J fiage h liyGi rreens Bites Conducted Visiting Record Set At Park ^^funernl ril»?s foi- .lay (Irccn, were hold W«MliH.s,|ay al 3 P*m. liom PiiMintont lh'i|)li.st wurch, intorinoiit following in Mounla.n U<*si (•<'ru4'i«'ry. R-PV. IViry Wliisn.ttil ;tnil lirv. Edwin Chrisfoi* <)rnci.it( <1 .u i1h* Hnji riles. M, o. route two, weie he’d Monday at 3 p.m. from Oak “f Whilev-nje, was attempting Grov’e Captist church of which ho was a meml)er. Ea.sy make up clas.ses wil. be held fur r(»ta(ing .shift workcMs. Woodjk' Christopher is the in structor and will be a.ssisted by Mr. Ross died Saturday even ing at his home. He was a native of Cleveland County and was employed with the Shelby streiM department until his retirement in 1961. B&B Damages Cost $8,100 , Eight million Ani(*ri<*aiis a’ttend Western S(|uare Dniu'es regularly, according to Kenneth’ nollins. publicity chairnrtin. ■ • Burlington Ine tho city f-r Wday! to pass a 1965 Chevrolet truck operated by Henry Berry, Jr.. 22. of Gastonia, Sterchi’.s driver. Hun ter said Strickland was attempt ing to pa.ss in a no passing zone and Berry was attempting tso make a left turn when they col lided. Terry Chisolm. 21; passen ger in the Berry vehicle, was treat ed for injuries. Damages werer es timated at $500 to the Strickland 1970 Buick and $300 to the Berry vehicle. Janet Louise Putnam, 19, of route 1, was charged with failure to yield right-of-way after she reportedly pulled into the left side of a 1969 Ford operated by Paul Denis Bolin, 22, 815 West Gold. City officer John Belk answered the call at 3:3.5 p.m. to the inter- .section of West Gold and S. Cans- ler streets. Miss Putnam told the Yule lighting Winneis Named 2. at 3 p7m*. nl Ihr-N-altonal Guard Armory and all college and sen ior 'schuol-ago. students are Invited to alleiid.; lers, Mrs. Ilia Grigg of Gastonia, Mis. Jasper Grigg of Lawndale, car. Damages were estimated at $250 to the Putnam vehicle and Mr.s. Melvin Lovelace of Kings 5350 to the Bolin car. Miss Put- i Mountain and Mrs. Hillard Thrift of Shelby. Mr. and Mrs. II. (M)] Uiflge street, ami Mr. and Mr.s. Hciman Bolin, C.ui.sler .sir<’el, are winners in the fiisi annuil Jaycee Out looi* Cliiistinas Light ing ConKvst. Tlie Mayes entjx- was judged Iwst i»i scasoital ileei>i'atk>ns and the Bolin entry was judged best for religious emphasis. Frank Hinson, chairruan of the projd'ct, saifl the .Tavei'es an* ap- firecdative of alj tIio.s. who took inlere.st in and enleicd the r(»n- fest. “All the entries an* goiKi”, said Hin.son, ‘‘but the two chos en for prizes weia* ogt.standin Mayor John Ihniry Mo.«s said he is hopeful lluit^many students will attend'and will bring cam- ments and .suggestions about the city’s program and progress foi 19’70. topic for (l^jlcussion. service. ( -We are interested to learn Krrphiyees at Burlington plants from students tfieir views and in 1.") stales reWMved the bonus, ideas with thoY'cHy of Kings payments. ’.Mountain during the ^decade'of Mori* than Baker s Rites Are Conducted bS.tKMi traditional Christmas-treat bags W4*re given chikiren of Burlington employees. RECUPERATING Ni'vette Hughes. Dixon com munity birmor. remains a pa tient in the Kings Mountain hospital where he is improving after suffering a heart attack. th(* 70*»”, said .Mayor Moss. “We feel”, he continued, that we want to work to make Kings Mountain the kind of place they’ll want to return to work-in after finishing their education.'