Population Greater Kings Mountain 10,320 City Limits 8,008 mu flguro for Orocrtor Dog* Mountain U darfnd from Ibo 19S5 King* Mountain city dlrsctorf csn*us. Tb» city limits flguro Is from tho United Stats* esnsus ol I960. VOL 73 No. 2 Established 1839 Kings Mountain, N. C., Thursday, January 11, 1962 Seventy-Third Year PRICE TEN CENTS S & L Firm Buys Baker-Plonk Lot Local News Bulletins i I— —1 COURT OF HONOR Kings Mountain Court of Ho nor'if olr. district Boy Scouts will be held at Central Methodist church Thursday, January 11th at 7:45 p. m. P-TA MEETS Bast School Parent-Teacher Association will hold regular meeting Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 p. m. in the school audi torium ARP SERVICE Attendance pins will be a warded too members of -Boyce Memorial ARP church having perfect attendance in church school and officers and teach elrs of the church school will be installed at vesper services Sunday at 5 p. m. at West school. KIWANIS CLUB Rev. Mit-chell Faulkner, pas tor of Shelby’s Central Metho dist church, will present a hu morous program at Thursday’s Kiwar.is club meeting- The civ ic dub convenes at 6:45 at the Woman's club. NO PERMITS Ho building permits were is sued by city officials during the past week. Leo Beattie's Rites Conducted Funeral riltes for Leo L. Beafttie, 33, were held Wednesday at 11 a. m. from Harris Funeral Home Chapel, interment following ' in Patterson Grove cemetery. Mr. Beattie died Monday after noon In the local hospital after an illness of several years. A na tive of Gaston County, he was married to the former Mae Pat terson who died in 1919. He was a member of Boyce Memorial ARP church. He is survived by his daugh ter, Miss Lois Beattie, of the home; and two sisters, Mrs. Wright Harmon and Mrs.William Ware, both of Rings Mountain. Dr. W. L. Pressly, paster of the ARP church, and Dr. W. P. Ger berding, pastor of St. Matthew’s Lutheran church, officiated at the final rites. Kimbrell Going To Lambert on iA. D. KSnubnell, North Carolina Highway patrolman here for the past five years, is being transfer red to District IV, Troop ‘IB”, in Lumberton effective February 1. (Kings Mountain has been Pa trolman KimbreM's first station and, coincidentally, he will com plete five years here on Febru ary , Patrolman Kimbrell said this week he particularly regrets to leave Kings Mountain, where he has found Kings Mountain area citizens most friendly and coop erative. However, he noted, his new station at Lumberton will be much closer to his parents, who live in Moore county. The Kimbrells live on Monroe avewnue. Mrs. Kimbrell is the former Donna Brown, of San Antonio, Texas. The Kimbrells have three children, Ricky, 10, Make, 5, and Ginny Kimbrell, 2. Queen Improving Following Fall FUoyd Queen, injured in a fall at Lithium Corporation last •week, is listed in serious condi tion at Charlotte Memorial] Hos pital, but at a Wednesday mor ning reporting was progressing satisfactorily. Mr. Queen, a senior mechanic when at the firm was hanging pipe when (the accident occurred. He fell from a Ladder onto a con crete floor within the plant. ; • Charles Ballard, Lithium Corp. ' spokesman, said his re Dealt from attending physicians Wednesday morning tinted Mr. Queen as im-> proving satisfactorily. Mr. Ballard could make no eosnmenlt on i.ie extent of Injur- j lea sustained in the fell. Mr. Quee ., hts wifi?, and small laughter Betsy reside on Shelby : tmA. Kings Mountain S & L Anticipates New Building j Kings (Mountain Savings & Loan association has purchased i the vacant lot at the Corner of W. Mountain and Cherokee street from Dr. L. P. Baker and the J. O. Plonk Estate. (Ben H. Bridges, secretary treasurer of the association, an nounced completion of the trans action Wednesday. Purchase price for the lot fronting 55 feet on Mountain and 100 feet on Cherokee was $20, 000. Mr. Bridges said the lot was purchased in anticipation of e rection of a new (building. The new purchase adjoins the 45 x 100-foot West Mountain lot the association purchased from L. Arnold Kiser for $10,000 in 1958 and now provides a 100 x 100 lot Which the association re gards as adequate for erection of a new huddling. Building plans are not ‘‘imme diate”, Mr. Bridges said. Meantime, the lot will be gra ded and stoned for customer and other parking. Kings Mountain Savings & Loan association owns the build ing it now occupies a cross-street, a building remodeled extensively in 1954. The association, founded in 1907, has enjoyed steady growth in recent years and boasted as sets at December 31, of $3,500, 000, Wix Official Rotary Speaker Norman Hull-Ryde, sales pro nHjltion manager of the Wix Cor pfeation, Gastonia, will be fea tured speaker as Kings Mountain! Rotarians meet in regular ses-: slion Thursday