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The Greenville News from Greenville, South Carolina • Page 22

Location:
Greenville, South Carolina
Issue Date:
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22
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TWENTY TWO THE GREENVILLE NEWS, GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1961 DEATHS AND FUNERALS Edward Laws Funeral services for Edward 67, River Falls, Rt. 1, Marietta, will be conducted at Thomas McAfee Funeral Home today at 3 p.m. by Rev. Carl terson and Rev. Kenneth McDonald.

Burial will be in Grand View Memorial Gardens near Travelers Rest. Pallbearers will be Frank Benson, Lester Spivey, Cecil Buchanan, Melvin Jarrard, George Laws Jr. and Dozier Sellers. Mr. Laws died Sunday in the Veterans Hospital in Columbia.

The body is at the funeral home. The family is at the home of his daughter, Mrs. R. D. McGee, Carswell Avenue, Marietta.

J. H. Stevenson ABBEVILLE. John Harold Stevenson, 61, died Monday afternoon 1 while at work on his farm after suffering a heart attack. A lifelong resident of Abbeville County, he was 'and of the late James Andrew Lulie Reid Stevenson.

He was a member of Long Cane Presbyterian Church and a veteran of World War II. Surviving are two brothers, J. C. StevenStevenson, Abbeville; sister, Mrs. Lawrence Mcllwain of Abbeville.

Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Wednesday a at Long Cane, Presbyterian, Church Burial will be in Long Cane Cemetery. The body is at Harris Funeral Home. Dr. E.

L. Stockwell TRYON, N. C. Dr. Eunice LeBaron Stockwell, 50, eye specialist, died Sunday morning at her home in Tryon.

She was a daughter of the late Frederick Emerson and Fay Cracken Stockwell. She was a graduate of the University of Pennslyvania and the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania. She also did graduate work in ophthalmology at U. of Pa. Surviving are three sisters, Mrs.

Catherine S. Linder of Webster ford of Corvallis, Mrs. Grove, Mrs. D. Curtis, MunJames P.

Stewart of Princeton, N. J. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Church of the Holy Cross by Rev. Charles A.

Greer. The family requests no flowers be sent. Hilliard Sutton SPARTANBURG Hilliard Sitton, 57, of 325 DuPre Drive, died at his home Sunday after several years of declining health. He was a native of Horseshoe, N. and was a cotton broker.

He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church and a son of Mrs. Cora Lee Sitton of Spartanburg and the late Augustus Sitton. His wife was the late Mrs. Louise S. Sitton.

Surviving in addition to his mother are two sons, John H. Sitton of Spartanburg and Bill Sitton of Blue Ridge School, Hendersonville, N. C. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 3 p.m. J.

F. Floyd Mortuary by Dr. Marc C. Weersing and Rev. Leonard Topping.

Burial will be in Greenlawn Memorial Gardens. The body is at the mortuary and the family is at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Swain, 114 Pine Tree Circle. B.

H. Lumpkin COLUMBIA (AP) Bryan H. Lumpkin, 68, for many years head of what is now known as the State Legislative Council, died at his Columbia home Sunday. The funeral will be at 4 p.m. Tuesday at Trinity Episcopal Church with internment at Elmwood Cemetery.

Lumpkin was a native of Milledgeville, and came to Columbia as a young boy in 1899. He awas a graduate of the Coof South Carolina. lumbia schools and the Univeristy, Surviving are his widow, three daughters and two sons, and three sisters. Among the daughters are Mrs. William B.

Harvin of Manning and Mrs. David Martin of Durham, N.C. The sisters are Mrs. Elizabeth Glenn of Asheville. N.C., Miss Grace Lumpkin of New York City and Miss Katherine Lumpkin of Aurora, N.Y.

Other survivors live in Columbia. Beltone 18 W. McBee Ave. CE 2-5876 Easily Reached from Anywhere Thomas Funeral Home 639 NORTH MAIN STREET PHONE CEdar 2-6733 years. He was employed by the Eureka Plant of Springs Cotton Mills.

Surviving, are his wife, Mrs. Deleina Kirby Houston; eight sons, Charlie and Tarlie Houston, both of Atlanta, John E. Houston of Leeds, Clyde Houston of Greenville, Roy, Jimmy, Preston and Joe Houston, all of Chester: a daughter, Mrs. John Sansone of Homestead, three brothers, Marion Houston of Greenville, Jess Houston of Winter Haven, and Jack Houston of Clinton; and three sisters, Mrs. Jim Bryson of Rock Hill, Mrs.

Maude Brooks and Mrs. Buford Weaver, both of Gastonia, N.C. Funeral services will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at Eureka Methodist Church by Rev. Ross A.

Pickett, Rev. L. C. Turbeville and Rev. R.

J. Roberts. Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery. Wright's Home for Funerals is in charge. White Infant GREENWOOD Grave side services for the infant son of of Mr.

and Mrs. J. C. White Jr. 1102 Brooks will be conducted at Greenwood Memorial Gardens Tuesday at 3 p.

m. by Rev. James W. Buckingham. Surviving in addition to his parents are a brother, J.

C. White III of the home; and the paternal grandpartnts, Mr. and Mrs. J. C.

White Sr. of Greenwood. The body is at Blyth Funeral Home. Mrs. J.

