Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Dec. 16, 1965, edition 1 / Page 14
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w Page 2 KINGS mountain H6KALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Thursday. December (6, 1965 Futher Recuctions AT OUR Going Out of Business Sale JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS $9.95 Men's Insulated Leather Boots... Compact Students' }n Honor Roll Compact hi^h school lias an-1 lounccci the foliowinp honor roll ; 'or Iho secoiul si.x weeks jjracl- \ ns pciioil. Krcslimen; Sandra K. Coyc', ! iicliie Lane Crocker, EJwina Jes3ie Crier, Norris Cal ‘ .lunier, Flrcoida Sue Leach, Bren- ia Kaye .McCroe, Pejjgy Da- )henia Moore. Betty Jean Smith, lone Smith and Barbara Ann •Vilsoii. HOPE FOR HEARTS It's My Report Card Sophomor(‘.s: John Adams, iariiara Adams, Julia Burris, Crystal Byc*rs, Darnell Shear, ind Bert Smith. Ladies' & ChUdien 'S Your Choice Oi Any (: FUts 3 PAIRS FOR Juniors: Suzanne Alexander, -ouise Bell, Genell Huriie’, Shir ley McCree, Patricia Mintz, Shir- ey Koberts and Oilie vVade. Seniors: Joyce Boll, H»c-nda Bess, Barbara Burris, Preston Childers, Yvonne Grier. Johnny .Manning, Jacqueljm Mcv'reN Ma- ;ie MeSvvain. Jackie Parker, Dorothy Ross. John Thombs, and .Melvin White. QUESTION: Do children got ' i heart disoa.-Jc*? ANSWER: Happily, heart at tacks and strokes are extremely rare among children. However, a; relatively common cliildhood dis-1 ease, rheumatic* fever, can leadj to heart damage. An estimated 500.000 children in the UnUited States suffer from this disease. It is important that research con tinue which promises to elimi nate this serious heart-crippling illnos.s. For a free copy of “Questions and Answers About Heart and Blood Ve.s.sol Diseases,” write North Carolina Heart Association, No. 1 Heart Circle, Chapel Hill. 27514. s- m ll' m it® M McGinnis Rites Held Sunday Ladies' & Children 's Your Choice Of Any Sterchi's Sales Dress & Casual 2 PAIRS FOR At Record Pace Large Assortment Odds-N>Ends — Broken Sizes — LADIES' & CHILDREN'S SHOES 89c each Mac’s Shoe Store WEST MOUNTAIN STREET Net sales of Sterchi Bros. Stores, Inc. for the month of November and for the first nine months of the fiscal year ended November 30, 1965 established new all-time record sales fon both the month and the nine months. November sales of 81.842,191 were $318,170 above sales of $l,.524,02l for November 1964. reprisenting a-n increase of 20. Net sales of S15.534.137 for the first nine months of the fiscal year ended November 30. 1965 in creased $1,127,967 or 7.83'^o above last year sales of $14,406,170. The Kings Mountain store i.s one of fifty-four stores owned by the Co.Tipany. Final rites for Clyde Franklin McGinnis, 57, were held Sunday at 3 p.m. from Sisk Memorial Chapel in Bessemer City, inter ment following in Mountain Rest cemetery. Mr. .McGinnis died at 7 a.m. Saturday in Kmg-s Mountain hos pital. He was a disabled veteran of World War II. His parents were the late John C- and Mary Rec tor McGinnis of Kings Mountain. 'm Surviving are his wife, Mrs. ^Irs. Ruby Childers McGinnis; two sisters, Miss Mandy McGin nis of Kings Mountain and Mrs. Frank Hedgepath of Lineolnton; five brothers, Boyce McGinnis of Shelby, Leroy McGinnis of Hud son, Charles McGinnis of States ville. J. C. McGinnis of Florida and Willie McGinnis of Kings Mountain. :M -ll »•/ ‘''5 & ' /.t - fISiSw iia GRASS FIRES City firemen dou.sed two Rev. Clyde Gordon and Rev. George Leigh officiated at the final riles. gras.s fires Wednesday, one at the residence of Lawrence Davis on the Shelby Road and the other at the home of John Knight on the York Road. A small chicken house also burn ed at the latter. Agriculture In Action Today.... An Angel In A Christmas Play Tomorrow .. .. A High School Graduate Help Plan Her Tomorrow Many wise parents regard as among their best gifts to their young children the opening of savings accounts at Home Savings & Loan Association. They encourage them to add to it from allowances and later from earnings. Their early beginnings have meant college for many. Current Dividend Rate Per Annum s S V, Home Savings & Loan Association Plenty oi FREE Paildng Space Di. 1. E. Anthony, President Drive-In Window Service Thomas A. Tate, Seaetary-Treasurer NO LEAF CUT Leaf growers dt'serve a little good fortune. This year, they got it. For the first time in years, growers won’t have to submit to a cut in production. The U. S. Department of Agri culture, late last month, announc ed that poundage quotas for the 1966 flue-cured tobacco crop will remain at the 1965 level of a- round 1,126 million pounds. Likewise, says USDA, the na tional planting allotment and average yield goal will be the same. The acreage ceiling will again be 607,335 acres, and the yield goal 1,854 pounds iku* acre. North Carolina farmei« might well applaud actions by USDA. The department’s decisions for the HK56 crop adhere closely to the tiiinking of Tar Heel farm ers, as expressed in flu* policies of the N. C. Farm Bureau. That situation, certainly, is im* proving. So growers felt no need to cut production for the coming year. Up until this year, farmers had almost come to accept reduc tions as an inevitable annual ex- •I'cise. Announcement has now come that November sales from the stocks of Flue-Cured Tobacco Co- oi>erative Stabilization Corpora tion were greater than sales for the entire year of 1964. And this reflects another wise decision on the part of North Carolina farm ers, who last year led the fight for ati acreage-poundage pro- ! gram. Much of Stabilization's in- I creased saU*s activity can be at tributed to the program change. ! For growers, though, the most : novel experience is that there’s i no cut in store. In view of the improving situation, that would ! have been the unkindest cut of all. Java produces cigars. Co.sta Ricans are known as I Ticos. So North Carolina farmc^rs got what they wanted, and what th(*y wanted was based on a lot of careful deliberation about the realities of tlu* leaf situation i Shrubs need fertilizer twice a ; vear. I At spots the English Channel is more than 500 feet deep. r; $10.95 1 I'Ostf. TMnk Rich...and look the part in SIERRA CARDIGAN by I There’s no limit to how far you can go in this rich looking sweater. Wonderfully handsome with a rich texture of 95% imported Shetland wool* 15% mohair, in a superb tight knit In rich mellow hues*< PLONK’S f>
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 16, 1965, edition 1
14
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