Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Sept. 28, 1972, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Page 2 Established 1889 The Kings Mountain Herald . : Carcttintf t {^ASSOCiAlJQ 206 South Piedmont Ave. Kings Mountain, N. C. 2838S A weekly newspaper dovotocl to tlie promotion of the general welfare and published for th,-! anligluenrr.onr, c-nlertainmnt and henefit of the eiti;;Cjis of Kings Mountain Jnd its vicinity,.published every Thurstlay by the Herald I’ublisidntr House. Sntered as socona class mailer at the post office at Kings Mcuiilain, N. C., 28086 under Act of Congress of .Mar-h 3, 1873. EDITOBIAL DEPARTMENT Martin Harmon Editor-Publisher •Miss Elizabeth Stewart Circulation Manager and Society Editor Gary Stewait Sports Editor. News Miss Dobaie Thornbu-g Clerk, Bookkeeper Rocky .Martin MECHANICAL DEPAHTT/JENT Allen Myer g Roger Blown Paul Jackson Herbert M. Hunter M.4H. si;b.s.'?jption rates payable in advance In North Caroliiuj and South Carolina One year $4; .six .months S2,2.'); three months $1.51'; school year $3. (Subsitription in North Carolina sub.iect to Uiree percent sales tax.l In All Other States One year $5; si.\ month.s .'tP; tiiree m.mth.^ 81.75; school yeai S3.75. PLCS .NOKTit CAIlC'tlN.A S.ALE.S T.\X THLEPHONE NUMBER — 739-5441 TODAY S BIBLE VERSE And hr rmew-rd in the si.irit of jiour mind. r.idwawna l,:2S. Problem ol People The problem of obtaining employee.^ continue.s. A lioorcivilto Aiilis oue.: .tl said Wednesday lie could use a liunurcd employees “tomorrow morning’’. ll s the same in Kings .Mountain and V Ihrougliout this surrounding area. \ The problem of course is “good people’. Shall we tace it? Some tol.k don't like to work at steady pace. Some folk don’t like lo work. Last spring a lady was getting her income tti.x report made and hantled her accountant live ii hlioiduig sups. The weliavo programs are maligned by harried employees as contributors to the pi'oblem. Tiioy are, perhaps, but only in the .sense where recipients liave ques tionable (pialitieations and sometimes spuriou.s one.s. \'arious employee promotional ef forts are sampled by employers. One ol the moi’o iiitvic.siing a: Spec trum Textured Fibers tour-days-on, tour-days-otf proffer of employment. It’s working to the degree that the 120 cm- ployee.s on this schedule like it. These tiro the group that keep the sovon-day- w eek departments running. In neighboring Gasi..nl.'i, a hesi.n-v manufactuivi' w ho operates a y r'.-t't'y work week, has gone to tliice-on, t!'". - - off and it .seem.s to be working well on tlie 12 hour wotk day. lie pays the ■■ oyee lor 40 iiour.s against the .‘m- p oyee’s actual 3G-hour v.ork week, ..' life employee has answered ‘'prosa.il ' fur the three i2-bour tkiys. In the “good old. rhiys" lernr.’' the 24 National Recovery Act divluted the .. .ght-hour work day tiio work tiay.- w 's 12 hours tor five day.s and six on Satiu - days. Of course, the macjiim s weren’l of the high spcctl variety of today. The work pace was less demanding. Perhaps the only time in modern history there was a great superfluity of “good help" was during the depression debacle of 1929-3.3. Better to have today than that day. \ Eye Wills Two mcmber.s of the Lion.s club, Tim Gladden (11) and Richard Green (5) have obtained 16 wills of eyes. More are sought. The eyes of a deceased person are usable in cornea transplants. They work. A Kings Mountain lady says a cor nea transplant ha.s provided hei- 20 2f) vision in the repaired eye. Saturdey Bonds While Kings .Mountain school dis trict eitizeps have no stake in the voting Saturday on liond issue ivopo;-a!s f..r tlie Shelby and County districts, the Kings Mountain district citizens will be interested in the outcome-. Upcoming in the Kings Mountain district in December is a .S2..'