y The Way We Were 26 Years Ago In Kings Mountain * Taking A Stroll Down Memory Lane Tre 3 Population Greater Kings Mountain 10,320 City Limits ! 8,008 his Bani # Ti for heater Kings Mountain Is derived from youniaia city J Sivettary census. The city from the Uniled States consus of 1960. Kings Mountain's Reliable Newspaper Section B) Thursday, April 4, 1991 > am Bulletins EPISCOPAL SERVICE “Epihany and The Popula- tion Explosion” is the title of a sermon to be given by The Rev. Rebert :L. Haden at the 10 a.m. Sunday service at Trinity Episcopal church, 303 Phifer road : METER RECEIPTS Parking meter receipts for the week ending Wednesday at oon totaled $228.75, includ- 2 $151 from on-street meters, 7 from fines and $20.05 from off-street meters, City Clerk Joe McDaniel reported. VETERANS MEET Wosld War I veterans will gather for a regular meeting Sunday at. 2:30 p.m. at City Hall, Quartermaster F. H. Glenn of Shelby has announc- ed. OPTIMIST MEETING Gecrge Wilson will speak on Japan and the Olympics at Thursday's meeting of the Kings Mountain Optimist club at 7 pm. at the Carpenter street clubhouse. Carl Wilson, program chairman, will pre- sent his brother. LODGE MEETING Regular meeting of Fairview Lodge 339 AF&AM will be held Monday night at 7:30 at Ma- sonic Hall, Secretary T. D. Tin- dall has announced. RADIO SERVICES Church services during the months of January and Febru- ary will be broadcast via Radio Station WKMT from Resurrec- tion Lutheran church. MARGRACE CLUB | Members of the Margrace ' Voman 's club will meet Satur ay night at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Floyd Gates, ac- cording to announcement by Mrs. J. B. Foster. It's Tag Time For Area Motorists | City of Kings Mountain auto; license tags went on sale Mon- day. ist a shiny new 1965 license tag. | Kings Mountain Lions are | vending the tags and 50 porent of the civic club's net proce from the sale will benefit the| Kings Mountain Stadium Fund, Chairman Sam Weir said Wed- nesday. | Blood Bank { Returns Monday The Red Cross bloodmobile re- | turns to Kings Mountain Monday : for its fourth visit of the 1964-65 year. Donors will be processed from 11 am until 5 p.m. at the Na- tional Guard Armory. Charles F, Mauney, blood pro- ram chairman, noted that in ree visits to date, the blood ollection has totaled 385 pints | hgainst a goal of 852 pints. { Goal of each collection is 125 | pints of blood for a yearly goal | of 852 pints. There is a 41 pint | deficit from the last visit, Mr. | Mauney pointed out. Owens Rites Funeral rites for John Clayton Owens, 88, were held Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. from Bethlehem ist ¢ inter t - : ] Baptist church, interment follow {nual meeting Tuesday night at ing in the church cemetery. Mr. Owens, a retired farmer of | route 1, died Tuesday morning in | the Kings Mountain hospital af- ter several months illness. A native of Cleveland County, | he was the son of the late Mr, and Mrs. Asbury Owens. He was a member of Bethlehem church His wife, the former Rettic Whis- nant, died in 1950. Surviving are four sons, Rich- ard, Alec and Fred Owens, all of Kings Mountain, and Charles Owens of ‘Lattimore; three daugh- ters, Mrs. William Black of Clo- ver, S. C., Mrs. Kelly McCarter and Mrs. Arthur Allen, hoth of ‘Kings Mountain; one brother, George Owens of Gastonia; 28 grandchildren and 10 great- ‘grandchildren. Rev. James Wilder and Rev. Marion DuBose officiated at the final rites. ' Kings ‘ Mayor Glee A. Bridges, Mr. and i Mrs. F. S. Morrison, Miss Betty | Daniel, Jr., i Timms, J. Lee Roberts, led as judge of city recorder's | court this week by George B. | ver. White served as the city Held Wednesday ~~ "== Y Club Stockholders that all stockholders are urged | to attend. Established 1889 Kings Mountain, N. C., Thursday, January 7, 1965 Seventy-Sixth Year PRICE TEN CENT Business Leaders Are Optimistic For 1965 Richard AIRMAN WINS CITATION — A/1C Karl R. Moss, Kings Moun- tain airman stationed at Tyndall AFB, Florida, is pictured at right receiving an Air Defense Command Certificate from Lt. Colonel Hicks which cited Moss for “outstanding performance and meritozious service as priorities requirements monitor in the priorities branch, base supply. The citction continued, “his determination, loyalty and devotion to duty increassd the ef ficiency of the priority expedite system. “Moss is the son of My. and