Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Aug. 30, 1973, edition 1 / Page 2
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p. PAGE TWO the kings mountain herald, kings mountain, n. c. Thursday, August 30, 1973 Established 1889 The Kings Mountain Herald Kings Mountain, N. C. 28086 206 South Piedmont Ave. A we<^kly newspg.per dt^voted to the promotion of the geiioraJ welfare and published for the enJigluenment, eiiteriainmnt and bi?nefil of the citizens of Kin^s Mountain and its vicinity, published every Thursday by the Herald Publishing House. Entered as second class matter at the post ofHce ut Kings Mountain, N. C.. 28086 under Aot of Congress of March 3. 1873. EtJITORIAL DEPARTMENT Martin Harmon Editor-Publisher Miss Klizaoefh Stewart Circulation Manager and Society PJditor (?a;v Stewait Sports Editor, News Miss Debaie Thorncurg Clerk, Bookkeept^r Rocky Marlin MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT Allen Myer« Roger Brown Paul Jackson Heibert M. Hunter MAIL SUBSCRIP710N RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE In North Carolino and South Carolina One year $4; six months $2.25; three months $1.50; school year $3. (Subscription in North Car^ina subject to three percent sates tax.) In All Other States One year $5; six months $3*: three months $1.75: school year $3.75. PLUS NORTH CAROLINA SALES TAX TELEPHONE NUMBER -- 7391^7 My sun fnryrt not >oy hue; but /,<■/ thiiw heart kep my rommandmrnts. Prov< rbs A Petition “Wo the Liiidei’siKnetl bcin.e citizens :ind I'osictcni of the City of Kings Moun tain, North Carolina, are vitally inter- ('sted in the preservation of bowling ac- livitior uilhin tlie City. In recent years, somt' ol out bowling teams have gained national recognition for their bowling activille.s. We are ])articularly proud lhal a towit ol this size can produce out standing bowlers. We also feel that bowling is a very healthy recreation for the young and old alike and would very much like to polition the Board to pro vide bowling facilities lor those interesl- cri citizens. We feel that it would bo a needed and welcomed addition to our total recantation fu’ognim within the Cit\.” The f|Liotcd petition is currently be ing circulated. It is addressed to the Mayor and City Board of Commission ers. Bowling ended in Kings Mountain when the Kings Mountain Redevelop ment Commission demolished the buil7 ing occupied by Mountain Lanes Bowl ing Center; indeed several days before at Impro.ssario C. H. (Cat) Houser clos ed his lanes. The problem was taken to the city commission, which appointed a commit tee, headed by John Billing, to find ways and means ot somehow keeping howling in the city. The committee has worked diligent ly to find a suitable locale for the Hous er alleys, which are now stored, and which Mr. Houser has given to any com munity bowling project. The one possible and suitable place evaporated when the owner declined to make the building available. It was the second floor of the Morrison Estate building, once the Masonic Lodge Hall and variously used by other groups ior club meetings and banquets. It appears the only “out” is for the city to stiueczc its budget and incorpor ate bowling into the city recreation pro gram. That’s what the bowling contingent asks. Mr. Billing contends a bowling op eration would certainly defray operat ing costs, could, with some promotion, return some cash against the initial in- vrstmenl. The bowling operation of the Shelby Recreation Bepartment does, he adds. Shelby's apparently, are ten pin lanc.s. Meantime, the Kings Mountain bowlers are driving to Kannapolis to find duck pin alleys. Kings Mountain can’t boast many national champions in .sports. The Little League baseball team brought off na tional honors a few years ago, and Kings Mountain has produced two major league baseball players. And the howlers. Fourteen Million Daily? A couple of decades ago, a textile firm evidenced interest in building a large new plant in Kings Mountain. The firm’.s officials and eno^ineers were ask ing questions and liked the answers the Kings Mountain folk wore giving. Then the visitors askod, “What a- bout water?" “Water? What do you mean water?” the local folk asked in turn. “WeMl need a million gallons daily. ” That ended the conversation, for Kings Mountain’s treatment