Negro News !
By Mrs. Cannle Gordon
105 Carpenter Street
Kings Mountain, N. C.
Turn In News Items
at above, address .
College students who were not
on the list last week are: Howard
Shipp, Earnest Gamble, Jr., Liv
ingston College, Salisbury; Annie
Lee Gaston, Fayetteviile Teach
ers College, Fayetteville.
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Cole
announce the birth of a girl, Oct
ober 8.
Mrs. Blanch Berry, of New
York, Is visiting relatives in
Kings Mountain.
Frank Youngblood of Winston
Salem visited Mrs. Connie Gor
don and other relatives over the
weekend. ' ,
DAVIDSON SCHOOL NEWS
During the regular meeting of
the Davidson School P. T. A.,
the following officers were elect
ed for the year; president, Rev.
R. L. Garvin; vice-president, Mr.
Roy Brown; secretary, Mrs. Fel
ton Martin; assistant secretary,
Mrs. Willie M. Adams; treasurer,
Mr. R. 3. Byers; (Reporter, Miss
B. Jackson).
Committeemen- appointed are:
Executive committee: Compos
ed of officers arid Mr. J. A. Gib
son.
Program committee: Mrs. Wil
lie M. Adams. Mrs. Gertrude
j Brown and Mrs. K. W. Winston.
Social committee: Miss M. L.
Pope, Mrs. Camenesal Castle, and
Mrs. Lucille Hunter.
I ?
Membership committee: ^ Mr. '
Millard Hunter, Mrs. Odessa
Shields and Mr. Felton Martin.
We do hope to see more of the
parents at these P., T. A. meet
ings. We. have big plans and it
is going to take the cooperation
of each parent and friend and
not a few to cooperate, and help
make the Davidson school P. T. A.
one of the best.
Brownie Troop No. 32 met
Thursday afternoon, Oct. 4 in the
recreational building of the Pres
byterian church. We had our play
period first and then Kathy
Hoyle called the meeting to or
der. After we had said our pled
ges, put up our stars and sung
our songs, we played gossip.
? Mary Lillian Lewis, Reporter
COMB! HAT/0, % RADIANT G. CIRCULATING HEAT/
Royal Heaters
Tat, tha floe* Is ?r*im ui iklUnr.
?an play aafaij whan thia baautifully
<Ml|iil< and atUMtlw CoU Royal
Haatar la la your homa.
OOUB HOT BLAST CIRCULATORS
ara CTJEL SAVERS. Tha AIR-TIOHT
Ut? mi W, 1 1 II.IH an J UMBOIBO
IHAL HOT BLAST ST8TEM OF
COMBUSTION auppliaa all tha draft
to tiw Haatar through tha HOT
BLAST TUBE war tha Bra bad, mi*
Ing prahaatad air with tha rialnff
'(??at, oauatnp ? aclantiflo, aconom
loal znathod for tha burning of tha
Thla AIR-TIOHT Con.tructton
makaa It p wllila for our Hot Blaat
Circulator* to hold Bra not manly
a*? night, but will hold Bra bom 84
to 36 HOUR 9, da ponding upon tha
alaa of oyr CIRCULATOR, /
Com* in and t*? thm b?t ooai
haatar on tha marJcaf today ? tha
modait prioa will plaaaa jrou.
PHIFER HARDWARE CO
Phone 46
EXECUTIVES CLUB SPEAKER
Sydney R. Montague, former
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
man, will be the first speaker
this fall for the Cleveland-Ruth
erford Executives Club at their
meeting on October 19.
Former Motility
To Speak To Club
The Land of the Midnight Sun
in all its glamorous adventure
and with its unlimited opportun
ity will be presented to the mem
bers of the Cleveland-Rutherford
Executives Club by Sydney R.
Montague, ex-Mounty. adventur
er and philosopher, when he will
speak at the next regular convo
cation of that organization which
will be held at Gardner-Webb Col
lege on the evening of October
19, W. M. Ficklen the local secre
tary-treasurer announced today.
"Sid" as he is generally known,
spent most of his six years as a
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
in the Arctic Patrol. It was while
he was serving as a Mounty that
he showed a tendency toward ad
venture which he had inherited
from a long line of swashbuck
ling ancestors, most of whom
were seafarers.
