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The Index-Journal du lieu suivant : Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 3

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The Index-Journali
Lieu:
Greenwood, South Carolina
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3
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PERSONALS HOSPITAL PATIENT CLINTON GUESTS ILL AT HOME Mrs. Frank W. Boyter of Ware Mrs. Tom Taylor and daughter, Mrs. R.

M. Harling is confined Shoals is a patient in Self Me- BB, will spend the, weekend in to her home at 318 Magnolia St. on morial Hospital for treatment. Her Clinton with Mr. and Mrs.

"Red" account of illness. room is number 215. Coleman. VISIT COLUMBIA COLLEGE WINTER 1 IN BENNETTSVILLE' GAME IN ATHENS Mrs. Otis McMillan left today Nancy Grier and Susan Jones Sandra Browning, Cullum Genie will visit Ray Watson and Jane ville spend winter in Bennetts- will be among those attending the Columbia College this weekend the with her sister, Mrs.

Charlie Citadel University of Georgia and attend the South CarolinaMcColl. football game in Athens today. North Carolina State football game today. Hodges (Rexall Drugs For Your Most -Attractive THANKSGIVING Hair Care Specials New Ease 16 Mess NEW SPEED Takes the mess out of waving. Gives Til the hair better body than any other wave you can use.

$702 PLUS Royal Drene SHAMPOO Try it Today CAN'T DRY hair out Large Size $1.00 Medium Personal NEW! from Procter a Gamble NEWI TWICE NEW $2.00 100 FED. TAX Cara. Nome Shampoo 1.25 Conditions While It Cleans Breck Only left! Hair Set Mist: Helene Curtis Spray Net 69c Super Soft SPECIAL SALE BUY ONE concentrate Get SAME SIZE FREE by Mail FAMILY LARGE MEDIUM 1 PERSONAL ROUX Color Curl Hair Spray. 1.50 Soft Hair Control With Color Rinse Away with VO-5 2. 1.00 YOU ALWAYS FIND A COMPLETE SELECTION OF HAIR CARE PREPARATIONS AT Hodges Drug Store Call 3636 or 5141 IN CHARLESTON Mrs.

J. F. Parkman is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gardner and family in Charleston.

She is the mother of Mrs. Gardner. VISITOR FROM TAIWAN Miss Pearl Johnson, missionary to Taiwan, is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. D.

Stuart and Mr. Stuart on E. Creswell Ave. Miss Johnson's headquarters are in Union while she is in this country, ELECTED REGION PRESIDENT Mrs. George L.

Johnson was elected regional president of the Woman's Missionary Union at the meeting of the State convention held in Charleston this week. GROUP ATTENDS CONVENTION Miss Betty Erwin and Mrs. George Johnson of the First Baptist Church, Mrs. R. 0.

Lawton and Mrs. Ruth Hilton from Connie Maxwell Childrens Home and Mrs. Jenkins from Ware Shoals attended the State Baptist Convention of the Woman's Missionary Union in Charleston Wednesday and Thursday. GO TO CLEMSON Dr. and Mrs.

0. S. Munnerlyn will attend the Clemson College football game today. VISITS MOTHER Mrs. D.

F. Minton is visiting her mother, Mrs. G. C. Gardner.

ATTEND GAME Thomas Pinson, P. Callison, E. I. Sterghos and John' Long will attend the University of Georgia football game in Athens today. RETURNS FROM HOSPITAL Gus McCaslan returned Friday from Self Memorial Hospital.

FROM FOUNTAIN INN Mrs. J. C. Sprouse, Mrs. H.

B. of Peden and Miss Lizzie Peden Inn visited Mrs. J. N. McCord on Route 3 yesterday.

IN HOSPITAL Mrs. J. F. Monroe, Jr. remains a patient in Self Memorial Hospital for treatment.

AT HOME Mrs. G. A. Polatty has returned to her home on Willson after bing a patient in Self Memorial Hospital. TO LOUISVILLE Mr.

and Mrs. Ed. Groves and family will leave Wednesday for Louisville, to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Harry K.

Stone. Mr. Stone is the father of Mrs. Groves. Shuford Invitation Issued Mr.

and Mrs. H. G. Shuford invite relatives and friends to the marriage of their daughter, Miss Jeanine Shuford, Thursday, Nov. 27 at 4 o'clock the afternoon, when she becomes the bride of Samuel Landon Madden, son of Mr.

and Mrs. I. E. Madden. The wedding will be solemnized at the Callie Self Baptist Church.

