Population City Limits . 7.206 Trading Area 15.000 i . (1945 Ration Board Ftguroo) VOL 63 NO. 36 Kings Mountain Newspaper 14 Pages Today Established 1889 Kings Mountain, N. C., Thursday, September 3, 1953 Sixty-Third Year PRICE FIVE CENTS Local News Bulletins LEFT TUESDAY Miss Mary Medlln left Tues day for Newiand, where she will hold a teaching position in the Newland high school for the coming year. Miss Medin is a recent graduate of Lenoir Rhyne College. She is a tea cher of commercial arts. HOSPITALIZED Ben F. Beam, Kings Moun tain Life insurance man, en tered kings Mountain hospital Sunday morning where he is I receiving treatment a^d Obser vation. His condition was re ported as improved Wednes day morning. AT INSTITUTE Franklin L. W^re, manager of the Kings Mountain office of the North Carolina Employ ment Security commission, at tended the annual institute for North Carolina Employment Security commission employ ees held at Chapel Hill last weekend. Theme of the three - day session which began on Thursday was 'The Employ ment Security Commission and North Carolina's Econo my." GRID PROGRAM Members of the Kings Moun tain Lions club Will hear a round-up on the forthcoming high school football season at their meeting Tuesday night, as High School Coachcs E. L. Carlton, Don Parker and John Charles outline prospects and plans for the 1953 season. The club meets at Masonic Hall at 7 o'clock. Program was an nounced by W. L. Plonk. HOME COMING Homecoming Day will be Ob served at Beulah Methodist church Sunday. A picnic din ner will be spregdgn the chur ch grounds following prea ching services at 11 o'clock. Special singing will >be featur ed in the afternoon. All (mem bers, former members, and friends are urged to attend. KIWANI ^MEETING Harry Cohen, Shelby mer chant, will address mem/bers of the Kings Mountain Kiwan is club at their regular meet ing Thursday night at "? 45. Mr. Cohen recently rel .ed from a three-month trip a broad. He attended the coro nation of Queen Elizabeth, and also visited many Euro pean nations. Patrol Officer The condition of Highway Pa trolman Bobby Cioninger, who was injured in an accident on Highway 49 near Mt. Pleasant Saturday morning, was reported much improved Wednesday. Patrolman Cioninger, son of Mr. and Mrs. June Cioninger, of Kings Mountain, suffered a frac ture of the upper right thigh when his patrol car was Xorced down an embankment while he was giving chase to a speeding car bearing a Virginia license. Patrolman Cioninger, a patient at Charlotte's Presbyterian hos pital, is to be transferred to Cab arrus County hospital at Concord this weekend, according to Infor mation received here. According to reports, the acci dent occurred when the officer started to pass a truck. The truck pulled out about the same time to pass still another car in the traffic line and forced the patrol man to ditch his auto down a 40 foot embankment. Cioninger was thrown out, but the car turned over and smashed his right leg. The patrolman had not been sufficiently close to the Virginia car, a blue 1951 Ford driven by a woman, to get the license number, he said. Labor Day Spoils Holiday For Somo Kings Mountain will obsa r the Labor Day holiday quietly, according Is advanc? .indications, though the Mon i day holiday will neanatong Majority of retail tlxuu plan to dose Monday, a* will all Ktnas Mountain financial In ' fttttatloriA. Th" postofflce will ho sloMd ad Will the steto En ployment Security comznisiiion office. The City HaU office will bo dosed, as will almost all offices In the county court house at Shelby. Industrial firm*, Including the Kings Mountain Herald. jh . ' ? . . ' n' * ' - ' . . * \ ? * . , .. . ; ? r- . ? : JHOHBH Schools Enrolled 2,139 First Day '? *? ??? * .