With The Farm Women By VIRGINIA NANCE PAYS TO PLAN Mrs. Vernon Williams, Kinston, Rt. 4, knows the value of Home Demonstration work. In planning the remodeling of her kitchen, Mrs. Williams made a scaled drawing before work was begun. According to Miss Marie Pen uel, home economics agent in Le noir County, Mrs. Williams plan ned her 'kitchen for more con venience and better storage bg fore contacting the contractor. TOMATO GRADING Recently, tomatoes were grad ed on Jimmy Williams farm in Burke County. According to S^iss Ostine War lick, home economics agent, the Williams family is experimenting in growing tomatoes for various commercial companies. They will soon know if the weather and other conditions are suitable for growing tomatoes commerci ally. EDUCATIONAL TOUR Johnston County Home Demon stration ClUb women recently made a summer trip to Niagara Falls and Canada. Miss Sarah Ann (Butts, home e conomics agent, reports that the tour was cultural and scenic and gave the group an opportun ty to visit historic areas, indus trial plants, and to see agricul ture of the northern state and Canada. The women had oppor tunity to see fruit farms in upper New York State and some com mercial flowers 'growing. PINE CONE WREATH’S North Carolina craft ideas are spreading into Virginia. Mrs. Ada Dalla Pozza, home econo mics agent in Anson County, re ports that requests have been re ceived from Virginia for infor mation on making pine cone wreaths. Direction and other guides have been sent regarding the craft which has proven popular in Anson. FAIR BOOTH PLANNED Pasquotank County is making final plans for their educational booth on “Chasing and Emboss ing Aluminum.” Workshops have been held for the purpose of training leaders to produce chas ed and embossed articles to be displayed in the booth. According to Miss Edna Bish op, home economics agent, the leaders are developing their skills and techniques in produc ing quality crafts. FURNITURE DESIGN ‘Good Design in Moderately Priced Furniture” was the sub ject discussed recently at Home Demonstration Club meetings in Buncombe County. Miss Nancy Crowell, assistant home economics agent, says that a bedside table was usedvto ex plain the joints which make a table sturdy. Points were brought out abdut support for the draw ers, ease in opening a drawer, sturdy handles on the drawers, and comer blocks which are used for a more steadfast piece offum • iture. The first fire prevention laws were enacted in Boston in 1630. Today, the nation’s four million Junior Fire Marshals act as a “fire prevention brigade”, con ducting fire hazard inspections in their own homes. With fire losses highest during winter months, millions of Junior Fire Marshals across the coun try will conduct special inspec tions of their homes during Fire Prevention Week Oct. 4—10 to help prevent tragic fire losses. > Our Junior Fire Marshals work for a safe community! Is yoi# youngster a Junior Fire Marshal? If so, he or she is participating in a program that’s helping to make our community a safer place to live , . . learning fire safety principles that may save a life some day! Be sure to help your youngsters put those principles into practice by inspecting your home with them when they bring home their Fire Prevention Report. We are happy to cooperate with the Hartford Fire . Insurance Company in sponsoring all Junior Fire Marshal activities throughout the year. And we invite your sup* port for the program, too. TOM TROTT AGENCY “Trot To Trott For Insurance" » 104 E- King St. Phone 950 Representing the Hartford Fire Insurance Company Prices Are Shot! MURRAY’S Now K HAND LOTION Protects, softens smooths. Free dispenser. <01.(1 + tax HUNDREDS OF BARGAINS IN OUR NEW HEALTH & BEAUTY AID DEPARTMENT SPECIALS All Over The Store FOR THE HAIR A Lanolin-rich dressing. Keeps manageable and lustrous. 4 os. $1 + tax I T. V. CLEARANCE New Sets 20% OFF Same Big Trade-ins SECOND HAND TV's. FROM $19.95 up Discount lor cash NANO CREAM For extra dry abused skin. Lanolin-rich . . . non-greasy. 