H. Wilson The body of Mrs. Geneva Wyatt Wilson, 43, is expected to arrive in Greenville today at 12:45 p. m. from Miami, where she died Saturday.

A daughter of Mrs. Emma McCarson Wyatt and the late ChapWyatt, she lived in Greenville until five years ago when she moved to Miami Beach. She formerly operated Jackie's Beauty Shop in West Greenville. Her husband, J. H.

(Doc) Wilson, a city meat inspector, died in 1954. She was a member of Morgan Memorial Baptist Church. The family is at the home of her nephew, Charles E. Dill, 22 Hammett St. Further announcements will be by Thomas McAfee Funeral Home.

Mrs. H. L. Corley Mrs. Gynnlee Ivie Corley, 33, of 39 S.

Haven Drive, wife of Harold L. Corley, died at a local hospital yesterday at 12:22 p.m., following two weeks of serious illness and two months of declining health. A native of Wadley, Mrs. Corley spent most of her life in Spartanburg. She moved to Greenville 11 years ago.

She was a Baptist. Surviving also are two sons, Arron and Gerris Corley of the home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marion L. Ivie of Whitney; two sisters, Mrs.

Doris Pruitt of Spartanburg and Mrs. Bernice Brown of Hempstead, Long Island, N. one brother, Marvin L. Ivie of Greenville, and her grandmother, Mrs. Ida Prince of Spartan burg.

Funeral services will be conducted at Thomas McAfee Funeral Home Wednesday at 1 p.m. by Rev. C. Leon Chandler and Rev. Marion Tripp.

Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Park in Spartanburg. The body is at the funeral home. A. V. Daniel LAURENS Alvin Vance Daniel, 71, of 1 Walker Ave.

died late Sunday night in the Laurens County Hospital following a fourweek illness. A native of Rutherford County, N. he had made his home in Laurens for 20 years. He was a member of St. James Methodist Church.

Surviving are five sons, Billy Daniel of Albuqurque, N. A. V. Daniel Jr. of Hendersonville, N.

Jimmy Daniel of Greenwood, Elbert Daniel and Wayne Daniel, both of Laurens; 10 daughters, Mrs. Gene Knox of Clinton, Mrs. H. M. Crum of Greenwood.

Mrs. Harold Barbare, Mrs. Bill Meeks and Mrs. B. L.

Daniel, all of Greenville, Mrs. Fred Bohrmann of Alexandria, Mrs. Henry Ames of Harrington Park, N. Nora Kate Smith, Ann Sistare and Faye Sistare of Spartanburg. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m.

at St. James Methodist Church by Dr. Claude M. Shuler and Rev. Grange S.

Cothran. Burial will be in Rose Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Cain, C. H. Hendrix.

Leon Johnson, Elbert S. Self. Wilson 0. Foster and George A. Word.

The body will remain at the mortuary and will be placed in the church at 1 p.m. Mrs. John Collier WHITMIRE Mrs. Martha Carver Collier, 80, widow of John Collier, died Sunday night at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Walter Alexander, in the Goshen Hill section of Union County following one month of illness.

She was a native of Graham County, N.C., a daughter of the late Wash and Amanda Crisp Carver. She had made her home in the Goshen Hill section of Union County since 1929 and was a member of Bethesda Baptist Church. Surviving are 2 daughters, Mrs. Walter Alexander of Whitmire and Mrs. Robert Henderson of Canton, N.C.; 2 sons, Oliver Col-1 lier of Prosperity and Pearlie Collier of Whitmire; Garland four sis- ters, Mrs.

E. L. of Whitmire, Mrs. Mary Ammons of Black Mountain, N.C., Mrs. Jane Ammons of Andrews, N.C., and Polly Marcus of Spokane, one brother, Wash Carver of Almond, N.C.; 27 grandchildren and 25 great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 4 p.m. from Bethesda Baptist Church in Union County by Rev. Joe West, Rev. T. J.

Crisp and Rev. Gilliam Johnson. Burial will be in Lee Cemetery. Pallbearers will be grandsons. The body is at the home of Walter Alexander of Rt.

2, Whitmire. Abrams Funeral Home is in charge. Center Infant TRAVELERS REST Graveside services for Donald Timothy Center, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald H.

and Irene Boy Center, will be conducted Tuesday at 11 a.m. in Grandview Memorial Gardens by Rev. S. L. Buchanan.

Mr. and Mrs. Center were both reared in upper Greenville County and attend Mush Creek Baptist Church. Mr. Center is employed at Wunda Weve Carpet Co.

in Greenville. Surviving also are one sister, Miss Donna Sue Center; one brother, Michael Center of the home; the maternal grandmother, Mrs. Sara Boyd of Marietta, and the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ford Center of Travelers Rest.

The body is at O'Dell Mortuary, Mrs. H. C. Tinsley Mrs. Roxie Raines Tinsley, 65, of Rt.

1, Travelers Rest, widow of Henry Charles Tinsley, died at a local hospital yesterday at 12:20 p.m. after a long period of declining health and 10 days of serious illness. A daughter of the late Charlie and Tabitha R. Raines, she was born in Transylvania County, N. but had spent most of her life in the Travelers Rest section.