* The city commission and mem bers the city re-development commission and industrial com mittee will cfinduct the seminar. Funeral rites P»r Thomas H. Baker, 60, were held Tuesday at 3 p.m. from Riverview Presby terian church in Fort Mill, S. C, interment following in Grand view Memorial Park in Rock Hill, S. C. Mr. liaker was father of Thur- man Lyon of Kings Mountain. Mr. Baker died Sunday. / Be xzr: if IMEMO TO ADVERTISEM uestions and inswers about NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING Q. What ar# tha I noat lmp porting tha circulationa of nawa> papara and pariodioala Q t* tbla aowapapor a aiombor af tko AadH Buroaa ad droulatioaaT A* Ym. Wi fnmi ti mmt iirwIatfML Wb wtmi to Idmv to* VAon AbMit ,,•* . to* **4toiw fmu *riUiii "F ■, aagaa trill kavo wkoa tkoy appaar te Ihaaa pagoa. Aak far IP ad aar lataal AB.0 KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD tac tirORTI PACT! At A tAtlC MIAtUAI #1 AiVItTIIII nam was treated for injuries at Hendricks-Durham-Lee Clinic. Luther C. Huneycutt, 61, of Albemarle, operating a truck for Ray D. Lowder, Inc., backed into a 1964 Crfry.sler Wednesday eve ning. The car. operated by Mrs. Betty Peterson Beam. 33, of Shel by, was damaged approximately $150 to the front end. Gertrude Oates, 53. of Scars- dale. New York, operating a 1968 Plymouth, told police she “black ed out" Saturday morning at the wheel of her car, came off Traev street and hit a 1963 Chevrolet operated by John Henry Lail, Jr., 28, of .Alexandria. Va. Damages were estimated at $800 to each vehicle and three persons were treated for injuries, including Mrs. Oates and Victoria Lail, age 8. .and Laurie Lail. age 7. William Dennis Rabb, 17, of route two, Bessemer City, was charged with following too close ly after a two-car crash Sunday at 3 p.m. at the intersection of East King and Deal streets. Ac cording to Police Officer E, \V. Ball, Lawrence Morris Leslie. 25. of Cherry\'iHe, was stopped for traffic. The 1964 Leslie Chevrolet was hit in the rear by a 1969 Ford operated by Rahb. Robert Dixon Smith. 23. was treated for iniurie.*:. Brenda Snellings Porter. 24. of route e. Shelby, was treated for injuries at McGill Clinic Satur day after a two-car cra.sh at the intersection of King street and Canterbury road. Patrolman Richard Reynolds said Walter Clinton Penley, 67, of Asheville, wa.s stopped for p traffic light when his car was hit by a 1964 Pontiac operated by Mrs. Porter. Damages were e.sti- mated at $300 to the Penley ve hicle and $75 to the Porter car. Two cars collided at the Moun tain .-street - Battleground inter section Monday at 4:15 p.m. City officer Tommy King said Alice Winfred Fulton, operating a 1966 Chevrolet, was traveling West on Mountain when James Kenneth Gradner. 29. of Shelby, pulled his 1966 Ford ^om a park ing space and into the path of the Fulton vehicle. Damages were estimated at $*500 to the Gradner car and $100 to the Fulton ve hicle. t./Cpl.Littleiohii With Second Marines CAMP LEJEUNE, N. C. tFHT- NO Dec. IS — Marine Lance Cor poral Henry F. Littlejohn, son of I M.. and Mr.-i. Howard Littlejohn ' of Route 2, Kings Mountain, N. C., is serving with the Second Ma rine DDivision at Camp L<»jeune, N. C. John Hamm's Rites Thursday Military fun<*ral rites for John Marion Hamm, is, of Kannapo lis, brother of Mrs. Harold ' Geoii e of Kings Mountain, will ' be held Thursday at 2 p.m. from First Wesleyan church o.f Kan napolis. Rev. W. J. Lovin and Rev. j Bill Freeman will officiate* at the final rites, and interm<*nl will be* in (’arolina Memorial Park. The body will lie in slate at tho church 36 minutes beJon* tho rites. Mr. Hamm dk*l 1’u(*.sday niglit at 8:30 in V'eterans hospital at I Salisbury. II<* ri'iired fiom the U. S. Navy in 196S. Since