Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Oct. 19, 1972, edition 1 / Page 10
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Page 2 THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. School Menus School menus for the week cl Octobeir 23-27 are announee<l ily Mrs. Martha Wright, schools food supervisor. ELEMENTARY AND JUNIOR HIGH Monday, October 23 Sausage patties Buttered rice Com on the cob Hot buttered rolls apple sauce. Milk Tuesday, October 24 Pizza with cheese Tossed green salad Banana pudding Milk Wednesday, October 25. Vegetable soup with ibeef Toasted cheese sandwich Orange half Peanut butter cookie Milk Thursday, October 26. Oven-fried chicken June peas Crahberry sauce Hot rolls Spiced peaches Milk Erlday, October 27. HIGH SCHOOL MENUS Monday, October 23 Choice: Sausage patties, steak with gravy Buttered rice Com on the cob Hot rolls • Apple sauce Milk I A la carte: Tossed salad, choc olate pudding, ice cream I I'uesday, October 21 I Choice: Pizza with cheese, fish I in a bun. I Tossed green salad I Banana pudding Milk . MORE ABOUT : SOC. HUGHES - RUPPE j Covtinw’d From Page One ' the new Mrs. Ruppe chose a blue and white pants suit with the corsage lifted from her bridal bouquet. The newlyweds will be at home I at SOI Southwood Drive. BRIDE AND BRIDEGROOM Mr. and Mrs. Jerrell H. Hughes of Kings Mountain are parents of the bride. A senior student at I Shelby BPW Tap Mrs. Roland Leafh I As Shelby Woman Of The YearTuesday A la carte: Deviled eggs, 1cm-; Kings .Mountain high school, she is employed in the offices of Bell Detective Agency. She Is granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Dalton of Kings Mountain and of the late Mr. and Mrs. John F. Hughes of Alabama. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. George T. Ruppe of Kings Mountain, is a 1972 graduate of Kings Mountain high school and is employed by Cleveland Hosi ery Mill, Inc. i on pie, strawberry shortcake, i Wednesday, October 25 I Vegetable soup I Choice: Toasted ehiHtse sand- ; wich, deviled egg sandwich ! Orange half. Pe‘<nut buller cookie Milk A la carte: Banana pudding, P'noapple salad, chocolate cake. Thursday, October 26 Choice: Fried chicken, ibaked turkey Rice with gravy June peas ’ Cranberry sauce Hot rolls Peaches Milk A ia carte nut pudding, dressing Friday, October 27 Choice: Hamburger in hot dog in bun Lettuce, tomato and onion Fiv'nch fries Applesauce cake Milk SOCIAL CALENDAR Friday: i 7:30 — Margrace Woman’s club I at the home of Mrs. George Sell- Tossed salad, coco- er.s bun, DOUBLE SUDS Clothing contaminated with farm chemicals should be wash ed separately In two complete sudsings, using extra soap or detergent, then rinsed well. The Washington machine should A la carte: Tuna salad, choc-' also be thoroughly “laiind^red” olate pie, pear salad. ^nd rinsed. Shelby Business & Pnofe.:sional I Women tapped Mrs. Roland Loath as Shelby’s Woman of the Year at a banquet Tuesday night at Hotel Charles in Shelby. Mrs. Leath, wife of the asso- ■ elate minister of Shelby’s First Baptist church; was cited for her long service as a Sunday school teacher and youth worker. Guid ance counselor at Shelby Junior high school, she has taught a Sunday school class for more than 20 years and teaches the ■ teachers In her church each week. I She and her husband accompan- ' led the youth choir of .the I church on a trip to Long Beach, I Calif, recently, sleeping In sleep- I ing bags on floors of the churches I in the various places they Ivslt- I ed. I After accepting the hand- j some gold loving cup and en- ; graved plaque, Mrs. Leath said: ' “We love the Lord and we love I the people in Shelby. I fee! we’re I a part of Shelby and forget that j I’m a na leTevtxshi'dluVKJwm I I’m a native Texan.” Mrs. Leath I was 1946 Woman of the Year In i the State of Arkansas. 1 Van Ramsey, minister of music j at Shelby First Baptist church, ! made the awards and presenta- ; tion and Mrs. Brenda Page, BPW I president, recognized as guests I former Woman of the year award winners and Shelby Mayor and Mj^s. Hubert Plaster. I Mrs. Lynda Ferreri, public re lations director of First Union National Bank of Charlotte, de lighted the group with an ad dress: "The Working Woman." ■Mrs. Ferreri joined First Union In 1971 after working for five years with a national advertis ing firm In New York City. Attending the banquet from Kings Mountain were Miss Betty Knox Davis and iMiss Elizabeth Stewart. This Is The Law . r! ,vi i,‘ Thursday, October 19, 1972 fray the necessary expenses- ' thereof it bec-rm shrdleutaoltywl jexitenses thereof if he possesses’ ! the means. IM Iss Williams, IMt. Westbrook Se‘t Wedding Date 'The engagement of Miss Fran ces Ruth Williams and James .Ricky Westbrook has been an nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Bickett WUUams of 6611 Martin Lake 'Road, Charlotte. The bridegroom-to-be is son of Mrs, H. O. Hardigree of Blythe- vlUe, Ark. and E. O. Westbrook of Jasper, Alabama. Mrs. Williams, mother of the bride-elect is the former Miss Margaret Wolfe, foster daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Rhea of Kings Motmtaln. The wedding is planned for November 18th In Charlotte’s As cension Lutheran church. \o( o Home We’re The People To Help You Out Colonial, Modern. Ranch-Modified, Beach Type, Mountain A-Frame? Whatever or Whichever, Home Savings & Loan Association is Ready, Willing and Able to Handle the Financing... .Whether Purchase or New Construction... or Maybe An Addition to Your Existing Home. Service Here Is PROMPT! Home Savings & Loan Association Free Parking. Drive-In Window Service 106 East Mountain By BOBEHT E. LEE (Fot N. C Bar AssockrtionT | DEAD