4 Population Greater Kings Mountain 10,320 City Limits 8,008 *■*»• Btwi u l»o» Ik* lhtiH4 iMiH CMm, « 7Si£ /OL.75 No. 41 Kings Mountain, N. C., Thursday, October 8, 1964 Pages Today Established 1889 Seventy-Fifth Year PRICE TEN CENT* Mountaineer Days Festivities Peak On Weekend United Fund Includes Grover; Goal Is Increased To $24,000 GOOD CITIZEN — Anne Trott , has been chosen DAN Good Citizen by Colonel Frederick Hambright Chapter. Daughters ' ol the American Revolution. Anne Trot! b DAB Citizen ! Anne Trott. high school senior ; and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Trott. has been nam- j ed DAK flood Citizen by Colonel ! k’-'roderifk flamhright Chapter, ' MAR, and received the award at | the organization's Wednesday af- j ternoon meeting. Only girls of tile senior class of an accredited public high school are eligible for the award, presented annually. Recipients must possess to an outstanding degree the qualities of deitcnda bility. service, leadership and pa t riot ism. Miss Trott is editor of the Kings Mountain high school newspaper, “The Mountaineer.” , She is a member of the Future ( 1 lomemakers of America, the French club and the Science club. A member of St. Matthew's Lu theran church, she is active in the Sunday School and Luther League. A flood Citizens Tour honoring the girls chosen in the Third f>is- i trie*. North Carolina DAR. will he held Saturday at 1 pin. After i luncheon, the flood Citizens and their mothers will visit the Mint Museum of Art in Charlotte and will be honored at a tea to tic , given at the home of Mrs. I floor go Robinson Smith, state I chairman of flood Citizens for DAR. Miss Trott is granddaughter of II. R Parton of Kings Mountain and the late Mrs. Parton. I New Hambright Grave Maikei Dctcrndanls of Colonel Frede rick Hambright. Revolutionary War hero at tin* Battle of Kings Mountain, braved Sunday's rain to trek to Shiloh cemetery at Grover to plact* a new marker, a tall granite shaft, over Itis grave and to pay tribute to the early settlers intern'd there. For many years the Colonel Homhright Chapter of the DAK. of Kings Mountain, has placed a marker at the grave. A tent was erected over the plot Sunday and Rev. Hi* hard llohson. pastor of Shiloh Pres byterian church, delivered the dedicatory address. Mrs. F. It. Summers, past regent of the Kings Mountain DAR chapter which bears llamhright's name, gave a description of the man. physical and motal. taken from an old letter by one who had known him in his hey-day. The maroon velvet veil, de signed by Holmes Harry, execu tive of Minette Mills. Inc., and his staff. Mrs. Hubert Rollins, Mrs. B. A. llarry and Mrs. Beck Wright, was unveiled by Bonnie Frances Hinnapt. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Hinnant. and ' Glenn Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Roberts, all of Kings I ' Mountain. Roliert Harry unfurl f'litlimiri/ Oh Page *» Several New Organizations loin In Appeal Kings Mountain and Grover's United Fund drive for 1965 will seek over $2-1,000 for nine causes. Chairman Charles Mauncy said this week. Mr. Maunev said he is calling a second meeting of UF volun teers for Thursday (tonight, at 7:30 p.m. in his office at Mauney Hosiery Mills to formulate plans for the November financial drive. | Directors of the United Fund are also expected to he elected at Thursday night's meeting, Mr. Mauney said. "If our 1965 goal is reached”. Mr. Mauney continued, "the pro blem of too many drives is solv ed.” The participating organizations will include: Kings Mountain Chapter A merican Red Cross, $5056. Boy Scouts, white and Negro, S53S5.60. Compact-Davidson high school band, $1128. Cancer Fund in Kings Moun tain and Grover, $1,000. Girl Scouts, white and Negro. $1500. j Grover Rescue Squad. $1500. Heart Fund Drive for Kings ! Mountalh and Grover areas. $1500. Kings Mountain high school band. $3550. Kings Mountain Rescue Squad, $3200. In years prior separate drives j have been conducted for benefit 1 of cancer, heart and Rescue I Squads. Grover is also included in this year’s campaign. Mr. Mauney reminded citizens ! that the 1965 drive is a local ! campaign conducted by local vol unteer workers for local charita- I hie organizations and service groups. "Remember", he noted, j "You contribute to nine different drives when you give the United way." Canvassers will encourage citizens to give at least one hour’s pay once a month to the community drive. Secession Front Quiet There was no new news on the Kings Mountain secession front this week. , Mayor Glue Bridges said he had not yet been able to set up appointment with Grier Beam, of