Mrs. J. D. Moss. He and his wife live in: Panama City. Local De Senator-Elect Jack H White Heads Group | | Thirteen Kings Mountain citi- zens join the large number of Clevelanders and North Carolin- ians jn Raleigh Thursday and Friday for the inauguration of i Dan K. Moore as governor of the state. : Senator-Elect Jack H. White of Mountain, Mrs. White, Morrison, Mr. and Mrs, F. A. Mc- Mr. and Mrs. Gene J. Ollie Harris, and R. L.. Shaney are ex- : pected to be in Raleigh Thursday and Friday. Mr. White, member of the firm of Davis & White Attorneys, is Kings Mountain’s first legislator- elect since 1926 He was succeed- | Thomasson, Kings Mountain law- Meet On Tuesday Stockholders of Lake Montonia Club, Inc. will gather for the an- 7:30 p.m. City Hall. President Carl F. Mauney said in the courtroom of { Miss Helen Logan, high mocrats ® There's no change at City Hall i 0 where a dollar will get a motor- | J Merchants Resume Mid-Week Closings Majority of merchants of the city resumed their customary Wednesday afternoon closings yesterday. : The stores had been open on full six- gay 2 week schedules. Mis. Logan's Rites Conducted Fune ral rites for Mrs Mitchell Barber Logan, 76, widow of Leo- nidas Marion Logan, were held Wednesday at 2 p.m. from the Chapel of Harris Funeral Home, interment following in Mountain Rest cemetery. Mrs. Logan died Monday at 6:45 p.m. in the Kings Mountain hospital following a month's ill- ness. A native of Cleveland County, she was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Battie Goforth Barber and a member of Kings Mountain Baptisit church. She had long been active in Kings Mountain Chapter 123, Order of the Eastern Star. Surviving are her daughter, school English teacher; her son, L. M. Logan, Jr. of Miami, Fla; two sisters, Mrs, Rufus Hartley of Lenoir and Mrs, Alvin Yarbro of Kings Mountain; three brothers, Carroll Barber of Charlotte, Cline Barber and Broadus Barber, toth lof f Kings Mountain, City Election Four Months Away, But Politicking Outwardly Quiet Kings Mountain will hold its | cumbents will seek re-election, biennial election in May, and Mayor Bridges himself has though the election is only four [heen non-committal. To a ques- months away, there has been thus far little outward evidence of political activity However, the subject is crop- ping up in some conversations, usually in the vein, “Isn't this | election year?” and “Who's go- ing to run?”. Generally speaking, [t is anti- cipated that majority of the in- tion on his plans, he said, “things have heen quiet. I better think about that a little bit.” Two years ago, Mayor Bridges announced his candidacy in car- ly February to oppose then-may- or Kelly Dixon. Ile was success- ful in his bid for ‘election fifth term as Kings Mountain mayor. award to to a | Jaycees Give Teacher, Scouter Sewvice Award Richard Culyer, 25 - year - old e.ghth grade teacher and scouter, was named Kings Mountain's Young-Man-of-the-Year for 1964 at the regular meeting of the Junior Chaxber of Commerce Tuesday night, Announcement of the winner of the r'ib's 11th annual distin. guished service award was made by Otis Falls, Jr, DSA winaer for 1951. The presentation of the s2rvice the Bethware teacher wis tne h;hlight of “Bosses Night” by Rev. Jack Cooke, chaplain of Carolina Freight Carriers Cor- gevatiza of Cherryville, Elakorating on the theme, “The Nobility, O. Being Ordi- nary”, Mr, Cooke challenged Jay- Cees and guests: “Let us not for- get who we are, what we are and enjey every day of life.” He an- swered his own question, “What has happened to our sense of values?”, by asserting that lead- ership is over-emphasized.' “We forget the mechanic, man, the farmer or other ordi- nary people”, he noted, in our desire to drive to be something.” “For every leader there : are many followers and the world depends on those with ordinary talen ts", be added. “You don't nave to be a big shot to get the | +108 out of life”, he continued, j closing his remarks with a quo- ; tation by the late President Lin- | coln, “God must have loved little people. He made so many of them” Exhibiting much surprise at the announcement of the DSA win- ner, Mr. Culyer said, “I thank you from the bottom of my heart.” : Selected by a secret committee of Kings Mountain men above 36-years-of-age, name of the winner of the award was a close- ly-guarded secret, known only to DSA chairman Jacob Dixon and the five-member