Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / May 26, 1966, edition 1 / Page 8
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■ / l>9MI KINSS MOUNTAIN HERALD, KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. Thursday, May 26, 1966 Graduation I Two Will AttendiHnncn^y Thieves ,nesday, June 1 at 7:30 p.m. Awards Day will be on June 1 at 2 p.m. Ifi the high school with Principal L. L. Adams to present the awards. Barbara Burris is valedictorian of the Class of ’63 and Yvonne Grier is salutatorian The class colors are navy blue and light blue and the class ixott'o is, “Learn Today, Benefit Tomor- row.” I Conference Take $600 Loot ance of two .xem-ers of the ' human relations committee to I the White House Conference on I Civil Riglits next week in Wash ington, DC. In other' action, the commis sion accepted the low bid of $2, Candidates for diplomas aile! 792 by Southwell Motor Com- Daphene Adams, Joyce Bell, ■ pany for a one-ton truck to be Brenda'Bess, Barbara Burris, Di- used by the city sanitation de- ane Byers, Barbara Byers, partment. Other bidder was Vic- The city boara of commission-1 ’a thief or thieves apparently ers Monday approved the attend- ' hungry—brok,c a back tfo Tpan- Yvonne Grier, Gwendolyn Jimi-1 son, Dorothy Logan, Mary Lewis,! Betty Littlejohn, Jacqueline Me- i Cree, Jeanette McClain, Brenda j McClain, Annie McClain, Marie MeSwain, Brenda Mcklluney,' with el of Glass Grocery Wednesday night and left witii S6d0 wonh Q.f„®erchand;se. Don Glass and Harold tdass, owners of the Gravei- road inm. said that missing on Thursday morning when they oiviied their doors about 7 a.in. were: 152 cartons of cigarettes Six cakes. Ten pounds smoked sausage. Twelve pounds pork chops. A butcher! knife. One brand-new electric lO-kby tory Chevrolet Company bid of $2,892.7.5. Mayor John H. Moss recom mended during the special ses- adding machine, sion a 4S-hour work week for One used RC Allen atldhi policemen when t h o current chine. ma- Currency amounting to SH Joyce Moore, Priscilla McDowell,' school tcr.Ti is complete. Po'iee- Jaclcie Parker, Dorothy Ross, men (urrcntly work a .ol-h.Kir, _ Polly Ross, Pauline Roberts, Min- week, including five-hours school . r-"‘V-- '\ * iC'Tisi nie Thompson, Herbert Byers, ! patrol dutv. He was ‘ Preston Childers, Augusta De-: to appoint a committee to review | ' etrer. gree, O. V. Ellis, Barney Elliott, all city pay scales. Accordin-r to the Cievrland Jerry Garner, Thomas Hickman, 1 The board also: „ County Sheriffs Department, a John Howze, Eugene Jamison, j (second break-in occurred in this Henry Littlejohn, Larry Logan,- 1) approved First Citizens' Clifford Leary, James McClain,' Bank & Trust Company as an Charles McClain, Johnny' M-an- official depository, making all ning, Joe Metz, Roscoe McGill, I four financial institutions in Lamar Pay,sour, Darrell Petti- . Kings Mountain official depTsi- gree, James Roberts, D a v i d i tories for the city. Others arb Smith, Kenneth Stowe, John W. First Lhiion N.ational Bank. Thombs, Melvin F. White, Lester | Home Savings & Loan Associa- Williams, Jerry Worthy, and | tion. James Whitesides. o. .u • ■ -<1 ( 21 authorized Mayor Moss and Public Works Supt. Grady Yel- ton to work out a drainage pro blem with Conrad Rippy who ap peared before the board. SERMON TOPIC Dr. Paul Ausley’s sermon topic Sunday morning at First Presbyterian church will be “Shall Never Die.’’ TO GIVE RECITAL MAY FESTIVAL Piano pupils of Mrs. Martin Harmon will be presented in a formal recital Friday evening at 7:30 p.m. at the Woman’s club auditorium. Central Elementary seventh graders will sponsor a May- Music Festival Friday morning on the grounds of Central school. The show will begin at 9 a.m. and there is no admis sion charge. area Monday night. Vand3i.< en tered Bethware school on Shel by road by knocking out a win dow in the reap of the hjilding Masons To Honoi Ladies Satuiday Williaim A. (Bill) Richard of Charlotte, will make the principal address at Saturday night’s an nual ladies’ 'night banquet of Fairview Lodge 339 AF & AM. The p-nly layman ever appoint ed Grand Chaplain of the Grand Lodge of North Carolina will speak at 7:30 p.m. at Masonic Temple. Mr. Richard was appointed Chaplain of the Oasis Temple of the Shrine in January. He is a Knight Commander in the Court of Honor of tlie Scottish Rite and has spoken at numerous Masonic gatherings throughout the two Caroiinas. At 73. ho is actively -en gaged in wovking with youth in .Mecklenburg County although ho has bi'on blind for six years. Bob y C. Bridges will present .Mr Richard tand Don Falls will erve as master of ccrcmoni''s. Master Howard Bridges will wel come guest.s, and Mrs. Lyman Robbs will respond to the wel come. D. E. Tate will present Ma- 5onic widows and Don