* '-V: ? % "v"/, ^ . ; \Sr : V :?:* vVVt Area Increase 148; City Total Tuesday 1,937 A total of 2,139 pupils enrolled in the seven Kings Mountain school units which opened the 1953-54 term on Tuesday morhing. | The ligure indicates an increase j over the 1952-53 first-day. en roll - I ment at the schools of 148 pupils. Enrollment at the city's six units Tuesday was reported by Superintendent B. N. Barnes at 1,937. Mrs. J. C. Nickels, principal of Park Grace Elementary school of the county system, reported a Tuesday enrollment of 202 pupils, a gain of 27 pupils over the 175 reported on the first day of the 1952-53 term. A total of 1,991 pupils enrolled on opening day last year at the seven units. Opening day enrollment at the city's six school units showed a net gain of 121 pupils over the first-day figures a year ago. The opening day total compares with a total at the six units last year of 1,816. At the end of the first week of 1952-53 term, however, the en rollment had picked up by 51 to 1,867. The city * schools enrollment Tuesday by schools was: High school 368 Davidson high 61 Central Elementary 700 East Elementary 381 West Elementary 272 Davidson Elementary 155 Total enrollment 1,937 Ix\ tbe.cUy ^hools, the unit to tals for the first day compare as follows with the 1952-53 opening day figures: High school, a gain of two over Continued On Page Eight Peaceful Valley Waxes Explosive Peaceful Valley turned un peaceful Monday night, and James F. (Bud) Childers, a resi dent of the community, is a pa tient in Kings Mountain hospital as the result. Mr. Childers received knife injuries in a fracas which report edly involved a half-dozen Peace ful Valley citizens. All were drinking, officers said they were told, and Childers received a cut after one of the party, later iden tified as Troy Hannah, grabbed Childers' knife and sampled its cutting edge on the owner's arm. Hannah's explanation was somewhat different, Constable Paul Byers said. Hannah told Byers Childers was injured when he fell off the porch onto a chic ken coop. At any rate, Childers doesn't want to prosecute. He told the constable that the accident was "all in fun" and that he knew no damage was intended. Only one of the half-dozen found himself in the clutches of the law. Furman Boyles Accom panied Childers by taxi to Kings Mountain hospital. City Officers Sanders and Carrigan, who had heard of the cutting and had fol lowed the pair to the hospital, booked Boyles for public drunk enness. Childers was still hospitalized on Wednesday and was reported improving after considerable loss of blood. Dr. P. G. Padgett is at tending the wounded man. PUBLIC WORKS CHIEF ? Em ory C. Nicholson, o! Gastonin, is the new city superintendent of public works .succeeding Tom S. Henry, who resigned to accept a similar position in Cherryville. Mr. Nicholson assumed his du ties last Thursday. Sgt. Franklin Is Repatriated M/Sgt. Henry Russell Frank lin, army careerman and a half brother of T. A. (Bud) McDaniel, of Kings Mountain, was among the group of war prisoners re leased Monday by che Chinese North Koreans, according to in formation received here. Mrs. Franklin, of Boston, Mass., who lived here several months during World War II, telephoned from Boston early Tuesday morning after hearing the name of her husband listed in news broadcasts. Though she had not yet been formally noti fied by the army, she said his name, rating, division and next of-kin listing left no doubt con cerning the identity of her hus band. Sgt. Franklin had been a priso ner for almost three years hav ing been captured by the North Koreans in October 1950. He was serving with the Eighth Army, 1st Calvary division, when cap tured. A veteran of World War II, including 18 months combat duty, Sgt. Franklin entered the service in the late thirties and, except for one year after World War II, has been on active duty with the army. Mrs. Franklin is the former Eleanor Chamaue, of Boston. Board Convenes Thursday Night L The city board of commission ers will hold their regular Sep tember meeting Thursday night at 8 o'clock, with a zoning change request and action on changing several street names principal items of scheduled business. The board has scheduled the Thursday night meeting for a public hearing on request of B. D. Ratterree to change the zon ing of a corner lot at Battle ground avenue and Wells street to commercial zone. The street name changes will precede an effort by the city to properly name and mark all city streets. ? > Otherwise, the agenda lists principally routine items. Mayor Glee A, Bridges said, including monthly reports from department heads and similar items. Registration For $72 Million Bond Elections Begins Saturday Books win open Saturday lor the first time for registrations for the approaching state-wide txntd i#me elections, scheduled for October t. ? The registrars will be at the polling places from 9 a. m. to 6 p. tn. on three successive Satur days, September 5, 12. 