriate Investments, par ticularly those for soil improve ment, increase the earning pow er of. ths 1 a nA-" .Thft'ch and Forster. -rtat*. "hmsoitueni ttni perma nently raise the returns from the land, increase the security of the loan." ! Loan repayment systems of both commercial and governmen wKBKmmm FAST RELIEF when COLD MISERIES STRIKE LIQUID OR TABLETS SNOW5D UNrkR WITH BILLS? ? -v " *f* ' Y*. ? '?> ?> - . ?* Finance your home repair or building expens.es with a loan. That way you have just one bill . . , lower Cost and no hfeadache. Repay your loan the easy way . . . to suit your budoet HOMEB.5L. ASSOCIATION , A. H. Patterson Sec.-Treas. w?mmmmmmmmmmmmm?mmmmmmim Ml agencies usually are based on nearly* equal annual payments over a period of years, rbach and Forester point out, however, that the annual net Income of most borrowers is non-existent or ex tremely low during ?he first year or so of the loan but rises rapidly after the third year. They suggest that annual- payruents of-pihwi pal and Interest be arranged to parallel?this Increase in Income. irr JOB PRINTING 283 The North. Carolina Crop Im provement Association is a non profit organization of farmers who are actively interested in the growing, processing, and market, ing of high-quality planting seed. The association operates under authorization of the "Better Crop Seed Program" enacted by the >95?- General Assembly. ^ - Spring sales of Guernsey cat tie and Tamworth hogs will be held In Forsyth County on April 3. For Highest Quality Foods RLALOCK GROCERY Serving Kings Mountain Orer 13 Tmti We are skilled crafts men in the delicate mechanism qf watch^R,' No watch repair job J* foolargebr tcw sWl!. We can fix themalll That is not a boast, out; a fact . . . backed by ?years of experience. D?LLinG?R S ^ __ -yJ?ID6L SHOP TClnfiTfl&ujnlcuLix. 71.C ; Mofi Motmtgdft' ? l>adlj^ hereby notified that they mast list their property, both personal and real, and all male *? ' 4. ? ? *Vr3jW persons beweer the ages oi 21 and 5t must list tMl b?Us daring the month of lannary as required by law. fUMEWT. F
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Jan. 27, 1950, edition 1
9
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