f’artlow, ni son, Kt. HERALD SPORTS By GARY STEWART inXs Lan(‘. It, N. dau^Mv Kin^js ope, 222 er City, daiigh- , Kings V'. Grog- ho hiitli gust 1, Iks, -1311 . C. an- , Thins- lountain . Gn*(*n, ineo th(‘ uirsday. lin hos- )oro.^ birtl^ ugust Mounties Will Field One Of Smallest Teams 1959 Bethware Girls Team One Of Area's All-Time Best The subject of an all-fime Kings Mountain sports' loam has Mrs. Ruth Gamble remembering her all-time greatest team in the Kings Mountain area. i The only difference in her team and the one we ll be naming in a couple of weeks is that h^rs is not an all-star team. It’s the 1959 Bethware High School girls basket ball team, which ran roughshod over all of its opponents en route to the Cleveland Countv Conference champion ship. The leader of the pack was Mrs. Gamble’s daughter, Barbara, now Barbara Hawkins. She led the club in scoi’- ing, made all-conference and all-tournament and was se lected as the outstanding player in the,conference tour ney, which Bethware won in a waltz. The club was well-balanced, to say the least, and coached by one of the county’s all-time best girls coaches, Mrs. Ellen Pow’ell, wife of current Burns High basketball coach Bill Powell. In four years of coaching at Bethware and Piedmont, Mrs. Powell posted a coaching record ot 102 wins and only 12 losses. Other outstanding players on the Bethw^are ’59 outfit included PTances Smith, Pat Bolin, Rae Falls, Dot Pan ther, Maxine Hamrick, Linda Herndon, Janet Hamrick,: • l^^oris Cranford, Alice MeSw ain, Norma Jane Hamrick,; Faye Bolin, and Sarah P'alls. Cranford, Faye Bolin and ■ Sarah Falls joined Gamble on the all-conference team. ; For the year, the Bethware lassies compiled a 27-2^ record, their only losses coming to Trvon of Gaston Coun- *y. —'57 Grover Team Tough Also Kings .Mountain’.'^ Mountaim'crs ter aro nine boys who oarnod a will field their smallest squad in loiter last year. Jones will rtMuni several yoais when they oi>en at least one starter a! every line i their 1972 football season here position but he lost his enlite iSei)temt>er 1 again.sl lk*ss(‘m<‘r i sariing l.jaekfic'kl. I CMly. I ' Only 33 players showeil up for. The Mountaino<*rs wall b(‘gin oiM*ning day praciiei* Monday practicing twieon and Coach Hobby Jones has thi'CK* others wailing on the sidi/ines o from 9-1.1 a.in. and ."j-T p.m. Jones w'ill send liis charges through a scrimmage* with Olympic High School ol Charlotte (jii August 2d here. n*»roi.’rri- {•r aiift the team’s biggest pl-iy- 0(‘nni.s ilogin* and Alfred Ash acil 4 hd.*- Harice I>a\ is and Jer> y Valentine. DavLs ha^ b(‘en run- v.ho’li ning .somi* at halli ai'k and may post b(* ino\(*d to the backfi<-!d. Tourney Begins On Friday Night The men's influstria! league I tournament will begin Friday, night at Deal .Street Park with' nine teams participating. It will ::e a double-elimination event. | Exact pairings for the tourney will not b<* known until Thiir.s-' day or F'riday as three teams are eicTently tied for first place in the regular season standings. Just two years before the successful Bethw'are dub. Grover High School had a girls team that would also have to rank among the county’s all-time best. The Grover lassies romped to 2S straight regular sea son victories but were upset by Waco High School in the finals of the Cleveland County tournament. Like the ‘59 Bcthw'are club, the Grover lassies took a pair of victories from Kings Mountain High School. Francis Carroll w'as the leader of the Grover gang. A tall center, she averaged almo.st 45 points per contest for Coach Preston Holt’s outfit. Waco, the club which handed Grover its lone defeat, was paced by Joan Cline, now Joan Cline Lattimore, coach of the Crest High