Montague was destined for a
commonplace engineering carter
and was educated with that end
in view in Montreal, Canada. But
he brushed aside further formal
education when a chance came to
him to serve with the lads in the
scarlet tunics.
His is NOT an illustrated lec
ture. He has made no moving pic
tures in order to round out a sur
vey of strange places, for he has
never needed such assistance. His
talk is packed with facts; his
power of description is vivid ; and
his command of words is fluent.
Montague has been places, seen
and done things, and he is a past
master in the art of getting all of
this across to his audience. He
makes it quickly apparent that
the life of the pioneer has not
passed. He believes, and he
makes his hearers believe with
him, that the youth of today has
new worlds to conquer and vast,
still-unsuspected resources to dis
cover, and he declares that the
natives of the north can show
the way to these things.
DAYS
October 12--13
Saturday
To Bring Yon
One Beauty U X 1
FOR ONLY . ? -j - ???
.ttiait In Carbon
oh or Moors
???
Rambling Sketches Of
Oak Grove News
By Mrs. William Wright
? ?' f ;
Mr? and Mrs. Frank Dixon and j
; children were the Sunday guests !
of Mrs. Dixon's parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Riley. Allen and family. Pvt.
D. C. Allen of Fort Jackson and
Mrs. Allen were also quests in the
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ware, I
Mrs. T. A. Champion. Mrs: Stokes
Wright, Misses Nancy and Betty
Ann Bell and Mr. and Mrs. A. T
Randall and Mrs. Laura Wolfe
attended the play "Then conquer
We Must" Saturday night.
Mr. J. F. Davidson left Tuesday
for Cheraw, S. G. where he plans
to spent the next few months.
Mr. and Mrs. Bayne Randall
and Tommie and Mr. and Mrs. A.
T. Randall enjoyed a trip to the
Mountains Sunday on their re
turn home. In the afternoon they
visited Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Bar
ber of Tryon.
Miss Annette Ware spent the
weekend with Miss Laurlane Mor
ris of El-Bthel.
Plans are being completed for
the annual Harvest Day and
Homecoming which will be held
at the local church on the first
Sunday in November. At that
time an ingathering of the Lord's
Acre project will be made.
A large crowd a'ttended a birth
day dinner Sunday honoring "Un
cle" Billy Hamrick at the home
of his son Claud Hamrick. Uncle
Billy was celebrating his 90th
birthday aniversary.
Master Bill Wright, small son
of Mr. and Mrs. Stokes Wright,
was sick the past week.
The Young Women's Sunday
School class and their teacher,
Mrs. Osby Lovelace enjoyed an
oyster supper Saturday night.
Mrs. Dewitt Randall entered
the Shelby hospital Monday af
ternoon for treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Queen
and children of Estille Springs,
Tenn., spent a few days recently
with Mrs. Queen's parents, Mr.
a:id Mrs. Marvin Wright and
Marguerite Wright.
DaUtWCR*
Final Rites Held
For Mrs. Rhodes
Funeral services for Mrs. Sal
lie Rhodes, 78, former resident
of Kings Mountain who died at a
hospital in Travelers Rest. S. C..
/ wore hold Monday afternoon at j
?3 o'clock at Hover A! onion a J
A. R. P. church. She had boon m '
; ?!! health fot: several 'years. . '
: Rev: W. L. Pressly. pastor, and !
? Dr. \V. M. Boy ce officiated and '
burial was in Mountain Host com- !
jetery.
Mrs. Rhodes was the daughter j
1 of the late Adeline Hooper Orane
ami Martin Crane. She was mar
ried' to James K. Rhodes, who
died in l!UT. She was a member
of Bovee Memorial A. K. Pre* by
terlun ehureh.
Sho had been living with her
daughter, Mrs. Ernest N. White,
af Greenville. S. C. Survivors in*
Clude Mrs. White, and a son, John
O. Rhodes ,of Selma, Ala., five
! grindchildren and four great
grandchildren.
The national average support
price for 1951 crop corn will be
$1.57 per bushel, the U. S. Depart-,
ment of Agriculture has announc
ed.;
Bessemei City
Kings Mountain
DIXIE THRIFTY PRESENTS A THRIFTY
I I
? ^ - ? ?
Firm Rlp? Slicing
Tomatoes. . . ?? 23c
Crisp Gr?en
Cabbage .... 3 1 9c
Musselmsn's Pie
CHERRIES
No. 2 Can 23?
