Populati Greater Kings Mountain City Limits IMa Bgim foe Ondn «m 19S5 Dan Mwatala ■nits >gan to Iron UM Vol. 74 No. 10 mountain's Reliable Newspaper Established 1889 Kings Mountain, N. C., Thursday, March 7, 1963 Seventy-Fourth Year PRICE TEN CEN1' Pages Today KIWANIS SPEAKER — Hanley Painter, coach of North Carolina's most successful college football team, will be guest speaker at the Kiwanis Club meeting Thursday night at 6:45 p.m. Painter is head football coach and Athletic Director at Lenoir Rhyne College. Kiwanis To Hear Hanley Painter I) Local New* IN FRATERNITY William Lee Ramseur, Jr., son of Mrs. W. L. Jrtamseur, was re cently initiated into Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity at Beta Chap ter at North Carolina State col lege. At N. C. State he is a fresh man in the School of Design, Ar chitectural Curriculum. TEEN-AGE DANCE Kings Mountain Recreation De partment will sponsor a dance for the teen-agers of the city Sat urday night. Starting time at the Armory is 7 p.m. ) LODGE MEETING A regular communication of Fairview Lodge 339 AF & AM Will be held Monday night at 7:30 at Masonic Hall, Tom Tindall has announced. 4-H CLUB TO MEET ' The Dixon Community 4-H club will hold regular meeting Tues day night at 7 o’clock at Dixon Presbyterian church. The meeting was postponed from Tuesday. JACKSON IMPROVED T. W. Jackson, well - known1 Kings Mountain citizen, was re ported improving Wednesday aft er being hospitalized Saturday for complications following in fluenza. ATTENDS MEETING Superintendent B. N. Barnes was in Raleigh Tuesday and Wednesday to attend an NCEA meeting. The meeting was call ed by Dr. A. C. Dawson, Executive Secretary of the NCEA, and poli cy eommitte members of the Di vision of Superintendents were asked to attend. Barnes is the Southwest District member. 4-H SUNDAY The newly . organized Oak Grove community 4-H club ob served national 4-H Club Week in Sunday sendees. Members of the club sang an anthem at the morning service and four of the boys were ushers. ) TO RALEIGH Mrs. Wanza Davis, secretary to Supt B. N: Barnes, will leave Thursday for Raleigh to attend a two-day meeting of the Depart ment qf Educational Secretaries of the NCEA. Mrs. Davie is a past president of the organization. COUNTY-WIDE MEET Cleveland County 4-fi’ers willj hold a county-wide recreational | meeting Friday night beginning at 7:30 p.m. In the Shelby Armo ry. Kings Mountain area commu nity clubs win be represented, i Lenoii-Rhyne Menton Here Tharsda; Night By HAFOLD PEARSON Hanley Painter, winner of two Coach of the Year awards in 1962, will be guest speaker at the Kings Mountain Kiwanis Club meeting Thursday night at 6:45 at the Woman’ Club. Painter is head football coach at Lenoir Rhyne College and in ’62, his first year at. the helm, was chosen Coach.of the Year for the NAIA’s District 26 as well as the American Football Coaches Association District 3. Succeeding his former college coach, Clarence Stasavich, as head coach and Athletic Director j at LR in January of 1962, Painter directed the Bears to 11 staright victories before bowing to Central Oklahoma State in the Camellia Bowl in Sacramento, California, December 8, 1962. They finished third in NAIA rating and fifth in the Associat ed Press small college rating. Born in Alabama, Painter re ceived his early formal .education in Bryson City, NUC. After gradu ation from Swain High School, he served with the Marines in the Pacific. He participated in the in vasions of Saipan, Tinian and Iwo Jima. Following his service discharge, he enrolled in Lenoir Rhyhe Col lege in 1946 and graduated in 1950. During his senior year, he was selected on the All-Confer ence team and served as the Bear’s captain in addition to be ing president of the senior class. After fdur years of successful coaching at Taylorsville, he re turned to his alma mater as end coach in 1954. LR posted a 2-7-1 •record that fall. At the conclusion of that year he was elevated to top assistant, coaching the line and in charge of defense, ixnae that time the Bears have won eight consecutive championships and established themselves as one of the tap small college teams in the coun try. During the £ast four years they have played, for the national small college championship three times, winning the 1960 Holiday Bowl. MuyorAnd McKee Due Back Thursday Mayor Kelly Dixon and Fire man T. C (RedI McKee are ex pected to return With a new gar bage truck from- Oshkosh. Wis consin, sometime Thursday. They flew to toe mid-west Monday to claim the new truck purchased by the city several months ago. \ Southwell Motor Company war successful bidder on the truck and A. E. Finley Company, of Charlotte, on the body of the garbage truck. Craftspun Yarns Building Finishing Plant, Warehouse Bleachery Spells New Operation Here City building permits were pur chased last week lor construc tion of a $75,000 bleachery -and $25,000 storage building for Craftspun Yams, Inc. 