Health And
RALEIGH, Oct. 10 Citing that
good health is the most price
less possession of every man,
woman, and child in our State,
Governor Dan Moore has de.si
gnated the week of October 15
21, 1967 as Community Health
Week - 1967.
"Good health is one of the
State’s most valuable resources
and one vital to the safety,
growth, productivity and progress
of our State and each individual!
in it. Maintaining or improving
public health is a constant, high
priority goal of the State,” he
said.
Governor Moore stressed that
the many members of the com
munity health team, by working
together and with continued pub
lic support, have made immense
strides in protecting and improv
ing public (heaith and assuring
Safety Tips
that health care services are
available to all.
He urged that local medical
societies, allied health profes
sions, and local health depart
ments join in observance of Com
munity Health Week
Medical Societies throughout
the state, in cooperation with
other members of the commun
ity health team, will mark the
fifth annual observance of Com
fnuni'y Health Week by present
ing public service programs em
phasizing how the groups are
teaming up for bettor health and
for the purpose of increasing pub
lic awareness of the many health
facilities and services available
at the community level to enrich
the lives of all.
"Teaming Up For Better
Health,” is the recurring nation
al theme of Community Health
Week.
It Starts Monday!
REXALL lc SALE
r KINGS MOUNTAIN!
623DRUG COMPANY
THE CITY'S MODERN^TORE
PHONE 41 & 61
GROVER NEWS
The Circles of the First Bap
tist church are holding their
meeting this week at the fol
lowing places. The Bostic Circle
• Wednesday afternoon with Mrs.
i B. F. Bird. Thursday at 7:30 p.
m. The Alma Hunt Circle with
I Mrs. Bob Beam, Meldona Living
| ston with Mrs. Jerry Cook, The
Mary Christian with Mrs. Hood
| Watterson.
The Circles of Shiloh Presby
terian church will hold their
meeting thisw eek, Circle No. 1
with Mrs. Charlie Harry III,
Circle No. 2 with Mrs. R. B.
Keeter Tuesday afternoon, Circle
No. 3 with Mrs. Stewart White,
Tuesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. David Harry,
Peggy and Lowrance Harry have
given to the Shiloh remodeling
fund in memory of Mr. Ross
Hambright and Mrs. N. L. Hou
ser.
Officers elected for the new
year at First Baptist church are
as follows: treasurer, Miss Beo
na Ross, assistant, Mrs. J. B.
Ellis, Secretary, Mrs. R. C. White
Clerk, Mrs. A. F. Collins assist
ant, Mrs. F. Bird, pianist, Mrs.
Gilmore Byers, choirister, Clyde
Randall, historian, Mrs. B. A.
Harry. Sunday school superin
tendent, Tommy Keeter, associate;
supt., Gene Turner, S. S. secre
tary, T. T. Keeter.
Superintendent of Sunday!
school at Shiloh Presbyterian I
. church, Mr. Frank Robinson, as
I sistant supt., W. F. Cockrell.
The women of the church at
i Shiloh are as follows: president
! of W.S.O.C., Mrs. William A.
! Ilammett, vice president, Mrs. G.
| R. Rountree, secretary, Miss Inez
j Davis, treasurer, Mrs. Fain Ham
I bright, historian, Mrs. W. A
I Ham blight.
Chirmen of the Circles are Mrs.
i H. Stewart White, Circle No. 1,
i Mrs. Roy Houser, Circle No. 2,
! Circle Ho. 3, Miss Mary Ham
j bright, co-chairman are No. 1,
Mrs. Fain Hambright No. 2, Mrs.
W. F. Cockrell, No. 3, Mrs. W.
A. Hambright.
The following attended the
football game in Atlanta, Sun
day. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ham
bright, Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Fran
cis, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Harry,
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. June Parks,
Robert Harry, Lowrance Harry,
an:; Herbert Singletary, Jr. They
made the trip by plane.
Misses Faye Houser of Char
lotte and Charlene Houser of
Gastonia wert guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Houser Sunday.
Mr. Tom Abernathy is a pa
tient in the Oteen hospital.
