PERMANENT PRESS
MANSTYLE SLACKS
, 50% Fortrel polyester, 50% cotton
Koratron-treated to stay press-free
Made {ust for us! Famous Galey and Lord double-
ply fabric guaranteed for one year's normal wear
^ or your money bock! Machine wash, machine
dry they thrive on this kind of easy care. But no
ironing — no, never! They're 50 V* Celanese Fort*
rel* polyester, 50% combed cotton, Koratron*
treated to stay press-free! Black, beige, oUvetones,
brown, navy, charcoal in group. Another **plos’'i
ready-cuffed. 28-42" waists, 29 to 34" Inseam*
*rrod*mortc of fibtr Industrits, Inc,
LOOK YOUNG.;.
BE YOUNG...SHOP BELK'S J
KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C.
TEWm BEALTB
Health and Safety Tipe
/row
The American Afedtcol
Aesooiation
COMEDY CORNER
Almost two years ago Ameri
can physicians, through the A*
merican Medical Association, an
nounced a new universal symbol
which tells anyone rendering
emergency care to a person who
is unconscious or otherwise un
able to communicate that its
wearer has a special physical
condition requiring special at
tention.
In the intervening two years'
the symbol has gained world
wide acceptance. It has been
widely dissominated throughout
the United States and, through
the World Medical Association, is
now being utilized in many oth
er nations
The symbol may be displayed
on a wristlet, an anftlet, a me
dallion around the neck or else
where. It is a sign that there are
vital medical facts on a personal
health information card in the
bearer's purse or wallet or on
an alerting device.
BETHWARE
OAK GROVE NEWS
Btf Mrs. Ruth Vesa
Phone 739'50J5
' Miss Katherine Gibbons who
works in Charlotte spent the
' weekend at home with her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. David Gib
bons.
Vess. It was a birthday dinner
for Mrs. Tommy Champion.
The children of Mrs. Mamie
Gibbons and Mrs. Minivera Phll-
beck gave them a birthday din
ner Sunday.
Mrs. Dean Champion and Tim,
and Mrs. Dessie Runyans visited
Sunday afternoon in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Champion.
Mrs. Nancy Senter from Gas
tonia visited Mr. and Mrs. Hor
ace Bell Friday.
Thursday, August 5, 1965
Seven Students
Win Scholanhips
Mr. and Mrs. John Patterson
and cliildren spent last week
visiting plact»s of interest in
Florida. They spent a few days
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Love
lace in Tampa, Fla.
w r. . . i Mr. and Mrs. Wray Thornburg
Mr. and Mr.s. David ribbons Dwan Thorn-
went to Gastonia Sunday after-1 Sunday at Fair For-
^-1... .1 g visiting Mr. Frank
Tliornburg.
noon to take their aunt, Mrs. Ot
to Adair, home.
Mr. and Mrs. Hillard Thrift
visited Sunday afternoon in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ross.
Maynard Ross
Mr. and Mrs.
[and daughters arse spending the
week at Crescent Beach.
-You know, I liko your now coote qrottml*
j Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ross, Mrs.
• Missoura Ross and Mr. and Mrs.
Garvis Ross visited Mrs. Manual
Ross at the Baptist Hospital at
Winston-Salem Sunday.
The symbol is a hexagon-shap
ed emblem containing a six-point
ed figure, or sign of life. Super
imposed Oil the figure is a staff
with a snake entwined about it—
the staff of Aesculapius, the In
signia of the medical pix)fession.
The symbol is used by many
individuals. Diabetic coma, for
instance, sometimes makes its
victims appear intoxicated, and
treatment may be dangerously
delayed. The symbol also is used
to indicate allergies to antibotics,
such as penicillin.
The need for certain medicines
must be known. Heart patients
taking drugs to prevent blood
clots may bleed profusely if in
jured unless they receive special
care. Epileptics could be saved
much trouble and unnecessary
hospitalization if they carried a
card indicating they may have
seizures.
ably about the neck or on the
wrist or ankle.
Many organizations and man
ufacturers sell durable signal
devices for emei'gency medical
identification. The names of
those reported to the AMA may
be obtained by writing to Emer
gency Identlfication-AMA, Amer
ican Medical Association, 535 N.
Dearborn St., Chicago, III., 60610.