School girls cagers. —^^Gas+onia Juniors Hot Going from past to pre.sent: Everyone admires a success story and J. V. McGinnis certainly has written another one in Gastonia. A long-time veteran of the teener and American Le gion coaching ranks, McGinnis has his Gastonia Post 23 Juniors battling for the city’s first state championship in 18 year.s. The Gastonia Juniors compiled a losing record (7-8) nff but caught fire Those toarr.s a.t* Carolina Throw oin 1° eliminate Belmont. Newell, Charlotte log, craftspun and Chompionts 380, Burke County and High Point en route to its champ- Lmid.^caping Xumhor Two. ion.ship serie.s with Hamlet of RichYnond County. The Gastonia club has a 17-7 playoff record and will open the state finals best-of-seven series in Gastonia to night. McGinnis, who coached a pair of Gaston County teener all-star teams to national championships, has han dled legion clubs in Gastonia, Belmont and Cherryville but this is the first time one of his teams has played for the state bunting. McGinnis says he’s been somewhat surprised with his a sudden death playoff game club. It has very little pitching depth and is not a good be played on Friday after- hitting team but a good defense and the players’ desire to win has made it a winner. The desire to win was shown in Gastonia’s playoff scries with Newell and Burke County. Against Nowell in a best-ot-five series, the Post 23 lads wore down two games to none but came back to cop throe .straight and win the set. Against Burke County, Post 23 was two down in a best-of-seven set but came back to win the .series in seven games. Gastonia turned the tables on High Point, winning; the first three and finally taking the series in six games.j McGinnis krtows winning the state title will be tough, I - r > especially against a tough Richmond County team which ^ defeated Durham in four straight for the Eastern crown. But J. has confidence in his comeback kids and more importantly, they have confidence in him. LITTLE LEAGUE STARS — The Kings Mountain little league all-star t;am, pictured above, copped the Area Two Tournament title here last week but lost to Concord in regional play Monday night 5-0. First row, left to right. Robert Robinson. Andy Lofin, Johnny Gamble and Tim Chapman. Sec ond row, coach Rick Moore. Jerry Jackson, David Ray Robinson. Richard Van I>yke, Tim Riddle, Bryan White, and Tim Whitaker, Back row. Bruce Valentine, David Coob. Steve Lancaster, Dennis Putnam, Ronnie Wilson and Tim Spicer. Scott Ellis was absent when photo was taken. Goforth And Connor Make All - Tournament CraCtspun was scheduled to pl:}y Duplex ’a.st night. Pnrolina Throwing is scheduled to niay Oxford tonight at 7 and Crnft- suun at S. Champion’s Nurn^'^er 'Pwo has alr{*ady completed its regular season play. ■Recreation Director Roy Penr- .*!on said tlie.t if two teams are still tied after tonight's action. noon. '|■i•e tournament is scheduled to o;*fn at G o'clock Friday with the number two team playing Ox ford, which finished ninth. The first place team will draw an opening round bye and will not play until Saturday at G. when it meets the winner of the Frida\- 9 o’clock game between Gastonia Knit and Dicey Fabrics. Pairings for the fir.st two nights of action: Outfielder Rocky Goforth and ^ shortstop tlene Connor of the Champion's Landscaping Xum- cer Two team were the only players from Kings Mountain to land a .spot on the All-District 23 softball tournament team. Champion’s finished second to Dover Textiles of Cherryville in the double • elimination event, which ended Saturday night at j City Stadiun. By finishing .second, ('hemp- ion’s earned a berth in The Area Tourney, which is underway now at City Stadium. Tiie winner