his re- ' t’remont he had operated BXso I ‘Service Station, on Clov<*rleaf Plaza in Kannapolis, He was a member of Cannon Memorial Masonic Lodge and the American Legion in Kan napolis. Other su.vivors inchifk* hs parents, Mr. and M»s. John M. Hamm; his wife. Mrs. Margie , t^arker Hamm; three daughters, , Mrs. Linda Lowery,' Mrs. Pattie Hardeman, both of Kannapfdls, and AIiss Terry Ilamin of thi* ' ’■'OTTie: six sisters, Mrs. Fi tnl Scales of Bessem<*r Cit'’, Mis. Dnv d Parker of Hickory. Mrs. Miry Jarrell, of Concord, and Mrs. Lucille Jarrell. Mrs. James T.ove and Mrs. Jack Gadd, alj of Kannapolis; four brothers. Ike ■\. Hamm, I>juglas Hamm and Tony Hamm, all of Kannapolis, and Clyde Hamm of Concord; anti two grandciiildix'u. MORE ABOUT Big Bvents Contlnueii Prom Front Page Receive Bids On Addition April 3; 35 More Beds In Two-Story Structure; Land Mine Cost SP'4 r.oy Ruff Both Feet In Action In Vietnam; MARCH Condemnations Ordered; Con tract Signing 'Puesday; Charles Ellison Killed In Vietnam; Gali lee Church Ground Is Broken; Miss Odessa Black,6S, Succumbs, Was Torcher Here Quarter Cen tury; Clearing To Start .Monday At Buffalo Ciet'k Site; Contracts Signed Tucsda> By Low Bidders And City; Foote Mincraj Posts Wage Hike; B. Meek Ormand To Be Honored On His 100th Birth day This Week; American Legion Will Present Flame Of Freedom On Saturday: Work Began Wed nesday On Buffalo Water Pro ject; Shaney Candidate For Com missioner; Country Club Stock holders Elect HinnanI, Author ize Big Expansion; Plans Jelling On Housing, Uptown Improve ments; Rites Thursday For J. B. Eills; APRIL Maunoy, Herndon And Mullinax File; Wilder To Preach Sunriae Sermon; Five File For Cit) Com mission Post; Hegislralion Books To Open Saturday For City Vot ing; Bids On Hospital Long By $156,004; Ground Broken Wed nesday On New Kings Mountain S & L BuUdiug; Moss Socking New Term; Pearson, Mrs. Jones File; Lake Authority Bill Creates Storm; No Hospital Help From Commission; Chief MiDevitt Is Teacher, Too; Officer Training, Junior Police; Senator While In troduces Revis(d Lake Authority Bill; City’s Two Legislators Still Poles Apart On Lake Bill; Pol iticking Picks Up Steam, Three .More Candidates F'ile; MAY Buffalo Crwk, KM Water Res ervoir Only: City Board; Moss, Cline, Herndon, Mauney Unop posed For Re-Election; Bids To Be Let On June 1.5th For 150 Unit Horsing Project; .Mos.s, Cline, Biddix, Ellison, Kin:^, Dick ey Elected; Ballard Calls Run- OCf For Ward 5 Commissioner; Mauney Answers Criliscisms In Herald Edits. Ads, Letter; Voters Will Decide School Tax Referen dum Saturday; Citizens Will Vole Tuesday In Kun-Off Election; Ground-Breaking At Ho.spital To day; Graduation Season Here; baccalaureate Sunday At 8; Rites Held For Restaurant Own er Marshall Heavner, 74, Wed nesday; HUD Approves 50 Leas ed Housing Units For PIIA; .Mrs. M^alker Run-Off W’innonenls Rough On Commission; Cline Decision Is Appealed On Stream Target Date Same; At tack Fataj To Ca! Fisher; Slew- art Home Oldest Inhabited In County; Smith Researched Map; Funeral Friday For Sand:a Wil son Who Died Of Rai-e Muscle Disease: Ne«vv Curriculum At KMHS Includes Negro History, Ping pong, Golf; Harris Chairs L3-Membt i* Committee On Fluor idation; Author Of Drama 'Bob Osborne Dies; Mrs. J. L. Hall man’s Rites Conducted; Fluori dation Gioup Will Report In 30 Days; Edict On Dixie Excites Students; Mrs. Herndon's Funer al Tuesday Morning; Kings Movntain’s One-Day United Fund Campaign Is Tuesday; Wilson Rules Again In City’s Ravor In Cline Action; Sales Tax Election Will Be Tuesday ; Coroner Har ris Senator