What's Your Home Worth To You? Is It worth the few dollars a year that it takes to give year protection from fire ... . Just think ? there are 365 days a year that your home could burn to the ground. Good Insurance can tsart a -re-building program in case of fire. It'll 'be a big step In getting you back on your feet. SEE US TODAY! The Arthur Ha; Agency AM* KINDS OF INSURANCE Phone 182 HARRIS FUNERAL HOME ? Ambulance Service ? Phone 118 ' Kings Mountain, N. C. First National Bank PRESENTS INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT NORTH CAROLINA ?to . ?( , ?? v-i -v ????*? ? ?????? ?? mi i mi ? 1 1 THE STATE FLOWER? Th* Dogwood Legend says that during Christ's time, the Dogwood was so tali and strong, it was chosen to furnish the timber of which the cross was made. This distressed the tree and Jesus said to it, "Because of your sympathy for My suffering I promise you this. Never again will you attain such size that you can be used as a cross. Also your blossoms shall be In the form of a cross with two short and two long petals, and at the outer edge .of each of your petals, in the center," shall be the print of the nail and in the center of your flower, which shall appear stained with blood and brown with rust, there shall bo a crown of thorns." Gnr friendship ties should never be broken if possi ble. They grow sweeter and more comforting with age. Likewise, your banking connections develope into fine spirit of understanding and mutual cooperation that grows stronger with time and experience. FIRST NATIONAL BANK 3 Subscribers to our knowledge Did Not Receive their HERALDS last week Ttie Address Labels Slipped Of! And They Were Re turned By The Postoffice. Let Us Know When Yon Fail To Get You Copy PHONG 167 01 283 of Write: CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT ?? Kings Check the Expiration Date printed on the Address Label an your HERALD. Renew Promptly! ? ? ? < .? . 4 44M049 PHSIMHT WHO UKtS TO StHf (KAH9 OPIKA IH90L01S his nour ir mhi ho m atom or THt 'MIT' WHIM IVSItftSS TAOS HIM TO new POKK AMI MAS HO. I MASTtK Of AHt MAT 10 H TUMS- WAIT 9/SHtP -PURSUiS RAILROAD MODtl 9 01191 HC AS A H099Y-9HUT AH 9 OPtRATSS HIS OWH Vglh SCAU MOm TR4IH WITH COAi r/A?? locommi capasu ot PUIUHS 4 1049 Of 3,000 P0UH9S. RC90ILDIHC ITS 9H9U ACROSS THt OHIO AfVtR. A A All AO AD (I J M0VT9 4H OLD SPAH Off ITS HtKS IH ST Ml HOT IS; (I) MOVtO A HIW Sit fOOT SPAN TO THl SAMt HI US IH 75 MIHVTtS/ (3/ HOOKED HP THt TRACKS 4H9 AISUM19 TOU MAIN UHl OPtHATIOHS 4U WITHIH 20 HOOKS. < ?nocunbH a im u? wm m PERSONALS Glee A. Bridges was a Charlotte visitor on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Hicks spent last weekend In .Raleigh with their son and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. John Pike and daughter of Greensboro were guests over the weekend of Mrs. Pike's parents, Mr. 'and Mrs. George Hord. Mrs. Edna Beam was a recent over-night guest of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Beam. Miss Eleanor Myers, student at Queens College, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Myers. Mrs. J. C. Smathers of Char lotte was guest Monday of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Pat terson. ^vfr. and Mro. Httfr-fcowery and children were spend the day guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dover of Shelby. J. W. Blalock, J. P. Blalock, T. D. Blalock, and L. G. Blalock left Tuesday for Union Level, Va,., to visit W. P. Blalock who has 'been seriously 111 in a Richmond hos pital, but has returned to his home. They will also visit anoth er brother, J. O. Blalock, in Bas kerville, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Allran, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Allran of Cher ryvllle were Sunday guests of Mr. A. A, Allran. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Beam of Bessemer City were Sunday din ner guests of Mr. and Brs. B. F. Beam. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Davis of Bessemer City, Miss ? Beatress Honeycutt of Kings Mountain spent Sunday with their moth er, Mrs. Julia H. Helms of Gold Hill. ? In addition to its regional blood centers now operating in 37 major cities, the American Red Cross is establishing a num ber of defense centers In other metropolitan communities which will function solely for the pro curement of blood and blood de rivatives tor defense needs. Letter Te Editor Richmond, Va. Dear Mr. Harmon: As there is a <wtain place that Is said to lie paved vith good In tentions never carried out; 1 am trying to fulfill an ir.tention sev eral weeks old to keep at '.east one of mine out of the pattern of that "good Intentions never ful filled paving." I wish to congratulate you and your force on the award recent ly received as to. the general make-up of your paper and as to your editorial page. I am an avid reader of every North Carolina paper I get hold of, and the Sea board and Southern trains crews bring me many weeklies as well as dailies, and I am proud to say that yours is outstanding a mong the country weeklies. Your editorial page, in my opinion, and while very often I disagree with you, is well written,., fitting, and always to the point. And I do not think your local news coverage could be improved upon. Again my congratulations and with the wish you will continue to make it what it Is now, one of the best country weeklies. Sincerely yours, Leslie McGinnls. Mokes Good Yield With 12 Dnstings Despite unfavorable weather and heavy boll weevil attacks in his section, Nathan Legrand, Ne gro farmer of Route 1, Mt