Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Sept. 9, 1965, edition 1 / Page 10
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MtSMILBIf ftOJLD ^•ge4 KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Thursday, September 9| 1965 FUNNY BUSINESS »POyiT AMO LjQSa \\ "And tlial; gcnHamen, is when the trtosNrar diMpp«art4r' There's Tough Row To Hoe For State Heart Researchers CHAPEL HILL — The htirt i’(!st*arther ha* a tough row to hop, says thp North Carol na Heart Association. He sar.etir cs knows where he vv'anls to go, out most frequently doesn’t got I there. Ho sometimes knc ws I where he is, but he is not alwe.ys sure how he got there or wh’ie I he can "go from here.” I Not too long ai'o, an interna- ‘ lional medical difference of of in- Dr. Keys, with an equrlly sharp sense of the ridiculous, fir ed back. T :ngue firmly in chc k, he said one could show slatl -ti- cally that artery degcnerat on and heai i disease are common st amoii/ persons who shave every day. Inasmuch as men have much more heart disease than worn n. Dr. Key's statement was a s fe one Additionally, by offering i ne lion between Dr. Ancel Keys, A-; obsurd analogy to illustrate ihe i merican expert on chole.s^! ob | absurdity of another, ho brou, ht i clearly into focus a matter of and Rjussia’s Dr. J. Yudkin made headlines. I Dr. Yadkin, refusing to accept I comparisons drawn by Dr. Keys I among widely scattered popula tions to connect a high animal- fat diet with artery degeneral on I and heart disease, lampooned Ur. I Key’s use of statistics. He declared pointedly that he I could prove — statistically, at j least — that heart disease is limost prevalent among persons I using telephone.s and radios. The Village Square "Clothes With a Flair” DOWNTOWN GASTONIA IN THE FAMOUS NAME BRANDS YOU l.IKE TO WEAR LONDON FOG COUNTRY SET COUNTRY SHIRTS COIONY CORNERS EVANS PICONE CANTERBURY BELTS JOHN ROMAINE BAGS BURLIIJGTON BAGS JOHN MEYER of NORA/HCH CHERBERG AND MANY OTHERS A LARGE Selection 01 New Fall Fashions See Them Now — At The VILLAGE SQUARE — DOWNTOWN GASTONIA — Plenty Of Downtown Parking — Open All Day Tuesdays and Fridays 'til 9 which most Americans know lit tle. More or less of necessity, re search into the causes of cari'io- vascular disease is pretty mi ch of a mystery to Mr. and M'S. Timothy Tarheel, although m d- ical reporting is more highly i e- voloped now than ever before. Few know to what tremendi us lengths medical scientists go to make sure their conclusions ere valid. It is probable that no med ical scientist alive is more aware than Dr. Keys that statistics a- lone are only a part of any med ical picture; the Russian phyd- cian’s re.Tark implied an undue reliance on the purely statistical picture. The international exchange was historic, if only because dic- tors are seldom given to humar in their fields of interest, and research men in particular are pas.sionately serious about thoir work. But the contribution of the Sharp sully across the globe is fo place in clearer perspective, the awful demands imposed on the heart researcher by the very nature of his searching and re searching. Here there is no room for the »imple syllogism, which can be wrong as often as it is right (fish swim; men swim; tbcrefo.c, mnen are fish.) Research is very much like a courtroom witmss who will toll the truth, if su.fi- cicntly pressed, but very seklom the whole tiTth. The lesearch project that ends in a blind alley has served a puiposc—that of eliminating a false clue and broadening the foundation for further progn s.s toward solution. The “disappoint ing” project probably has been expensive and time consumirg, but if it has been done with tiie ihroughness and imagination that characterizes most medical scientists, it has not failed. Timothy Tarheel’s family doc tor today knows imore by far a- bout the heart and eiroulatlrn than he did 10 years ago. The body of information is constant ly growing, due to carefully planned i-esearch. ADITLT HOME STUDY Intcraatienol Corretpondaaee School offers sound, procMcal metho< 1. Complete personalized lessor and answer service. No serin: - ping. I. C. S. High School D - plomo to graduates. Invest. gate at your local high schor l —credit allowed for previous study. Call 738*4487 or writs I. C. S. Representotivo, Box 74;!, Kings Mountain. Accredited Member Not. Home Study Council OVER 200 COURSES 4:27-tfn The painful fact is, Iiowever, that we are a long distance from discovering the causes of some of the major death-dealing ills of the heart and circulation. Un til the causes of high blood pres sure and artery degeneration are [irmly nailed down, the search tor cures will be necessarily im peded and the toll will continue, for some time to come, to lead all other diseases. Knowing thp size of the job a- head, it should be comforting that eminent medical scientists challenge each other rather sharply. Their attitude makes for stern appraisals of every new development. In medical science there will always be many more questions than answers. In the cardiovascu lar field, there seems to be a bot tomless pit of questions, but, one by one. the answers are building up a reservoir