Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / June 5, 1979, edition 1 / Page 4
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9 i /♦ , » Page 4-MmROR-HERAU>-TMa*kr, /OM $, IKt OBITUI^RES PUTNAM 2>^ineral Mnrle** for Mrs. Suaon Mm Pulton Putnam, >7, widow of William C. Putnam, wore conaucxod Sunday af> temoo^ at s p.m. from Ontral United Methodlat Oturch of which ehe wae a member. Her paator. Rev. Robert Boggan, officiated at the rttee, and Interment was In Mountain Roet Cemetery. Mre. Putnam died Friday night at 8 p.m. at Klnga Mountain Con- valeaeent Center after aeveral yearn Ulneee. She wae a native o< Cleveland County, daughter of the late Mr. and Mre. Daniel A. Pulton. She WM a retired Klnga Mountain aeamatreaa. Surviving are two alstera, Mra. E.B. OUve of Savannah, Qa., formerly at Klnga Mountain, and Mra. G.L. McDaniel, Sr. of Klnga Mountain. Harrla Funeral Home waa In charge of arrangementa. Palmer Mortuary of Funeral aervleea for Mlae Lorn Dale Sclam, 81, who died Sunday night at Klnga Mountain Hoopital, will be conducted Tueeday afternoon at 4 p.m. from Patteraon Orove Baptlat Church of which ahe wm a member. Her paator. Rev. Richard Plyler, will of ficiate at the rttee, aaelated by Rev. Sam Murphy, and Interment wlU be In the church cemetery. Ml— Sclam, daughter of the late WUllam Albert and Mary Ellen Wright Sclam, had been In 111 health for aeveral monthe. Surviving are two brothera, Raymond Sclam and Thurman Sclam and two alatera, Mlaa OUle Mm Sclam and Mlaa Ruth Sclam, all of Klnga Mountain. Harrla Funeral Home la SCRUCM18 Funeral aervleea for Mrs. Theoda Blanton Scruggs. 72, of 211 Virginia Ave. In Beaaemer City, will be conducted Tueaday morning at 11 o'clock from Palmer Mortuary In Shelby, Interment following In Orassy Pond Baptist Church cemetery In Cherokee County, S.C. Rev. Jerry A. Smith officiated at the rites. Mra. Scruggs, widow of Horace Scruggs, died Sunday morning In Kings Mountain Hospital after a week’s Illness. She wm a native of Cherokee County, S.C., daughter of the late Reuben and Uasle Bridges Blanton and a member of Kings Mountain Church of Ctod. She WM a retired employe of Phenlx Plant of Burlington Industries. Surviving are hla brother, Bart Blanton of Mooresvllle; and two half- alaters, Mra. Myrtle Dixon and Mrs. Tula Dobbins, both of Oaffney, S.C. Rev. Hale Conducts Revival Rev. Oene Hate, piaster of Second B^tlst Church at Bessemer City, will be evangelist for revival aervleea June 7-10 at Path way Bs4>tlat Church on Parkdale CTlrcle. Services will be at 7 p.m. SMh evening. Qoepel preaching and RMClal Binging will feature the aervlce. to which the oonununlty la Invited. Rev. James Hamrick la Bethlehem Baptist Church has acheduled Vacation Bible School June 18-22 at 7:80 p.m. with a BVS ortentatlon on Sat., June 18 and com mencement on June 24. DONKISTLER The Truth Will Make You Free I have surveyed the Kings Mountain area since I have lived In Kings Mountain and found that there are many churchea of many denomlnatlona and articles of faith differing In many ways. Some believing In one God, two gods, three Gods, and 8 person Goda and one woman God. So I came to the conclusion that It would be Im possible to please all ao I decided I would just pleaae the true God I know, Jeeus Christ the Meaalah of larMl. So when I WM asked to write the column "In Search of the Uplng God" I decided to only write m the Holy Spirit IMda me tor the Word aaya "He srtll lead you Into aU f^rth and the truth will make you fiwe". ^ decided also If there were ao many denomlnatlana Mt could not agree la the one true book. The Bible, and l^y differed In the bellefa of that book and divided ^maelvM from one another who am I to bring them ^ther to understand truth even by the Holy Spirit, qilly the electseedof God wUl be drawn by HU Spirit ao 1^ will have to wait unUl we paM from death unto life or death unto death and I am sure that day will come. Are you prepared and sure that you have searched the Word of the Ltving God and have been revealed the truth by HU Word, for only HU Wind will stand In that day. If you are in the Word of God you can count yourself m a son of God, predMtInated and redemmed In eternal life. Tou were saved before the foundation of the world. Eph. 1:4-U. I do hope theee arttetee are causing you to open the Bible and eearch the Wordof God rather than Just being a bench warmer on Sunday for an hour or ao... Many of the things we p^ In the Mirror Herald