> m.ilhoii bond issue election. The elections Saturday and the up coming one in December will be the last of district bond issues. Under legislalioii by the 1971 General Asscmldy by di..- trict system of financing construction of school plants was scrapped—a system which included, the Herald recalls, only Ion counties of the state'.s 100. In the future after next June 30 all school bond elections will be county- wide. Vince Colombo, county schools sup erintendent, figures that the passage of the bond issue Saturday will save the county SI million over the next fi'w years' He figurexs the rising cost of con struction would amount to that much difference during the period. The county is growing and the school folk in the two districts are an ticipating future need.s—in time. They know' they can't hang ttic youngsters on the chandeliers. Over-Zlrdent Support Thus Jesse Helms, Republican can didates for the United States Senate, came forward to correct the record on aa advertisement placed for liim by sup porters in which his opponent Democrat ruck GalTianakis was charged with ab sence and non-voling on four anti-drug bills before the United Stalc.s House of Representatives, of which Mr. Galifia- nakis is a member. .Said Mr. Flclms; the advertisement would liave been correct had it charged his opponent with absence on four of ^<-n anti-drug bill votes. T'here was no strain, the Durham r.\. r ii'nlative had countered, since the fou'’ uills he m'ssod voting for were non- controver.sial and passed by near-unani mous votes. In the heat and stress of an elec tion campaign emotions can and often do get out of hand. 71 o{ 72 ri.ghls of appeal. The senuence has been long. IMg p’l'ojocts don’t get accomplislied overnight. ‘Happy future hope is a full lake, with not only a .supply of potable water, l it alu-ndant benefits of recreational activity. Th.e fif'hts get the news play but it is ihe Herald’s observation that con- deri’n-.uon litigation was required to oli- tain only five of the 72 properties. Pertnership Tn an address to tlio Lions club Tuesday, Gene White, director of the Kirivs Mountain Redevelopment com mission defined urban renow’al as a parlncrsliip with the federal-government to rescue the blighted cities. G'ornerstone of the program include attention to parking problems, open .space areas, tr.affie flow and elimination of .sub-.standard buildings. He reported that the commission has acmiired 25 percent of tlie property called for in the central business district pi'ojeet, property, most of which will be offered for sale for commercial rede velopment. THE KINGS iMOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Thursday. September 28. 1972 It’s happened many times before and undoubtedly will again: over-ardent suppoiTcrs oil-times get their hero (or heroine) candidates in trouble. More often its the supporters, not the candidates themselves, who run amok. When the city’s engineers finished pkuining the Buffalo Creek w'ater reser- V ill-, it was found that 72 individual p-ecc.s of property were required. With the commission award of 372.800 to John D. Cline, the city ob it; ined the 71st ol these properties. It is the Herald’s understanding that, with the posting of the am.ount of tlic tiwai'd wirlt the city has use of the piop':rT\. Mr. Cline, as other defendants condemnation actions, has Action to proceed on the project V as tat->m by the city commission in July 1966. Plans were completed and bond is sue approval sought from the citizens in December 1967 (and approved by a 20 to 1 margin). Jlappiest fact is that the city, by a cofferdam arrangernont. has