BODIES A husband and wife were bur ied in a rural graveyard many years ago. Recently John Doe, acquired the property adjacent | to this graveyard. He plowed over | the land, leveling off the bill on which the graveyard was located, destroying the graves and ex posing the remains of those bur led. Later he gathered up the re mains and reinterred them in an other place So that the remains: of the graves in which they were interred could not identified. May; the great-grandchildren of the deceajsed recover damages for the desecration of their ancestors? Yes. The Supdeme Court of North Carolina so held in 1952. The right of action for the des ecration of the grave of an an- certor vests in the next of kin < as of the time the wrong was committed. It is the policy of the law, ex cept in cases of necessity or for laudable purposes, that the sanc tity of the grave should ibe main tained, and that a body once sult- ablv burled should remain undis turbed. # « * An autopsy was performed on a minor child without the con sent of its parents. My the fath er, without the consent or joinder of his wife, bring an action against the hospital for the wrongful mutilation of the dead body of his child? Yes. The tenderest feelings of the human heart center around the remains of the dead. The right of the next of kin to the passession of a dead body for the purpose of preservation and burial means the right of posses sion of the remains in the condi tion when life became extinct. • * « A railroad company in North Carolina has been held liabable for neglecting and leaving expos ed and subject to further muti'a- tion of the body of a person kill ed on its track without reference to the killing. There 'is, of course, no liability for an autopsy where performed with the consent of the deceased given prior to death when a coro ner or the majority of a coroner’s jury deen it necessary, and cases where the surviving spouse or next of kin give consent. The right of the surviving spouse is paramount to the rights of the relaitves in the giving of consent. * * • May the mother of a minor wrongful autopsy or mutilation of the 'body if the father does not, want to do so? No. The right to see in such; a case Is exclusively vested in the father of the child. j The duty of. care and mainten- j ance of minor children is Imposed; primarily upon the father. The' law also requires the father to de-1 cently bury the child and the de- U. ARRANGE TREE.S In planting trees around the house, arrange them informally where they will cast shade wii.i-e it is needed. To shade the roof, place medium to large trees with in 15 to 20 feet of the house. Twenty to 30 fe<‘t might he bt't- ter if shade on the root isn’t needed. Decoupage Class Set Free decoupage classes will be- , gin 'Wednesday, October 25th, at ■ the Community Center at 6:30 p. | m. The classes \'I1 continue each Wednesday throlgh Eiecember 13 with Mrs. Alice Johnson as in structor. Decoupage gifts suitable for Christmas-glvlng will be featured. Prospective students may' call 739-3549 between 9 a. m. and 5 p. m. to register'or may register at the first class session. Mrs. Johnson said a minimum of 25 students is needed. You're Invited to visit with Skipper Bowles DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR Tuesday Oct. 24 2:30 - 4:30 pm. Informal Reception Shelby City Park 4:45 p.in. City Hgl) Visit Kings Mountain Everyone Welcomel BOWLES for GOVERNOR Vote Nov. 7 Cleveland County Citizen^ for Bowli-s Galifianalds On Busing "Undecided" 1. Mr. Galiiianakis did not sign the anti-busing petition. Sixty other Congressmen did. They sent a strong anti-busing petition to the U. S. Supreme Court. Mr. Galifianakis, who says he is against busing, refused to sign the petition.l Lots of politicians say they are against busing. Actions speak louder than words. ’ ' i | Mr. Galifianakis failed to act. 1 - 2. Mr. Galifianakis is SOMETIMES against busing. In another election year, Mr. Galifianakis introduced a supposedly “anti’’-bus ing bill.2 It was a weak bill. So weak, say lead ing attorneys who have studied it, that it would have played right into the hands of pro-busing federal judges. After the election, Mr. Galifianakis forgot about the bill. It died in committee. This year an anti-busing hill came to the House floor for a vote. A political reporter who was there wrote: “Nick Galifianakis, whose voting record became more conservative when he announced for the Senate, seraied undecided on that vote. He picked up sev eral red amj green ballots and shuffled them nervously, pacing back and forth in front of the two aisles. After conferring with a dozen or more members and reading the amendment, he finally marched slowly up the left aisle with his green ballot." 3. Jesse Helms is against forced busing. ~ ? He has always opposed forced busing—from the very beginning. He has never been namby-pamby about it. He will fight to stop forced busing—bv constitu tional amendment, if that’s what it takes. His stand against busing is one reason so many pro-busing editors are aeainst him. They know where Jesse Helms stands—against busing Period. Noteo 1. ^«4«h News A Observer. September 17. 1970. Mr. Galifianakis' "anU-builnj; bUl" was written for him to a Yale University law professor. 3. <%srlotte Observer, Aufuit 20. 1972. Column by Paul a^noy, Otesrvtr washliiftM Rumu. This Ad Paid Jto By HeJw ^ Senate Tnm The Contributions of Thousaeds of North Carolina Demoemts Damocrats for H^ms, Gyde Harriss, Oialrmaa. Former Democratic Legislator, .Salisbury. North Garollaa’
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Oct. 19, 1972, edition 1
10
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