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The Greenville News from Greenville, South Carolina • Page 9

Location:
Greenville, South Carolina
Issue Date:
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9
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FRIDAY, AUGUST li 1942 THE GREENVILLE NEWS, GREENVILLE. SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE NINE SCOTTY, LASTOF CANDIDATES SAY Big Battle Flares On Moscow Front. DEATHS Thev formed the jaws of a plncer which finally enclosed the Wades-boro objective. A blue cavalry regiment, sent around the south fianfc was the first to cross the river last night, under heavy gas and artillery fire. Under cover of darkness, the Blues put up three pontoon bridges, several footbridges and steel-cable ferries facilitating the coordinatec river crossing last night and early twlao ThrA rfr1mnr et Texas IWF GALLANT AMERICANS, DIES Wanted To.

Paste 'Krauts' One More Time Under Colors Of U. S. A. BACK BROKEN 3 PLACES I KEEP SOUTHERN IES Tells Bankhead Not Feasible To Train All Northern Negroes In North ARMY NEEDS C0ME FIRST WASHINGTON, Aug. George C.

Marshall. Army chief of staff, has rejected the suggestion of Senator Bankhead (D-Ala) that northern negro troops be stationed only In the north to avoid any possible racial difficulties, aides to the senator disclosed today. General Marshall said In a letter to the senator that military policy must dictate the locating of troops although full consideration is given to the sentiments of civilian communities adjacent to the posts. Bankhead't letter to the general followed a disturbance Involving some negro troops at Jacksonville, Fla. Marshall said: 'The War Department has given careful study to the assignment of troops and fully recognizes that harmonious relations between the soldiers at any particular camp and the adjacent civilian population Is conducive to htgh morale and contributes to military efficiency.

"I am convinced however that the only sound basis upon which we can proceed in the prosecution of the war Is to station our troops in accordance with the dictates of military necessity. Therefore while our policy in general is when practicable to station northern troops In northern stations and southern IRSli HE FBI Investigates Reports Of Hauling Petiole From State (Continued from Page One) initiated at once. Mr. Cunningham said that the complaints received by iienator Maybank would be probed to the fullest extent. He said the investigation would take several weeks to complete since every outlet in this area must be checked.

The Washington official warned that any violations found as a result of the investigation would be brought to the attention of federal official'! and the cases prosecuted. The following is from limitation order L-70 as to shipment of motor fuel from curtailed areas: "(c Limitation on Shipment of Motor Fuel from the Curtailment Area. "No supplier shall deliver or cause to be delivered, directly or indirectly, and no person shall accept delivery of any motor fuel from any point within the curtailment area, to any point in the United States outside the curtailment area: Provided, that this paragraph shall not apply to: "(1) The delivery of motor fuel from the curtailment area into contiguous areas for return delivery into the curtailment area; "(2) The return delivery into contiguous areas of motor fuel delivered into the curtailment area from such contiguous areas for return delivery; "3t The delivery outside the curtailment area of benaol or of any motor fuel manufactured wholly from crude oil or natural gas produced within the curtailment area; "(4 1 Deliveries from bulk plants within the curtailment area to such points outside the curtailment area as were actually served by such bulk plants by tank trucks during the period December 1. 1941-Feb-ruary 28, 1942, Inclusive." Tliantom Barber' division crossed bv heavy and light pontoon Driages pusnea step oy swrp over the river by their engineer la.m. rh, Um cAiith flanlr Another II aui.h irv.

heavy 25-ton pontoon structure was usea oy Uie Blue armorea uikisium. Hen It Cartographic longing to K. C. Coleman here laid an unusually large egg. which he says has an almost perfect map of Australia ana New uumea ouuuicu on the shell.

Portrait Service GREENVILLE AIR BAbb PERSONNEL Available Her Workmanship Coxe Studio PHONE 4211 Woodside Building PEE OEE Cross Stream And Are Ready To StrikeAt Retreating Red Forces CAVALRY LEADS WADESBORO, N. Auc. 13 The second battle of the Pee Dee river in the Sixth army corps' Carolina maneuvers ended today as Blue armored infantry forces assembled on the west side of the river and were readv to strike at the retreating Reds. With Wadesboro's rail lines as their objective. MaJ.

Gen. Fred L. Walkers Blues developed a timetable schedule for their drive across the 40-mile river front. Action during the first two days was deliberate, buildine ud to a strona co ordinated attack launched last night. RED FORCE IS LIGHT The Red defense of MaJ.