been able to otilain its w ater needs from Buffalo wifliout impoundment. Msirttrs MEDICINE 4 '1 1 h II Viewpoints of Other Editors TN 10 SECONDS THIS CAN . . By MARTIN HARMON At last the scienttsts are get- ting around to creating some- thing many ol us have been wish- nMimi indwdries Phenix ing lor-a plastic bottle that will TSa't col<XaiSit'^n"a'nd employee apprecl- d.smtegrate when discarded. The therefore had Immense eonseciuences, Erikson’s voyage 27th in 181)8. Interes'ting'.y, October is the month in which both Lief Erik- .son and Columbus sailed to the While Columbus’ voyage actually opened up North KINGS MOUNTAIN Hospital Log VISITING HOURS OaUy 10;30 to ll:30 AJC 3'to 4 VXl. and 7 to 8 PJM. hr EMh ' Annonneemenis came aoout five hundred years earlier. Colorado, in 1943, became one of the first states to observe Lief Ericson Day , on the 9th. Mrs. Sarah M. Bohelcr. Cuy Rolx'rt Farr. Mrs. Barbar C. Goforth. Mrs. Ruth M. Goforth. Roger Dale Hayes. iMrs. George B. llord. Clyde W. Kerns. Rufus George Kiser. Burlington plant held an atiLn dinner Wednesday. It was American Chemica’; Society heard an on the-jo'b dinner, with the encouraging reports of retent de machinery shut down while em- velopments In producing a self- pLyees enjoyed a sumptuous destruction container, fare—'bJked ham, fried chicken, Ah, well and enough! After and roast beet. vam.r, green beans plastic, then perhaps glass and ’ "a and to,ssed salad, ice cream and Ltal ’oontaine^rs. U If such PoS*.?- progre.ss m all three types brings ^ ’ containers which wil!, as it looks m m like the new plastfo will do, disin tegrate and become part of the I was a guest. After dinner soil pei-haps some day it may be- Plant .Manager Jim Bowman pro- come our civic duty to fling vided a plant tour. Others on the cans and bottles along the road- tour were the Mayor, Chief of side. -Anniston .(Ala.i .Star. Police Tom .McDevitt. Rodney „ . icaki". Dcd.s.)n and .several visiting fire men in the .Burlington organiza tioM. mm It w.ns a first for the Chief — first time he’d ever been in a Columbus Day, on (be 12th, has (jecorpe a fMlerai holi4ay. Liehigh Univefsify and Dart mouth observe bunder’s ptiy in October, the first permanent German seUlet^fnt in'AmefU'a Was ma'de £|t Germantowri, Penn- sylvanJa, on the 6th In 1683; John Clarke, a pioneer in th*’ FOREIGN WORDS PAIL US religious li^ty and Qne of the founders of Rhode Island, w.as Language study is anything but born on the 8th, 1” IGM (in ^g- a craze in the Uniu-d .States cur- land). Hdllowe’^ ends the footly. month, on the 3'lst.Licievcland Enrollment In university and Times. college language departments, . j and more twently high school courses, has been on the decline. Hero the fifth anniversary thereof will ho observed soon. textile plant. He commented kn,'>.v a little better now w-hat a , . differ, .spinner and c-arder do. 1 the point that some academic t-har in -tan loo fn... tliought a carder had something are^expressing mild y„ ihcreasinalv in to do with cards." Jim acknow- ,, . nwe-fp^*^tn Ivoman lodged after the tour that a deal _ standards souths and mino'rlltea nrJ af textile nomeRelnture seemed French and German—^have been ytktths and mmoritjes afe swell- m havo little co^Sn vvith^he losing students, but the “glamor” '"S the v^lng mU. vyhile the TO nave uuie connecion wun me unemployed, -poor and unedueat- ■well. Russian, according to the become more politically eon- Councii on Teaching of Foreign ®eiou.s. Languages, dropped a third in high school enrollment between 1965 and 1970, down from 32,000 students to 22,000. Walter M. Moorhead. Manue! A. .Moss. Mrs. Minnie Lee McClain. Homer Lee Nations. William Ray Neely. Mrs. Betty P. Parker. ■Mrs. David J. Phillips. Cathy Ann Price. Conan F. Pursley. Mrs. Cora L. Rhyne. Mrs. Zeb W. Shleld.s. -Mrs. J. H. Thomson. -Mrs. BilUe T. Whetstine. Mrs. Marie Withers. Airs. Novella R. Herndon. 