'Purchaser was Roy Barnes, Gastonia contractor, also the builder of Craftspun’s 32,000 square foot knitting plant, which went into operation last year. Construction work is already underway. Craftspun is a wholly-owned subsidiary of B. V. D. Corpora tion, major manufacturer of men's underwear, as well as oth er textile products. Company officials have not announced likely completion date of the new addition to their Lin wood Road plant, nor the em ployment potential. However the construction of the bleachery has been contemplated for several months, the project having been noted in the 1962 annual state ment of B. V. D. Corporation by Sol Kittay, president. B. V. D. Corporation purchased Craftspun Yarns, Inc., wia federal court sale, after Oraftspun’s par ent company, Scranton Lace Cor poration, went into bankruptcy. The building was completely mo dernized and. new. yarn-making equipment installed. Craftspun subsequently pur chased the properties of the Parkdale Mills, of Gastonia, more familiarly known here as the Old Phenix or Loom-Tex mill. Tom Blalock's Rites Conducted Funeral rites for Thomas Dick son Blalock, 90, retired farmer of route two, were held Saturday at 3 p.m. from Bethlehem Bap tist church, of which he was a member. Mr. Blalock died Thursday night in the Gaston Memorial hospital following an illness of two weeks. A native of Cleveland County, he was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Blalock. Surviving are his niece and nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Yar bro, with whom he made his home; one brother, L. G. Blalock of Kings Mountain and a num ber of other nieces and nephews. The final rites were conducted by Rev. D. F. Callahan, assisted by Rev. W. G. Camp. Interment was made in the church ceme tery. Active pallbearers were Clyde McDaniel, Wyatt and Charles Blalock, Walter Dickson, and James and Ed Yarboro. PRESIDENT — Robert (Bob) Southwell has been elected presi dent of the Kings Mountain Mer chants Association for the com ing year. Merchants Elect Bob Southwell Robert (Bob) Southwell, owner and manager of Southwell Ford company, has been elected pres ident of the Kings Muontain Merchants Association for the coming year. ■ -Me*~-Southwell will Succeed Glee Edwin Bridges. The new officers will be in stalled at the annual employer employee banquet March 22nd at .7 p. m. at the Woman’s club. Balloting among retailers was completed this week and officers and directors were elected in a close race, Mia. Ida Joy, Mer chants Association secretary, re ported. . Lewis Dellinger,' manager of Dellinger’s Jewel Shop, will serve as vice-president of the associ ation. New members of the board of directors will include Bill Brown, Belk’s Department Store; Bob Mincey, Harris-Teeter Super Markets; Menzell Phifer, Phifer Hardware company; and Humes Houston, Kings Mounatin Drug company. Bloodmobile Here For Monday Visit The Red Cross Bloodmobile will return to Kings Mountain for a one-day visit Monday, March 11th. Donors will be processed at Kings Mountain Baptist church from 11 a. m. until 5 p. m. and goal of the collection is 125 pints of blood. ,Mtrs. John A. Cheshire, co chairman of the Red Cross blood program, made the ann ouncement. Funeral Rites Conducted Tuesday For Mrs. Virginia R. Miller, 99 Mis. Victoria Virginia Miller, widow of Oarenee P. Miller, died Sunday afternoon at the age of 99. Mrs. Miller would have cele brated her 100th birthday Octo ber 23. Funeral rites were held Tues day ait 4:30 p.m. from First Pres byterian .church- Dr. Paul K. Aus ley, assisted by Dr. W. P. Gerber ding, officiated and interment was made in Mountain Best ce metery. In lieu of flowers, mem orials may be designated to the building fund of Chester, Va. First Presbyterian Church, of which Mrs. Miller was a member. Mrs. Miller who had been en joying apparently good health, died at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. J. A. NeiSler, Sr. She