3Vi ox. |1 + tax SCHOOL SUPPLIES Toys* Gilts, Cameras, Jewelry, Home Appli ances, Specialties — Register here lor FREE CAR MURRAY’S - 610 Stone St. Founder 0! America Was Good Navigator Columbus must have been a good navigator to discover Amer ica and find his way home . . . even if he was seasick much of the time With none of the modem lux uries that almost make naviga tional electronic breeze, he had to rely on “dead reckoning.” This means he figured out where he was going on the basis of dir ection, time and speed, according to The World 'Book Encyclopedia. Direction was easy to find wiith the good compasses avail able. Time was measured by an hourglass, presided over by a ship’s boy, who turned it over the moment all ithe sand ran out and kept a record with marks on the slate. Distance was figured by multi plying speed by the time travel ed. But there was no way to measure speed, so Columbus es itimated it. The records show that the “Admiral of the Ocean Sea” overestimated his speed . . . but because he was consistently wrong, the mistake didn’t pre vent him from getting back to Spain. Even with a more reasonable estimate, Columbus made good time. Ship® like the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria— called "caravels”—usually made three ito five knots in a light breeze. In a strong gale, they made up to nine knots and sometimes hit 12. Columbus’ ships averaged a bouit six knots a day for five consecutive days on the trip to America, and on one day, whiz zed along at eight knots. The Nina and the Pinta at times hit 11 knots on the return trip in 1493. Maybe it was this fast clip that made Columbus seasick. Or maybe that story is just another of the legends that have grown up around the wool weaver’s son from Genoa who turned Eu rope into an "Old World”. Ellis Named To Church Post PORT KENNING, Ga. — Spec ialist Fourth Class Harold D. El lis, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Ellis, Lackey street, Kings Moun tain, was recently elected assist ant choirister of the First Bap tist churah in Columbus, Ga. Spe cialist Fourth Class Ellis is sta tioned with the 2d Infantry Di vision (Band, Fort Benning, Ga. Ellis graduated from Kings Mountain High School hr 1956. He is a Master Mason, Fairview Lodge 339. Sp4 Ellis entered the Army . in July '1958 and completed his ba sic training with the 12th Artil lery, 2d Infantry Division. After completion of his mili tary service Sp4 Ellis plans to enter a Baptist college and study religious music. Columbus might never have discovered (the New World if his name had been Tom, Dick or Harry. The World Book Encyclo pedia reports that he was named after Saint Christopher, patron saint of sailors and travelers. He saw in his name a sign that he was destined ,to carry Christian ity to heathen lands. • • By BILL CROWELL One reason traffic authorities are so vitally concerned with plain and fancy drinking is the correlation between “a few snorts” end highway mishaps. Year after year, right here in North Carolina, roughly a third of our death-dealing traffic ac cidents involve drinking drivers. Maybe too many people have been influenced by the publicity of distillers and brewers. Publi city Which artfully says a little alcohol — like the amount in two or three cans of beer—calms ithe nerves and eases tensions. And that's right, even doctors a gree that alcohoi in moderation possesses some beneficial as pects. )But unfortunately, too few dri vers realize that even a “light” drink, one highball, say, is e nough to seriously impair judg ment, vision, muscular efficiency and reduce reaction speed and accuracy. Dr. Leon Greenberg, director of Yale’s famous Center for Alcohol Studies, has said, “A multitude of tests that after two or three cocktails or highballs we react a trifle more slowly to the flash of light or the ring of a bell . . . However, since our center of judgment its depressed, we think we can do every thing 'better. The chief danger in driving after a few drinks probably lies in the fact that our confidence zooms— and we take chances.” As little as ithree-and-a-half ■ ounces of liquor can cut react ion time by some 34-per cent. Thus at 40-miles an hour, this slow down of normal reaction time would add 15 feet to the distance required for a safe stop. That’s roughly one ear length. Once a drink is taken in and absorbed (there's frothing a driver can do ito compensate for the lowering of his driving skill nor his reduced accuracy of judg ment Only time will turn the trick. Hot coffee, for example, won’t sober a drunken person. It only produces, what someone has called, a "wide awake drunk.” Contrary ito popular belief, al cohol is not a stimulant. It is re lated chemically to the anesthe tics — chloroform, ether, ethel ene. No one would seriously pro pose 'that person partially anes thetized could possibly be a safe driver. Alcohol produeets in the body silmilar effects as the anes thetics. It is a narcotic drug wh ose principle effects are on