Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / March 20, 1952, edition 1 / Page 11
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PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Charles HarrlU, Mr. and Mrs. James Litllejohn re turned Thursday night from a visit in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Goforth, Mr. and Eugene Goforth and son. spent Sunday in Rock Hill with Mrs. R. H. Kendrlck. Mrs. Oren Fulton was guest during the weekend of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fulton in Rock Hill. Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Murray, Mrs. Y. F. Throneburg were Sun day afternoon guests of their parents, Mr,. and Mrs. W. D. Mur ray in Maiden, Jimmie Simpson returned Thursday from a business trip to Alabama. Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Allen and Sam Suber returned Sunday af ternoon from a weekend visit in Four Oaks and Smithfield. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Moorhead spent Sunday in Blacksburg with Mr. and Mrs. William Moorhead. Q Mr. and Mrs. Tim Hord and children were Sunday guests of Mrs. Herd's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Hubbard of Earl. They also visited Mrs. Leonard Cook in Shelby. Mrs. George A. Morrow and Miss Dorothy Mull of Charlotte were guests during the weekend of Mrs. Clara Wood and Miss Irene Ingram of Asheville. Mrs. Frank Graves of Greens boro was a guest during the week end of her daughter, Mrs. Falson Barnes. , ' . Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Shields of Atlanta were Sunday guests in the home of Mrs. R. D. Goforth. Mrs. Shields is the former Miss Elizabeth Wimbish. Mrs. Paul Mauney, Mrs. W. W. Tolleson and Mrs. H. E. Lynch went to Greensboro Friday to spend the weekend. Mrs. Mauney went especially to hear her daughter, Miss Pauline Mauney who was on the Art Forum. r NEW YELLOW HYBRID IS PROLIFIC? This photo shows twoTtolks of Dixie 82, a new. imj-.OTed yellow corn hybrid adapted to all com munities in the Coastal Plain and Piedmont sections of North Caro lina. In the 19S1 official Coastal Plain variety tests conducted by the North Carolina Crop Improvement Association. Dixie 82 yielded 25.8 bushels pier acre more than the average of th? best open-pol linated varieties. F. J. Bell, seed and small grain specialist for the State College Extension Service, says seed of this hybrid is being sent to county agents and vocational teachers for farm demonstra tions. A limited supply of seed is available in seed stores. Dixie 82. according to Bell, produces better yields and has better roots and stalks than N. C. 27 and is about equal to N. C. 27 in weevil resis tance. It is slightly later than N. C. 27 and a week earlier than Dixie 18. , .V' . Fertilizer manufacture In the Scientists are giving increas United States was begun In a ing attention to the importance small plant in Baltimore in 1849 of secondary and minor elements and today is one of the largest calcium, magnesium, sulfur, bor unites ? ?* ? 1 % units of the heavy chemicals industry. on, manganese, copper zinc and iron-- in fertilizers. NO SQUAT NO STOOP! NO SWNT! IT COSTS LESS AT Phone m I r""'\T\ 'dm Vl STEP-A-LIGHT THE LAMP YOU LIGHT 1 AT THE TOUCH OF YOUR TOE STERCHI'S ? delivers this Regular 19.95 VALUE Balance To Suit Yc YOUR CHANCE OF A LIFETIME! The magical new 6-way floor lamp that has every thing! Smart styling, eye-restful illuminationl No more fumbling in the dark for a tiny switch hidden somewhere under the shade ? just tap the base with your foot and presto . . . theie's light! So convenient when you're "hand-tied" with pack ages, the baby, etc. ? Rich, latin finish plastic shade that looks like silk, washes like plastic, ? Genuine Polymerin finish base ? will not chip or mar ? resists staining ? stays t:cut:ful. P IV Ultllt llir FIMISIIM Mountain St. Rambling Sketches Of Oak Grove News By Mrs. William Wright Miss Elizabeth Bolin of Beth Ware was tile guest of Miss Shir ley Led better during the weekend. Pvt. Jack Ware of Camp Gor don, Ga., spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ware and family. . Mr. Bobby