had been ill since Saturday. A native of Gaston Gounty, she was the daughter of the late Mn, and Mrs. Emmanuel Bndi m Besides Mrs- Nelsler, she is sur vived by three daughters, Mrs. 7red E. Finger, of Kings Moun ain, Mrs. Robert Morrison of hester, Va., and Mrs. Frank 'laxco of Lincoln ton; and two ->ns, Jacob E. Miller of Tulsa, Udahoma and Clarence J. Mill •r of Chester, Va. Fifteen grand children and 29 great-grandchild KITES HEI.D — Funeral rite* f*r Mr*. C. T. Millar, were hold Tuo* day. Mr*. KOtor dtofhMMor «t the 09* of ML , ;en also survives - < *■ Active pallbearers were Hugh Neisier, Robert Neisler, Joe Neis !er, Jr., Carl Finger, Dan Finger, C. R. Morrison and Frank and Joe Plaxco. Funeral Rites Held On Tuesday For Mr. Hamrick Funeral rites for Cleophas Hamrick, 88, prominent retired farmer of the Patterson Grove community, were held Tuesday afternoon at 3 o’clock from Pat terson Grove Baptist church, of which he was a member. Mr. Hamrick died Sunday af ternoon in the Kings Mountain hospital following an illness of several months. A native of Cleveland County, he was the son of the 'late Mr. and Mrs. Elphus Hamrick. Surviving are two sons, D. R. Hamrick and Ben Hamrick of Kings Mountain; four daughters, Mrs. G. A. Bridges and Miss Mae Hamrick of Kings Mountain, Mrs. Broadus McGinnis of Gaffney, S. C. and Mrs. T. W. Beam of Char lotte; two sisters, Mrs. Barnette McSwain of Landrum, S. C. and Mrs. Henry Cabiness of Shelby; 14 grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren. Rev. E. S. Elliot officiated at the final rices and interment was made in the church cemetery. Active pallbearers were J. C. Bridges, Glee Edwin Bridges, J. W. Beam, Kenneth and William Hamrick and Wginalfi Weaver. N. C. State Band To Hay Here North Carolina State College’s 85-member symphonic band will play a concert at Kings Moun tain high school auditorium next [Wednesday morning at 10:30. The band’s appearance here will be part of its annual spring tour, with other concerts sche duled at Durham, Burlington, Lexington, Rutherfordton-Spin dale, and Mt. Holly. Among the band members are James Forrest, clarinetist, son of Mr. and Mrs. R.J. Fortrest, of Kings Mtountain. The band will play the follow ing repertoire: Beatrice and Benedict, Berlioz; The Tsar’s Bride, Rimsky-Korsa kov; Francesca da Rimini, Tsch aikovsky; A Hero’s Courtship from “En Heldenleben, R. Strauss; Piece Heroique, Franck; Polka and Fugue from “Schwan da,” Weinberger; Three Chorale Preludes, Latham; Piece for. Tnumphets and Comets, Gerrard; Prelude and Fugue in F Minor, Bright; Two Grecian Scenes, Parnell; Crown Imperial, Wal ton; We$t Side Story (Selec tions), 'Bernstein; La Virgen de la Macarena, (Banjamin Sloan, carnet soloist), Mendez; and Con certo No. 1 for French Horn, (Steve Seawright, horn soloist), R. Strauss. Legion Schedules Saturday Dance The Jimmy Heavner Combo will furnish music for the Satur day evening dance ait the Legion Building for members and their guests, according to announce ment by Carl Weiaener. The five-piece group includes two brass instruments, organ, pi ano and bass fiddle. Admission win be $2 per cou ple. The dining room will be open at 6 p.m. Dancing will be from 9 to midnight. LIONS MEETING Regular meeting of the Kings Mountain Lions club will be held at the Woman's Club Tuesday night at 7 o’clock and will fea ture an address on cancer de tection. The program la being ar ranged by Charles H Mauney, chairman of the cancer associa tion speaker’s bureau.' r"‘ DAVIS IMPROVING J. R. Davis, Kings Mountain attorney, is continuing to Im prove at Kings Mountain hos pital, where he Is recovering from a broken hip suffered Jan uary 27. CANDIDATE — George H. Maun ey is a candidate for the Kings Mountain school district board of education. Heart Fund Gifts $2,502 Kings Mountain citizens have contributed $2,502.06 to the 1963 1 Heart Fund'campaign, L. E. Hin nant, fund drive chairman, said Wednesday. The ’63 figures are $500 ahead of last year’s contribution to the Heart Fund by local citizens. Mr. Hinnant said the drive will continue for another week or so to allow all who wish to give to the Heart Fund to do so. Con tributors may forward their gifts to Mr. Hinnant in care of Firs! Union National Bank. “Kings Mountain citizens have been mosit generous again in giv ing to this needy cause,” Mr. Hin nant said. He noted his apprecia tion to the many volunteer work ers who helped conduct the