HOW IS THE GOOSEBERRY, PIE, PAW? OKAY, BUT IT. ISN'T QUITE LIKE MOTHER. • TO MAKE! THE itED TEA t&N'T Quite like she used TO MAKE, EITHER.f SHE ...oops: WOW! THAT'S THE KIND OF * PAIN MOTHER. ., USED TO MiAKEJ^gr ~ST (A u S o u o -i M X YOU S-HOULPNJ'T GO OKJ A P1CNJIC TOPAy PETER-r 6Olf06TO PEGGY cm, ve* y* theT IT IS! V^WEATHBR MAKJ 5AV6 A W\ fJPTT1 Beauty You Can See 1.l\ l jTi I Quality You Can Trast Prices You Can Afford Distinctive installations by certified mechanics. Call or write us for samples and prices. No obligation, of course. PERRY FURNITURE & CARPET CO. Shelby. N. C. — Dial 7426 It's so easy to see the point... . Most people are quick to see that saving makes the difference between wishing and having. The question is: HOW to save most successfully? The answer is: do your saving BEFORE you do your spending. Deposit the first dollars out of every pay envelope in your savings ac count here. Your own persis tence plus the extra money your dollars earn here will pay off handsomely in a brighter future for you. Savings are insured to 510,000 and earn a worth-while return. CURRENT DIVIDEND RATE 3% Building & Loan Association A. H. Patterson. Sec.-Treas. NOTICE OF SCHOOL ASSIGNMENT Upon motion ol J. W. Webster seconded by Fred W. Plonk, the board voted to make the follow ing tentative assignment of pupils i for the school year 1956-57: All children are assigned to the | same schools they attended last ' school year or would have atten ded provided, however, those children having satisfactorily completed the course of instruc tion of , any school are assigned ! to the next succeeding grade in the school to which they would have been assigned with the fol lowing exceptions: 1. All children living east of the railroad on Gold Street and to south of Gold Street in grades 1-6 who have been attending or would have-attended Central Ele mentary School are assigned to the West School, 2. Since there will be no sev enth or eighth grades at West School, pupils in these grades who have attended West School are assigned to Central School. 3. All children living on the opposite side of the railroad from Central School grades 1-8 and north of Childers Street who have been attending Central School or would have attended Central School arte assigned to the North School. 4. ah children living on the | opposite side of the railroad from East School grades 1-8 who have been attending East School or would have attended East School are assigned to the North School except children living on First and Second Streets. These child ren are to return to East School. 5. All children grades T8 liv ing on Cleveland Avenue and east ! of this Avenue and all children living on York Road and east of York Ropd who have been attend ing Central School and West School or would have attended Central School or West School i are assigned to the East School. 6. All children grades 1-8 liv ing on Clinton Drive, Hill Street, Gillespie Street, and Baker Street who have been attending Central School or would have attended Central School are assigned to the i East School. The statement “would have at ; tended” meads the school the ; children would have attended this year had there not been added a I North Elementary School.) These assignments are tenta. tive. Changes in assignments by ; the board will very likely be nec I essary at the opening of school in order to equalize school and class i enrollments. » For clarification of above as signments parents should contact principals or superintendent. All principals will be in their respec tive schools beginning August 21. NORTH CAROLINA CLEVELAND COUNTY. The undersigned, having qual. ified as Administrator of the Es tate of Oblu Smith, deceased, late of Cleveland County, this is to notify all persons- having claims I against said estate to present ! them to the undersigned on or before the 16th day of July, 1957, | or this notice will be pleaded in ; bar of their recovery. AH persons indebted to said estate will please make immedi i ate payment to the undersigned. ( This 16th day of July, 1956. Amizah Smith. Administrator. 9:2-23 EXECUTRIX NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix for B. S, Peeler’s Estate by the Clerk of Superior Court for Cleve land County, North Carolina, all persons having claims against said estate will please file same with the undersigned 'On or be fore the 1st day of August, 1957 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery; All person* indebted to said estate will please make immedi ate payment to the undersigned. This the 31st day of July, 1956. Mrs. Pearl M. Peeler. Execu trix for the estate of B. S. Peeler, ; Deceased Davis "and White, Attorneys 9:2-23 ASTHMATICS! Want simple* effective relief .from chok ing, racking bronchial astbfua spasms? Get genuine Breatheasy—see what you've been missing! There's no substitute for original Breatheasy inhalant and nebulizer set. Get