Gil ead, produced 2,002 pounds of seed cotton per acre last year. According to W. F. Wright, Ne gro farm agent In Richmond County for the State College Ex tension Service, Legrand entered five acres of his cotton crop in the State Five-Acre Production and Quality Contest and did a good job of following extension recommendations. He used Coker 100 wilt resis tant seed and applied 800 pounds of 4-10-6 fertilizer and 100 pounds of nitrogen material per -acre. One practice to which he devo ted a great deal of attention was insect control. He applied ben zene hexoehlorlde dust six times with a tractor duster ?t the rate of eight to 10 pounds per acre. Six additional applications of dust were made with an airplane. Legrand started applying In secticides early, on June 27 Just before squaring, and made suc ceeding applications at intervals of seven to 10 days. I Whole blood shipments to Ja pan and Korea for wounded fighting men have been carried on regularty by the American Red Cross since last August, .thanks to blood donations by the public through the organlza t ion's regional blood centers. Re ! 3erve stocks of blood plaama sup. 1 plied earlier through the <Red j Cross also have been used ex tensively, particularly during the early days of the ; FLOOR ? <mm Inlaid T fiolwmi end Rub. bor TO* InstalkrtJoa by *??. Nfo ?xtra dun?* for *?? ****** *nn&? of MOHAWK ecarpoL Venetian Blind Co. : k York Rood | IT College Hints To Farm Homemakers By Ruth Current State Home Demonstration Agent Kitchen Travel ? Don't store outside the kitchen ? in pantry, basement, dining room, hack room, cellarway, milk house or porch ? hems that are used oft en In preparation of ihree meals a day. Shorten your walk dis tance simply by providing work space near sink and refrigerator. Too often equipment la isolated from work counters. Many fanv ilies continue to keep things where they have always been kept instead of taking advantage of possibilities offered by their kitchens for storing supplies and equipment within easy reach of -where they are used. Paint Protection ? Any paint can be damaged by strongly al kaline soap or other cleaners, a brasive powder, and rubbing, home management specialists say. Coarse scouring powder and strong cleaners remove or rough en the smooth outer surface of the paint so that It soils faster and is more difficult to <. clean. Strong alkali can weaken and al so discolor paint. It is wise to try out any new cleaning preparation on an in conspicuous part of the paint first, carefully following direc tions that come with It as to how much and how to use. In washing paint, It is impor tant to wash only a small area at a time and rinse carefully be fore moving on to another area. Even a mild soap contains some alkali that will eventua iy injure paint If left on it. Directions for some commercial paint cleaning preparations suggest that no rinsing is needed. Yet many are highly alkaline, say specialists, and will damage the surface if left on. Some cleaning solutions make the paint soft while It is wet and then tubbing can damage It. With such cleaners there may be less damage from 'leaving a very little cleaner on the surface than from rubbing while rinsing. Be sure to use only t.te amount of cleaner suggested in the direc tions. Some of the new deter gents, like soap, are alkaline; othefs are slightly acid or neu tral. They are satisfactory for washing painted surfaces in the kitchen or wherever a greasy film has formed. No Man or Woman Can Enjoy Life With Stomach Gasl Poor digestion ? swelling with gas after meals? heavy feeling | around waistline ? rifting of sour food. These are some of the pen alties of an Upset Stomach. CERTA-Vln is helping such vic tims right and left here in Kings Mountain. This new medicine helps you digest food faster and better. It is taken before meals; thus it works with your food. Gas pains gp! Inches of bloat vanish! Contains Herbs and Vitamin B-l with Iron to enrich the blood and make nerves stronger. Weak, mis erable people soon feel different all over. So don't go on suffering. Get CERTA-VIN ? Kings Moun tain Drag Company. ? Herald "House-of-the- Week The Douglas smau'moum REOKOOffl "H Ky-ftmtae cl h* Bioaoort ct H'-0?I0,-G kit- Din THE DOUGLAS has a Cape Cod exterior, with the second floor entrance on the side concealing the fact that this la a duplex. Tenants on the second floor have direct ac cess to the basement laundry. Rooms on the second floor Include living room, bedroom and kitchen -dinette. A bed closet provides space for a roll -away bed and one dormer is a large closet Living room, kitchen-dinette, two bedrooms and bath complete the first floor. Bedroom clos ets are the wardrobe type with separate storage space above. Frame construction is used throughout this house, Which is finished with siding and asphalt shingles. The called -for dimensions of THE DOUG LAS are listed as 34 feet toy 28 feet. Overall floor area Is planned for 952 square feet, while the cubage Is 23,800 cubic feet. For further information about THE DOUGLAS, write the Small House Planning "? n. mu, St. Cloud, Minn. FOR RESULTS FEED Pinnacle Laying Mash We also manufacture: \ THESE PINNACLE FEEDS: ?% Starting Math ? H i -Energy Broiler Mash ? 16% 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 MeatMeaL Ask Your Dealer Ware & Sons KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. ^CHEVROLET ?ngln*? 92-h.p. Thrift ma sf?r or ?xtro MAuaAal>|| f l? ?% I Vjaaa - ja* piwwm; pvj-n.p, uHMinwiiwr. ?wu ytf a

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