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The Greeneville Sun from Greeneville, Tennessee • 2

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TWO THE GREENEVILLE SUN, GREENEVILLE, TENNESSEE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1959 Russian Lunar Rocket Hit Almost On Schedule Starts on Page 1 essed. Preliminary reports indicated that all scientific instruments in the rocket functioned normally up to the moment of impact, he said. The rocket carried pennants bearing the Soviet hammer-andsickle emblem and an inscription of Soviet Socianst ReThe Soviets did not disclose the exact time or site of the rocket launching, but newsmen estimated that it took off sometime early Saturday. They reckoned the capsule soared 236,160 miles to the moon in about 35 hours. publics, September 1959.

The Soviet news agency Tass said special measures nad been taken to make sure the pennants Mrs. R. L. Sauceman Passed Away Today Mrs. R.

L. (Nora) Sauceman, aged 62, passed away this morning at 6:55 at the home of her daughter, Mrs. G. J. Glasscoe.

Survivors are her husband, R. L. Roy Sauceman of Mohawk; two daughters, Mrs. G. J.

Glasseoe and Mrs. Finley Sauceman of Greenville; one son, Cecil Sauceman of Midway; three sisters, Mrs. E. M. Gregg and Mrs.

Nell Jennings of Greenville and Mrs. J. B. Hinkle, Midway; one brother, L. V.

Beach, also of Midway, thirteen grandchildren and four great grandchildren. The funeral will be at 2:00 p.m. Wednesday at tite Whittenburg Church with interment in the church cemetery. Rev. Charlie Clowers and Rev.

M. L. Bowman will officiate. body will remain at Kiser Funeral Home until time for service. Active pallbearers Billy, Ed.

and Delmont Beach, Junior and Clifford Hinkle, and J. W. Ragon. Flower girls will be nieces and neighbors. Mrs.

Mae Richardson Dies In Johnson City Mrs. Mae Ruble Richardson, aged 76, 17 Orleans Street, Johnson City, died suddenly at ten a.m. Saturday, She was rushed to Memorial Hospital but was dead upon arrival. She was a native of Greene County but had been a resident of Washington County for thirty years. She is survived by four daughters, Mrs.

Lucy Miller of Greene County, Mrs. Elsie Hurley of Johnson City, Misses Parlee and Ferbie Richardson, both of the home; three son, Walter Richardson, St. Joe, Robert and Cubert Richardson, both of City; twenty-five grand children and twenty great Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday at Union Chapel United Brethren Church in Greene County with the Rev.

Jesse Haws and Rev. Robert Jeffers officiating. The body was taken to the last residence Sunday afternoon and will be removed to the church at the serwice hour. Appalachian Home is in charge. James W.

Seaton Passed Away Sunday James William (J.W.) Seaton, aged 71, died Sunday at 6:45 a.m. in a local hospital. The funeral will be held Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. at Solomon Lutheran Church (Cove Creek).

Rev. Fred Dufford, Rev. E. H. and Rev.

John Powers will conduct the service. Active pall bearers will be grandsons. Honorary pall bearers and flower bearers will be members of the Men's Bible Class of Solomon Lutheran Church and friends. The body will remain at Kiser Funeral Home until time to remove it to the church to lie in state thirty minutes before time for services. survived by his wife, Mrs.

Nora Bible Seaton: two sons, L. A. and Troy Seaton of Greene County; four daughters, Mrs. Etta Humphreys, Mrs. Carrie Wills, Mrs.

Iretus Ball and Mrs. Louise Hensley of Greene County; twenty-seven grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. He is also survived by six brothers, Herman Seaton of Cleveland, Ohio: Sidney, Perry, Jessie, Charlie and Walter Seaton of Greene County and three sisters, Mrs. Addie Bowers, Mrs. Cora Arwood and Mrs.

Lavon Collins of Greene County. Matt Bird Died Saturday Matt Bird, aged 89, died 9:05 p.m. Saturday at Tusculum Rest Home. The funeral will be held at p.m. today at Doughty-Stevens in Oak Grove Funeral Home.

Interment will Rev. William J. Powell will the officiating minister. Pall bearers Dunn, Bruce Payne, Ted and George He is survived Dona Bird brother, Andy Tenn. and nephews.

Doughty-Stevens is in charge. Eisenhower Signs Labor Bill Into Law Starts on Page 1 ships, plus a provision that a trusteeship must be for legitimate union objectives. 5. Provides for secret ballot elections in unions with a limit on terms of union officers. Contains provisions to insure all members can nominate candidates, vote in the election, and be sure of an honest count.