Falls will The department said U;0 pounds of butter is reported missing. recognize officers and Past Mas- Plonning Groups To Meet Thursday A review of the proposed zon ing .map to include a onc-mile perimeter will be the major item of business on the agenda for Thursday’s meeting of the city planning board and zoning com mission. The joint meeting will be hbld at 7:30 in the courtroom of City Hall. The meeting is open to the in terested public. ters. Rev. Bob Haden will give the invocation and pronounefe the benediction. Fairview Lodge 339 was char tered December 8, 1874. Youth To Dance On Saturday Night “Thb Chandeliers” will play for Saturday night’s dance for Kings Mountain area young pleople at the National Guard Armory. Dancing will be from 8 until 11 p.m., a member of the Kings Mountain Recreation Activities Commission said. MEMO TO ADVERTISERS uestions and nswers about NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING Q V What are the 3 most important rules for profitable newspaper advertising? Q. What does A.B.C. do for me? A* 1. Your advertising message should be newsy, friendly, informative, easy to read. Give facts and news about your merchandise and 2. Advertise regularly. Make your advertising do what successful salesmen do—call on customers and prospects consistently. A* At regular intervals one of the Bureau's large staff of expetienoed circulation auditors makes a thorough audit of the circulation records of each publisher member. The results of each audit are published in an eaBy-to*read A.B.C. report for your use and protection when you, buy newspaper advertising. 8. Insist on audited circulation reports that give you the facts about the audience that your sales messages will have when you buy newspaper advertising. Q* What are the FACTS in A.B.C. reportsT r Q* Is there a measure for the value of news*, paper circr|^ation to an advertiser such as the standards a merchant uses in buy* ing merchandise‘s for example, like STERLING on silver? A* A.B.C. reports tell you how much circulation, where it goes, how obtained.and otl^r facts that help you buy advertising as you would make any aoimd business investment—on' the basis of known values and audited information.. Q. Are all publications eligible for A.B.C. membership? A* Yes—in the well known circulation stimdards of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. A. No. Only those with paid circulation. This is important to advertisers because it'is svidsnes that the paper is wanted and read. Q. What is the A.B.C.? A, The A.B.C. is a cooperative, non-profit associ ation of 3,450 advertisers, advertising agencies and publishers in the Unit^ States and Canada. Organized in 1914. Brought or der out of advertising chaos by establishing a definition for paid circulation, rules and standards for measuring, auditing and re- portingithe circulations of news papers and petiodicala. Q. la this newspaper a member of the Audit' Bureau of Circulatione? 0 A* Yea We are proud of our drculatioii. Wi want you to know the VAOn'ebout the audience jrour selling met- sages will have when they appear in these pages. A'sk for a copy of our latest A.B.C. report. ' i i A'-- 4^": KINGS MOIl^AIN HERALD RIDORTI - FACTS AS A DASIC MIASURI OP ADVIRTISINO VALUlj '’WiSli Goforth Elected active naval reserves. He is a former member and ■officer in the Jaycees and is a member of the Kiwanis club. Mrs. Goforth is the former Dor othy Jones of Wilson. She is an alumni of ASTC and graduated from Rex Hospital School of Nursing in Raleigh. The Goforths are parents of three children: Michael, a threc- Icttcr KMHS athlete who will at tend Duke University on an NROTC scholarship this fall; Brent, 16, a rising junior who is a' member of the Key Club and baud at Kings Mountain hi',?h sclrool; and Lindsay, age six, who will bo a first grader at Fair Grove school in September. The Goforths are active in Central Methodist church where he has taught Sunday school, and is a member of the choir and the official church hoard. v.X» FIRST HALF WINNERS — Pictured above is the McGinnis Furniture ladies' bowling team which captured the first half championship in the local loop this year but lost a best-of-five series to Plonk Borthers in a roll-off for the league title. (Photo by Lem Lynch). Keep Balance, Says Hamrick “Wo nfeed a balanced view of American life “We tend to underrate the present and future, and wc tend to overrate the past.” Thus C. Rush Hamrick, Jr., Shelby businessman and civic leader, summated a brief but succinct serious pliilDsophy, cap- I the incidence of wiecjcs and ' deaths per million vehicle miles I driven has dropped; that the per centage of school dropouts was • greater by far in 1940 than to- • day; that the percc-utage of high I school graduates