drive. Heart disease is a major cause of disability and the leading cause of death in the nation to day, Mr. Hinnant continued. He added that the 1963 Heart Fund will support an attack against this No. 1 enemy — through re search by working with the North Carolina and American Heart Association, through pub ! lie and professional education and through community health | programs. Music Contests This Weekend Kings Mountain school musi cians will participate in the an nual district music contest to be held at Lenoir-Rhyne college in Hickory Friday and Satur day. On Friday, the high school mixed chorus, directed by Mrs J. N. McClure, will sing. On Saturday, five piano stu dents, pupils of Mrs. Martin Harmon, will play in the piano contests. Del Goforth and Don na Crawford will play in the junior divisions. Joan MicClure, Rita Bell and Reta Phifer will play in the senior division. The contests will he held in I the Mauney Music building. ' Carpentei Withdraws Mayoral Bid BY MARTIN HARMON J. E. (Zip) Rhea, Ward 5 com missioner, became the first in cumbent city official to seek re election Wednesday, when he formally filed for re-election. In another Wednesday develop* ment, Clarence E. Carpenter formally withdrew as a candi date for mayor. East Thursday, George H. Mauney filed his candidacy for Kings Mountain school district board of education. Mr. Rhea, mayor pro tempore in the present administration, seeks his second term as a com missioner. He said he had no formal statement but comment ed, “We’ve several major pro jects in process and I want, to see them through to completion. He mentioned particularly the re building of the electrical distri bution system and the project for new out-door lighting. Mr. Mauney is the first ciandi date for the two board of edu cation positions to be filled at the May 14 election. Mr. Mauney said, “If elected I will do the jol to the best of my ability. I’m not angry at anyone.” In withdrawing Wednesday as a candidate for mayor, Mr. Car penter, onetime city tax collect or, wrote City Clerk Joe Mc Daniel: ‘1 hereby withdraw my candi dacy for Mayo.- of they City o' Kings Mountain, for which I filed several months ago. “This is due to the fact m> doctor advised me not to partici pate in too many activities which a political campaigr would entail. “I shall support any electee candidate to my utmost to helt build a better community of th< city in which I was born anc which I love with all mv heart Mr. Carpenter's withdrawal leaves ex-mayor Glee A. Bridge; as the lone mayoral Candida, to date. Commissioner Rhea was the ticket leader in the May 9, 196? election. A builder a-nd er>n"retc products manufacturer, he is cur rently commander of Otis D Green Post 155, American Legion. He is a Navy veteran of World War II and a former p es ident of Kings Mountain Coun try Club. Mrs. Rhea is the for mer Madge Wright. Mr. Mauney, secreta y end superintendent of Mauney Mills Inc., seeks public office for thr first time. He is -a graduate o' N. C. State College, -a navy vet eran of World War II, a Kiwa-" ian, and member of the Cleve land County Citizens committee for better schools. He is active in Boy Scout work and a mem ber of St. Matthew’s Lutheran church. Mrs. Mauney is the for mer Barbara Broward. They have four children. All city elective offices axe to be filled at the May election. Two school board positions are to be filled, the terms of Chair man Pred W. Plonk and Dr. P. G. Padgett expiring. Mis. Alleiton Dies In Three-Car Wreck; Husband and Youth Injured Mrs. Muriel Hollas Allerton, 59, of Charlotte, was killed al most instantly, her husband, Rowland Allerton, and Perry Douglas Phillips, of Mooresboro, injured in a head-on collision at the Kings Mountain-Watlerson intersection about 11:15 Satur day night. tMr. Allerton’s condition was reported satisfactory Wednesday by attending physicians. He suf fered a fractured leg and rib. The condition of Mr. Phillips, age 19, was improved Wednes day, but was still considered ser ious. Suffering severe head in juries, the Phillips youth was un conscious for several days due to brain concussion. He also suffer ed a leg injury. Police Chief Paul Saunders was still continuing his investi gation of the accident yester day. He said it is a possibility young Phillips "had been driving after his license had bee„i re voked. No charges had been pre ferred. Report on the accident by City Policeman Ernest Beam and Charles Wallace