[Page 2A-THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HE : NORE FEDYSCHYN Andrew Is two Andrew Michael Fedyschyn cel- ‘ebrated his second birthday June 6 * with a "Choo Choo" train party. " He is the son of Pam Bolton Fedyschyn and Gary Fedyschyn of Westminster, SC and grandson of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Morrow and great-grandson of Mabel Teague, all of Kings Mountain. Obituaries =i JETTIE B. LINDSAY 2! Jettie Barber Lindsay, 86, of 610 W. Gold St., died June 8,1992 at South Fulton Hospital in Atlanta, Ga. i « She was a native of Lynchburg, Virginia, and thewife of Clyde Louis Lindsay. She was daughter of the late William Banks and Elizabeth Ashby Barber and a member of First Baptist Church. .. Surviving, in addition to her husband, are two daughters, Louise Early of Orlando, Florida and Lyvonne Ruth of High Point; two sisters, Arlene McMurry of Charlotte and Sarah Greene of Lexington; eight grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren. ¢ The funeral will be conducted Thursday at 2 p.m. at First Baptist Church. Rev. John Sloan and Rev. Gordon Weekley will officiate. Burial will be in Mountain Rest Cemetery. : Memorials may be made to First Baptist Church, 605 West King Street, Kings Mountain, 28086. EULA LEDFORD Mrs. Eula Hayes Ledford, 93, of White Oak Manor, died June 9, 1992 at White Oak Manor. # A native of Gaston County, she was widow of Clarence Theodore Eedford and daughter of the late Emest and Cora Moss Hayes. She was a homemaker and a member of Bethlehem Baptist Church. = Surviving are two sons, Clarence Eedford Jr. of Mountain Home and Gene Ledford of Shelby; two daughters, Mrs. Lucille Wells of Kings Mountain and Mrs. Virginia Efird of Oakboro; one brother, Ered Hayes of Charlotte; 16 grand- ¢hildren; 25 great-grandchildren; and two great-great grandchildren. = The funeral will be conducted Thursday at 11 a.m. at Bethlehem Baptist Church. Rev. Harold Beam and Rev. Russell Fitts will offici- ate. Burial will be in Bethlehem Cemetery. MATTIE GINTHER : Mattie Logan Ginther, formerly of Kings Mountain, died June 1, 1992 in New Holland, Illinois. % She was widow of Paul Ginther and daughter of the late John and Susie Sellers Logan of Kings Mountain. = Surviving are one brother, Albert Eogan, and one sister, Lula Hardin, Both of Kings Mountain. “ Funeral services were held in New Holland. RE ELE ENTRNVE RALD-Thursday, June 11, 1992 D-DAY From Page 1-A The USS Meredith was.a de- stroyer made in Bath, Maine with guns, radar, torpedoes, and depth chargers getting ready to ship out. Hedden's fiancee Frances Crouse went to Maryland and the two got married March 12, 1944 and had a week's honeymoon. Hedden tells how his bride met him for a short leave at Grand Central Station in New York, a 19- year-old girl from Kings Mountain sitting on her suitcase waiting for a sailor, 21. They had a week before his orders came to report for Europe. June 1944 found Hedden's crew outfitted for the invasion of Normandy, escorting ships with troops to Utah Beach and looking for mines. A spotter was dropped by parachute on the beaches. Joe's job was to run the communica- tions system. June 4, 1944 he shelled the beach, firing twin five inch guns from the new 2200 ton destroyer, one of the U.S.A.'s finest at that time . June 5,1944 Hedden and crew shelled until noon. They lost their spotter, swept for mines, and cleared the channel of mines. June 8 his ship was hit by what he thought was a mine. A bomb from:an airplane hit the middle part of the ship below the water line. The keel was ripped and the ship started sinking. Sailors abandoned ship. More than 200 of the 350 on board were killed. Joe said he did- n't recall the names of any of his shipmates, he had known them such a short time. The English channel was swift and cold in June. Those who jumped overboard had no chance for survival. June 9 Joe was picked up by tug- boat but before that he and 15 other officers destroyed all communica- tions materials and classified infor- mation, dropping them overboard. Joe took a sledge hammer, broke up radio and radar equipment, and took bodies from the ship. At 10 a.m. Hedden was on the port side of the ship. Bullets were NORICK From Page 1-A transaction. Reynolds exchanged approximately 885,000 of its Class A common shares for the Norick business that totaled more than $35 million. Before the acquisition there were nine manufacturing facilities. "Norick and Reynolds have been competitors in automotive business forms for over 60 years, with strong reputations for excellent customer service, high-quality forms, and a high level of under- standing of the automotive market- flying. He