of the area event will go to Eden. X. C.. /for the state champion ships. Champion’s Number One and Lily Mills are favored in the double-elemination event. pitcher for Kings Mountain High, and Connor were the leading hii- ; ters for Champion’s Number Two, which came within an eyelash of ' winning the district crown. The only leturning .starlei* in tlie bac’kli(‘ld is senior quarter- .'uck Chris JoKnson, who stai1<*d SVVC Football Schedule AU.'H'ST 25 Chas'* at i:as1 Rutherfonl Fr; d T. Fo.ird at Burns ■ SLFTK.MBBR 1 South p(;]ni at C,icrr\vii!e Cr< .d at Chase LiiKomton at iUilhi'rford- n ai Ilunici’ Hu.-.- Bessemer City at Kings Mtn. SEPTEMBER s South Point at Crest Shelby at Burn.-' Chose at Kings Mounta n Ka.-i Rutherlonl at Linr(jln.on •Cherryville at North Gas* »:i Oa!e Hill ai Ruthorfoi-dlor. ' SFHM'FMHKR 1.7 ■ Burns at Cherryville , Ruthri furdlun at (’ha.^^e Kings Mountain at East Ruth. Liniolnlon at .Shelby ! Ea.-l Gaston at .South Poim I SEPTEMBER 22. I Kings Mountain at South Point Cheiryville at Shelby i Ri'.therfordton at East Ruth. I Lincolntnn at Newton iSEIM'E.MBER 2fl I ' South Point at Lincointon Burns at Chase Cherryville a Kings Mountain Ea.si P^utherford at Crest Sh(‘l :y at Rutherfordton OCTOBER G I Chase at .South Point Lincointon at Burns East Rutherford at (^herryville Shelby at Crest Rutherfordton at Kings Mtn. OCTOBER 13 on defense last year. He’il be pushed for the signal calling jxjsi by sophomore Tony Fall.-;. h.‘d last year’s fre.diman le.'un a 0-1 lecord and .second pla«e in the '■J'ri-County Conference. Jax'ori Sinith, who sldtcd at times on defense* last tall, is tl-.c l *p halfback prospect. Jo]inn> Byers, a .sophomore. i.> anoth<‘r lilu'ly .starter and Martu.s l-’Jovd, who .saw .some spot iuiion ol t.lanki'r last year, will lx* the iuj» candidate for thi* starling Uill- l>ack pf>sition. Myron George, a letterman, is a likely starter at one of the defensive back posi- ‘I lions and will probably set* a lot of action of offense as well. 'I'he Mountaineers will run from the I-formation, an attack which was highly successful for Jones at Lowell'Holbrook. Falls ran the attack with ease as a fresh man hut Johnson's varsity e\- pc'rience may prove to be the dif- ierenco when Jones makes his final quarieiuack selection. KMHS Grid Roster MEET THE MOUNTAINEERS s s \ s s . \ 11 s s s ■ s \ : ( I » \ \ \ \ I s s \ t s \ \ s \ i i s POS. NAME HGT. WGT. i: Jei'i'v \ktIc:riIiF‘ B- 0 1G5 ]■: H>ti inc .7- (i 130 i: Hoy Piilnnm i;- 1 u;5 K Kevin Queen 5- \) 12.7 K I.ari'y Ilamriv'k (i- 2 185 K Mcnt\- Wilson ti- 1 200 K L):i!o I laid .<(.»(* (•>- 1 185 F. Han(l>' Win-.i 2 175 F Chri.-', Laughief 5- 9 1.30 r Ttnntny Sliirhy 0 199 John Ih'idRi's (;- 1 195 'V Jake Bridejes G- 2 210 r Lan’y Biddi\ (.;- 1 d:8 T Heggie Wirilin ire 5- G ri)S T Laiuiy 'ITiornburg t;- 0 '!* (; Dennis .7-10 J • lO ('i (Hctin Moss (■.- 12 ISO (; Jo.hn Pn‘ssli‘\' 5-10 1G5 ii ILn F-'ulnam 5- 7 149 (4 Alfred Ash 6- 0 190 c NIark fk^cji'tge 5-11 190 c Josn Morrison 5-11 160 c Wayne Dixon 5-n 1.70 QH C'bris Johnson G- 0 182 QH Tony Falls G- 0 173 QH Darryl Van D\'ke 5- 8 140 QF C'hiK’k Ausi in 5- 8 145 HH Javon Smith 5-11 IGO 1115 Nlyron Cu'orge .7- S 145 I IB Johnny Byers .7-11 170 HB Edw ard Goode G- O 139 HB Walter Snead 5- 9 145 HB Mike Whitaker G- 0 152 HH Harlee Davis .7- 9 155 FB Dennis Trout 5-11 145 FB Marcus PToyd 5-11 155 Rutherfordton at Soutli Point Burns at East Rutherford , Chase at Lincointon ' On Saturday, Champion’s stop- cherryv ille at Crest '.pod Cherryville Pythians 14-S to advance to the finals. Eric Yates led the winners at bat with 2- for-3 and Bill Ware hurled the victory. Nine Pythian errors helped Champion’s cause. ('hampion’s stoj.'ped Dover 