The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, October 02, 1958, Image 9
Thonday, Ocf»«r », IfM
I. B. Sumerel Invites
Comrades Of First War
As Guests On Oct. It
TUB CUXTON CBBONICLB
At Kiwanis Barbecue-Bazaar
Theodore B. Sumerel. of Rt. I,
Clinton, the Pea Ridge Community,
has invited the surviving members
of a group of 90 men who reported
with him to Fort Jackaon, Colum
bia. for service in World War I to
be his guests Saturday afternoon,
Oct. 11. beginning at 4:00 o’clock.
Listed below are names of the
men, supplied by Mr. Sumerel, all
from this section, many of whom
are no longer living. He wants all
who can be reached through notices
in newspapers, or messages from
relatives or friends, to gather at
his home for the afternoon.
He asks that all men who can be
reached acknowledge the invitation
so he will have some idea as to how-
many to expect.
His home may be reached either
from Clinton or Laurens. If from
Clinton, go out Highway 308 and
turn right at the Goodwin home, and
signs will be placed along the road
from there. If from Laurens, cross
Highway at 308 at the Goodwin
place and keep going.
Mr. Sumerel states that he wants
the veterans to sample the many
Career Days Series ML T. LAYTON FRASER
Planned At College, More About Egypt
To Feature Leaders
P*C« M*#
v
Homed Ployer Of Week
TV mital program - of Progbytr-
rian ('olloge't nr* "Career nays"
series will feature the man who
conceived the long range Federal
Interstate Highway System, Presi
dent Marshall W Brown announced
today
Dr Fraser, of the Department of
Bible, Presbyterian College, recent
ly returned from a trip to Parts,
Rome, Greece, and Egypt
became our driver was from th-
Soudan pnd is the same color as
the police. Home of whom were also
from the Soudan.
We went on to the town of Suez
and took more pictures of the canal
and the northern tip of the Red Sea
I was disappointed that a road
along the western side of the sea
down that way. but we were about
anyway, and had
The 1958 Community Barbecue-Bazaar, sponsored by the Clinton Kiwanis (tub In behalf of Thornuell
Orphanage last Thursday, was pronounced an outstanding success by Kiwanis President A. C. Young. Hr
reported a net of approximately $1,300, which will be turned over to Thornwell. Five of the leading par
ticipants in this year's Barbecue-Bazaar are pictured above, left to right: Co-chairmen Mrs. Tnomas Bald
win. Mrs. Frank Sherrill and Mrs. W. R. Anderson. Jr., Thornwell President Dr. M. A. Macdonald and
Young.—Photo by Dan Yarborough.
Your Community Chest ! ll( ! rn '!'? ll J > ! avs
At Lockhart in
Game On Friday
(This article is another in the series dealing with agencies in the
1959 Community Chest of Greater Clinton. It covers the Cancer So
ciety. )
One of my most interesting expo
riences in Egypt was a side trip
taken by four of us to see the pa'h
of Moses from the ancient city of
, Rameses to the Red Sea We drove | ,,
He i. Cecil M Webb, president of! a|onj{ irr4 * ation canals mufh of the not open, so we could dm.
the Dixie Lily Milling Company, of i wav farrners usinK water down w *
Tampa. Fla., and former chairman j to draw water from the canals to (H ' r hou ? ,ate
r,?nda . S,aU ‘ Road Board -1 irrigate crops, using water buffalo,' 10 leave for ra,ro
While in this latter position. Webb and cam eLs to pull the There is no way to tell just- where
conceived the unprecedented $32 SW eeps reminded me of grinding Moses crossed the Red Sea It may
j billion highway construction pro- L u g ar can( , jn Georgia w ith miller been just south of where the
|gram and presented it directly to:^ W ater was sometimes drawn town of Suez now stands, or it may
| President Eisenhow-er in 1954 Tt re- by hand j t was Kood t0 see and have been just to the north where
ceived Congressional approval two j photogrjiph some of the fertile land the shifting sands have taken the
years later. | 0 f Goshen, the area settled by Ja of the sea It may have been
President Brown said Webb will! co b and his family when invited still further north, across the Bitter by" t he South Carolina Sports Writ
visit Presbyterian CoUege on Octo- t0 Egypt by Pharaoh and Joseph " hl(,h appears to have been ers Association after he paced the
ber 9-12 He will be accompanied on this trip. I was interested to a part of the Red Sea at one time v m uo j^ose to their stunning 8-8 de.
by Senator Joe Eaton, of Miami, a bave pointed out to me the kind of ^ some want to insist that jt was f oa t 0 f Lenoir Rhyne last Saturda
Pt graduate who is one of Florida s sycamore tree that, hears fruit— the RchI Sea rather than the night
youngest state senators, and the kind that the prophet Amos "Bed Sea." I saw some* reeds grow
Rev. Lawrence Sthreshley, Jr, pas-1 dressed j n Palestine. * n K along the edge of the Great Bit
tor of the Tims Memorial Presby-'
terian Church of Lutz, Fla.
