» Population Greater Kings Mountain 10,320 City Limits 8,008 «=»» Mountain U derived from Um 1955 Kings Mountain city directory census. The dty limits figure Is irons tbs United States census oflSSO. Kings Mountain, N. CM Thursday, February I, 1962 Pages Today VOL. 73 No. 5 Established 1889 Seventy-Third Year PRICE TEN CENTS Fourth ’62 Snow Harbingers More? I Local News Bulletins LEGION MEETING Regular meeting of Otis D. Green Post 155, American Le gion, will be held Friday night ait 8 o’clock alt the post build ing. H. O. Williams, chairman of a four-man committee, will make recommendations for the 1962 Legion Baseball athletic office and other members of the management team. METER RECEIPTS Parking melter receipts for the week ending Wednesday alt noon totaled $155.70, including $112.65 from on-street meters, $31.75 from over-parking fees and $11.30 from off-street me ters, City Clerk Joe McDaniel, Jr., repotted. > » VFW FILM Showing of a film of the Southern 500 races at Darling ton will be free to the interest ed public at a VFW-sponsored ptrogTam Friday. Commander Paul Dover says the film will he shown from 7 until 9 p. m. at the VFW Post building on Grover road. KIWANIS PROGRAM Thursday night’s Kiwanis program will be devoted to a question - answer discussion of the upcoming school bond election of March 10th. The civic club meets at 6:45 p. m. at the Woman’s club. W*S&hr-^. First Baptist church WMS is inviting Brotherhood groups and Women’s Missionary So cieties from other area church es to .ioin in a program Tues day night at 7:30. Rev. Jesse Powers, pastor of Hopewell Baptist church of Blacksburg, S. C., will show slides he made during a preaching tour of Nicarauga. MISSION FILM A mission film will be shown Saturday night at 7 p. m. at Dixon Presbyterian chur ch, the pastor, Rev. James Mann, has announced. Refresh ments will be served by women of the church. SEMINAR CONTINUING Seminars on education are continuing on Tuesday even ings at 7:30 at Trinity Episco pal church, Phifer road. Mrs. Thomas Droppers, wife of the rector, is leading the classes, open to the interested public. Mrs. Droppers teaches English in Bessemer City schools. PADA TO MEET Piedmont Area Development Association is meeting in Char lotte Thursday at 6 p. m. at Charlottetown Mall, according to announcement by Clyde Stuitts of Shelby. Sixteen coun ties in North and South Caro lina will give reports. IN NEW POSITION Mrs. Eddie Simmons, the for mer Patricia Foster of Kings Mountain, has accepted the po sition of secretary to the City Council of Tipton, Ga. The Simmons now reside in Geor gia. Mrs. Simmons is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Fos ter. NO PERMITS No building permits were is sued by city officials during the past week. JAYCEE MEETING Frank Splawn, safety repre- ! sentative for Highway Patrol Fist riot 3, wil l present a safe ty f ilm to Kings Mountain Jay cees as the club meets in regu lar session Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. at Kings Mountain Woman’s ClUb. FAM.S TO SPEAK Butler Falls, Kings Moun tain surveyor, will speak to Shelby Kiwanianr Thursday at 7:00 p. m. at the Hotel Charles, j The program will be an illus- | trated lecture on his recent Eu- | ropean travels. OPTIMIST MEETING Rev. Melvin Gentry, of Gas tonia, will address the Optimist j Club at is meeting Thursday < night at 7 o'clock at Kings I Mountain Baptist church fel- ! towship hall. i Stamen Predict, But Groundhog Day Upcoming By DAVID BAITY Young Tommy Finger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Finger of 505 W. Mountain Street, predicts there will be more snow on Feb ruary 6. The prediction came af ter much study and the fourth 1962 snow. Young Finger, a grammar grade student, has observed the! white fafllouit with much interest (keeping an eye on school clos-: ing) and has concluded the snoWj is falling in nine-day cycles. His calendar is correct. Snow fell on January 1, 10, 19, and then Sunday. January 28. If thej pattern is true, folks will be| clanking out chains for their au-! tos come next Tuesday. But perhaps the groundhog will' have something to say on the1 matter. He’s seated to make his annual appearance Friday. If the nervy criltter sees his shadow, it’s back to the burrow for some more hard winter. If the weather is bad, the sky overcast, and no shadow present, that's an indication of an early spring. If the groundhog sees his sha dow and goes back to the bur row, he may not see another day, according to an alarm last week by astrologers worldwide. The