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The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 7

The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 7

Publication:
The Index-Journali
Location:
Greenwood, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 1 WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25, 1942 THE INDEX-JOURNAL, GREENWOOD, S. C. Page Seven NEW YORK FUTURES York, Nov. 25.

(P). Cotton futures opened 10 to 45 cents a bale higher. Prev. Close Open December ..18.34 18.43 January .18.30 March 18.34 18.39 May 18.22 18.26 July 18.22 18.25 October 18.25 NEW ORLEANS FUTURES New Orleans, Nov. 25- (P) Cotton futures opened steady 25 to 35 cents a bale higher.

Prev. Close Oper December .18.57 18.63 January 218.57 18.63 March 18.53 18.59 May 18.44 18.51 July, 18.49 October 18.46 18.46 LIVESTOCK Chicago, Nov. 25. (P) (U. S.

Dept. Salable hogs 000: total slow, steady to 10 lower; good and choice 190- 325 lbs. 13.40-55; top 13.60: good and choice 160-90 lbs. 13.00- 45; sows steady to mostly 10 lower; good and choice 300-500 lbs. 13.40-55; few early 13.60.

Salable cattle calves 000: fed steers and yearlings 10- 15 higher; instances 25 up on choice offerings; early top 17.35; some held higher; several loads 16.75-17.25; light yearlings 16.75 and long yearlings 17.10; broad demand on medium to good grades at 12.75-14.75; medium stockers scaling 700-900 lbs. active at 11.00-12.25; good to choice stock cattle steady choice calves to 15.00; fed heifers steady: best 16.10; cows and bulls strong to 15 higher, instances 25 up on bulls: weighty sausage offerings vealers steady at 14.00- 15.50. Berlin Tells Of Gains In North Africa Continued from Page One Algiers, Bone and Phillipeville, all Allied-held ports in Algeria, were targets of Nazi air raiders, it said, and fires were. spread on the three shorefronts. The Berlin radio also broadcast a report today that the British First Army "has suffered a severe setback in its attempt to gain ground in the Tunisian-Alberisn frontier area." Allied Tanks Ambushed It asserted that in difficult, mountainous ground, fairly strong British tank spearheads, closely lowed by several motorized columns.

were caught in an ambush prepared by German and Italian tank troops. German sappers, it said, had blown up two hairpin bends of the coastal, road, thus cutting off the way of retreat for the most advanced British units. British resistance collapsed in crossfire of German infantry and anti-tank guns, it WAS said. and all armored cars and several armored trop carriers were reported destroyed. No One Man Boss Of War Production Roosevelt Asserts Washington, Nov.

25- -(P) Arguments among some government officials over who bosses the nation's war production were stilled at least temporarily today by President Roosevelt's assertion there is no individual high command. Present administrators, the PresIdent told a press conference yesterday, must work together to solve the problems of production, allocation of materials and scheduling of production. Further, he declared all the officials concerned with these problems are supposed to agree. And if: they don't, Mr. Roosevelt added, he will put them in a room and tell them to do so.

Commenting on current conflicting reports over who has the final word on production and allocations, the President observed that those who say there will be a single man control over all war production factors are doodle drawing. DETAILS Continued from Page One Hitler was wrathful at "failure to complete the extermination immedlately." To speed the slaughter of the er half during the remaining month before the edict's deadline, Dr. Wise said the Nazis were moving some four-fifths of the Jews in Hitlerruled European countries to Poland. There, he said Nazi doctors were killing them at the rate of "more than 100 men an hour, per doctor," by injecting air bubbles into their veins- "the simplest and cheapest method" they could find. Reduced Four- In Warsaw Dr.

Wise, who heads the committee, asserted that already the Jewish population of Warsaw had been reduced from 500,000 to about 000. (The Polish government-in-exile reported in London yesterday that Heinrich Himmler, Nazi Gestapo chief, had ordered the extermination of one-half of the Jewish population of Poland by the end of this year and that 250,000 had been killed through September. Only 40,000 Jews -skilled workers in the German war industry--are to remain in the Warsaw ghetto, the government said). In addition to the State Department which he said had provided the documentary proof of previous rumors and reports, the chairman said a "representative of President noosevelt, recently returned from Surope," had confirmed other storles and told him that the worst you thought is true." FOR WEDNES TODAY IN MEMORY MARTHA ARNOLD Mary Arnold pays a tribute to her sister, Martha, who will have been dead six months and two weeks tomorrow, Thanksgiving Mary says that her sister is gone but not forgotten. Private Workman's Address The address of Private Rufus Bruce Workman is: ASN 134388240, Co.