19. Chal lenge day will be observed on September 26 >foe Mull, county elections board chairman, pointed out that all persons now on the books are registered and the only persons required to register to vote are those Who have moved Into the community since the last election and those who have moved Into the community since the last elec tion, which was the general ele<v tion of November 1952. Kings Mountain area regist rar^ as announced by Mr. Mull, are: East Kings Mountain, Mrs. Nell Crariord, at City Hall, West Kings Mountain, Mrs. J. H. Arthur, at Victory Chevrolet Company. Beth ware, Mrs. H. A. Goforth at Bethware school. Grover, J. B. Ellis, at T. S. Kee ter Store. Citizens of North Carolina will determine 1) whether the state ahall borrow $50 million dollars for school construction and. 31 whether the state ahall borrow $22 million dollars for improve ments to mental institutions. ! iX Kings Mountain Woman Seeking $50,000 Damages A Kings Mountain woman has filed a civil action in Cleveland Superior Court. to collect $50,000 from a Charlotte man for alleged breach of promise. ? The action was filed Monday against L. S. Gattis, Jr., of Char lotte, by Miss Audry Timms, through her attorneys, Horn & West, of Shelby. In the complaint, the plaintiff states that upon numerous occa sions the defendant promised to marry her and induced her on this promise to live with him as man and wife. Plaintiff also states that she expects to give birth to an illegitimate child in November and that she is advised the birth will have to be by Cea sarian section. The plaintiff fuVther contends that up to the time she began associating with the defendant she was a woman of good char acter and unblemished reputa tion. Since her association with the defendant, she alleges that her name has been dragged through the mire, and she asks damages in the amount of $50, 000.' In another action, Miss Timms seeks judgment of $900 against L. S. Gattis, Jr., and L. S. Gattis, Sr., operators of the Children's ; Shop in Charlotte. She contends this amount is due her in back wages. Defendants have .-30 days in which to file an answer. No an swer had been filed Wednesday afternoon. Students Clogged City Classrooms Kings Mountain city schools began the 1953-54 term Tuesday with a full complement of tea-, chers and with the 1,937 students enrolled jamming the facilities. Superintendent B. N. Barnra cherstofUMh^Hs^l Mrs. Donald Deal ?BHKallas was elected to teach piSJdSF Miss Margaret Steitf di Dar lington, S. C., was elected to teach Bible. John Lewis Porter of Durham, a June graduate of the Univer sity of North Carolina, was elect ed to teach an eighth grade re placing Walter Johnson who had resigned. I. B. Goforth, Jr., an [eighth grade teacher last year, was transferred to high school to teach math and science. Mr. Barnes said that the three temporary classrooms construct ed in the auditoriums at East (one) and West (two) schools are "acceptable" and- ate reliev ing the crowded conditions in those schools. The temporary rooms are bing used untit* building programs at the two schools are completed. A new cafeteria addition is to be ! built at West school, releasing two classrooms, and a rew four room primary structure is to be built at East school, also releas ing two classrooms. Bids on the two projects have not been asked but plans are almost complete, t "We will very likely have to ask for parents of many students to cooperate with us in effecting transfers from one school to a nother to relieve crowded class es," Mr. Barnes said. He noted that 42 students are enrolled in the fourth grade at East school and only 27 In the West fourth grade. In the fifth grade at West, one teacher has 40 pupils enrolled while at East school two fifth grade teachers have only 59 students. Mr, Barnes also reported elec tion of Mrs, S. R. Suber, Jr., as West school treasurer. Haimon Property Re-sale Saturday Fourth re-sale of the T. N. Har mon Estate lot at the corner of Battleground avenue and Falls street will be conducted Saturday. The bidding will begin at S8.547, the current high bid placed by B. D. Ratterree, Kings