The AMA emergency identifica
tion card also is available from
the same address.
Is your boy one of the several
hundred thousand American •
youngsters who will soon be
'going out” .for football at his
junior high or high school?
The American Medical Associ
ation recommends that every
body have a card, such as the
AMA emergency medical identi
fication card, to show who they
are, where they live, whom to
call if they become ill or injured,
the name of their doctor, and
when they were immunized, par-
j tit^larly tetanus, or lockjaw. On
this card should be noted any
special problems that need im
mediate attention in an emergen
cy or could cause an emergenc>'.
If so, you will be vitally inter
ested in the new six-point joint
recommendations of the Ameri
can Medical Association and the
National Federation of High
School Athletic Associations that
will help to insure that your boy
is properly conditioned for this
vigorous contact sport.
on information gained through
the school’s health and physical
education classes plus some spe
cific training for the demands of
tackle football.
• At least the first week of
practice should be limited to
non-contact drill with emphasis
on conditioning and fundamen
tals. Shorts, T-.shirts and foot
ball shoes are the recommended
training unifoirm in this period
because of the heat. The boys
also should wear their mouth
protectors to begin to become ac
customed to them.
* The second week should in
clude only controlled body con
tact drills and avoid wide-open
play.
Miss Jan Fisher who works in
Charlotte spent the weekend
visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. David Fisher.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Davis,
Jeff and Craig of Perryville, Mo.,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Buford Ware
and children. 'Their father and
stepmother, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Davis, of Gastonia joined them
for a week at Folly peach, S. C.
They visited Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Lyerly at Folly Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Voss Jr
and hLs sister, Sheilia, visited in
the home of Mr* and Mrs. Luther
Hoyle Friday night.
* Practice games or game-con
dition scrimmages should be
prohibited until after at least
two weeks of practice.
‘Beginnii\g with a satisfactory
pre-season medical examination,
there is no substitute for requir
ing a standard of physical fit
ness that assures sufficient
strength and endurance, a good
level of skill, and acclamation to
hot and humid weather, before
exposing 'any individual to the
rigors and risks of tackle foot
ball.
• A minimum of three weeks
of carefully planned practice
should prec^ the first regular
ly scheduled game.
The two organizations also
pointed to two factors that should
be considered in schoolboy foot-
baU:
Some people’s problems are so
serious that it is absolutely es
sential for the first aider to
know about them in an emer
gency. A durable signal device
made of metal or plastic should
be worn by such people, prefer-
Folimvlng is the AMA-NFflSA-
A program for readiness of
schoolboy giidders for participa
tion:
* The boys should follow faith
fully a personal conditioning pro-
• Participation in interscholas
tic Sootbali is not a right but a
privilege for those who can de
monstrate the high level of phy
sical and emotional fitness neces
sary to play aggressively, skill
fully and with sportsmanship.
* Participation in high sch(x>l
football should not detract from
keeping up with a broad-based
physical education program and
from sampling other sports dur-
gram during the summer, based 'ing the off-season^
For Home Owners
Second Mortgage Money
WHY WORRY?
WHY FRET?
CONSOLIDATE
YOUR BILLS
6^ Interest
Strictly In Compliance With N. C. Law No. 81
GUARANTEED PAYMENT SCHEDULE
AMOUNT
OF LOAN
$1500
$2000
$2500
$3000
$3500
36 PAYMENTS 48 PAYMENTS 60 PAYMENTS
$ 55.76
$ 74.34
$ 92.93
$111.51
$130.10
ALL FEES
$ 44.40
$ 59.20
$ 74.00
$ 88.80
$103.60
INCLUDED
$37.63
$50.18
$62.72
$75.26
$87.81
All Applications Treated In Strict Confidence
Charles E. Dixon Mortgage|Co-
PHONE 739-5471
HOME PHONE 739-3348
The State of North Carolina
awarded this naonth through the
N. C. Veterans Commission, sev
en (7) N. C. College Scholarships
to certain children of disabled or
deceased wartime veterans of
Clevolanii County, each scholar
ship paying tuition, room, board,
an<i certain fees for four acade-
imic years.
Tile recipients who plan to stu
dy toward a Haclicior s Degree
are as follows:
Douglas Ira Bridgt*s. Casar. N.
