Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / July 15, 1954, edition 1 / Page 11
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-HERALD HOUSE OF THE WEEK "... ?? : t DESIGN B-297. This attractive ranch type twp bedroom plan also Includes a separate dining room, porch and attached garage. French doors open from the living room onto the porch. The kitchen -dinette is In front of the house, "With windows overlooking both front and rear yards. Wardrobe closets are used throughout and include coat closets in living room and en try, a hall closet and a linen cabinet. v Plains also call for fireplace, picture window, ? planter, stone facing In front, recessed tub ?nd full basement. Exterior finish Is wide siding and asphalt shingles. Floor area is 1101 sq. ft., , without porch and garage, and cubage is 21, 469 cu. ft. For further information about DESIGN B-297, write the Small House Planning Bureau, St. Cloud, Minn. Peach-Freezing Method Outlined What gives a peach that fresh, right-off-the-tree flavor when It is frozen and eaten In Decem ber? According to Nita Orr, State College extension frozen foods specialist, to preserve the natu ral bouquet of the peach, pick the tree-ripened fruit In the cool of the morning, prepare and freeze immediately. Avotf bruising In handling. Peaches that have been gather ed for market and ripened off be frozen satisfac tory "-they aren't bruised, adds Miss Orr. They develop a mel lowness and have a different; not-qulte-so-good flavor as the tree-ripened peach. Peel peaches by dipping and uniformly ripe fruit into boiling water for 30 to 90 seconds ? lust ?noH8h loosen the skin. Leaving the ripened fruit in ADMINISTBATO BS NOTICE Having qualified as Admlnis tratora for the estate of p pk Beattle, deceased, all persons having claims against said es tate will please file same with the undersigned on or before the 24th day of June, 1955 or this notice will toe. pleaded in ibar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immedi ate payment. * This the 23rd day of June, 1954. Leonard P. Beattle, Lester P. Beattle. Administrators for P. P. Beattle Estate Davis and White, Attorneys - 6:24?7:15 notice of sale ? Under and by virtue of the pow. er of sale contained in an order made by E. A. Houser, Clerk Su perior Court for Cleveland Coun ty in the special proceedings en titled, ?w. H. Huffstetler, et al v?. Mrs. Ruth Huffstetler, Admin istratrix for the estate of Boyce Huffstetler", I wll* sell for cash the premises hereinafter de ?CTibed at public auction on SAT URDAY, July 31, 1954 at 10:00 oclocka. m. or within legal hours the following described real es tate: BEGINNING at a stake in cen to1 of Kings Mountain and Cherryvllle Road, Kelly Dixon's tSSw *2*13?*. with his line S. 82V4 W. 2.85 chains to hltf corner; thence a new line N. 17?4 W. L70 chain# to an Iron stake; thence another new line N. 8214 E 2J8S chains to a stake to center of said wad; thence with road and John Dicksons line S. 17 K E 1.76 chains to the BEGINNING, con tahUfcg one-half of an acre. ; V The above described property # ??ated*bout "illes North Cf..?^8^Iountaln on Cherry vllle Highway and there is locat ed on the above described lot a nlos five room dwelling house. day of June- 1954 n n Commissioner C B- McBrayfer, Attorney 7:11-22 ?boiling water too long will par tially cook the peach and the fresh flavor will, be lost. After dipping the peaches in hot wa ter, plunge them into cold water and rub the skins off with your hands. Peach varieties suitable for freezing are Dixie Gem, Sun beam, Triogem, Goldoneast, Hal ahaven, Elberta, Hale, and Ship per's Late Red. Pack halves in a 40 or SO per cent chilled syrup with ascorbic acid added. Halves are good for both salads and desserts. Cover peach slices or chunks with a 40 or 50 percent chilled syrup con taining ascorbic acid. Use for fresh dessert, pies, cobblers, or shortcake topping. To make a quart of the 40 per cent syrup, mix 2 cups sugar and 3 cups water. Proportions for a quart of 50 per cent syrup are two and two-thirds cups sugar to two and two-thirds cups water. Miss Orr recommends adding as corbic acid, the anti-browning a gent, according to the directions on the package. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Dear Sir: I received this weeks copy of your paper, which I ten joyed read ing very much. I appreciate your sending it to' this Marine Corps Recruiting Office, and look for ward to reading -it every week with great interest. I again wish to thank you for your splendid co-operatiOn of the past and enlist your aid in fur thter support in getting qualified young men and women to s^rve their country with the United States Marine Corps. Sincerely yours, ARTHUR F. BEELER Staff Sgt, U. S. Marine Corps Recruiter ? Card ol Thanks We wish to express our appre ciation to our many friends and neighbors for their abundant expressions of sympathy, floral tributes and other kindnesses at the death pf our husband and father. The Family of J. W. WATTERSON v NOTICE OF ADMIN1 STBATOB NORTH CAROLINA. CLEVELAND COUNTY * ' Having this day qualified & administrator of the estate of Pearl Hloks, deceased, late of Cleveland County, North Caroli na. "nils is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said deceased, to exhibit them to the undersigned at G ro ver, North Carolina, on or before the 7th day of July, 1955, 'or this notice will be pleaded- In bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate , payment of said obligations. This the 7th days of July, 1954. ?.R. B. KEETER, . - Administrator of Estate of Pearl Hicks, Deceased. Joseph C. Whlsnant, Attorney < ; v. . ' 7:15?8:12 Wheat Supports Aze Increased ___ - * | The final support rate on the 1954 crop of wheat has been an nounced, says H. D. Godfrey, state administrative officer for Agricul tural Stabilization and Conserva tion. The final rate is 4 cents more per bushel than the minimum pri ces announced last fall. The aver age support rate for grkdes of wheat produced throughout the nation is $2.24 per bushel. God frey compares this figure with the national average support rate of $2.21 per bushel for the 1953 crop. The class of wheat grown in North Carolina is soft red winter wheat. This wheat, grading No. 1, carries a support rate of $2.40 a bushel; grading No. 2, it carries a rate of $2.39; No. 3 ? $2.37; No. 4 ? $2.34; and No. 5 ? $2.31. Godfrey reports that by grade the rate is also discounted accord ing to the condition of the wheat. If the wheat is "light smutty", "the support rate is 2 cents less, "smutty", 6 cents less, "light gar licky", 6 cents less, and "garlicky" 15 cents less per bushel. The 1954 wheat crop will be supported as in the past through | loans on farm and warehouse- 1 stored wheat jHi\d through the purchase of wheat delivered by producers under purchase agree- j ments. Loans and purchase agree ments will be available from har vest time through January 31, 1955. In North Carolina these loans will mature on February 28, 1955. Producers who elect to deliver wheat under purchase agree ments must notify their County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee within a 30-day period ending on the loan maturity date. To get wheat price support in 1954, a producer must be in com- ? pi lance with his 1954 wheat acre age allotment and be eligible to receive a wheat marketing card on all other wheat growing farms In the county in whidh he has an | interest, Godfrey reminds. The house in which the incum bent Commandant of the Marine i Corps always lives Is one of the | oldest public buildings in Wash ington, D. C. STOP UTTLE WATCH TROUBLES Before They Get BIG! i?yw*oU ] iww.Mcm ' ond *? |ot> H ' ?' . ' > ENGRAVING FREE On All Gift Items Purchased Here Grayson's Jewelry m YOU eu h*ve fun nfurlm out your ntiuie from the Orient Utile letter punle. If the oumbtr of tfc.M ?^15* .. T?" l? J of iM*. subtract from 7. If mort i yonr >rrt ?aw, subtract from JJ. Now In kr (hit If? ?. n"^ your key letter In the word OftlKS'T at the too of Sf ..lSP>Ur..Tk?< Up,ler left ? " k "* ont to/EtteSTC ft'lS&MMm "o^u" fr?m le,t to rUht- BMuw tf" Bulletin Describes i Control For Mastitis ?? Continuous spread of mastitis, or inflamation of the udder, re sults each year in enormous loss es to dairymen, according to Ho ward Clapp, county agent. More effective control of this condition would go a long way toward improving the efficiency of t}?e dairy industry and help ing individual dairymen to meet today's competitive standards, says Mr. Clapp... TTie many causes of mastitis, methods of prevention and treat ment, and the relation between general good management of dairy cows and udder health are described in a recently revised farmers* bulletin by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. The bulletin, entitled 'Udder Diseas es of Dairy Cows," reports that mastitis Is one of the chief caus es for the heavy turnover in dai ry herds. Even with mild chronic masti tls, cows cannot produce as much milk as they could otherwise. As '.the disease becomes more acute, production may decrease as much as 25 percent or more, and early disposal of the animal may be necessary. Fortunately most bacteria found in mastitis are harmless to people and, when milk is pro perly pasteurized, danger to pub lic health is eliminated. Masti tis organisms are a threat chief ly to the profits of tjie producer, Says Mr. Clapp, but that is rea son enouj^. to control them. A single copy of Farmers' Lul letin No. 1422, Udder Diseases of Dairy Cows, can bp obtained free of charge from the Office of In formation, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington 25, D. C. A detachment of Marines un* der Colonel Robert E. Lee,, U. S. j Army captured John Brown at Harpers Ferry on October 18, i 1859. . . I Funeral Rites For Watterson Held On Friday Funeral rites for John Wilburn J < Will f W.attorson. 