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The Times and Democrat from Orangeburg, South Carolina • 15

Location:
Orangeburg, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE TIMES AND DEMOCRAT, Orangeburg, S.C, Friday, July 11,1175, Paee Omar Temple Shrine Coming To Orangeburg 1. iuv Four Title I Heading Centers Serve Elloree Students -4. Ktofi A a 4 A 1 LEARNING ABOUT WORDS Students are working on a words in color activity under the direction of reading teacher, Mrs. Dorothy Parler. VOCABULARY BUILDERS Mrs.

P. E. Lewis works with a group of students on vocabulary skills during the summer reading program at Elloree Elementary School. mmtf t- icr 1 i Thomas A. Phillips, illustrious potentate, announced recently that Omar Temple of Charleston and the lower half of South Carolina will hold Its summer ceremonial In Orangeburg on July 11th and 12th.

According to Phillips, a record number of candidates, nobles and their ladies will be attending the ceremonial. A kickoff for the occasion will start with the candidates reporting to the Masonic Temple on Highway 301 at 4 pjn. for registration. There are expected to be approximately 50 candidates seeking membership in Omar Temple, with half of this number from Orangeburg and nearby areas. At 9 pjn.

there will be a pre-ceremonial dance at the Shrine Club for nobles, candidates and their ladies. Then, Saturday will be the big day beginning with candidates on the streets and visiting businesses to sell peanuts in order to help raise money for the Crippled Childrens Hospital in Greenville. All of the money raised from the peanut sales will go directly to the hospital. At 11 ain. there will be a shSr A By Four Title I Reading Centers served 75 youngsters from grades one through five during the month of June at Elloree Elementary School.

The students maintained excellent attendance and a keen interest in the reading activities during its 20 days of operation, according to a spokesman for the program. The center teachers provided individualized help in reading skills, language and vocabulary development. Emphasis was placed upon enjoyment' of reading through creative dramatics, games and puzzles. Reading supervisor, Mrs. Frances Bowers, said that many of the children had made excellent gains and were highly benefited by the program due to the outstanding efforts of the center teachers Mrs.

E.K. Jones, Mrs. Dorothy Parler, Mrs. Ada Hopkins and Mrs. P.E.

Lewis. The teachers reported their pleasure concerning the high level of enthusiasm which was maintained during the session. High school aides who helped in the centers during the last two weeks were Cheryl Mood, Marilyn Moorer, Patricia Bonaparte and Frank Browii. A visit to the Santee-Cooper Resort Park was the culminating activity. 1 jji if I I 1 Iff-" Columbia COLUMBIA, S.C.

(AP)-Co-lumbia's two daily newspapers have decided to discontinue publication of certain legal ad WU THOMAS A. PHILLIPS parade featuring 20 marching and motor units, bands, dignitaries and candidates; not forgetting the ever-popular clowns, too! The initiation of candidates will take place later in the afternoon at the Wade Hampton Academy gym. During this initiation there will be entertainment for the ladies at the Edisto Shrine Club. The finale will be the two potentate's balls, which will be held at the Edisto Shrine Club and the National Guard Armory later in the evening. SALE The Caper House i.iiii l.UA WORD GAME Mrs.

Ada Hopkins, reading teacher, is assisting students in playing, a word game. Games were an important part of the summer reading program. READING STUDENTS Students in Reading Center I are working on a Hoffman Reading Program exercise under the direction of Mrs. E. K.

Jones, teacher. Papers Quit Some Legal Notices 2373 Chestnut OOD-OOZU Orangeburg Fashions For Juniors and Ladies S.C. Resources Commission Board To Meet COLUMBIA, S.C-The South Carolina Resources Cor poration will hold its annual corporate board meeting Saturday, July 12 in Columbia at the Carolina Inn, according to Calvin Wright, publicity chairman. The meeting will begin at 11 ajn. SCRC is a state-wide corporation presently operating a manpower program for migrants and seasonal farm workers in South Carolina.

The speaker for the afternoon luncheon will be William "Sonny" Waleer, regional director of CSA of Atlanta, Ga. Registration will begin at 9 ajn. July 11 SE Children Of Revolution Plan Meeting The twenty-fifth annual meeting of the Southeastern Region of the National Society of Children of the American Revolution will be on July 14-15 at the Hyatt House in Winston-Salem, N.C. Highlights of the event will include a business workshop to discuss the summer packet and make plans for the year's work, a tour of Old Salem and a formal dance. Meetings are planned for both seniors and C.A.R.

members. Georgia, Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, and North Carolina will be represented by C.A.R. members and adults. Those attending from Edisto Society of C.A.R. are Liz Irick, state representative; Mrs.

W.G. Irick, senior state president; and Bill Irick, senior state historian. Forgot your wife's birthday again? Let Corbett get you out of a jam with FLOWERS from lorbett Flowers, Inc. 196 Hampton (Corner Hampton Mlddleton) 534-8204, 534-8233 4- vwXsr MIRROR The incorporated an overall SUMMER INVENTORY College Funding Procedures sses pre shrtS i Pants Tops 0NefV ill II a vertisements because of an old state law limiting the amount of money charged for them. Ambrose G.

Hampton, pub that all institutions should submit financial requests for operational or capital requirements to the commission and men to the State Budget and Control Board. The formula procedure will be limited to financing for oper R.R. Legislation WASHINGTON (AP) Legislation designed to put America's unemployed to work rebuilding the nation's deteriorating rail system could be a waste of taxpayers' money, Transportation Secretary William T. Coleman Jr. said Thursday.