the higher nerve centers in the brain. The apparent stimulating ef fect of alcohol is due Ito the re moval of inhibiting nerve ac tions. Alcohol in a sense takes off the brakes and removes the controls. The so-called sophisti cation of the alcoholic is not true brilliance. It is merely lack of control and is usually appre ciated only by companions in a similar state. The enhanced "skill” of the TERMITES KILL THEM Yotirsolf with ARAB . -- „ U-DO-IT TERMITE CONTROL «r MOro. Easy to use. No harm to plants. Professionally proven 5 year* protection. Get FREE folder at your Lumber Yard Thousands use it. ELMER LUMBER COMPANY 204 W, Ridge St. Phone 24 or 54 Kings Mountain, N. drinker is really nothing but lack of appreciation of his short comings. These are glossed over self-confidence engendered thro ugh paralysis of critical judg ment. Even while he thinks he is doing better than his best, he is making more mistakes. Add to (this a slowing of the 'reflexes and impairment of coordination and ithe dangers of driving and drinking bewme utterly clear. SUDDEN THtAWT . . . The Mo dem Girl would imake a wonder ful cook if she had a kitchen run by a steering wheeL POEM . . . Sgt. A. H. Clark of the State HighwayPatrol in Wil mington likes this bit of vertse: _ If I were standing to be judg ed, < Before the great white (throne; Where I could hear the right eous sing, And hear the sinners moan, I’d wanlt no greater advocate To make my final plea, Than jusit a boy or girl who’d say “He did a lot for me.” Fire claimed a life in the U. S. every 46 minutes during 1958. Junior Fire (Marshals, through their special training, have been credited with saving numerous lives in fire mishaps. Thousands of Thrifty North Carolina Women Agree . .. Green Stamp Savers Come Out DOLLARS AHEAD DOLLARS AHEAD.. because prices are low at the fine stores and servite stations that give S4H Green Stamps. J --and DOLLARS AHEAD AGAIN New 1959 S&H Ideabooic fea tutt over 1,000 Items of Distinguished Mer chandise, including complete room decoration designs. when S&H Green Stamps are redeemed for the won derful gifts available with S&H Green Stamps. Over 1500 items of Distinguished Merchandise front which to choose. Since 1896 ... America’s Only Nationwide Stamp Plan \ NORTH CAROLINA DIVISION W- —«Ci The Sperry and Hutchinson Company : ' Jjf' T* , s. *Tryofi St. . Charlotte, N. C. •. * ™A' *?&'.** HUTCHINSON COMPANY • ESTABLISHED. 1090 * HIS* 7 J* fk L A car with major advances in transmission, suspension, brakes, and engines which are Buick's alone today A solid, substantial car • A car of superb comfort, quiet, reliability • A car you should drive soon New comfort, quietness, and quality Doors that open wider — easier to get in and out. Family-size interior. Seats that are higher, more deeply cushioned, and reposi tioned to provide more room for feet and legs. Perhaps the quietest running car in America due to Buick’s high use of insula tion and torque-tube drive. Buick’s quality control program comes to a peak in the TUrbkie Drive Buick '60. Now interior decor and convenience An entirely new “Mirromagic” instrument panel. It lets the driver see speed, gas gauge, and other necessary readings at a glance in a mirror he tilts to suit his own eye level. And a new exclusive safety option — the Twilight Sentinel*—that turns headlights on automatically at sunset. .. off automatically at sunrise. AU-new colors and fabrics. Richer appointments. *At $light extra cost. Outstanding performance with economy 1. Buick’s Exclusive Turbine Drive Transmissionf is jet-smooth, responds faster, more economically than ever. No gears ever shift while the car is in motion. 2. Buick’s Exclusive Air-Flo Aluminum Drum Brakes—found on no other Amer ican car. Fin-cooled drums front and rear for faster cooling. Fast cooling means safer stopping, longer brake life. Slotted wheels pass a current of air from under the car constantly over the brakes for added cooling efficiency. (Wheels are 15" size which gives you up to 1/3 more tire life.) 3. Buick's exclusive Wildcat Engines give high efficiency with high economy. (An optional new LeSabre Engine is designed to give Buick performance on regular, grade fuel.) 1 \ Optional at extra cost on LeSabre, standard on htvicta and Electro. Ilil BUICK LESABRE BUICK INVICTA BUICK ELECTRA I ft a w m THE LOWEST-PRICED BUICK THE HIGH-PERFORMANCE BUICK THE FINEST BUICK OF ALL DEAN BUICK COMPANY D“ter Ucense 2338 KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. S- RAILROAD AVENUE