may m be yet seen by other believers but we stand on the Wkk (Jeaua). We are grounded In bMlc truths of Wvatton (Teahua). ' at the mlnUtxy of Positive People Worldwide wUh not to debate, nor to destroy any orthodox Bible truth. But we M a body promote and toMh greater truth not yet known to believers. Funeral services tor Wilburn Norman Aber nathy, 64, of 804 Cherokee St., who died Friday night at hU home of an apparent heart attack, were con ducted Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. from the Chapel of HarrU Funeral Home. Rev. J.C. Goare, pastor of Kings Mountain BaptUt Church, officiated at the rites, and Interment wm In Mountain Rest Cemetery. Mr. Abernathy wm a native of GMton County and a retired textUe and city of Kings Mountain employe. He wm a veteran of World War n. Surviving are his wife, Mre. Vada Pruetts Abernathy; one son, James Abernathy of Asbury, New Jersey; one daughter, Mrs. Joe FUd, Jr. of St Petersburg, Fla.; one brother, Leonard Abernathy of GastenU; five slaters, Mrs. Carrie PrMsley of York, S.C., Mrs. LesUe StamM of Rock Hill, S.C., Mrs. William Tipton of Edgemore, S.C., Mrs. Varner Howard of Orlando, Fte. and Mrs. Lola Etters of Orlando, Fla. Also surviving are five grandchildren and one great-grandchildren. Harris Funeral Home waa In charge arrangements. GASTONLA-Funeral services for Mrs. Annie W. Pegram, 82, who died Monday, mother of Mrs. Betty Cobb of Kings Mountain, were conducted Saturday at 4 p.m. from Mars Tabernacle F.B.H. Church In Clover, S.C. by Rev. W.L. Brown, Rev. W.T. ThomMson and Rev. CD. McOaakell, Interment following In Saint James Uhlted Methodist Church Cemetery. Mrs. Pegram Is also aurvlved by her husband, Sam Pegram; five sons; two daughters; her father, Willie Armstrong of Ctover; four brothers; two rtsters and nine grand children. Black Funeral Home of aover, S.C. wm In charge of arrangements. GUEENIE PARKER BALTIMORE, MD - Funeral servlCM for Mrs. Queenle Goode Parker, 72, who died TuMday, were conducted Thursday from Mount Lebanon Baptist Church In Baltimore. Graveside services were held Sunday afternoon at Saint James Church Cemetery In Hickory Grove. The family wm at the home of Haael Parker In the Ebenemr Community of Kings Mountain. J.w. GUI and Sons Ftineral Home was In charge of arrangements. J.D. COFFEY Funeral services for JamM Donald Coffey, 88, of Grover, who died Tueaday at Cleveland Memorial Hoopital, were conducted Frtday at 8 p.m. from Sisk Funeral Homo ChM«l by Rev. Henry Jenkins, Interment following In Grover COmetery. Mr. Coffey wm a native of York County, B.C.,eonof the late Thomas and NMml Farris Coffey. Surviving are his wits, Mrs. Mary Cloaiy Coffey; two sons, JamM Thomas COffOy of IJamsvllla, Md. and Danny Coffey of Salem, Va.; a step daughter, Mrs. Martha Lee Goforth of Klnga Mountain; a sister, Mrs. Haael Parrish of Kings Mountain; and seven grandchildren. Sisk Funeral Hmue waa in charge of arrange- In t&e good old days, nearly every Piedmont home had a washing machine Its name was Mom. Then came electridtyL Electricity helped to bring tou^ chores indoors. And replaced muscle power with motor power. Washday was one of the tougtestforMom. It meant carrying everything outside. And trying to keep the knuckles fiom giving out before the back did. Then toting it back to the kitchen, where strength-testing flatirons ^wed on the stove. Mom didn’t do all of the dirty jobs alone. Her favorite brand of carpet cleanei; for example, was Dad. Carpet cleaning became easier when Dad bou^t Mom a new- fangled electric vacuum cleaner. Other machines also electrified Piedmont homemakers with their muscle-saving domestic skills. Like sewing, cwking and preserving food. And even provided entertainment, which seemed to lighten Mom’s work still more. Today, electricity continues to be the power behind the scenes in nearly every Piedmont home. It opens the doors, washes dish^, takes out the garbage, perks coffee, cooks meals, heats you and cools you, brings the world into your home, lulls you to sleep, wakes you up—and even lets you catch a few extra winks. What’s next? Only the future can tell. But you can be sure of one thing— electricity will be a part of it. DUKE POWER Electricity came to the Piedmont Carolinas in 1904. The rest is history.
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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June 5, 1979, edition 1
4
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