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The Greenville News from Greenville, South Carolina • Page 17

Location:
Greenville, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

rWIDAY. MARCH '11. isss PAGE SEVENTEEN THE GREENVILLE NEWS. GREENVILLE. SOUTH CAROLINA TEACHERSW 1st Dam In Twelve Mile Watershed Ike Goes To Hospital News From Everywhere Eisenhower went to Walter Reed WASHINGTON.

March 10 OH -I ICR DELEGATES on Monday for a heat treatment when the bursitis began to bother President Eisenhower went to Walter Reed Army Hosnital today and For Every Action, A Reaction; And Boy, Was It A Reaction! him. He has been bothered by it Intermittently for several years. nad the first in a new series ot treatments, for bursitis in his right shoulder. The White House announced the TOKYO, March 10 on Pvt. Charles Broxmeyer, feet 4 and FIREPROOF SHIP New York The SS United States is fi reproofed to a record tr hospital visit aftei the President had returned to the White House.

225 pounds, was hit by a small Japanese taxi. Damage to taxi: windshield smashed, fender torn off, grill damaged, wheels wrenched Press Secretary James C. Hag awry, driver shaken. Damage to Broxmeyer, of Mismarck, N. degree.

Only wood used is in her pianos and butcher chopping erty said the physical therapy small facial bruise. moving mortgaged property his blocks. contains more alumi- num than any structure on land treatment was a form of exercise, and added that the President plans to have several more treatments. DONALD SLOWS DOWN arums. or sea.

Wells, claimed the SI consecutive hours la a world record, HOLLYWOOD, March 10 (U.B- Brash, youthful-appearing Donald He played his drums continuous' xonnor today decided to devote 1 himself exclusively to the movies and arop out ot television for a year because he couldn't do both Connor e- ire in en became 4 iJrHMt-1 known when the sponsor of hi; filmed show ly In the window of downtowa department store from 12:04 p. m. Monday to 10:04 p. m. Wednesday.

As he started to get onto the stretcher "It's" doctor's orders" Wells collapsed. He was taken to a hospital, where Deputy Sheriff Henry Mag-card kept a vigil outside his room to arrest him as soon as physicians approve. Maggard said Fort Worth officers told him Wells hadn't been keeping up his payments and that Texaco, discloset it was looking fo: Administrator Arid Teacher Be Chosen From Each District COLUMBIA, March 10 When thi South Carolina Education Assn. meeti in Columbia March 17 and 18. one of the most interesting election contests will be for delegates to the National Education Assn.

convention in Chicago this summer. Memberi of NEA in each congressional district will select an administrator and a classroom teacher, NEA membership cards must he presented In order to vote. Through arrangements with the Richland county supervisor voting machines will be used. Forty-seven nominations have been reported by the county is-aociations. Voting will take place injjtf basement of the Columbia tiip auditorium March 18.

'Nrfiinees include: THIRD DISTRICT Anderson Miss Annie Lee Boxes, Pendleton, teacher. Edgefield R. 0. Derrick Edgefield, adminstrator; Mrs. Sarah B.

Hollingsworth, Edgefield, teacher. Greenwood A. Porter, Ninety-Six, administrator; Mrs. a Hudson, Greenwood, teacher. Newberry J.

G. Long, Silver-utreet, administrator; Miss Julia Kibler, Newberry, teacher. Oconee, H. H. Gettys, Westmin-iter, administrator: Mist Eliza placement.

O'Connor's show alternated i Ih Jimmy Durante PHONE 5-9624 219 N. MAIN how I or the they heard where Wells was from same sponsor. the publicity about his drumming. -1 I till! The young hoof If mi iiwiTAfe't- Wi er-comedian said MR. HENDRICKS MR, L1NDSEY lie still would-ac I.ewll Hendricks, left.

Soil Conservation Dkirlrt iiiurvlinr. mnA R. 1 lnHir ISntl fnnMrvallnn OPEN THE DOOR, BUB WASHINGTON, March 10 (U.tt-President Eisenhower got locked out of the White House for a few cept an occasion Service, look OVer the first flnnri retirHin tmrliir rnmnl.lul in tti Tarlv Mil. rk U.lor. 10 Pc.

