in O <M| s o u a *5 os u * 5 WEy MOM, I CMJ'T . SLEEP-' TME UGHTi IK] mv eyes; PEGGY m , I M u HOLY SMOWES 5 OADRAOTT. JOBBER, IUHOW IT'S HOT TOOA.'Y .BUT YOU'RE PMD TO WORK,NOT SWIM.1 SET BUSY -<e AND DO THE .—-rrf 'V* NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the po. Wr at sale contained in a Deed of Timst given by T. F. Bridges sand wife, Mildred Rhea Bridges an the 23rd day of April, 1956, wow on record in the Office of Ibf Register of Deeds for Cleve land County in Book 469 at page 199 to the undersigned as Trus tee tor the Kings Mountain Build. Sag and Loan Association to se. «ire the indebtedness therein mentioned and default having keen made in the payment of same and at the request of said Association, I will sell for cash at the Courthouse door in Shelby, Cleveland County, North Caroli. »a on Monday, August 12, 1957, at *0:00 o’clock A. M. or within le gal hours, the following describ ed real estate: ■ Situated on the South side of Jacksam street and Beginning at a stake in the southern edge of said street, which stake is S. 85 Weg. 53 Min. E. 114 feet from the northwest comer of Lot No. 10 and also the intersection of the Bessemer City Highway with .Jackson street and runs thence along the southern line of Jack son street S. 85 Deg. 53 Min. E. 90 feet to a stake, the northeast mmer of Lot No. 10; thence a long the eastern line of Lot No. m-SLS Deg. 30 Min. W. 147 feet *» a stake, a new corner; thence a new' line N. 81 Deg. 30 Min. W. SO feet to a stake, another neiw earner; thence another new line JJ. * Deg. E. 147 feet to a stake in the southern edge of Jackson street, the point of Beginning. And Being a part of lot No. 10, Section No. 1, of Block No. 2 of the Mrs. C. M. Whitesides prop erty in Kings Mountain, N. C., as per map or plat of same made by J. Clarence Burrell, Register ed Surveyor, September 12, 1947, and Recorded in Plat Book 5 at page 25 in the Office of the Reg. ister of Deeds for Cleveland County, and to which map or plat reference is hereby made. This the 9th day of July, 1957. B. S. NEILL, Trusteee. Davis and White, Attorneys. 7:11—8:8 ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified as Adminis tratrix for the Estate of Miss Maggie Jane Leslie’s estate by the Clerk Superior Court for Cleveland County, all persons having claims against said es tate will please file the same with the undersinged on or be fore the 18th day of July, 1958 or this notice will toe pleaded in bar of their recovery. Alt persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment. This the 17th dav of July, 1957. Eloise S. Crawford, Administratrix for the Estate of Maggie Jane Leslie 7:18-8:8 [ SUBSCRIBE TO THE HERALD NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a deed of trust given by Robert Etters and wife, Estelle Etters, on the 30th day of October, 1954, now on record in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Cleveland County in Book 439, at page 225 to the undersigned as Trustee for the Kings Mountain Building and Loan Association to secure the indebtedness therein mention, ed and default having been made in the payment of same and at the request of said Association, I will sell for cash at the Court house door in Shelby, Clev. Coun. ty, North Carolina on Monday, August 12, 1957, at 10:00 o’clock A. M., or within legal hours, the following described real estate: Being Lot No. 60 in the Cora Mill Subdivision of the property of Textiles . Incorporated as shown on plat thereof made by Charles S. Kirby, a copy of which plat is filed in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Cleveland County, in plat Book 2 at page 95, to which plat reference is hereby made for a full and com plete description of said lot by metes and bounds. Being more fully described as follows: Beginning at a stake In the western margin of 15 foot Street or Alley; thence N. 19 Deg. 11 Min. E. 76.48 feet with the west ern margin of said street to a stake at the intersection of ano ther street; thence S. 85 Deg. 37 Min. E. 200 feet with the southern margin of said street to a stake: thence S. 14 Deg. 58 Min. W. 26.3 feet to a stake; thence N. 65 Deg. 21 Min. W. 192.7 feet to a stake, the point of Beginning. This the 9th day of July, 1957. B. S. NEILL, Trustee. Davis and White, Attorneys. 7:11—8:8 EXECUTRIX NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix for the estate of Carl Herndon by the Clerk of Superior Court for Cleveland County, all persons having claims against said estate will please file same iwith the undersigned on or before the 25th. day of July 1958 or this notice will toe pleaded in bar otf their recovery. All persons indebted to said es tate will please make immediate payment. This the 24th day of July 1957. Mrs.Vada Herndon, Executrix for the estate of Carl Herndon. 