6. Bans service as a union officer by any person convicted of a major crime for five years after he leaves prison, or by any Communist or former Communist for five years after he quits the party. 7. Ends a void in federal-state jurisdiction known as no man's land by permitting each state to handle under its own laws any labor dispute the National Labor Relations Board declines to handie. But the NLRB could not refuse to act on any class of cases it was handling Aug.

1, 1959, Prohibits all types of secondary boycotts by closing TaftHartley loopholes. 9. Bans hot cargo contracts under which an employer agrees with a union not to do business with another employer. 10. Prohibits picketing in order to organize workers in these situations: where another union has been lawfully recognized; where the union seeking to picket has lost a collective bargaining election in the last 12 months; where picketing has been conducted for a reasonable period not exceeding 30 days; and where no election has been asked.

On secondary boycotts, the law makes it clear that labor can continue to refuse to wok on struck goods. It also protects garment industry agreements under which a deal prime contractor agrees not with 1 nonunion subcontractors; provides that the right of primary picketing against the employer directly involved in the dispute is not limited, and allows unions to use informational acitities other than picketing to seek to persuade customers not to buy products of an employer with whom there is a dispute. On organizational picketing. the limitations provide that a union can picket for longer than 30 days without an election if the picketing does not halt deliveries to a business. They also permit organizational picketing if the employer has entered into a collu.

sive, or "sweetheart," contract with another union. The act also contains three provisions long sought by labor. These would: 1. Permit replaced strikers to vote in a bargaining election one year after a strike begins. This repeals a section of TaftHartley.

2. Repeal the Taft provision requiring union officers to file non-Communist affidavits if their organizations seek to use the NLRB. 3. Permit pre-hire agreements in the, construction industry plus mandatory union membership aft: er seven days instead of the 30 required by present law Aunt Josie Sizemore Begins Her 114th Year MANCHESTER, Ky. (AP) Aunt Josie Jackson Sizemore begins her 114th year today, fully expecting to be around to celebrate her next birthday.

"Come back next year," shel told the crowd on hand here Sunday for her 113th birthday celebration. Many of the visitors were persons Aunt Josie helped into the world. She reportedly has delivered about 5,000 babies as a midwife in the Kentucky and Tennessee hills. Messages of congratulations were read to her from President Eisenhower, Vice President Nixon, Kentucky Sens. John Sherman Cooper and Thruston B.

Morton, and Govs. A. B. Chandler of Kentucky and Nelson Rockefeller of New York, Tennessee Valley Fair Gates Open Under Cloudy Skies KNOXVILLE (AP) The 40th cials said they were hopeful of neath overcast skies. Fair offiannual Tennessee Valley Fair swung open its gates today bebreaking last year's opening day attendance of 34,437, House Considers Ban On Junkets Starts on Page 1 ed.

so some routine business was taken care of. Under consideration is a proposed rule that would bar use of public funds for congressional travel overseas while Congress is in session. Any member going abroad at that time would have to pay his own way. Absenteeism has been a vital factor several times in recent weeks. Some Democrats believe the first veto of a public works bill could have been overriden if absent members had been on hand.

Markets In Old Leaf Belt Swing Into Operation Officials Look For Day's Average Of About $58 RALEIGH. N. C. (AP) The 20 flue-cured tobacco markets of the Virginia-North Carolina Old HAVE Belt swung into operation today and officials looked for an opening day average of about $58. "The quality is there to justify such an average," said Paul Hedrick, tobacco marketing specialist for the North Carolina Department of Agriculture.

Hedrick said the general quality of Old Belt leaf probably is better than the other belts, except for the Carolinas Border Belt where growers are receiving record prices. Old Belt markets sold 7,198,714 pounds on opening day last year for an average of $57.30 per 100 pounds. The 1958 season average was $57.67 for 227,835,016 pounds. Objections Raised To Lick Creek Project Starts on Page 1 Brown, and Thomas Hull all spoke in opposition to the plan. John Graham made a motion that a committee be appointed to look into the facts in the watershed and report back to the group their opinions.