star gazers are calling for dire deeds of nature and man next Monday, based on a close grouping of the five visible planets along with the sun and moon aronud 'the constellations of Copricom and Aquarius. The astrologers doubt human Sty will see next Monday and, if so, a bad one. Storms, tidal wa ves, , earthquakes, the sinking continents," finan cl alp a n ic, aW the outbreak of World War ni are predicted variously. Astronomers call the fears of the astrologers “nonsense” and note that a close grouping of the aforementioned planets fakes place about once every 100 yealrs. Meanwhile, back to Sunday’s snowstorm, roads were clear by mid-aftemoon, and Kings Moun tain police reported no automo bile accidents within the city li mits as a result of the icy condi tions. Early Sunday morning travel ers found rough sledding on Highway 29 between Gastonia and Kings Mountain. Farmer, mayor Glee A. Bridges was in-; volved in an auto accident as he! journeyed to Kings Mountain from Shriner’s meeting held in Charlotte Saturday night. Stranded with the onslaught of the snow Saturday night, he ven tured out Sunday, made it to the “Gamble Hill” where his jeep, was struck in the rear by a car! attempting to pass. Mr. Bridges said Tuesday night: the jar from the crash strained his back. “The crash felt like a bomb exploding at the back of, my car,” he said, adding the im- j pact propelled him 40 feet up Gamble hill. Vardell Neal, insurance sales man, thought his mud-tires would bring him home from Lex ington. They did, but not with out a two-plus hour tie-up in a U. S. 29 traffic jam. (Continue On Page Eight) Township GOP Committees Are Elected Kings Mountain area Republi cans elected precinct officials last week. B. F. Maner will serve as chair man of the 'West Kings Mountain precinct, Ed H. Smith Will serve as chairman of the East Kings Mountain precinct, Bill Babb will serve as chairman of the Beth ware precinct and Paul Allen will serve as chairman of the Grover precinct. Other precinct committeemen and officers are: West Kings Mountain: Mrs. Delbert Dixon, vice-chairman; Ja cob Dixon, secretary; and Dorus Littlejohn, William M. Herndon, committeemen. East Kings Mountain: Palmer Huffstetler, secretary; and Har bld Glass and Doc Burton, com mitteemen. A vie "-chairman is Still to be named. Grover: Stough Wright, vice chairman; W. W. Little, secre tary; and Mrs. James Rollins and M. H. Gamp, committeemen. Bethware: Mrs. Clyde McDan iel, vice-chairman; Frank C. Ware and William A. Wright, commit teemen. A secretary is Still to be named. Tentative date for the Repub lican Party’s Cleveland County convention is Saturday, Febru ary 10th, at 2:30 p. m. at the county courthouse in Sihelby. The Republican state convention is to be held in Durham March 3rd. Gary Decries Extremists “There is one America, one God. Both command our faith,” Kays Gary, Charlotte Observer columnist, said last Thursday in an address to the Kings Mountain Kiwanis club. Mr. Gary, a Fallston native, (had decried the nation’s extrem ists, tooth supe* patriwes* and ul» tna-liiberals as hardly patriots at all and declared the United Sta tes operations “have weaknesses and waste because humans ad minister them.” “Be we correct the abuses or stop ’em?” (he asked. He cited Russia’s quick con quest of Poland and contended that the Russians make a peace with the owners of the Skoda munitions works. He also charg ed that Cuba fell easily to Cas tro due to the government tym anny of Batista "with our and U. S. investors’ approval.” “Those who would run out the United Nations have Mr. K danc ing with glee,” he declared, add ing, “none likes waste in foreign aid, but our missies encircle the Soviet.” He failed to see, he added, how elimination of the income tax or! impeachment of Chief Justice! Bari Warren would defeat Com munism which he termed “'the; threat of our nation.” Mr. Gary spoke on a program arranged by Sherman Periy. Fish Not Hungry Bui Weather Fine Mayor Kelly Dixon, just re turned from a week’s trip in Florida, reports “weather fine, but fish not biting.” The Mayor Visited the Tam pa-Clearwater area, confined ; Ms fishing efforts to dockside. ; The weather was warm and | pleasant,” he added, “but the , fish just wouldn’t bite.” Crowded Now, High School To Need Eight More Classrooms Next Year ‘We’re badly crowded today,” says B. N. Barnes, superintendent of schools, “and will be more crowded next year.” This is the basic theme of the Superintendent as he expounds on the need of the area for a new high school plant. He cites chapter-and-verse from projections of school attendance in future years, as based on to day’s actual attendance. Wlith earliest possible use date of the proposed new high school plant the school year 1963-64, the high school can anticipate having an enrollment jump of 231 — from today’s 817 to 1048—or, in classrooms, virtually eight, for next year (1962-63) with only present facilities. 