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The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 5

The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 5

Publication:
The Index-Journali
Location:
Greenwood, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Filled 'Funny Money Room 1 Soviets Hammer Disarmament Theme In Publicity Campaign With Cash All Counterfeit of the Socialist but the ret Service, which safeguards the But the article said that the end of the arms race, contrary to the A li 7 '11 A x' If TV 1 i pi 1 I 1 Si By FRANK CORMIER WASHINGTON (AP) Locked behind stout steel doors in a small room at the U.S. Treasury is five million dollars in paper money all worthless. This is the "funny money room of the counterfeit section of the Secret Service. It probably is the only place in the country where you can say something is as phony as a 3 bill and be literally correct In a locked file in this room are samples of every counterfeit currency ever uncovered by Sec t.v Jt it vv By STANLEY JOHNSON MOSCOW (AP) Soviet nub. Bdsts have opened a new cam paign to convince the West that complete disarmament offers it batter economic opportunities than continuance of the arms race.

At the same time Soviet organs make clear that there is no change the Communist creed that capitalism is doomed whether or let it is shored up by arms production. This is one of the main themes being beamed abroad and the emphasis on it is likely to increase. Domestically the point hammered home by every possible means is that Premier Nikita Khrushchev wants peace and prosperity. Not since Stalin's 70th birthday has any event been so publicized a Khrushchev's trip to the United States. Daily mass meetings throughout the Soviet Union praise the Premier for having made the trip which speakers say has convinced the American people of he sincerity of the Soviet desire for peace.

Every issue of every newspaper end magazine stresses the same theme. There Is a color film about the. trip and a new book, "To Live la Peace and Friendship." There naturally are still refer-encee to the "unshakeable unity Deaths and Funerals Saluda Girl Is Miss Columbia College Margie Coleman of Saluda, right, has been selected Miss Columbia College for 1959-60. She won the title in competition with S7 other Columbia College students. Dianne Wilson of Charleston was second in the contest and Bootsie Berry of Union was third.

Other contestants from the Greenwood area were Cecelia Cofvert, left, and Penny Henderson, center. Industry Hunting Team Goes To N.Y. overwhelming emphasis is on the need and wish for friendship and cooperation, with the United States. All forms of propaganda stress good relations with Washington. It is against this background that one should read the assurances that the Soviet disarmament proposals are not intended deliberately or by chance to cause an economic upheaval in capitalist countries.

The Literary Gazette this week took issue with Harvard philosoph er Robert P. Wolf, who wrote the New York Times that Marx, if alive today, would say "capitalism prospers only on preparations for war whether a war is being carried on or not." "Marxist-Leninists are very far from thinking that modern cap italism can prosper in any event with or without the help of military profits." the magazine said. "Marxists look upon present day capitalism as something decaying and dying." Theorist Leonid Leontyev explained: "the simple truth is that capitalism is as pregnant with crisis as a cloud is with rain. Whether there is an arms race or not, crises are inevitable while capitalism exists." taken there Sunday by officers to get clothing the boy said he wore the night of the robbery, A policeman told the family he bad news young Smith had admitted the crime. "Rae, you couldn't have done it.

Say you didn't kill anybody," screamed his mother, squeezing him close. "Yes, I did it," the boy answered without emotion. Whitley said young Smith was picked up early Sunday for ques tioning in connection with a store robbery. The questioning turned to the robbery-slaying here early Friday. Whitley said Smith admit ted it, and led police to a patch of woods where a .12 gauge shot gun and part of the 544 loot was recovered.

Police said Smith had been convicted twice for store breaking and larceny and had escaped twice from prison camps, the last time on Jan. 20, 1958. Chandler was found dead in the station, slumped in a sitting position. His hands were in his pock ets, one grasping a .22 caliber re volver. 17-Year-Old Boy Admits Killing Station Attendant At Charlotte CHARLOTTE (AP) A poker faced teen-ager who showed no remorse bunaay was cnarged with murder and armed robbery in thej COLUMBIA (AP) Gov.