No formal invitations have been sent. Thanksgiving Special CANDELABRA IN HEIGHT Can be changed like magic size Old English Style candlesticks and 4 size candelabra for every occasion. 8-way multiple CANDELABRA IN FAMOUS MW ROGERS SILVERPLATE Made by The International Silver Company A pair of elegant candelabra to enrich formerly found only in candelabra com setting. Impressive size and weight ing twice as muchi All heavily silver plated for lasting satisfaction. Quantities limited at this special price: LAg pair THAYER'S FINE GIFTS They Are More Trouble If They Are Smart he were genius? "It's not easy." says Mrs.

Regina Fischer of Brooklyn. Her 15-year-old son, Bobby, is genius at chess. He won the United States championship at 14 and became the youngest international Grand Master in history this summer. His one dream is to snatch the world chess crown from the present champion, Russia's Mikhail Botvinnik. One of Mrs.

Fischer's definite "not easy" moments came this summer when Bobby appeared to be stranded in Yugoslavia NEW YORK (AP) Ever have trouble coping with your teenager? How would you like it if first international tourna- had a round trip ticket, but made any reservations for he couldn't get a plane. he'd spent most of his at the World Fair in Beland I was afraid the YugoChess Federation wouldn't paying for him after the had ended. went to the Yugoslav Embut it was the weekend and find anybody. I tried Bobby, but they said he by train. was really worried.

I knew loaded down with books didn't see how he could He doesn't speak the I could just see him in a train station some and people stealing everyhe Bobby used his tournament money get to Munich he found plane space is not a popular game there are no funds to send the champion to Bobby won two tickets to. on television proHis 21-year-old sister, Joan, the second. doesn't like the idea of mother going around with him tournaments. Besides, I fig. would be better for me here in case anything was money, primarily." laughed ruefully--a slender, woman with a smilmouth in gamine face.

separated when Bobby and Mrs. Fischer raised two children on her earnings nurse. don't discipline Bobby. He's Anyway, there's not much He comes home and sticks nose in a chess book, stops and he's back again until to go to bed. "Bobby's one of the ones who for blood as they say He's serious.

He has all the time. The countries pamphlets and books at rate-new openings always worked out. "He's not interested in girls don't play chess. He doesn't or drink. He does nails down to the bone, afraid to make him know what he might "Some of these chess players Nov.

22, 1958 SATURDAY Tie Index-Journa 3 Outdated Customs Mark The Hiring Of Working Women Today after his ment. "He nobody him and knew money gium slav go on tournament "I bassy couldn't to call had left he was and I manage. languages. sleeping where thing But prize where home. Chess and American ments.

Yugoslavia gram. took "Bobby his to lured it be needed She dark-haired ing Fischers was 2 her as a "I too big. to say. his eat, time play chess. study publish great being they smoke his I'm I don't up.

Two Years Today Peggy Jo McCoy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis McCoy 420 Sproles is two years old today, Nov. 22. Her paternal grandparents are Mr.

and Mrs. -Floyd McCoy of Ware. Shoals and her maternal grandmother is Mrs. Louise Cooper. (Photo, by Starnes Studio.) Chicken Supper Held By HD Club At Bradley The Bradley HD Club sponsored baked chicken supper at the Community Center.

Alter supper an informative talk was given by Walter O'Brien, assistant County Agent on Rat Control, Orders were taken for rat poison and it was announced that members, not present, who want poison are urged to contact the County Agent's office. twitch all over. Honest. They start with an eye and twitch down to their feet and start again, I'd rather he chewed his nails." "The only thing I do is nag him to get some fresh air, This year he's joined the and says he's going to get in better physical shape. "He used to be wonderful sports--in fact, he himself used to say he wanted to be a baseball player.

"I don't know thing about chess. In fact, I tried. to make him stop for four years, But I've given up Be The First alTo Select Your Christmas Cards, Christmas Ribbons, Papers And Tags. I McCaslan's EDITOR'S NOTE: The moderm women's place in the U.S. work force is marked by paradox and marred by Inefficiency, says the National Manpower Council.