'Present enrollment figures in dicate another big jump for 1963-64 to a high school popula tion of 1183. or a need for a min imum of 12 new hi ii school *-'oms. followed bv a peak of 1243 students in 1964-65. Mr. Barnes notes the figures will undoubtedly vary, with drop outs and transfers in and out of the district, as citizens move in and out of the school area. After the 1964-65 peak potent ial, the indication is that high school population, again an basis of today's enrollment, will drop slightly for three years to a base figure of 1135, then resume its upward trend. Mr. Barnes lists these items in today’s crowding: 1) Three high school classes are in temporary buildings. 2) The band is housed in a ga rage 3) Two seventh grades are be ing bused to Park Grace school. 4) Auditoriums at both West and East schools are being used for classrooms. 51 Libraries are sharing space with cafeterias. "A new high school will not only provide the needed 'high school Classrooms but will relieve the Central plant and others for more students,” Mr. Barnes adds.; He continues, “A new high school is best and most econom ical means of handling the dis trict’s present and future space needs. The present Central plant has insufficient acreage for an adequate high school and thei building, constructed in 1933, was designed in greater port to ac commodate elementary students,) as this was the groat need at thart toe.” Bridges Elected C Of C President PRESIDENT _ Glee A. Bridges, former Mayor, has been elected president of the Chamber of Com merce for the coming year. He succeeds Charles Blanton. Ross Funeral Held Sunday Funeral ri'tes for Mrs. Blanche McGill Ross, of Charlotte, form erly of Bessemer City and a Kings Mountain native, were held Sunday afternoon alt 3 o’clock at Carson Memorial ARP church, Bessemer City. IMrs. Ross, Who had made her home in Charlotte with a daugh ter for the past ‘Seven years, died at Presbyterian hospital in Char lotte at 6:10 Friday afternoon She had been in declining health Born (March 19, 1085, Mrs. Ross was a daughter of the late John Thomas and Frances Payne Me Gill. Her husband, John Odom Ross, Sr.j died in 1951. She was jSLMifhfcfer of the iCaraon Memo rial chi Surviving are two daughters, Miss Mairy Bitten Ross, witth whom she resided in Charlotte, and Mrs. Joseph Turner, also of Charlotte. Also surviving are three sons, John O. Ross, Jr., and Norman E. Ross, both of Charlotte, and Robert M. Ross, of Bessemer City, a sister, Mrs. Earl Carpen ter, of Kings Mountain, and 'two brothers, N. F. McGill, Sr., Kings Mountain, and J. D. (McGill, Al bemarle. Six grandchildren sur vive. The final rites were conducted by Dr. J. W. Carson, a former pastor of Bessemer City, Dr. Mof etit Plaxico, Charlotte, and Dr. W. L. Pressly, Kings Mountain. Interment was in Mountain Rest cemetery. Mother's March Set Thurday The Junior Woman’s club has postponed the Mother’s March from Tuesday until Thursday (tonight). Club members will meet at 7 o’clock at the Woman’s club to conduct a two-hour can vass of the community. March of Dimes coin collectors have been placed in downtown stores and Citizens not contacted via the Mother’s March may for ward their contributions to Har ry Jaynes, Chairman, Central School. Citizens Who wish to contribute during the Mother’s March are asked to leave their porch lights burning. Crutch sale for benefit of the March of Dimes will toe conduc ted on downtown streets Satur day. High school students will serve as “salesmen.” Many In Area See Titan Wake The fiery wake of Titan I, fir ed from Cape Canaveral, Fla., Monday afternoon at 6:31 was witnessed by numerous citizens in (this area. W. T. Weir, of Weir's Coal, said two of his drivers, Tom and Grady Odom came back from deliveries reporting the fiery aer ial flame. Tom Odom had been delivering in the Hilltop area and Grady Odom in the Craftspun Varns, Inc., area. And Don W. Blanton, an East ern Airlines employee, said “I had 200 calls reporting the site." site.” It was the last test-flight for Titan I, fired successfully for the 34th time in 47 launching at tempts. The missile landed in the target area