POPULATION (1940 Census) 6.574 Trading Area 15,000 i Board Figures) 16 Pages T oday PRICE FIVE CENT.4 Election Saturday LOCAL YOUTH RECEIVING TREATMENT FOR POLIO? Eight-year-old Boyce Cash, shown above receiving treatment for infantile paralysis at Camp Saltan. Is one of 209 North Carolina polio victims still hospitalized. Tho Cash youth, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Cash, routs 2. Kings Mountain, has rocalvod treatment sinco Ms illness of last summer totaling 1X118 ? the Wit being paid by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. Foundation funds come from the annual March of Dimes gifts. Young Cash fpont four and o no-half weeks in a respirator. 47 days at Grace hospital at Morgan ton. and has Camp Sutton hospital 67 days. He Is showing much improve m ii!,, i. ml miw For Guard Motor $%?</ Beink Purchased By Cit v Local News Bulletins SERIOUSLY ILL Boyce Slmorfton, well-known , Kings 'Mountain citizen, is serl- ? ilously til at his home. Mr. Simon-:' ton has been in ill health for sev eral years, but his condition has become serious In the past several days. ? SUFFERS STROKE ,Mrs. W. A. Riderthour is critical ly 111 In GaSton Memorial hospi tal following a stroke of paraly sis Monday morning at her home her?. She had not regained con sciousness Thursday morning. * f *i i ? i ? ? in .a i i.i. TAG SALES Sale ol. city auto tags total 400 Thursday morning, somewhat less than half the number .of tags bought during 194S. City officials reminded car owners that 1949 city licenses must be displayed by February 1. :v METER RECEIPTS Parking fneter receipts for the 34th week of operations, which ended on Wednesday, totaled ,.9143.92 according to a report by A. Crouse, city clerk MEETING Regular January meeting of Otis D. Green Post 155, the Amer ican Legion will be held at the - courtroom at City Hail Monday night at 7:30 p. m., according to , 'an announcement by OHie Harris, ./commander. A report is expected ?'Irom the building committee. - ||; LIONS MEETING Carlos Young, at Shelby. Cle veland County chairman of the March of Dimes fund campaign, will speak at the regular meeting 01 the Kings Mountain Lions club Tuesday night, it was announced ye^erday by Dan HuT/stetler, pro -gram chairman. Mr. Young will show a film demonstrating the done by the National Tnf*n Paralysis "Foundation in treni polio? The speaker was a vlc of polio during the epidemic Arrangements were being com pitted this week (or purchase of a (Mp-and one-haH acre tract as a site for a National Guard motor shed aiK.eventual site for a National Guard Armofy. pv The City of Kings Mountain is purchasing the iraci ? at the corn er <?* Mountain -street and Phifer road *? from Mrs. G. W. King and Mrs! J. H. Thomson. Announcement of the purchase wag made by Mayor H. Tom Fulton, who said National Guard officials had Informed him that contract for building a $25,000 brick veneer ma tor ahed 50 feet wide by 72.8 feet long, would be let prior io March 31. The deed for the property now be ing drawn has a contingency clause providing that the purchase price Will *e returned by the sellers and the lot returned to them in event it Is not used for the purpose outlined during the next 12 months. Th# site wis chosen from several investigated by the city board in co operation with the North Carolina National Guard. Members of the city bpard serving on the committee to investigate sites were Carl F. Mau ney, John H. Moss and &farr|ott PMtto . ? "The city administration is very hapfry, *> announce completion of arnfeng*tnents to purchase this site,* Mayor Fulton said. "Due to Book Fund Gifts j Now Total $1,350 Contributions to the Jacob S. Mau- , ney ' Memorial Library Book Fund totaled *1,350 this week, according to announcement by J. Byron Keet er. chahBKUrt of the second annual financial campaign. Mr. Keetiir reported addition*! ] gifts oC'-f?|B Gifts previously rr ported tot*l?