Randall of State College is spending the spring holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Randall. Mr. and Mrs. Wray Thornburg and son, Dwan and Mr. and Mrs. John Patterson were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otha Thornburg of Rock Hill. - . Mrs. Sam Bell, Giles and Gail, Mrs. Rosa Lee Bell and the scribe were Tuesday guests of Mrs. Arnold .Bell and Dennis and Mrs, Lester Canipe. Miss juanita Lovelace spent Sunday with Misses Carolyn and Nancy Bell. Mr. and Mrs. Dewitt Randall and Keith, Mr. and Mrs. William Wright were Sunday ' dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wat terson, Billy and Judy in the af ternoon the group visited in Char lotte. Mrs. Beatrice Beaty, Mrs; Char les Weaver and baby of Waco were recent visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Spencer. Mr. D. A. Bell is seriously ill at his home here. Mrs, Opal Bell is ill with th?? flu. Mrs. Virginia (Ware) Stone, Jr., was very ill during the weekend. Mrs. Laura Wolfe is spep^ing awhile with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac McGlll of St. Luke. Mrs. McGill has been real ill for several days. Master Charles Wright spent Sunday and Monday with his grandparents. William and Essie Wright. Mr. John B. Ware of Washing ton, D. C., spent the weekend with his brothers, Mr. and Mrs. James S. Ware and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ware and family. Mr. and Mrs. Stokes Wright and children, Charles, Bill and Beth were guests in the home of Mr. and . Mrs. R. L. Plonk of St. Luke recently. Quite a few people of this sec tion attended the Harmon-Love lace wedding held at David Bap tist church Sunday afternoon. GEORGIA ACE ? Fonty Flock. Atlanta speedater, ranks among the top farorites (or the season's first Grand National Circuit atock car race at Charlotte apeed way Sunday afternoon. Fonty will be driving a new Olds 88 in the ISO lap event Time trials start at 1 o'clock with the race scheduled for 2:30 p. m. ' Stock Car Race Set For Sunday CHARLOTTE ? Stock car rac ing's first glamour program of the 1952 season for North Caro lina will be presented by Bill France at the Charlotte speed way next Sunday afternoon as some 40 to 50 new model auto mobiles roar into action ovec the three quarters of a mile Char lotte speedway, located four mil es west of Charlotte just off Wil kinson boulevard. Heading the parade of drivers will be last season's two win ners of Grand National Circuit races over the Charlotte track, Curtis Turner of Roanoke, Va., winner of the spring classic, and Herbert Thomas, Olivia, N. C.. winner of the final race of the season over the local speedway and also winner of the national championship after his triumph in the annual Labor Day race at Darlington Raceway. Rated among other top threats ?are Fority and Tim Flock. Fon ty, who iin'shed second in the national championship last year, will be driving & new Olds 88, while Tim, youngest of the three racing brothers, will make his first local appearance with a 1951 Hudson Hornet. Tim, how ever, won two races with a Hud son, including the race at Atlan Thomas Strickland, senior sani tarian of Cleveland County Health department, has Issued several rules for house wives and food-handlers for the protection of food-poisoning often served u'n suspeetedly. Mr Strickland stated that fowl dressing, cream-filled pastries and chopped meats are the most frequent sources of food poison ing. . "This type of food poisoning," Mr. Strickland explained, "is caused by a germ known as the staphyloceus-staph ( pronounced "staff")r lor short. The staph caused boils, carbuncles and the infection of cuts, scratches and bruises. It can be taken Into the mouth and "stomach without ill effects; but. when the staph finds its way into fowl dressings, cream filled pastries, chopped meats and similar foods, it starts causing trouble. "As the staph germs multiply," the sanitarian continued, "they give off a poison into the' food . and it is that poison which makes the eater deathly iil. A Careless kitchen-worker with an infected cut can. thu?, cause a lot of misery." . Food