Oen. Leonard T. Qerow was based on relatively light detachments along the west bank of the Pee Dee. with Stronger holding forces at probable crossings and a heavy reserve ready to throw in wherever the Blues at temDted to cross. General Walker disposed his Infantry force on the north flank with his armored division to the soutn, tionps In the south and also to station colored troops in localities where a commensurate negro cmi inn nonulation exists, the imDle mentation of the policy must be secondary to military require ments.

3Boh 15c BLUES VICTORS AND RAP HOSPITAL. EASTERN ENGLAND, Aug. 13. (U.R) Alex (Scotty) Cooke of Los Angeles, last of the RAF' "gallant nineteen" Americans, died today without realizing his hope to bomb "the krauts" hlle flying with his own country's ir force. Beside his bed was a picture of Lieut.

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, 4 commander of American forces in Europe. And nearby was a letter from the general promising Scotty a Job with the United States Army Air corps when he recovered. LAST WISH DENIED But the burning desire to make 1 ene more trip over Germany in an American bomber was not enough to keep Scotty alive.

Doctors said it was miraculous that he clung to life as long as he did more than 10 months with his back broken in three places, Back in the days when Britain was waging a lone fight against the Axis, 33-year-old Cooke and 18 pals decided to lend a hand. They paid their own passage here to fight with the RAP. and, as Scotty used to say, "do some good before the United States gets into it." One by one they failed to return from their missions. Some were killed and others captured until only Scotty was left. Forty-nine times Scotty sat behind the rear guns of a Wellington bomber as it roared out to attack enemy territory.

The 50th trip came one night last September. Over Frankfort the plane was battered by anti-aircraft fire. ONLY SCOTTY SURVIVES When it came in to its own airdrome it was so damaged that the pilot had to make a crash-landing. All the crew except Scotty were killed. They took the American to this hospital and they set the odds against his recovery at a million to one.

But when I visited him last month he still was hanging on confident he would get back in the fight. Before I left he asked if I would find out what his chances were to get in the United States Army Air corps when he recovered. A few days later, Scotty received a letter from Oeneral Eisenhower 4J saying the United States Army would be "delighted" to have him transfer to Its forces. The doctors said today that the letter "added at least two more weeks to his life." They said he hung on when all hope was gone because, as Scotty used to tell his doctors, "I want to give those krauts just one more pasting while flying under my own colors." Discards Spectacles A KENNEBUNK, Me. (U.R Ninety-v five-year-old Miss Mary E.

Kimball now reads without glasses, although she wore them for 45 years. She put spectacles on when she was 30 and discarded them when 75. FUNERAL INVITATION Russians Report (Continued from Page One) Soviet capital. The Red army was said to have crossed a nver near Bryansk to dislodge the enemy from several localities. There was little elaboration in brief dispatches reaching the Soviet capital saying fighting similar in scope and intensity to that in the Caucasus had flared over the northwestern front.

The Soviet Information bureau aiH ntilv that, tho PjH irmv had occupied a "populated place" In the general area, uui a aispaicn tu uic Communist party newspaper Prav-da from the front which winds 500 miles northwest of Moscow to Len- ii-iorari said tha Prfrni.nK httrl at tempted a violent 120-plane raid on Leningrad and scattered- parachutists around the northern city. Without giving the date of the attack. Pravda said 30 of the planes were shot down and the parachutists mopped up. NAZI VERSION DIFFERS (Giving a different version and suggesting Russian, not German, infantry and armored divisions were tied "in a heavy defensive struggle" on both sides of Rzhev, 130 miles northwest of Moscow. The Rzhev area is the site of some of the strongest German fortifications along the entire eastern front.

In last winter's great Soviet counter-offensive, in -which the Germans were pushed back generally along the entire battle-front, the Red army made little headway in the Rzhev area. After manv weeks of fighting the German positions about Rzhev formed a large bend in the long battlelirie. and the situation has remained generally static there all this year. (The scope of this battle was hinted by the Oermans who Baid 71 Red army tanks were destroyed there yesterday, 55 of them on the front of a single nazi division. LAKE ILMEN ACTIVITY (The Germans said the Russians also were attacking at lake Ilmen, southeast of Leingrad.