Sunday was Layman’s Day at
Shiloh Presbyterian church. Par
ticipating in the service were
Mr. Louis Morgan, gave an in
spiring talk on, “What the Church
Means to Me”, and Mrs. G. L.
Rountree gave a talk on, “Haw
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• Safety lid lock • Porcelain enamel wash basket.
Model OEJ250 Electric Dryer
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Bessemer City Ice & Coal Company
Bessemer City. N. C.
Phone 629-2276
'COMPLETE LINE OF WESTfNGHOUSE"
I Can Serve the Church”.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
| and Mrs. Wayne Roark were,
Mr. and Mrs. James Wilson of
1 Springfield, Virginia; Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Putman of Kings
Mountain and Mr. and Mrs. Don
ald Roark and Lisa of Asheville.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyn Kirby of
! Charlotte visited Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Rollins Saturday.
The Hambright reunion was
held Sunday at the Rescue build
ing.
Mrs. Maude Oats Steele and
Mrs. Lucy J. Cline of Charlotte
attended the morning service at
Shiloh Presbyterian church Sun
day and attended the Hambright
reunion.
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Childers
of Greensboro were weekend
guests of her mother, MrS. Susie
Cook.
Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Mattingly
of Atlanta were last weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fay Tes
seneer.
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Steven
son of Gastonia were weekend
guests of Mrs. Mildred Hollifield,
Sunday guests of Mrs. Hollifield
were Mrs. Evelyn McNeely of
Morganton and Miss Joyce Brid
,es of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crump
>f Albemarle visited Mrs. Addie
Beam Sunday. She. accompanied
them back and will visit Mrs. W.
C. Crump in Badin,
Miss Jean Neal of the Univer
sity of S. C. spent the weekend
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Neal.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore Byers
visited her mother and sister,
Mrs. Golden Spencer and Miss
Lorens Malone in Gaffney Sun
day.
. Lt. Greg Kimberlain of Ky. and
Lt. Tony Ard of Florida in ser
vice with Lt. Tommy Hope at
Fort Jackson spent last week
end with Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Hope.
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Becknell,
Mrs. Mary Irvin and Mrs. Eunice
Simmons, the two latter of Gaff-'
ney are visiting relatives in Ak-I
ron, Ohio. I
Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Anthony of
Shelby were Sunday guests of
Mrs. Cora Casey.
Mrs. Robert Peterson of Earl
visited Miss Ava Gibbons Satur
day .
Mrs. Thomas Wright entered
Kings Mountain hospital for
treatment and observation Sat- i
Jirday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mnllinax
announce the birth of a daughter
in San Diego, Calif. She is the
former Peggy Hovjkl. She will
return here the last of October
to be with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Howell while her hus
band will be gone overseas.
Jimmy Wright is in service at
Fort Sill, Oklahoma, after finish
ing his basic training at Fort
Bragg.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hope hon
ored their son, Lt. Tommy Hope
with a party last Saturday niight.
At the woman club building in
Kings Mountain approximately
75 guests attended the party was
This Is The Law
STATE CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENTS
What are the proposed amend
ments to the Constitution of
North Carolina to be voted upon
at the general election on Tues
day, November 7, 1967?
Six of the seven proposed
amendments deal with the elec
tion of members of the General
Assembly. One deals with the
compensation to be received by
the members and presiding offi
cers of the General Assembly'.
The proposed amendments im
pose upon the General Assembly
the duty to revise the geogra
phical districts ffom which mem
bers of the General Assembly are
elected “at the first regular ses
sion convening after the return
of every decennial enumeration
taken by order of Congress.”
Under these proposed amend
ments each member of the Sen
ate and House of Representa
tives of the North Carolina Gen
eral Assembly must represent,
as nearly as may be, an equal
number of inhabitants.
These amendments become
necessary as a consequence of a
United States Supreme Court de
cision.
Under the language of the pro
posed amendments each Senate
and Representative district must
at all times consist of contigu
ous territory; -and no county can
be divided in the formation of
either a Senate or Representative
district.
Heretofore, the compensation
of the members and presiding
officers of the General Assem
bly has been fixed by express
provisions of the Constitution.