at 12:15 p. m. at Kings Mountain Country Club. ©am in New York City, N. Y., Mr. Hull-Ryde attended the Kent School, Kent Ocnneotdcut. He! took a degree in journalism at' the University of North Carolina in 1952. Following college he ser ved a two year tour of duty with the United States Navy attaining a rank of lieutenant junior grade. (He is married and the father, of three Children. Mr. Hull-Ryde’s address will be a brief history of Wix Corpora-! tion’s role in present day indus try and an explanation of fil ters, the company's main product, and their varied uses. The dis course will be followed by a question-and-answer session. The program was arranged by Tom Trott and Wilson Griffin. City Tag Sales Now Total 376 A .total of 316 Kings Moun tain autos axe wearing new city tags for 1962. Sales (through Wednesday to taled that number, it was re ported by Mrs. Furman Wilson, at the city hall office. .The tags sell far a dollar, law requites that the tags be bought and displayed on autos of In-city oar owners not later than February 15. Penalties are provided for those buying tags laite or who fail to buy them. FROSTY AND FRIENDS — Frosty, the Snowman, flanked on the left by Pat Durham, age 2, and on the right by Julie Durham, age 4, make a pleasant threesome, typical of the kiddies' delight with the heavy snowfall which blanketed Kings Mountain January 1. The girls, daughters of Dr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Durham, were de lighted again Tuesday night when King Winter etched the Kings Mountain landscape in white. School Bond Vote Details To Be Set Education Board To Meet Friday, Says Chaiiman By DAVID BAITY (Board of education members will convene Friday to designate a recommended date for the for thcoming school district bond e leCtion, Chairman Fred Phmk said Wednesday, after- conferring with J. R. ©avis, schools attor ney, and Superintendent 'B. N. Barnes. The election, expected to 'be on or before March 10, is sulbject to call by the 'board of county com missioners. (Max Hamrick, county auditor, said last week the county board adjourned its mid-month Decem ber meeting to convene at :30 a. m., January 15, in anticipation of calling the Kings Mountain district $1,100,000 (bond vote, thereby meeting a legal techni cality on bond election calls. (Attorney Davis, commenting on the setup for poling places, no ted he would recommend to the school hoard that the election follow the same plan used in last spring’s school trustee election. He will suggest the poling places he opened at the five in-city wards, and in the outlying area at Grover fire station, and at Be thware and Park Grace schools. Hie suggests the possibilty that former election officials at the poling places 'be appointed. A new registration will be re quired, the school district bound aries not coinciding with the boundaries of the regular county voting precincts. (Funds from the proposed bond election, if approved, will be used for the construction of a consolidated high school to ser/e the area. Architects Associates, Shelby architectural firm, has already been retained to design the pro posed structure. Kiwanis dob. Chartered In 1940, Contributor To Welfare Of City By MARTIN HARMON The* Kings Mountain Kiwaniu Ohib, chartered April 12,1940, has published this week a history ol its 21-plus years of service ant activity in Kings Mountain b> Edward H. Smith. Published in booklet form, th< history capsules salient details ol organization, civic and service projects: Outgrowth of the strictly io cal Business Men's Club, itsell successor to Kings Mountain Cl vitair clUb, the Kings Mountain Kiwands club came into being at a. charter night banquet in Shel by, with Ladd W. Hamrick, now rf Boiling Springs, as first pres dent. Other officers included W. E. Blakely, vloepresidient, and L. 3. Hord, now of Hickory, secre tary treasurer. Directors were J. Ft. Davie, W. K. Mauney, I* Ar nold Kiser, J. L. McGffll, P. M. Meteler, Harry E. Page, B, S: Peeler. Sr., and Joe Lee Wool vat^. * .' The history gives particular at jention to Kiwanis dUb projects, from the initial activities report (battleground highway sign, Boy Scout aid, contribution to teach ng Bible In the achoote), to ttwe | major ones: I 1) The Kiwards scholarship loan fund, fathered toy C. E. Nessler, Jr., in 1947, and since j having aided 24 students to at tend college. | 2) Purchase of wheelchairs for' ! the use of those who need them, with 16 in use today. 3) Organization of the Key Club, organized in 1949. | 4) The under-privileged child ren’s fund, which since 1957, has provided more than 15,000 free lunches to need r children. 5) Purchase ol the initial fight ing system for City Stadium in 1945 at a cost of $4500. 