completing col lege is far greater today than in 19.50; that the percentage of di vorces today is no greater than in 1940 after a post World War II pick-up. “We talk about the parking problem,” he added. “In Sh'’lby, we Irave 600 metered parking ping a laugh-producing address j spaces. Chief of Police Knox at Tuesday night's twenty-eighth i Hardin tells mo the 600 are sel- annual ladies night banquet of! dom in full use. o.xcept at the the Kings Moiinta:n Lions club.' i peal: of the ChviFtinas shopping Using his anecdoto filied pres-! sca.son. The trouble is that a entation of fun,^ frolic and lam- j fellow going to A. V. Wray's poonmg as a springboard, he : wants to park in front of Wray’s declared all will fare better if then, if going to J. C. Penney’s, they keep soxe fun and humor i wants to park in front of Pen- in their daily chores and activi- i ney’s. He’s unwilling to walk , haif-a-block.” „ i^ay,” he said, j “Unfortun-atcly,” ho added, the bucket is half-empty, but i “(be had happenings scerr more that the bucket is half-full.” | newsworthy than the good. Do He cited statistics to show ; you ever read a nows story on that, while the cost of food has! how manv ftdk joined the church risen, wages and salaries have i last Sunday?” greater proportion; Mr. Hamrick‘couched his hum- accidents and I orous presentation on a message deaths have grown in number, ! he wrote in red on his stomach the incidence of wrecks and j before undergoing an operati-on deaths have grown in number, ' for removal of an ulcer. The message read “Open with CARE”. First printed in the Shelby Star, then circulated world wide by Associated Press, the story brought him corres pondence from Zambia. Japan, from service i.xen who read it in Stars and Stripes, many states of the union. Rev Ro:crt Haden welcomed the ladies and Mrs. Willi.am Lawrence Plonk responded. Rev. Dav'id Caston said the invocation and Bill Jonas led the pledge to the flag. William White prsent- ed Mr. Hamrick, and the ladies night committee, George Thom- asson. Gene Timms, and Di'. Na than Reed, distributed favors to the ladies. Dr. George Plonk, president, w'as toastixaster. Scott To Launch er and officially welcome in June as Dairy Monllr in Cleveland County. This will be the first of several events to be conducted during the month by the Cleve land County June Dairy Month comm.ittces. Bill Plonk, Kings Mountain dairyman, is chairman of June Dairy Month activities. Mr. Plonk was Cleveland manager of the lieutenant-governor’s successful 1964 primary and general elec tion campaigns. ’ Himself a dairyman, Lt. Gov. Scott is a son of tJie late Gov ernor and United States Senator W. Kerr Scott. Lt.-Gov. Scott is a graduate of North Carolina State college, for mer master of the “State Grange, a former member of the state Board of Conservation and De velopment, and an army veteran 1953-55. He is a Presbyterian eld er. METER RECEIPTS Parking meter receipts for' the week ending Wedne.sday totaled $198.35, including $129.- 70 from on-stroct meters, $42.25 from fines, and $26.40 from off- street meters. NEW ADDRESS The hew mailing address of CWO Charles B. Wright, leav ing Monday for duty in Korea, is W2-2122.37. 833rd Ordnance Co., APO San p-rancisco, Calif-, 96231. Yauth Corps Mr. Poston’s office, 520 S. Lafay ette Street, Shelby, or through the offices of high school princi pals. Mr. Poston said application blanks will be in the hands of the principals within a few days. Chairman Moss said he was highly pleased to receive the signed contract noting, “It means that 115 Cleveland Coun ty youngsters can have gainful employment, with corollary ben efits of vvork experience, during the summer vacation. The agen cies served will benefit mutual ly.” Tourism is the main industry in Bermuda. Lemons are themain source of citric aciij. The Kings Mountain Area Nee(]$ And Deserves ommissioner Containing the 2nd largest city in Cleveland County, popula tion 8,256, as well as the incorporated industrial community of Grover, the Kings Mountain area both needs and deserves ■14 a member of the county board of Commissioners. Taxable valuation of No. 4 Township Taxable valuation of Kings Mountain School District, $40,- 036,626. An Able Candidate For This Responsilnlity Is Carl Wilson # Maintenance Supervisor of one of The Area's Largest Industries President, Kings Mountain Optimist Club # Veteran of World War II # Athletic Director (6 years) Otis D. Green Post^lSS, American Legion (Political advertisement paid for by Supporters of Carl Wilson) bonn frieni hat c seve has e and orite Fore At mur eve I Ian
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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May 26, 1966, edition 1
8
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