selection com- mittee. Other former DSA win- ners present were B. S. Peeler, Jr., 1954; Charles Dixon, 1957; Otis Falls, Jr.,, 1961; and Bob Southwell, 1963. In presenting the handsome en- graved plague to Culyer, Mr. Falls said of Culyer: “Here is a man who can take a boy into the woods, get him interested in books as well as nature and the scouting program. He tutors, free of charge, at home, after school and never turns down a suggestion...” Both Mr. Falls and Mr. Culyer are active in the scouting program of St Mat- thew’s Lutheran church. A native of Albemarle, Mr. Culyer joined the Kings Moun- tain schools faculty five years a- 20. He has taught both sixth and eighth grades. His wife, the for- mer Annette Vaughn, is a sixth grade teacher at West school. He holds B.A. and M.A. degrees from Appalachian State Teacher's col- lege where he majored in history and mathematics. and followed an address ! the sales: | | Culyer Is Young Man Of The Year JAYCEE DSA AWARD wiisah — Hacuo.a Culy@s, TIIXA IZOIN lil, WS aidesithd asdaigS Mountain's’ Young-Man-of-the-Year for 1964 at the 11th annual Distinguished Service Awexd banquet of the Junior Chamber of Commerce Tuesday night. Pictured from left to right gre Otis Falls, Jr.. who made the award presentation; Hugh Lancaster, Jaycee president; Mr. Ciulyér and Jacob Dixon, chairman of the DSA committee. (Photo by Bill Jackson, Shelby Star). Neil AR Mayberry Boy Is '65 Winner Of Baby Derby James Edward Mayberry, Jr., six pound seven ounce baby boy, is winner of the Kings Mountain Herald's 10th annual baby der- by Young Mayberry arrived at 12:44 Friday afternoon at Kings Mountain hospital and is the third child of Mr. and Mrs. James Mayberry, Sr, of the Crowder’s Mountain community, Other members of the May- berry family are four-year-old Deanna Margaret and 16-month- old David Wayne Mayberry. Mrs. Mayerry is the former Mary Breedlove. The proud father is a Kings Mountain native, son of Mr. and i Mrs. Jesse Mayberry of East ! King street. His wife's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Breed- love of the Crowder’s Mountain community. The Mayberrys at- tend Carson Memorial church Dr. Thomas Durham was the attending physician. Mrs, Mayberry was discharged from the hospital on Monday but the baby remains a patient for treatment of “breathing difficul- ty."”, his father said. PROPOSED GAMBLE FOOTBALL STADIUM — The photograph above is architect's drawing of ball Stadium to be erected at the proposed John Gamble Foot- the site of the mew $1.1 million high school plant on Phifer road. Plan of the committee is for construction of a 4.000-seat football stadium, comparable to Shelby’s Blanton Memorial, and to include facilities for track. The $80,000 stadium is to be built from public subscription - ” “Speaking Out” Appears This Week The Herald is publishing this week the first in a series of re- ligious columns by Rev. George Moore, pastor of Resurrection Lutheran church and president of the Kings Mountain Ministeri- al Association. Articles will appear under the heading, “Speaking Out”, and comments are invited from read- ers. Davis Assuming Church Post Luther Davis, formerly organ- ist at St. Matthew's Lutheran church of Greenville, S. C., will assume duties as organist at Resurrection Lutheran church Sunday. ! Mr. Davis, a designer at Mar | grace plant of Massachuetts Mo- hair Plush Company, will suc- | ceed Mrs. Aubrey Mauney, church |; orzanist for 10 ycars. Mrs. Mauney, who has resign. | ed, will be honored by the Luthe- | ran congregation at a reception from 7 until 9 p.h. Saturday eve- ning at the Lutheran parsonage. | Members of the Church Council and their wives will be hosts and hostesses with Rev. and Mrs. | George Moore. Johnson, E.R. Goter Win Promotions At Foote Foote Mineral Elevates Two At Local Plant Foote Mineral Company's Kings Mountain operation an- nounced Wednesday the promo- tion o ftwo officials of the firm. Neil O. Johnson, operations manager since 1956, has been promoted to maneger of the Min- erals Division, a newly-created division of Foote Mineral Com- pany, which includes four plants: Kings Mountain, Sunbright, As- bury and Kimbalton. E. R. Goter, Kings Mountain plant genera 1 superintendent since 1961, becomes operations manager of the local operation, succeeding Mr. Johnson The Johnsons will continue to make their home in Sheloy. Mr. Johnson will supervise both