6) Expenditure of $2,300 (1955) to provide tennis courts ait the Deal street recreation area. 7) PumutBe In 1947 of an au diometer for the county health department for use in testing hearing of school pupils. 6) Presentation of a $900 air pressure lock nesustdtator to | Kings (Mountain hospital in 1951,1 ! making It possible for many pre mature babies to live. 99) Presentation annually of a good citizenship medal to high j Rcnooi wuoenni ana owraying r** i (Continued On Page Eight} TOWER SCHOLAR —Rev. James S. Mann, Kings Mountain minis ter, is one of 84 ministers select ed to participate in the Tower Room Scholars program this week and next at Union Sem inary. Dixon Pastor Towei Scholar RIICHIMQND, Va. — The Rev. James S. Mann, pastor of the Northside Presbyterian Church, Rt. 1, Gastonia, and the Dixon Presbyterian Church, Rt. 2, Kings Mountain, is one of the 84 Pres I byterian ministers chosen for | participation in the Tower Room Scholars Program at Union The ological Seminary in Richmond, Va., this year. The Rev. Mr. Mann, together with five other pastors on Mon day began two weeks in residence at the Seminary - engaged in an intensive study program designed to bring them up to date on re cent developments in various theological fields. 'A graduate of Davidson Col lege, the Rev. Mr. Mann is a na tive of Wilmington, N. C., and received the Bachelor of Divinity degree from Union Seminary. He came to his present pastorates in 1960, and he and Mrs. Mann and their three children reside at 1518 West Davidson Avenue, Gastonia. The Tower Room plan, made possible by a foundation grant, was begun in the realization that pastors need not only to study at home but also to have occasional opportunity for extended research and expert -guidance on a semi-! nary campus. The Tower Room program gets; the pastors away from the. dis-! tractions that make systematic study difficult to achieve. Each of the group of six or seven en gages in his own intensive study on a research project in a “Tower Room" of the Saninary library. And each day they meet with a' faculty member to discuss re cent developments in theology—, particularly as those changes af fect the pastor and his effective ministry. The groups are in residence at! the Seminary from Monday night until the Friday night 12 day® la- j ter — housed In a Seminary dor-i mttory and provided; meals tat) the Seminary dining hall. They miss only one Sunday of pulpit -...... . pwponsHMiRy. -Now in Its fifth year, the To (Continued On Pag* Bight) Township GOP Will Meet Here January 18 To Name Officials Mercury To Drop To Low Regions In Snow's Wake Smart Kings Mountain folk (or those with faith in the weather wizards) again laced chains to their automobile tires Tuesday ■night In anticipation of a predic ted three to six inches of snow. 1 The. fallout failed to reach the six inch level, dumping only a-! bout two to three inches of the! White stuff on, the Kings Moun- i 'tain area. A United Pres? weather report; received via the WKMT wire late Wednesday afternoon called for a ibone-chiliing cold wave to sweep the Carolinas Wednesday I night with low temperatures pre-j dieted at the zero to five degrees below zero levels. Prediction for Thursday was continued very cold with a high between 15 and 20 degrees. .Prognosticators call for no more snow. The chilling blast of winter sculpted the area landscape with white, delighting school students With another “free day" but hor rifying persons who must jour ney to work via highway. ■However, Kings Mountain Po lice Department reported only, one automobile accident within the city limits, that involving on-; ly minor damages. The accident occurred at 12:30 p. m. on Deal street and involved cars driven by David Michael Hardin, 504 W. Gold street and Eddie Ross, Woodside Drive. The Hardin vehicle was parked on Deal street and Ross backed into it. Damage to the Hardin car was estimated at $30 while damage to. the Ross vehicle was logged at $45. The snow failed to lay deeply | on Kings Mountain streets, melt ing 'as it fell. However, a drop In temperature coated roads with a jldm of ice,' making driving eon- j rntions perilous early Wednesday j morning. v Street department employees i “dug in” with snow shovels and had sidewalk areas of the busi 1 ness district virtually cleared by, noon. Dixon To Address State Convention Mayor Kelly Dixon has been: requested to deliver a “Christian; message” at the North Carolina Republican state convention in! Durham on March 3, by State Chairman William Cobb, of Mor- j ganton. Chairman Cobb, in his January news letter to party members, stated that others expected to, address the convention include William E. Milller, national, chairman, Wirt Yerger, southern: states chairman, I. Lee Potlter,, national committeeman, Robert! L. Gavin, of Sanford, GOP