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The Greenville News from Greenville, South Carolina • Page 2

Location:
Greenville, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TWO THE GREENVILLE NEWS, GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1959 'Basic Plan' Of Bank Approved By And The "basic plan" for tion of a modern banking institution and appropriate beautification of the premises on the site of the old Camperdown Mill property, between S. Main and Fall was approved here yesterday at a meeting of the board of directors of the Citizens Southern National Bank. What this plan embodies exactly was not explained publicly by Hugh C. Lane of Charleston, president of the bank. Mr.

Lane, following the routine monthly meeting of the bank's directors at Furman University's new campus on Poinsett Highway, first ever, held in Greenville, commented only that "We tion to plans for the Greenville hav. been to giving careful attenbank project but we have not finally approved them in full detail." Following the meeting, which was held at Furman University invitation of Dr. John L. Plyler, president of the university, the bankers were guests at lunch at the school cafeteria and then were taken on a brief tour of the handsome new campus. OFFICERS ATTENDING Members of the board attending the meeting included officers, Albert R.

Simonds, first vice president: Milton A. CANN'S FURNITURE STORE Phone CE 5-3263 18 CEDAR LANE RD. JUST RECEIVED New Shipment ABC AUTOMATIC WASHERS and DRYERS ALSO KELVINATOR Refrigerators LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE CANN'S FURNITURE STORE Phone CE 5-3263 18 CEDAR LANE RD. Appleby, Michael L. Runey and Harold Thomas vice presidents; Julius E.

Burges, vice president and comptroller, and Lawrence W. Barrett, vice president and trust officer, all of Charleston; J. Willis Cantey, assistant to the president; John W. Huggins, vice president; Coit T. Hendley, vice president: and trust officer, and Marshall A.

Shearouse, general trust officer, all of Columbia; Rupert E. Kuhne, vice president, of Greenville, and Leon L. Patterson and John A. Wallace of Spartanburg, vice presidents. Directors included C.

Thomas Wyche, Sapp Funderburk, Edward F. Bahan, Buck Mickel and Ed D. Sloan, Greenville; Frank B. Vincent, Arthus F. Willis, Wallace DuPre, Marshall C.

Stone, H. Morgan Rogers, T. Sam Means Tom Q. McGee, E. L.

Hanna, M. L. Cates, W. Priestly Conyers R. H.

Chapman and D. A. Geer, Spartanburg Also, Ames Haltiwanger, Angus E. Bird, John M. Blalock, Robert Avinger, George D.

Lott William Perry and D. W. Robinson, Columbla; R. Y. Lane, Whitehall; S.

R. McMaster, Winnsboro, and W. A. Livingston, Orangeburg. Also, W.

Harold Butt, M. A. Condon, B. 0. Geer, C.

Norwood Hastie H. W. Hopke, C. Bissell Jenkins H. L.

Kilpatrick, Edward Kronsberg, Theodore D. Maybank, Joseph P. Riley, G. L. Buist Rivers, J.

Edwin Schachte Jr. and E. Edward Wehman all of Charleston, In Spartanburg Plane Trouble Stalls Cubans SPARTANBURG (AP)- Thirty Cuba bound political refugees whose plane was forced down here by weather Thursday were still 1 grounded Friday night, but time because of mechanical trouble. When the starter on their Cuban military craft would not work Friday morning, they tried an old rope trick. But attempts to crank the propeller with the rope failed.

Senor Senapio Montejo is in charge of the group, which is part of a group of more than 200 political refugees from the Batista regime who have been living in Chicago. Montejo said he placed a telephone call to the Cuban Air Force but it had not come through Friday night. He said he will ask for another plane. Capt. Roald Amundsen commanded the first ship to pass from sea to sea in the Arctic when he navigated the northwest I passage in 1903-1906.