crawled forward. He found he had no where to go, no orders, no ship. There were few survivors, it appeared. He hitched a ride on a merchant ship and spent the night sitting off Utah Beach in France. He said he was told to help calm down the crew. June 11, 1944 he lay down on deck. He had not slept for days. He told the Lord, "I leave it in your hands." He said he slept like a ba- by. Finally, making his way to England, Plymouth, and Scotland he sailed on the Queen Elizabeth to New York, where he was met by his wife. He had only the clothes on his back but the Statue of Liberty never looked better. He bought a white sailor suit at Abercrombie & Fish in New York and new shoes at the old Moore General Hospital in Asheville. The Heddens had 30 days to- gether before Joe was off to the Pacific. Movie star George Montgomery was on the same train with him from Spartanburg. Ensign Hedden landed in the Philippines October 20. The Battle of the Philippines was the biggest naval battle of World War II. Admiral William Bull Halsey was comman- der of the third fleet. He fell prey to deceptive measures by the Japanese, however, according to Hedden, and dispatched his troops in the wrong direction, leaving the old Liberty ships and baby flat tops to battle with the enemy which luckily for the Americans turned around, said Hedden. Japan had five battleships, the biggest in the world at the time, which fired 18 inch guns. Hedden said when the alarm went off in early morning a sailor screamed, "The whole damn Japanese fleet is coming.” Hedden looked up to see the big battle flag flying and shells bombarding them, sinking several “of the American carriers. He could hear the pilots in the Allies planes overhead crying that they were out of ammunition and gas. With the American ships sunk, the planes had nowhere to land. The USS Johnson flagship was the first American ship to go, said Hedden. "The Japs started shooting at us. place. The combined businesses will offer a broader product line and expanded market coverage, as we continue to innovate and lead this very important market," David R. Holmes, Reynolds’ chairman, president, and CEO, said. As required in a pooling of ‘inter- ests transactions, Reynolds will re- state ‘its historic financial state- ments to include Norick operations. Holmes stated that while the pro forma impact on pri- or periods was slight, the transac- tion will have a significant, posi- tive impact on earnings and earnings per share in future years. Reynolds and Reynolds is a Kings Mountain Weather Report ; June 3-9 Total precipitation 2.60 Maximum one day 1.03 (4th) Year to date 25.88 Minimum temperature 58 (5th) Maximum temperature 91 (8th) Average temperature 74.4 Last Year 0 0 30.12 51 (7th) 90 (4th) 70.0 Goode reunion planned The descendants of Annie Powell and Giles Goode will host a family reunion in Kings Mountain on Saturday, July 18. The reunion will be held at the Kings Mountain Community Center located at 208 N. Cleveland Avenue. The time will be from 12 noon to 4 p.m. The family will attend the morn- ing worship service at 11 a.m. at the Long Branch Baptist Church in Grover on Sunday, July 19. The church is located on the Long Branch Church Road off Highway 29. For further information, contact Victoria Bees in Kings Mountain at 739-2000, Donnis Goode in Gastonia at 865-5011 or Willie Mae Ward in Gastonia at 864- 1810. © and Astigmatism = Of all your senses, sight is in many “ways the most precious. If you don't see as well as you might, perhaps you should consider Shelby Eye Center. ‘We offer complete eye care under the «direction of an Ophthalmologist Graduate of Medical School & “Ophthalmology residency) certified by ‘the American Board of Ophthalmology. = We are committed to providing ‘quality care in a cost-effective, caring ‘environment and stress that only care that is truly indicated and has a | reasonable chance of helping is ‘offered to our patients. “= Shelby Eye Center offers complete ‘eye care, some of which includes ‘Radial Keratotomy, laser surgery and the latest in small incision cataract surgery as well as other types of surgery. : Se Hablo Espanol RabpiaL KERATOTOMY : is a Proven Medical Procedure - For Correcting Nearsightedness Call us today for up to date eye care and to find out if Radial Keratotomy might be for you — We have free seminars and if that is not convenient for you, a free videotape which explains the procedure. SHELBY EYE CENTER Thomas D. Bailey, MD, PA 704-482-6767 . FREE S12 TaN VLR To [| Tuesday, June 16 at 7:00 p.m. at the Shelby Eye Center. No appointment iS necessary. Please bring your glasses or copy of your prescription. Quality Care Close to