ca.paQity was only a million gallons daily! ' The incident of the early fifties is recalled due to the prediction recently of R, W. Herbst, superintendent of a water system survey for the city made by the Pitometer Company of America, of Pittsburgh. Mr. HerbsU prediction: Kings Moun tain will be consuming 14 million gal lons of water daily within 15 years. real. But the other potential benefits are Today's Depression A salesman said he called on a Negro mortician lecently and suggested it was time for the funeral home owner to buy a new hearse. “No,” the mortician replied, “ho couldn’t." He added, “We’re in a depres sion, not like the thirties, hut a depres sion just the same." He explained that today he pays an employee .S150 weekly, but that the employee needs 1*^250 to meet his ex penses. In the thirties, he continued, there wasn’t any money, but there was plenty to buy. It looks like the salesman’s morti cian Iriend had the business economics rather well pegged. There is question as to how over sold the United States, major granary ol the world, be it wheat, soybeans, au tos. steel, cotton, etc., ad infinitum, really is. How many shortages are real? How many shortages are artificial^ Sale of wheat to Russia and cotton to China prr)duccd shortages of, and high prices for, these commodities. And a recent item reported that Japan had bought several million pounds of pork loin. Another item reported that China ha.s made arrangements for a major purchase of tobacco. Cigarette smokers who lire of the surgeon-general's messages on the haz ards ol smoking must wonder: Is the government going to make us quit smoking by drying up the supply? Or , . . Memories of World War II, will in veterate smokers be waiting in line for their rations ot Marvels and TweilTv Grands? Add note on prices: low bid among three the city received Monday for hot- mix asphalt was $12.32 per ton. How long has it been since the city rejected Mds when the low was $8.50 per ton. I MARTIN'S I MEDICINE I By MARTIN HARMON u: I thought the pr(?sB conference wa.-; at 3, Out it w'a.sn't until 4. m-m Viewpoints of Other Editors LEARNING FROM WATERGATE TRAINS ARE COMING BACK Watergate is still the topic of The signing at the White Housed each viay, with pco;.'le having, cf a new highway and transport' jdilferenl \iows of it. While it is bill was a happy event in iTiore 1 shameful, we can learn many ways than one. Welcome, indeed, things trom it. was the incidental fact that in I ^ ... spile of all the strains and ton- First of all, «<> soe what hap- ,^1, 1 petoona whon they bc-,n j,. Washington. President I to cheat and he dishoneset. 1 hey congress were"in agreement 'have to start lying America has niatters in hand. Wash-, loo many liars and cheaters, but pa,.„|y/ed ay Wat- perhaps aticr they see on televi-1, i ^ j sion the agriny, the ergale This wa.s all very well and goofl. Hud it boon at 3, I would uave been late. Since I was early, sion me agony, the em :arrass-j 1 \vus aole to have an enjoyaaie ment, and the publicity that the| In this rase the necessary visit with Clyde Nolan, Cleveland Watergate participants have un- thing was to get on with thei C(,unty’s Ml. Democrat, Coun.ty dergone, they will turn over a business of opening up more fed- hairman and Mr.s. David Beam, new leaf and begin a better life. funds for urban mass irans-| and Chairman Beam’s sister, Mrs.! - ,. ! port si.siem. ' Winifred Gadd>. whom I met lor I ^ interesting to watch iho^ i the first time. expressions on the faces of those! Un this subject the handwriting Involved in Watergate? You can 's on the wall. Gasoline is in' learn something, too, in that ie-| short supply and gasoline and oil 1 respect. Particularly in ."''onator I Pikes an* rising. Chrysler cor- HOSPITAL LOG John A. Cheshire Hul>ert G. Clemmons Mrs. Robert S. Curry Mrs. Martha R. Dee.se Mrs. Joint A. Ellis Tliomas A. Hambright Ambers ffenderson Mrs. Maty R. Hill Mrs. Lula B(*ll Johnson Prince H. John.son Mrs. Dai.s> P. L(‘dford Birth • Announcements Mr. and Mrs. Hdgh J. Adams. ! 308 W. Ridge Street, announci* I the hirlh a daughter, Tln^ I day, August 23, Kings Mountain huspitaL Mr. and Mrs. Bruee C. Baldoek. Box 293, Bessemer City, announce me biiUi ol a daught(*r, Friday, August 24, Kings Mountain ho.s- pital. Mr. and Mrs. Ruben B. Revis. 