23- 1.3 to hand the Ch 2 winner. Saturday, 8 p.m. Mica - No. 3 winner vs. 6 p.m. winner. Duke Faces Toughest First Three In Land DURHAM. N. C. With the opening of football practice loss than two weeks away and th<‘ first game only three weeks a- way. Mike McGee tmd his Blue Devil assistants arc hard at work preparing for the temgh season ahead. On Septemljer 9. Duke will be- ;in what has been toi-meii as the “toughest first three games any team in America will play”. Tlic Blue Devils open with Alabama and in the following weeks meet Washington and Stanford. Then, without a breather. Duke \\ill face a much improved Virginia team in their first Atlantic Coast Conference action of the year. Alabama, Washington and Stan ford all have ‘ ecn picked hy pre season polls in the top twenty. Both Alabama and Washington have been selectf'd as their pre season conference favorites. DARLINGTON. S. C. — Darling ton Ractnvay, basking in thcj S-'Utii Carolina sun .since April, j will .spurt a new “cjat“ for the' Labc.r U.iy. S.iutliern .700. | The "coat" is black nd weigh.s| 850 tons. It stretch(*s from her! shoulders hallway around h<‘r j mile and throe eights fnm<*. A! mort*c ommon name for the, “coat" is a.sphalt or what Rate-! way Pre.sident Barney Wallaci*: call.s “black gold.” The 8.70 tons is being .s’)read j from the track’s start finish linc| , through the first and .sei-ond I turns. ' “We've had :i major water pro- ■ hlem the past two years in the first and second lurna. It’s some thing that couldn’t bi* helped. We had more than our slian* of rain l.xst year and water got under the trek eusing the a.-;ph;dt to vShift a- soon as the heavy stwk car.--, started running," t'.xp'lained Wallace, “we had o wail until tlie water level dropped before: anything (Muld bi* done to the' track.” I Florenee and DarLngton, apj)rox- imately four miles from 1-95. The fjur-latn* road in fn^nt of the Raceway will extend .s.nne 11 miles W(*sl of the track. Fans sitting in theg rnneUtands for the Southern 700 will beni*- lit fnnn a nev\ fenci* in-'talled a- cros-s the Raceway infield. The fences we:*e installed from both tunnel entrances and will block out all vehicles over seven feet, ten inehoo, from i)arking in the turn.«. All tlie large vehicles com ing into the infield will have to {>ark in a designated area in the (*enter of the infieUl. NOVEMBER .3 I2urns at .South Pohil .'base at Cherryville Rut-herforcUon at Cie.r>y ueck- ('■ d- V: .y Pe.ar-on, re r<' i!.- n di:ec- tf;r aid lofiay t'lai plans are •• na J to :it:e:r:p: • bn 'k t.if- ’•!:( rc-.-»i.t L: a m:irah n CO tball 'orte-s!. Fears.'’n said two '•‘tm-- from E.'.en, N. C.. .<.*1 the re rrd of 30 liours. Pearson s.aid one team. Har den Manufacturing Co. of Ga -t-m C<'unty. has already agreed to parlieijinic in the maratlnm. Nov., • Prarson said, he needs an all- star team from Kin.e,.^ Mountain , campetc again.<‘ Harden. \ Pear.s in .said Hit* game would' probably be completed late .'-aJ- ^'opfem'er 1. The game would probably be completed late Sat urday night. Sept. 2, or early Sun day mornitig, St'pf- 3 Pear.-on -suid liiat mcsl busine.s:^es will he cIos(*d for Labor Day M.:]ida\. 4, plnycns will ha.'i* nknty of lime t rest be- 1 .n • >:ng baek to wwk. have unlimited .subsihu tion.” Pearson .said. “When, a player gets tired, .someone e!.se ..