Here's the first in a three- part series based on the Council's report: "Work in the Lives of Married By CYITHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) Women in the work force have been causing talk ever since the first once announced she had time to leave the cave and do I little dinosaur hunting herself. Now the working woman is more of a problem than ever: Today she holds the balance of power in our nation's economic structure; tomorrow she will be the one major manpower pool to be tapped in probable period of shortage. Despite these hard facts, the modern woman's place outside the home is marked by paradox and marred by inefficiency in the use of her skills. The situation is pointed up dramatically in the newly published in the Lives of Married report of the National Man-power Council's conference on womanpower. In the first place, the report shows, the question of whether or not women should work outside the home is purely academic.

About 28 million are already working. That means that almost one-half of the nation's adult female population is, fulltime or part-time, in the work force. Three out of five of these women are married. And if for some reason, all of these working wives quit today, "the economy would collapse and we would not be able to perform the essential services needed," declared one conference speaker. The paradox in the situation is that the public generally overwhelmingly opposed to married women working; employers For good housekeepers: always wrap melons tightly in foil, waxed paper, plastic bags or plastic see-through wrapping when you refrigerate them.

This will prevent their aroma mingling with other foods. have been laggard in hiring mature women available for fulltime employment; our education system, in spite of shortages of teachers, nurses and other areas of women's work, fails to take into consideration the almost classic course of the average woman's life. and ignoraht" were the words used by one conferee to describe the public attitude towards married working women, while another cited a random sampling of adults on the question of working wives in which every person queried favored getting them out of the labor force. Reasons given ranged from one man's view that it would create manpoyer shortage with resulting, higher wages, to a girl singer's opinion that married women only worked to buy mink stoles any. way.

Statistics gathered and projected by the U. S. Department of Labor indicate that in 1955, 46 out of every 100 women over 14 years of age worked at some time during the year. By 1965 that figure will reach 50 of 100. And, seven years hence, the "typical" woman will work for a time before she is married, leave the work force to raise a family, and then return to it, full-time or part-time, as she approaches middle age.

"The far-sighted employer," said Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell to the conference; "must know that he is going to have to employ, women in everincreasing numbers and in increasing variety of jobs. His problem, it seems to us, will lie in using the available supply, some of them full-time workers, some of them part-time workers, in the most efficient manner And because of the way typical woman breaks. up her life, employers must look older women women over 35 But, first, he must get rid of and about older women which currently present an employment problem of women eager to work (Next: The myths about older women workers.) Plans December Wedding Mr. and Mrs.

Abe Cohen, of Clio, announce the engagement of their daughter, Cecile Elaine, of Clio and Atlanta, to William Lawrence Waromker of Atlanta. The will take place Dec. 28 at the Wade Hampton Hotel in Columbia. Miss Cohen is a graduate of the University of Georgia and is teaching, at present, in Dekalb County. Mr.

Waromker is also a graduate of the University of Georgia and is connected with the Citizens Jewelry Atlanta. wood Shoals. Her grandfather is Lewis Mark of The bride elect's mother is the former Bessie Mark of GreenWare Shoals. MEETINGS SUNDAY, NOV. 23 Women of Immanuel Lutheran Church will have their annual thank-offering program at 8 p.m.

the church. Members are reminded to bring food for the Thanksgiving basket. MONDAY, NOV. 24 Holly Garden Club will meet with Mrs. W.

D. Coleman, Jr. at 3:30 p.m. Fidelis Class of the First Bap-ling. tist Church will pack Thanksgiving boxes for shut-ins at 7 p.m.

A covered dish supper will be served. Business and Professional Women's Club will have the regular monthly meeting at 7 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Abney Coleman. Any business or professional woman interested in joining the club is invited. Scaean Club will meet with Mrs.

W. P. Martin on Blake at p.m. AAUW will meet at the home of Mr. E.

L. Rhinehart, Brook- COKESBURY COKESBURY Mr. and Mrs. J. H.

Greer and Mrs. Allen White visited Mr. and Mrs. W. R.

Townsend, Friday morning. Mr. and Mrs. C. D.

Cullens visited Mrs. Capus Timms, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Medlock of Princeton and Mrs.

Turman McCoy of Ware Shoals were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Strawhorn. Mr. and Mrs.

Grady Price Jr. and son, and Mrs. Grady Price visited Mr. and Mrs. J.

E. Quarles, Saturday. They visited Mr. and Mrs. Brodus Corley of Greenwood Sunday afternoon and Rhett Quarles of Saluda, Sunday night.