Hol-lings and some 100 prominent South Carolinians left for New Ycrk City today in quest of new industry. The group will gather tonight at the Hotel Roosevelt for a briefing session. On Tuesday the group will break up into teams for conferences with key business executives. The governor plans a press con ference Tuesday with the business editors of various leading news papers and magazines. Sponsoring luncheons Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, will iiolguii paying ui a service attendant.

Maine Man To Re-Enter Society After Serving 22 Years Of Term integrity of the nation's money. The samples Include a number of $3 bills counterfeits of currency issued by state banks be fore the Civil War. In vaults lininx one wall are millions of dollars of bogus bills seized by the Secret Service in recent years. The service keeps counterfeits locked in these vaults for five years if there is any chance they'll be needed as evidence in court If the service knows it never Hickory Grove Advent Christian Church. He ran a general mer chandise store.

Survivors include three sisters, Mrs. G. D. Huiet of Columbia, Mrs. Ben Coleman of Saluda, and Mrs.

Lowell Altraan of Batesborg; and a sister-in-law, Mrs. Curtis Etheredge. Funeral services were conduct ed at 1 p.m. today front Hickory Grove AC Church by the Rev. G.

W. Shephard, assisted by the Rev. H. A. Hoover and the Rev.

Wil liam Raid. Interment waa in the church cemetery. MRS. R. A.

COOPER GAFFNEY Mrs. R. A. Cooper, 47, of Gaffney died unexpectedly Saturday in Vero Beach, Fla. She was formerly Miss Ruth Byrd of Edgefield.

Survivors include her husband, R. A Cooper of Gaffney; her mother, Mrs. Mae Byrd of Edgefield and two sisters, Mrs. Grover Talbert of Edgefield and Mrs. G.

A. Baker of Louisiana. Funeral plans are incomplete. Gas War Fizzles Out At Greenville GREENVILLE. S.C.

(AP) A gas price war that flared in Green ville over the weekend apparently is ending. Some service stations still sold gasoline at 23.9 cents a gallon Sun day but prices at most stations went back up. Esso stations, which had cut pri cea from 31 .9 to 25.9 for regular gasoline, raised their prices to the higher figure Sunday. Other major oil companies also aised prices after dropping them Saturday. FACULTY RECITALS ROCK HILL Eight faculty recitals have been scheduled by I the department ot music at Win throp College.

Concerts will be presented by Dr. Jess T. Casey, pianist, head of the department; Miss Mary Elizabeth Dunlap, or ganist; Adrian Ketcham, baritone; Wilmer Welsh, pianist and organist; John W. Baker, clarinetist; Miss Katherine Pfohl, mezzo-soprano; Miss Florence Smyth, pianist; Emmett Gore, violinist; and Jack Tait, pianist. tor STOMACH TROUBLE try Chiropractic! Dr.

Geo. W. Parsons DIAL or t-nsi Cor. N. Main Beaudrot Sts.

nothing it it will need the bills as evidence, keeps them, for two years. Once a year there is a big cleanup. AO counterfeit bills no longer needed are bundled up and turned over to the Treasury's official destruction committee. This-group takes them to the naval gun factory where they are burned. The 'counterfeit section vaults also bold bogus or altered coins.

Few people bother -to counterfeit small change but many try to convert pennies into dimes. The object is to make the pennies us able in vending machines or pay telephones. Whenever a coin is altered, it ceases to be money. It is then worth only the value ot the metal contains. Whenever the Secret Service gets a counterfeit bill, at checks against a master file to see whether other copies have turned up.

The file is used, too, to kelp people who find cache of old money. This money often ia so old and quaint that the finder must establish that lfs genuine. Last week agents checked out some bills that had been bidden for more than half century. They were fake. Their states, seized decades ago, were la the file.

Mental Health Meet Tonight At Jaycee Home A meeting will be held at 7:30 tonight at the Jaycee Home on Grace Street extension for the purpose of establishing a mental health association for Greenwood County. Tonight's meeting Is sponsored by the Greenwood Junior Chamber of Commerce. Taking part on discussion panel will be Miss Atha J. Cooper, psychiatric social work er ot Columbia; Miss Norma E. Hallett of the Whltten Village Staff, Mrs.