off Africa 5,000 miles distant. Titan I will be replaced by Titan II, described as the na-1 tion’s moat powerful missile. Organization Has Compiled Area Analysis Glee A. Bridges, former mayor of Kings Mountain, was elected president of the Kings Mountain Chamber of Commerce as members met for the annual session Tuesday night at Kings Mountain Country Club. Other officers elected include | Fred Wright, Jr., first vice-presi dent; B. F. Maner, second vice-! president; and L. E. Hinnant. treasurer. I Three year directors are Wil ; 'Mam Herndon and Charles Maun ey. Thomas Tate and James Amos were elected to setrve terms as two-year directors and, Robert O. Southwell and B. S. Peeler, Jr., were elected as one-year direc tors. The officer candidate 'slate, pre pared by a nominating eomlmit l lee, was accepted by acclamation of members present. Charles Blanton, retiring pres ident of the organization, outlined a year of small successes for the chamber. He noted a big achieve ment of the organization was the publishing of an industrial ana lysis of Kings Mountain for dis tribution to 'persons inquiring a bout Kings Mountain and area ■ surrounding. 1 The analysis report covers up to-date information on county manufacturing, labor supply, transportation, taxation, utiliti jes, housing, education, Churches, i and other assets of the area, i Mr. Blanton noted ‘he was pleased with the spirit of the ac tive members of the Chamber of Commerce but said it had been his experience to find a lack of enthusiasm 'and interest in the I growth of the. community by the j public. He noted the Chamber of Commerce must stimulate inter ' est in the town, not only in exee i utives of prospective industries, but in the citizens of Kings Mountain. wonting rogecner, mmang in terras of growth, and being pro gressive is the key to building j Kings (Mountain” he said. Kings 'Mountain is failing to capitalize oh the historical signi-i ficanoe of its background, he (said. "We are letting surrounding communities take the lead in I publicizing the historical value of the Revolutionary War battle for ■Which our town is named,” he noted. (Mr. Blanton urged that some thing be done to start an annual observance of the Battle of Kings Mountain, date of which was Oc tober 7, 1780. (He noted the measure had been j a big point on his ‘Want list” for his year of service, and the ob servance had failed to material- i |ize. He noted, too, that the lighting campaign of the miain business (Continue On Page Eight) j 1961 Tax Listing Officially Over Annual tax listing officially ended Wednesday. Max Hamrick, county tax su pervisor, noted that the listing officials had enjoyed 'brick traf fic all week and said an extension wasn't deemed necessary. in Kings Mountain, Conrad Hughes, township listing official, and Gleen A. Bridges, city listing official, said that Monday was the peak listing day. They were still recording prop erties for taxes Wednesday but the traffic wasn’t heavy. "We believe the large majority of property owners have listed,” Mr. Hughes commented. Mr. Hughes Will be at City Hall for a week or ten days tabulating the listings, he said. Heart Attack Fatal To Ruppe James Ruebush Ruppe, Gaff- ■ ney resident employed at Ideal Knitting Mill here, died Wednes day afternoon in a Gaffney hos pital from a heart attack suffer ed while at work. 'Mr. Ruppe is reportedly a bro ther of George Thomas Ruppe of Kings Mountain. Ray Cline, a friend of the de- i oeased’s brother, reported Runpe suffered the heart attack Wed nesday morning and was taken to Kings Mountain Hospital, la- 1 ter transferred to a Gaffney hos pital. Death came at one o’clock. Details of survivors and funer al services wore not available. <1 Mayor Hasn't Yet Decided On Senate Bid (Mayolr Kelly Dixon, back in his office Wednesday after a trip to Florida, said he hasn’t come to a decision as yet on seeking the Republican nomination for United States Senator. “I’ve been out of touch for the past week,” Mayor Dixon, the GOP Congressional standard bearer in 1960, said Wednesday. He added he might be closer to a decision following Thursday night’s Republican fund-raising dinner at Charlotte, where Rep. Charles A. Jonas, the state’s lone GOP Congressman, will make the featured address. In addition, the Republicans gathered at Hotel Charlotte will hear via closed-circuit television brief addresses by former Presi dent Dwight Eisenhower, Na tional Chairman William Miller, New York Governor Nelson Rock efeller and Richard E. Nixon now seeking the California gub