5Irs. Rhea K. Lewis. Mrs. Betty D. Moore. Afax Forest Roberts. Mrs. Hazel \V. Sprouce. William L. Wray. Mrs. Josephine M. Davis. Kenneth VV. Lewis. John Allyn Cheshire. Mrs. Ella Mae Hughes. actual operation of the particular machines. ADMITTED THURSDAY Mr. and Mfs. James D. Gui ton, 20 IDcnnctt Drive, announu- the birth of a .son, Wednesday, September 20, Kings .Mountain hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ivey, 300 1-2 South Oriental Avemic, announce the birth of a son, Wcil nesday, September 20, King.v Mountain hospital. Mf. and Mrs. Buford E. Barnos, 910 W. Fifth Street, Gastonia, an nounce the birth of a son, Thursday, September 2, Kinys Mountain hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Paul MoLeary, Route 1, York Road, announce tin- birth of a son, Friday, Septemhi-i 22, Kings Mountain hospital. •Mr, and Mr.i. Craig A. Parker, .'109 W. Virginia Avenue. Bcssi'mer Cily, announce the birth of .-i daughter, Friday, September 22. Kings Mountain hospital. ■Mr. and Mrs. James F. Brad burn. .513 Penn Avenue. Bt'ssomei- City, announee the birth of a daughter, Saturday, Septcmbi'i- 23, Kings .VIountain hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Billy A. Bower.s. J.510 Lake Street, Gastonia, an nounce the birth of a son, Satui day, Septcm)';or 23, Kings .Moun tain hospital. -Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Adaii-. Costner School Road, Be.sscmor City, announce the birth of a son, Sunday, September 2-1, Kings m-m All of the Kings Mountain plant's current production gotv into denim, one cf the current “hot” items In the textile field. The political atmo.sphere Is de coiving, though. Despite tremend- St., City. Mrs. Bos.s Acuff. Rt. 1, Box 234, Mountain hospital Grover Mr. and .Mrs. John D. Huffstcl Burman C. Brj'ant, 1002 Fir.st 'f*'- announce the hlrtlTI of a son, Sunday. September 21, OU.S get-out-the-vote efforts, few- Addle F. Hill, 418, S. Cansler er Americans are exercising thi.s Street, City. •■ight. Mrs. John Q. Hope, P, O. Box . 54. Grover. Plipnix nlant vai-n tops t") Cool)** , “ 7* m N^othing proves this more than ADM1^"PED PHtriAV mce for'dyeinl fhe"n to Moores- onrt'Cf,h'^'”2Tem1'n.” erLVthe “^oos^t M'. Camp. 606 ville Mills for weaving. Com- .- r-.i i i voting. In 1968 only one- yy Alabama Ave., Bessemer City. lowed to vote in some states! Mrs. William A. Carver, 816 N. The decline is being attrlbuterl to a numi’ier of developments, in- Kings Mountain ho.spita'. Mr. and Mrs, William A. Iloj'Ie, P. O. Box 10004, Bessemer City, announce the birth of a daughter. Monday, .September 2.5, Kings Mountain hospital. .. . . . traditional science-oriented fields menting on how h.it denim i.s, » , ?, ,, ... and classic disciplines in favor one of the'Mf)oresvill(» .men corn- one of the Mooresville men corn mented, "I gue.ss the bubble will burst semetime.” Then he con- of social involvement. It is also possible that the very .... J „„ , V. , ■ increase in and ease of student tmued, ‘You loiow back in our went to the polL=. In the 1970 Con. weldon St., Gastonia. gressional races, a mere 26 per cent voted. school days a boy was .supposed to dress up a little bit. Totlay tlie contributed. Familiarity with other cultures va.st m-iiority wear jeaas. Lot ^ but it could be diluting intellec- ■Mrs. Carl T. Fi’azier, 12 KLser Road, Da.Mas. Mrs. Fannie Bell White, Box 4.84, Bessemer City. Mrs. Harold T. Hance, 503 East cheaper on Papa. Ju.st about out fit a boy for $20.” tuai curiosity. Inscrutable, these Americans.