*an ipki- his place, and then he can take )iis i)laa*. and then he t Any plnyer.s or umpires inter ested in participating in The too- ord-breakin gatiempt are urged to eontact Pear.son at tlie commun ity center. Mcana-hile. Pear.son say.s he’ll be C3nia:ting softball people in Ef It) i Dickie Burgess I'olle.ted three and 13 who weigh less than 110 . hits apiece. Craftsj.un whippixl pounds may play for the jxm* wee Mica .Mine lS-3 oehind t!ie tliree team. Mighty Mile players mu.st base hit pen »?manees of ^GU'nn be between the ages of nine and , Rcrkln.s, Dickie Burgess. Shields and Pete Burge.ss. Craft.spun bjjnktvl Oxford 20-0 as Bill Broome, Dick Burgess. Pete Bur- g(s.s and Gerald Hlpps collected three hit'- j In the twinbill vvitli Hanlon’s ^ Craft.spun e(*ked out an 8-7 vie-' tory before l.Ksing 20-10. Ilardim’s: in the 20-10’ 12 and weigh les.s than 80 paund.s. The pee wee ' team will be coachtHi by Charles Burn.s and Jimmy Littlejohn. The mighty mites will be coaehf'd by Jch* Cornwell. Both teams will particU>ate in the Gaston League and will be eo-sponsored by the Optimig Club rapiK*d eait 30 hits Righthand Pitcher (1) The Crimson Tide finished the‘The hy-pa?,-^ will eonnoet High- season last year ranked thii'd in i way 52 North around Darlington menf. | Ch-ampion'.-; Number Two, which ♦ • ♦ I had to forfeit its last league No less than five forfeits were game* due to partici;)at ion in the recorded in indtustrial league ac-larca tournament Tuesday night, tion during the past week, most sqiKHved out an 8-7 win oy<^ Du- ' winners and Mullinax .slammed a lK)mi‘ run. Ji*wel Watson and Danny Rhodes led the losers with 3-i.u-’ eacii. Carolina Throwing topped Dic ey Fabrics 9-G in its only game I ■ d’c Tim Oliver was the !''Aiun;ii , .;t'. !u'r and B.ib South- well lu-ok tin* lo.ss. .\obodN' liad over one IFi. Skidnvvx* Construction toc»k a piir of 'ri.Uorie.s, besting Dice;. il-2 and .^ipirntruin 27-1. Skidmore .scored p: :u:i in die last foui innings to t;reak open a 1-0 game against Dice>. ."^kidmoie siwed 10 in the fir.st two racks in its easy victory over .Spectrum. Spocrum oeked out an 11-10 victory over Dicey as Proctor col lected tliree .hits, including a homi'r. Terry Punam led Dicey' with throe hit.s. _ Fpectrum dropped a 5-3 divi sion to Gastonia Knit. Donaldson, blew •will 27 laps to go and Junior Croucli went on to win his third feature of the season. Eo.seo L()-a-(» was four seconds back in the runnerup .slot. Officers (.‘ontinuo to probe the ulentity of the person who threw the bottle on tin* ract track. He will be cliargod with a-s^ault with . a deadh' weapon with intent to kill, accordin.g to track manager Ned Jarretr. In an action-filled night, Roger >tarne.s of Hickory emerged the -vvinner of the Hobby fe.Jt'jre after John Si*tllemyre was tue victim ol a .spinout on the ' c.ind lap and had to restart in Fie r/ar. Even s>. Setlhmiyre n. Ic a run hack fer the Iront ani clashixi fenders with Ronald Fo.x for a number of lap.s. Run off the track when he div ed lov\ and almost piishcxl into the wall when he tried the high side. Setilemyre and Fox e.x- changed fender blows after the event. Fox finislu'd set'ond and Setilemyre was tbirl. .\ctio:i against one or both driv ers Ls being eon.sidered by offic ials. The victoiy wa.s a career first for Starnes, who led all but the fir.st lap. Two drivers were shak en up in warmup.s when five cars were involved in a pilc-up. Lar ry Starnes of Taylorsville and .Allan Powell of Lenoir \s-ere shak en up but apparontlv not hurt in the chain ('ollision after Starnes a lire. resulting from teams particlpat-' plex. \Va>Tie Mullinax and David, plex. 8-4 as Donaldson went 4 had three hits for the winners- Ray Nicholson, Jr., of Fayette- and Cutchins had three for Spec- ville. driving a Volk.suxigen, made trum. a runawav of the 25-la.p mini- 'Gastonia Knit also topped Du- stock feature, and Lariy Little Continued on Page Tour I back into Highway 52 between j ing in the District 23 and area Bolin had tliree hits each for tlie‘far-4 won the fourth of Rookie feature, his the season. >•«•* **««««