Harris? NOVEMBER Garvin Favors Vote On Fluor idation Issue; Committeeman Says Motion Of Monday Misun derstood; Condemnation Actions A,e Filed; City Board Calls For Vote On Fluoridation Question; KM’s Long-Awaited 74 Bypass Is In Planning Stage; Rites Con ducted For Mrs. H. T. Fulton; New Corporation To Assure Ear ly Nursing Home Start; KM Is Expected To Mt^et Bond Test; Ground Is Broken For Fam'ily Inn; We're Back In Business, Neisco’s Jim Dickey Saj-s; Bu- . ford Cline Appeals To Be Heard B> Judge Ervin In Superior Court; DECEMBER Ervin Will Rule In Cline Mat ter; New DraiR Lottery In Ef fect Jan: ary'1, Birth Dates Key; Funeral Rites For F'red Cock rell Thursday; Heart Attack Fa tal; Opening Of Impi-oved NC 161 Is Few Days Distant; Smith Most Valuable of 1969; Jerry Lovelace Best Blocker; Industri al Holidays 'Beginning At End Of Week; $75ing For Christmas; Church Services On Christmas Eve; Rev. * W’ayne Ashe Riles On Sunday; I'uneral Rites Held On Friday For Law- son Dover. S3. Form b Consolidated Greensboro, N. C. - Each of the IS million taxpa>ers in the United Slaves wlio filed the now diseontinued caid 1040A form last year, has leeeivetl a post- caid e.xplaining the change to the new consolidated 1040 form, the Internal Revenue Service annoumed to: ay. This year all taxpayers will receive a larger, complete tax package that includes the one- page basic 1040 and additional pages or schediuJes, which may or may not be us<*d according to the ta.vpayer’s needs. Past KMOA-usei's will find that except for a few lines, the new 1044) asks for the same infonna- tion as the old caixi form and that they will probabl) not need to fUj out more than one sheet of paper to make out their re- ums, the card says. In the past, taxpayers who us(Hi the 1040A could not take advantage of certain* tax credits or exclusions and could not item • . ize their deductions. A principal reason for making the change to the new form is to enable tax payers to take full advantage of the tax benefits the law pro vides, the postcard says. Most taxpa>^rs should receive their individual tax forms and instructions by mail the first week of January. sicm. iinnrf Advisory Group Meeting Tuesday Q. The bank asked me to get a social security number for my two-months old son. Why does he need a sociaj security number? A. Social security numbers are needed by the bank to report in terest income to Internal Revenue Service. In other words, a social security number is also u.sed for tax purposes. Q. My name is “Smith” so my social security card shows this name. There -must be two million other “Smiths." How does social security keep my earnings under .social security separate? A. You’re right! There are over two million “Smiths.” However, you’re the only Smith with your social security number. Your num ber keeps your record separate from all others. Q. My father died last year and my mother, age 51, received the LSDr. Sin’ce his death she has become disabled with a severe heart condition. Can she receive \ disability benefits as his widow? A. Disabled widows betw'oen age 50 and 60 may be eligible for disability payments on their de ceased husband's earnings. You should have your mother contact her local social .security office as soon a.s possible. A meeting of the niavor's Cit-^ izens Advisory Ckunmiltee has l)oen .s(‘t R)r 'Puesday, January 6, al S p.m. at the National Guard Armo.y. Mayor John Henry Aioss has calltd the meeting to discuss plans for the Cansler Street Ur ban Renewal Project, a fo(iora] grant recently appjoved whieh will provide “giant sleiw towards the goal of