Edith Hudson of the State Hospital, Mrs. J. H. Young of the Anderson County Mental Health Association and Harry R. Bryan, executive director et the Citizen's Mental Health Movement South Care-Una.

Index-Journal 5 MONDAY Oct 1951 HIATIN0 JOtVIT CAN SAVI TOO your chteee so i sure you're gettiag maxitnam comfort tod eeooomr from yor furnace. Williamson MACK'S MEATINO PLUMBING 400 W. CavhrMg PkM or e-eioi is too nun -croaaing ot the arms mer chants," would open up broad new prospects for increased international commerce, growing markets and consequently growing employment. The newspaper referred to an editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle saying that if armed forces were disbanded and arms production ended, men must go into underdeveloped lands. "We are sure the West can vie with and beat the Comunists in this field of competition," the California paper said.

The Literary Gazette commented: "competition in peaceful constructive labor is precisely the meaning contained in the policy of peaceful co-existence the Soviet Lnion so consistently conducts. "Now, after N. S. Khrushchev's visit to the United States, the American public have an incomparably clearer notion of the principle of peaceful co-existence "Let the San Francisco paper have hopes of 'beating the Com munists in peaceful competition. That is its right "As for the Soviet Deoole.

thev have every reason to seek peace- tui competition and be absolutely sure they will win it. They have never feared peace and never will. Such fear is a sign of weakness, not strength." Cheerleaders Win Harris Talent Contest Cheerleaders from Harris Ele mentary School won first prize Saturday night in a talent contest at a Harris Parent-Teacher As sociation Family Fun Night event Members of the group are Lena May Weeks, Linnie Reddin, Judy Hartley, Alene Weeks. Shirley Silvers and Patsy Woods. Linda O'Sullivan played a piano solo to win second place.

Mrs. Frank Russell was in charge of the program and Jerry Mewbourne acted as master of ceremonies for the talent show. Other contestants were Becky Reed, Shela Bobo. Carrie White, Gloria Byrd, Bill Herring, Ronald Herring, Donald Scott, Eddy Coleman, Bruce Bordan, Lanelle Dow, Frances Loftis, Charles Dod-son. Fay Fultz, Shirley Ponder, Mary Underwood, Linda Shirley, Peggy Dillashaw, Tony Goldman and Richard Skelton.

Judges were the Rev. C. J. Hammett, Mrs. Frances Gunnells and Durell Bowie.

Birthdays The Index-Journal extends best wishes to the following who ob serve birthdays tomorrow, Oct. 27: Dr. J. C. Kinard Cora B.

Davis Donna Kay Collins A. Wesley Harter Sam Paysinger Patricia Ann Dobbins Janice Lynn Corley Larry Sidney Dobbins Erskine Wilson Ray Clark Mrs. Duke Daniel Martha Ann Bell C. B. Berry Frankie Drake Debra Ann Richey Joyce Ann Hall Phyllis Annette Owings Mary Sue Sanders Rossie Ann Lamar Sharon Lois Quarles The Index-Journal congratulates these who celebrate their wedding anniversary Oct.

27: Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Stewart Negro Man Shot While Fighting With Policeman CLAYTON. Ala.

(AP)-A burly Negro wrestled a white policeman to the ground and grabbed his blackjack before the officer shot him through the head. City Policeman Victor Snead, about 55 and slightly built, killed Levi Williams, 48, Saturday while trying to arrest the 185-pound isegro lor pulling a knife on a grocer during an argument The officer was commended by Sheriff William J. Adams and prosecutor Seymore Trammell, who ruled the shooting justifiable homicide. They said the policeman, flat on his back and about to be beaten, was unable to draw his pistol and fire until an unidentified passerby tried to pull tne Negro on nlm. Negro Methodist Appointments Made Piedmont District appointments made yesterday by Bishop J.

