i Population City Limits 7.206 Trading Area . .r: . .... 15.000 (1945 Batlon Board Figure*} 16 Pages Today Established 1889 PRICE FIVE CENTS ifi First ion Day Local News COLLEGE TRUSTEE ? W. K. Mauney, Kings (Moun tain textile executive, was re elected a trustee of Lenoir Rhyne college last week. i ?? ATTENDS CONVENTION T. W. Grayson, Kings Moun tain Jeweler, returned Tuesday from Winston -Salem, where he attended the annual conven tion of the North Carolina Jew elry Dealers association. RECEIVES DISCHARGE Don Carpenter, who has been serving with the Navy for the past 15 months, was honorably discharged this week accord ing to information received here. TO ENGLAND Cpl. Ivan Weaver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Weaver, leaves Thursday for Camp Kilmer, N. J., preparatory to transfer to England for duty with the ALr Force. He has spent & 30- day leave here with his parents. LEAVES SUNDAY Warrant Officer Ray Black leaves Sunday for Camp Kil mer, N. J., for assignment to duty In Germany with the ar my. Mrs. Slack and children will reside in Kings CMountaln while Mr. Black is overseas. ' DUKE ALLOCATION' Kings (Mountain Hospital was allocated $179 by the Duke Endowment for Charity work done In 1961, according to an nouncement following a meet ing of the Endowment trustees Tuesday. HEALTH OFFICIAL W. S. McKimmon, chief san itation engineer of the North Carolina Department of Heal th, will come here May 14 for a public hearing on the city's sewage disposal system needs. City Clerk Joe Hendrick said this week. The meeting will be held at City Hall courtroom. CASHWELLS MOVING Rev. and Mrs. T. L. Cash well, Jr., will move Thursday to Le noir, where Mr. Cashwell will assume the duties of pastor of College Avenue Baptist Chur ch. Mr. Cashwill completed his pastorate of First Baptist chur ch at the Wednesday evening prayer service. TO ATTEND MEET Dr. P. G. Padgett will leave Sunday to attend the annual session of the Medical Socie ty of the State of North Car olina which will be held at Carolina Hotel, iiv Pinehurat, May 5-7. 'Announcement was made by James T. Barnes, ex ecutive secretary. 1' , ISLEY FEATURED Mayor Carlysie Isley, of Bur lington, recently elected di rector for the sixth district. North Carolina League of Mu nicipalities, was pictured on the cover of the League's April edition of its monthly publication Southern City. Mr. Isley is the husband of the for mer Miss Margaret Plonk, of Kinps Mountain. 1! Your Light BUI Looks Odd. Read This About 700 city water and po wer bills, approximately one third of the totaL will have ? strange appearance to custo mers receiving them Thursday. With two-thirds of the mon th's billing Job dene. Assistant Cit* Clerk Joe McDanlel re ports, the billing machine brake, and the remainder of the task bad to be done by hand. The "odd" bills list only the amounts lor water, lights and other Items, pins totaL without the several meter en tries customarily made by the machine . Mr. McDanlel says the meter readings will be famished en request. The machine has new been repaired and the bills eboald return to their normal look n?*t month. Mr. IfcDamiel i ? Pie-Primary Registering To Get Underway plaSHy at thC respoctlve .Polling The registrars will bo nt ?>,?i X TT 9 a' ? 4mm,1 zens not now register**! ? handle transfers fnr Th* secutive ' three cod ami 17 Q.t ^ays' on May 3, 10 fenRe day M? ?? ch.? TwjsMp^lZL Si1? u iSfrtSSfK* *szra?gr? ?*?*> b Grave, (TaM's Drag Store,. j. ^&5sE?*~k ,Mr. Hendrick saw !J ?, ^P,ete' KrUnParbli0tolyse^0,KS f ^ -ntroneRabeCaT ^ clnct will be a D&nJH * pre" will be a Rep^SS? *"* ?"e %?? z:yBz: ffsvpis? i preMm^ classes. phy"lcaI education K ^h?K Day 15 8P?n8ored by the k' an or??nlzatJon of girls r?H \!?aVe earned schot>l letters and the members of the nhv?inoi education faculty. Physical Material Delay Slows Opening Of Bus Terminal The contractor's delay in in stalling partitions In the bath rooms of the near-complete Kings Mountain Bus Terminal was giv en as the reason for delay in opening of the terminal, in a let ter received .by the city Wednes day. The letter was a carbon of mes sage sent by J..H. QuatUebaum, of Queen City Coach Company, to Edward H. McMahan, Utilities commissioner, according to City Clerk Joe Hendrick. In response to a letter from the city clerk, Mr. MaMahan, who has been handling the Kings Mountain case for the utilities commission, had written the Queen City official Information on when the terminal would open. Mr. Quattlebaum stated in the letter that the contractor had in formed him the partitions had ar rived and would be installed in the near future. He said that Queen City hoped to open the terminal "as quickly as possible, and will do so." Plonk School Plays Won Highest Ratings Plays of both the high school and college departments of the Plonk School of Creative Arts, of Asheville, won }op honors at the annual North Carolina Dramatic Festival held at Chapel Hill last weekend. Lead roles in the cast of Mar> tha L. Levering's "Reciprocity," were played by Shirley Houser and Nan Jean Gantt, Kings Mountain, students at the Ashe ville school. The college depart ment presented James M. Bar rle's "Twelve Pound Look." The Plonk school is directed by Misses Laura and Lillian Plonk, Kings Mountain natives. Mrs. W. M. Gantt and Mrs. George Houser, of Kings