- Gastonia Gazette. Mature citizeirs vote much more regularly. In 1968, 75 per cent of the 45-64 age group went to the polls. Slightly over half of Washington Ave., -Bessemer City, the 21-24 bracketdid. Even the over-63 group topped them (66 per cent). Mr. and Mrs. James F. Hendi lx, 607 East Florida Avenue, Besse mer City, announce the birth of a son, Tuesday, Sr'ptemhcr 2i), Kings Moiuitain hospital. ADMITTED SATURDAY Mr. and Mrs. Char'es D. Greene, P. O. Bo.x i-M, Grover, announce the birth of a son, Wed nesday', Septem'bei- 27, Kings Mountain hospital. Tlien we- toured the remodeled offices, where I more or less SMOKING IN THE AIR Kennetli L, Dellin,ger, 404 Haw- , , , . thornc Lane. City. Raxhing to conclusions is obvi- Loi-pna H. Shields, 200 In'- ou.sly a mistake. For e.xample, gia„a Avenue, Be.ssemer City, men vote in higher by percent- -phomas H. Barnette, 115 , . The Civil Aeronautics Board is ages than women. The men led vvann Road oitv rff''"‘'ighing making all airlines eon- in 1968, 70 per cent to 66 per m°s Cariand Detter • he old Dll mg . Majority of he smoking to an area at the cent, and in 1970, 57 per cent to offices are downside, where Wal- hack of aircraft. It Is entertain- 53 per cent. Those earning over ^ X^ee Kenneth Patterson Box ter Dilt'cy. Fovcp .simonton and ir.c reaetinna tn tha m-nr.ncai tin rmn I Georgc Kcnnotn patierson, BOX Rt. 1, Letter To The Editor _ ,. . . 53 per cent. Those earning over u ^-1, reactions to the proposal until $10,000 yearly vote in higher jxrr- RpILm'e'r‘cirv* Booth Gillespie held forth in my >^ov. 3. centage.s than those maWng less, ^ity. day Uiere, but the ex-grocery ja, ^ ^ . stcre has several offices too. in- Our reaction is that making a ^ P^ • To the Edilor: ADMITTED SUNDAY I’ve been a Democrat a'.l life but on November 7th going to part company on cludint the first aid department no-smoking area mandatory on Lack of education is another Suprina B. Lee. 1106 Spencer presidential ti^et and Vote foi - ^ r.. _ 1 -J.- .... A:iYnn-Aorn<>u; That's ihf'nnlvdp- when Mrs. Vicky Wyatt superin- aircraft is a good idea. Perhaps landmark of poor voting records. Avenue, Gastonia, tends the operation, tending to oui readers w-il] want to tell the Over 80 per cent of the people Paul Phillip iMcCleary, Rt. cuts and bruises, and other first CAB in Washington that they with more than high school edit- York Road, City. aid items. Mana-ter Bowman Is think it is a good idea too particularly proud of this func tion, as is .Mrs. Wyatt. m-m The current voluntary provision of non-smoker sections aboard American commercial aircraft Is a step in the right direction, but Manager Bo-.vman is native to "“t p far enough. .Many « small town in East Tennes.see. airlines joake no proiision for I asked hoiv close his town is to non-smokers. Dayton, wliere Dr. Sam Robinson jjjg airliner is crowded, non- is fre-m, and their towns are only smokers may still find themselves twenty miles apart. seated next to heavy smokers who seem seldom to have the m-m grace to ask whether their smok- , , . „ . - ifg is annoying their neighbors. ‘‘\ou Itnow what Dayton is -pheie is nothing more obnoxious famous lor. he asked. That s the finding oneself inhaling the timed Scor"' —' iarly knew trial”, featuring, more cations -voted in 1968, the high- Orle M. Valentine, est of any educational group. On- wood Drive, City. 1015 Lln- ly 72 per cent of all eligible high school graduates voted, and the figure.s decline from here. . -.