PAGE 4. KINGS MOUNTAIN MIRROR, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1971 D ID Of Interest To Women...By Sylvia Holmes Phone: 739-5829 or 739-3851 Who Is Guy Fawkes? Who Is Guy Fawkes? Ask any Englishman and you will receive a prompt reply. Guy Activity Agenda KINGS MOUNTAIN GARDEN Club meets on Wednesday, Nov. 10th at 3:30 P.M. at the home of Mrs. Carl Mayes. The program will be given by Dr. Juan Celecla, botanypro- fessor from Belmont Abbey College. It will be a slide presentation entitled "Man, Medicine and Plants Through The Ages." Members will receive the N.C. Garden Club calendars and make plans for a holiday bake sale downtown on Friday, November 19th at 10 P.M. OPEN GATE GARDEN CLUB meets on Wednesday, Novem ber 10th at 3:30 P.M. at the home of Mrs. Wilson Craw ford with Mrs. Harold Coggins as CO-hostess. The program which will be given by Mrs. Eugene Roberts will be "The Use of Ground Cover InLand- scape Plan.' *** BETHWARE SCHOOL P.T.A. meets on Thursday, Novem ber nth, at 7 P.M. It will be "Open House" and all parents are invited to attend. Plans will be made for the “Fall Festival" on Friday, November 19th. TOWN AND COUNTRY GAR- den Club will meet on Thurs day, November 11th at 7:30 P.M. at the home of Mrs. Bob Maner. The program will be “The Most Festive Holiday - Christmas" which will be given by Mrs. C.D. Blanton. THE MOUSETRAP - FINAL perfornoance by the Little Theatre on Friday No. 12 and Saturday, Nov. 13th at 8:15 P.M. at the Park Grace School Auditorium on the Gro ver Road. All tickets $1.25. Don’t miss this exciting per formance of Agatha Christie’s long - running murder my stery. BAZAAR. THE WOMEN OF Grace Methodist Church are holding a Bazaar on Saturday November 13th in the Fell owship Hall from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. There will be a great variety of items on sale In cluding Christmas items, hol iday gifts, crafts such as throw pillows, house hold goods, clothing, homemade baked goods such as cakes, pies, cookies and brownies. Hot dogs with all the trim mings and soft drinks will be on sale for take out orders, call 739-5391. At 4 P.M. there will be an auction of used items. GIRL SCOUT LEADERS ARE invited to attend an extra special training session on Saturday, November 13th, at the troop house at Golden Valley from 9:45 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. This wUl be a “listening clinic" entitled “Understanding Begins With Me" and it is presented by the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. Region Ill (Atlanta staff) Make reservations with Pioneer Council (864-3245) and bring lunch. A drink will be pro vided. WEST SCHOOL P.T.A. meets on Monday, November 15th at 7:30 P.M. The pro gram will be given by Miss Cynthia Teres, who Is an elementary school guidance counselor with the Belmont school system. MRS. MARGARET BAIRD and Mrs. Betty Gamble were in Charlotte Friday through Sunday attending the N.C. Home - Economics Associa tion and family life seminar. Dr. Dave Mace was one of the keynote speakers. Dr. Stanley Hardin CHIROPRACTIC PHYSICUN 518DeKalbSt. Shelby, N.C. 28150 Phone 482-7271 Fawkes was a member of a group of conspirators who plotted to blow up the Pro- ' testent Parliament in 1605. The conspiracy was known as the “Gunpowder Plot” be cause a cellar under Parlia ment was hired and filled with barrels of gunpowder. However, during the days ap proaching Nov. 5th, children are very busy indeed. First they construct an effigy of Guy Fawkes made from old clothes stuffed with rags or newspapers. Gun Fawkes was to have lit the fuse, but the plot was dis covered and he was caught, tried and hanged. November 5tb was the date of his undo ing and In England that part icular date is known as "Guy Fawkes Day" and it’s a great excuse for a lot of fun and celebration. It is this day, rather than Halloween, when the children have a good time before the cold winter weather arrives. Although Halloween is recognized In England, there is no equivalent of “Trick or Treat". Maybe just a little mischief in the air occasionally, and a few ghost stories are remem bered. When the Guy has been com pleted he is carried around th e neighborhood from door to door and children beg for “A penny for the Guy”, All the pennies collected are then spent on fireworks (fire crackers). Meanwhile the children also collect logs and other fuel - even discarded pieces of furniture and a huge bonfire is built in the middle of a suitable street - pre ferably a dead end road. Fawkes is tossed onto the fire, and everybody cheers when the traitor is burned again. The fire Is also used to roast potatoes and chest nuts and everyone eats other traditional goodies such as parkin (gingerbread) and brandy snaps (a toffee. like candy.) If you really are wondering what Guy Fawkes actually looks like, you may appease your curiosity by glancing in the window of Fultons De partment Store where a gen uine Guy Fawkes is currently residing. S.H. As soon as darkness fails on November 5th, thousands of bonfires are lit all over England. Countless Fire crackers are exploded and when the fire Is roaring greatly, the effigy of Guy Murphy - JCcQrand Vows Set for Mev. 27th Mr. and Mrs. Ray