(An even more violent Soviet offensive was being waged around Voronezh, on the northern shoulder of German Field Marshal Fedor von Bock's Caucasian army, the Germans hinted. (Here, where they said yesterday they were encountering superior Russian numbers, they declared they had knocked out 234 Soviet tanks in the last two days, and the battle was said to have "increased in violence" in the last few hours.) The Soviet Information bureau's midday communique said "our troops continue to press back the enemy" at Voronezh. 1 1 Dodge Heir Passes In Detroit Hospital Strikes Wife After She Calls At Home Where He Is Drinking DETROIT. Aug. 13.

(JP) John Duval Dodge, 43, son of the late millionaire automotive manufacturer, John F. Dodge, died tonight in Receiving hospital. Dodge's death came a few hours after Prosecutor William E. Dow-ling of Wavne county said he was informed that a quarrel in which Dodge struck his wife while another woman looked on, preceded Dodge's arrest Wednesday morning and his subsequent collapse in a police station. Dodge was taken into custody after a woman reported she saw a man pry a screen from a window at the home of Howard K.

Lange, on Van Dyke place. Dowling, after questioning Mrs. Dodge and four other persons, said today he was told that Mrs. Dodge was visiting in a residence next door to Lange's when she saw her husband drinking in the Lange home. The prosecutor said Mrs.

Dodge went to Lange's, and was admitted by Miss Mignon Fontaine, whom he described as "a roomer in the Lange home." "Dodge accused her of spying on him," Dowling said. "He chastised her severely and finally struck her, hitting her on the face three times. She fell to the floor. Miss Fontaine ran out of the house." Dowling said he had concluded that the excitement in the Lange home probably had brought on Dodge's condition of coma, probably a cerebral hemorrhage, or stroke. University of Javia, Italy, was founded by Lothalre, grandson of Charlemagne, In 825.

-jUiSi AM 11:14 114 Ik. "ta BUY WAR STAMPS BONDS REGULARLY I FIRS! SPEECHES TO FEWALOS Crowd Increases. To 75 J. L. Davis Presides At Campaign Opener SPEAK AT DUE WEST ABBEVILLE, Aug.

IS The Abbeville county campaign opened yesterday morning at Donalds. The meeting was held in the school-house and at the beginning there were less than 20 people from Donalds to hear the candidates. About 35 were present from Abbeville, counting the candidates, and the attendance increased until about 75 were present at the close. The meeting was presided over by L. J.

Davis and was opened with prayer by Luther Bowie. The candidates without opposition thanked the people for their support and pledged a continued service in their behalf. They were Senator J. Moore Mars. Auditor James H.

Sherard and Treasurer W. J. Evans. CARWIXE SENDS MESSAGE Candidate for judge of probate, Wilbur J. Blake of Calhoun Falls, spoke of his record of 25 years as manager of the mill store and buyer for the mill and his service as mayor of the city.

Judge of Probate A. B. Carwile was not present, being in the army, but a message from him was read by his son, Addison Carwile. Candidates for game warden spoke next, J. Irwin Hawthorne, W.

R. Nance and Frank Smith, Incumbent. Candidates for house of representatives were: Melvln J. Ashley, who is asking reelection. He stated his record and spoke of the war saying we have not begun to sacrifice, we are getting all the sugar we want and all the gas and rubber we need.

Mr. Ashley said he did not miss a single meeting of the legislature or the powerful ways and means committee of which he la a member. He said he voted on every question from the moral side. J. T.

Blake gave his record as a farmer and a business man and promised to "hold the banner high" if elected. W. P. Greene, spoke of his record as a lawyer and asked the support of the people on his stand on good schools, economy and promised to guard the state surplus of three million for a needy day after the war readjustment begins. KELLER MAKES SPEECH L.

VV. Keller, who once served as a member of the house, promised good schools, more pensions for old people and cited his record while a member. Charlie Murdock was the last speaker and asked reelection sorely on his record of four years. He promised no new taxes, always voted a moral vote, nine months' schools, state insurance for the members oi the home guard. He also favors free text books bought out of the surplus now in the state treasury.

The second meeting was held In Due West in the afternoon and was attended by about a hundred people. R. Galloway, presided over the meeting. Marines Capture Airdrome-Aerial And Sea Fight On (Continued from Page One) las MacArthur's command fanned out over the broadest area possible to the north and northwest of the fighting area to keep- Japanese reinforcements away. Guadalcanal, as well as Tulagl, Is important in uie operational plans of both sides.