C, son of Mrs. Vergie Bridges
land the late Uoert Arthur
' Hridges. wlio plans to atUmd The
University
h#
of North Carolina,
Mr. and Mrs. John Senter
Gastonia visited in community ; .. ^
Saturday. Their little niero Bridgt's. Boiling
Gina Bell, was flower girl in the
wedding of Mrs. Joyce Plonk of
Kings Mountain.
Visitors in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. T. C. Lovelace Sunday were
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith and
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Lovelace and
children from Kings Mountain,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Lovelace
and children from Ashevillej and
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Putnam and
boys from Charlotte.
Mrs. Fred Green had as her
guest little Lisa Green while her
mother, Mrs. Emmett Green,
went to Raleigh for the funeral
of her grandmother, Mrs. Linda
Rudisill.
Springs, N. C. the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Pink E. Bridges, who
plans to attend N. C. State of
the University of North Carolina
at Raleigh, Raleigh, N. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Champ
ion and children from Elizabeth
City spent Wednesday through
Sunday visiting relatives in the
community.
Rev. and Mrs. Arnold Bell and
children of Lenoir visited Mrs.
Virginia Bell and Gail Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene B<*11 and
Jack and Paul Ledford visited
her mother, Mrs. Alex McMilUan
of Bessemer City.
Miss Margurite Wright is con-
Thomas Wilkerson Graham,
Jr.. 'Shelby, N. C., the son of
Mrs. Joyce C. Graham and the
late Thomas Wilkerson Graham,
Sr., who plan sto attend Western
Carolina College, Cullowht?e, N.
C.
Miss Mary Maliiuia Morehead,
Shelby. N. C.. the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey H. More-
head. who plans to attend the
University of N. C. at Greens
boro, Greensboro. N. C.
Larry Lynn .Southard, Lawn
dale, N. C., the son of Mr. and
Mrs James W. Soutliard, who
plans to atleiui \ >rth Carolina
State University, Raleigh, N. C.
Robert Alexander Williams,
p'allslon, N. C.. the son of Mr.
valcsing at home after surgery i ytj-s. Blanch A. Williams,
in Kings Mountain Hospital plans to attend N. C. State
cently. i university. Raleigh, N. C.
Mrs. Obsie Lovelace spent
Tuesday through Saturday visit-
ing Mr. and Mrs. Donald Blan
ton and children of Gaffney, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Newell Thorn
burg and boys arc visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Champion and
children in Elizabeth City this
week.
Visitors in the home of Mrs. Miss Beverly Ann Willis, Kings
J. M. Wright and Margurite | N. C., the daughter of
Wright Sunday were: Mr. and j and Mi's James K. Willis, Jr.
Mrs. C. B. Barber from Concord; i ^^ho plans to attend Western
Mrs. D. M. Teague and Mrs. Es-jcarolina College, Cuilowhee, N.
telle Barber from Charlotte; Mrs. iC.”
Eunice Seism from Clover; and i
Mrs. Dixon Goforth
Seism, and Mrs. Margaret Ham-1 ameda Calif
rick from Kings Mountain.
."'Kings Mountain. N. C.. is serv-
Mrs. Pervis | Naval Air Station, Al-
Mr. Jeff Patterson is convales
cing at home after surgery in
Kings Mountain Hospital last
week.
Jackson Serving
At Alameda Base
Lf>f‘ated lu'side the San Pran-
eisco Hay, Alamwia provides and
maintains facilities to support
op^Tations of patrol and trans
port aircraft as well as aircraft
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Champ
ion and Mrs. T. A. Champion
spc»nt Sunday visiting in the
ALA^^EDA, CALIF. (FH'TNC) 'whidi oiH^rate from Pacific Fleet
July 2.S — Airman Apprentice | aircralt carriers. It also has fa-
Larry S. Jackson, USN, son of , cilities fi»r repairing aircraft,
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Jack- j guided missiles and their compo*
home of Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt son of 2500 Parkdalo Circle, ‘ nents.
! amis'
SCHOOL'nME
$2.98 to $5.95
School dresses with
everything a girl
and her nnother want
,,. they’re pretty,
comfortable and
easy care.
McGinnis
Department Store
Thun
01
PRIC
THIS
EFF.
SAT.
AUG
7th
1
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