Murphy, Jr. ofDes Moines, Iowa, ann ounce the engagement ofthelr daughter, Katherine Mary Murphy, to Richard WareLe- Grand, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Torrance LeGrand, Jr. of Shelby. tration at George Washington University, Washington, D.C. and has just begun a year’s residency at St. Luke’s Hos pital Medical Center In Phoe nix, Arizona. The Church of Saint Agnes in Phoenix will be the setting for the November 27th, wed ding. Miss Murphy attended Conn ecticut College, New London, Connecticut and was grad uated from the University of Iowa City, Iowa in 1970 with a B.A. degree In English. She ■ is a member of Pi Beat Phi sorority and a provisional member of the Junior League of Washington, D.C. The bride elect is now employed as a writer by the National Assoc iation of Chain Drug Stores in Washington, D.C. Mr, LeGrand was graduated in 1966 from St. Andrews Presbyterian College with a B.S. degree in Humanities. He served four years in the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps with service in Houston, Texas, Fort Campbell, Ky., QuiNhon Vietnam, and Letter- man General Hospital in San Francisco, Calif. He received his honorable discharge with tbr rank of Captain in the sum mer of 1970. Since leaving the service, Mr. LeGrand has been working on bis Master’s Degree in Hospital Admlnls- MtSS KATHERINE MARY MURPHY Jf you like it.. Subscribe to it! We hope you have enjoyed the first issues of The Kings Mountain Mirror. If you would like to receive it each week by mail nil out this subscription blank and begin receiving it next week. Enter My Subscription To Kings Mtn. Mirror P.O. Box 345 Kings Mtn., N.C. Name Address $4 PER YEAR IN KINGS MTN. & N.C. $5 ELSEWHERE ( ) PAYMENT ENCLOSED ( ) BILL TO: Newcomers Club For Kings Mtn.? Local Mr, and Mrs. Jerry W. Morrow, 114 Gayton Loop, Kings Mountain, a girl, Nov. 2. 1971. Girl Scout Troop 155 Due to the recent Influx of new residents to Kings Mountain as a result of all the new in dustries which have located here, it seems that there is a need to have a "Newcomers Club," Tentative plans are underway, but because of the upcoming festive season, the date of the first meeting has been scheduled for Tuesday, 11th of January at the Womens Club building on W, Mountain St. Births Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith, 410 Hawthorne Rd., Kings Mountain, a boy, Nov. 7,1971. Mr, and Mrs, Richard Lee Kee Rt, 1 Box 215, Shelby, a boy, Nov. 2. 1971. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Curry, 16 Chesterfield Cr., Kings Mountain, a girl, Nov. 8, 1971. The Girl Scouts of troop 155 wanted to help beautify Kings Mountain so they planted planter boxes and pulled weeds in the downtown park ing lot. They hope to plant flowers next spring. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas F. Cook Bessemer City, N.C. a boy, Nov. 3, 1971. Mr. and Mrs. Preior F. Childers, 125 McGinnis St., Kings Mountain, a girl, Nov. 9. 1971. The girls celebrated Juliette Lowe’s birthday wlthaHallw- ween party with refreshments and games. ? The club will then meet re gularly every second Tuesday in the month. Prospective member s wUl be notUled closer to the date and if you are interested in joining this club, please call Mrs. Robert Lee Smith (739-6021) to have your name placed on toe maU- Inglist. Anyone who has mov ed to Kings Mountain during the past two or three years wUl be ellgilde to join. t 7 V Week Snd Sale SPECIAL PORTABLE AND STATIONARY MIXER Foreign Visitors In Town MIXES, MASHES, BEATS, CREAMS, Peter and Rosalind Gwinnett from London, England, are spending this week in Kings Mountain as special guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Bedford. HARVEST GOLD WHITE AVOCATO $9.97 AS SEEN ON T.V. They attended “British Night" at toe Country Club on Saturday - amostapproprtaie occasion. Peter works tor Barclay’s Bank In New York and is in toe United States tor a two year exchange program wito toe Bank. TheGwlnnetts stopped oft in Kings Mountain on toelr way back to New York after a week’s vacation on British Tortola in toe Vir gin Islands. Peter was at school with John Bedford in Bradford, England. SPECIAL REGENT Electric Can Opener SPECIAL Miracle KNIFE SHARPENER $9.97 Brush AS SEEN ON T.V. $2.99 Local Golfers SPECIAL FAST START On Thursday, Nov. 4to toe FoothUls Golf League Tour nament was held at Cleveland Springs Country Club in She lby. Local golfers who part icipated were Lto Mayes and Anne Pouchak. Anne tied for 1st low gross in Class C. This was toe final tournament for 1971 and tournaments wUl be resumed in the spring of 1972. Battery Booster Cable Set 100% COPPER $1.97 SPECIAL * * * * * * * * * * * * RockTm Sock’Em Robots $9.84 t * * * -N- * * * * * * * * * WHAT MAKES A6IRL ALLGIRLA6AIN7A CONCERTINA PLEATED SKIRT BY KORET OF CALIFORNIA’ In an all around whirl of pleats. Soft. Feminine. Romantic. Hemline in proportioned lengths to suit your fancy. Coordi-knitted to dress up or down with a sensuous body shirt. Both in wonderful washable Regency Coordi-Knits of 100% Dacron’ Polyester. California is a special way of living. Koret of California’ captures it all. PI ( A S 3 ] Me the of ive Ch dal 121 be the ba wh ve re se ov iz( lo< in ly cel or me