A prepared statement was read by John Rush opposing the project and asking for a delay in a decision to start it. Those attending the meeting were urged to sign protests immediately so that they could be filed before the public hearing on September 21st is resumed. There were many points that could not be answered in the meeting because no one there appeared to have information to speak authoritatively on the matter. So the committee was urged to contact Soil Conservation and Watershed directors to attempt to get the answers to a number of questions such as the cost of the operation to the land owner, the plan of operation the question of whether the land owner has any right to protest his assessment and many others. This committee is expected to report back to the group by the end of the week.

Four Killed In Highway Accidents By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Brisk fall weather and sunshine Fenderse them were killed. The deaths marred a weekend record: which had been clear of fatal traffic reports Friday night and Saturday. The worst crash killed two and injured seven near Jefferson City. State troopers said one car crashed into the rear of another and the wreckage came to rest more than 250 feet from the point of impact. The dead were: Augustin Lemaire, 36, Bristol, and his mother, Mrs.

Louis F. Lemaire, 58, who died in the wreck near Jefferson City. Ike Meets With Other Top Officials Before Arrival Starts on Page 1 Douglas Dillon on plans and preparations for Khrushchev's visit. Meanwhile members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee were working on their own preparations for entertaining Khrushchev at an hour-long tea party Wednesday afternoon, They want to find out "what kind of man he is, said Chairman J. William Fulbright (D-Ark), and they wane Heavy Dockets Heard In City Court Sessions Starts on Page 1 charged with peddling, dismissed; Allie Shelton, charged with driving without a drivers license, forfeited a $55 bond; Eunice Dunbar, charged with driving without a drivers license forfeited a $25 bond.

In one case held over from Names of -persons listed in City Court stories are taken from the City Court Docket which does not give addresses for further identification. The Sun regrets any duplication of names. an earlier date Clifford Reed, charged with driving while intoxicated, driving without a drivers license and possessing open beer, found not guilty of DWI and driving without a drivers license and fined $25 for possessing open beer of which $10 was suspended. Cash Shortages Of $20,000 Reported In 8 Counties Starts on Page 1 Atwood, who also served as clerk of the general sessions court, deposited $1,645 on Sept. 3, 1959, to be applied to a deficit of $4,738 in sessions court funds.

and made up $1,448 of a $1,911 shortage in the circuit court accounts, according to the report. It quotes Atwood as saying the balance of $3,556 is due him for payment of duties performed and he plans to file suit against the county. Snodgrass said the Jackson County deficit occurred in the funds of former Circuit Court Clerk Grant Hawkins between Sept. 1, 1957, and Aug. 31, 1958, when he left office, It said Hawkins overdrew statutory salary allowances by $827.48, and had refused to restore the funds.

Jackson County court has refused Hawkins. tof release. the The largest deficit was $7,353 in the accounts of White County Circuit Court Clerk Gerald Wallace. He restored $3,551 on 31, 1958 and an additional $3,541 at the close of the audit. The other shortages, all of which have been restored, were: Circuit Court Clerk H.

M. Fetzer of Coffee County, Fentress County Clerk and Master George L. Stockton, Former Van Buren County Trustee R. T. Davis, Crockett County Clerk Jerrell Reasons, $1,382.

and Sullivan County Circuit Court Clerk Howard L. Morrell, $548. MEMBER, THE ORDER OF THE GOLDEN RULE We Know This The privacy of the family group is probably most important during the memorial service. In recognition of this fact, we provide a separate room from which the family can see and hear the service in complete seclusion. Kiser FUNERAL HOME Dial ME 24 Hour Oxygen Equipped Air Conditioned Ambulance Service Khrushchev Will See U.

S. Against Soviet Background Mrs. Elizabeth Brown Russell Succumbs To Long Illness Mrs. Elizabeth Brown Russell, after a long illness, passed away Sunday at 2:30 a. m.

in a local hospital at the age of ninety-one. Mrs. Russell had made her home with her daughter, Mrs. Ruby Myers, for a number of years: Last rites will be held Tuesday at 2:00 p. m.

at First Baptist Church at Pennington Gap, Va. Rev. Lonnie Quillen will officiate. Burial will take place in Cecil Cemetery. Active pall bearers will be Paul Lewis, Van Grabeel, Walter Willis, Bill Russell, Orville Howard, Joe Kelley, Eugene Davis, Arthur Black, Everett Cutshall, Kelley, Earl Lane, Hugh Cobble, W.