D. 205 QM Gas Supply APO 3346, care Postmaster, New York, N. Y. EGYPTIAN KING Answer to Previous: Puzzle, 21 Metallic DEL 22 Emmet. fastener.

TRADE ARC 23 Come. VIGOR TAT SNEER 24 Make bread. ACER 25 Within. IT 26 Head cover. DRS DELANO REDE 27 Iridium SO ROOSEVELT (symbol).

ATOP 28 He is ruler of REMASTS the EEMS SE US 30 Tip. APE EN NAT 31 Native of LENOS ARN REATA. America. 33 Grafted (her. 34 Tear.

41 Upward, VERTICAL 35 Age. 42 Endearment. 1 Roman 38 Move swiftly term. religious law. 39 Writing tool, 43 Golf device.

2 Amount 42 Inevitable. 44 Upon. 44 Rowing 45 Merriment, 3.500 sheets implements. 46 Exist. 45 Short for.

47 Symbol for Solely. Frederick. 5 Indian 46 High card. 48 Animal. 6 Kings 47 Girl's name.

51 Speed 7 Sport. 49 Fondle. 8 Long fish. 50 Essences 53 Collection of 9 Proceed, facts. 10 Young woman.

52 Morindin dye 54 Makes amends 11 Fish eggs. 53 Sloth. 57 Vehicle on 12 And (Latin). 54 Near, runners. 13 Rod.

55 Toward. 58 Hostelry. 18 Tablet. 56 On account 59 Browns bread. 19 Kind.

10 12 IS 22 23 93 36 53 U.S. WARSHIP. RESCUES JAP FLIER NEA Telephoto Arrow indicates Jap flier clinging to wing of wrecked Mitsubishi Type One bomber alongside United States warship somewhere in the Pacific. Official U. S.

Navy photo. U. S. Troops Make Steady Advance On Guadalcanal Continued from Page One edged forward yard by yard mopping up straggling Japanese as they went. Offensive action opened this morning as a heavy artillery barrage aided a number of planes strafing machine gunners.

As the barrage lifted infantry units dodged forward taking advantage of every bush, scanning every tree top for snipers. Many of the snipers tumbled out of their roosts as a result of the activities of our sharpshooters. Between the Army units and their objective lies a treacherous hill full of small caves, turned up trees, natural camouflage and shell holes affording a full measure of protection for the Jap defenders. Marines Know Terrain It was over this terrain that Marines made their way on the initial drive into the island. Hence, Army units now have the advantage of Marine intelligence on the topography of the countryside.

As he visited the front lines this morning Colonel Whitney said he belteved the objectives would be reached on schedule. He said American casualties thus far were none dead with a few men slightly wounded from snipers. Offsetting our casualties, he said the Ameripicked up at least 70 dead cans Japs on the beach this morning after the barrage. -A score more dropped fro mtrees a sa result of the sharpshooting. On the eastern front the action smore or less stagnated, the Marines having wiped up the slight resistance and straightened out their lines with practically a dearth of casualties.

Col. Arthur Tells Losses Col John M. Arthur, Union, S. said he had three men killed and a half dozen wounded during the naval shellfire on the night of the fourteenth. He expressed belief that there are "hardly more than a dozen Japs left in this sector at present." Not Japanese plane has been seen in the skies over Henderson Field during the past few days and front line troops report none have been over either wsterd or eastern front lines.

Huge German Plane Transport Shot Into Sea Off Tunisia London, Nov. 25 (P) A Reuters dispatch said today that a mammoth Germane transport seaplan capable of carrying up to 80 fully equipped soldiers, was shot into the sea yesterday of the eastern coast of Tupisia by. RAF longrange fighters from Malta. The dispatch called the craft Blohm and Voss 222 apparently a huge new type by the makers of flying boats which the Nazis used experimentally for flights across the Atlantic before the war, Three RAF fighters sighted it north of Linosa island, midway between Tunisia and Sicily, flying northward and unescorted, presumably returning to Sicily after having landed enemy reinforcements in Tunisia. No one was seen to escape as the plane crashed into the water.