W. E. Bowen at the Mth session of the South Carolina Annual Conference (Central Jurisdiction) of The Methodist Church Included Duff Williams at Greenwood and W. T. Doggs at ninety Six.

tion Raeford Thomas Smith, a 17-year-old with a duck tail haircut, bright red shirt and blue jeans, admitted the slaying of Clifford Eugene Chandler, 57, Mecklenburg County Police Chief Joe Whitley said. Smith, who lives in a run down shack at Rt. 7 Charlotte, was GARY COOPER DIANE VARSI SUZY PARKER Ten Hcrth Frederick NOW VILLAGE ft nrnt Sua JttiES Tonight and Tues. Ta a LJv hu' cL i py veiuxc i 6:30 8:45 i IN THE WONDERFUL nL? THE MOST WONDERFUL ENTERTAINMENT 1 ft S.C. Education Groups Planning Joint Meeting COLUMBIA (AP)-Three South Carolina education groups will hold their annual meetings In Co lumbia Nov.

12. The joint meeting will bring together members of the State Assn. of school boards, the State Assn. of County Superintendents of Education, and the Assn. of District and Area Superintendents of Education.

A feature of the meeting will be a progress report on educa tional television. Henry Sneed of Chester is chairman of the com mittee which will outline develop ments in the educational television field. A banquet program will be cen tered around an evaluation of the recent Governor's Conference on Education, Industry, Business and Agriculture. An evaluation of the Conference will be presented by Cyril B. Busbee, superintendent of Brook-la nd-Cayce schools, and by Thoi.i-as K.

Johnstone a member uf the Greenville County school board. Mathis Takes Lead In ACC Scoring Race GREENSBORO (AP) Half back Bill Mathis scored two touchdowns in Clemson's 27-0 wallop ing of South Carolina to climb into first place in the Atlantic Coast Conference scoring race. The two touchdowns raised Ma this' total to seven plus four extra points giving him 46 points. South Carolina fullback Phil Lavoie. the leader for three weeks with 38 points, dropped to second, accord ing to ACC Service Bureau fig ures.

Neil MacLean, Wake Forest's hard-working fullback, scored all 19 of the Deacons' points in their 21-19 loss to North Carolina to pull into third place at 23 points He scored three touchdowns and booted an extra point. In fourth place is halfback Tommy Gravins of Virginia with 21 points followed by fullback Don KJochak of North Carolina and halfback Jack Wilson of Duke, each with three touchdowns and 18 points. Both Klochak and Wilson scored two touchdowns each Saturday to pull among the leaders. COLLEGE Scores By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Late Saturday Scores Georgia Tech 21, Tulane 13 Georgia 14, Kentucky 7 Florida State 22, Richmond 6 Colorado 18, Arizona 0 Texas 28, Rice 6 North Texas 7, Houston 8 Hardin Simmons 22, West Texas 0 Xavier (Ohio) 3, Dayton 0 Wheaton 7. North Central III 7 (tie) San Jose State 24, Arizona State Univ 15 Sunday Scores Boston College 16, Marquette 0 Mich Tech 31, Northern State (SD) 13 St.

Ambrose 28, Lores 16 ANNOUNCEMENT HELD UP TEHRAN, Iran (AP) A royal court source here says announcement of the engagement of the Shah of Iran and 21-year-old Far ah Diba has been postponed until mid-November. The announce ment had been expected to come Tuesday, the Shah's 40th birthday SHIP BY WHOLE WIDE WORLD! ft iowxm) e. nusoa RoBira R. DOOIJTTLE JOHNSTON Rufua Lee Dco little, 58. of Modoc died of a heart attack Saturday morning in Jacksonville, where he was working.

He was a son of the late Press and Mamie Doolittle of Edgefield County. Surviving are a son, Thomas Lee Doolittle of Greenwood; a sis ter, Mrs. Thomas Gilliam of Pomaria, and a brother, Bill Doo little of Modoc. Funeral services were conduct ed at Red Oak Baptist Church today at 3 m. by the Rev.

J. G. Dukes and the Rev. Joseph S. Dukes.

Burial was in the church cemetery. WILLIAM SMITH WESTMINSTER William (Kink) Smith, 81, retired farmer of Rt. 1, Westminster, died tn day at 11 p.m. at a local hos pital after several years ot declining health and six weeks of illness. Mr.

Smith, a lifelong resident of Oconee County, had been living with his son, Andrew Smith, in Greenwood for several months. He was a member of Clearmont Baptist Church. His wife, Mrs. Katie Taylor Smith, died in 1958. Surviving are five sons, Jesse Smith and Grady Smith of Laurens.