7:25-8:15 The carrot is considered an ex. cellent foodstuff—and perhaps it has seen service above and be yond the call of duty. In World War II, a rumor started circula ting that our night flyers were improving their vision toy eating lots of carrots—and drinking huge amounts of carrot juice. Carrots, like many other foods, will only help cure night blind ness in people who are already have poor diets. THE MOST ACCELERATING—If your gasoline hasn’t sufficient octane, it can’t deliver full power accelera tion. Super Shell has all the pctane any car needs. CRUISING—And Super Shell has toluene, a major power ingredient of aviation fuel. This means more energy for extra mileage at cruising speeds. PASSING -Now your engine runs at maxi mum temperatures. Super Shell has heat-stable avia tion fuel components for knock-free passing power. Super Shell instantly and automatically supplies any engine with the full octane value required for knock-free power...under every driving condition SUPER SHELL was developed because many of today’s powerful engines can't deliver full power on premium grade gasoline. Super Shell is an entirely new grade of gas oline ... packed with a high concentration of power ingredients used in aviation fuels. This power pack automatically supplies any car with the octane it needs under every driving condition. And this power will last... thanks to TCP* additive that neutralizes harmful engine de posits and insures the full power of high octane. So if you’re still using a premium grade of gasoline—switch to Super Shell for the best performance you’ve ever known. Fill up at your Shell Dealer’s new white pump! •Shell's Trademark for this unique gasoline additive developed by Shell Research. Smtch fo Super Shell FRED PLONK OIL COMPANY 5 with TCP § Phone 936 ( No, It Doesn't Hurt. I'm lust Learning To Do The Rock 'N' Roll By Billy Arthur Why is it when you or I are driving a nail and hit the thumb instead, and then go hopping a round and jumping and whirling in the wildest contortions of agony, and slinging the hand as it trying to get rid of the lasce rated thumb, someone is sure to ask, “Does it hurt?” It always happens, but why? The average answer is “that’s just the way things are. Back in 1884 the Gaston County Times grumbled about the lack of Tar Heel enterprise: “We sleep in Northern beds, and *our eyes upon a Yankee bureau. We eat out of Yankee plates with Yankee knives and forks. We are placed in Northern or western coffins and deposited in a grave dug with an Ames shovel and spade. We make for sale only cotton with which we expect to pay for the 1001 things we buy from the west and north. We see in our stores northern apples al though we live near Buncombe county. Today our merchants sell cabbages from Baltimore as ch. eap as our culture. Today we use oleomargarine and Boshen butter when we have fine grazing land adapted for cattle. At the Shelby depot 200 walnut trees are wait ing to be shipped north to make the walnut furniture we”ll soon buy. When we build railroads we send north for iron and engines while we curse the Yankee en ergy we so much need. Whetstone Mountains divide Cleveland and Gaston counties, yet We send to Connecticutt for whetstones. In Western North Carolina, the rail road runs over a bed of beautiful varigated marble in Cherokee County, yet our tombstones and monuments are imported from Vermont. Take me, for instance. If I see a fight, I try to keep the crowd back so the fighters will get a fair deal. When a man is run over or hurt, I run for help, phone the police, help load him into an am bulance—all so I can see how bad ly he’s hurt and get a lot of first, hand information. I attend all parades and fires. But I only work or help out when no one else is apparently is at tending to his duties. And at fires my work is altogether in a supervisory and critical capacity. When a musician or band comes to town, I always attend by stand, ing near the open windows and doors, because no better enter tainment can be had anywhere for less money. Why? Horace Greely Miller inferen tially asked the same question ill the old Moravian Falls Fool Kil ler when he pointed out: "A fellow with some cunning, alacrity, superior acumen or fool luck runs across a valuable gone th and claims to be Its sole owner simply because he beat somebody else to it. That’s discovery. “A man holds stock and sits in a: shack or lies in the shade and earns ary a nickle. That’s in come. “Another man has no income and does nothing useful. He’s a tramp. ' “A musician composes a mas terpiece, sells it for bread to keep from begging or stealing. After he’s dead, another man copy, rights it and gets rich. That’s genius. “A skilled worker takes a little straw worth two cents, a few fea thers worth five cents, a nickle’s worth of ribbon and conjures up a combination of indescribable and senseless form which serves for a lady’s headgear. That’s art. “A hat and frock go out of style, and wife or daughter would n’t have it as a gift. Next year it comes back into style, and father sells a cow and a calf and buys it. That’s fashion. “A man invests his money in the right thing at the right time and gets rich. He's a financier. “Another invests his money in the wrong thing at the wrong time. He’s a fool. “An uneducated man labors for $1.50 a day and earns dollars