-i t Nixon-Agnew. That’s the only de parture as I’m .supporting ail Democrats from courthouse to state house, ' J. C. Clary Jimmy Ray Ellis, 314 E. Penn. Avenue, Bessemer City. Joseph Edward Peeler, Rt. 9, Box 93, Shelby. .Septomliei- 27 Should someone argue that the unemployed, worried about job changes, go to the polls more frequently, he would be wrong. In 1968, 71 per cent of the em ployed voted, but only 52 per cent Box 46, Bessemer City, of the unemployed did. Those not Isaac Robert Crawford, even in the labor force (mostly Box 279, City, homemakers) had a higher per Mrs. Arthur J. Green, rentage, 63 per cent. Airport Road, Gastonia. ADMITTED MONDAY Mrs. William H. York Road, City. Carmie K. Brittain Jr., Early, 606 Rt. 1, To A'l Our Fiiend.s: if you need any fish or just want to have lol.s of fun wati-h- ing them, just go out to the dwp. We h,-i;l the best and fastest boat in these parts of Little River. Given the near-universal suf- Mrs. H. Eugene Gi-igg, 914 Sec :opo.s trial, more famil- from someone's tobacco, frage, it goes without saying that Str^t, City, rwn a.s the particularly when meals are being excryone ought to vote. Ameri- -,^*',1', ' Ss. t2 «^;ved.-Christian .Science .Monl- cans, however, are going to the Alley'llely, 82.f C. Teacher-Defendant famed legal brains, William Jen riin.gs Brj-an, thrice a candidate f.r president, and Clarence Dar- r.jw for the defense. Dr. Robinson says the ground-work for the trial was laid in liis father'.-i drug stcie, -.vas, in fact, geared for a tc.st case and that Scopes nevei taught the Darwinian theory. ACCORDING TO FORM The House Committee has horror that Pentagon paper shuf flers are using 11,916 standard forms. polls less. street, Bessemer City. For the Congressional election Mrs. William C. McClain yeaxs 1962, 1966 and 1970, voting 114, Stanley, percentages declined, from 47 per Mrs. Walter Peterson, Robert Fleming and I went out Rt. 1, 90 mile.s and caught over 200 pounds, some weighing about 1.1 Rt. 3, pounrl.5. Went out with our wive.s on another boat, only alxiut 3tl miles and caught about .50 pounds. if you want the big ones go where they are. You wi'I like the electfc reels. They are wonder ful hut fishin." Is still hard work. Hurry back. Box J. c. Clary 607 Armed services ^ p^j. p^j. Landing St., City, d.scotercd to its Presidential elections have also Mrs. Bertie Barber Thompson, .seen smaller percentages of vot- 604 1-2 E. Church SI., Cheri-yville. ers going to the polls. In 1960, 64 James Edward White, 1301, per cent of those eligible cast Shelby Road City. Septcmhei- 27 and agencies striving In It was summer and hot in Day- ton and Eryan died there shortly aftei- the trial ended. each form their ballots. In 1964, 63 per cent, piled together, the stack weighs =„ jggg 52 per cent. Congre.s- more than 200 pounds. election, likewise -plum Firm.s to meet afrirshrdlu5 ^fesycshi-dl meet affirmative action goals of increasing minority employment may find useful the directory of Soanish Sui namcd A ni ei-ican only College Graduates 1974-72. Single Frances Perkins, the If the House committee thought pw'(int''l^'"59 woman to serve as Secretary of copies of this dii-ectory, showing publicizing these facts would per'cent).’ ' Labor in the 80-year history of the names, addresses and major shame the Pentagon into weeding ■ ’ . ' the Department of Labor, also fields of study of Spanish-sur out some of the forms, it prob- Carping aliout being “aiienat- sei-ved longer in the office than named college graduates, may be ably was naive. ed” and being ignored by the any other Seeretai-y of Labor. Ap- obtained from the Cabinet Com- Our guess is that the Penta- “power structure” is palaver when pointed in March 1933 by Presi- mittee on Opportunities for the At Dayton is a grow'ing Bryan gon already is conducting a sur- one loots at the facts. Group.s, dent Roosevelt, she served Amei- Spanlshing Speaking. 