Later, when fighter planes from Malta shot down a JU-52 German transport plane in the same area, troops were seen struggling in the water. The JU-52 also was unescorted. Service Man's Address The following address was submitted to The Index-Journal for publication: Sgt. Ernest Frank Mabry, Hq. 263th CA.

Fort Taylors, Key West, United States Army, GAS NOTICE IS ISSUED BY OPA Instructions Are Given On Coupons Effective Nov. 21 The following has been issued by the OPA: "Section 1. Notations Required on Coupons: Effective. November 21, 1942, no transfers of gasoline may be made to consumers in exchange for coupons unless the following notations are written in ink on the reverse side of the coupons: 1. In the case of 'A', 'B', 'D'.

'T-1' or coupons, the license number and state or registration of the vehicle for which the ration was issued. 2. In the case of coupons in an interchangeable coupon book issued for fleet vehicles, the fleet designation and the state and city or town in which the principal office of the fleet operator is located. (This information may al80 be stamped in ink.) 3. In the case of 'E', and 'R' coupons the name and address of the person to whom issued, as it appears on the front cover of the book.

4. In the case of bulk coupons, the name and. address of the person to whom the coupons were issued. Dealers and intermediate dis tributors must write in ink on the reverse side of inventory coupons issued to them the names and addresses of their establishments as shown on their registration certificates. Their suppliers are not permitted to furnish gasoline to them in exchange for such coupons unless such notations appear.

Filling station and garage operators are asked to apply for a supply of blanks. to be ed to truckers for gas rationing under the ODT. All coupons expire on November 30th. DE LA HOWE BOY DIES YESTERDAY McEarle Moore Sue. cumbs In Anderson Hospital To Two Weeks Illness MeEarle Moore, 16, a student at the John de la Howe school from Florence County, died' 'at the Anderson County Hospital yesterday at 6:45 p.

m. after an illness of two weeks with cerebral embolism. He had been a student at the de la Howe School since April. 1942 and had endeared himself to the entire student body as well as to officers and teachers because of his many fine traits. All the students mourn his untimely passing.

This was the first death in the student body since 1933. Survivors are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L.

Moore, of Florence county; two brothers in the U. S. armed forces. Thomas Edward and 7. Charles Moore: a sister, Mrs.

E. R. Alford. of Shaw. Miss.

Services will be held at four o'clock Thursday afternoon at the McKissick Memorial Chapel at the de la Howe school, conducted by Superintendent E. F. Geddys. Burial will he Friday afternoon at three o'clock at the Elim Baptis Church. Effingham, in Florence county.

Young Moore was a membor of that church. The officiating minister will be the Rev. W. B. Gunter, pastor.

Escape Slayer Said Captured Austin, Nov. 25 (P) -State pelice were informed today that officers had captured Claude (Cowboy- Henry, convicted slayer whose wife faces execution in Louisiana Seturday, in a rooming house at Beaumont. Henry escaped from a Texas prison farm Monday. Beaumont is near the LouisianaTexas line and less than 50 miles from Lake Charles. where his wife, Annie Beatrice (Toni Jo) Henry awaits electrocution for the slaying of a Houston, salesman.

Yesterday Louisiana officers announced they were on the alert for any attempt of Henry to reach his wife. Jake Todd, Ex-Coach In Red Cross Service Columbia; Nov. 25- (AP) State probation and parole director Jake C. Todd, who for 17 years directed athletics at Erskine College, will join the American Red Cross for overseas duty about Jan. 1.

The state board yesterday granted hi request for a leave of absencel and camed Assistant Director J. Curtis Moore to succeed him In his absence. 21 BUSINESS NOTICE 21 NOTICE All hunting and passing is hereby forbidden on my place. J. B.

Higgins, Hodges, S. C. 11-24-3tx TRESPASS NOTICE Notice is hereby given that hunting, fishing. or otherwise trespassign on the lands of the undersigned is forbidden. Violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

Please avoid embarrassment by refraining from 1 asking permission. Mrs. Kate S. Self, Mrs. Callie Self Coker, Estate of J.

H. Self. 11-24-3tx HIGHEST PRICES PAID for scrap iron, steel and metal. Goldsmith Iron de Metal Company, Oak St Phone $850. 4-6-tt.