Moun tain, attended the festival. Snarr Heifer Sale Saturday Fifty purebred Guernsey heif ers will he sold at auction at the Cleveland County Fairgrounds, beginning at 12:30 Saturday. The auction, is a feature of Ward Snarr's eighth annual heifer sale, and the third annual sale in Cleveland County. The sale is being conducted in cooperation with the Cleveland Guernsey Breeders association and is. designed to improve the quality of Guernsey herds in the county. On Friday niglu the associa tion will hold a supper for breed ers, merchants, consignors, Grade "A" dairy operators and other "guests, also at the Fair grounds, at 6:30. Following sup per, Ralph Coarsey, manager of Eeigeidale Farms, at Trion, Ga., will deliver an address. Holland Dixon, of Kings Moun tain, is a member of the commit tee arranging the Friday night supper. J. C. Randle, also of Kings Mountain, is president of the Guernsey Breeders associa tion and will preside over the meeting. BUILDING PERMIT A building permit was is sued last week at City Hall to McCoy Service Company for construction of a service sta tion on Railroad avenue at an estimated cost of $5,000. Funeral Services For C. C. Edens Conducted Wednesday Afternoon Funeral rites for C. C. (Shorty) Edens, 53, were conducted Wed nesday afternoon at 4 o'clock at First Baptist church, with Inter ment following In Mountain Rest cemetery. Mr. Edens, for much of his a dult life a well-known Kings Mountain citizen, died Monday morning at 9:10 at Kings Moun tain' hospital after suffering a heart attack. He had been lfi for four day&, having suffered a slight attack last Wednesday. He appeared to he recovering satis factorily until early Monday morning when he suffered a se vere attack. He was admitted to the hospital about five hours be fore his death. A native of Cteonee County. S.' C., Mr. Edens was the son of the late Samuel and u.lary Stand] Edens. He liad recently retired as a merchant, .having disposed of hla interest in Economy Cash Grocery. A loyal and active member of the First Baptist church, Mr. Edens was actively Identified in the civic life of the (c ontimmed On Page Eight) HEART ATTACK FATAL ? ' Fun ?ml rltoa for C C, (Shorty) Edtu. woll- known Kings Moun tain dttson wm hold Wodnes day afternoon at First Baptist church. Mr. Edons succumbod Monday morning, following a heart attack. r?atw#i BLOOD CHAIRMAN? Rev. Vance Daniel has been appointed blood program chairman of the Kings Mountain chapter. American Red Cross. Succeeding Rev. T. L. Cashwell. Jr. Daniel Named Blood Chairman Rev. Vance Daniel, pastor of Resurrection Lutheran church, was appointed .blood program chairman Of the Kings Moun tain chapter, American Red Cross this week, succeeding Rev. T. L. Cashwell, Jr., who leaves Thursday to assume a new pas torate in Lenoir. The appointment was made by Rev. W. L. Pressly, chapter chairman, and was announced Monday nigl)t-at a special meet ing of the Red Cross directors concerning the blood program. Addresses were made by Mrs. Marion Ritzert, of Charlotte, area blood program representative, and by Miss Hope Buck, of At lanta, special field irepresenta tive, both of whom pointed out the great need for increased blood collections to 'serve both civilian and armed services de mands. Mrs. Mary B. Goforth also re ported on a recent meeting in Charlotte at which quotas for the coming year were scheduled. She said that Kings Mountain's quota for the year beginning July 1 is 667 pints of blood, and, that the community is currently 220 pints- behind on its 1951 52 quota. Mrs. J. N. Gamble, Red Cross secretary, said that there is dan ger that the Red Cross will, with draw its supplies from the Kings Mountain hospital if the blood quotas are not met. Kings Mountain's last collec tion, under Mr. Cashwell's chair manship, was it's i emocraUc primary. The reentry of Mr, Blackburn in th" constable contest returns to five the number of contest ants for the constable nomina tion. The others are Ervin Klli son, Paul Byers, Ken Stepp and H. G. Clemmons. Mr. Blackburn exhibited a let ter from C. H. Hendrix, of Shelby, chairman of the county board of elections, under date of April 25, which read: "In regard to your request to withdraw your notice of candi dacy irt the primary election as Constable of Township Number Four, we are sorry to inform you that the ballots have already been printed, and your name, of course, is on them." In his re-entry statement, Mr. Blackburn told the Iferald: "Since my name was already on the ballot and could not be removed, and at the urging of many friends and voters. I have "decided that if the people want me for consijbie for another two years. I would serve as in the past, to rhe best of ability." Kiwanis Project To Get Out Vote A Register-andvote campaign has been launched by the Kings Mountain Kiwanis club. .1. C. Bridges is chairman of the pro ject. The club's purpose is to get 100 percent registration of all eligible Kings Mountain area voters by the May 31 primary. Plans are to use advertising methods to urge eligible voters to register and then to vote, Chairman Brid ges said. The campaign, entitled "Ballet Battalion", is expected to result in the largest turn out at the polls in the history of primary elec tions in this area The Kings Mountain club Is conducting the "'Juliet Battalion" in eonjuction , i