Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Oct. 20, 1950, edition 1 / Page 7
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H. Y. Belk *nrrg *~t: AND HIS NEWS OF NEBO VALLEY Mr. William Ware and Mrs. Ware and baby called to see HY and wife Sunday from Bethle hem. Miss Hoyle Ware from the country spent Sunday with Mrs; Sue Belk. Bill Burton is spending the weekend in Monroe with his sis ter Mrs. Lee Slesner. Frank Leney is moving his wife and son Joe to Pittsburg, Pa. while he is taken in the army. J. B. Brown from Ashville is spending two weeks with his mo: ther in North Charlotte. Ben Leroes and wife are mov ing Spartenburg, S. C. to work in a Lumber Plant. House building is at a stand still. Plenty empty houses. The rent should come away down. I know a few houses not fit for anybody to stay in, where they are paying $35 a month. If there be a hell it must be a sizeable hell. A smart man up and told me a rich man will never go to hell. I asked this rattle brain fool why In the hell would'nt a rich man go down below. He said a rich man gets his hell sight down here fooling with the poor trash. That fool is crossed eyed and a }iar. Looks like the war is about E veryone Should Kno w! "More and more people are learn, inn that GOLDEN GUERNSEY Milk is an indispensable energy food for wartime living , . for health 1 Food shortages, scarcities diminish in importance when GOLDEN GUERNSEY Milk is your mealtime stand-by. There's more energy-value in each quart than in H lb". of steak! Drink it ... use it . . . keep up your energy! TRY SOME OF OUR GOLDEN GUERNSEY CREAM TODAY! XX Heavy Whipping Cream, V* pt. 35c Coffee or Cereal Cream. Vs pt> ..... ... 20c Axchdale Farms Phone 2405 over. Mr Truman taking off over sea. "Why don't he stay home and look after Uncle Sam's business? This is a great nation if we had someone to run it. But so many damn rascals on the payroll Don't get shocked ye saints. If every one like you and I were honest no more jail houses would we have. Churches would be found where jails now abound. An honest man is the noblest work of God, but so many damn rascals on this old shift. Has anybody heard of or seen where Mr. Truman has taken a single step toward stopping the distilleries from turning good grain into good drinking booz. The bootleg business sure is! thriving all around. You would bo shocked if you knew al! 'those boys that stay out these Octo ber nights making sugar head booz. Evil results from too close re lation with evil women and bad men. Many who try to make believe they are on the Salvation Train when they are riding in the see fer and don't know it. them, but if we try and do our duty, what little they have to say about us don't hurt us, if it does help them. Why I love to pay what I owe, I can go back and get some more then I would'nt care to be called a dead beat. If everyone was honest our jailhouses would all be churches. What a grand coun try America would be. One of the hardest thing about living in the country is finding rime to at tend to your own business. Everyone wants a lot to talk a bout after they make a small story toO big when they all get through handling the story. This typical how much higher prices the armed services are paying for everything. Yet Pres dent Truman with a price con trol act before him on his desk giving him ample power, has steadfastly refused to move one ! inch. Now let's repeat. Once there was a poor old negro, who had a. very strong old mule. To have more for spending, he fed the old mule less and less each day, the mule continued to carry great goods, but one day the jar head collapsed of starvation, then he died. We may over do many things like the old negro with the mule. Let me say without fear or favor, One High tax em Harry is wreak ing our nation with debts and more debts. We are drifting too far from the old honest way of living. Most Americans love to diet. Men and Women, old and young, 4 There's just "lots of peo ^ pie who, say so JP many nice th JjL ings about you v and I then. there are a bun I , ch thai are ever Ml ready to say un kind words a bout us, even if we try to help W MAIN STREET PROSPERITY run business everybody "Many small town*, many small buainassas? that's North Carolina- In (act, it's all America. Among tha many thousands ol amall business man in onr ?tat* are thoaa anqlqad in the distribution and sal a of bear. Thay run Ihsii businesses legiti mataly, successfully and in conformance with tha law. Thay contribute their shara to onr main v . ' ? ?? * . 