12i. Sadie Street, announce .ilto birth cf a son. Sunday, .\ugust 20. Kings Mountain hospital. I I m-m Liam's face. His claim that he is P^^Fation has just petitioned the Mrs. Gndd>-. when we were in- nothing but a poor old country Cost of Living Council for per- trcduied, asked, “Are you the lawyer is rather misleading foV mi.ssion to raise it 1974 car Martin Harmon who cru'e lived he shows quite qlainly he is a I prees. in Al'bcmaiie?” I r(*plied, “One hard-core old-time Democrat, hot and Mr. and Mrs. Danny A. Mc.Miee, Box 544. Besscmei Cit>, announce the birth of a son, Tuesday, Au gust 28, Kings Mountain hospi tal. and the .'■ame.” There rapidly dc- on the trail of a Republiean, any! v< loped an interesting “old home Republican if the politics were ^ ^ wee-Klor Mr.s. Gadti>, loo, mi- reversed here, I will venture to - - - - woukll nm glittej- so much. :rated from Cleveland to Stanley, and, for that matter, for a much linger period of time titan I. j The Betterment Act Tho Community Betterment Act be fore a Senate .sub-committee woulfl pro vide cilie.s and towns over the nalio.n cash luncis for use in a wide variety of directions. An extension and supplement to the revenue-sharing appropriations which became effective last year, the discre tion in use of the funds would he in the hands of those at the local level—in Kings Mountain the city commission— as long as the funds were expended for permitted purposes. The bill now being considered would give the city during the upcom ing three fiscal years 82,374,U0(.). Mayor John Henry Moss summated to the city commission Monday night the potential impact, should the hill be come an act. In essence, the funds could be ex pended for virtually all functions of government now permissible under North Carolina law, from water, sewer, fire and police protection services, to recreation projects and libraries. The Mayor pointed out that, be sides the cash, the proposal has two principal purposes; 1) to get a menage rie of federal aid programs under one roof, and 2) to give local level officials spending permission, on thesis that the homefolk know more about what their communities need than the agency folk in Washington. Tltc bureaucratic guideline method long lollowed has one basic ill. If is rigid and does not recognize the fact of life that what's good for Kalamazoo may not bo good for Kings Mountain, and vice versa. Should such a program be enacted, the idea follows, the federal government could close some agencies, and chop liei’sonnel in others. In the light of past history, that’s probably ju.sl an idea and a ' forlorn hopi. m-m Mrs. (kiddy's late hii&)and 1 knovV quite well and her tather- indaw Used a ecuple house.s d::.-vvn-.stieet from where I lived It was the best fill-in I’ve had ! cn my .Vloemarlc friends in ages. which • tlio old Highway j Trust Fund, Pi'cs^ldeni Nixon ro*| marked that “after these two smog alerts wt’vo had in Wash-! ington, let’s have more mass, transit.’’ Too many crowded high ways in riries are bad for cities. Washington and Los Angele.s are tiie showcase liorrors. Doth were in grave danger some day soon of having to l)o labeled ‘unfit for human ha itation." Old age could account, too, for the many different experssions 'on his fa«\ The wiggling of his . eyebrows, hi.s haltering and fal tering speech tones, his nervous habit of jerking his glasses off and on ((‘ompami to the cool, calm manner of tho other mem' hers of the Watergate committee! ^ Indicate Mr. Sam is old, very old. j I Another fact al>out Watergate i m-m is ftiai the appearance of any I p( rson of TV for a lung period I Clyde Nolan, ol course, was the time just abouis marks him I gear-up man for Senator Sam Er life. Tins is particularly I vin’s pre.-NS conference and the H’ue about the committee mem- * subsequent Democratic party ral- ly, which Ollie Hxrris labels “tho ' , best Democratic rallv I’ve e\ei * people ever for- a.tcnded”. * {Watergate defendants I who hare their souls ''cfore the entire world. Whether the law lever convicts them or not. So-, I cicty has alivay convicted them! Tho big press, wire services. 