WANTED Insurance Agent. Apply Life and Casualty Insurance Office, Room 410, Hodges Building. 11-24-3tx ALARM CLOCK REPAIRING Reasonalbe prices, Prompt service. See James Wright. 205 Hodges Building.

11-25-3tx TERMITE CONTROL Why let termites eat up your home? Call Carolina Builders Supply Phone 5541, for free inspection. 10-16-tt ATTENTION FARMERS Premi. um prices paid for pine pulpwood loaded on or stacked near P. N. Southern, G.

or Seaboard Railway. Thin and improve timber for profit now. Contact Chester N. Wright, Forester Canal Wood Corporation, 320 Calhoun Avenue, Greenwood, S. C.

11-23-15tx RECAPPING WORK done buy is guaranteed to stay on. Factory trained repair man. D. F. Clark.

North Main near First Baptist Church. 10-22-30tx NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That there shall be no hunting or fishing or trespassing on any of the properties in the Epworth Section of the undersigned landowners. Any trespasser will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law for the very first offense. W. N.

Henderson, R. Calloway, G. W. Landis, Misses Ella and Bessie Kinard, N. E.

Paysinger, H. B. Kinard, Miss Christine Kinard, Mrs. Marie Moyd, J. I.

Kinard. McD. ard, E. D. Mays, J.

E. Kinard, E. C. Templeton, W. H.

Miller and C. W. Kinard. 11-23-7tx NOTICE is hereby given that no trespassing in any form will be allowed on the lands of the undersigned. Lands being situated in Abbeville a Greenwood Counties, known as Flat Wood Section.

L. Street, C. B. Farris, W. B.

Murphy. George Adams, J. B. Caddy. 11-24-3tx 11 LOST FOUND 11 LOST Car keys, driver's 11.

cense, shop keys, house keys. $1.00 reward. Return to The Index-Journal. 11-23-3tx LOST Gas Rationing Book. Car.

tis lasting. R-3, Greenwood. 11-23-3tx LOST Gas. Rationing Book Oliver L. Thomas.

108 Mathews Heights. 11-23-3tx LOST Gas Rationing Book A. Number F-314972-D. George Wesley Harrison, 612 Pelzer St. 11-24-3tx The Orange, largest river in South Africa, has a length of 1,300 miles, almost traversing the continent.

The Australian lyre-bird is SO named for the remarkable plumage of its tail, resembling a Greek lyre. Unlike most aboriginal peoples, the Maoris of New Zealand have increased in numberse daring recent years. What You Buy With WAR BONDS Refrigerators are out for the duration. Manufacturers have now tooled their plants for production of war materials. Common-sense-folk, however, are saving now, not spending, and building up a fund for purchase of refrigerators and other domestic needs through investment in U.

8. War Bonds. Your Money put into War Bends today will bring you back $4 for $3 at maturity. So start saving for those domestic needs when you will be permitted to buy them. Join the Payroll Savings Plan at your office or factory and let's all "Top that Ten Percent by New Year's." 4.

S. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Seven months old White Rock Pullets. chicken house and wire. 144 Draper St. 11-24-3tx FOR SALE Small heater, praetically new, Also small refrig-: erator in good condition.

Mrs. A. Rhoden, 130 Willson Street. near radio station. 11-23-3tx FOR SALE One four -burner Nesco Oil Stove, built-in oven.

for $25.00. J. B. Turner, Main Ninety Six, S. C.

11-25-3tx FOR SALE Fryers. 45e per pound. Weighs from 2 to 2 1-2 pounds each. Phone 5168. Pauline McGee.

209 East Cambridge. 11-24-3tx PANSY PLANTS-Just received fine lot Giant Swiss and English Daisies. The Seed Store. 11-24-3tx FOR SALE One Bulldog Puppy. Eight weeks old.

Color dark brown. L. P. McNinch, RFD No. 2.

Blakedale. 11-25-1tx German Losses Close To 100,000 Continued from Page. One to take Surovikhino, another 35- 40 miles west. (Earlier Russian communiques reported penetration to Chernyshevskaya, about 75. miles west of Trekhostroxskaya, and this gives the picture of a German-held corridor stretching some 120 miles west from Stalingrad within narrow confines before it spreads out into relative security for the invaders).