Most of its area is broken by precipitous and heavily forested mountains which shoot up rapidly from the seafront to an altitude of 8.000 feet, but the north side includes a comparatively flat area about 40 miles long and from four to 10 miles wide, suitable for airfield construction. JAPS START AIRDROMES Japanese exploiting the Islands after their landings last February began building airdromes along the north coast seven weeks ago, but Allied planes spotted them and bombed Kokum July 31, hitting a supply dump and a large ship offshore and returning the next day to drop. more bombs which Ignited supplies and military Installations, There was considerable speculation that if the Nipponese conform to their usual strategy thev not only will fight to the end to main tain their hold on the Solomons, but will attempt to create a major diversion elsewhere. Military observers noted that the Solomons campaign, while giving the Allies the initiative, still is in the nature of a defensive operation designed to keep the Japanese away from the flank of Allied supply routes from America to Australia, and the Japanese have been reinforcing their naval and air units heavily elsewhere in the belt of islands north of Australia. Malta Jumping Off Place For Invasion WASHINGTON, Aug.

13. (U.R)-Malta, the most heavily bombed spot in the world, will be the Jumping off place for an Allied invasion of Italy, Air Marshal Sir Hugh Pughe Lloyd, who commanded the RAF on the fortress during its darkest days, cald today. He said at a press conference that Malta was the key to British successes in Libya last year and remains today a "stumbling block" across the supply lines of German Commander Erwln Rommel. BEACH PATROLMEN WANTED ATLANTA, Aug. 13.

(JP) Charles H. Murchlson, regional civilian defense director, announced todav his office had been requested to assist in recruiting men in six southeastern states for coast guard beach patrol and coastal lookout duty. FURNACE CLEANING And SERVICE Attic Fans GOWER SERVICE CO. Phone 98 Mrs. Lula F.

Phillips NORRIS, Aug. 13 Funeral services for Mrs. Lula Fleming Phillips, who died Wednesday night at her home, will be held Fridav morning at o'clock. Rev. F.

S. Clldress will conduct the rites. Pallbearers will he T. M. Garrett, Claud Cook.

Walter Tate, B. A. Chapman, Lela-nd and Truman Stephens. The body is at the home until the hour of services. Lynn Wood WALHALLA, Aug.

13. Lynn Wood, month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. L.

Wood, died at the home this morning at 5:45 o'clock. surviving besides the parents are two sisters, Leila and Ruth Ann Wood: four brothers. Earle, Turner. Jim and Tom Wood; maternal grandmother, Mrs. Tilda Shook, and maternal grandfather.

Bill Wood. Funeral services will be conduct ed from the home at 16 Jaynes treet, Friday morning at 11 oclock. by Rev. Andrew Gillespie. Interment will be In Neville cemetery.

Mrs. W. N. Trowbridge Mrs. W.

N. Trowbridge of Nash ville, died at her home there Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. She had been In declining health for the past year. She was the former Miss Betty Poole of Piedmont. Surviving are her husband, a daughter, Mrs.

Thelma Brooks; five sons. Joe. Harry, William, Robert and Clarence Trowbridge; two sis ters, Mrs. Corrie James and Mrs. Annie Turner, and a brother, Wal ter Poole.

Funeral services will be conduct ed in Nashville on Friday. Mrs. Cleo W. Mosley McCORMICK. Aug.

13. Mrs. Cleo W. Mosley, 55, wife of Robert P. Mosley.

died Thursday morning at 9 clock at her home near here following a short Illness. Funeral services will be conducted at the graveside In the Wldeman ceme tery Friday at 11 a. m. with JJr. S.

W. Reid officiating. She was a daughter of Napoleon and Lizzie Spence Wideman, and had spent her life here. Besides her husband and parents she is survived by four sisters, Mrs. Herbert Wideman, Mrs.

Oscar But ler, Mrs. Mae Bearden and Mrs. Henry Mosley; three brothers, Frank, Press and Leon Wideman. James E. Collins GREENWOOD, Aug.

13. James E. Collins, 63, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Thomas L. Leary, here early today following an illness of six months.

He was a native of Brooklyn, N. and was a mechanical engineer In New York City, South America and helped construct the Panama canal. He and Mrs. Collins had made their home here since May. He is survived by his wife; two daughters, Mrs.

Leary and Mrs. Anna M. Aiken; two sons, Thomas F. and James E. Collins.

one brother, John J. Collins; one sister, Mrs. Catherine Rauth, and eight granacnuaren. Mrs, Betty Mathis Mrs. Betty Jo Smith Mathis.

wife Of C. D. Mathis and for the last four years a resident of this city, died at. a local hospiUl at 12:05 0 clock yesterday afternoon follow lng a brief illness. Prior to moving nere, Mrs.

