Obituaries Page 2A-THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD-Thursday, May 23, 1991 ARCHIE LEE QUEEN LAKE LURE-Archie Lce Queen, 78, of Route 1 Picnic Point Road, died May 19, 1991 at home. A native of Gaffney, S.C., he was married to Frankie Scism Queen, who survives, and was son of the late Benjamin Cathy and Ollie Barnette Queen, He was retired owner of Asheville Boat & Saw Company and former member of Lake Lure Lions Club and Asheville Kiwanis Club. Surviving, in addition to his wife, are one son, Wayne Queen of Asheville; one stepson, Gene Cline - of Asheville; one stepdaughter Vickie Cline of Lakeland, Fla.; two brothers, Floyd Queen and C.B. Queen, both of Shelby; two sisters, Mrs. Kathryn Martin and Mrs. Myrtle Bland, both of Shelby; and three grandchildren. The graveside service was con- ducted May 21, 1991 at 2 p.m. at Poplar Springs Baptist Church Cemetery in Shelby. Rev. James Hindle officiated, and burial was in Poplar Springs Baptist Church Cemetery. Memorials may be made to Cleveland County Heart Association, PO Box 2391, Shelby, N. C., 28150. SADIE K. BURTON | Mrs. Sadie King Burton, 87, of 205 E. Parker St., died May 18, 1991 at Kings Mountain Hospital. A native of Sylva, she was daughter of the late John and Sallie Elizabeth Cunningham King. She was married to the late Garfield Hannah and the late Charles C. Burton. She was a retired textile employee and a member of Second Baptist Church. Surviving are three sons, James Hannah of Dallas, Beauford Burton of Gastonia and Dealis Burton of Kings Mountain; two daughters, Rachel Hullender and Mary Clark, both of Kings Mountain; one brother, Willis King of Kings Mountain; three sisters, Mamie Roper, Jeanette Kiser and Reba Wilson, all of Kings Mountain; 19 grandchildren; 40 great-grandchil- dren and three great-great grand- children. The funeral was conducted May 21, 1991 at 2 p.m. at Second Baptist Church. Rev. Eugene Land officiated, and burial was in Patterson Grove Baptist Church Cemetery. § DORSEY SEABOLT Dorsey Seabolt, 74, of 106 N. - Cansler St., died May 16, 1991 at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, He was a native of Blairsville; Ga., husband of Maven Queen Seabolt, who survives, and son of the late Joe and Elizabeth Seabolt. He was a retired upholsterer and member of El BEthel United Methodist Church and of Disabled American Veterans. He was a vet- eran of World War II Army service. Surviving, in addition to his wife, are one stepson, Jimmy Gamble of Florence, S.C.; one daughter, Linda Williams of Baldwin,Ga.; three stepdaughters, Martha Howle of Charlotte, Betty Jean Jackson of Florence and Summer Day Camp slated at Central The 11th annual Community Schools Summer Day Camp will open June 10 at Central School for children ages 4-13. The camp pro- gram will include supervised recre- ation, educational movies, swim- ming, field trips, library programs, museum programs and a story hour. Participants are grouped by age and grade and are supervised by a qualified staff. The camp will operate from 7:30 am. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The cost is $30 per week for the first child and $15 for each additional child. Early arrival su- pervision will be provided from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 a.m. for an addi- tional charge of $5. There is also a $5 registration fee. For more information call 734- 5634. Youth concert at North School The 80-voice Sonshine Youth Choir of Gainesville, Florida's Trinity Methodist Church will pre- sent a concert June 11 at 7:30 p.m. at North School. Hosts will be Central, Grace and El Bethel Methodist Churches, St. Matthew's and Resurrection Lutheran Churches, and First Presbyterian Church. The choir has achieved a con- temporary sound, and ministers in a unique way to 700 regular listen- ers every Sunday morning. Kings Mountain families and youth are invited to attend the free concert. “ Asheville: - Harriett Conn of Cheraw; one brother, Arley Seabolt of Flowery Branch, Ga.; two sisters, Berley Seabolt and Ruby Pass, both of Braselton,Ga.; 11 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. The funeral was conducted May 19, 1991 at 3 p.m. at Harris Chapel. Rev. Stephen Lee officiat- ed, and burial was in Mountain Rest Cemetery. CARL E. ESKRIDGE SHELBY-Carl Evans Eskridge, 86, of 214 Ford St., died May 17, 1991 at V. A. Medical Center at A native of Double was husband of Bessie Poston Eskridge, who survives, and was son of the late Samuel B. and Millie Ida Yelton Eskridge. He was previously employed by Charles Chips and A.V. Wray & 6 Sons. A graduate of Piedmont High School, he was a retired Captain in the US Army Air Corps in World War II. He was a member of First Baptist Church and of the Gideon Bible Class. Surviving, in addition to his wife, are one son, Harold Eskridge of Crystal City, Mo.; daughter, Lynda Willard of Gastonia; two brothers, Sherrill Eskridge and Samuel Eskridge Jr. and two sis- ters, Muriel Eskridge and Lesta Spangler, all of Shelby; four grand- children and four great-grandchil- dren. The funeral was conducted May 19, 1991 at 2 p.m. at Webb Chapel of First Baptist Church. Dr. Gene Watterson officiated. Burial was in Sunset Cemetery. Memorials may be made to Parkinson's Disease Foundation, William Black Medical Research Building, Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, 650 W. 168th St., New York, N. Y., 10032-9982. CARD OF THANKS The family of Arvel McCall would like to thank