D. McKey and Thomas Seaton. Honorary pall bearers will be J. T. Sword, A.

C. Shelton, Martin Vanderveter, T. M. King, Claude Orr. W.

D. Harr, M. E. Flanary, J. Barren, T.

C. Barlow and E. R. Halstead. Flower bearers will be ladies of.

the First Baptist Church of Pennington Gap. The body will remain at Kiser Funeral Home until time to remove it to the church one hour before time for services. Survivors in addition to her daughter, Mrs. Myers, is another daughter, Mrs. 0.

V. Cooper of Phoenix, Arizona; one son, H. A. Russell of Dayton, Ohio; one sister, Mrs. James Willis of Ewing, three half-sisters, Mrs.

Edgar Hamilton of Miami, Mrs. Arch Ritchie of Tazewell Mrs. C. C. Carter Perryton, Texas; one half -brother, C.

L. Graybeal: of Rosehill, five grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Russell was a descendant of Captain George Ball, cousin of George Washington, first president of the United States. She received her academic education at Currey College, Rose Hill, Virginia where she also studied piano with a professor from England.

After her marriage to Mr. George W. Russell, they lived at Pennington Gap, where her charming personality made for her at Pennington Gap, where her many friends both in church and social circles. For a number of years she was organist at First Baptist Church membership has remained. She served on various committees and as treasurer of the W.

M. S. for twenty years. She was preceded in death by her husband in 1945 and a son, King G. died in 1953.

Since 1951 she has made her home with her daughter here. MR. MATT BIRD Funeral 3:30 p. m. today Doughty-Stevens Chapel Burial in Oak Grove Cemetery: Morticians Dial ME 8-4141 KISER SERVICES MRS.

ELIZABETH BROWN RUSSELL Funeral Tuesday 2:00 p. m. First Baptist Church Pennington Gap, Va. MRS. R.

L. (Nora) SAUCEMAN Funeral 2 p.m. Wednesday Whittenburg Church JAMES WILLIAM (J. SEATON Funeral Tuesday 2:30 p. m.

Solomon Lutheran Church SERVICE KISER FUNERAL HOME Main St. Dial ME 8-3121 FLOWERS By IREENE THE FLOWER SHOPPE DIAL ME 8-4161 4162 405 Tusculum Blvd. F.T.D. Service SAY IT WITH FLOWERS: RHEA FLORAL CO.3 AND GREENHOUSES KNOXVILLE HIGHWAY Dial ME GREEN 8-4121-WE GIVES STAMPS bearing the emblem remained intact despite the terrific impact of the moon landing. The dramtic shot, sure to give Khrushchev's visit a sharp prestige boost, marked the first time man has lobbed a missile through space to hit a celestial target.

News of the flight was hailed on both sides of the Iron Curtain as a major scientific achievement. In Jodrell Bank, England, Prof. Alfred Lovell, in charge of the world's biggest radio telescope, termed the moon rocket "a brilliant demonstration of the advanced state of Russian technology." It was Jodrell Bank that flasned first word that the Soviets had been successful in their moon shot. American scientists congratulated the Soviet Union on her feat and expressed hope information gleaned from the rocket would be shared with the world. But Vice President Richard M.

Nixon said official proof was still lacking that the Soviets really hit the moon. Nixon, interviewed as he landed in New York Washington, said the Soviet tried and failed three times in the last two weeks to land a rocket on the moon. Saturday's was the fourth try, he added. Pravda, official Communist party newspaper, said second Soviet space rocket has reaffirmed the leading role of the U.S.S.R. in the highly important spheres of science and technology, in fathoming the mysteries of the universe." Acclaiming the "latest remarkable successes of the Soviet Union," Pravda added "world public opinion emphasizes the tremendous importance" of Khrushchev's visit to the United States.

In Moscow, Soviet citizens stood tensely by their radios as stepby step reports were broadcast of the trail-blazing flight. Shortly before midnight, the Moscow radio announcer began counting "now just five minutes. "Now three minutes" and finally down to seconds. Just before midnight, the announcer said, "wait for a special announcement. Listen to Moscow.

Listen to Red At the stroke of midnight the and the radio began blaring the chimes tolled from the national anthem. Minutes after the deadline the radio began broadcasting concert music. Finally at 12:35 a. the music ceased and the historic announcement was made-33 minutes after the rocket's reported landing. Moscow proclaimed the announcer, then: "Tass-bulletin.

Today the 14th of September, at 00:02.24 Moscow time-2 minutes and 24 seconds after midnight--the second Soviet cosmic rocket reached the surface of the moon. "It was the first time in history that a cosmic flight has been made from the earth to another body. There was no public sign of rejoicing. over. the announcement.