ernatorial seat. Normally, the GOP nominates its candidates for state offices at the state convention, to convene in Durham this year on March Mis. Corey's Rites Conducted Mrs. Bonnie Welts Corey, 51, Kings Mountain native, died Sat urday in Washington, D. C., fol iowing a long illness. Mrs. Oorey, wife of Verne G. Corey, retired Washington at-■ torney, was a daughter of the late Aaron and Jane McCarter Well® of Kings Mountain. She was graduated from Kings Moun tain high school 'and received 'her R. N., B. S., and N. E. degrees! from Saint Elizabeth Hospital at Washington. Mrs. Corey had served for ma ny years as assistant neuropsy-l ehiatric nursing specialist at Vet- ' erans Administration Hospital ini Washington. She and Dr. Ray-' miond Hendry were co-authors of the hook, “Psychiatrics In Nur sing,’’ used for textbook mater ial student nurses in veterans hospitals. She is survived 'by her hus band; seven brothers, Whitney! Wells, Earle Wells, Hunter Wells,! Quinn Wells and Wayne Wells, all of Kings Mountain, Harley Wells of Washington, D. C., and Dailey Wells of Virginia; and one; sister, Mrs. W. B. Francis of Blacksburg, S. C. !!Funeral rites were held Wed nesday at 1 p. m. In Washington. Interment was in Arlington Na tional cemetery. Gifts For Bible Teaching $135 The Ministerial Association’s Bible-in-the-Schools committee | i,s $135 nearer meeting its ex panded budget committment for the current school year, Treasur- i er Paul Ausley reported Wednes day. The money came from an un named business firm $50, from Second Baptist church, $35, and from David’s Baptist church, $25. Currently needed to even the ■ budget for the current school year is $928, Dr. Ausley added. The budget got out of kilter on 1 two counts: 1) the general] state-.« wide teacher pay increase; and [ 2) the fact the Bible teacher up- : graded her certificate to "A”. j< “The Bible committee deeply i appreciates these contributions and yearns for additional ones,”; Dr. Ausley commented. He noted that several civic clubs have been asked for aid and added, “I hope their consid eration will be favorable.” Other committee members are Dr. W. L. Pressly and Rev. J. W. Phillips. Two More Groups For School Bonds C of C Members, GOP Precinct Groups Act Two more organIzaitions have endorsed the forthcoming bond issue election for building a high school plant. Kings Mountain Chamber oi Commerce, in annual meeting Tuesday night, unanimously en dorsed the proposal. r East and West Kings Moun tain Republican precinct organ izations, noting they had no in tention of making the bond e lection a partisan matter, endor sed he bond issue. B. F. Manor, West King; Mountain GOP chairman, ar.c sed the bond issue. Ed H. Smith, East Kings Moun tain GOP chairman, issuing tin following statement: “The East and West King; Mountain Republican Precincts are writing to inform you tha provided the amount of the bonded Indebtedness to be float ed in the coming School Bone election is sound in-terms of cos projected in relation to act.ua plant size and function that w< will support the passage of th< | bond issue. “This statement is by m means to be construed as an in j jeetion of partisan politics int< J a wholly non partisan project j As Republican citizens vitally in ! terested in the growth of the! community we are only concern 1 ed that the monies will be spen ■ in such a way -as Ifco providi j maximum facilities for the ohil dren at a sound minimum cost In other words we oppose “frills' which tend to be both expensive I and unnecessary. A case in poi-n j is the extreme amount of addec ' cost in the Garinger School ir Charlotte, N. C. “Our prime concern is that i reasonable -bonded indebtedness be effected and that our Schoo Board be assisted in every possi ble way to do an increasingly ef fective job in leading the com munity.” Bounds Listed For Bond Vote Polling places for the March 10 school bond election for once outof-district citizen's will be same as for the consolidation e lection of May 14, 1960, while in city pre-cinc* bounds conform to the City of Kings Mountain pre cinct bounds. An addendum to the official bond election notice first publish ed last week specifies bounds for the eight designated polling pla ces. A new registration is required by state statute with the registra tion books opening for the first of three consecutive Saturdays on. February 10 at each of the eight voting precincts. It was also announced that Mrs. W. W. McCarter, of Grover, Will serve as registrar at the Grover precinct. She replaces