'hoy are marked for life | come in and enjoy “bargins." area dailies and television news- ^or while Gcxi forgives, Society ■ The-■ are, until you get to the men. were out in force for the oever forgives ‘r forgets and has I f'lHng station pumps, visit cf the man who, by the 'cry little compassion on peo coincidence oE hi.s chairmanship I'k». of the Watergate inve.stigating c(.nYnittee. hits become not only religious pamphlV' calied'' “The^ remaining 17 per cent a naticnal but international star, defender.’’ Recently there was an I frchably should and will be fin- Two other cities. .San Francis co and Boston, saw what w’as Iiappening to Los Angeles and Washington an I decided that enough was enough Both stop ped the march of superhighways into their precincts. Symptomatic of the moment are the automobile commercials: Have you noticed What they are trying to sell? There isn’t a word about the smalls care with low gasoline guzzling records. The public has! p,* caught on. Americans are buying; „ small cars. The dealers, o\er-; Mrs. Thomas Kilgore, Rt. 1. B(jx loaded wilh the big super deluxe j ^^y ^elchflres, are begging you to| Ruby Mae Martin Eddie Daniel Mason Mrs. Ora D. Maunt'y Hubert C. Maye.s Mrs. Madge B. Miller Waltei .M. Moorhead Manuel A. Mos.s Joseph Let .Viurray Mrs. Julia B. McDaniel Mrs. Pearl J. MeXiney Guinc‘ey C, Parrott Mrs. Irula J. Payseur Mrs. Vivian Phifer Robert T. Ruff Mrs. Florence R. Sheppard Henry' L. Webb, II Mrs. Willie M, Raborn O.scar R. Gladden Mrs. Floyd T. Payne Clarence J. Grayson Mrs. James F. Gunnells Lawrence Guy Mrs. John R. Phifer Louis J. Burton Henry Loray Henderson j ADMITTED SATtmOAY j Mrs. Marvin Leonhart, Rt. 2 (jpy , New students include 3.'H)d Coley L. -NVal, m. 1, Be.-ao.mi-i ! f'l'shmen and 70 0 transfi-i .-. 1 About 43 per (ont of the fresli- Lucius Ratcliford, 923 Canter- i "'•'n are women, a sllstit increa.-a- bury C-., Gastonia f'"'" Mm. Eliza A. Sinclair, Rt. i, L.\T s fall, 1972 enrollment .wag ,19,224. Ineie were 2,8.51 students ADMITTED SUNDAY ^ freshman clas.s and Mrs. Jame-s C. B.-11, Rt. 2. Bo.x : ! Mrs. Cora Lee Hope, Box 54, Grover ! Mrs. Jerry Peterson, P.O. Box ' 255, City E. Registrar Lillian Lehman, em- • phasizing the fall semester en- , roHment figures are estimates. ’ said total enrollment could in- I crease by 100 students. I Dr. Lehman .said more than ! 16,60(X) students will be enroIU*d i in the University’s DivLsion of 1 Academic Affairs and more than 1 2,600 wi’U be in the Divt.-iiou of Mrs. Tildcn Palmer, 2100 j Highway building is not yet, Hemlock Avenue, Gastonia Jover. The fedei al inter;-tate sys-: ..Mrs. Kate Patterson, 601 Neal' u’,V;;;;h”;Vfabr-;‘‘I'hV.‘o<Omated rin- I receive one.- a month a little, •'<3 per cent coniplete. Most Hawk^Rd Gisdonia | dersraduate enrollment, includ- ADMITIXD MONDAY : underclassmen in health John A. Burch, Rl. 1, Box 287A, and programs, will lx* m-m The Senator’.s opening remark was typical. He was glad, ho .said, to DC with members ol too press, adding, “1 am a lawyer, out 1 am told a .scratch of a pen is worth more than many wit- r.esse.s.’’ Then h(‘ invited que.s- tions. ankle in it ahout Watergate with regret, that ended with thi.s .sentence: ! President and Congress the peo- "Watergate is a sign of the end "i <’0"curnng have faced up to The first part of ihp t iece conditions., tying them in with'American can af- dvvelt with the alarn-i-> i ford to go to work or to chores the prophecies of the . I a lout 13,509. Undergraduates en- the alarming world! \ or to pleasure every day, each in proof that the end of lime ‘is!’’*® individual dreamboat.i near. As a matte,- of fact, many' t ^oing to .:e enough^ j Christian people feel ver. uneasy ' j I about world conditions at this I lime and do wonder how much m-m There may be some, but I don’t believe I’ve ever known a ba.-Jh- 1 fui mem.ici ot the press. The i Senator’s invitation was happily ’ acv-epled and for 50 minutes the I que.siions, .some of them w?rn I barb.s on them. flew. | I ' m-m I (longer God will lot the ! tions e.xisi. William George Haskett, -1515; last fall was 13,08.5. Pine St., Gastonia ^ ( NEW FACILITIES Mrs. Azariah Jamerson, 58 Pine, One new building will he com* Manor Apts., City j pietcd during the fall .semester. Jacob Ed Yarbro, 610 Hillside ; $i; rnOiion Preclinical Educa- Dr., City facility. It will house the ADMITTED TUESDAY L,. iiooi or M<Jdcine’s Department Mrs. W. C. Ratchford, 214 S. of Pathology, the offia^s of the S;jargo St., Dallas ! N. C. Chief Medical UxamlinT Sc, on Monday la.st, as it had! Mrs. Eugene Logan. 