candi-, date for governor in 1960, and U nited States Representative Char les Raper Jonas, of Lincolnton. The Republicans customarily nominate candidates for state wide office at the State conven tion, eschewing the option of holding party primaries. City Receives Survey Details City officials have received; from their electrical engineers detailed report and recommen dations on improving the city’s electrical distribution system. ITie engineers repeat their rec ommendations as outlined in the prior preliminary report, recom mending Installation of switch gear equipment at the Duke Po wer delivery point on N. Gaston street, up grading of the voltage ! to 4100 (now 2300), addition of ' an eighth circuit, replacement of j transformers and other required equipment. Estimated cost, which the engineers, South eastern Consulting Engineers, Inc., of Charlotte, is $132,800, based on recent electrical con struction prices in the area. Of the city’s present seven circuits, the engineers report I Circuit 2 (serving N. Piedmont | avenue and lateral areas) most g near the overload point, with I _ Circuit 4 (serving the West King ' street area) next closest to ap-;1 preaching the over-load point. i Third nearest over loading is ’ Circuit 5 (serving the upt^ -vn 1 business area.) i * The engineers reiterate the fact j1 (Continued On Page Bight) If Jaycees To Make 1962 DSA Award Boyd To Speak At Boss Night laycee Event Kings Mountain’s Young Mar of the Year will be named Tues day night as Kings Mountain Jaycees entertain employers and special guests at the anual Boss es’ Night Banquet. Featured speaker for the pro gram willl be Ty Boyd, WBT Ra dio personality. The 1961 presentation will mairk the eighth annual Distin guished Service Award presenta tion to the Young Man of the year. Award Chairman Charles: Blanton said Wednesday he had received eight nominations. The reporting was prior to the 6:00' p. m. deadline for nominations. Mr. Blanton said the winner would be selected from nomina tions by a panel of judges Wed nesday night. Nominations were asked from the general public. To be eligible for the aiward a nominee tpust be between the ages of 21 and 36, of good moral character, have made outstanding contwbTSOons to the welfare of the community through civic, cultural and religi ous activity, and show evidence of progress in his chosen field of endeavor. Former winners of the award include B. S. Peeler, Jr., Grady K. Howard, Coach "Shu” Carlton, Bob Maner, Charles Dixon, Sam Stallings, and Charles Blanton. Special guests for the banquet, in addition to employers of Jay cees, willl be former winners of the award, the mayor of Kings Mountain, and the board of city commissioners. Guest Speaker Boyd, hailed as a "buffon, wit and funny man, and the liveliest character in Eastern Carolina,” was formerly with WCHL Radio in Chapel Hill and Durham’s WTVD. He replaced Grady Cole in the early morning Radio spot on WBT Radio early in June of last year. He has emceed the Miss North Carolina Pageant on television and has done regional television sports specials. He holds a degree from the University of North Carolina and served in the U. S. Navy. He is married to the former Balt Cowden, a Maid of Cotton, and is the father of two children. GO-GETTER DINNER Members of the 1962 Otis D. Green Post, American Legion ! Go-getter club will go to Char- ' latte Saturday for a steak din ner. They will leave the post building at 6:30 p. m., Adju- , tant Joe McDaniel said. JAYCEE SPEAKER — Ty Boyd WBT Radio personality, will ad dress Kings Mountain Joycee; and guests at annual Bosses Night festivities Tuesday. Chambeis Youth Drowns In Pond A nine-year-old Kings Mountain Negro boy drowned about 5:30 p. m. Friday when he fell throu gh a thin sheet of iee on a pond at the Kings Mountain Country Club golf course. Efforts to revive Adolphus Chambers, Jr., by artificial respi ration administered toy Sylvester iBell, Negro employee of the club, were to no avail. Police Chief Martin Ware said Chambers and four other boys were hunting golf balls arourJ the No. 5 hole on the golf course Friday afternoon when the acci dent occurred. With Chambers were James Adams, 12, Arthur Lee Hood, 9, Jesse Ray Adams, 10, and Burben Lee Burris, 12. The Negro youths told Ware that Chambers ventured out onto the See covering the pond, which had frozen to a depth of about an inch-anda-half which gave way under the youth’s weight. Hood and Burris ran for help, their shouts attracting Ronald Spcidel, who dragged Chambers’ body from the water. (Members of the Cleveland County Rescue Squad were also called to the scene to aid. Chambers, ion of (Mr. and (Mrs. Adolphus Chambers, 312 W. Rid ge street, was a fifth grader at Davidson school. He is survived by his parents, three