| fl?00. A ltHtlOtWH gifts include: tjnig Store flO.OO. A W. KMeftld *1000 (Cont'd on page eight) Vic Mr*'*! J. B F. i s?.u Pal Plo Coc 125.00. Ing Sastonla ttO.OO. ? Co. 915.00. X-Ray Fund Now Needs $$53.S0 I , The Kings Mountain Junior Chamber o! Commerce needs S653.50 to complete its quota for the T-B X-Ray machine. i Report by Chairman Joe Hedden Wednesday morning showed a gain oi more than S500 since the last report, including a contribu tion ot $200 trom Park Yarn Mills Company. Also Included were several con tributions from Grover citizens and business firms. > "With hard digging, we can make it." Chalsman Hedden stal ed. announcing that the Bethware Progressive Club planned to aid the drive in that community and that effort will be made through the schools of Kings Mountain and Grover to hike the fund. Harmon, Veteran Grocer, Retires M. L, Harmon, who has been dis pensing groceries in Kings Moun tain since 1896, retired December 31. Manager of the grocery depart' ment of Plonk Brothers & Corrtpany since 1933, MK Harmon first entered the grocery business In Kings Moun. tain In 1896, as an employee of the j late Capt. Freno Dilling at the Dill; Ing Mill Store. In 1916, he purchased the business from rhe Dilling Milt and operated it until 1931. He joined Plonk Bro thers In 1933. ? ? " Mr. Harmon is a native of Cleve land county. He first came to Kings j Mountain In 1894 and attended school here. He Is an elder of Boyce Memorial ARP church and a Mason. Lo^e To Observe i 75th Anniversary | M. E. Hoffman, of AshevlHe. Grand Master of Masons o* North Caro- j iina, will be the principal speaker at , the ?5th anniversary banquet of Falrvlew Lodge No. 339, A. P. A A, M. to be held at the high school cafeteria Monday night, January 17. Members of the lodge are now ar ranging details for the event, and j ticke* sales wfll be handled by Bruce M<?Danlel, Oscar McCarter and ! J. OI lie Harris. 1 Herald Headlines Reveal City's 1948 History As Kings Mountain look* forward into 1949, a review ol the news e l vents o.f 1918 shows that rhe city .spent an active, prosperous year. The city was liberal with it* gifts, actively supporting a large number of worthwhile causes, including the March of Dimes, the Girl Scouts, the Boy Scouts. Red Cross, T-B seal sale, Jaycee X-Ray Fund drive, ihe Ja cob S. Mauney Memorial Library Book Fund and others. Civic clubs were active too, the i KiwanLs and Lions clubs, and the Junior Chamber of Commerce con ducting active programs. Miss Peg gy Smith was the city's senior beau ty winner of 1948, and Miss Betty Falls copped first honors in the Ju nior division. The Number 1 news story of the year was the same as it was for the j nation ? the surprising re-election i of President Truman. Otherwise, Kings Mountain had its share of the bizarre, the sordid, the pleasant and the tragic. Top local news story was the Bet ty Smith murder case, which was ? followed as closely in the big city tabloids as in the local press. A large number of local citizens were claimed by death during 1948. Among the more prominent deaths were: Mrs. A. J.. McGill, 'Mrs. Mary Harmon, Mrs. E. A. Shenk, Dr. R. N. Baird, P D. Herndon, Dewitt Hull, . J. Tracy MoGinnis, Boyce Early, George Barber, At. White, John Flet cher Ware, O. C. tyParrell. F. C. Ro berts, C. P. &arbei, C. -T. Dixon. Jotxn Seism and Harve Hambright. Economically the city did well, though a curtailment in textiles the ' last quarter threatened to dampen the Christmas spirit. New business es opened included City Auto & Home Supply, Davis Launderit, Pied mont Washerette, and Haywood E. 1 Lynch Realty Company. Sales of business included purchase of Par ton Funeral Home by Harris Funer al Home, purchase of Hord Furni ture Company by Cooper's. Inc., and purchase of Piedmont Drug Store by Mrs. C. P. Barry. The Logan Supply i Company Record Shop moved to an uptown location and Kings Moun tain Drug Company began extensive