Mrs. Tinsley was a member of New Liberty Baptist Church and of the Mothers Class of the Sunday School. Surviving are 3 daughters, Mrs. Marie Goldsmith and Mrs. Louise Odom of Travelers Rest and Mrs.

Ruth Ward of Greenville; 1 son, Elbert Tinsley of Travelers Rest; 1 sister, Mrs. Emmie Stroud of Travelers Rest; 7 brothers, Bunyon, Odell, Worry, Cephus, Mark, Luther and Edd Raines, of Travelers Rest: 12 grandchildren, and 1 great-grandchild. Funeral plans will be announced by Thomas McAfee Funeral Home. family Mrs. is at Marie the home Goldsmith, of her daughter, 22 Circle Drive, Renfrew.

Mrs. T. G. Gibson Mrs. Anna Seay 83, widow of Thomas G.

Gibson, died at a local nursing home yesterday at 5:30 p. m. after a long period of declining health and two weeks of serious illness. Born Feb. 25, 1878 in Spartanburg County, Mrs.

Gibson lived there until she came to Greenville in 1916. For many years, she lived at 115 Carolina Ave. Her parents were the late James A. and Emma Gossett Seay, natives of Spartanburg County. Her husband died April 9, 1945.

Mrs. Gibson was a member of Grace Baptist Church and of the extension department of the Sunday School. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. T. J.

Estes of Winnsboro, Mrs. W. L. Leazer of Charlotte, N. and Mrs.

R. A. Wilson of Greenville; three sons, W. Carl J. and Clarence M.

Gibson of Greenville, and one sister, Mrs. Maude Collie of Spartanburg. Funeral plans will be announced by Thomas McAfee Funeral Home. Mrs. D.

H. Poole TRAVELERS REST Funeral services for Mrs. Daisy Barbare Poole, 61, will be conducted Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Pleasant View-Welcome Baptist Church by Rev. W.

M. Fletcher and Rev. Homer Couch. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Mrs.

Poole died at the home of Mrs. Hazel Barbare on Apopka Avenue, Greenville, morning after several years of declining health and being seriously ill one week. She was born in upper Greenville County and I lived there all her life. Mrs. Poole was we member of Pleasant Baptist Church.

Her husband, David H. Poole, died last October. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Ruth Wells of Travelers Rest: two sons, Ralph Poole of Marietta and William D. Poole of Travelers Rest; one sister, Mrs.

Ellie Nichols of Travelers Rest: 11 grandchildren, and 4 greatgrandchildren. After 2 p.m. Tuesday the body will be at the home of her daughter in the Pleasantview-Welcome community, but will be placed in the church Wednesday at 10 a.m. Pallbearers will be Ralph Bowers, Ray Childs, Norwood Childs, B. E.

Barbare, Roscoe Barbare and Raymond Davis. Honorary escort will be the Men's Bible Class of the church with Dr. T. E. Coleman, Dr.

Stanley Coleman, B. F. McDaniels, Ben Landreth, Carl Sandlin, W. H. Jarrard, S.

B. Cunningham, Jess Reynolds, Oscar Boland, Clifton Ables, Roland Jones, Howard Jones, T. R. Chandler, Troy Galloway, Rufus Medford and M. B.

Jones. O'Dell Mortuary is in charge. Navy Veteran Found Dead; Was Left Watching TV WARE SHOALS A retired Navy veteran, left to watch television when his son went to bed Sunday night, was found dead in his living room here Monday morning. An autopsy to determine the cause of death has been ordered by Coroner Odell T. Duvall, but results of the post mortem on were not available Monday afternoon.

Coroner Duvall said Paul Bow51-year-old Paul Leroy Bowen Easley Has 4-Car Wreck By NEWS STAFF WRITER Four cars were involved in an unusual wreck a half mile east of Easley Monday. Two drivers went to the hospital, three vehicles were considered total losses. Two of the cars collided twiceone each with two other vehicles in a zany mishap a half mile east of the city on Highway 123 By Hospitalized here were Hugh K. Lesley, 33, of Rt. 1, Easley, (driver of a 1951 Chevrolet, and James Walton Newton, 52, of Rt.

1, Easley, driver of a 1954 Dodge, and most seriously hurt with severe leg and face cuts and a dislocated hip. Lesley was not believed to be badly hurt. Two other drivers including Newton's wife escaped harm. Highway Patrol Cpl. T.

N. Ackerman explained the four car crash this way: Newton was traveling toward Greenville, followed by his wife, Mrs. Mary C. Newton, 28, in a 1950 Chevrolet. His car went out of control a and swerved to the right.

She swerved left to avoid his car and went off the highway. Newton's vehicle returned across the center line and met a 1955 Chevrolet driven by Rufus B. Hoffman, 24, of Gail Street, Easley. This car and Newton's collided. Hoffman's car traveled on, colliding with Mrs.

Newton's car. A 1951 Chevrolet, fourth car involved, and driven by Lesley, behind Hoffman. Attempting to avoid Hoffman the car and Newton's collided headon. The Dodge and 1951 and 1950 Chevrolets were termed total losses and damage to the 1955 Chevrolet put at $300. The patrol corporal said he would try to further unwind the accident Tuesday.