Red desertMoscow nosed midnight as usuals Billy Graham Prays With Accused Bombers LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) Four men accused in the Labor Day bombings here knelt and prayed in city jail cells with their tall, visitor. "Young men, I could very well be here instead of you except for the grace of Jesus Christ," the visitor, evangelist Billy Graham, told them. "Maybe this happened to bring you to Jesus." The prisoners nodded. "They were very remorseful and two accepted Jesus on the spot, said James T.

Karam, clothier and Baptist Church leader who accompanied Graham on the visit Sunday. It was Graham's own idea to visit the men, Karam said. Graham was in Little Rock for a religious rally. The accused men are J. Sims, 35.

and Jesse Raymond D. Perry, 24, both truck drivers: Samuel Beavers, 42, a carpenter, and John T. Coggins, 39, car salesman. Also charged in the three bombings is E. A.

Lauderdale 48-year-old lumber dealer and a leader. of the segregationist Capital Citizens Council. He is free on bond. They are accused of dynamiting the Little Rock school board offices, Mayor Werner Knoop's business office and a station wagon owned by Fire Chief Gann Nalley. Man Drowned be Trying To Retrieve be Fishing Pole will be Drexel MEMPHIS (AP) A bamboo Morrison, Curtis pole snatched by a fish has cost Holt.

Herman Bird the life of Howard Haynes, 53, of Justis. Memphis. by his wife, Mrs. Haynes was fishing in a Shelby of Greeneville: one County Lake Sunday when a fish Bird of Cleveland, jerked the pole from his hands. several nieces and He swam out 60 feet into the lake to retrieve the bobbing pole but Funeral Home went under while trying to return Ito shore.

Ito ask him some tough questions about Soviet behavior in world affairs. Eisenhower himself is expected to tell his visitor that the use or threat of force around the boundhalf a dozen major problems to aries of the Communist bloc most recently against India and Laos is the major cause of tension and war fears in the world. The President expects at least be covered in the talks he and Khrushchev will hold here Tuesday afternoon and late next week, following the Soviet premier's return from a tour around the The problems include disarmament. Berlin and the future of Germany, and the situation in the Far East. One difference between the Soviet and American approaches has already appeared.

Soviet propaganda for days now has been building up great expectations of achievement from the meetings. American officials have been playing down hopes of major accomplishments. Asst. Secretary of State Francis 0. Wilcox cautioned Sunday night in a New York speech that while he was not pessimistic about Khrushchev's visit "no one ought to look for miracles." Scientists Say Man May Reach: a Moon In 5 Years Starts on Page 1 whether the moon has a magnetic field.

or belts of radiation around it, as the earth does. And scientists want to know if life in any form exists on the moon. If so, it must be hardy to endure the extremes of temperature which run from 250 degrees Fahrenheit in the daytime to 215 below at night, They want to examine the dust on the surface, to test one theory that life may have been carried through space to land on the moon after originating somewhere else. They also want to know if volcanoes caused the eruptions on the moon, and if so, can the explorers tap the heat by means of borings, to supply warmth, and use the heat to create power. Mickey Wayland Auditions Today For Singing Career 'KNOXVILLE (AP) Marion Lee (Mickey) Wayland, Tennessee's entry in the Miss America pageant, is in New York today for auditions for a possible singing career.

Miss Wayland, who won a scholarshin semi tanne City beauty contest, will be auditioned this week by bandleader Fred Waring and singer Pat Boone. She was accompanied to New York by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Editor's Note Nikita chev arrives Tuesday take a look at the bounding economy. What will be his yardstick? How will he measure U.S.

life against. the background of his Russian upbringing? Here is an appraisal of the system Khrushchev leaves behind when he flies to Washington. By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst Starting Tuesday Nikita Khrushchev will get a first hand idea of what he must do if he is to deliver on those promises he has made to the people of the Soviet Union-to match and overtake the living standards of the United States. The Communist boss likely will see America through the eyes of one whose life has been ruled by inflexible Marxist theories.

Probably he will remain convinced the U.S. system inevitably must collapse and that thus the superiority of the American way must be regarded as temporary. The U.S.S.R. has come a long way, even in the five or so years of the Khrushchev era. Under any system, mighty development would have been certain in these modern times for naturally rich a land.