4 atraat psosperity - to out taxea? and to tha ptfe Mtvation of onr Amarican way of life, foundad on fraa enfetprUe, tolerance and rights of others. Bat ?no#t important to these man and to yon, in tha (set that thay stand for tha /aero/ control of the sal* of bs? a a oppoaad to bootlegging methods. North Carolina Division United States brewers Foundation. l;c. puny and fat, rich and- poor. Sooner or later are jempted to buy some miracle diet that pro mises to shed weight quickly and painlessly, yet in their ea gerness to outwit the laws of na ture and medicine, they forget that improper dieting can lead to grim and inexorable death. So no matter how the certificates may read, if death comes on the heel of a reducing diet, who is the .real culprit? The facts are, there are indi cations that the present business and industrious boom can and will not last forever. The blame for this view of this reporter is bared on the fact that our gov ernment's spending policy has reached its height. But what does Harry care, I wish to remind you that a President dpn't have to travel across the continent to find out what the people want and what they are thinking a bout. Looks like he, Harry, could stay in the White Capital long enough to set and quit taking those wild flights. One George Washington run the U. S. A. while he stayed home and farm ed. Great man was George. When Harry gets back to Washington after a quarter mil lion dollar political trip, at your expense, he may be done to fish up something else to do, never in the history of political govern ment has as many grave offences been charged up to the party as prevails today. Loilis Johnson and Bernard Baruch spoke the truth when they told the people where the nation was headed, straight down, but not Texas. With stock piles of atom bombs on hand and the hydrogen bomb just around the corner it would seem that the human race is now nearing the home .sure stretch. An exterminating company in New York secured a call from a woman with a strange request. She asked if they would sell her 10,000 cockroaches, 6,000 bedbugs and 1,000 ants What in the world do .you want with them? asked the clerk. | ?" > * * Well, replied the woman, I'm moving tomorrow and the land lord insists that I leave the place just as I found it. Many are the nice places left like this one. They don't smoke cigarette in Heaven, and they can't get em in hell. You may not know it but tobacco is thip oldest cash crop in the U. S. A. There was ! a day in the history of America Iwhen tobacco was almost like gold in value. That was back in the days of our early colonists, who used it ajj legal tenders to pay fines, taxes, and to buy most all household commodities. Although tobacco has the small est acreage of all other major crops in the States, its cash va lue per acre is greater today than any other weed grown, and the most worthless when it comes to health value of this poisonous weed, then too, tobacco is one of the most labor-consuming crops we grow. Then Just think' nothing but a man and a goat will eat this health robbing filthy stuff, the starving nation love the weed. It comes before bread with them. Oh yes its a great habit. We all, I hope, love our coun try's banner, our flag. For more than 150 years our Star-Spangled Banner has symbolized the Pa triot Dead, immortalized in our noble patriotic ?ong, America the Beautiful. All over the world, this our American flag, has been reversed and respected wherever unfurled to the br^pze. Leading our people like a pillar of fire by night and like a star by day. . May this mighty Spangled Banner lead us on till the war drums throb no longer and the battle flags are furled in peace, Wonderful United peace. Wh'en new sweet potato stor age houses are completed at Bethel, nearby farmers will have access to storage facilities which Will care for nearly 100,000 bus hels. The town opened its sweet potato auction market for its second season on October 10. FAVORITE ? Rated a* one ol the top favorite* (or the two 100 Iap modified stock car races at the New Charlotte speedway next Sunday afternoon will be Char lotte's own Buck Baker, dinner of four features at the Charlotte fairgrounds track during the sea son. Buck will also compete in the 20-mile NASCAR strictly stock car <ace at Occoneechee speedway, Hillsboro, N. C. Sun day, October 29. , Baker Favoied At Charlotte CHARLOTTE ? Something new and different for stock car race followers has been scheduled for the fina'i racing program of the season at the Charlotte speed way, located just off Wilkinson boulevard, for next Sunday af-. ternoon Bill France, director of the popular NASCAR -sanctioned ra ces, had booked two 100- lap speed events as a farewell pro - gram for the three quarters of a' mile banged, dUstless speeu way. The first will be a 100-lap race for sportsmen's' modified cars and indications point to a field of some -10 or more drivers for this classic. The second event will be a 100-lap race for the fast championship modified cars with the starting field unlimited. The 15 leading cars from the sportsmen's race will be allowed to compete in the championship modified- event, lining up back of the starting field of champion ship modified cars. . With a S4.000.00 purse offered for the final event. France anti cipates a fast field of top rank ing drivers from throughout the I South and East, including Char SMALL IN SIZE tt\0 in HBAT ? [I SEMI-RADIANT and CIRCULATING Domestic Furnace Let M ?how you dill compact Kretky Oil Burning space heater that's big enough in capacity to beat a hoo*e - yet take* to litde ?pace (only 11" wide, 19" deep, 38" high). Can be connected to fireplace or *oy flue. Easily light* od aad regulated. Quick, dean, dependable, and extremely eco ?omlfil I* Thermostat Control Automatic Heat Cheshire & Patterson PATTERSON OIL CO. City Si. Phono & EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE fill. WORK GUARANTEF.0 Prompt