min- jing and minerals operation at the ! four plants with offices at the Kings Mountain plant, Mr. and Mrs: Goter live on i Hillside Drive and are parents of two children: Carol Jean, a jun- lior at Duke University, and Win | Goter, a high school junior. The family attend Resurrection Lu- | theran church. funds and pledges toward construction reached $30,798.88 this week, including cash gifts of $3,298.88. Van Wageningen & Cothran are cxchitects for the stadium as well as the school plant. Concession and facility stands will be located on each side and a pressbox will be built over the concession stand en the home side. There will be concrete and wooden seats. : | i i | i i | i | i { | | | i Businessmen Give Opinions On: Prospects Kings Mountain's economic prospects for 1965 appear good, 1 spot survey of area industrial- .sts showed Wednesday Whether 19385 will be a good business year in Kings Mountain | brought virtually similar opin- Ja from yarn manufacturers as well as businessmen, W. K. Maunsy, Sr. Mills is optimistic as well as George Houser of Sadie Mills, Ben Grimes of Phenix Plant No. 1 of Burlington Industries and Tom Tate, sec cretary-treasurer of : Home Savings & Loan Associa- i tion, among “other leaders. Mr. Houser said, “It looks bet- ter than a year ago, in fact busi- of Mauney i ness has been brisk and we are hopeful it will continue and 1963 will be better than 1964." Most leaders shared the same opinion that recent legislation giving the textile industry one- price cotton is the difference. Before Congress passed the i one-price cotton legislation, it was possible for foreign textile industries to “uy American cot- ton at a lower price than could business interests. The expan- sion in textile industries in the Carolinas is due to their ability to buy cotton at an equitable price, Mr, Houser believes. Mr. Houser noted that this legisla- tion opened up buying that peo- ple had been holding back and he hopes the two-year program will be “a permanent thing.” The program, as set up, will expire August 1, 1966. Beh TF Manel, president of we Chamber of Commerce, said: “1965 is a bright new year and I am confident it will be a -good one for mercantile, manufactur- ing and home construction in Kings Mountain. . Kings Mountain business citizens have enjoyed a profitable year. We have seen the evidence of progress and are pleased that K Mills has joined our industrial family. I am opti- mistic that 1965 will be the best vear in the history of Cleveland County.” Easom To Install » - . Kiwanis Officers Horace Easom of Shelby, past lieutenant governor of District 1, Kiwanis International, will in- stall new, officers of the Kings Mountain Kiwanis club Thursday night, The civic club meets at 6:45 p.m. at the Woman's club Mr. Easom, a Kiwanian since 1928 who was instrumental the organization of the local civic club 25 years ago, is a former vice-president of Union Trust Company in Shelby and has beer active in civie, church and busi ness affairs of the county. He was named Citizen of thy Year in Shelby in 1%31 and Shel by Man of the Year in 1960. Mod- erator of Kings Mountain Baptist; Association, he was featured by “Charity and Children”, Baptist Publication, in a feature story entitled, “Horace Easom, Twice dule.” For 20 years he was direc- tor of education and music at Shelby's First Baptist church. W. S. Fulton, Jr., manager of Fulton's Department Store, will be installed as president of the civic club succeeding R. S, Len- non, PBX Club Taps Howard Grady Howard, Kings Moun- tain hospital administrator, was named ‘Boss of the Year” by the Gastonia Public Telephone Branch Exchange and Mrs. Ellen Petrosino, switchboard operator at Massachusetts Mohair Plush Company's Neisler plant, was named “Employee of the Year” at the club's annual employce- employer banquet Tuesday night. The Gastonia Chamber of Com- merce made the selection of “Boss of the Year” after reading letters submitted by the mem- bership. Both Mr. Howard and Mrs. Petrosino received gold loving Cups, >, Mrs, Petrosino, who is retiring, has been switchboard operater at the Neisler plant since 1957 W. J. Clark, sales supervising market director for Southern Bell Telephone Company, made the presentations, ol This page brought to you as a public service By Jones Intercable Kings Mountain, N.C. E. King Street At Canterbury Road 739-0164 Bh, in ~ Retired, Still Working Full Sche-