Scan Service Ok’ d For KM Hospital | Page 10-A VOL. 97 NUMBER 34 Vs — ENC THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1984 Sell Papers, Win Bike, TV, Cash ‘Atfontion, all boys and girls and anyone alia in terested in earning some extra cash for back to school clothes or vacations, or anyone 10-speed bicycle or television set. : The Herald's annual summer subscription drive. is in progress and everyone in our circulation area is invited oo to sell subscriptions and earn any of the above prizes. Anyone selling 20 subscriptions. may choose a new 10-speed Western Flyer bike or a black and white televi- sion set. or $5 for each year subscription sold. A two-y subscription counts as two sells. ; ‘Subscriptions may also be sold to the Belmont Banner, 1 Mt. Holly News, Bessemer City Record, Sioniey News and : Cherryville Eagle. Subscriptions to the Herald sell for $10. 45 per year. No subscriptions for less than a year can be accepted. 3 The campaign will run through August 24. : jptions must be turned in fo the Herald on , Planters and Merchants Warehouse Company, Inc. of Shelby and Kings Mountain Mayor John Henry Moss an- nounced Wednesday that P&M has purchased the old Phenix Plant of Burlington Industries in Kings Mountain. H. Eugene LeGrand, Presi- dent of P&M, said that the new Kings Mountain company will be an expansion of P & M’s general warehousing operation in Cleveland County. LeGrand said that Phenix, Inc., the new name of the com- pany, will store cotton and tex- tile raw materials and finished goods, plans are to lease a major portion of the building to Burl- ington Industries. Phenix, Inc. of Kings Moun- tain will operate as a subsidiary of P&M. The Old Phenix Mill has 163,000 square foot of floor space and is located on 16 acres of property. The addition will bring to more than 900,000 square of feet of operating and storage space that P&M will be using in Cleveland County. “We like the location and ap- pearance of the old Phenix Plant and are pleased to be moving in- to the Kings Mountain industrial id G interested in FIRST FEDERAL PLANS EXPANSION - Steve McCorkle, of Turnkey Financial Builders, Inc., Architects Scott Hughes and Bob Rash of R.L. Rash Architects of Charlotte, and Gary Whitaker, executive officer of First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Kings Mountain, look over plans for a major expansion of the financial institute which will enlarge the lobby and office areas and parking area of the firm. Three Killed In Wreck A Cherryville man, Donald Ray Eaker, 38, and a Poquoson, Virginia husband and wife, Cheryl Jeanne Ryan, 27, and Michael J. Ryan, 26, were killed instantly in the head-on collision of their two vehicles on I-85 south near Highway 161 Kings Mountain early Saturday morn- ing. Two-year-old Justin Ryan, in a child safety seat in the back seat of his parents’ 1979 Toyota, survived the crash. He suffered a broken wrist, broken legs, a lacerated tongue and several abrasions. He was treated at Kings Mountain Hospital. State Highway Patrolman J.L. Evans said the wreck occurred at 2:47 a.m. half a mile south of Kings Mountain on I-85 when Eaker, apparently intoxicated, driving down the wrong side of Turn To Page 6-A resides on Moss Lake near Kings Mountain. Mayor Moss said he too is elated that P&M has purchased the old Phenix property and will operate as Phenix, Inc. as a new 25° KINGS MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA Kings Mountain business and in- dustrial citizen. Phenix, Inc. will maintain a full time staff at the new loca- tion. Mayor Moss said the in- henix Plant Bought dustrial and development, com- mittee is continuing to work with groups of people interested in acquiring the old Margrace Turn To Page 6-A KING STREET CONSTRUCTION SCENE.- Workmen, above, are pictured at busy King S Street - Piedmont Avenue intersection hauling off asphalt recycling and later paving of this major thoroughfare through the city. Mayor John Moss said no timetable has been given by state ad Highway officials for First Federal Savings & Loan Association on West Mountain Street announced major plans for expansion this week. Gary Whitaker, Executive Vice President and Managing Officer, said that work is under- way to increase the lobby space and parking area substantially. Three new offices will be con- structed on the ground floor as well as a new vault to be equipped with safety deposit boxes, with a custodial area along with booths for customer to use when they visit the safety deposit area. Whitaker said that plans also call for construction of four new offices on the second floor plus two work areas and a new board Announces Expansion of directors room which will ex- pand the use of the existing com- munity room on the second floor. An additional back office and expanded bookkeeping area on the first floor, a partial basement for storage and an additional drive-in window will enhance customer service at the financial institution. Whitaker said that the crea- tion of two lines for drive in win- dow service will triple the volume of business anticipated for this service to customers. First Federal Savings & Loan has been a Kings Mountain business citizen since 1907 and occupied its new building on West Mountain Street in 1970. Because of larger volumes of business, Whitaker said the need for expansion has been needed for sometime. “We hope that our customers will excuse the in- convenience that this construc- tion may cause but that when the construction is over they will realize how much better we will be able to serve them,” Whitaker said. First Federal Savings & Loan employs 10 people. First Federal’s assets now top $10 million. Rash Architects of Charlotte hold the architectural contract for the new construction and general contractor is Turnkey Financial Builders, Inc. of Charlotte. An i i Photo by Lib Stewart FIRST PATIENT - Tricia Burns, age three, was the first patient for Kings Mountain's first Pediatrician Dr. Martin Stallings. right, this week as he opened his new office in Kings Moun- tain, a children’s clinic at 108 Edgemont Drive beside of KM Hospital. New Doctor Likes Calling KM Home Dr. Martin Stallings, Kings Mountain’s first resident pediatrician, saw his first patient Monday, three-year-old Tricia Burns, as workmen completed the finishing touches on renova- tion of his clinic at 108 Edge- mont Drive. A native of Sylacauga, Ala., Dr. Stallings says he already “feels right at home in Kings Mountain,” which compares in size to his hometown. Dr. Stall- ings comes to Kings Mountain from Raleigh where he was in pediatric practice for 10 years. In Kings Mountain, he will be closely affiliated with Kings Mountain Hospital and the hospital nursery for newborns. The hospital is adjacent from what used to be called the nurses home. The pediatrics clinic ad- joins the offices of surgeon Dr. Sam Robinson. Dr. Stallings announced that Camille Leonard (Mrs. Ron) Bagwell is joining his staff as a registered nurse and Gail (Mrs. Eddie) Herndon will serve as receptionist. Mrs. Bagwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Black Leonard, graduated from KMHS and Gaston Memorial Hospital School of Nursing in 1973 and formerly worked on the staff and served as a nursing instructor at Cherokee Memorial Hospital in Gaffney, S.C. She was also formerly on the staff of McGill Clinic in Kings Mountain. Her husband is Director of Nursing at Kings Mountain Hospital. They have a seven-year-old daughter, Windy, and are active in First Baptist Church. Mrs. Herndon formerly worked at the Children’s Clinic in Shelby for 11 years. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pete Heavner of Kings Mountain, she is married to Eddie Herndon and they are parents of three daughters, Edie, age 16; Nikki, age 12; and Missy, age 10. They are active in First Baptist Church. Dr. Stallings said he got his first training in a doctor’s office helping his uncle, a general prac- titioner, put up shelves and do some of the same work he was doing Monday as he readied his offices for patients. He received his B.S. degree from the Univer- sity of Alabama in 1965 and graduated in 1969 from the Medical College of Alabama. His residency was done at the Children’s Hospital at Birm- ingham where he was the chief resident his senior year. He served in the USAF for two Turn To Page 10-A