Mathis lived in Texas. was twice married, her first husband, Pat Smith, having died several years ago. From that Union she is survived by two sons, Harold L. Smith and James P. Smith.

Mr. Mathis survives her. She is also survived by three sisters. Funeral arrangements have not been completed, awaiting the arrival of her son who are now en route to Greenville, and pending the completion of the arrangements the body will remain at the Mackey mortuary, Caleb K. Dalton GREENWOOD, Aug.

K. Dalton, 85, died at his home in the Bradley section early today after an Illness of three days. Mr. Dalton was a native of Polk county, N. but had lived in Greenwood county since boyhood.

He was a prominent farmer. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Fannie Rush Dalton; four daughters, Mrs. W. F.

Rush, Mrs. J. Floyd Burnett, Mrs. Ernest Hollingsworth and Mrs. Jasper Rush; five sons, Joe W.

J. Chris and Boyd Dalton; one sister, Mrs. Anna Rush; three half-brothers. Dawson. Ed ward and Vance Ellison; 20 grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Funeral services will be conduct ed Friday at 5 p. m. at Bold oprings aaptist cnurch by Rev. a. D.

Croft and Rev. G. W. Gurley. Albert D.

Dorman GAFFNEY, Aug. 13. Albert Dean Dorman eight-months' old son of Mr. and Mrs. John H.

Dorman of Plneville, N. former residents of Oaffney, died at Cherokee county hospital Monday afternoon at 3:15 o'clock after an illness of one week. Funeral services were conducted from the Dray ton vl lie Baptist church cemetery near here yesterday afternoon. Rev. C.

A. Kirby, pastor of the Cherokee Avenue Baptist church, was the offlclatine minister. Interment followed In the cemetery. The baby is survived by his par ents; a sister, Pauline Dorman; a brother, Howard Dorman and his paternal grandmother, Mrs. Lonnie Dorman.

The Dorman famllv moved from Oaffney to Pinevllle about 10 days ago. Mrs. Belle F. Watson BELTON, Aug. 13 Mrs.

Belle Fowler Watson, 70, died today at her residence In the Cedar Grove community near here. She had been In declining health for eight months and seriously ill for a week. A native of North Carolina, she had lived in the Cedar Grove community for 21 years and was a member of the Cedar Grove Baptist church. Survivins are her husband. John P.

Watson; one daughter, Mrs. Effle Boyter; two tons, Tom Watson of Belton and E. W. Watson of Honea Path; two sisters, Mrs. R.

N. Bryant of Willlamston and Mrs. T. C. Gillespie of Seneca; three brothers.

W. W. Flower and W. B. Fowler of Walhalla and F.

V. Fowler of Central; and nine grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted Friday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock from the Cedar Grove Baptist church with the Rev. M. M.

Mc-Cnen, the Rev. J. JC. Crawford and the Rev. W.

Lee Hartsell officiating. Interment will follow in the church cemetery. pallbearers win inciuoe waiter Elrod, Adger Campbell, Norman Brock, Haskell Hammonrta Cliff Hammonds and F. M. Ka7 Pea- MAVOMSE 25q GERBER a 2 SAUSAGE y's 2 25c COCKTAIL a a 15c PUPDIFJGS 2 11c ELTON Aug1.

13 Friends nd rH-tive of Mm. Belle Fowler Watson. John T. Watson, Mrs. Efrie Boyter.

Tom and I. Watson, Mrs. R. N. Bryant.

Mrs. T. O. Gillespie, W. W.

B. and, F. V. Fowler are respectfully tnvlted to attend funeral aerylces for Mrs. Watson Friday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock at Cedar Grove Baptist church.

Rev. M. M. McCuen, Rev. J.

B. Crawford and Rev. W. Lee Hartsell will officiate. Interment will be In the church cemetery.

Gray mortuary, Pelzer, In charge. AUTOMATIC COAl STOKII KIRBY HAMMOND, Inc. (Formerly Gower-Hammond) Libby Placed Queen OLIVES Born In Germany, Pascagoula Claims (Continued from Page One) and was gone about an hour. (The Heldlcberg's home Is about one mile from where Atwood said his automobile stopped.) Then Dolan reportedly came back to Atwood's truck and asked Atwood to hurry, adding that "there's been some trouble." Another witness, whom Ezell and Talley would not identify, was said to have seen Dolan come out of the couple's house shortly after midnight. Lloyd Spicer, a neighbor of Dolan, discovered the hair behind Do-lan's house, the police reported.