205 N. Mor-1 and a student commons and caf^ to be sooner or later, the pr^si-lris Street, Gastonia ; teria. The building is adjace“ condi-ldeni signed the bill which breaks] Larry Dean White. Rt. 3, York to N C Memorial hospital. lopen the once sacrosanct High-| Jessie L. Shipman. 904 Rhodes Also schecKiled for completion P . iway Tru.'t^ Fund. “Vour highway: Avenue, City jdurin.g the fall semester is the u- taxes” will now go to work on! Alexander Burris, 211 Parrisli. S3 million addition to the ?.Torf*- vuien He set's this b(Mut:ful world nrur high- Drive. City .head Planetarium. Its featun lie made ,, , projects other than new high-'Drive. City ^ I I oyw nionoy will bel Mrs. John A. CariHmtor. Rt. 1,: include a 24 ingh telescoi>e. a 500 eLrkw nIM„ r; rf" "’“'V’'’' ‘liveried to mass transit. - The B0> 44. Be.ssemer City - canng. all lust drifting on down. But the su -ject is giMting loo <lef*p for mo. I can only .say: thi.s: \\'heiher \\''at<'rgato is a sign of the end or not, I can onlv’ hope and pray that it will no! he! for nothing Chri.stian .Science .Monitor. lie .said the Watergate commit- tee wa.s over the hump on its as- ^"^ ^nd gained sorm thin signment, but had a bit v\’urk to do. To a suggestive lion that the committee was fLhing, the Senator replied, “That j‘*^itiithf;eld Herald, is quite correct. Already we have caught a let cf minnow.s, a few .shaiK.s and a tVvV whales,” OILY One ol company has a televi that we have learn- ^ton advertisement that shows] worth-j former Oklahoma foot :all coach • ti'ViiJ 4U I 'll 1 ^ jXUIJiJvX 11A/II J4l 1 \J\Ji >011 • ■■ ■■■ mote e t.nal wjl help us to beth’riBud Wilkinson peering down'ff- V 11 ¥ ques- kvo.s ami have a brighten from a helicopter above an ex-i StAlfdl JOllV IS sju.st ill pressvvay interchange, saying the; ^ Y Grad Instnidor fcasons for the gasline short-: LT age can be seen in a traffic jam ] FEDERAL SPENDING below. It might also be seen in I For thp first in history, j hurninj!'av'iaUmrRa.sohw”ovL I a’nd'lhv''lar'ayde' m-m I ra'P Iho .^ovornmont spends head T should be added yhe' Lane, Shelby, and Ih« late Clyde , Sernnd semester classes boK:,, He e.vcoriated tho.so who con- 1 Sl^r'^Koderlny t"n ‘ ’ ' ' ' i .seat ball room and offices for the Mrs. Wiliam C. McClain. P. O. I Morchead foundation. Box 114, Stanley, N. C. j Om.sti uction on the Univ(*r Gordon Dale Myers, Rt. 2, Box! sit.’s Paul Green theatre will 1m‘ 287, City I Jjtnuary, 1974, The build Pine to he constructerl in the ! Student Union parking lot, i*- 1 funde<i by a $2.25 million approp riation from the 1971 General As.sem ly and i rivate gVts. I CALFNDAR j The new year bo;;an last year. [When freshmen and transfer stti I dents arrivcl on campus for , .. ! orientation. Registration n Aug. Steven A. Jolly, son pt Mrs. 107-20; clashes lx*gn Aug 30; au<l I. J- ;j20J • iMeadowood Stacy Joe Bridges, 28 Manor Apt., City A. J. Mack, Box 482. City ! ' tend “it s all right to do wrong I because it’.-: been done before.” I Argument by comparison, he coa- I tinued, he does not buy. A CLASS HORSE :»lly Spending Clock” located in the national head-' quarters of the Chamber of Com- I met ce of the United States. > I Every 12 seconds a dial indi-! Even before Secretariat had 1 cates the expenditure of anoth-;run that magnificent mile and a ler JlO.fKX), the average annual! half in the Belmi)nt Stakes, Au- j .income of an American family.jdax .Minor of 'he New Yorker t^j Vice-President Agnow’s pro- 1 Every 12.6 second a light flashes,'had called it by writing; “Secre- ! blO'ms. Certainly not, the Sena- I indicating the soendine of an-1 m-m Would tho cemmittee delve in- ! tarlat has something we call the spending of an ter cieclaied, adding his special 1 *^ther $190,900. And eVery two committee was assigned a .speci- I seconds, a fic task, to inve.stigate the Wat- } is heard, signaling that ergate bugging business, and federal government has just that was all. |dropped another million smack eroos, m-m The “beep” incidentally, goes once said, should be left alone in I off about 700 times a day. By the! their time and not compared to Another quote. ‘‘Notlung could of the curient fiscal year, the; those of another era. By coming make me happier than to find rapidly changing digital figureslhome so alone in the Belmont, M. Jolly, has been ap;'ointed aij^y, graduate instructor in the School, 29 to May s. The 1971 com of Business Adiministration of! mencement e.xercLes will be Sun the University of North Carolina! 