Democracy In South Blasted "Democracy and Christianity have both bogged down in this country," Rev. J. Herbert son, pastor of the United Presbyterian Church in Orangeburg, said here Sunday in a speech at Allen Temple AME Church. A member of the State Advisory Committee to the Civil Rights Commission, he spoke during a program sponsored by Phi Alpha chapter of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, composed of Negro business and professional men in the Piedmont area. "We are losing our resources through the thousands of teachers and the hundreds of doctors and ministers who have no choice but to leave the South because of its stagnant democracy," he said.

He also declared that the action of the recent South Carolina Baptist convention which met 1 in Greenville and rejected a motion that state Baptist institutions be integrated was an example of "faltering Christianity." Woman Hurt In Accident Mrs. Clara Hinchman of Glenwood, was admitted to General Hospital yesterday after she was involved in a car-truck collision on Poinsett Highway. She was in good condition after treatment for a possible head injury. She was the only accident victim admitted to the hospital yesterday. William Vaughn, 14, of Rt.

1, Travelers Rest, continued in poor condition. He was badly hurt last Saturday near Blue Ridge High School in a collision between a car and truck. Still listed in fair condition is Darrell Roger Chapman, 20, of 130 W. 1st Williamston, who received a fractured jaw and other injuries in an accident near Pelzer. In good condition is Peter Morrison, 21, of Clemson, who is being treated for a fractured wrist he received while plying football.

Storms Hit Much Of U.S. By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Thanksgiving week storms swept the Pacific Coast and the North Atlantic Seaboard Monday. The double onslaugh c. wintry weather touched off mudslides on the California coast, deep snows in the High Sierras, up to 6 inches of snow in New Jersey and New England's first region-wide Nor-easter. Drenching rains lashed South ern Colifornia and the San Francisco Bay area.

The Sierras and northern Nevada got their heaviest snow of the season, and the snow closed some mountain roads, Dorothy Heyward Porgy, Bess Collaborator Dies InN. Y. NEW YORK (AP)-Mrs. Dorothy Heyward, who with her husband chronicled Negro life on the Charleston, S. waterfront in the story of Porgy and Bess, died at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital Sunday.

The cause of the 71-year-old woman's death was tentatively diagnosed as a coronary thrombosis, She had undergone an appendectomy and apparently was recovering satisfactorily until a few minutes before she died. Funeral arrangements were incomplete Monday, She leaves a daughter, Jenifer. Mrs. Heyward wrote plays and novels of her own. But greatest success came in collobration with her husband, DuBose Heyward.

Mrs. Heyward was Dorothy Hartzell Kuhns of Wooster, Ohio when she met DuBose Heyward in 1922 at the MacDowell Colony of Artists in Petersborough, N. H. They were married in 1923 and went to live in a cabin in the Great Smoky Mountains. It was at this retreat that she tried to persuade Heyward to convert his novel "Porgy" into a play.

When she was unsuccessful, she tried writing a play draft herself, letting Heyward think she was working on a detective story. When her husband saw her finfished work he became enthuasistic, and together they wrote the final stage version. Set to music by George and Ira Gershwin, the play "Porgy and Bess" opened on Broadway in 1927. It was to win world acclaim. J.

L. Teasley, 65, Succumbs HARTWELL, Ga. James Loy Teasley, 65, of 118 Forest Ave. died Monday at 3 p.m. in Hart County Hospital after an illness of eight weeks.

Born March 13, 1896 in Hartwell, he was a son of the late Allen and Georgia Jones Teasley, and had spent all his life there. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Cola Neese Teasley; two sons, Lucius E. Teasley of Columbus, and James W. Teasley of Greenville: two brothers, Alfred Teasley Hartwell and Oscar of Macon, and three grandchildren.

was a member of Hartwell Methodist Church. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Smith's Funeral Home by Rev. Robert Hayes. Burial will be in Nancy Hart Memorial Cemetery.

The body is at the funeral home. Over The Counter The following bid and ask quotations, from the National Association of Securities Dealers, do not represent actual transactions. They are a guide to the range within which these securities could have been sold (indicated by the or bought (indicated by the at the time of compilation. Bid Asked American Discount Cyrogenics 29 30 American Heritage 18 American Investors 17-16 American Security Shell Homes Billups Eastern Billups Capital Western National Bank of sC 91 Carolina Pipeline Co. Colonial Stores, Inc.

Crumpton Builders Dallas Airmotive Diebold 96 Dynatronics 13 Far West Fin. First Republic Georgia International Gulf Life Ins. Co. Holiday Inns, Inc. Enterprises Houston Corp.

101 Minit Mkts. Jefferson Std. Life ins. Co. 92 Howard Johnson Liberty Life ins.

Co. 39 42 Life Casualty Ins. Co. 33 Life of Va. 140 145 Lithonia Lighting 15 16 Lowes Cos.

Lucky Stores. Inc. Maior League Bowling McLean Industries, Inc. N. C.

Natural Gas Co. Overnite Transportation Co. Peoples National Bank 57 Piedmont Natural Gas Public Service of N. C. 12 13.

Pyramid Builders Life Supplies 1812 20 Sabre Inc. Corp. Scrivener Stevens Sea Pac 5. C. National Bank Soroban Corp.