comfort by breathing! Guaranteed! Kings Mtn. Drug Co. Small Grain Yield Reaches New Record North Carolina farmers reach fed an all time high with their average yields of small graiir in 1956. This new record was not produced by accident. It was due to careful planning by the farm ers in their efforts to grow lar ger yields of high quality grains. Extension Field Crops Specia list George E. Spain at North Carolina State College in Raleigh says that farmers need to plan now for even higher yields in 1956-57. He believes that the appli. cation of sound principles will continue the upward rise in ave rage state yields that has been going on over the last 20 years. Spain claims that one of the basic sound principles is the selec tion of a good variety. He points out that the varieties of many crops are quite specific in their requirements of a proper envir onmental condition. The varieties of small grains recommfended by the Experiment Station at Ral eigh have been tested for seve ral years over a wide range of conditions, and these recommend ed varieties have excelled over othter varieties under the average of these conditions. Your county agent can give you a list of the varieties recommended for your particular area of the state. Marines Set New Reenlistment Plan The Marines have announced a new policy for reenlisting ex-Ma | rines with dependents who were discharged with the rank of Cpl. or Pfc. Prior to this announcement, ex Marines in this category were not : allowed to reenlist. Sgt. Golowski, of the Marine re cruiting office, said here today that ex-Marines with dependents, who held the rank of Cpl. or Pfc. i upon their last discharge, will be I permitted to reenlist in the Ma I rines provided they meet revised requirements recently published Oy Marine Corps headquarters. Briefly, the sergeant listed the j new requirements for reenlist ment in the lower ranks as: Cl) | Being a desirable applicant above average in the performance of duty; (2) Dependents of reenlis tee should not cause hardship, or interfere with man's value to the Corps; and (3) Must have been recommended for reenlistment by Commanding Officer when last discharged. Persons wanting more informa tion about this new policy should contact Sgt. Golowski at the Post Office in Gastonia. EVEN in normal times, it's important to have your in surance policies checked pe riodically. New additions and improvements always make your property more valuable. And today, property values are rising as never before! Don’t delay. Make sure that you’i'e well protected TO I DAY. C. E. WARLICK Insurance Agency 203 W. Mountain St. Ptaone 9 __'_„ Social Secority To Include More Sell-Employed In the first article of this se ries I outlined the most impor tant changes in the old-age and survivors insurance program brought about the 1956 amend ments to the social security law. Today, I shall discuss the kinds of work which are brought under social security for the first time as of January 1,1956. For taxablfe years 1955, persons who work for them selves—alone or in partnership—as Lawyers, dentists, chiropractors, veterina rians, naturopaths, osteopaths, optometrists, started building old age and survivors insurance pro tection for themselves and their families on the same basis as self employed persons previously cov ered by the law. It is estimated that 200,000 professional people are affected by this change in the social security law. Lawyers make up the largest number of these newly-covered self;employed professionals. As long ago as 1948, it was estimated that 140,000 out of the probably 170,00 lawyers in the United States were self-employed. Most of them are already familiar with the insurance provisions of social security. They have had occasion to study it in connection with re lationship between legal practice and fields such as business man agement, real estate, finance, and • politics, many lawyers had moved I into other lines of work covered | by social security before 1956. A great many of them came under ! social security as employees of | other lawyers; tfthers acquired military wage credits under social ! security during active service ivvith the Armed Forces. In fact, |it is estimated that at least 30 I percent of all presently self-em | ployed lawyers, at one time or ano ! thter, have accumulated some ear | nings credits under the old-age and survivors insurance program. I To these lawyers, in particular, ! the extension of coverage is of ! marked importance. The social se j curity credits they have built up j would have steadily declined in benefit value in the years ahead; ; in the case of many young law ! yers, they would eventually have ! disappeared altogether. Also brought under social se curity as of January 1, 1956, are I an estimated 78,000 dentists ac tively engaged in private practice. This protection should be of spe I cial importance to a young den | tist who is