Sunday Dinner She Crab Soup Chefs Salad Brown Beef -Casserole Two Vegetables Corn Bread Sticks Cherry Tart with Whipped Cream Tea or Coffee $1.40 RECOMMENCE Duncan Hines. IN ADVENTURES IN GOOD EATING 1959 Open 8 A. M. Until 10 P. M.

Sunday Lunches Served In Banquet Room CALL CE 9-3578 Mr. Lyerly, Mgr. Mural Room ORVIN COURT RESTAURANT 811 LAURENS RD. HEYWARD MAHON Clearance Sale NOW IN FULL SWING Lowered Prices on MEN'S AND BOYS' Suits, Topcoats, Slacks, Furnishings and Shoes Save Now on Fine Quality New Apparel Thayerrd Mahon Ca Main Street at North The Quality Store for Men and Boys Bank Directors Hold Meeting Here, Tour Furman of directors of the Citizens and Southern the first time yesterday, at the invitaFurman University, are shown above in Seated, left to right, are Edward F. Spartanburg; Julius E.

Burges, Charleston; Lane, Charleston, president of the bank; 1 H. Kuhne, Greenville. Standing, left to right, are John A. Wallace, Spartanburg; Sapp Funderburk, Greenville; Buck Mickel, Greenville; W. A.

Livingston, Orangeburg; Spencer R. McMaster, boro; Marshall A. Shearouse, Columbia; J. M. Blalock, Columbia; Ames.

Haltiwanger, Columbia; H. W. Hopke, Charleston; John W. Huggins, Columbia; Marshall C. Stone, Spartanburg; C.

Thomas Wyche, Greenville; Robert H. Chapman, Spartanburg; Colt T. Hendley, Columbia; William L. Perry, Columbia, and M. L.

Cates, Spartanburg. Some of the directors had not arrived at the time the picture was News photos by James G. Wilson). It Makes Me Look Like A Durn Cluck LOS ANGELES (AP)-Brigitte her nest and settled down to try the little red hen looked down in again. her nest.

Green, Bright It just wasn't respectable. With a surreptitious swish she flipped the offending egg out of Pulp Plant Will Start In August ROCK HILL--The Multi-million dollar Bowaters Carolina Corp. pulp mill near Catawba is scheduled to go into operation in August, General Manager T. C. Bannister announced Thursday.

However, Mr. Bannister said the August date is still tentative and will hinge on construction progress. H. C. Carruth, head of the Catawba Timber Co.

estimated wood purchasing will begin in July or perhaps as early as June on a limited basis. Most of the wood will be obtained from the Piedmont regions of both North Carolina and South Carolina. The pulp mill expected to provide a daily market for 800 cords of pine pulpwood. Ground has also been broken and construction underway on the Bowater Board Co. Hardboard Mill, scheduled to start operations during 1960.

It will use about 1 135 cords of pulpwood daily. OFFICES ESTABLISHED Foresters have established four district offices for the Catawba Timber The Bowaters Pulpwood purchasing subsidiary. Headquarters for district foresters and their assistants include: Lancaster, Joe Simpson and Gabe Purvis; Clinton, Don Creighton and Bobby Womack. District foresters will be responsible for obtaining quotas of pulpwood and growing trees for future requirements. MINE PRODUCTS BOISE Lead, zine and silver comprise the chief products of northern Idaho mines.

Baby T-Bone Steak Dinner $150 MIKE FRASER'S FINE FOODS Phone CE 3-7616 LEWIS PLAZA No Reason For Jump Is Found COLUMBIA (AP)-Officers offered no explanation Friday for the 50-foot leap of a doctor into the Congaree River from a bridge here. Dr. James M. Neill pleaded with rescuers not to pull him from the shallow waters into which he had leaped. He recently transferred to the Veterans Administration Hospital staff here.

Officers said his wife and four children live at St. Petersburg, Fla. His leap from the Gervais Street Bridge about 8 a.m. apparently did him no injury. A coat he wore kept him afloat by fill.

ing with air. Firemen pulled him out. Mary Lyon, the founder of Mount Holyoke College, began her teaching career at a salary of 75 cents a week plus board." Officers and members of the board National Bank, meeting in Greenville for tion of Dr. John L. Plyler, president of the conference room at the university.