Andrew Smith of Greenwood, Talmadge Smith of Walhalla and Robert Smith of Spartanburg; a daughter. Mrs. John B. Compton of Marion; a brother. Bert Smith of Westminster; three sis ters.

Mrs. Mattle Leopard of West minster. Mrs. Lola Addis and Mrs. Viola Addis of West Union; 17 grandchildren, and seven greatgrandchildren.

Funeral services were conduct ed Sunday at 4 p.m. at the First Baptist Church of Westminster by the Rev. M. J. Stansell and the Rev.

Ned Finley. Burial was in the church cemetery. S. W. CREWS COLUMBIA Funeral services for Stanley Wolff Crews, 61, who died Saturday night, were con ducted at 11 o'clock this morning from Dunbar Funeral Home by the Rev.

E. C. Brown. Interment was in Greenlawn Memorial Park. Mr.

Crews was born in Laurens, a son of the late Elizabeth Wolff and William Thomas Crews. A second lieutenant in World War Mr. Crews was a former clerk and treasurer of Laurens and was postmaster of Laurens for a number of years. He had been vice president of Liberty Life Insurance Co. of Greenville and was with Provid ent Life and Accident Insurance Co at the time of his retirement.

He was a member of Shandon Baptist Church and a Mason. He was married to the late Mrs. Alton Morse Crews. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Robert W.

Robinson of Co lumbia; two sons, Stanley Crews, of Spartanburg, and Talmadge M. Crews of Charlotte, N. five sisters, Miss Alliene Crews of Columbia, Miss Catherine Crews and Mrs. Thomas White, both of Atlanta, Mrs. J.

C. Godsey and Mrs. S. R. Todd, both of Laurens; two broth ers.

John W. Crews. Columbia, and Thomas B. Crews of Spar tanburg; seven grandchildren. J.

T. ETHEREDGE SALUDA Jasper Tolbert (Bub) Etheredge, 71, died at his home in the Hollywood community Sunday after several months of illness. He was a son of the late John Q. and Effie Mitchell Etheredge. He attended Indian Creek Elementary School and Leesville College.

He was never married. He was a charter member of Film In By 3:00 P. M. Ready By 11:00 A. M.

Hodges Drug Store OR S-3S36 Phones OR S-5141 last West iW Kswtoli RIm ttft VS) tOOtf) ff)f fWsjji GKJWSw1 sfclhsW -FRANKGAPRAS be the South Carolina Electric Gas Duke Power and the South Carolina National Bank. Some 100 industrialists and financiers are to meet with the South Carolina group Wednesday at a reception sponsored by Frank G. Binswanger, industrial realtors. The three-day trip is sponsored by the State Development Board as a team effort with local community leaders in promoting South Carolina advantages to business and industry. Those making the trip are doing so at their own expense.

from Paris Hill where he was born and raised and where Dr. Little- field was killed. Dwyer is the only living princi pal in Maine's most notorious crime case. His freedom follows by nine years the release of another lifer convicted of the same slaying largely on Dwyer's testimony. Each blamed the other for the crime.

Francis M. Carroll, one-time deputy sheriff, served 12 years for the doctors slaying. He was re leased in 1950 on a claim that he was fraudulently convicted. Car roll died in 1956. Dwyer was arrested in North Arlington, N.J., 22 years ago this month in a car that contained the bodies of Dr.

Littlefield and his wife. Lydia. After two days of trial at South Paris, Maine, for the doctor's death, Dwyer changed his plea to guilty and accepted a life sentence. He said later he pleaded guilty in fear of violence to himself and his mother, Jessie Mann, now of Worcester, by Carroll, who was his jailer. Several months later, Carroll was arrested on a charge of incest with his daughter, who was Dwyer's girl friend.

Carroll was indicted for murder instead of incest. At the trial, Dwyer testified the peace officer killed Littlefield because the doc tor had learned of the alleged incest. Dwyer also claimed Carroll killed Mrs. Littlefield because she was suspicious of what happened to her husband. Nobody ever was tried for her slaying.