Cherryville, chairman of the Gaston county board of commis sioners. for discussions concern ing a possible joining of the Kings Mountain area of Cleve land County with Gaston. Nor had there been any indi cation of any change of heart or action on the part of the Cleve land County welfare board which closed the Kings Mountain branch of the welfare offiie. I-*»st action by the Kings Mountain group was a 30-day moratorium on circulating peti tions for seceding from Cleve land and joining Gaston. Pollbooks To Open! For Registration i TO CONDUCT SERVICES — j Rev. Grant Johnson. Gastonia minister, will conduct a series at sototeso i» Scree Msmoriaf ARE church beginning Monday night UP Services To Start Monday Rev. Grant Johnson, pastor of First Associate* Reformed Pres- j hyterian church of Gastonia, will : conduct a series of sendees at Boyce Memorial ARP church here beginning Monday night. Sen i<vs will be held Monday through Friday nights at 7:30 and on Sunday. October IS. at 11 am. and 7:30 p.m.. it was; announced by John L. McGill. I Boyce Memorial's moderator pro tempore. Rev. Mr. Johnson is a son of a New England Congregationaiist minister. He is a graduate of! Davidson college and won a master of arts degree at the Uni versity of North Carolina. For nine years he was a coach at King's College. Bristol. Tenn.. subsequently served as youth di rector of the Ft. Lauderdale. Fla.. Presbyterian churrh before cn tering Krskine seminary. He was graduated in lBtil and has serv ed the Gastonia church since. Mrs. Johnson is the former Bertha McLaughlin, of Charlotte. They have six sons. Chilly Temperatures Follow Hilda Rains 1 Temperatures plummeted Mon day night, in the wake of heavy weekend rains, skirt lash from Hurricane Hilda which wreaked havoc from Louisiana to the North Carolina mountains. /.It was the first "cold spell’ of the autumn and produced a flood of calls to fuel dealers and heat tng plant servicemen. City ad Duke Paver Will Tirade Seme Facilities; Board To Meet The city board of commission er* is expected to accept a prof fer by Duke Power Company whereby the city veil It rack- Duke its J. E. Herndon Company facil ities for Duke facilities serving eight residential customers. The commission Mill consider the proffer, whereby the city will pay Duke $62K difference at the regular October meeting to convene* at City Hall at 6 p.m. Electrical Superintendent Hun ter Allen said the Herndon Com pany asked to be served by Duke, due to the fact Duke already : serves a portion of the Herndon j property and because the Hem- 1 don Company desires 330-volt service, now furnished by the Duke service, to all Its facilities. The eight residential customers tile city will acquire are Sam ' Dye. Stow Devinney. in West Kings Mountain, and II. C. At | Kins. Frank Bridges. \V. A. Tins | ley, Paul R. Ross and Charles i Hampton, in Fast Kings Moun ' tain. Duke made the pro|Hisal on basis of a South Carolina law setting up a formula for sale or purchase of power facilities Tile hoard also is expected to: | It Adopt an ordinance which would make official its previous ly appointed city planning com mission. and 2) Accept the low bid of Mc Cabe-Powers for purctKise of a Skymaster "cherry picker" for the electrical department. The commission will also re ceive bids for purchase of a pneumatic-lilt'd loader. ! Unregistered Can't Ballot November 3rd Voter registration hooks open in Kings .Mountain and through out the county on Saturday The books will be open for three consecutive Saturdays through October 24. Saturday, October 31. will be challenge flay. Ralph Gilbert. chairman of the county board of elections, re minded citizens that a new reg istration was ordered last spring and that citizens not eligible to vote in the May primaries must register to be eligible to vote in the November 3 general election. Mr. (Gilbert said the same pre cinct election officials who serv ed in the May and June pri maries will be on duty in all pre cincts. The Kings Mountain area pre cincts. their locations, and the registrars are: Bethware. at Beth ware school, Mrs. J. D. Jones. East Kings Mountain, at City I Hall courtroom. Mrs. Nell Craw ford. Grover, at Grover fire station. Mrs. J. D. Ellis West Kings Mountain, at Na tional Guard Armorv, Mrs. J. H.' Arthur. The registrars will be at the voting places Saturday from 9 to 5 p.m. Chairman Gilbert also remind ••d non-registered citizens: T'iti sens must register in jterson, as j the new registration system re- j quires that a voter be able to read and write. And all regis- j trants must sign their registra- I lion form in duplicate.” A total of 3.W)2 registered in! Number I Township last May. British Strike Alter 184 Years •It’s 1K1 years too late but the British have struck again.” ! This inscription was pinned j to a five-foot dummy, clad in ' shirt and trousers. Saturday 1 morning outside the office of Mayor Glee A. Bridges. Some English citizens, plan ing a bit of fun during Moun taineer Days, had planned to I display the dummy on a down town street but Saturday's ramy weather cancelled out that plan but didn't dampen their spirits. They moved the j dummy inside. ChuichwomenSet Community Da; Kings Moun'ain .