The present Constitution says
members of the General Assem
bly "shall receive as compensa
tion for their services the sum
of $15 per day $20 per day for
the presiding officers of the two
houses) for a period not exceed
ing one hundred and twenty
days.” In addition, while engaged
in legislative duties, they may re
ceive “such subsistance and trav
el allowance as shall be estab
lished by law.”
The proposed substitute provi
sion reads; “The members and
officers of the General Assem
bly shall receive for their serv
ices a compensation to be estab
lished by the General Assembly.
An increase in the compensation
of members shall become effec
tive at the beginning of the next
regular session of the General
Assembly.”
made up of former schoolmates
and classmates of Tommy. De
licious refreshments were serv
ed.
Mrs. Jim Bell had the misfor
tune of falling at her home and
breaking her hip last Thursday.
She is in the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Dear! Hope and
Miss Vickie Hope visited Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Cjjiwley in Cherry
ville recently.jy
vMr. and MB. Russell Pinkel
ton of Charlotte were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Pinkelton.
Do the proposed constitutional
amendments change the number
of members of the General As
sembly?
No. As provided in the Consti
tution, there will continue to be
fifty members of the Senate and
one hundred and twenty mem
bers of the House of Representa
tives.
Picture Sc* y
of Your Weddin;
In Color
Tape Recording:
Also made
CARLISLE
STUDIO
314 S. Lafayette
Shelby, N. C.
Phone 487-462 J
Telephone
Talk
By R. B. MOORE
DEFENSIVE DRIVING AND SCHOOL DAYS
As summer fades, football replaces baseball,
raking leaves replaces mowing the lawn and new
loafers replace tennis shoes.
But the change of season doesn’t change eveijK)
thing. Safety-consciousness, for instance, just gets
a new emphasis. Caution is the watchword when
driving on streets filled with schoolbound young
sters.
Southern Bell is urging its employees to be
especially observant of the basic rules of the com
pany’s safe driving policy: Concentration, Control
and Courtesy.
Safety is a main concern of Southern Bell. Class
room training and road tests are given to make sure
that each employee hot only obeys all traffic laws,
but is constantly alert to the three C’s of safe driv
ing.
If every driver of a motor vehicle will stop and
think, will apply the concentration, control and
courtesy of safe driving, there will be fewer broken
bikes and injured children. Think: “Drive Defensive
ly!”
Do not let the next accident be because of you.
* * *
IF YOU’VE EVER EXPERIMENTED WITH “CHIP
MUNK” SONGS, you know that accelerating the speed
of a record produces a high-pitched, unintelligible babble.
That’s why blind students have never been able to “speed
hear” records as others “speed read” books.
Not too long ago, though, Bell Laboratories perfected a
device that permits records to play at double-time without
distorting normal voice pitch. The device was presented
to the American Foundation for the Blind.
JlL. * *
REPAIRING TELEPHONES
ISN’T A DULL JOB, at least
for one repairman in British
Columbia. One day he went to
the forest ranger’s cabinto find
out what was wrong with the
telephone. He analyzed the
trouble\as a short circuit and j
traced it to a nearby vacant
lodge which was on the same
line as the ranger's phone.
Hearing movements inside,
he rattled the door — and a (
huge, frightened bear bounded
through the side window and disappeared into the forest.
The repairman entered the cabin and found the bear had
knocked the receiver off its hook, causing all the trouble.
’68 Caprice Coupe; rear, Cama'Q Sport Coupe, " the Hugger“
Dramatically new!
Astro Ventilation makes Hie ride
as quiet as it is smooth.
With special new Astro Ventilation,
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Bs smart t
Be sure!
Buy now at
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dealer^. _
your
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No better value
For '68, you also get new riding
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for one) along with many new
safety features.
Drive the finest
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Camaro, “The Hugger,” gives you
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before. Come drive ’68’s finest—now
at your Chevrolet dealer’sl
VICTORY CHEVROLET COMPANY
CORNER RAILROAD AT MOUNTAIN KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C.
TELEPHONE 739-5471