Service Prizes For High Corn Yields r ' - ? rt Highest com yields 'will win North Carolina farmers savings bonds with a maturity value of $400 in the State's 1950 corn con test. The highest official yield in recent years was 148 bushels per acre, according to Dr. E. R. Col lins, extension agronomist at State College. Collins say s thfit yields of 125 to 140 bushels usually win the district contests, and sometimes even the State competition. He explains that only harvested and weighed yields will be accepted for entry in the contest, and that lotte's own Buck Baker. Boh Har well and many others from Char lotte; BUI Blair, Jimmy Lewal len, Jim Paschal and Pap White, High Point; Bill Huskins, Burns ville; Doug Cox and Leonard Tippctt, Greenville, S. C.; Cotton Owens and Joe Eubanks, Spar tanburg. S. C.; Dick Blackwell, Tucapau, S. " C.; Charles Rush, Greenwood, S. C.; Bill Widen house, Concord; Jimmy and Speedy Thompson, Monroe; Charles Freeman and Hank Simpson, Concord; Jim Brawley, Kannapolls; R. J. Ollis, Ashe ville; Bob Welborn, Thomas ville; Lloyd Dennis, Salisbury; Marshall Weatherly, Charlotte; Curtis Turner, Roanoke, Va.; Tini Flock. Eweli Weddle, Ted Swaim, Bill Myers, Bobby. Myers and H-uselj Reid, Winston-Sa lem. ari l numerous other, top drivers fr\>*n Georgia and other states. ?: Time trials 'or. both the sports men's and championship modi fied cars will start at 1 o'clock Sunday afternoon with the first race slated for 2:V) p.m; A Three Days' Cough Is Year Danger Signal Creorrmlsion. relieves promptly because it goes right to the scat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you or money refundedr'Crcomulsion has Mood the test of millions of users. CREOMULSiON "'licve* Coughs, Che^t Colds, Acute Bronchitis shocked or harvested corn cannot N' entered. j Farmers desiring to enter (he contest should be careful to see I that their acre of corn Is harves- J ted by a commltte representing agricultural agencies and busi- 1 ' nessmen, with chairman from j outside the county. The acre, ' must be measured by a county j surveyor, a licensed surveyor, or I | a person recommended by Ihei county PMA chairman. Yields above 148 bushels can be disqualified by the Stale com mittee unless a member of the committee is present at the har vest. Certification of any yield, may be disqualified for non compliance- in regard, to any re gulation. Farmers making an estimated yield may determine the mois ture content of their corn by sending one pint of shelled corn in a sealed container to Clyde Oorriher, Ricks Hall, State Col lege, Raleigh. The North Carolina Founda tion Seed Producers. Inc., is mak ing available $100 in bonds to the highest producer on one acre of land in the State. In addition, a $100 bond will" be awarded to ihchigheKi producer in of I h rce. a reas. Many of the most valuable farm crops and .most of the do mestie animal* grown" in the U: nited States were brought to Nor'h America many years ago front other countries. For exam ple, cotton came fr<>m Egypt and India, cattle and sheep from nor thern Europe, and peanuts from Brazil. m, m MANGt MIDICINC GUARANTEED ts:?:," h?ir gro\nh >km nrii.itioii% on tl??Rs ;?rul livt'Mock or niniir* hi' k AT UhUO & FEED STORES distributed by N Kendall Medicine Co.. Shelby jfcrl //ty/u/tfeuA. ' t/c>u\ doy u>vu&{ Dr. James S. Bailey OPTOMETRIST . Examination, Diagnosis, Giusses Fitted Office open cach Friday 10 A. M. to 5 P. M. v , - ; 214 Mountain St. Next Door To Imperial Theatre The Herald ? $2.00 Per Year FOR RESULTS TEED Pinnacle Laying Mash We also manufacture: THESE PINNACLE FEEDS: ? Starting Mash ? Hi-Energy Broiler Mash ? 167o Dairy Feed ? Pig Starter & Grower . ? Big Hog Feed ? Mix Feed Your needs with regard to custom mixing will have our most careful attention. We can furnish most any protein concentrate such as Fish Meal and Meat Meal. Ask Your Dealer ? ' * , *' ' **;? ' ? 4 ' * ? ? ? . ; * -v ' * 1 ? ? . ' Ware & Sons KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. IS 5 MINUTES OF YOUR TIME WORTH $1000? "X it . ? i.;> . 5 M/A/(/T?S B?HWt> TH? WH??L SOU) M? ON DODG?. . A NO SAVEO MS WOO/ * ? . / , > says Karl R Now Hoclielle. New York feftpi.B every dav arc fimlint; <mt for themselves . . . vou can make 5 minutes of your. Kmc worth $1,000? by spending it at yntrr Dodge dealer*#. Hell demonstrate how you could pav $1,000 more and not get all the extra roominess, the driving ease, the rugged dependability of this smartly Styled Dodge! ? You 11 see that Dodge gives you real stretch-out roominess vou can't- find in ears costing hundreds of dollars more. And a few ?minutes l>chind the wheel will open your eyes to ease of han dling you never thought possible in a car so big and roomy. And after vou buy your Dodge? yonll find that famous Dodge dependability and ruggedness will continue to save you money for years to come. Your dollars do go further with Dodge. Five minutes . . . that's all we ask! NEW BIGGER VALUE AND MOT GET ALL THE EXTRA ROOMINESS, FAMOUS RUGGED DEPENDABILITY OF DODGE Just a few do//ars more ff>an tf>e to west-priced cars/ REYNOLDS MOTORS ? SBtnngst
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1950, edition 1
7
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