a decent home for every citizen of Kings Mountain.” VISIT HERE Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Thomas have returned to Gainesville, Fla. after spending the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thorn burg. par(»nts of Mrs. Thomas. The Thomases came especially to attend the funeral of Law- son Dover, grandfather of Mrs. Thomaij. Joe Laney, director of the Re- dov<‘lopmenl commission, will discuss t.h(* prf)ject briefly and will answer questions fiom njem- b<‘rs. Mayor Proclaims Palsy Month J(»hn O. Plonk, Jr., nierdiant, is chaii'man of the committee which includes a committee on minority group housing headed by Herald Editor Marlin Har mon; the committee on down town clevdopment headed by Charles Blanton, merchant; and the committe<* on human rela tions headed by Supt. Donald Jones. Tt) be name 1 is a committee on the Cansler stretd Urban Ile- nt'w al Area which w:is to bo ap pointed after approval of the project by HUD. Meml'ers o Mi’. Harmon’s housing <-ommittee are .Sandro Blalock, George Edwards, Will iam On-. Brooks Tale, George White and Carl Wilson. Memljers of Mr. J*>tus’ com mittee (Jii human relations are Huhe, I Atiorholdl, Mr.s. ('harles Alexander, Mrs. John L. Bess, James Dickey, U<*v. R. L. Gar vin, Mrs. Juniors Haywood, Gra dy K. IldAanI, Mrs. Eugene Me- C'arler, William Orr, J. Lee Rob- o.ts. KyJi* Smilli and Leonard Smith. Memlwrs of Mr. Blanton’s committee on downtown develop ment are (lire E. Bridges, Bil] Brown, Lewis DelKngei’. Charles Dixon. IMIl Fulton. Paul .MtCin- nis. Loo McIntyre and B. S. Peeler. SEPTEMBER Zonaig Board Disapproves Ilaimon 'lYact Rcznni»vg; Hern don, Dover, And Harrill Appmis- <*rs In Cline Acii<»n; Lyhrand Partner In Floor Service; Beth- ware Fair Opens Wednesday; Fox: Treatment Plant Should Be TO HOLY LAND Rev. and Mrs. James Wild er, Mig.s Janet Falls, Hugh Falls, all of Kings Mountain, and .Miss Madeline Patterson of Rock Hill, S. C.. a former teacher, lo t Tuesday for a tour of the Holy Land. Rev. Mr. Wilder is pastor of Kings Mountain Baptist church. Kings Mountain Mayor John Hen.y 5Ioss has proclaimed the month of January “United Cere bral Palsy Month" and urge* citizen si pport of a local fund drive which will take place Jan uary 10-11. Marvin Teer is locaj chairman of the “Happiness Is Helping” campaign to fight against cere bral palsy. Cleveland County chairman is Mrs. Don Crawley of Shelby. The proclamation issued Mayor Moss points out that cer bral palsy strikes every 53 mil? utes, ciipplimr. 10,000 new 1 hies each year, and that 6001 children and adults in this coti try suffer from this multiS crippler. It further slates that, “Wht_ as the cerxjbral palsied need me ical care, therapy treatments _ special education and vocation training, and "Whereas ifor more than years, the United Cerebral sy Association has devoted attention exclusively to the fare of tho cerebral palsied, viding diagnostic services, tw ment and therapy, and other i vices for their maximum deV opment, an I has also cai-ried i an intensive research progr Into the cause and possible vention of cerebi-al palsy, _ “Whereas the United Cereb ! Palsy affiliates in this state served tlreir communities in , viding direct services to the ands of cerebral palsied child and adults, giving them same opportrnlties for dcvelf ment as the non-handicappe “Now, therefore, I hereby „ ^claim January United Cerc^ Palsy Month and ui-go the zens of Kings Mountain to port tho efforts of volunteer the Happiness Is Helping fH against cerebral palsy in a sj of public interest in the welt of the handicapped.”