-hurchwomen aiv readying for World C >mmu- ; nity Pay to bo held Friday, No- ! vember Hth. at 3:15 p.m. at Re- j surreotioo Lutheran rhuivh. Rev. Charles Kasley, new min- 1 later of St Matthew's Lutheran i church, will make the principal address. All churches of the ! area are invited to participate in j the annual program, Mrs. K. R. ■ (lotfcr. program chairman, said. Committees for the event in clude: Mrs. Paul Ausley, First Preshyterian; Mrs. L. L. l.ohr, St. Matthew’s Lutheran: Mrs. Kmmelt Ross, tiracc Methodist; Mrs. Arno Haas. Trinity Kpisco pal; Mrs. Kugene Roberts, Kings , Mountain Baptist; Mrs. A \V Kincaid. f>'ir«st Baptist; Mrs. Carl Cl-winger. Resurrection Luthe ran; and Mrs. C. T. Carpenter. Jr.. Central Meth->dist church. World Community Day is one of three annual observances sponsored by the interdenomina tiouai group of churchwomen. , Others (Delude World Day of Prayer and .May Kellowsliip Day . | TYPICAL MOUNTAINEER DAYS COSTUMES—Mrs Zoe Falls Deilinger (at telephone; and Mrs. Merle Beatty are pictured Mountaineer Days-fashion in colonial style costumes of 1780. Women employees of Kings Mountain Merchants Association will be outfitted in long dresses and bon nets during the celebration, which continues Thursday. Friday and Saturday. Five civic club presidents will pick three winners from the many who will wear costumes from the Elizabethan era. (Herald Photo by Paul Lemmons). Awards For Best-Costumed; 40-Unit Parade OnSaturdav live lodges Will Decide Best-Costumed i Who will win prizes for best cos I u mo among Kings Mountain area women? Five judges, all of whom arc presidents of Kings Mountain civic clubs, will adjudge winners in the Mountaineer Ixa\s contest and trophies will he awarded to first, second and third place win ners this weekend. Decision of the judges is to be announced at the- Friday night street dance, w hich begins at 7:.i0 pm., and the winners will ride in the 2 pm. Saturday pa rade which will culminate cele bration festivities in the city. Mrs. John A. Cheshire, Wo man's club president, RohCrt • Rob, Munson, Rotary dub pre sident. Hugh Lancaster, Jaycee president. Harry Jaynes, Lions dub president, and \V. D. tDoct | Byars, Optimist club president. | will have no easy task in decid- ] i«g winners of "best costume." All women employees of ma jority of the city's retail mer chants have been busy with needle and thread the past few weeks. The costumes are not on- , ly pretty, but original. Some aie implemented by frilly lace, vel rct, sequins, and jewelry typical if that era ami flounces, over- ■ skirts, and pantaloons. Many of the colonial style dresses ate orn with matching bonnets Mountaineer Days con-memo rates the lslth anniversary of he Revolutionary War Rattle of Kings Mountain, fought October ■ r. 17*0. VETERANS World War I veterans w II hold a meeting Sunday at 2.'!'» p.m. at City flail. Quartermas ter F 11. Llctui lias aunuwucvd. | EVANGELIST — Rev. James Stanley ol Shelby will be speaker for evangelistic serv ices. which begin Sunday at Second Baptist church. Parade To Start At 2 o'clock On Saturday Saturday'?, mammoth to unit Mount aineei Days parade wiU begin promptly at 2 p.m. and Aiil culminate a lull three days of special activities (luring the second annual community • wide celebration. I'nits til the parade will assem ble at the corner of Kast Gold strein and Gaston street incar the \V. K Vlauney, Jr. hornet, march west to Battleground Ave nue. tui a north and march to Mountain street .turn iij»ht and march t > Piedmont avenue, pro ceed lett to King street, turn left and march west over the over head budge, turn Icit at K.ul road and proceed south to Gold street, turn right and disband on West Gold street. Humes Houston, chairman of the color) rat ion and I>on Dixon, parade chairman, said all entries Continued On Pniif n Kings Mountain Optimist Club b Awarded "Honor Club" Rating The Optimist Club of Kin"* Mountain was namf<l an HONOR CLUB for 1963 61 and R. \V llurlhut. Iflt3-6I president, was named a DISTINOUISIIKD PRKSII>ENT by Optimist Inter national as announced