Mrs. J. B. Ellis, Who found the February 17 Grover water bond election, for which Mrs. Ellis is registrar, in. conflict. MOOSE DINNER Chicken dinner will be serv ed free to members of Kings Mountain Moose Lodge and their wives Sunday from 5 to 8 p. m., according to announce ment by Charles (Whitey) Bowen, chairman of the com mittee in charge. High School Student Campaigning At Full Peak; Election Friday School “politicking” is in full swing at Kings Mountain high school. Campaign speeches will begin >n Thursday during a student as sembly and Election Day is Fri day when students will select a president, vice-president, and sec retary of the Student Participa tion Organization. The student “politicking" inclu 3es all the “fun” of regular cam paigning as each candidate picks i manager and other workers to lid him in his hid for office via distribution of campaign cards, placards and persuading favora ble votes from other students. Student campaign managers were buying colorful cardboard this week for poster material for .’otc-seeking. Some workers wear rolorful hats, others have cam paign buttons bearing the inscrip tion, “Vote for....’’ The candidate list: For president: Paul Smith, Ro bert Plonk and Charles Goodson. Fir vice-president: Russell Gar mon, Donnie Freeman and War ren Goforth. For secretary: Coral Ramseur, Dianne Roberts and Neal McCar ter. Balloting for candidates ended a week ago. Bach homeroom had previously elected one candidate for each offioe. Number of votes cast by each chairman of each homeroom representatives was determinined by the number of Students in the home room. The three students who received the most votes became the candidate for the three offices. '"■s Current officers of the student body are Bill Ramseur, president; Paid Smith, vice-president; and 1 Dianne McDaniel, secretory. PROMOTED _ Jack Ruth has been promoted to the vice-presi dency oi the North Carolina Bank oi Charlotte. He joined the than as assistant vice-president in 1953. Jack Ruth .', f t wins Promotion Hilton L. (Jack) Ruth, Jr., so*n ! of Mu-, and Mrs. Hiiilton Rutjv'of Kings Mountain, has been pro '! molted from assistant vicepspeej ' dent to vice-president of ■ Carolina National Bank of Chtu? 1 (lotte. ■ • • The former Kings Mpuntaih ► citizen joined the Charlotte1 ixink . ing firm in 1953 after his gradu ation from Davidson College • where he played football for ftnir years and was president of the student body his senior year. - He is also a graduate' of Kings ■ Mountain high school. Mrs. Ruth . Is the former Beiity Kate Jones of ’ Greenwood, S. C. They are pm * ents of three children, Libby, sb; Hilton, III, four; and David Ruth, age three. In Charlotte the Ruths are members of Covenant Pirosfoyter ian chirr h. where Mr. Ruih is as sistant Sunday School superin tendent and a (bacon. Tax Payments Reported Brisk The city tax office has, had a busy week as taxpayers have been paying 1&61 tax bills In ad vance of the penalty cate. Thursday is the final day for paying 1961 (tax Mils at par, wlith a penalty of one per cent apply ing on Friday. I Additional one percent penalty I apples March 2. Joe (McDaniel, Jr., acting tux collector, said collections through Tuesday totaled $99,658, or G0.2S percent of the $165,315 levy, which includes poll taxes. Mr. McDaniel added that col lections Wednesday morning had been heavy, guessing payments totaled $7,000 to $8,000. He anticipates heavy collections Thursday, based on prior year's experience. Grom Bond Books To Close j Saturday is the final day fV>r Grover citizens to register to vote in the February 17 $148,000 wri ter bond election, Town Clerk W. W. 'McCarter reminded Wednes day. 'No new registration is requir ed. However, many new citizens of Grover are registering at the two polling places — Grover Fire Station and City Hall. “We think there’s a Jot of inter est in this election and we hope it goes the right way”, Mr. Mc Carter added. By “the right way” Mr. McCar ter means the favoring by citi zens of issuance of $148,000 in wa ter bonds to supply a new water system for Grover, a project star ted over a year ago when Hue prints and plans were drawn up by the town board. February 10th is Challenge Day. Grover citizens will vote on the proposal at the polls from 6:30 a. m. until 6:30 p. m. Satur day, February 17th. 794 CITY TAGS SOLD A total of 794 Kings Moun tain auto owners have piBrelr ased 1962 city auto tags, Mrs. Furman Wilson, city office Clerk, said Wednesday. Dead* /line fee purchasing and dis playing /the fags is Febfuarjj 15.