Southern Bank and Trust Tekoil Corp. Telechrome Texas National Petroleum Chemicals, Inc. Wachovia Bank Trust Jim Walter Corp. SPOT COTTON NEW ORLEANS (AP) Spot cotton Total for season 4,070,996 Cottonseed Oil NEW YORK (AP)-Bleachable cottonseed oil futures closed 13 lower to higher. Sales 63 contracts.

High Low Close Dec 14.09 14.03 14.09 March 14.02 13.94 13.97 May 13.99 13.97 13.978 Jul 14.00 13.95 13.95B Oct 13.35 13.35 13.35B Closing Bids: Sep 13.55 B- -Bid. Local Cotton Reported by the Greenville Cotton Ex changs in connection with USDA quota ions are tor mixed lots equal to official standards uncompressed to warehouse Basis middling 1 inch. Bales sold 13,899. GRADE AND 15-16 1-32 COLOR Inch inch inch inch Middling 10.85 72.10 33.60 34.30 GEORGIA POULTRY ATLANTA (AP) Georgia live poultry: Ready demand continues slow to fair. Broilers, and fryers 11-13 cents most 12 plant prices cents type lb.

Hens: Market unsettled on heavy as offerings increased ranging Middling Sales New Orleans 33.15 121 Galveston 33.25 465 Houston 33.25 5,181 Dallas 33.15 3,918 Memphis ..33.40 48.947 Little Rock 33.60 2,740 Montgomery 34.00 1,962 Augusta 34.50 825 Atlanta 34.00 Charleston 34.00 Fresno 33.25 32,040 Lubbock 33.00 14.007 Greenwood, Miss. 33.50 Greenville, S.C. 34.25 9,918 New York 35.60 Total 123,091 for week 123,091 from adequate to fully ample. Light type 2,800 head. Heavy type farms cents, light type at farms 7 cents f.o.b.

plants too few to report. LINT FUTURES CLOSE LOWER Mrs. McClellan PICKENS Graveside services for Mrs. Frances G. McClellan, 43, of Rt.

1, Pickens, will be conducted at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Pickens View Wesleyan Methodist Church cemetery. Funeral services were conducted Friday but burial was delayed until the arrival of a son on special assignment with the U. S. Marines in the Mediterranean.

Robinson Funeral Home is in charge. Acey B. Minor CALHOUN FALLS Funeral services for Acey Beaxer Minor, 72, who died Sunday will be at 3 p.m. Tuesday at Carswell Baptist Church near Iva by Rev. John Chapman, Rev.

H. C. Crawford and Rev. Marvin Cash. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

The body is at the home on Rice Street. Parker Funeral Home is in charge. WOODRUFF Mrs. Cora Lee Malone McGee, 47, died suddenly Sunday at 8:45 p.m. after a few She hours was of a of Mrs.

Celia Suttles Malone and the late Joe Malone. Surviving are her husband, George McGee; a brother, Joe Malone of Greenville; six sisters, Mrs. J. T. Cody of Union, Mrs.

Frank Waddell of Simpsonville, Mrs. Margaret Thomason of Mauldin, Mrs. Betty Thomason of Simpsonville, Mrs. Gene of Owings and Mrs. Charles Dixon of Greenville.

Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Friendship Baptist Church In Laurens County by Rev. Olin Hutchinson and Rev. C. L.

Boyter. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Pallbearers will be Keith Waddell, Jack Cody, David Cody, Earl Godfrey, Charles Cooper and Ansel Leopard. Honorary escort will be deacons of Friendship Baptist Church and M. B.

Henderson and Attaway Tinsley. The body is at Lanford-Boyter Mortuary and the family is at the home of Mrs. Hames in Owings. Mrs. George McGee Melvin Pace Arthur Melvin Pace, 56, of 109 Cumberland died at a local hospital yesterday at 8 p.m.

after one year of declining health and a serious illness of two months. He had lived at his last address for five years, and had made his home in Greenville 23 years. He was born in Tryon, N. the son of the late Jonathan and Ida Wilhelm Pace Davidson. He was a Baptist.

He was a machinist at Palmetto Box Co. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Elsie W. Pace of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Doris Lenora Sanders and Miss Patricia Ann Pace of Greenville; three sons, Melvin Kenneth, Charles Buddy and Harold Franklin Pace of Greenville; his mother, Mrs.

Ida Davidson of Tryon; one brother, Loton Pace of Tryon; two half sisters, Mrs. John Cowan Tryon and Mrs. Willie West of Columbus, N. two half brothers, Richard and Edgar Davidson of Tryon, and five grandchildren. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Thomas McAfee Funeral Home.

The body is at the funeral home. Mrs. C. E. Jordan McCORMICK Mrs.

Belle Carroll Jordan, 86, died at 6:30 p. m. Sunday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. C.

Creswell at Troy after a long illness. She was a native of McCormick, a daughter of the late Michael and Hulda Newby Carroll. She was a member of Galloway Methodist Church. Her husband, Charles Edward Jordan, died a number of years ago. Surviving are 4 daughters, Mrs.

J. C. Creswell of Troy, Mrs. Chester Parker of Aiken, Mrs. Tom Anderson of Greenwood and Mrs.

Lester Simons of Gloverville; a son, Raymond Greenwood; 2 brothers, G. E. Carroll of McCormick and B. G. Carroll of Greenwood; 26 grandchildren; 48 great and 5 great-great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a. m. Tuesday at Troy Baptist Church by Rev. Carroll Spivey. Burial will be in Edgewood Cemetery in Greenwood.