Adding to the troubles being built up behind the Axis siege armies, the Russians reported yesterday that they had shoved a column down the Volga from the north to effect a junction with Stalingrad's tough garrison in the northern part of the city and clear out a wedge that the invaders had driven between this sector and the main part of the town. Advances Within City Cheered by this direct and indirect relief, the hardy defenders of the war-torn city pushed ahead slowly in their own offensive, the regular midnight communique reporting the enemy cleared out of several dozen blockhouses and blindages in the factory district with 900 invaders killed. A slight advance also was claimed for Red troops in the southern outskirts of the city. Today's midday communique reported continued advances night within Stalingrad as well as to the northwest and south of the city "in the same directions as previously." Red Army soldiers were said to have advanced further in the factory district, although no details were given, and in the southern outskirts 400 Germans were reported killed when Soviet troops occupied a number of fortified positions. One German regiment was declared wiped out in futile counterattacks northwest of the city and the Russians moved ahead.

N. Y. Stocks (2 P. New York, Nov. 25- Al Chem and Dye 137 American Can 71 American T.

and Anaconda A and 0 Bethlehem St1 54" Boeing Airpl Chrysler 65 Coca Cola 86 Dupont de Nem 126 Eastman. Kod 142 Gen Elec General Foods Gen Mots. 41 Interna and Kennecott Loew's Inc Montgom Nash Kelv Natl Dairy Prod Central North Am 10 Packard Mot Penney 1.C .74 Penn Phillips Petr Pure Oil Radio Reyn Tob B. 225) Southern Rwy Std Oil J. Studebaker Tex Corp Un Aircraft Union Pacific 80 8 Rubber 23 Steel 47 Western Union Tel West El and M.

1 p. m. Sales 330,510 Some one has suggested that the boys in the service, whether in camps it this country or on foreign soil, want letters from home more than, anything else. The letter may tell that the cow has new calf or that the old hen smothering dozen biddies. Even that would be good reading for the fellow in Australia, Iceland, the Solomons or even til England.

WRITE TO THE BOYS From the Aiken Standard: May Drain Planes Out Of Russia Continued from Page One 3-Ai: Objectives The enemy air objectives apparently were threefold to rake advancing Allied columns in Tunisia, to blast shipping and choke off supplies and reinforcements as far a possible and to fly in men and weapons across the Mediterranean narrows from Sardinia and Sicily. Both Axis communiques stressed blows particularly against Allied shipping and Allied-held ports in Algeria. These enemy claims, how. ever, had no confirmacion. The sinking of four Allied met chantmen, Including a tic ship of 20,000" tons and a destroyer by Italian planes and sub.

marines off the Algerian coast was reported by the Italians. The German communique said Nazi night raiders had scattered fires on the shore-fronts of Algiers Bone and Phillipeville and had destroyed a 2.000-ton merchantman set fire to another transport and damaged two destroyers in Algiers Scout Action In Libya In Libya also, the Nazi bulletin reported air blows against British desert strongholds and airports United States fighter planes ling theforward areas of the Eighth Army's westward advance toward Tripoli, however, encountered no enemy air opposition in Libya yer terday. Both the Germans and Italians reported adverse weather possibly accounting for an apparent lull in. dicated by a Morocco radio report of quiet today after atr alarms during the night in Algiers- and both men tioned only inconsequential clashes aground. Long-range American P-38 fight ers ranged the skies above the ground troops, seeking out German and Italian concentrations, attacking troop columns and trains and occasionally engaging Axis planer Four German planes were shot down and a troop train was riddled ba these fighters near Gabes yesterday, British observers said that both the British Eighth Army in Libya and the Allied army in Tunisia had built up their forces for a crushing blow at boht ends of the extended German lines which would De launched at any minute.

Advices from authorized spokesmen, however, have indicated a longer period of preparation for the admittedly tough assignment. STOCKS By Victor Eubank New York. Nov. 25. (P) -A few favored issues pushed up fractions to around a point in today's stock market but many of the industrials on the armament roster continued to retreat from their November peaks.