sisters and two brothers. Funeral rites were held Tues day afternoon from Mount Zion Baptist church. Gill and Brown Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. Baptist Association Sponsoring Choral Workshop Starting Monday j TO LEAD WORKSHOP—Harvey Woodruff of Charlotte College will conduct i three-day choral worshop la tbelby beginning Monday evening a First Baptist church. The program is under sponsorship of the Kings Moun tain Baptist Association. Harvey Woodrun at cna/riotte Ooilege will conduct a Choral Workshop Monday, Tuesday, and next Thursday in Webb Chapel of F’ilrsrt Baptist ohuirch of Shelby.1 Sponsored by the Music De partment of the Kings Mountain Baptist Association the workshop is open to all those interested in church music from Baptist chur ches in the area and other de nominations. Mir. Woodruff is well-known, having served in several differ ent positions in this sitaite. He was minister of music at Myers Park Baptist chturch for five1 years, then at "Wingate College | for two yeans, and one year as visiting professor at Woman’s College, Greensboro. He is in hkk sixth y«ar as cho ral director and, voieevteachor at Charlotte CoMege sive experience 9a a workshop director, having conducted such meetings in umtVbers of dfcurcii es over the two Carolina* and Florida. (Continued On Page Eight,' The evening periods will b^gin Precinct Officers Will Be Elected; Cassidy To Speak 'Number 4 Township Republi cans Will elect precinct' officials January 18, at ipieeting at CSty HaJJ, courtroom aV 8 o'clock, it was announced &y W. A. Wil liams, veteran Kings Mountain Republican. iMr. Williams, said that Pierce Cassidy, of Shelby, runty GOP chairman, will speak alt the meet ing, and he dsnviteii all memtx> -a of the party and others suppo., iang GOP policies to attend. The January 18 meeting meets the state Republican organiza tional timetable, calling for bi ennial precinct meetings In Jan uary, county conventions during the first half of February, dis fcriiOttriet conventions during the final half of February, and Che state convention in (March. Date for the state convention this year is (March 3. lit will be held in Dur ham. The GOP operational format calls for election for a minimum o>f three precinct committee mem bers, including a Chairman, vice chairman and secretary, one of Whom shall be a woman. ■Present GOP precinct commit tees, as Msted In August 1960, in clude: ! i West Kings Mountain — D. G. Littlejohn, chairman, W. W. Par rish, and Russell Smith. Grover Brady Lail, rtwur man, T. Stough Wright J 7.. wnraey : t IBetihwaie -—. Frank C. Wm ■, dhatrman, H. B. jHemdon, arui William Wright. Bast Kings Mountain — fl. H. (Doc) Burton and W. T. Wteir. Crocked Heals Montonia CMj 'Bob Crockett, of Gastonia, was elected president 'of (Lake Mon tonia Clilb, Inc., alt the ojunual meeting of stockholders held at Oity Hall courtroom Tuesday night. He succeeds Oarl F. Mtouney, of Kings Mountain, completing two years in the presidency. Other officers elected were: George H. Mauney, Kings Moun tain, vice-president, to succeed Walter Carroll, Gastonia; Ben H. Bridges, Kings Mountain, sec retary - treasurer, to succeed James Wilson, Jr., Gastonia; and Roy Bullard, Jr., Bessemer City, assistant secretary - treasurer, to succeed George Houser, Kiiigs (Mountain. Elected directors for ttxreayear terms were Robert SUber, Jr.. Kings Mountain, and F. A. Young, Sr., Gastonia, succeeding L. Arnold Kiser, Kings Mountain, and R. Lee Spencer, Gastonia. Tom Trott, Kings Mountain, was elected a director to fill the one year unexpired term of George H. Mauney. Other holdover directors are: terms expiring 1964, J. Pat Tlg nor, Kings Mountain, and How ard Whisenant, Gastonia; and term expiring 1963, Charles Peer son, Gastonia. In his annual report, distribu ted to members last week, retir ing President Mauney reviewed the year: 1) construction of a new pier adjacent to the picnic ground; 2) construction of two new residences by members; 3) transfer of ten lots and member ships; 4) purchase of picnic ta bles and additional lighting; 5> payment of a $750 balance on a paving contract. The treasurer's rcDort Showed gross income of $5,035, expendi tures of $4,702, and end-of year cash balance of $738. Mojor income was derived from dues, including eight pay ments for prior years, 140 regu lar memberships, 30 child’s and seven associate memberships. Griqq Is Growing Oriental Radishes Toy Grigg, truck farmer of route one, is growing oriental radishes, Mr. Grigg, who works In Gastonia at the HomeWp chnln saw plant; showed a radish «s week thaft weighs 11 ominrte. 12 ounces and boasts there's more in the- ground that be planted last summer. In spite of the size. Mr. Grigg says oriental radishes are both sweet and tasty.