Strands have been sent to a New Orleans chemist for Inspection. The series of halr-snlppings and the Heidelberg beatings had the town of Pascagoula whose war population of 14,000 Is more than three times what it was In 1940 In a state of wild alarm. Men armed themselves and women locked their homes carefully after dusk. The army even lifted temporary Its coastal ban on home and street lighting. The only victim of a hair-shearing who awoke in time to see the "barber" was Mary Evelyn Bridges at Our Lady of Victories convent.

"I saw the figure of a klnda short, fat man" she said, "bending over me with something shiny In hla hand and he was fooling with my hair. When he saw me' open my eyes he said 'sshh' I yelled jumped out of the window." Navy Is Silent On Report Wasp Afire In Mediterranean (Continued from Page One) At the opposite end of the Mediterranean at safe distance from the Allied warships, four Italian cruisers were found by huge S. bombers In the western Greek port of Pylos. when the bombers turned back toward Egypt or Cyprus, three of the cruisers had been damaged seriously. Explosions were hpard from two and black smoke billows from the third.

The fourth apparently es caped. The convoy action, indeed It was such, apparently included a side-issue attark on a French airliner on the Marseille-Algiers run. When the plane reached Africa It was riddled with bullets and had one dead and seven seriously wounded passengers aboard. It had been attacked by four unidentified fighters, Vichv France said, near the western Mediterranean convoy battle. DESTROYERS AT GIBRALTAR The Vichy radio broadcast also that a British carrier of the Glori ous class and four destroyers entered Gibraltar during the dav.

Ber lin broadcast a Madrid dlsnakh saying the British destroyer Wrestler had been sunk from the convoy. Axis radios said the action started early Tuesday and the only admission of loss thus far is the Italian admission of 13 mlsslnu planes. The British at the time the Enirle was sunk said an Axis submarine was sent to the bottom. Well informed British sources said it was significant that the Axis withheld details of its own losses. Curfew On Liquor Sales Is Sought MIAMI.

Aug. 13. (IP) Military and naval authorities asked Governor Holland today to call a special session of the legislature If necessary to enforce a curfew on liquor sales in Florida areas with lare concentrations of soldiers and sailors. The request was set forth In an open letter to the governor elgned by Admiral J. L.

Kauffman, commandant of the Seventh Naval district; Gen. Ralph H. Wooten, commander of the air force school at Miami Beach, and Gen. E. A.

Evans, commander of the Florida sub sector command. Times Hard, Judge Told By Gambler MIAMI. Aug. 13. (U.B Oeorge A.

Vaughn, 50, charged with operating a Miami gambling establishment, today pleaded for a "UKht fine" In city court because "we are not making much money thee days." "You mean If I make It a heavy fine you will have to go out of business?" queried Judge Cecil C. Curry. "We can't license gambling places." Vaughn was fined $30 and court costs. cons of the church will serve as an honorary escort. A group of nieces of the deceased wilt serve as flower girls: Mildred Gillespie, Louise Fowler, Llnnls Bryant, Ruby Flnley, Ruby Robert, Edith Fowler and Ruth Alexander.

BABY FOODS CLAPP'S 2 BUS SCHEDULE Libby Sweet RELISH 9 12c Libby Potted MEAT 4NC.J4 25c Libby TRIPE Nc.2 39c Land O' Lakes CHEESE-- l. 30c Valley Farm BUTTER Uyb 23c Oalumbta and return only 11.15. plui Meral Tax. Ont way far Greenville to Columbia only tl.1t pliu ft Federal Tax. Lv.

GreeBftlla a.ia la U'flfl comma yPiTi TISSUE GAUZE 3 ROLLS 4 0rJ 0 3 EAGLE BUS LINKS, la. bui leaving Oreenvlll at Columbia i m. make direct connection Ar Omavlile Colurabl for Chtrleiton. I'M MH Iffectlve Jliria 11 NEW 6CHEDU1 ET1CTZVZ la, 19X. EASTERN WAR TIM1 Between QreenviUt, and Greenwood.

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in. and will In th future taav at 1:40 a. arriving In Oreenvlll at th earn tlm 1:00 a. wt. Thli eehertul I limed at tnformstlon only ae to leaving and arriving time and I.

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