remodeling. The city's professional groups al | so increased in number, with two new dentists (Dr. R. N. Baker, and Dr. D. F. Hord), a lav.yer <W. Faison (Cont'd on page seven) Local People Injured In Wreck Mrs. O. W. Myers and Mrs. W. B. ' Gillespie sustained slight injuries Wednesday when the car in which they were In route Winston -Salem was involved with two others in a j wreck near Charlotte. ' 'Both Mrs. Myers and Mr. THIIes- j pie were hospitalized In Charlotte, ! but sustained only minor lacera- ! tlons, which were described as pain- j ful but not serious. Mrs. Myers sus- I tained minor head cuts, while Mrs. j Gillespie sustained knee cuts. Miss Eleanor Myers, third occu- ; pant in the Myers car was not injur ed. j Carl Kiser, & passenger in one of ! j ^he other cars, received knee injuri es. The accident occurred at 12:10 p. m., at the intersection of Highway 16 with the Mt. Holly - Huntersville road. Three cars were Involved "in the crash, .the Myers car, a car dri ven by Ra-lph Moody of Whitnel, and a car owned by Margaret Hig gins of Huntersvilte, the latter ve hicle a more or less Innocent by- j stander. After the crash of the Myers and Whitnel cars, the two autos I crashed into the Higgins car which 1 was parked and unoccupied at the I time. Mrs. Myers was taking her dau^ 1 ghter to Sal^m Academy, where Miss Myers i? a student. O. W. Myers said his wife, who ' i was driving the Myers car, blamed the accident on poor vision caused ' by the rainy, foggy weather. ALLEN TO NEW YORK George W. Alien, Jr., well-known Kings Mountain man, left last weekend for New York, where he has accepted a position, with Neis ler MHls Company, textile sales agency. Mr. Allen, a graduate of N. C. State college, has been a mo j dated with Neisler "Mills, Inc.. here IMMfflNMii i ,snS". ' ? JK ? \?J ? v - i \ l !. 4? ? r- ? '? - i \T,r v NEW DKMTIST? Dr. D. F. Hord. na tive of Kings Mountain, announced last week opening of offices for the practice of dentistry in the Profes sional building. Dr. Hprd is a grad uate of Emory University School of Dentistry and spent two years as a dentist in the' Army. (Herald photo by Bundy.) Business Gifts Chairman Named Dan Huffsteiler will head the bus iness gifts seerion of Number 4 town ship 's annual March of Dimes drive, it was announced yestengay by Ol lie Harris, township chairman. The drive for funds will get und erway next Friday, with the Number 4 township goal at $5,000. r- i Mi i m., - Mr. Harris, Mr. Huffstetler, George Ho user, chairman of the industrial gifts division, attended a meeting of drive officials at Morganton Mon day night at which Dr. Ralph Mc Donald, state chairman and othei officials spoke. It was pointed out that the Na tional Foundation's aid to North Carolina during the past summer's epidemic totaled $1,417,110 plus 23 ?specialists in physiotherapy. More than 2,700 cases of the dread dis ease occurred in the state during 1948. The National Foundation funds arc depleted at the present time and it is making no more pay ments until after .this year's fund drive, it was stated. DuCourt Reported Ceasing Operations DuCourt Mills. Inc.. was making plans to cease operations this week. Circumstances concerning the situation, including final shut down date, length of shutdown and othe* details could not be ob tained by the Herald, due to ina bility to contact Superintendent J. W. (Bill) Heim. . A member of the mill's office force said. "All I know is that the mill is closing." DuCourt has been manufactur ing broadcloth. At full* operation it employs 360 people with a pay roll of about SI 5,000 weekly. County To Vote On Legal Sale 01 Beer, Wine Kings Mountain citizens will j,>.n thoir Cleveland County neighbors Saturday and wilt g(> (o the polls ;?? determine whether to continue t4** legal sale of beer within the bounds , of the county. Prediction for the election was a record vote both in Kings Mountain and throughout the