Bahan, Greenville; Frank B. Vincent, Albert R. Simonds, Charleston; Hugh C. J. Willis Cantey, Columbia, and Ruper John Huff (Continued From Page One) a member of City Council from Ward 4 (now Ward 3).

He served for 16 years, a record matched only by an old friend, the late Kerr Wilson. He was a member of Choice Street Methodist Church, where he was chairman of the board of stewards, but in recent years had transferred his membership to Trinity Methodist Church. SURVIVED BY WIFE Mr. Huff is survived by his wife, the former Fannie Smith of Enoree: a daughter, Mrs. Helen H.

Cothran of Greenville; five sons, John Waters Huff, Henry E. Huff, Frank S. Huff, W. Ralph Huff and James S. Huff of Greenville; a sister, Miss Mozelle Huff of Spartanburg; a brother, D.

Huff of Union, a stepbrother, J. W. Waters of Spartanburg; 15 grandchildren, and 15 greatgrandchildren. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Jones Funeral Home. The family is at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. Frank S. Huff, 109 Grove Rd. DR. PLYLER MR.

LANE Dr. John L. Plyler, president of Furman University, extended a welcoming hand in greeting (above) yesterday in his office on the university's new campus to Hugh C. Lane of Charleston, president of the Citizens Southern Bank of South Carolina. The bank's officers and board of directors held their monthly meeting at the I university.

U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast PREVUE OF U.S. WEATHER BUREAU FORECAST to 7:00 P.M. EST 2 14 -59 SEATTLE BOSTON MILWAUKEE MOIST NEW YORK WARMER DENVER FRANCISCO KANSAS CITY SAN ATLANTA FT.

WORTH MILD HIGHEST and CLOUD FORECAST MIA MI 50 WEATHER FOTOCAST SHOWERS SNOW 70 STORMS THUNDER VIZ RAIN FREEZING RAIN or SLEET COPR 1959 EDW LA. WAGNER DISTRIBUTED BY UNITED PRESS Ample moisture and contrasting air masses will provide the necessary ingredients for producing wet and cloudy weather over the Eastern and Western ends of the country on Saturday. Generally speaking, rain and scattered showers are likely to cover most of the area from the mid-Mississippi Valley Eastward to the Atlantic Seaboard as well as in Northern snow flurries are in store for the mountainous regions of the in the higher elevations of the Northeast. Otherwise, except for and around Alabama, partial cloudiness will be featured elsewhere. the Northeast and the nation's mid-section while a slight warming (Unifax Map).

Greet State President MR. OWINGS MR. MAHAFFEY MR. THEODORE Ray Mahaffey (center) of Georgetown, state president of the South Carolina Junior Chamber of Commerce is welcomed to Greenville by Greenville Jaycee president Nick Theodore (right) and B. B.

Owings of Greenville, national director. Mr. Mahalfey is here for the winter meeting of the board, of directors of the State News photo by James G. Wilson). Jaycees Arriving Today (Continued From Page One) open with a devotional service to be held at the County Office Building led by the Rev.

John A. Pinckney, rector of St. James Episcopal Church. A state board meeting will But in vain. The next egg was green, and the next one, just as all the others had been for days, Oh, the shame of it.

Brigitte quit laying altogether. Her owner, Mrs. C. Martine, who had been observing all this sympathetically, appealed to a poultry expert, Charles Salverson of the University of California Extension Service. He advised Mrs.

Martine to tell Brigitte not to worry. The discoloration, he said, was caused by the reaction of oxidants in the air on the moist shell of the newly laid egg. Or, in other words, smog. ENJOY OUR FAMOUS SATURDAY BUFFET 5:30 to 9:00 P.M. Bring The Children Over 40 Different Foods To Select From THE WAFFLE SHOP IN THE OTTARAY HOTEL Successful men KNOW AN INVESTMENT SAVINGS ACCOUNT is SAFEPROFITABLE- FLUCTUATION FREE YOU MAY start an investment account with $100 or multiples of $100.