Plllsbury Beat Whit*
CAKE MIX
16-Or. Pkg. 35c
White House
APPLE JELLY
2-Lb. Jar 30^"
Large 8Ue
RINSO
Pkg 30?
Cook's Inaaetlolda
REAL-KILL
Pint Bot.
With a tinge of Fall in the air, appe
tites are keener, and everyone enjoys
crisp, crunchy APPLES. These delici
ous APPALACHIANS will double your
enjoyment and at THRIFTY PRICES,
tool
Tender Yellow Cookneck
Squash . . 2 "... 15c
Small Crisp Green
Cucumbers . 2 "? 25c
Double Red Delicious ? Nature's Own Health Food
- 39c
Guaranteed Ripe ? Ready To Eat Jumbo California
Each
-yy
TRUE SOUTHERN tfOSPHAUTY
IS OUR RUIE FOR COURTESY
Dix
Apples ... 3
Guaranteed Ripe ? Ready To Eat Jumbo Cal
Honey Dews . - 59c
California Flame Tokay
G rapes... 2 " 25c
Carolina Grown Fancy
Snap Beans 2 ? 27?
?fittir// Values!
Sunlight American
Cheese .... $1.00
Ballard Ovenready
Biscuits . . . 14c
Chef's Salads!
Makes Tasty 8andwiche.
Ham Salad . ... 45c
Freshly Prepared
Chicken Salad . . 8C?; 59c
From Llbby*s Hawaiian Plantations! Crushed
27C
From Lib*>y*s Hawaiian Plantati
Pineapple
Hunt, For Th. Best ? Tomato
Catsup..
Stock Your Shelves With Armour's
Roast Beef
Can
14-Oz.
Bot.'
Ycsemlte Yellow Cling
PEACHES
Swlffi F<n. Shortening
Toilet Soap
69c Swiftening
12-oz.
Can
3-Lb.
' Can
18c
51?
99?
No. 2J Can
Kansas Gold Self-Rising
FLOUR
25-Lb.
Print Bag
S2.15
Hormel Meat Of Many Use*
SPAM
(WOODBURY'Sj Beef Stew
For Double-Quick Meala? Auetex Savory
No. 300 9J.
Can v.
12-Ox. Can
52c
Rag. Siza
D?l Monte Country Gentleman
Golden Corn . . H d"
Buy 8everal Can* ? B? jh'a Beet
Pork & Beans . .
Greenwood'* Horn* Style Pickled
Cm
Beets... ~
Swancon'i Delicious Boned
Chicken . .
Castleberry'a Famous
Ga. Hash
Cooka Quickly? rDelmonloo Long
Rice ? ? ? ?
A Great Favorite I Luzlanne
Coffee..
^ ^ So Tender! So Good!
Economical Pork Roant
BOSTON
Flavorful, nutritious and
more meat for your mon- Lb.
ey ? a thrifty buyl .
Fine Flavor Ham ? Small Slzea ? 4 to 6-Lb. Avg.
Smoked Picnics ^ 48?
Freeh Dreesed and Drawn
Frying Chickens . ? 49c
Pinky Pig Juicy Plump Pinky Pig Mild Or Hot
Frankfurters pkbq 58c Pork sausage u 49c
Fresh Fish Vaiues!
Fresh Red Medium Slse Fresh
Perch fillets u. 37c Mullet... u 19c
.uTT:'"*! It. Ocean
Whiting.. "? 15c Croakers, lb. 35c
1 ' 1 . . ' *,*. . S T.'
Toilet Soap
WOODBURY'S
13c
l*Hl Shi
Lotion Soap
JER6ENS
Call*
9C
Swift's Cooking Oil
JEWEL
32?
Pint tot.
CAMAY
2 *??
\
To! lot Soap
JlpAY
2 ?u?? ?*? 2S?
Granulated Soap
OXYDOL
I**. Hi 3QC
For Ea?y DlihwMhlng
DREFT
L?? Pk#- 3QC
Health Soap
LIFEBUOY
2 ???*. 17c
R*fr*shtng Bath Soap Soap Of Tho Star* I
IJFEBUOY LUX
2 a^Sm * I .??. ?? 1 7C
Fragrant Bath Soap
LUX
Satfc Sis*
25c
?
For Family Wash
SURF .
lp* Ms- 30? I