Grandsons will be pallbearers. The body is at Strom Funeral Home and will be placed in the church at 10 a. m. Tuesday. W.

G. Houston CHESTER William Garfield (Bill) Houston, 59, died suddenly Monday morning at his home. He was a native of Jackson County, N.C., a son of the late Monroe and Vini Ingram Houston. He was a member of Eureka Methodist Church and had lived in Chester for the past 23 FUNERAL INVITATIONS The friends and relatives of Mrs. Ruth Wells, Ralph Poole, William Poole and Mrs.

Ellie Nichols are respectively invited to attend the funeral services for Mrs. Daisy Poole Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Pleasant View Baptist Church. Burial will be in the church cemetery. O'Dell Mortuary Directors.

The friends and relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Laws, Mrs. H. L.

Stephens, Mrs. Archie Fossum, Mrs. Hugh K. Mansfield, Mrs. R.

D. McGee, Sammy Laws, John Laws, Talmadge Laws, Mrs. Dollie Buchanan, Willie Laws and George Laws are respectfully invited to attend the funeral services of Edward Laws to be conducted at Thomas McAfee Funeral Home Tuesday at 3 p.m. Burial will be in Grand View Memorial Gardens near Travelers Rest. Thomas McAfee, funeral director.

en 14, the only resident of the 21 Circle home, other, found his father a few feet from a couch where he was watching TV when Paul Jr. went to bed about 10 p.m. The death was discovered about 7:15 a.m. when Paul Jr. arose.

Mr. Bowen was a native Otto, Iowa, and was a son of Mrs. J. A. Bowen and the late Mr.

Bowen. His mother lives in Anthon, Iowa. Surviving in addition to his mother and son are three brothers, Theodore, Ivan and Vernon Bowen, all of San Matoe, and a sister, Mrs. Kenneth Page of Ames, Iowa. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Parker-White Funeral Home in Ware Shoals.

The U. S. Naval Air Station lanta, Marietta, is making a change in its attack squadrons to F9F8 jet aircraft. To from propeller, type AD5 aircraft assist in the transition from propeller to jet aircraft, 12V jet trainers have arrived and the change is now taking place. There will be openings in the new jet squadrons for former Navy pilots and enlisted personnel who have experience in fields of maintenance, metalsmiths, ordnance, electricians and electronics.

Naval Air Reservists are airlifted to NAS, Atlanta, from Greenville on the a second weekend each month, departing from Municipal Airport Friday evening and returning Sunday. Naval Air Reservists on-inactive status are urged to participate. This group may come in at the rate held when they were released from active duty. Naval Air veterans who have been discharged may reenlist at the highest rate held regardless of the time elapsed since discharged. Complete information may be obtained from the Recruiting Office, U.

S. Naval Air Station Atlanta, Marietta, Ga. Naval Station Getting Jets WASHINGTON (UPI) gian Foreign Minister Paul Henri Spaak told President Kennedy Monday that he saw no immediate prospects for peace in the Congo. Spaak made a quick trip to Washington from New York, where he is attending the United Nations, to confer with Kennedy and Secretary of State Dean Rusk on the future of Belgium's former African colony, In addition, the former secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization also discussed the Berlin problem with Kennedy. Doesn't See Congo Peace Power Struggle Begins In House WASHINGTON (UPI) A struggle for the Democratic leadership of the House the first in 21 years- erupted Monday in the wake of Speaker Sam Rayburn's death.

Rep. Richard Bolling, 45, a liberal from Kansas City, launched an uphill fight to beat Rep. Carl Albert, 53, a moderate from an Oklahoma farming district, for the post of majority leader. And Albert Rains, 59-year-old Alabama Democrat, let it be known he is considering challenging Rep. John W.

McCormack of Massachusetts for the speaker's post. 'Muzzling' Probe Set For January WASHINGTON (P) A special Senate subcommittee Monday postponed until January the start of its investigation of charges by Sen. Strom Thurmond, D-S. that the Pentagon has censored anti-Communist statements by military personnel. Chairman Stennis, D- announced the postponement after a conference with Thurmond.

He said they had discussed the volume of documents and evidence expected to be offered in the public hearings before deciding on the delay. Grandma Makes Long Balloon Hop OKEMAH, Okla. (UPI) A Pennsylvania grandmother ended a 40-hour flight in a balloon over three states Monday and set a new women's endurance record. Mrs. Alford Wolf, 56, of Bluebell, said she made the gruelling trip because she was "sick and tired" of Russian claims of superiority.

MASONIC MEETINGS EMPIRE Empire Lodge 213 will meet today at 7:30 p. m. to confer the fellowcraft degree. Roy F. Edwards is worshipful master.

TAYLORS Taylors Lodge 345 will hold a special communication today at 7:30 p.m. to confer the fellowcraft degree. S. D. Stevenson is wor(shipful master.

NEW YORK (AP) Cotton futures closed 30 cents to $1.95 a bale lower Monday. Commission house liquidation, based on talk of lower cotton price supports next year, dropped futures as much as $3.10 a bale at one time. Prices later recovered somewhat on short covering. The July 1962 delivery showed the widest decline. This is the last of the 1961 trading months but was expected to be influenced by any lower supports for cotton next year.