Home se Our men fell seven miles down in the ocean.” : The shells from the five-inch guns the Americans were firing bounced off targets like BB's. Sailors were sick, the enemy was giving chase, and then suddenly the big cruiser turned around. Japan had got word that Halsey was on his way. Halsey caught them and wiped out the Japanese fleet. Hedden said he could write a book about his Naval service as a young man not yet old enough to vote.” A typhoon sunk two destroy- ers. One of the bloodiest operations of WWII was the Battle of Iwo Jima. Hedden was on the first American ship in the China Sea Operation. On Okinawa and Iwo Jima he shelled and bombed industry and knocked out steel fac- tories, remembering how cold it was there compared to the Equator. There was no heat on the ship and no warm clothes. He says he will never forget Japanese suicide planes attacking USA picket boats. After Okinawa the Junior Grade Lieutenant, 23, put in for shore du- ty. He went to Hawaii with Admiral Hiram G. Rickover, the father of automatic submarines. When Japan surrendered, Hedden was elated but plenty scared. "There were so many guns going off. People were firing anything and everything in the air and the harbor." Hedden got under his desk and stayed the night. Hedden was awarded the Liberation of the Philippines medal with two battle stars from the Philippine government and the Invasion of Normandy medal with one star. He also received a Presidential Citation for service during Operation China Sea. As a young student at WCU, Hedden learned about Kings Mountain from his bride-to-be and of the late Paul Hendricks' reputa- tion as a fine band leader at Kings Mountain High School, never dreaming he would follow in Hendrick's footsteps. Hedden came home to Kings Mountain from the war and when Will Mauney asked him to work part times at KMHS with the band he jumped at the major supplier of information pro- cessing systems, including. busi- ness forms and computer systems to automotive, professional, medi- cal, and general business markets. The Kings Mountain printing shop, a branch of the parent Norick company, printed automotive busi- © ness forms for a nationwide mar- ket. chance. His first wages, he said, were $100 a month. He stayed with the school system for 33 years, re- tiring as Principal of West School in 1982. Some of his first band stu- dents were Reggie Murray, W.P. Fulton, Avis Warlick, Norman McGill, and Gene Ellis. A native of Sylva, Hedden and his father, Jeff Hedden, 93, plan frequent fishing trips, a hobby that Joe loves during retirement. The Heddens have two sons, Joe Hedden Jr. of Nashville, TN and Jeff Hedden, a U.S. Marshal in Greenville, TN. There are two granddaughters and the family is active in St. Matthew' Lutheran Church. After the war Charlie Carpenter came home to his family and went to work as sports editor of The Kings Mountain Herald. The Kings Mountain native, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. C. Troy Carpenter Sr., is a Clemson University gradu- ate. He and his family are active in Central United Methodist Church. The Kings Mountain veterans say that today the West seems un- able to find the resolve that united the free world on that June mormn- Do You Have Asthma or Emphysema? : ire You Using Inhalers? : And Paying For These With Your Own Funds? Did You Know That Medicare and Private Insurance WILL PAY For These Drugs For Home Inhalation § Therapy Usually At Little Or NO COST TO YOU??? § Call | MEDI-FARE DRUG CENTER 300 W. Pine Street o Blacksburg, S.C. 1-800-527-9217 or 1-803-839-6384 For Details ing in 1944. D-Day today is as re- mote to youth as Bunker Hill but Hedden and Carpenter believe that young people today need to know more about history. When they went to France that summer of 1944 they were young people but they were lucky. Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Invasion commander of the U. S. ground force, said of June 4, 1944 that' 'every man who set foot on Omaha Beach that day was a hero." i Carpenter and Hedden don't see themselves as heroes. They were doing a job. When Carpenter re- turned to Normandy in 1990 he said it was hard even to imagine the ruin of nearly 50 summers ago. "Things may have been simpler then but remember a lot of those young men never went home. They died so the generations of today would be free to make its own de- cisions," said Carpenter. "The D-Day vets take it hard. It's tough to remember those days," said Hedden. With tears in his voice, he said, "We know the price of that strip of beach." TT hh ~~ JQ = SECURITY A SYSTEMS INCORPORATED Will you be a victim? 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