Deluxe MATCHED CANNON ENSEMBLE al guest appearance but was not O'CONNOR contemplating re moments today. The" President was in the rose garden to greet gular TV appearances during the coming year. He joins Bob Hope (bed in Pickena County. During a flood, this structure on the head waters of Rice's Creek, will hold 162 acre feet of water. The down-drop tube, 24 Inches in diameter, will release the flood water until the basin is empty, Flooding Hazard Reduced Under Project and Joan Davis as comics who have bowed out of TV in recent a group of fore ign a ts.

months because they found regular shows too strenuous. urnish protection from flood plain By DOTTY GANTT PICKENS, March 10-The first Watershed in Pickens County has been completed. areas by providing temporary When he returned to his office door, he found it locked. Ifully, he BOOM-DITTY-BOOM structures for run-ofl from ap The dam on the head waters of some 12 flood retarding structures in the Twelve Mile Creek proximately 25.8 per cent of the AMARILLO. March 10 (U.P.) of Rice's Creek has filled to its watershed, his percentage ot the Billy Wells played his drums normal water line, according to rang me uuor, total area included in the water for 58 consecutive hours, then col hell Ann in jt fpw F.

G. Lindsey of the Soil Con ney, administrator; Miss Kathe-rine McSwain, Gaffney, teacher. hed will be located above the moments i Sec- servation Service. When filled lapsed on an ambulance stretcher beth Stripling, Walhalla, teacher. Pickens M.

E. Herndon, Liberty, administrator; Miss Dessie Few, Pickens, teacher. Saluda-A. L. Bradley, Saluda, administrator; Mrs.

M. A. Car- IV r--MKg-H ill planned structures. ret Service agent 'E Wednesday night as a deputy during a flood, it will hold 162 sheriff waited to" arrest him for acre feet of water. These structures are to be earth dams with a fixed draw edlhe doorS' and OUR GIFT TO YOU WITH PURCHASE OF Good, bottom land below the dam may be brought back into production, because the flooding $20.00 OR MORE.

HURRY GET TOUR FREE GIFT I aon, Saluda, teacher. 1 FOURTH DISTRICT down tube and emergency spill ways. Suitable vegetation is being planted on the spillway, bor COFFEE'S PERKING hazard has been reduced. Lewis stream from the completed structure. Channel clearing has been completed for five miles down the creek.

Farmers, whose land will be af Grrtnville-W. A. Woodruff, I Taylors, Miss Hendricks, Soil Conservation Dis row pits and the basin whore ap tnester James W. Younginer, Great Falls, administrator. Chesterfield I.

N. Rivers, Mt. Crochan, administrator; Mrs. Sara Pegues, Cheraw, teacher. Kershaw H.

W. Rast, Blaney, administrator; Miss Leila Brown, Camden, teacher. Lancaster Wyatt H. Benton, Lancaster, administrator; Miss Sally Anderson, Lancaster, teacher. York Miss Stella Patterson, Rock Hill, teacher.

Grace Greer, Taylors, teacher, NEW YORK, March 10 hj.pj-Housewives soon will pay lower prices for coffee, industry sources predicted todav on the heels of plicable to adequately control erosion. The vegetation planted on trict supervisor, said. This and other dams are being built in the "7 Spartanburg S. C. Brissie, the finished structure was oats, watershed principally for the pur Woodruff, administrator; Miss Lillian Grant, Spartanburg, teach- wholesale price cuts of five cents fected in the program, were told at a meeting last week that it was necessary for them to work the land correctly to be able to reclaim much of the rye and Bermuda grass.

One of the other structures to pose of retarding and deterring flood flow and to protect the land from inundation. r' FIFTH DISTRICT a pound or more. Beech-Nut coffee slashed Its wholesale price i 3-4 cents per be built will be on Rice's Creek some four or five miles down Cherokee B. D. Lee, Gaff- The structures are designed to swampland.

pound for vacum-packed coffee effective today. The new price Is 91 cents a pound for large lots. Two other firms announced that cuts of five cents a pound will go into effect tomorrow. These were General Foods Corp. and J.

A. Kolger Co. The new price on General Foods' Maxwell House coffee is 92 cents. Lower retail urices usuallv fol low cuts at the wholesale level. LAW ME I NO LAW NICEVILLE.