Nearby current crop positions held relatively steady as liquidation and hedging met a good volume of trade buying. A leading spot firm in its latest weekly survey indicated that the cotton harvest was slowed in most areas of the Cotton Belt, except the Far West, by rain and snow. Dealers said the National Cotton Advisory Committee opened meetings in Washington and was pected to formulate tions for the cotton program next year. Open High Low Close N.C. Dec 34.33 34.33 34.23 34.24 Mar 35.03 35.08 34.99 34.99 May 35.36 35.37 35.25 34.63 35.27B -39 Jul 34.95 35.00 34.40 Oct 33.53 33.53 33.35 33.538 -17 Dec 33.71 33.71 33.53 33.65 Mar 33.60 33.88 33.60 33.858 May 33.90B Middling Spot 35.60N unchanged.

N-Norminal; B- -Bid. NEW ORLEANS COTTON NEW ORLEANS (AP) Cotton futures declined Monday under a small amount of long liquidation. Closing prices were steady 35 cents $1.95 a bale lower. Open High Low Close Dec. 34.34B Mar.

35.09B May 35.46B 35.37B Jul. 35.06 35.06 34.73B 39 Oct. 33.658 33.58B Dec. 33.68B 33.70B Mar. 33.85B 33.908 May 33.95B NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Spot cotton Sales 121.

Low middling 30.65; middling closed steady and unchanged Monday. 33.15. Good middling 33.85. Funds INVESTING Select 10.27 10.99 COMPANIES Var Pay 7.82 8.49 NEW YORK (AP) Canad 6.28 6.79 National. Associa- InvResch 14.98 16.37 tion Securities Deal- Johnstn 16.22 16.22 ers, Inc.

KEYSTONE: Bid Ask Cus B1 24.85 25.94 Aberdeen 2.55 2.79 Cus B2 21.78 23.76 Advise Fd 7.25 7.99 CuS B3 15.56 16.98 Affil Fd 8.73 9.44 Cus B4 9.38 10.24 4.98 5.32 CUS K1 9.43 10.30 Am Inv 19.39 19.39 Cus 6.46 7.04 Am Mut 10.21 11.16 Cus S1 52 24.64 26.88 Asso Fd 1.70 1.87 Cus 13.89 15.16 Atom Ph 5.76 6.29 Cus 53 15.95 17.40 AxeH A 5.64 6.13 Cus 54 5.24 5.71 Axel 5.58 10.41 Keys Can 16.32 17.66 AxeH Stk 3.98 4.35 Knickerb 6.54 7.17 Axe Scien 12.68 13.78 Knick Gth 7.94 8.70 AxeTemp 10.96 11.98 Lazard 17.875 18.75 Blue Rid 13.61 14.87 Lexingt 12.05 13.17 Bost Fd 20.73 22.66 Life Inv 17.76 19.41 Broad St 15.29 16.53 Life Stk 12.25 13.35 Bullock 14.37 15.75 Loom SCa 31.28 31.20 Calif Fd 8.13 8.89 Loom Say FUND: 17.11 17.11 Can Gen 16.12 17.62 MANAG Can Fd 18.42 19.93 Elect 2.88 3.15 Can IGth 11.56 12.63 Gen Ind 4.18 4.57 Capit Shr 16.64 18.24 Metal 2.34 2.56 Cent Shr 15.62 16.96 Paper 3.55 3.88 Chase Fd 8.80 9.62 Petrol 2.29 2.50 Chem Fd Unavail Speci 4.46 4.87 Colon Fd 12.29 13.43 Trans 2.97 3.25 Col. Grth 15.34 16.77 Mass Mass Tr 16.39 21.01 17.91 Cwth Inc 10.04 10.97 Gth 19.22 Com Int 11.25 12.30 Mass Life 24.91 26.93 Com Inv 10.90 11.91 Add Investings 9-12 Com Stk 18.75 20.45 M.I.F. Fd 15.78 17.06 Comp Bd 20.40 22.17 M.I.F Gth 4.85 5.24 Comp Fd 9.25 10.05 Mut Inves 11.10 12.11 Concord 14.99 16.21 Mut Shrs 15.74 15.74 Cons Inv 23.00 24.50 Mut Trust 3.42 3.49 Cont Grth 10.02 10.95 Nat WSec 23.49 25.41 Corp Ld 22.69 24.69 Nat Inves 17.78 19.22 Crown 8.82 9.65 NAT SEC SER: Fd 13.80 15.17 Balan 11.94 13.05 Dela Inc 10.27 11.29 Bond 5.63 6.15 de Veghin 18.54 18.73 Divid 3.90 4.26 de VeghM 68.00 68.69 Pf Stk 7.18 7.85 Diver Gr 11.60 12.71 Income 6.30 6.89 Diver Inv 9.94 10.89 Stock 9.09 9.93 Divid Shr 3.65 4.00 Grwth 10.07 11.01 Dow Th In 6.71 7.26 New Eng 12.32 13.32 Dreyfus 18.61 20.23 NY Capit 16.64 16.64 Eaton Bal 13.52 14.61 NCE Sh 13.77 15.05 Eaton Stk 15.58 16.84 One WmS 15.65 17.10 Elec Inv 7.46 8.150ppen Fd 18.98 20.74 Energy 24.74 24.74 PennSq 15.75 15.75 Equity 10.04 10.44 Peoples 11.92 13.06 Fed Grth 14.06 15.27 Phila Fd 12.34 13.52 Fid Cap 21.11 22.95 Pine St 13.30 13.43 Fid Fund 18.73 20.25 Pioneer Unavail FidTrend 15.06 16.28 Price TR 17.35 17.53 Fid Mut 21.05 22.70 Provident 4.56 4.90 F. I. F.