1.800 C Memorial College, Jim says, and vey to determine which forms are from youths to farmers, complain lean workers for 42 years until Street. N. W., Washington, D. i'. dedieatixi to the three-time Dem- being used by whom and for that no one cares what happens June 194-5. 20506. * mm ocratic .standard-bearer. what. And the questionnaire will to them. But they themselves do of course become standard form not care (e.g., urban residents ' 11,917.—Roc-ky Mountain News vote in higher percentagea than (licnver). rural ones). Until the lault-ftnd- Mrs. Jean Ratchford wa.s a - ers shew some interest in the helplul hostess and the Moores- “system,” it is not likely that the ville plant visitors were Don Bar- OCTOBER, 1972 system will show the interest in ham, Mooresville division man- October dresses in flame and ager, Fred La than, group man.- .gpj^ Lincdla Tlmes-News ager and T. D. (^twalt. division Ld^e a woman afraid of personnel super\-lsor. pij, LONG AND SHORT OF IT _ _ - -Anne Lawler. A helpful guide penetrating Manager Bowman said, “Tlic October is filled with interest- bureaucratic gobbledygook may purpose of this occasion is to ing dates, and is the birthday solve problems for business mysti- langibly demonstrate to our em- month of five Presidents. It Is also 1^8®! jargon of re- ployees how mucli we appreciate the month in which many state quirements for government pur- thom and the job they are doing days are, or have been in the chasing contracts, at the Phenix Plant.” past, observed—^Mlssouri Day on The handjoook, entitled “1972 the 1st. Oklahoma Historical Day Government Contracts Guide,” ™ ™ on the 10th, University of North promises to explain technicalities The Chief had an intere.sting Carolina Day on the 12th (and in important areas of public con- Phenix sideliglit. Will Means, old"^ Farmers’ Day in Florida), A’aska tract work such as eligibility, la- est employee in point of senice. Day on the 18th, Yorktown Day bor rules and final payments in wa.shes cars on Saturdays. He on the 19th, Pennsylvania Day on plain language. The guide in- .stopped at Belk to pick up Mrs. the 24th and Admission Day in eludes checklists of required and F. L. Earlj-’s car and .--ho handed Nevada on the 31st. permlss.ble contract clauses along him the keys. Will got a car he Presidents bom in October in- with relevant legal cases, thought to be Mrs. Birly'.s. Later elude Rutherford Hayes, the 19th, The Commerce Clearing House in the afterno. n, the iiolice had born in Delaware, Ohio, on the in Chicago was clever to pro- a stjlen car repi-t. When Will re- 4th in 1822; Chester Arthur, 21st, duce such a simplified work. The turned 5rrs. Early’s she said, born in Fairfield, Vermont, on only problem is that their “short “That isn't my car!” Her ignition the 5th In 1830; Dwight Eisen- cut” is 916 pages long. -Jackson- key worked very well in the one hower, 34th, born at Denison, ville (Fla.) Florida Times-Unlon. Will mistakenly thought was Texas, on the 14th in 1890: John — hers. That wouldn’t happen oft- Adams, 2nd, born tn IBraintree, The International Iron and en, but the Mayor says the igni- Massachusetts, on the 30fh in 1735 Steel Institute predicts world steel tion keys to his old and new.ij and Theodore’ Roosevelt, 26th, consumption will grow to over a cars turn both ignitions, born in New York City, on the billion net tons by 1980, Keep Your Ra(dio Dial Set At 1220 WKMT KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. News & Weather every hour on the hour. Weather every hour on the half hour. Fine entertainment in between Th m b( le W' )-ia
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 28, 1972, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75