Weather Data By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATION PR PR Asheville, clear 49 36 Augusta, cleai 62 39 Charleston, clear 65 50 Charlotte, clear 58 34 Columbia, clear 60 37 Grandfather Mtn, clear 30 25 Greensboro, clear 56 34 Greenville, S.C, clear 55 35 Myrtle Beach, clear 64 43 Raleieh. clear 55 35 01 .04 .05 Savannah, clear 59 36 Spartanburg, clear 67 43 Wilmington, clear 64 41 4 Children Burn To Death; Mother Fails In Rescue FRANKLIN, Tenn. (AP)-Flames trapped and killed four Negro children in their tiny upstairs bedroom Sunday. Their Clara Bell Lee, 30, suffered burns climbing blazing stairway in a vain effort at rescue, and then suffered a back Injury jumping 30 feet from a window. The children were James Richard Lee Margie Marie Lee, Rosie Annette Lee, 5, and William Charles Crite, 11.

FOR SERVICE UNEQUALED SINCLAIR Heating Oils Coll G. Deary I Lusk OR 8-4891 nl rL Tuesday 25 JfHEATRS TS-W VWViP. OH a.7431 THOMASTOWN, Maine (AP)-Paul N. Dwyer today re-enters a world he left 22 years ago when he was condemned to life impris onment for murder. Dwyer's freedom from the Maine State Prison was made pos sible by a commutation of his sentence by Gov.

Clinton A. Clausen and the Executive Council. He was 18 years old and considered a drifter in 1937 when ie was sentenced for the bludgeon slaying of Dr. James G. Lit-tlefield, 67.

He had not finished high school. In prison he educated himself in law, accounting and public re lations. Dwyer, now 40, will work as manager of the 33-room stone hotel in Norway, only a few miles Model Prayer Is Studied At St. Louis ST. LOUIS (AP) The question of whether each day in St.

Louis schools should start with a volun tary non-denominational prayer is being considered by the St Louis Board of Education. Board member Daniel L. Schla- fly said Sunday he had given copies of the prayer to other mem bers for study. "Naturally, if the board adopted the prayer it would be on a pure voluntary basis," he said. Schlafly said the prayer has been approved by many Catholic, Protestant and Jewish groups.

Iti also has the approval of the New York State Board of Regents, but last August a New York Supreme Court justice ruled that a public school cannot force pupils to participate in a state-approved prayer. The 22-word prayer: "Almighty God, we acknowledge our dependence on thee, and we beg thy blessings upon us, our parents, our teachers and our country. Negro State Fair Opens In Columbia COLUMBIA (AP)-South Carolina's 55th Negro State Fair opened at the state fairgrounds here today. Attractions include farm and home exhibits, livestock competition and prize poultry shows. There will be a high school marching band contest on Thursday along with majorette exhibition.

The fair runs through Saturday. CANTERBURY CLUBS ROCK HILL The Winthrop College Canterbury Club, an or ganization of Episcopal students, will be host Friday-Sunday to the convention of the S. C. Association of Canterbury Clubs. or lS5l Jack Daltoa WMHWIJUUHUW ai in" -Wr'1 I'd lit VhV.

Climb lfffcY5 Mountain Academy Award Winner Susan Hayword Bill LUNDIGAN YOU Reached that 'Dj4NGROUS AGE? When You Have that Burning Desire to Jmt ONE MORE or too small to be sold in a classified ad! WW p. lb fe m. far Mr D. YOUNG Mm a mmt lW Technicolor be a Romantic ROMEO fc TWW MEN! wm mmo BAKER TODAY and STATt ft- 11' LADIESL. to tm OACX9 1MT A Ckat GABLE BETTER CLEANING' SERVICE Is Yours Just Dial OR 5-5146 For Fast Pick-Up And Delivery No a'a-J I I pi I iAMY COt a siii turn i coa "BUT NOT FOI ME" The capabilities of classified are almost limitless.

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Bring to Plant en Monument Street, Next to Court House, and Save 10 CURB SERVICE Greenwood Dry Cleaning Co. 9 PROMPT SERVICE Greenwood Mdtor Lines Montague Extension Telephone OR 1-0311 Chris Dahoa Itn.

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Years Available:
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