March 10 (U.B Niceville's police chief and his two-man force left town to look for construction jobs today after the City Council ordered them "not to use any force" in arrest' tng servicemen from nearoy fclgin Air orce Base. Police Chief William Franklin and Patrolman Lowrey Tirown quit after the City Council issued the order Wednesday Bight in the tace ol threats by military of ficials to put trie town off limits f.m mv ti because of alleged "abuse of airmen. Patrolman Tom Lawrence walked off the job last Monday, so now the town of 4,000 is with out a police force. LEASED LANDS WASHINGTON About 600.000 acres of Indian lands in the U.S. were under lease for oil and gas rights at the end of 1952.

A SPECIAL SALE at PEHDLCTOHYTAQOlC H0HE-5 TODAYf (C 1418 LAURENS ROAD 1 a jjj 1 -ti0SS 0 j-ySJfS 7 l-l' I I drt. St" MMiMm. tO" JZ. Ik II JZaKZ 1 kllfc uU tbml. Ctot pwKti.

11 it i-l 1 jpZfS 'r -y VSJl 1 1 ipV rtww dtoy mt wdnt vmtm 7t6" ilf jifiitT' 7 st 4' VL sfT 7stAHMiKM NLV' 7ulw 11 1 7 PcSrt-Offset Screw Wrenches DEATHS Mrs. Dora Draisen ANDERSON, March 10 Mrs.1 Dora Draisen, 70, died suddenly at the home of her son, Hyman, 2204 Ridgewood early Thurs-; day. Mrs. Draisen was a resident of Dorchester, and had been visiting her son here. She was born in Russia, a daughter of the laie Mr.

ana Mrs. Josua uave Margolin. Her husband, David Draisen, died five years ago. She was a member of the Jewish Synagogue of. Dorchester, Mass.

Surviving are four daughters, Miss Roan Draisen, Bos ton, Mrs. Leon Goldberg, Atlanta, Mrs. A Ebenstein, Peoria, 111., and Mrs. Al Schwartz, WATER-RESISTANT "vHI SHOCKRESmArtTSAllE PRICE LUMINOUS DIAL A Jill rO)0pLU8TAX NONMAGNETIC expansion 88c DOWN! A Bronz, N. two sons, Hyman, Anderson, and Samuel Draisen, Boston, two brothers, Israel Margolin, New York, and Hyman Margolin, Miami Beach, and 10 grandchildren.

Funeral services will be conducted at Sullivan-King Mortuary Friday at 2 p. m. by Rabbi Henry E. Barneis. Burial will be in Forest Lawn Memorial Park.

Pallbearers wilt be Paul Radin, Sol Seigel, Nathan Rosenhlum, Alvin Fleishman, Michael Levin and Joe Kaplan. The body is at the mortuary. JThe family respectfully requests that flowers be omitted. James W. Stewart NEWBERRY.

March 10-James W. (Jim) Stewart, 69. died suddenly Thursday morning at his home on Pope St. Mr. Stewart was born in Laur ens County, a son of the late Glenn and Tallie Jones Stewart.

He had made his home in Newberry most of his life and was employed at Kendall Mills. He operated a taxi for a number of years. Surviving are his wife. Mrs. (PMliiTTrifWWl 1 '3 VJaustoOao.

CCIS E3-TBEPS8IS Maggie Mize Stewart; one son, Glenn L. Stewart, Newberry; one PtNDLk i ON-MATT AG CO I l.i i 'it. lro Mvnni jrcsn.mv, jt il. li.iiu Nolaxnlhr odwKwd 41 Hm CompWw Sod I i I'liull 1 1 llll JWTPA0g 11 Wrcll Sf yowr rt J. I 1W I kelam $liX mk.

5-9609 I'oiuiicuJii ay tag uo. "A Depandoblt of Supply Sine 1931" DRIVE-IN BRANCH Hi UjS adopted son, Preston Bodie. Denver, two grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 4 p. m.

at Hunt Memorial Baptist Church by the Rev. C. M. Johnson and the Rev. J.

E. Walker. Burial will be in Rosemont Cemetery. The body is at McSwain Hume. Saturday morning it will be t.ikrn to the hi me of t.U nn Stewart 'he (ir.vnviSIr num r-ii i mot fitt Cy OPIN MONDAY end FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M.

1418 LAURENS PxD. jjui.i.. no. lvry Blue Ridga Dlemond is Guaranteed In Writing ALSO AVAILABLE IN SPARTAN5UR3 STCHS Other Deaths Ca P.rjc.

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