The Rev. and Mrs. T. M. Fulmer: visited Mr.

and Mrs. Allen White Sunday night. Graver White also called. Mr. and Mrs.

J. H. Greer spent Tuesday in Belton and were dinner guests of Miss Inez Greer. Mrs. C.

A. Nickles spent Wednesday night with Mr. and Mrs. W. R.

Townsend. Mrs. J. E. Quarles and Martin were supper guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Toyce McCarthy on Tuesday night in Ninety Six. Mr. and Mrs. D.

C. Smith spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. Palmer Sloan, in Greenville. Mr. and Mrs.

J. D. Brooks of Greer and Mr. and Mrs. Reed Milford of Ware Shoals, visited in the home of Mr.

and Mrs. J. H. Greer, Sunday afternoon. Mrs.

Odelle Morrow remains sick in Self Memorial Hospital, PARGO FRITO: FISH PUFFS For the lightest, most delicate fried fish you have ever eaten, try dipping fillets in a frothy batter, then fry until golden in olice oil. To make the batter, blend two taalespoons flour with two tablespoons water, add a tablespoon of fino or amontillado sherry, teaspoon salt and two egg yolks. Beat until smooth and creamy. Separately beat the two egg whites until stiff, then fold the egg yolk mixture into the whites. Out the fillets into pieces easy to handle, dip each fillet in the batter, and fry in hot olive oil.

You will need about cup olive oil, enough to cover the bottom of a heavy frying pan to a depth of inch. Batter is enough for 6 fillets: pecially good with cod, flounder or haddock. GETS THE BIRD SALEM, N.H.. (AP) Anyone who deigns to congratulate George Gelt on his good fortune on winning three turkeys in a lottery may expect to get kocked on the noggin with a drumstick. George operates a market and has more than 500 birds in stock.

lane at 4 o'clock. Dr. Helen Bedon of the Lander College Science Department will speak. TUESDAY, NOV. 25 Martha Franks Circle of the Laurel Baptist Church will meet with Mrs.

E. C. Grant, on the Old Laurens Highway, at 7:30 p. m. Pilot Club will meet at 7:30 p.m.

at the Oregon for a program meetHostesses will be Mrs. J. C. Agnew, Mrs. Pauline Purdy, and Mrs.

C. T. Jay. Duplicate Bridge Club will meet at the Sproles Ave. Recreation Center at 7:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 26 Gladiolus Garden Club will meet with Mrs. J. M. Motsinger at Coronaca at 3:30 p.m.

There will be a plant exchapse. FRIDAY, NOV. 28 Open House will be held at the Greenwood City and County Public Library from 6 until 9 p.m. This is the official opening of the new building and the public is invited. Births Satterfield Mr.

and Mrs. L. O. Satterfield of 504 Norwood St. announce the the birth of daughter, Kathy Claire, Nov.

18, at Self Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Satterfield is the former, Betty Lou Alewine. Thomas Mr. and Mrs.

Whitely Thomas of 102. Brissie St. announce the birth of a son, Michael Anthony, Nov. 17, at Self Memorial Hospital, Mrs. Thomas is the former Patricia Mooney, Worthington Mr.

and Mrs. Bobby Eugene Worthington of Route 1, announce the birth of a son, Danny Floyd, Nov. 19, at Self Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Worthington is the former Ellen Smith.

Barnhardt Mr. and Mrs. Homer Barnhardt of 54-C Glenhaven Apts. announce the birth of a son, Homer Lee, Nov. 20, at Self Memorial Hospital.

Mrs. Barnhardt is the former Clara Pugh of Prosperity. CHRISTMAS GREETING CARDS Plain or Monogrammed Letterheads 4 Envelopes Bible Book House You Send a Part of Yourself When You Use Photo Christinas Call for 8-1001 vadings! Appointment Professional Photography Gives Meaning Your STARNES STUDIO Professional Photographer 15 Kirksey Drive South. Greenwood SALE one week only! FOR TERRI LEE DOLL CLOTHES price Clothes for Linda, Connie Lynn, Tiny Terri and Jerri not included. Jewelry Caldwell Gift Shop 401 Main Street Phone 9-3295 fashions for the party season.

Fabulous formals for the festive seasons to come. Flattering fashions Chiffon, Peau de Sole, Nylon Net, Lace. waltz and full lengths. All sizes. Modest prices.

And complemened with Costume Jewelry, Evening Bags and Gloves. at Wharton's.

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