"The railroads need financial assistance but providing that assistance under bills of the type before the committee today, without changes in the basic rail structure or in the regulatory regime, can lead to a lisher of The State and The Columbia Record, made the announcement Thursday in a front page editorial in The State. Clarified ational purposes, he added. The commission also agreed that institutions may submit supplemental capital funding requests as separate items. The commission will consider the requests on ther merits and then submit them to the budget and control board. Could Waste Funds waste of funds," he said.

Coleman made his remarks in an appearance before the House subcommittee on transportation and commerce. That subcommittee currently is considering four bills that would provide between $700 million and $2.5 billion to put unemployed Americans to work rebuilding railroad lines. Wants Ads Call 536-4607 CO, 1- COLUMBIA (AP)-The state Commission on Higher Education clarified procedures for handling capital funding requests from the state's colleges and universities at a meeting in Columbia Thursday. State Auditor Pat Smith told the commission that capital funding requests still should be submitted separately rather than included in the funding formula for operational costs. But several institutions have contended that capital needs are justified under a particular section for special requests in the formula.

The commission has used the formula for several years in an attempt to provide a basis for equitable funding among the state's institutions of higher learning. It is based largely on the number of fulltime equivalent students with provisons for special programs and needs peculiar to institutions. Smith told the commission Aquarium Capital of The law, passed in 1899, limits the maximum charge of the legal ads to $1 per column inch for the first insertion and SO cents per inch for subsequent entries. The statutory limitation doesn't apply to some legal notices, and some counties have been exempted from it completely by special legislation. However, this year the state House of Representatives defeated a bill to repeal the law and allow newspapers to charge their regular open retail rate for legal ads.

The editorial cited an increase in losses because of the publication at the assigned rate and said the beneficiaries of the advertising should bear its proper cost. This Bedroom Suite Is a true example of American Contemporary with the hand-sculptured look. Choose Walnut or Maple finish. fell ORANGEBURG AQUARIUM Manufacturer! 200-500 Weekly S.C. Factory Outlet AQUARIUM Upward Bound Students Tour Building Approximately 80 Upward 'Bound students at Claflin College for the summer session, toured The Times and Democrat building recently.

The students are enrolled in a course in mass communications for the summer, and the tour was a part of the activities planned for the course. The students were accompanied by their instructors, Mrs. Georgia Boyd and Mrs. Eloise Murray. The Upward Bounders were able to observe the processes involved in making up the daily newspaper and the various techniques used in each of the processes.

Orangeburg Bahals Meet Baha'is of Orangeburg and Elloree gathered at the home of Wayne and Kathy Daniel July 9 to observe the anniversary of one of the central figures of their faith, the Bab, according to a spokesman for the group. Visitors from Bishopville, S.C. and Chicago, HI. also attended the ceremony. At the meeting the story of the Bab's martyrdom was told.

The Bab was shot by a firing squad in a public square in Tabriz, Iran, according to the spokesman. Chinese Pottery Archeological Find TOKYO (AP) Chinese archeologists have unearthed life-sized pottery figurines of warriors and horses from a huge pit in northwest China, a Peking broadcast reported Friday. The official Hsinhua news agency said several hundred figurines were excavated from the pit east of the tomb of Chin Snih Huang, founding emperor of the Chin dynasty (221-207 B.C.), in Lintung County, Shensi province. BETTER HURRY! will be over! LARGE GROUP 30 off Today Last Day! SDTk Camera Shop Hi SALE ca no 'ters Blokes OWN ACCOUNTS FACTORY OUTLET designing of this new modern suite has those details that are popular with Style-minded customers. The low-base styling gives substantia' look without being bulky.

LOW DISCOUNT PRICES "MR PRO" FISHING TACKLE JULY SPECIAL 25 OFF ON AQUARIUMS-LIGHTS-STANDS Family Fun For Everyone-Start An Aquarium Today Handsome Practical Inexpensive -re. lEiMM SNIP SPECIAL AQUARIUM SALE DOUBLE DRESSER BOOKCASE BED CHEST TWO LAMPS WE FINANCE OUR Quilted Innerspring SjperSet Mattress and Boxsprings Aquarium All Glass Heavy Duty Light Gallon Aquarium Stands Inc. Ref. wBLB Sugg. Sugg.

Sugg. Retail 25 Retail 25 RetaU 25 10 7.77 5.83 22.49 16.86 8.39 5.99 15 14.49 10.72 26.49 19.86 10.29 7.71 20H 19.99 14.99 26.49 19.86 10.29 7.71 20L 19.99 14.99 29.89 22.41 12.87 9.65 29 32.49 24.37 29.89 22.41 12.87 9.65 30 38.89 29.17 34.49 25.86 14.98 11.23 40 74.49, 55.86 44.69 33.51 20.59 15.44 55 93.49 70.11 44.69 33.51 20.59 15.44 10 Gal. Starter Special 20H GaL Starter Special Corner Filter Undergravel Corner Filter Undergravel ORANGEBURG FURNITURE EXCHANGE fl) 25.99 20.99 188 "HEADQUARTERS for VALUES it ALL 3 of OUR STORES" Russell S.E. 241 Middleton, S.E. Dorchester at Russell Includes air pump, air hose, gravel filter fibre, filter carbon, fish food beginners guide hand book.

Drop by spend some time with Calvin Carter 1324 John C. Calhoun Dr. (301 North) 534-9947 534-147! 183 RujwII.

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Pages Available:
776,597
Years Available:
1881-2024