county, and dry leaders were confident of victory. The election ' will also determine whether wine can be sold legally. However, wine has not been legally sold in. this county for more than a year, it having been declared illegal under an act of the 1947 General As sembly. The ballots are divided Into two parts, one on the beer matter, tb<? other on the wine matter. The voter is instructed on the ballot to marK. (1) for the legal sale of beer or i? gainst the legal sale of beer, .ani 12 ? tor the legal sale Of wine and a gainst the legal sale of wine. The election comes as a result of efforts of dry leaders over the pa.it eight months to secure an election. First petitions were obtained calling Beer Election Facts Foils Open: 6:30 a. m. Polls Close S:30 p. m. tolling places: East King* ; Mountain precinct at City Hall courtroom. Wsst Kings Mountain precinct at Victory Chevrolet Co*? pany. for a vote. Wets then stalled the voU* , with a court action, but h was or dered later after fh? complaint of the wets was denied in ? Superior Court. Dry leaders have been quite ac tive here during the past two mon (Cont'd on page eight) Symphony Group Seeking $250 s Members of the Kings Mountain Symphony Society are renewing thi ; week their drive to obtain $730 In mentber.ships ? amuuni required to bring the North Carolina Symphony orc.hestra Jierc for a concert thi* i spring. Mrs. Paul Mauney, chainnan, said a minfmum of 5^50 is required to complete the membership drive and urged all citizens who have not re ( newed their memberships to do * j at once. i The Symphony is tentatively see duled to come to Kings Mountain on March 24 for a formal concert in the evening and for the free children'.-! concert at rhe school during the day. Mrs. Mauney said that the addi tional funds would have tb com? primarily from individuals, sine* majority of business and industrial firms had already renewed their memberships. Aiding in the campaign are Mrs. C. T. Carpenter, Jr.. Mrs, Bruce Mo Daniel, Mrs. I. G. Patterson, Mrs. Aubrey Mauney, Mrs. E. C. Brandon, Jr., Mrs, B. S. Neill, B. S. Nelll an! Charles A Goforth, Jr. Merchants' Directors Nominate . Candidates For Offices For '49 Harold Cogging, secretary ? treas urer of Cooper's, Inc., and Charlie Blalock, owner of Blaloek's Grocery, have been nominated as candidate* for president of the Kings Mountain ' Merchant? association for 1949 50. Nominations for officers of the as. i soclation were made In accordance with the by- laws of the organiza- ; tion by the board of directors at their meeting 'Monday night. Other nominations inciude: for vice-president, L. E. Abbott, and B. S. Peeler; for directors, E. B. Smith, O. W. Myers, J. C. Bridges, Floyd i Payne. Sam Cdllins, T. W. Grayson, ! Charlie Spearman and J. Ollie Har 1 ri?. A mall ballot among the member ship will be conducted in the near ; future, with members to'choow four L of the eight nominees for dliectors. Four current directors have ano ther year of rheir two-year terms remaining. They are W. G. Gran tham, Hilton Ruth, Sam Davis and Marriott Phifer. The directors also discussed plans for the annual banquH of the asso ciation which Is tentatively sched uled In February. . Retail Firms Resume Weekly Half-Holidays Majority of Kings Mountain re tail establishments are again ob serving Wednesday afternoon half -holidays. rMuming the cus tomary weekly half -holiday on December 28. The retail firms of the city sus pended the half- holidays during the months of November and De cember for the benefit of Christ mas shoppers. Four Local Cases On Docket Wednesday Four Kings Mountain cases are scheduled for Superior Court action at Shelby Wednesday according to a court docket released this week. * The cases are:* J. C. Guffey, rape. Withrow Brown and Grady Bfowrj, secret as* iUlt. Wood row Brown, assaulting an of "oer' ? . . <-,Y 'TV-.-.; ?

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