Earnings are mailed by check direct to your home. credited to your acount, as you prefer. Get started on a higher-earning, fluctuation free investment program today! Ask about our Investment Savings Account CURRENT DIVIDEND PER ANNUM Carolina Federal OFFICE HOURS W. E. HENDERSON Monday Through Thursday IT CO Treas.

9 a.m. to 4 p.m. INSURED 22 W. McBee Friday-9 a.m. te 6 p.m.

Saturday--Closed Phone CE 9-8401 California and Oregon. Snow or Northwest, the Great Lakes area and a few isolated thunderstorms in It will turn colder in portions of sets in over the central The Weather TEMPERATURE Maximum Minimum Mean Normal 45 Highest this months (10th) 65 Lowest this month (3rd, 7th) 29 Accumulated Excess Deficiency For Feb. to date For 1959 to date -64 PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 7:00 p.m. 1.10 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

Trace For Feb. to 7:00 a.m. 2.75 For 1959 to 7:00 a.m. 4.47 Accumulated departures plus or minus (Inches and hundredths) For Feb. to 7:00 a m.

For 1959 a.m. Sunrise today 7:16 Sunset today 6:11 U. S. Weather Bureau ERNEST W. G.

KLIEMANN, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU (Greenville Forecast On Page 1) South Carolina Mostly cloudy with occasional rain or showers Saturday, continuing at night with chance of more showers Sunday High Saturday, upper 60s north and low 70s south portion. Not as warm Sunday, WEATHER BUREAU RECORDS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Weather, 12, bureau report of temperatures low, last 18 hours) and rainfall (last hours) ending 7 p.m.. for selected areas: STATION Pr.

STATION H. L. Pr. Albany 40 25 .05 Knoxville 49 40 1.06 Albu'que 46 33 Angeles 62 43 Amarillo 64 40 Louisville 56 48 .21 Asheville 53 34 .66 Memphis 64 53 1.09 Atlanta 54.38 .46 Miami 74 Bismark Minn-StP 33 Bl'ing R'k 57 29 Orleans 81 62 Boston 47 30 .04 New York 50. 30 Buffalo 40 32 ,16 Norfolk 40 .45 Hat'as 65 55 .50 Omaha 64 45 Chrafeston 70 58 1.13 Okla City 34 17 Charlotte 56 34 .98 Phila 52 34 .17 Chicago 37 32 .11 Phoenix 62 47 52 45 .56 Pittsburg 43 41 .16 Clevel'd 44 36 .12 Port'd Me 45 24 .03 Columb's 49 42 .10 Raleigh 66 38 .76 Denver.

40 30 Richm'd 62 37 .63 Detroit 37 31 .21 Antonio 58 .03 Duluth 20 -3 St. Louis 53 44 .01 EI Paso 72 61 61 48 San Fran 56 43 Worth .01 Savannah 78 62 .04 Galves'n 68 61 Seattle 35 Grf Mtn Spokane 38 Greenville 57 85 36 1.10 Tampa 85 68 Jack'ville 67 Wash on Kan City 39 Wilm 'ton 47 February Clearance Sale! ONE ONE LOT MEN'S ONE LOT LOT MEN'S MEN'S SPORT To $55 To $85 COATS Values SUITS Values TOPCOATS sale! Values Up To $75.00 sale! $24 $29 $36 to $66 $33 $56 to and open friday nights 'til 9 p.m. Stone Brothers 108 NORTH MAIN STREET low and during the same time a ladies' coffee will be held on the mezzanine of the Poinsett Hotel. A banquet at 1 p.m. at the hotel, with the naming of the South Carolina Young Man of the Year, will conclude the two-day meeting..

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