Mountain realtor, t The property was originally sold via commissioner's tale last May, with the several ne-sales having been necessitated by con tinued increases of the bid. Saturday's sale will begin at 10 a. m. The property is occupied by ? two-apartment frame dwelling, and fronts 100 feet on Battle ground avenue, 105 feet on Chero kee street and 230 feet on Falls street. MSTXR RECEIPTS A total of $174.21 was collec ted from the city's parking meters Wednesday morning, according to a report from Hie city treasurer's office. Postal Inspector Approves Route Extensions To Serve 501 Houses Shotgun Victim Jack Martin, 20, Declared Suicide Jack Martin, 20-year-old em ployee of Craftspun Yarns, Inc., was found dead Wednesday morn ing in the upstairs bedroom of his father's home in the Tryon community near Cherryville. Gas ton County Coronor W. G. Mc Lean has ruled the death suicide. The. young Kings .Mountain man had been dead since Monday morning, the post-mortem exam ination established. The suicide victim was found by his father with a shotgun wound through the heart. The gun was the pro perty of Paul Martin, the boy's father. According to report of Coronor McLean, the boy, who lives with his mother, Mrs. Ora Martin, on Fairview street here, had gone to visit his father over the week end. The father was away from home at the established time of the shooting, and did not discov er the body until Wednesday mor. nlng. Members of the family were at a loss to determine the motive for the suicide. Funeral rites for the young man were held Wednesday after noon from the Church of God, with the pastor, Rev. Doc Wil banks officiating. Interment was made in Mountain Rest cemetery. Surviving, in addition to his father and his mother, are a bro ther, John Martin, Kings Moun tain, two half-brothers, Bob and Fred Davis, of Kings Mountain. Edna Fredell and Mrs. Joy Lawson, of Kings Mountain, and a half-sister, Miss Mae Davis, of Gastonia. Fronebergei Rites Held Funeral rites for Mrs. Rebecca Rhodes Froneberger, of Gastonia, wife of a Gastonia dentist and sister of Mrs. Fred W. Plonk, of Kings Mountain, were held Wed nesday afternoon from Gastonia's Trinity Lutheran church. Rev. George Lingle officiated and interment was made in Gas ton Memorial Park cemetery. Mrs. Froneberger died at 6:30 Tuesday morning in a Gastonia hospital following a long Illness. She had lapsed into a coma three days prior to her death. Mrs. Froneberger was a daugh ter of C. J. Rhodes and the late Fuller Torrence Rhodes. She was a native of Lincolnton. She graduated from Bessemer City High School, and Woman's College in Greensboro in the class of 1932. She was active in the work of Holly Trinity Lutheran church of j which she was a member, serving as the first president of Women of the Church. She played a lead ing part In the organization of this important women's auxiliary which coordinates all women's ac tivities. She served In the Wo men's Missionary Society of her church, and was chairman of var ious circles In the women's auxi liary. She taught a Sunday school class, and was president of the Mary Monroe Bible class. She was a leader of the Brownie Troop, and was active In all pha ses of the general work of her church. Mrs. Froneberger taught home economics at Oakhurst High School In Mecklenburg county from 1932 until 1934. She was a member of the North Carolina Dental Auxiliary, and Phi Beta Kappa in College. ?Dr. and Mrs. H. D. Froneber ger were married In November 1934 in Bessemer Ci'y. Surviving in addition to her husband, Dr. H. D. Froneberger, and Mr*. Plonk, are her father, a ?on, Henry Fronebergef, > Jr., three daughters, Becky Dann, Sue and Roxanna Froneberger, all of iGastohla, a half-brother, Dr. John S. Rhodes, of Raleigh, and a sis ter, Isabel Dofgett, of Forest City. Active pallbearers were Hunter Huss, Frank Suggs, Dr. W. A. An thony, Dr. John Quickel, Dr. ^ames Moser, and Dr. David Tut tie. Honorary pallbearers were members of the church council of Holy Trinity Lutheran church, the Gaston County Dental Society, and the Gastort Ccunty Medical Society. Here Are City Carrier Route Extensions Provisionally Approved By Postal Inspector Following arc the route extehsions for city carrier which have been approved by the post office depart to adequate street-marking and house-numbering: Street Houses West Lackey 22 Brice * 13 Alexander 11 Gantt 23 Ramseur 3 Waco Road 22 Morris lq Confederate 19 Watterson 14 North City . 