10 at Chapel Hill for the 1973-74: _ academic year. j r\T'\T; C'llC'KFN Growth in con.sumption of couitrv through 1085 may iml be ciu/'> ns .spectacular a.s it has Jolly is a candidate for the Doctor of Philosophy degree and was a Fellow* to the American Accounting Association held re- j;-ecn the Iasi' 20 years, hut con ccntly in Quebec City,( Canada, tinued growth is predicted class, which will carry him anyjB*^ graduate of Rutherford* Chicken consumption will prob- distance. wdih colors flying, and '‘^"'^oindale high school ^and ably oxcw*d .50 pouirls per tM't- ' UNC*OH. ^ ¥|son, up from 41 pounds current- He Is the grandson of Mrs ly. per capita turkey use Is ex- C. J. Gault Sr. of Kings Moun- pected to rise to around IL tain. ) pounds. M on to a tripie crown.” There is no need to say more. Great horses, a noted horseman the president c*ompIetely cent, os I presume he is.” m-m Ancther: “Sometimes liars tall the truth.” m-m He Ls supporting leglslaTToil that would make illt'gal both campaign cash contrioutians and pay-outs. “If the money is banx- ed and checks drawn there’s al ways a permanent record,” he re marked. m-m I asked only one qwestioti v\hich the Senator did not an- .svver directly. The questioning had turned to inflation and he had already noted that the Con gress had given the President the necessary powers to co^x* with op top of the clock will have. Secretariat won for himself the registered a total (»f some $250. distinction of being one of the billion. I very few of those incomparables. ^ Meanwhile, over at the Census Louisville (Ky.> Times, that records tho arrival of onci —r- — Bureau, there’s anullier ^l^^l^' fin P V A A rtioro citizon who will I ^ K|,0I||eSI most of his lifetime makng the, clock run.—NEA. AIRPORT IMAGINATION You can take a taxi from Mex ico Citi ■ to Rome by way of Hong Kong and the far« won’t run much more than a dollar. That’s because the street: and drives at the new .$2.50 million Kans.T': F’tv Tntornatinn.al ah-'ort are nar''*rd 'n .some of ^f»r.'*i'’'n ritics srr e'l hv the maier an*- Hnes -hat fiy in ani out of the citv. The airnort, whhh covers Set Sept. 22 Jaycees annual The Kings Mountain are co-sponsoring the Punt Pass and Kick competition to be held on Saturday, Sept. 22, at 3 p.im. at the little league field. j Bob Myers, chairman of the project, said thv all boys age.s eight through 13 are eligible but must register at Wade Ford. Par ents must accompany tho young- : sters when they register. -Myers said three trophic.^: will be given in each age group for 000 acres, has three cirrnHr t^'r- thc pro'blcm. I asked his'epinVon min.Tl hnildings s-rroundin'^' the Pass'ng and kicking, cn h.vv President Nixen is using administration building and con- Is no charge^ to enter, these powers. He replied that tower, and various cargo, The winners of the city compe- every President and every Con- i^staurant, nost office and main- ti-tion will go to Charlotte for the gross during the past 45 years facilities. district contest, must share the blame for the present debacle. m-m I Makes sense^ All are accessible to each oth- Sixy youngsters participated in er over 12 miles of roadways the competition last year. , with names ranging from Am- The trophies which will be *'■ sterdam to Tel Aviv.--iBeaumont presented to the winners are on (Tex.) Journal. display at Central Barber Shop, I i beside Griffin Drug Cb. i Keep Your Radio Dial Set At 1320 WKMT KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. News & Weather every hour on the hour. Weather every hour on the holf hour. Rne entertainment in between 'HI Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Ratchford, 214 S. Spargo Street, Dallas, an nounce the birth of a son, Tues day, August 28, Kings Mountain havitiil. UNC-ChapelHill Expects 19.300 Fn Fall Term ^ CHAPEL HILL— Officials at the University of North Carolina at ChaiKd Hill predict 19,300 students will begin fall .semester classes here Aug. 30. ♦
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Aug. 30, 1973, edition 1
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