Page 4 THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD, KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. Thursday, September 10, 1970 Your Happy Shopping Store > I H 'Heiress' osiery NINE DAYS ONLY, SEPTEMBER 10 THRU 19 • ? ' Vi V.i w * ■ V* PANTY HOSE 1.68 3 FOR ’5 USUALLY 1.99 Height proportioned to insure perfect fit. Choice of Agilon* stretch mesh or Cantrece* seamless. In all of Fall’s key fashion shades. And you save STOCKINGS 88-^ ..... j 3 F'AIRS 2.34 USUALLY 1.00 Wonderful fitting Cantrece* and Agiloh* — plus all the other great-fitting "Heiress” everyday stockings! Plain, mesh, demi-toe, teenage stylesi ' -I i*.- ♦‘HEIRESS’ SEAMLESS STRETCH PANTY HOSE USUALLY 1.59 SALE 1.38 3 FOR 4.00 SUPPORT STOCKINGS 1 QQ 288 USUALLY 2.99 and 3.99 Welcome kind of comfort with a sleek fashion look c c/% that lets you wear them every day for every occa- J rUK D.OU 3 FOR 8.00 Sion. Thank Lycra* spandex for the way you feel. 'Heiress' Sale NINE DAYS ONLY, SEPTEMBER 10 THRU 19 9.88 LOWER MIDI-HEEL 1 , USUALLY ns MEDIUM MIDI-HEEL USUALLY n4 j V Now, more than ever, the perfect plain-toe pump completely re-designed to achieve a superbly-smart balance between slimmed ankle and over- the-knee skirt lengths. Toes are slightly squared and completely natural. Tricot-covered foam linings. Sizes 4-10, AAA through B. Fit's a joy! Insurance Top Subject Oi Motorist RALBIGiH — .What U the fa- voriitc subject when thg Tar Heel motoring public has a complaint to take up with the Department of Motor Vehicles? An arrest for a IraJl'ic viola tion? No? The safety Inspection pro gram? No. A license suspeaiBdon or irevo- -vtion? No. ,. Driver license examinations? iiO The Financial Responsibility Act? If jtm .guessed this one, you are right. Few people know it by that name, but it's the act administer ed by 'the 'department that, sim ply slated, irequlires a motor ve- ihicle owner to maintain contin uous liability insurance or forfeit his or her license plate. According to Director James ff. Sramey of the Registration Div ision, which carries out the pro visions of the act, ‘IMost of the complaints origlnato simply be cause ithp average motorist isn’t familiar with the requirement. And that’s because the motorist doesn’t read his mail.” sramey explained that full de tails of the Financial Responsi bility Act are mailed to every motor vehicle owner in North Carolina each year along with the anmjal license plate renewal cards “The trouble begins,” ihe said; "when we receive a .notice ifrom an insurancp company thiat lia bility insurance on a particular vehicle has terminiated and our records indioote that the license plate has not been turned in. We immediately notify the motorist of the insurance company’s ac tion and allow the owner 15 days to surrender the plate or show that coverage has been contin uous.” “If there has ibeen even one days lapse in coverage, the li cense plate must be surrenldcred. If this is done within 15 days the only pen'alty is the cost of pur- cHasing a new plate when the insurance is reinstated.” Stamey explained that vehicle owners who fail to respond with in the 15-day period face an au tomatic 60-day suspension of the re-licensing privilege. It isn’t a Registration Division polcy or a policy It’s a State law. Somp attempt to rtreumvent the law ibyi transferTing ithe title to the vehicle to their wife, hus band or ohitd and having them apply for new insurance. The law covers that, too. It can’t ibe done. Stamey also advised that ins urance must be carried contin uously when a plate is transfer red from one vehicle to another or when vehiclp classifications are clianged. Finally, the Registration Div ision director suggests that “If a person, for any reason, wants to stop operating a vehicle and wants ito oan'cel the liability in surance, he should turn in the plate before the coverage is to enIJ. When this is done, a new plate will be issued free of charge at any time during the same year when the 'insurance is re instated.” Stameji concluded that bis div ision processed 717,816 insurance termination notices during 1969. Indications are there will be a 10 per cent increase for 1970. Dependency Status Clarified Greensboro — Many taxpay ers want to know .whether they may continue to claim their chiki as a dependent after the child gets married. J. E. Wall, District Director for 'Internal Revenue Service, says that a taxpayer ntay claim his ntarried child as a dependent if he itumishes more ithan one- half of the child’s support and meets all .the other dependency ■requirements — except in some cases Where the child files a joint return with his spouse. If the child files a joint return, the parent is not allowed the de- dependey deduction, unless the joint retcim was fried toy his child only for the purpose of re ceiving 'a refund of taxes and neither the child nor his spouse had sufficient Income to be re quired by iregulaitions to file a return. Only in such cases may a parent claim his child wbo files a joint return iDlmJtor IWaJI suggested .that parents who arc supporting mar ried children might consider con ferring with the childiren to de cide the best way to file .their re turns next year since, in some oases, it rttayi save .tax dollars for the married couple to .file a joint return even though the joint re turn may nullify the parent’s right to the dependency deduct ion for his child. Wall added that a. Joint return cannot be changed Ito separate reums after the final date for filing, which, for nearly every- bodji, U 1S| , 31