last Thurs. ;lay at the Hub's regular meet in-4 by the current president, W. D. Byers. Notification of these honors Tame from Carl L. Bowen, D.D. v. president of Optimist Inter national. The awards, a medal lion for the club's banner signi fying Honor Club at.d a old vat eh denoting Dtstinguislied Pres.deui will be presetiled at a future date. The Optimal Club of King* M >unt.i] earniil the Honor Club award for Pxivllrnw m live ma jor phases of club activity membership, attendance, new eluh building, boys' work and life membership. Hob Huilbut. Iasi year's president, earned the Distinguished President citation for meeting additional require ments in the organizations a wards program. In making the annoumvmetit. W D. ‘Dim-" Byers said. "We are very proud 10 be notifi**d of these awards and we are happy that CuiUmucU Oh Fuji, o Talent Event, Street Dance And Parade Are Scheduled Kings Mountain area citizens a r e ii'Icbrating Mountaineer Days with beauty queens, coloni* | al costumes atxl a mammoth parade planned to commemorate the !H»ih anniversary of the Rev ohitionary War Battle of 1780 Miss North Carolina — Sharon Kay finch — arrives Thursday for a big talent show at S p.m. at the National Guard Armory. The Thomasvllie beauty, ap pearing here under co-sponsor : ship of the Merchants Associa* tion and Jayives — will be mis* tress of ceremonies for the show i which will feature <-ountry mu* | sir bands, rock-n roll bands and I individual talent vicing for cash prizes totaling $50 in three divi sions and handsome trophies. Miss Finch, who sings, dances , and plays the piano, will also : perform in the show, along with j Diane Ray, of Gastonia, record* I ing star for Mercury Records. Becky Kennedy. Miss Mountain* 1 err, will bi- presented by Miss • North Carolina at the beginning I of the event which is expected to attract a number of talent en tries and a large crowd. Admis sion will he 50 and 25 cents. Mis> North Carolina will be guest of honor at a dutch sup per to he hosted by Merchants Association offi< ials and Jayeres at the Country Club at 6:30 that evening. Judges for the talent competi tion will be Mis* Ray, Jim Allen, editor of the Shelby Daily Star. I Ray Jimison. Gastonia Gazette •ounty editor, and Hugh Dover. ' of Shelby, vice-chairman of the county board of commissioners. 1 Friday night's big street dance will begin at 7:30 p.m. in a rop ed off area of Railroad Avenue ' from Wright's Barber Shop to | Joy Theatre. Music will be pro I vided by “Tlie Hometowners”, a country music band. Announce i ux-nt by the judges of winners l of l>est costumes among the lady folk will be made. In event of j rain, the street dance will be i held at the Armory An all-day barbecue stand will I be operated by Kings Mountain Jayeees Thursday. Friday and Saturday in the Kd Falls Csed t ar lad on Railload Avenue. Bar ... plates are $1 and sand wiches are 50 cents. Tables will tie set up for persons who want to eat lunch at the stand. Saturday's parade, which eul i tnmati * the week of activities, j will begin promptly at 2 p.m. i hntries include school bands I and Iloats. beauty <|iu-ens and . others. Winners of best ••ostume | and talent events will also par ; ticipale in the parade. Women employees of the city's i business finr* will be dressed in keeping with the )78o period, I and men will wear eoonskin caps. Humes Houston is chairman of j the second annual Mountain Days .elchiation sponsored by the Merchants Association as a t ale promotion and battle an* | ni versa ry event. Clark To Discuss State Bond Issue Smi.- Senator David Clark, of Lincolnton. state chairman of a citizens group supporting ap pr.nal of a $100 million state school construction bond issue, w ill address the Kings Mountain Lions club here Tuesday niglu at the Woman's Club. Senator Clark is expected to discuss iho bond issue proposal and his reasons for supporting it. both now and in the JW3 General ssembly. Harry Jaynes.'Lions club prcsl tlent, said presidents or repre >ci tatives of all Kings Mount.mi civic clubs have been invited to hear Senator Clark, as have sev eral local and county school of. ti lals. Superintendent B. V. Barnes was a member of the original superintendent's planning com mittee for the hood issue, and <leorge K. Maunoy, of the Kings Mountain board of education, is a vice-chairman of a county citizens group supporting ait pntval of the issue. Kings Mountain school dis trict s share of the issue would 1 exceed S'lT l.tMo. which, school of ficials s.i\ would provide suffi cient building funds for immedi* ('••tit til Hill lit; /Coif'd

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