Its strides in science, technology and military might are well known. But it lags badly behind Western Europe, far behind the United States, in terms of people's material well-being. A Communist party of 8 million rules the nation's other 200 million, more than half of them Great Russians dominating numerous other races speaking scores of different languages. Khrushchev says this is the world's most democratic system because the party represents all the people and there is no need to choose between leaders. In the West, adds, workers can choose only between parties intent upon exploiting them.

The system, however, has produced a privileged class. It's extremely difficult to become a Communist in the U.S.S.R. Membership is open only to those the party calls the "politically mature." Party members often have the best jobs, make the most money. A ranking Communist can have a private town apartment, a country dacha or bungalow, an automobile assigned for official or personal use. He often has a chauffeur and other servants.

His wife may scorn Moscow dressmakers and have her clothes made in Riga- or even, if she's ultrafashionable, imported from Paris. Many outside the party have good incomes, too. The class extends to professional people, seientists, writers, industrialists and others. But about 60 per cent of the labor force--perhaps 55 millionare those the party calls "workers and employes," wholly dependent upon wages and salaries. Of these, eight million were in an extremely low bracket in September, 1957, when a decree fixed the minimum wage of 270 to 250 rubles monthly equal in terms of purchasing power to perhaps $27 $35..

a worker, now probably earns 800. to 3900 rubles monthly, on $80 to $90' in terms of- purchasing power. Of this, about 70 per cent goes for food, 17 per cent for clothing -and necessities, 9 per cent for rent and utilities, the rest for squandering or saving. The citien is urged to deposit his surplus, if any, in savings banks. Apart from rents, living costs are high.

Families get by because usually each has two or more working members. Some improve their situations by having their own vegetable gardens, even cows and chickens, though this now is being discouraged officially in urban areas. The average man works about three hours to earn enough for 500 grams- little more than a pound--of butter or bacon. The average American earns that in less than a half hour. A cheap suit costs more than a month's pay; a 15-inch television up to five months pay.

The smallest automobile would cost the average worker more than 16 months pay, a university professor about six months pay, and a cabinet minister about two months salary. One of the biggest consumer economy problems is a severe housing shortage. It is common for a Russian family of four or more be crowded into a single room, Many families must share kitchen and other facilities. To appreciate what. this means.

an American might imagine 20 persons crowded into the averagesize American home. Khrushchev says a building program will cure this within 12 years, but that's optimistic. Another sore spot is a severe manpower shortage. This requires use of women for heavy labor. Almost half the labor-employe force is made up of women.

Freeing them from it would cut the force in half, have telling effect on the economy, and weaken the military. Miss America Says She Has Duty To Educate Herself ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (AP)The new Miss America says she thinks it is her duty to "educate herself, to make herself as wholesome as possible so as to set an example for the women of So spoke Lynda Lee Mead, 20, of Natchez, Sunday. She won the title Saturday night, along with a $10,000 scholarship and the possibility of earning about $75,000 from personal appearances.

Newsmen gathered around Miss Mead. How does she like to spend leisure time? "I like to read and listen to music," she said. She added that music did not include rock 'n' roll. "I just haven't been able to catch on to it." Nixon Advises Starts on Page 1 sees far more than what he Khrushchev, said Nixon. not need to be convinced -that the government and people of the United States want, peace.

The danger is that Her day believe we may want peace st much we will pay any price: "to get including surrender at the conference table." Boy friend? "There is no 'one terribly serious in my life." ITS BACK TO SCHOOL And It's Great When The Sun Goes Along! Keep up with all the Home Town Happenings with THE GREENEVILLE DAILY SUN SENT DAILY TO YOU AT SCHOOL Local news, state and national news, sports, and comics all in your own GREENEVILLE SUN, Special! right in your room throughout the entire school year at a bargain price. SCHOOL Keep up with the local as well as national and international happenings all through the school TERM year with your GREENEVILLE SUN. Ask Dad at once, to send in when your subscription there. have it SUBSCRIPTION waiting for you you get 9 Months MAIL TO Only $700 CIRCULATION DAILY SUN Greeneville, Tenn. EVERY DAY NAME The GREENEVILLE SUN will be mailed to you at SCHOOL ADDRESS school for the entire 9 months using the above rate.

This I Go to School. rate applies anywhere in the UNITED STATES. Please include my name in your special DON'T DELAY School offer for the Sun for a period of 9 months. Get your subscription in now so that you won't miss an issue while you are away to Please Print Your Name Clearly school..

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About The Greeneville Sun Archive

Pages Available:
86,407
Years Available:
1912-1963