Page 2A-THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD-Thursday, June 1, 1995 JULIA LOCKRIDGE Julia McDaniel Lockridge, 57, of 815 Bethlehem Rd., died May 29, 1995 at home. A native of Cleveland County, she was the wife of Bobby L. Lockridge and was a homemaker. She was the daughter of the late Forrest and Baner Padgett McDaniel. She was a member of Second Baptist Church. She was preceded in death by a daughter, Pamela Lockridge Anderson. Surviving, in addition to her husband, are two sons, Jody Lockridge and Michael D. Lockridge and two daughters, Charlene Ramsey and Anita Delores Lockridge, all of Kings Mountain; three sisters, Bertha Rogers and Inez Hutto, both of Kings Mountain, and Lois White of Winston-Salem; five grandchil- dren; and three great-grandchil- dren. The funeral will be conducted Thursday at 3 p.m. at True Gospel Holiness Church. Rev. Jerry Morrow and Rev. Roy Clark will officiate. Burial will be in Mountain Rest Cemetery. OLLIE D. HARRIS RALEIGH - Ollie Davis Harris, 89, a resident of Integrated Health Services, died May 30, 1995 at Integrated Health Services. A native of Dallas, she was the son of the late Luther and Mary Etta Barrett Davis, and wife of the late James A. Harris. She was re- tired from motel management and was also retired as a public: schol elie a te Over 700 Cleveland County Christians participated in the March for Jesus Saturday in Shelby. Church Briefs She is survived by her MI in-law, Frances Burns of Cary; a brother, Miles Davis of Stanley; six grandchildren; seven great-grand- children; and a number of nieces and nephews. A graveside service will be held Thursday at 1 p.m. at Mountain Rest Cemetery. Sr TT i Frm, TAYLOR HULLENDER Taylor Hullender celebrates third birthday Taylor Hullender celebrated her third birthday April 25 with a Lion King party at her home with family and friends. Her parents are Kim and Trent Hullender of Kings Mountain. Grandparents are Ruby Hallman of Cherryville and Bob and Guyanne Hullender of Kings Mountain. Great-grandmother is Barbara Payseur of Cherryville. Taylor is also expecting twin brothers in July. Abel gives program for DAR meeting Ruth Abel of Gastonia present- ed a report of the recent Continental Congress in Washington, DC as the program for the May meeting of Daughters of the American Revolution. The Colonel Frederick Hambright Chapter met at Weir Auditorium at Mauncy Memorial Library. Abel noted that the President General of the DAR wants mem- bers to push a new image of the DAR, "not just for ladies in fur coats." = Campbell. More than 700 people, including marchers from numerous churches, participated in the annual "March for Jesus" rally Saturday morning at Brown Stadium in Shelby. The participants tripled the num- ber which attended the service last year. Betty Mitchell, Kings Mountain organizer, said that the crowd was enthusiastic and that marchers car- ried banners and wore shirts pro- moting their congregations. Local churches participating in the march were Faith Baptist Church, Landmark Church and People's Church. Among participants were mem- bers of a Spanish-speaking church from Cleveland County. "Share the Vision" was the theme of the program. Phyllis Campbell was church co- ordinator. . The group of marchers gathered on Sumter Street in Shelby and marched to Shelby High School for the worship service and rally in Brown Stadium. "It. was.a. joyful, colorful cele- p.m. The theme is "Awesome re CRAVEtturesT Gods Amazing bration and we already look for- ward to next year's event," sald Macedonia Baptist plans Bible School Macedonia Baptist Church, 1101 South Battleground Avenue, Kings Mountain, will hold Vacation Bible School June 4-9. This year's theme is "Turn About, Paul" and will focus on the many turn abouts in the life of the Apostle Paul. Activities begin at 6 p.m. nightly with a processional and assembly in the sanctuary. .' After the assembly, each age level will break into small groups for music, crafts, recreation, refresh- ments and Bible School. Children will be treated to larger than life props, including ship- wrecks and dungeons, as well as puppetry. skits which will depict the life of Paul. Door prizes will be given each night. Macedonia will sponsor a pre- registration party Friday, June 2 from 7-8:30 p.m. Children will meet their teachers, dive into a 50- foot banana split and participate in drawings for door prizes. Camp meeting set at Grover church Camp meeting '95_ will be held June 4-10 at 7 p.m. at Bible Holiness Church, 709 Cleveland Avenue, Grover. Rev. Elbert Keeter will be the guest