BOB WATERS
Presbyterian quarterback Bob
Waters currently rule- as South
Carolina s player of ?h. week.” ,
The 180-pound junior from Sylva-
ma, Ga , was cited for this honor
Waters received more than twice
. as many votes as the runner-up.'
The tnost pitiful sights seen were , i ' M e ' and (V, OR r aphed them q Uar terhack Charlie Bradshaw of
Rt>*d Sea. Wofford, with whom he matches
r.-v-
the mud cities through which we
Possibly that was the
Thirty-six cancer patients of the
varieties of grapes in his extensive clinton area were ass i st ed bv funds
vineyard, and light refreshments area were ass,stea by I nd ‘
will be served late in the afternoon tbe American Cancer Society
at an old house on his place, called during the past year. Mrs. Sarah
“The Shack,” which he has reno- Dixon DeLoach, commander of the
vated, where chairs and tables will Laurens County unit, reported to-
be provided. day.
Mr. Sumerel is enthusiastic over
the plans he is making for the oc
casion, and hopes many of the vet
erans will attend the reunion to rem
inisce and greet old fqjends of
World War I days.
Mr. Sumerel states that each vet
eran may bring one guest, who may
be his wife, his child, or a friend
Following is the list of Mr Sum-
erel’s comrades:
William L. Shockley, Henry C.
Hendly, Frank Hammond Caine,
Charles Tune Simpson, Ernest Per
ry O'Shields, Edward George Noffz,
Virgil Tumblin, W. D. Stewart,
John Belton Watkins, George Elbert
Burnett, Clinton Knight,
money from other areas also is be
ing spent here.
The Cancer Society has been
given a quota of $2,300 in the total
$19,980 53 budget of the CHnton
Community Chest.
Mrs. DeLoach pointed out her
unit’s work:
“We help with special diet, lend
hospital beds, back rests, bed lin
ens and many articles of hospital
supplies. We call doctors, nurses,
hospitals and ambulances when re-
quired by patients. A practical
ler, Thomas Jackson Johnson, Ben- n Urse j s often provided during pe-
jamin L«wis Martin, Jess Frank 0 f intense suffering. Right
Gray, Erskine Quince Benjamin, now our funds ^ ^ o{ a
Don Herbert Irwin, Samuel Murphy Clinton patient who has been placed
Simpson, Ben Andy Cooper, David | in the ^tns Nursing Home.”
Augustus Blakely, " * ” ‘
She said these cases included
drugs, transportation to clinics,
operations. Since there are more
treatment in hospitals, x-rays and
cases in the Clinton area, she said
All three men will participate in | passed one was said to have 5.000 or " Ht>d Se ‘ l at that t,me wits this.weekend
the "Career Days” program which ‘ inhabitants, and another 20,000. Con- 11 matters not where the Israel- The PC signal caller capably di-
_ »« designed to give Presbyterian d j tions were unbelievably horrible, ltes crossed, it was still by the reeled the Hose attack against
week’s footbal engagemet, the fifth | ( °Ih‘ge students the opportunity to with people living in these squalid PO"''r of God. It was wonderful to Lenoir Rhyne, completed 9 of ii>
of the season, after a loss to Pen- hear successful leaders speak and; mud b uts, dose together, on streets j 8 * 0 ^ country through which they pass attempts for 121 yards ran
Thornwell takes on Lockhart Fri
day^ night at Lockhart in their
dleton last week
Danny Ferguson dashed 100 yards
for a Pendleton touchdown in the
season’s longest play as the Bull
dogs downed Thornwell
night 19-0
to discuss issues with them infor i j us t w j de enough to get through P assof I- an( I se< ’ for myself the fur 14 more and punted twice
mally
President Brown pointed out that
this program will inaugurate a se-
Friday i ries of appearances on the PC cam
pus by leaders in various fields. In
Ferguson intercepted a Thornwell addition to addressing the entire stu-
pass at the goal line, after the dent body, each leader then will
visitors had driven to the Pendle meet with those students particular-
Everything was dry, dusty, dirty bodies of water along the way With
We have certainly seen humanity ( f*RR* n g and dredging that • HH XGO
in the raw. You may spell this I ias ^cen done, it is possible that 'L otiit Mrs
with a double w. The poverty and some r chc has been brought up
filth in some quarters cannot be an< ^ P'led along the banks of the
described canal It is possible yet that some
We went all the way up to what ^mg will he finind to show where
is said to be the site of the ancient Israelites were enabled to cross
Samuel Reid
Ramsay, Henry Samuel Bryson,
Walter Gray .Clardy, John Wallace
McCarley, Isaac L. Owings, Ro
bert Broadus Bagwell, Jesse Lee