Steels and Aircrafts were notably backward from the start. A few rails registered minor recoveries. Certain chemicals and industrial specialties held the best positions near the fourth hour. Handicaps to trading activity were tomorrow's holiday and the notion of many market followers that the readjustment of the price structure to the brighter international picture was still uncompleted. Stocks fractionally lower most of.

the time included U. S. Steel, Bethlehem. General Motors, United Aircraft, Boeing, Douglas, Glenn Martin and Kennecott. Better support was accorded JohnsManville, Allied Chemical, Eastman Kodak, U.

S. Gypsum, Santa Fe and Pennsylvania. Commodities were steady and bonds irregular. Old-fashioned husking bees have been revived by students at Pennsylvania State College to aid farmers. The first orange tree brought to England in 1395, flourished, with care, until destroyed by a heavy frost, in 1740, SEWER CARTRIDGES destroy chemically.

Will keep your sewer open permanently, Avoid expensive digging cleaning jobs. of elz, $1.50. GAMBRELL HARDWARE CO. 11-21-7tx FOR SALE Fifty Barred Rock Pullets, Just beginning to lay. $1.25 each.

Louis Benjamin, Coronaca, S. C. 11-25-3tx FOR SALE Good black leather baby carriage. Slightly used. Phone 7213.

11-25-11x WOOD BLOCKS for cooking, hot water heater, start fires in furnace. $2.00 load. Wood burners $8.50 per cord. E. F.

Fletcher. Telephone 8-1666 or house phone 2517. Lower end South Main St. 10-2-tt FOR SALE Meat Cases. New and used.

Special prices. To close out. Several beverage coolers left. Can sell without priorities. J.

W. Jennings, Greenville, S. C. 11-25-3tx HORIZONTAL 1 Pictured ruler of Egypt, King IL 7 Plug. 10 Became larger 014 Region of the dead (Egypt).

15 Lion. 16 Small part. 17 Not fresh. 18 Friend. 19 Anger.

20 Mine. 21 Compensation. 22 Every. 23 Paid notice. 24 Twice.

26 Has concealed. 27 Writing fluid. 28 Erbium (symbol), 29 Article. 30 Winnow. 31 Skill.

32 Monster. 34 Soak flax. 35 Print measure. 36 Chinese. weight.

37 Great Lake. 39 Before (prefix). 40 Private 20 25 20 PERSONAL 20 LOANS -When It's cash FOR need, see us. Prompt service. Security Finance Investment Company.

301 North Main St. Dial 7071. 10-20-30tx SPECIAL DISCOUNT on all orders written for Spirella Health Garments during November. Call Miss Lila Beaudrot 6841- 425 Calhoun for appointment. 11-16-15tx A.

R. P. CHURCH Is now taking orders for rose bushes. Call M. G.

McDonald. 2737, or Mrs. F. E. Grier, 4871.

11-25-3tx NOTICE Hunting, Fishing and Trespassing of any kind is hereby forbidden on my place. W. L. Bedenbaugh, Ninety Six, S. C.

11-25-3tx 2 FOR RENT ROOMS HOUSES FOR RENT Large store room In Professional Office Building. Fine condition. Reasonable rent. Apply 303 Professional Bldg. Call 3661.

11-23-3tx FOR RENT Two unfurnished bedrooms with heat and bath. Phone 4413. 11-25-1tx FOR RENT Furnished apartment. Close in. John B.

White, Jr. Dial 5201 or 7801. 11-25-31x 25 WANTED- 25 SALESMAN MAN WANTED for Rawleigh Route. Real opportunity for right man. We help you get started.

Write Rawleigh's. Dept. SCK-151-0, Richmond, Va. 11 25-1tx WANTED MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Colored renter or sharecropper for farm. Prefer man with stock and farming implements.

Good offer for right party, Farm located near Kirksey. One mile from school. J. Parks, 514 Hackett St. Phoue 3256.

11-7-H WANTED Pecans. Any amount. Quality Curb Market. Phone 5858. 11-19-Ef WANTED AT ONCE Ten Indies for sales work with Jewel Tea Co.

in North and South Carolina. Ages 22 to 40. Experience preferred but not necessary. Guaranteed salary and expenses. Phone 5373 Saturday, Nov.

28, tor appointment. Mr. Gokey. Assistant Manager, 949 South Main St. 34 HELP WANTED WANTED Painters.

Apply to C. G. Ray, care of C. M. Guest Son.

Phone 374. Anderson, S. C. 11-24-SLE.

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Years Available:
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