I* IF ? U. r . 1^' i-' IFig« 6 THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD, KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. By J/.NICE CHBISTENSEN The cost otf building a new ' house may leave luue money I for house furnishings and acces-] ' sories. j “When that happens, ii, com- ' bination of imagination and el bow grease can prove mighty h;uidy,” notes Mrs. Phillip -Stra- de" a young extension home maker from R ckingham coun- tj - So the Straders made plan.; to salvage and use as much of their old furniture as possible, Mrs. Zadie Jackson home economics extension agent, relates. For example, the homemaker antiqued her childh ,od study desk and put ‘t into hef daugh ter’s room. She fashioned a dressing table from an old sowing machine, made a seat ;rom an old kitch en stool, and pulled the set to gether with tabrio found at a remnant sh ip. •Mrs. Strader also made a bed side table for the master bed room and antiqued small to med ium-sized tables for use in other rooms of the house. ‘"rhe small investment the family made in house furnish ings went a long way toward making their new home com- f 'tibh and beautiful,” the agent said. PO MAN'S SUPPEH A “po man's” supper can bo a real money maker, according to memihers ol the Olivet 4hH club, Ans n county. The 4 H ers (Jauner a supper consisting of pinto beans, pota to salad, cole slaw, cornbread and ice tea and coffee, adds Janet Rlanchar.i, assistant home economics e.xten.sion agent. - -dvlore than 9(1 pe pie attended. “AH InH'ers were involved in the venture,” the agent added, “many serving the tables and acting as busiboys.” S'HLL QUIL-nNG The old art of (piilt making is not dead. It ’s not oven fad ing away in Johnstf)n county, where women young and old en- .ioy getting together to make a quilt. The ladies have made many DBaSDS beautiful (luilts and Ifirows dur ing their sessions, adds Mrs. Pa- ; tr.cia brown, associate home €>co- nomics extenskm agent. ACCENT ON AGRICULTURE , I- . logy movement, tne agent bo- I lieves. By quilting, the Johnston county women are using up j scrags O'.' fa'-.iric that probably would be thrown away other wise, Mrs. Br.wn points out. Ph.D. Degree To Spangler I wo well-known busi.nea.smen, a ■ j college president and a Baptist evangetist will be presented hon-.' I orary doctor's degrees by (lard-' j nerWeeb colege at the school’s I ' commencement May 14. The men to Iw honored are: R. i Patrick Spangler, Shelby and I Kings Mountain concrete prod ' ucts executive and chairman the school's board of tru.sices; John L.^ (Buck! Fraley, Cher- ryville, " president of Carolina Freiglit Carriers corporation; I Dr. Norman A. Wiggins, Buie’s I Creek, president of Campbell , college and Vance II. Huvner, Greensboro, Baptist evangelist. ! Mrs. Horace G. Hammett- of lie ilumbia- S. C., will be honored ! witli a certificate of “Christian I Service.” Mrs. Hammett and her husband, former executive secre- . lary of the South Carolina Bap 'list con\ention, wrote the i si-h.iol’s Alma Mater. She wrote the music for the Alma Maler S-e Is a former head ot the col lege's music department. Tile honorary degrees will be ' pic.-.cr.led at the cvmmenc.mipnt procram which will bo held j .Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock in . lost Phy.sical Education guild-1 ir.L;. 1 BEHIND TOE TIMES « f GOSPEL SING SATURDAY — Bob Oaks and the Skyland Gospel Singers (above) of Newland, N. C. will be the featured group in a big Gospel Sing Saturday night beginning at 7:30 p.m. at Midview Baptist church in the Midpines community. The Gcspcl Tones ol Concord and other groups will be featured in the ;;*~r^.ani open to the interested community. Feofsle everywhere are talking about Winn‘Dixie...and ...We like to be talked about CARD OF THANKS \Vc want to thanks friends and neighbors for the kimlni'ss ,a; ,.ig ii'ic iilne.ss of my 'daugh ter. God will bles,< you. -Mrs. Annie Etellinger and Nora. 5:18 DAtRY Kings Mountain, N. C. — Gaffney. S. C. 206-208 York Rd. Phone 739-5603 Coming Soon !! COMFORTABLE BOOTHS To Go With On; Brand New Air Conditioned Porch IN THE MEANTIME TRY OUR: # Big Moo # Big Bossy # Old Fashion Hot Dogs # Old Fashion Hamburgers OR THE SPECIAL: Free 16 Oz. Coke Glass With Your Choice of 3 Sandwiches and French Fries The FcmiEy Piece To Eat I Congress and the admlnistra-' ti in are currently very concern ed with what the Washington, | D, C. press calls "high” food prices and high farm prices, fiioy have conducted all kinds ot hearings on the subject to determine what is going on. The real truth of the matter LS that Washington is way be hind the times. The subject un- 1 der discussion should be the big; drop in farm prices. I The m ist recent official report with the government’s own fig ures shows that priceg received by farmers fell to two per cent in just one month. Prices received 'by farmers for hogs ;irc down. So are farm prices for cattle, milk, cotton, lettuce and tomatoes. Farm prices are back down to 72 per cent of parity. Almost nobody talks about the real issue facing agriculture, the high cost oC farming. Prices paid by farmers wete at the high est level in history last month. Compared to 20 years ago- the wages farmers pay their em ployees are two and one-third times higher, farm machinery price levels are nearly double and farm real estate taxes per a-re are 3.8 times higher. Farm ers, in order to stay in the busi ness of producing food and tiber for the nation, have more than doubed their investments but iflnd themselves nearly five times deeper in debt. Perhaps one reason Washing ton doesn’t hold hearings on the high cost of farming is that they just might find out the real cause, he farmers have ibeen hit toy inflation and that the federal ‘government's deficit In fiscal 1972 is 38 billion dollars. (Hearings just might discose that creating that kind df a def icit budget toy pumping a lot of Thursday, May 18, 1971 government money into the na tion’s economy caused the Infla- tio. ^ FOOD SHOPPERS T.he explosion in the number of working married women has not changed the traditional re sponsibility of the woman If or the family shopping. Ninty four per cent of all working women shop for food, usually after work and on the weekend, says Mrs. Ruby Uzzle, extension consumer marketing economist. North Carolina State University. Kanu, Nigeria, once a major caravan center, is now an im portant air transport base. OVEN REAOY O O a O l-LB. V Cup LEG-O-LAMB.. 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JAR OF Maxvjellhcu jE coffee AT WINN DtVIE v84'cS, I r . i 0*tf COL c . NJ rL.vt^Y .^.^1 -1’-- «t) tss