of hope for hearts. Agriculfue Liability Insurance Requirements In Action HAIL THE FAIR What is the North Carolina State Fair? It’s a blanket of dust-dulled car tops flung over a rumpled mattress of grass...the mam moth span of s.T.oke-hazed space which the dipping steel rafters of Dol ton Arena entrap.. .a tan- gfcle tale of plenty, told in end less rows of jellies, apples, eggs, and hams.. .a wandering waft of warm air in the cool sea of night, heavy with the rich otior of chili and french fries.. .pastel fluffs of cotton candy which tease the eye and then suddenly shrink into a tongueful of syrupy sweetness... a dazzling blur of lights glimpsed by a toddling youngster through a forest of legs...feathery bursts of fire works dribbling like paint splashed against a dome of deep ebony sky...a raucous interlude of carnie canvas-tent burlesque drowned in a stabbing blare of rhythm.. .littered avenues of concrete which steer swelling floods of humanity through a flashing, clanking, churning, babbling one-week world of fan tastic impressions. The fair is an explosive hymn of antonym^.. .at the same iijo- ment earthy tut thereal, chaotic but orderly, pungent but sooth ing, discordant but melodic, of fensive but irrestible, ravaged but innocent, crude but bea/utiful. One may curse it in one breath and exult in its madness the next. i This rollicking, bclslerous gi- ; ant demands superlatives, and is , called, by turns, the gaudiest, most sensational, I'ambunctious, memorable, enlightening, excit ing spectacle to tc seen herea bouts. Tightened Under New law Passed^ North Carolina motorists will find that liability Isuranee re- ing the re-rertification. He cautioned molor vehicle iiiiu [iiui jiHUiiiiy isuittiiv*. .1- ; — tin quirements have been lightened owneis again,. ‘ * under a new law passed by the 196.5 Le,gislalure wlihh became effective August 17, Tile new law requires in.sur- aiii'c companies to loport imme diately to the Depaitment of Motor Vehicles when liability in surance ends for any reason. If the policy is lieing cancelled by the insurance company, n::tite to the department must be 15 days in advance of the termination date. Upon receipt of the termina tion notice, the Departi.Tcnt of .Motor Vehicles is required ty law to notify the owner, and the owner to retain his license plate is required to re-certify to hav ing liability insurance coverage effective on the termination date of the prior coverage. Failure to re-cerllty within 15 t(ays is by law prima fade evi dence that no financial respon sibility exists, the vehicles agen cy explained. Penalty for failure to have in.surance, or failure to re-certify to having insuranct?, is revocation of license plate and driver’s license for 30 days Motor Vehicles Commissioner Edward Scheldt said the depart ment began sending out on Au gust 17 the required insurance termination notices along with form FR-3, a certificate for mak- bility insurance coverage. "Make ccitain .you have lia bility in.sui-aiicc and llial it is maintained anil continuously or suircndcr y ur i)latp before in surance ends." Scheldt said. * You will then have complied with the law and at the sai.T«‘ lime will liavo protecteil yoar driving priv ileges. The tern gull is also known as tile sea swallow. STRICTLY FRESH The fair will drain your ener gy, deplete your finances, batter your feet, sting your eyes, pound yoar ears, and knot your stom ach. And then it is gene, leavin.g behing a rolling field of tire- worn grass, a fading poster wearily cli-nging to a telephone pole, and hushed exhibit halls gutted of glitter- buttoning up their tin coats against the com ing of winter. But it leaves, too. a priceless echo of knowledge and memory, hoarded in a heart beat by a million fairgoers. Some contend that W'o lose in the exchange. True, the fair poses jn the guise of a sltrewd and crafty tradesman. But we give a pittance each year for a prize. (Tile 1965 North Carolina State Fair is scheduled for Ra leigh, Oct. 11-16.) Joe: TFs nining—opea the umbreUa.” Moe: “Wouldn’t do no good. It’s full of boles.” T Joe: “So wiv’d yoa bring ft?” ' Moe: *1 didst think ft would rain.” • • I He: "You are so beaofi* ful toni^L” She: “You flatterer.” He; “No, I mean it I had to look twice before 1 tec* ognized you.” Johnny started sdiool and within two weeks the teacher sent home a note containing the following: “Young Johnny is more than 1 cun handle. I am forced to ask for your help." The next day the mother answered; “Listen, all those years 1 had him alone, did I ask you for help?” Off-to-School? CtOStOUf PRICiS! Youll want the Kings Monntain Herald — a great big, news - filled letter Iiom home — to keep yon iniormed about your home area events. For the Full College School Term ONLY Anywhere EVERV MROUIU HOIUNE FORD MUST 60! . Southwell Motoi Co. he. Thurs New Rlchm Gastoi Count CHEl Perl ranice make mount pies, i high c Mrs econoi Count, makes is the ing qi FA Twt the G the ni pies’ £ Mr. a) Maud< ics ag well p good The built-i ^homs ^Pom. ture £ celleni cd oui
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 9, 1965, edition 1
10
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