for the stockholders. That's labor. ‘The officials exercise lordship over the nation. That’s state craft. “The soldier fights for it. That’s patriotism. > "The priest prays for it. That’s divinity. “The attorney pleads for it. That’s the law. ‘>And the masses make every red cent of wealth and then foot the whole durned bill. That’s pro. duction.” Why? Now back to driving that nail and hitting the thumb and the man asking if it hurts. Although we know sympathy has prompt ed the question, we cannot resist that tantalizing, longing, uncon. trollatole desire to be preverse, and the answer: “No, it doesn’t hurt a bit. Right now I’m trying to learn how to rock ‘n roll.” Why is that? People Vacation; Accidents Don't RALEIGH — “Traffic accidents take no vacation. To stay safe this summer, step up your vigi lance on the road.” That was the warning given to Tar Heel motorists this week by Major Charles A. Speed, dir ector of the State Highway Pa trol’s safety division. The major urged vacation planners to cooperate with the patrol’s vacation driving pro gram toeing conducted through out the summer as a part of the nationwide Back the Attack on Traffic Accidents campaign. 'He suggested that drivers a dopt Slow Down and Live as a traffic watchword from now through Labor IDay. “During the vacation months, thousands, of motorists are on the highways, and too many of them are intent on cramming as much activity as they can into one brief vacation,’’ Major Speed said. "The result is often tra® edy.” iHe said that summertime traf fic mishaps killed last year 94 persons in 'July, 108 in August and 89 in September. ‘Vacationers must be on guard against speeders, drinking driv ers and drivers who disregard trfalfic laws, if iwe are to avoid a similar record this year,” the patrol executive declared. “And above all, we must make sure we are never guilty of such of fenses ourselves. “Many vacation goers get in to traffic trouble Iby failing to al low enough time to cover the trip comfortably,” Major Speed said. “Then they try to make up time toy driving too fast for condi tions, by driving when fatigued or toy disregarding traffic laws.” As a guide to safe vacation driving the patrol authority rec ommended the following tips: 1. Never go over the speed lim it, and vary your speed from time to time to relieve monotony. 2. Concentrate entirely on your driving. (Let others in the car look at maps and inspect passing scenery. If you are alone, stop if you must take your attention a way from driving. 3. Make a refreshment Ibreak e very couple of hours. It helps to How To Sweep Her Oil Her Feet... Every girl goes for that fresh, well-groomed look... the look you always have when we clean your clothes I Tour suits come back promptly, as crisp and spotless as when new . .. the better to make a good im pression! Try us . . . see for yourself I WEAVER'S CLEANERS "PERSONALIZED SERVICE*’ PHONE 910 ANNOUNCING OPENING OF Huffsjetler’s Auto Parts CHERRYVILLE ROAD • USED AUTO PARTS OF ALL MAKES, MODELS. • NEW PARTS ON ORDER. Unde Haury Huffstetler, Owner keep you alert. 4. Before you start on your trip, learn the driving regulations of the states you expect to travel through. 5. Watch for and obey all road signs, especially speed limits. 6. Have your car completely safety-checked before you start out. 7. Plan your trip so that you have plenty of time to reach your destination and return in com fort. Slow down--the in-a-hurry complex has no place in driv ing. Paul (Revere’s home in iBaston, Mass., is that city’s number one tourist attraction, according to a taxi company’s recent survey. WHY re-enlist in the small car army? /p=J> READ THIS <£=^\ STARTLING FACT 5 out of 10 Smaller Cars wear a Pontiac Price Tag -yet none gives you Any of Pontiac’s Advantages v: PONTIAC GIVES YOU UP TO 8.9% i MORE SOLID CAR PER DOLLAR. 1 ' Not one of the smaller cars can give you the heavy-duty construction, the road-hugging heft and solid security of America’s Number One Road Car! PONTIAC GIVES YOU 4 TO 7 INCHES MORE WHEELBASE. .Here’s extra length where it counts— to bracket the bumps instead of riding them! And this extra length shows up inside, too, with plenty of stretch-out room for six-footersf PONTIAC’S PERFORMANCE TOPS THE BEST THE SMALL CARS CAN OFFER BY A WIDE MARGIN. Your Pontiac dealer can give you a complete facts-and-figures comparison and an on-the-road test to prove that Pontiac performance stands head and shoulders above anything in the low-price field! AND PONTIAC HAS ALWAYS BEEN FAMOUS AS ONE OF AMERICA’S TOP TRADE-1 NS I So why not look and feel like a million —instead of a million others? Trading’s Terrific RIGHT NOW! NOWl If you wont Hio ultimate In both economy tnf extraordinary performance, now Tr.-Puwer Corburetlon I* available ot extra •not on ovon the lowest priced Pontiac models I It's America's newest power advance end exclusively Pontius's at so low o cacti ' SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED Pontiac ‘ DEALER Manufacturer’s License No. 110

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