head of a family. Be cause of the length of time re I quired to complete his profession al training, his earning capacity : in many cases does not commence as early in life as that of the f.T EWiSSS!? wnen snouid ai falfa be seeded? ANSWER: Latte summer seed ings are preferred. The seeding must be made early enough to get the plants established bfefore cold weather. This usually assures a better stand and eliminates much of the danger from weed compe tition. In addition thfe plants are ready to start growing early the following spring, and cuttings of hay are much larger. Recommen Corn Yield Will Pay For Extra Nitrogen One North Carolina youngster has proved to his dad that it pays to uste plenty of nitrogen on com. Jones Negro County Agent Fletcher Barber says that Elbert Brown, a 4jH member of Route 1, Trenton, has shown his father that more nitrogen will pay. Barber delates that young Brown has a plot of corn in a field with his father. The entire field was cultivated, planted with the same seed, and fertilized in thie same manner. However, Brown persuaded his father to let him use more nitrogen on his plot. According to Barber, the corn in the plot stayed greener longer, and ntearly every stalk has two well matured ears. The older Brown'is now convinced that the extra com produced will pay the cost of the extra nitrogen used. average non-professional indivi dual. Moreovter, in starting his practice, he must furnish his of fice with expensive equipment and thereafter go through a pe riod of low income before he is able to realize a reasonable re turn from his practice. If he has a wife and family, he is in need of the survivorship protection social security affords to a young widow and minor children during those years. Dr. D. M. Morrison Optometrist will be in his Kings Moun tain office each Friday afternoon. 1 p. m. to 5 p. m. Office in MORRISON BUILDING ded dates: Coastal Plains, Sept., 15-30; Lower Piedmont, Sept., 1-15; Upper Piedmont, Aug 15-31; Mountains, Aug 1-31. QUESTION: Whfen should you begin culling laying hens? ANSWER: Culling should real ly begin early, as good manage ment of chicks will improve the performance of the hens. Start culling when you place the chicks under the brooder. Promptly cull all chicks that appear runty or weak. Kill them and dispose of them by burning or deep burying. QUESTION: Why have trench silos becomfe more popular? ANSWER: Both the temporary and permanent types of trench silos will usually have more spoi lage. However they are lower in cost than most upright types, and they may save labor in filling and emptying. They can be locat ed so that vehicles can be driven through them for dumping. They are very easily adapted to self feeding cattle. Haroid j George "Summer sure rolls by in a burry. Maybe it’s because we spend so much of it on wheels." HAROLD'S SHELL SERVICE RAILROAD A PIEDMONT jWtfr PHONL o OB. A -USE HERALD CLASSIFIEDS— ^ you need There may be a bedroom or two hid den in your attic, a playroom or work shop in the basement, or a sun parlor on the porch. Why wait to enjoy new comfort and charm in your home when you can do it now and pay the easy way through monthly payments — out of income. • 1-* You’ll bo surprised how much more room just a few dollars a month will buy. Let us plan and estimate for -without obligation. ELMER Lnmhw Company The 25 & 54 WHY DELAY-TAKE TIME TO PAY - SEE US TODAY 9 What happens when a NEW PAYROLL conies to town? More SPENDING MONEY isn’t the only^thing a new factory payroll brings to town. A survey made by the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, shows that 100 new factory workers also meant this to a community: 296 more people 112 more households 51 more school children 107 more passenger car registrations 174 more workers employed • 4 more retail establishments $590,000 more personal income per year $270,000 more bank deposits $360,000 more retail sales per year Here’s convincing proof, we think, that whatever helps the Southland to develop industrially is a real contribution to the long-range growth and prosperity of the South. The Southern helps in many ways. Our own Industrial Development Department aggressively seeks new industries for every available plant site. Our nation-wide advertising program continually invites business enterprises of all kinds to "Look Ahead — Look South!” for greater opportunity. Our modern rail service helps ■provide the economical and efficient mass trans portation so indispensable to industrial progress and growth. New ’'ayrolls—and all they mean to a community — a "coming to town” all over the South. Last year 23,000 new jobs were created by industrial expansion along the Southern Railway System alone. Many in the South helped bring this about. All in the South benefit! I SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM WASHINGTON, D. C. I

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