Willie Lynch, Marvin Wright Roper,
She toid of a case in Clinton in
volving a woman patient with three
small children who needed a house
keeper An older daughter in Texas
needed a ticket home to enable her
ton three in the second period He ly interested, in his profession for city of Rameses (the same as Tan.. H owev ’er, we know that the miracle
ran the length of the field. further discussion and for a ques is, Avaris and Zoan). This was the 100,1 P ,ace because of the historical
Ferguson had passed to Gary Am-; l' on anf I" answer period capital of the Hyksos kings, when recorc I- s ' an( l because the Israelites
mons on a 65-yard touchdown play. Other programs in this series will Joseph was prime minister of , ' ro never a 8 a,n molested by the
in the first period. be held throughout the school year. Etfypt- It was also the place where F-Rypt‘ a n.v Hie whole journey
Pendleton’s final score came in he said the Hebrews assembled before mak through that desert wilderness had
the period when the Bulldogs drove During Webb s visit to Presbyte- ing their hist °ric and miraculous! to ^ miraculous, for they could
t arl Franzen and
sons, t'hucky and Larry were in
Chicago last week where their son,
Lt Melvin Franzen, of the U. S
Air Force, was married TTnirsday
Mr Franzen served as his sons
best man
45 yards, and Leland Mullinax went r j an Gollege, he is scheduled to ad
over from the five. He also ran the dress t be j a n meeting of the Men
point.
Charles Ivey, Luther S. Holland, George Thomas Gray Cooper, Carl to run the house and nurse the pa-
Lester Lawson, Martin Hargrove Owings, James Charles Bramlett, tient, and when the society provided
Riddle. Seth Ward Prior, James Henry Burnett I this she stayed until the death of
Boyd DeShiekis, Laurence George Also Clarence O. Abercrombie,
her mother.
BaHey Says Textile
Industry Hampered
By The Government
of Enoree Presbytery at the Roe
buck Cafeteria on the evening of
October 9 He will .speak to the PC
journey back to the land of Canaan 001 have survivied without God-
The desert has reclaimed the city. R* vt ' n 1°°^ an( I water You should
and even the excavations made *** ^be ground over which they
some years ago. have been covered Pit*™**!-
by the shifting sand At one time The trip that we took wan well
Oxner, Samuel Laurence Terry, Luther Clarence Hellams, Roy, Mrs. Deloach said the American
Frank Nelson, Nuell Ezell Watkins, Smith O’Dell, Morris Talmadge Cancer Society also uses funds for
Laurence Knight. William Holmes Vaughn. Robert William Nabors, its national research and education
Bell, Cip Conway Spoon, Arch Clee Grover Clave Bobo, David Fulton program in an effort to win the bat-
Owen*. Ryan Earl Taylor, Charlie Vaughn, Robert Melvin Abercrom tie against this second greatest kill Clemson — Two South Carolina
Bobo Powers. Ryan Andrew Cul- hie, John L. Osborn, John B Har- er—next to heart disease—of Amer textile mill officials told a senate
bertson, William Richardson Tbo- mon, George Cromer Johnson, Ru icans Films and leaflets try to sub-committee Monday that their
mason, Ben Kilgore Garrett, Hart- fus Lester Hammett, William Ca- impress upon the people of this industry is sorely hampered by gov.
well P Cromer, Robert B Morris, pen Hellams. Palmer Freeman ^unty the importance of early di omment “fetters and inequities
Thomas Hill Neel, Jamas Marvin Burns, Joseph Turman Copeland. ^ wo union spokesmen charge that
Rhodes Henry Drayton Simpeon. Herbert ^ .. . commMnder Industry’s difficulties
Also John Talmadge Patterson Moore Cooper. D. Wyatt Glenn, ^ 001,1 ^ co ™“” arise from friction between em
Ethbert Rosamond Bushardt Louis William Boyd Godfrey, Richard P 0 *"*.** 1 0 ? t ^ d ?^ >rS haV ‘ 7 and management
Roy CaMweil, Charlie M Owens. Simpson Bolt. Andrew Clyde The cnticism of the m *wwmmt
David Dugas Copeland. Henry Hitt Young. Rufus Barnett, Frafc Cole- * c “^ paUe "‘. ^ CMm * from P S BaiJey ^ al,,tor,
students the next morning and in I th,s was su PP<**d to have* been a over two hundred miles m all. the
formally that afternoon, attend the ver y fertl,e area - but when vege - * a y we had ,0 *° T^ ,as ‘ '•*< n <
PC Davidson football game on Oc- tat,on is 00 ,onger watered artifi- our journey, from Suez to Cairo.
tober 10 and speak in the Clinton I c,al, y- lt ceases to 1,ve We P icked was over the d««rt A go**d cool
First Presbyterian Church Sunday l,p a few souvenirs ,n the f orm of breeze was blowing, but the rest of
fragments of earthenware, and pho- the day had made us hot and dutsy
Smith. John J.