6 Block 100-300 -300 600-700 400 300 -000 ?400 100-200 -500 300-100 ?200 Street Linvllle Road Fairview First Second Third Church Grace Phoenix Broad Mill Hill Gillespie Baker ( t * Cherry Walnut :<f~ Chestnut Bennett Drive Clinton Block 100 400 500 100 100 100 Northwest Area Cora Mills ? 'V, ? * f. Houses 17 33 ' 18 14 21 41 31 14 13 4 12 5 9 ' 10 14 9 22 5 Street v ? . South Deal Wilson 15 Cherokee Falls Monte Vista Wells RECAP 150 177 Houses 5 15 5 6 9 17 Burlington Mil.' a * Loonitex Mills 117 Southern Area 57 TOTAL 501 postal service nvnt, subject Vacant Lots 15 3 7 5 5 3 14 4 0 0 Vacant Lots 11 4 0 0 12 9 4 9 3 1 3 3 3 2 0 2 f 11 V- - o Vacant Lots 1 11 5 10 8 56 61 37 42 196 Herald Seeks Copy Dated Sept. 16, 1943 Wanted ? a copy of the Kings Mountain Herald dated September 16, 1943. This issue is missing from the file of 1943 issues and the Herald would like to secure a copy to bring the complete year's issues up to date. Any citizen possessing an is* sue under that date is reques ted to contact the Herald at telephones 167 or 283. Area Registrants Inducted Tuesday Ten of 43 Cleveland County men who left Tuesday for Induc tion into the arnr?r?. services were Kings Mountain area registrants. The induction group included from the area: Paul Montgomery Chappell, Herbert Albert Hick man, Rudolph Bridges, Marshall Logan, William Andrew Mc Swain, George Cecil I^ooney, Jr., Charles Donald Blanton, Jr., Glenn Alton Dover and Cornell Hlnes. The Cleveland County selective service board has been ordered to furnish 40 men for pre-tnduc tlon examinations on September 18, Mrs. Clara Newman, clerk of the board, said Wednesday. Oc tober calls have not yet been re ceived by the bodrd, she added. Man Dies Horn After New "Safe" Highway Opens Highway officials opened the new lane of U. S. 74 (and 29) be tween Kings Mountain and Gas tonia Tuesday afternoon around 4:30 o'clock and about an hour later a Kings Mountain man was dead, victim of the first accident on the new strip. George Lee Gordon. 53-year old Negro resident of route one, was pronounced dead on arrival at Kings Mountain hospital shortly before 5:30 p. m. Tuesday. Another man, who said he was Lewis Samuel Rochester, 41, of route orte, Waterloo, S. C? was hospitalized with painful injuries. The fatal accident took place at about 5:15 p. m. at the junction of Bessemer City road and U. S. 74, some three miles east of Kings Mountain near the Dr. J. E. An thony farm. Gordon was driving a 1942 Chevrolet and was alone at the time of the accident. Rochester was riding in a 1939 Cadillac being driven by Clarence A. Westbrooks, of 1801 Chestnut Hills drive, Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Westbrooks appeare dto be only slightly injured afrnd was not hos pitalized. State Highway Patrolman Paul Hemphill, of Gastonia, investigat I ' Continued On Page Eight 1 ? 111 ? "" ' Many Practice Good Samaritanism In Aiding Disillasioned Wax Bride A large number of Kings Moun tain citizens and groups of citi zens have recently collaborated In an act of Good Samaratanism which will result soon In the re patriation of h Kings Mountain war veteran's Japanese bride. Mrs. Klmiyo Taguchi Arnold, 31, and heir eight-month old daughter, took off from Charlotte Municipal Airport on August 28 on the first leg of a long journey to Mrs. Arnold'* native land. They were to have sailed from San Francisco, Calif., Monday aboard the American President Lines' SS President Wilson. Among groups collaborating were women'# groups of the First Baptist church, Grace Methodist church, First Presbyterian church and the Woman's Club. In addi tion, the Lutheran church used its mission service to arrange pas^ sage and to see that Mrs. Arnold, who spoke only broken English, was cared for during the watt be tween San Francisco arrival and departure dates. F. R. Summers, bank president, had a hand In the work by arranging air trans portation and cheeking on travel visas. A woman, who prefers to remain incognito, supplied quar ters for mother and daughter tor several days prior to the depar-. ture. Almost all those mentioned ? and some others ? had a hand in supplying funds for the trip. The story of the sad ending of the international marriage is not a new one. The Japanese girl married a Kings Mountain soldier and, later on, joined him here, to find many of the rosy pro mises not borne out and to find herself resented by the ex-sol dier's family. The result was a continuing and worsening home sickness. Mrs. Arnold and eight month-old daughter Connie are destined for Mrs. Arnold's family home at 5 Part Shirahamacho, Hakozaki, Fukuoka, Kyushu, Ja pan. Blakely Reports Approval Given Foi New Route Cily carrier route expansions have been provisionally approv ed by the postoffice department to serve 501 houses not now re ceiving city carrier service. The route extension will in clude 150 residences in the Northwest -section of the city, 177 residences in the ('rafts pun Yarns, Inc., vicinity. 117 residen- ? <'cs in the Burlington "Mills-Con iolidated Textiles area, and 57 residences in the southern part of the city. Notification of t lie approval 'was received by Postmaster W. K. Blakely last weekend from Inspector C. C. Keever, who had 'investigated the postmaster's re quest for expanded service. Mr. Keever made his survey on Au gust 17 and 18. The extension, when imple mented, wi-ll require the addition of one regular employee, the let ter from Inspector Keever stated. The, service is. to be inaugurat ed as quickly as many of the streets approved have been suit ably marked and the houses on them numbered, Mr. Keever con tinued. " ; When completely in the city carrier system, the additional territory will cover 6.35 miles and require approximately five hours and thirty-five minutes to cover by foot carrier, the inspec tor's survey shows. Inspector Keever wrote Post master Blakely in part: "3. You will note that the esti mated street time for the new extensions will be 5 hours and 35 minutes. The office time nec essary is estimated at 1 hour and 25 minutes. One hour and thirty minutes will be required to han dle the parcel post delivery to the areas involved. In all, it is proposed that your dally carrier hours increased by 84 hours to handle the proposed exten sions including parcel post time. "4,. At the present time, there are two full time foot routes at your office and an auxiliary par cel post route running approxi mately four to five hours daily. I.t is proposed that the carrier complement be increased by one position. The new foot route will Continued On Page Eight Mis. Ruth's Parents Succumb Both parents of Mrs. Hilton Ruth, of Kings Mountain, died during the past week. Her mother, Mrs. Emma Kim brough Meroney. 82, . died late Friday night at her home in Mocksvilie after a long illness, and her father, Charles Flynn Meroney, Sr., 86, succumbed Tuesday morning. Mr. Meroney, who had been ill five days, was not aware of his wife's death, members of the family said. Funeral rites for Mrs. Meroney were held Sunday afternoon at Mocksvilie Presbyterian church. Rey. Paul Richards, the pastor, conducted the service. Funeral rites for Mr. Meroney were held Wednesday afternoon, with Rev. Mr. Richards officiat ing. Interment for both was in the family plot of Joppa cemetery. Mrs. Meroney was born Sep tember 6, 1870 In Yadkin County, daughter of the late Sara Kathe rine Brown and John Anderson. Kimbrough. She was a member of one of Davie county's oldest families and had been a resident of Mocksvilie since childhood. Mr. Meroney was the son of the late Charles P. and Charity Burkhead Meroney, of Rowan County and had also lived at Mocksvilie since childhood. Born August 15, 1867, Mr. Meroney was a retired hardwareman, having operated his own business, Mocksvilie Hardware Ca., after spending 26 years with Odell Hardware Company, of Greens boro. Mr. and Mrs. Meroney were married December 10. 1887. Survivors. In addition to Mrs, Ruth, include three sons, J. K. Meroney, T. F. Meroney, and C. F. Meroney, Jr., all of Mocksvilie; four daughters, Mrs. R. S. Mc Neill, Mocksvilie, Mrs. R. L. Mor row, Fayetteville, Mrs. Silas Mc Bee, High Point, and Mrs. Cooper Edwards, Columbia. S. C., ten grandchildren and five great grandchildren. Mrs. Meroney is also survived by one sister, Mrs. J. M. Downum, of Lenoir.

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