poisoning need not occur, the sanitarian emphasized, and can be prevented by two simple rules: (1> If you have an infected cut, sore, boil or blister, don't handle food. (2) In handling food, keep it piping hot (not lukewarm) or keep it cold (below 50 degrees) or don't keep it. At the same time, Sanitarian Strickland cautioned restaurants and cafes to observe Section 7 of the State Sanitation Law, which provides: "Notice shall be sent to the Health Officer immediately by ta last November and the event at West Palm Beach, Fla., in January. Other leading aces due to com pete include Marshal league, winner of the Daytona winter classic, driving a 1952 Hudson Hornet; Lee Petty, Randleman, driving a 1951 Plymouth; Bill i Blair, High Point, driving a 1952 folds 88; Buck Baker, Charlotte, driving a new Olds 88; Buddy Shuman, Charlotte, with a 1951 Ford, and numbers of other stare from all sections of the country. Time trials start at 1, o'clock Sunday with the race, a 150-lap event over the three quarters of a mile track, starting at 2 30 p. m. Strickland Gives Simple Rules Against Food-Poisoning Dishes the restaurant manager, or by the employee concerned, If he or any employee contacts any Infec tious, contagious, or communica ble disease, or has a lever, a skin eruption, a cough lasting more than three weeks, .or any other suspicious sympton. It shall be the duty of any such employee to notify the restaurant manager immediately when any of such conditions obtain, and if neither the manager nor the employee concerned notifies the Health Of ficer immediately ... they shall be held jointly and severally to have violated this seccion . . North Carolina's Agricultiu* ai Experiment Station points out that corn yields in the Southeast, ern States could be increased 42 per cierit by adding 30 pounds ot nitrogen per acre. \o IVea BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS ANO COLORS Fine quolfty Archdole fabrics in up to the minute cicl)iiive pattern*. Sturdy 100% wool inner-lining for wrinkle retistant, longer wear. Wide telection to chooie from: Bold or neot pattern*, ttripci or tolldi, bow* or four-in-hands. flWks^ Home o( Better Values MEN'S STORE It Makes Your Dollars Feel Important too The Buick pictured here can match price tags with a lot of cars smalte; in size and horsepower and win. But that only gives you a' hint as to What a whale of a buy it is. Like costlier Buicks, it has the wide-open view of a one-piece windshield. Like costlier Buicks, it has the gleaming dis tinction of sweepspear styling. Like costlier Buicks, it has smart new fabrics and door trim. Like all other Buicks, it has the extra safety of new, long-lasting Wide-Band brakes. Like all other Buicks, it has the sure-footed, road-hugging, even-keeled steadiness of the' Million Dollar Ride? a combination of 15 engi neering features including a husky X-braced frame, end-sway and side-roll stabilizers, I li Poised engine mountings, I'crmi-Firm steer ing and soft coil springs for every wheel. And like all other Buicks, it has a power-packed Fireball 8 Kngine? a high-compression valve in-head that gets extra wallop, extra mileage from every gallon of gasoline. So we think that you'll feci mighty important bossing around this smart-stepping smoothie. And when you check the price we're asking against the field ? we think your dollars are going to feel mighty important in buying power too. 1 fadn't you better look into this soon? Equipment, acr:*9*ttie$. and (fr* wubjttt to chanp* without notice. LOCAL DELIVERED PRICE FOR THE NEW 1952 BUICK SPECIAL 2 -door 6-patsenger Special Sedan MODEl 480 (llluslrdted) $2290.13 Opfco<val ?oj'pmoft, ??o?e O'vd loco' if' oov odd.*onot. moy vq'Y ?n adjoining* ?OmrWyn?H#l OwO to C^0*8??. All pr>Cei tubioct ro c?>o*?e oo#ce. Sure is true for '52 * ? When bolter automobiles arc built BUICK will build them R ''Iroad Are. DEAN BUICK COMPANY ' RING" MOUNTAIN. W. C. ... ii Telephone 330
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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March 20, 1952, edition 1
11
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