17. wove con , ducted Friday at 3:30 p. m. from jOak Grove Baptist church with [ interment following in the church 1 cemetery. Rev. C. C. Crowe, the pastor, 'and Demauth Blanton, Wake Fo rest ministerial student, officiat ed. Tlie body lay-in-state at the church one half hour prior to the service. Mr. Wattqrson, a prominient farmer, died at Kings Mountain hospital last Wednesday morning at 8:15 a. m. after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage at his home in the Oak Grove community less than three hours earlier. A native of Cleveland county, he was the son of Mrs. Ida Dixon Watterson of Charlotte and the late John Watterson. He was a deacon of Oak Grove church, a member of his district school committee, a former president of the BethWare Progressive club, and a former Democratic precinct ] committee chairman. Surviving are his mother, his wife, Mrs. Lizzie Lovelpre Watter son. and four children, Billy Wat teison, Mrs. Dewitt Randall, and Judy Watterson, all of Kings Mountain, and Mrs. Wlllard Boy les of Clearwater. Fla. Five brothers, Bun Watterson, Bessemer City, Mitchell Watter sqn, Shelby, Elmer Watterson, Rock Hill, S. Cj, Raymond Watter son, Charlotte, Gene Watterson, LaGrange, Ga., and six sisters, Mrs. Beatrice Rogers, Tulsa, Okla., Mrs. G. B. Borders, Shelby, Mrs. A. C. Bell, Kings Mountain, Mrs. Clyde Pressley, Charlotte, Mrs. Ed Conder, Pineville, and Mrs. P. W. Helms, High Point, al so survive. * : Active pallbearers wlpre Char les E. Goforth, Horace Bell, Gar man Davis, Lester Canipe, Clar ence Blanton, and Tom Hamrick. PONY LEAGUE TEAM ? Pictured above la the Kings Mountain Pony league team which finished In the runner-up spot in the Amer ican Pony League this summer with an. 8-6 won-loss record. Sit ting left to right are Johnny Hardin. Russell Pinkelton. Bill Ware. Charles Cleary and Buddy Connor. Standing are Recreation Director "Red" Layton. Johnny McGlnnis. Gerald Thomasson, Randy Cash. Keith Layton. Johnny Carpenter and Coach Will Grlce. (Photo by Carlisle Studio.) Dr. Hamrick Opens Office In Concord Dr. Ladd W. Hamrick, Jr., a I former resident of Kings Moun tain, opened .an office July 7, in Concord, and will serve Cabar rus County in the practice of in ternal medicine. Dr. Hamrick's office is Jocated in the Medical Clirjlc Building near the Cabar rus Hospital. Dr. Hamrick Is the son of Mr. | and Mrs. Ladd W.. Hamrick, of | Boiling Springs. He is a graduate of the Kings Mountain High School and Bow man Cray School of Medicine. | Dr. Hamrick received his intern ship in the department of Medi cine at Washington School of j medicine and Barnes Hospital at [ St. Louis, Mo. He also served as i assistant resident in the Depart ment of Pathology at Bowman Cray School of Medicine and the North Carolina Baptist Hospital. While serving in the U. S. Army Medical Corps Dr.. Hamrick held the rank of Captain, and was as sistant chief of medicine at 10th General Hospital In Manila. He has also had four years work in the Dike Uuniverslty School of Medicine. Dr. Hamrick opened a joint of fice with Dr. Robert L. McWhor ter, Jr. AT SAN DIEGO Dickey Woodward, 17, son of Joe Lee Woodward of Kings Mountain, is receiving basic navy training at San Diego, Calif., following his enlistment June 7. He will complete his (boot training on September 8. Ills ad dress is S/R William D. Wood-, ward, 446-4fi 25, Co. 147, USNTC, San Diego 33, Calif. Only Ford Trucks have it ! Y-8'i and SIXl AIL Low-Friction ALL High-Compression ALL Overhead Valves ALL Deep-Block Design For the power they develop, the 1954 Ford Truck engines have less cubic inch displacement than other-make engines! And smaller displacement engines normally need less gas! iiMtr. 1IMLT. POWf* K MO V-? K)W Bf MNG V-M 170-M.P. OUtOO KINO V-? 152-R*. cakoo king v-a .
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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July 15, 1954, edition 1
11
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