indicated the Phillips 1962 Ford, traveling west on King street, sde-swiped a 1951 Ford operated by Raymond Tesenlar, of 500 Lon wood Road, and was catapulted head-on into the 1963 Dodge driven by Mr. Allerton and east bound on King. Both the Allerton and Teseniar cars were stopped awaiting a i change of traffic signal. The A1 | lerton car propelled 90 feet and the Phillips car 60 feet fol ! lowing the collision. Other occupants of the Tesse ■nair car were Mrs. Tessenair and two children. None were ad mitted to the hospital, after ex amination. Mr. Allerton is owner of Aller ton Jacquard Company of Chat lotte. He and his wife had been dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moss, Sr., Saturday e\’: ening at the Country Club. He, too, is an English native. Funeral rites for Mrs. Aller ton were held Wednesday morn ing at the chapel of M-rEweer: Funeral Home, Charlotte, inter ment following in Sharon Me morial Park there. The final rites were conducted by Rev Thomas W. MacLean, pastor of Avondale Presbyterian church. With her husband, Mrs. Aller ton had been a Charlotte resi dent for the past 15 years. She Is survived by her mother, Mrs. Alice Hollas, Bradford. En gland, and two sitters, Mrs. Jack Firth, Bradford. England, and Mrs. Gilbert Smith, Whit ney, England. Mrs. Emily Boitomley, of Lei cester, England, a sister of Mr. AUerton’s, arrived Nm England by plane Monday. She is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Moss while her brother remains a patient at Kings Mountain hospital. SEEKS RE• ELECTION — Mayor Pro Tempore J. E. (Zip) Rhea is a candidate tor a second term as city commissioner i/om Ward 5. Women's Clubs Hear Piesident “We serve where needs are found,” Mrs. James Harper, of Southport, president of the North Carolina Federation of Women’s Clubs, said here Monday night. Mrs. Harper addressed mem bers of the Kings Mountain Sen ior and Junior Women's Clubs following a Husband’s Night ban quet. In a witty presentation, Mrs. Harper delineated the services and prospects of the North Caro lina Federation, numbering more than 16,000 members, declaring, "We substitute fact - finding for fault-findkig.” The state organization, she not ed, promotes leadership training, a world affairs institute, literary improvement, college scholar ships for young women, a read ing program in cooperation with ■ the University Extension division, legislative action, and crime pre vention. Mrs. Harper credits North Caro lina women citizens with respon sibility for the establishment of the Department of Public Wel fare in 1917. Two-y -ar aim of the organiza tion is “to s trengthen the arm of liberty.” "AH local clubs don’t partici pate in all state projects, but all are constantly striving to make their community a little better,” she declared. Mrs. Harper paid high tribute to Mrs. Aubrey Mauney, a past president of the North Carolina Federation when Mrs. Harper was a vice-president. Mrs. Maunty presided at the Monday evening banquet. New members of the Woman’s Club were presented by Mrs. Jacob Cooper, vice-president, and of the Junior Woman’s Club by Mrs. Ja cob Dixon, president. Mrs. Juanita Logan and M s-.. Bill Allen, accompanied by Mrs.. J. N. McClure, sang original prize winning songs, and Mrs. Martin Harmon played an original prize* winning musical composition from recent North Carolina Fede ration contests. Mrs. Paul Mauney prayed the invocation and the benediction was group reading of the North Carolina Federation collect. Mrs. Harper is the wife of the publisher of the State Pont Pilot, which she managed while her husband was on navy duty dur ing World War II. She now man ages an insurance agency. Th^y have two sons, one a Chicago, III., newspaperman, the younger a high school student. McDaniel Joins Paik Service Robert S. (Bob) McDaniel' has"7 joined the Kings Mountain Na tional Military Park as adminis trative assistant. Mr. McDaniel was t ansfetred here from Guilford Courthouse ’ National Park at Greensboro. He* and his family moved here Mon day. He is a Kings Mountain na tive. At the National Park he ?« placer Joe Kennedy who was transferred to Fort Pulaski at Savannah Beach, Fla. "We are happy to have Boh with our Park Service”, Park Supt. Ben F. Moomaw said in making the announcement. Mr. McDaniel is married to the former Wilma Brock of York, S. C. They have four children, five-month-old twins; Robbie Mc Daniel ,age 11; and Karen Mc Daniel, age 9.