the staff at Kings Mountain Hospital for the loving car they gave him. A special thank you to Dr. Lee and Dr. Durham for their sincere care. Thank you to the staff of Harris Funeral Home for all the help.A loving thank you to the Rev. Cliff Morgan, Rev. Bob Dockery and Mary Alice McDaniels for a beau- tiful funeral service. All the floral pieces, cards, food, visits, prayers and all acts of kindness are greatly appreciated and will always be re- membered. This all made our loss easier to bear. May God bless each of you. Lal Sincerely, Grace Falls McCall Shoals, he FIRST MODULE CHRISTENED-Officials of Combustion Engineering, Norfolk Southern, Clancy & Theys Construction, Sanders Brothers and N. C. Department of Education Thursday christened the first module in a shipment order for 54 heat recovery steam generators to be exported to Korea. Robert Starkey, left, general manager of Combustion's Grover Road Plant, and Larry Lansford, president of ABB Windsor, distribute ABB HRSG caps to employees at a plant picnic and stand before the first module ready for shipment. "They said it couldn't be done but the 150 employees proved it could," said Lansford. First module completed It weighs 117 tons. Laid end to end, one module is 11 feet high, eight feet wide and 62 feet long. Combustion Engineering plans to export 54 of these modules to Korea from its Grover Road plant. Thursday plant officials christened one of the completed modules after a plant picnic. Production of heat recovery steam generators here for export to Korea began in September 1990 when the Kings Mountain facility was awarded the first contract to manu- facture them and Combustion be- came the first domestic supplier of the product. Originally opened in 1984 to produce tubular products for the clients of Combustion Engineering Services, the facility is now fabri- cating a much different product which required major renovations to the plant. The layout of the facil- ity was completely redone, consoli- dating Services work to a single bay, and opening up the second bay for the installation of new machin- ery and equipment necessary for building HRSG's. Additionally, a " rail road spur was run from the Norfolk Southern main line into the back of the facility for ship- ment of the modules. General Manager Robert Starkey said it took six to seven weeks to build one module of welded spiral ~finned tubes. Larry Lansford, pres- GOSPEL CONCERT Featuring Contemporary Soloist SCOTT GORDON In Concert 10:00 AM Sunday, May 26th Kings Mountain Church Of The Nazarene 405 South Cherokee Street 108 WEST WARREN STREET SHELBY, NC 28150 Special Victorian Rose Studio of Photography HE CHARLES CAP & GOWN Portrait SITTING INCLUDED 1-11x14 2-5x7 8 wallets $64.95 704-482-9360 ident of Power Products Systems Manufacturers of Windsor, Connecticut, said the 150 employ- ees here represent 200,000 man hours a year and have done what some said was impossible, building a unit that turns heat back into steam power. "The market is here and we expect to build 18 units, six modules to a unit, this year and in three years will be the world leader in production of this product,” he said at the christening of Combustion's new product. Lockhart completes training Pvt. Kimberly Lockhart has completed basic training at Fort Sill, Okla. : During the training, students re- ceived instruction in drill and cere- monies, weapons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, military justice, first aid, and Army history and traditions. Lockharts parents reside at 1504 Long Branch Road, Grover. Sanders Brothers of Gaffney, S.C. did the detailed engineering for the project and design work was done in Windsor, said Starkey, who said the project is a month ahead of schedule. "This is a significant event in the history of Kings Mountain," said Kings Mountain Mayor Kyle Smith, a guest at the open house and a former retired employee of the plant. KIMBERLY LOCKHART 7 > : For More Information Call 739-4917 PRE-SCHOOL PROGRAM BOYCE MEMORIAL A.R.P. CHURCH EDGEMONT DRIVE 3 year olds - 2 mornings VREGISTER NOW! (Classes Begin In September) — BIG BACK LOT SALE Saturday 2:00 fil 3:00 ALL ITEMS BELOW 1/2 PRICE SageSp DOWNTOWN KINGS MOUNTAIN ort GA's of Kings Mountain Baptist. Church will sponsor a bake sale’ Saturday beginning at 8 a.m. in’ conjunction with the city Folk Festival. Homemade cakes and pies and other goodies will be available from a tent set up in front of the church on West Mountain Street. Dixon sets homecoming Homecoming Day is Sunday at Dixon Presbyterian Church. Rev. Alan Sinclair will deliver the message at the 11 o'clock ser- vice. Picnic lunch will be spread at 1 p.m. The public is invited. At the Beautiful KINGS MOUNTAIN COUNTRY CLUB Located on West King Street in Kings Mountain, NC (Bus. 74) OFF GREEN FEE With This Ad *New Fleet Of Club Car Carts *Paved Cart Path From Tee To Green +18 Hole Championship Golf Course 7 DAYS A WEEK For More Information And Starting f= Times, Call: \ Kings Mountain Country Club i at: 739-5871 MUST RENT A CART (704) Color Photos 99¢ Deposit 100° Due at Pick up (plus tax) 1-10x13 (Wall Photo) 1- 8x10 2- 5x7 2- 3x5 16-King Size Wallets 8-Regular Size Wallets PLONK BROTHERS 218 S. Railroad Ave. Uptown Kings Mountain Saturday May 25th Photographer's Hours 9:00 'til 5:00 WE USE KODAK PAPER ® Group charge 99¢ per person PAPER ...for a Good Look FOR CREATIVE COLOR PORTRAITS Pro Shop|! ee -

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