speaker. For more information, call Joyce McEntyre at 937-3397 or Sherry Moss at 937-7407. Homecoming will be held June 11. Dinner will be seryed at 1 p.m. at Grover Town Hall and a gospel singing will begin at 2 p.m. The church will hold a bake sale and ham biscuit sale June 3 begin- ning at 8 a.m. Bible School set at First Wesleyan First Wesleyan Church, 505 North Piedmont Avenue, Kings Mountain, will hold Bible School for every age group, including adults, June 12-16 from 6:30-8:30 Deeds." In addition to Bible study, __ participants will enjoy stories, pup- pet plays, music, crafts and refresh- ments. For more information, and for those who would like to attend but don't have a ride, call 739-4266. Bible School at Oak Grove Oak Grove Baptist Church, 1022 Oak Grove Road, Kings Mountain, will have Bible School June 4-9 from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Ages two through youth are in- vited. For more information call the church office at 739-4833. Auction to benefit church mission trip Royster Avenue Church of God of Shelby will hold an auction Saturday from 9 a.m.-12 noon at the Double Shoals Auction House, located on Double Shoals Road off Highway 18 North. All proceeds will go to help fi- nance a mission trip to Venezuela. Needles | $3.49 Plants 259 OFF Pine Bark Mulch 2:91.99 Soil $1.09 pine Bark | gets $2.09 Potting Soil V0 J [ody] edd pd 100 Cansler Street at East King Street ¢ 739-5461 Hours: Monday - Friday 8 am - 8 pm ¢ Good thru Easter Monday Over 700 participate in March for Jesus in Shelby Homecoming Day Sunday at Cherokee St. Church Homecoming Day is Sunday at Cherokee Street Baptist Church. The Blue Grass gospel group, "Reference," will sing at the 11 a.m. service. Picnic dinner will be served afterwards. Rev. Gene Leigh, pastor, invites the public. CARD OF THANKS We would like to take this op- portunity to thank the following: Kings Mountain Rescue Squad, Oak Grove Volunteer Fire Dept., and Cleveland County EMS. We would like to thank all the mem- ‘bers of these units for their quick response when we would call 911. Their care and concern for Mrs. Pridmore and our family is deeply appreciated. Words cannot express our thanks and appreciation for all that they did during Mrs. Pridmore's illness and for all that they do for the community as well. May God bless all of you. Family of Ella Galloway Pridmore Alexander NC Evangelism Week. The Evangelism Department of the North Carolina Baptist State Convention has appointed Kings Mountain native Reg Alexander as conference host for the state's "Personal Evangelism Week" and the "Single Adult Evangelism Conference." Both conferences will be held at the N. C. State Baptist Assembly at Caswell. In addi- tion to facilitat- ing the scheduled activities, Alexander will be one of the keynote speakers and will teach several seminars. ALEXANDER to host His seminar topics for adults will include "Enjoying Your Time With The Bible" and "The Circle of Laffter." Youth and college age will also attend his session, "Don't Let Evolution Make A Monkey Out of You." Alexander is Director of Kings Mountain-based Regal Ventures Creative Ministries, a non-profit organization involving special event planning and conference ac- tivities for churches throughout the ~ southeastern states. Other speakers and music artists who are affiliated with Regal sponsibility for these two confer- ences as well as additional State Baptist Convention events. Central Tnited Methodist Church “ A Church For All Seasons” 10:00 am Church School ¢ 11:00 am Worship VISITORS WELCOIINE! i @l “What Guides You, Inclination or Inspiration?” Sermon 113 South Piedmont Avenue ¢ Kings Mountain, NC 28086 (704) 739-2471 Thank You! Hundreds of individuals, businesses and institutions supported Project Graduation '95 through gifts, services, financial contributions or by volunteering time and energy. Thanks to you and your generous display of concern our graduates had a healthy alternative choice for celebrating a milestone in their lives. Together we sent a message PROJECT.GRADUATION,'95 | CHOOSE TO BE DRUG FREE to our young people that this community cares about them, reminding them they can have a good time without tobacco, alcohol or other drugs. Thank you ior your support. The Project Graduation Planning Committee i RESET MOCO °1.00 OFF 4 i ON ANY MAJOR BRAND 1 CARTON EVEN AT SALE PRICE limit one coupon per customer - York Road at I-85 ¢ Kings Mountain M 2 AN carton dl | carton Ay \ Ventures are sharing program re- = summer EE ba 2 mc on a

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view