5.08 5.56 Puritan 8.59 9.29 Fla Gth 6.66 7.27 Putnam 17.23 18.77 Fla Mut 2.28 2.49 Put Grth 10.25 11.14 Fnd Mut 13.17 14.32 Quar Dist 7.96 8.70 Fnk Bnd 2.48 2.73 Revere 13.92 15.13 Fnk Com 7.53 8.27 Scud Can 14.51 14.51 Fnk Pf 2.64 2.90 Scud SC 20.64 20.64 Fund Am 9.10 9.89 Scud Stk 11.04 11.04 Fund Inv 11.14 12.21 Selec Am 10.97 11.86 Gen Cap 21.27 Sharehid 12.02 13.14 Gen Inves 7.44 8.09 Smith Ed 10.65 GROUP SEC: Sw Inves 9.33 9.01 9.06 9.93 Sover Inv 16.38 17.94 Cap Gr 6.98 7.65 State St 46.25 48.25 ComSt 14.24 15.59 Stein RF 41.24 41.24 Ful Ad 10.15 11.12 Stein Stk 35.39 35.89 Gen Bd 7.08 7.76 Sterl Inv 12.07 13.05 Petrol 11.02 12.07 Telev EI 8.84 9.63 Grth Ind 23.62 24.33 Texas Fd 12.63 13.80 Guardn 22.77 22.77 TwenCGth 9.89 10.81 Ham hc7 6.07 6.63 UBS Fd 10.68 11.34 Ham Hda 5.95 UNITED FUNDS: Haydock 30.18 30.18 Accum 16.16 17.66 Imp Cap 10.16 11.05 Cont 8.01 8.75 Imp Fd 10.84 11.79 Incom 14.02 15.32 Fnd 2.91 3.19 Intl 11.15 12.23 Inc Bost 8.44 9.22 Scien 7.98 8.72 Incorp: nc 10.03 10.98 IstelFd 39.15 39.93 Incorpinv 9.04 9.98 UnFCo 18.62 20.24 INSTIT SHRS: VaiLine 7.67 8.38 Found 12.30 13.46 Val Linc 5.58 6.10 Grwth 12.13 13.27 LSpl 4.61 5.04 Income 6.85 7.49 WallS! In 10.25 11.20 Int Resour 5.35 5.83 Wash Mut 11.33 12.38 Inv CoAm 12.16 13.29 Well Eq 17.83 19.30 Inves Bos 13.21 14.44 Well Fd 16.37 17.84 INVEST GRP: Whitehll 14.43 15.60 Mutual 12.13 13.11 Winfield 8.86 9.60 Stock 20.57 22.34 Wiscon 8.10 8.76 In The Spotlight NEW YORK (AP)-Sales, closing price and net change of the fifteen most active stocks traded on the NY Stock Exchange Monday. San Diego Imp 90,300 Forem Dair 73,100 Penna RR 53,200 Martin Mar 42,700 Chrysler 39,100 Std Oil NJ 36,300 Gen Motors 34,000 Am Tel 32,700 Gen Dynamics 30,200 29,500 Apco Oil 27,700 US Steel 27,400 Desoto Chem 25,300 Westing El 23,900 Alieg Corp 23,600 At A Glance NEW YORK (AP) Stocks- Higher; some wide moves. Bonds -Mixed; narrow changes. Cotton -Lower: sharp declines in new crop months. CHICAGO: Wheat -Steady; mixed trade.

Corn -Slightly higher; light demand. Oats- -Firm; with corn. Soybeans -Lower; November weak. Hogs- Cattle- -Steady to 25 cents higher; top -Slaughter steers steady; top $27.50. Spot Averages price NEW of one ORLEANS inch spot (AP) cotton The average at 14 designated Southern spot markets Monday was unchanged at 33.59 cents a pound; previous day 33.59; week ago 33.60; month ago 33.61, year ago 30.19.

Average for the past 30 market days 33.60. Middling 15-16 inch average 31.84. Sales 123,091. Textiles NEW YORK (AP) Scattered sales of print cloths and other constructions predominated in the cotton textile mar. ket Monday.

Prices were about Une changed. Orders for wool goods were moderate. Prices were unchanged to higher at tralian wool auctions. In synthetics, a good converter demand for cotton-dacron blends was reported, Some prices were higher. COTTON Greenville mid.

spot 34.25 New York mid. spot 1 inch 33.60 14 market spot average 33.59 BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO (AP)-Butter: wholesale selling prices unchanged; 93 score AA 60.4661 92 A 60.466; 90 Eggs: prices paid delivered Chicago unchanged to 2 higher: 60 per cent or better grade A whites medium extras 25-26; standards 32-34; checks.

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