Urn Crowder. Jt
John Clay-1 man Young, Columbus W Dial.
Austin Chand- Goorge Washington Con.
SAVE MONEY ON
THESE SPECIALS!
GRADE A
FRYERS
fc 33c
CENTER CUT
Pork Chops
a-79c
HOME MADE PURE
Pork Sausag<
e A. 49c
ALL MEAT
WIENERS
a 49c
CLINTON CITRED SLICED
Slab Bacon
fc. 59c
T-BONE
STEAK
A 85c
Irby’s Meat Market
MU8GROVB STREET
PHONE 489
has been referred by her. and Frederick B. Dent, of Spartan-
She added: “Every drug store in ln statements for the sub
Clinton is given some of our busi committee headed by Sen John O.
ness in drugs The choice is left to pasiore (D-RI).
the patient
Regnery To Speak
At Texas Cotton
Meet This Month
The senators moved into South
Carolina today after touring New
England mill areas in a continu
ing search for long-range trends
and conditions in the textile indu>
try
Bailey, president of the Clinton
Cotton MiUs and president of the
South Carolina Textile Manufac
turers Association, said
A day-by-day study of the tex
Stoneville. Miss-Walter Regnery. ^ indiutry by those of us who
vice-president and general manager look textiles for a livelihood
of Joanns Cotton Mills. Joanna. S. convinces us that some of our most
C . will make the keynote address *™*i* problems result from acts
at the 13th annual Cotton Spinner and policies of our federal govern.
Breeder Conference to be held on rnM >t
October 21 and 22 in Lubbock. Tex- tho «* 10 be re
m moved," Bailey said, "I am coofi
Mr Regnery’s subject will be "A d* 1 * there are many dynamic
New Look at the Values Related to forc< * work within our industry
Cotton Fiber Qualities " He will which would quickly set in motion
speak at the opening session of the
industry-wide meeting on the mor
ning of October 21.
Recognized as one of the leaders
of the industry, Mr Regnery is pres
ident and chairman of the board of
an industry-wide revival.”
Dent, president of Mayfair Mills
and vice-president of the manufac
tuerers group, said, “if the fetters
of government control, unfair tax
policies and unfair competition are
trustees of the Textile Research In- removed” the workers and investors
HAMPTON ST.
P-T-A
Presents
SCHOOL
LUNCHEON
MENU
EACH MORNING AT 9 A. M. AND 12 NOON
ON
WPCC
1410 ON YOUR
RADIO DIAL
stitute, Princeton. N. J., s member
of the board of trustees of the In
stitute of Textile Technology, Char
lottesville. Va., a member of the
Utilization Committee that Pres
ident Eisenhower appointed to study
and find new uses for cotton, and
a member of the qualiy committee
of the National Cotton Council.
The theme of the 1958 Spinner-
Breeder Conference is “Modern
Quality Evaluations and Their Re
lation to Cotton Spinning." The
meeting is sponsored by Delta
Council find is aimed at afford
ing a better understanding of mu
tual problems by cotton breeders,
producers and spinners and the de
velopment of fiber properties need
ed by spinners.
The Plains Cotton Growers, Inc.,
representing the high plains area
of Texas, will be host for the meet
ing.
The conference program will
also feature two panel discussions
and addreses on cotton ginning and
.cotton textile machinery develop
ments.
Donald Halselden Gets
Navar Discharge
Donald Haselden, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. K. Haselden, has received a
discharge from the Navy and has
returned to his home on North Adair
street.
Mr. Haselden, who has served
four years in the navy, was last
stationed at Patuxent River, Md.,
base in the accounting office, after
serving aboard a number of ships
for various tours in Pacific, Medi
terranean and Atlantic waters.
1 ; tngrpahed the spot There were a In fact, we were nothing short of
few mud huts seen, said to be the filthy; but the experience was ex-
remains of the city One can hard- cellent I would have felt myself
^ ly believe that mud huts could sur- >hort changed if I had not been able
vive for centuries, and there is no to take this partciular trip
reason to bdieve that these huts ex- It was about nine o clock at night
isled in Moses day, but they could when we reached our hotel, ao had
have held together for a long time to eat after only a little superficial
'Hie thought naturally comes to washing of face and hands, but
mind that surely the weather would with supper under my belt a good
was away these mud buildings, shower and clean clothing. I really
hut the fact remains that it rarely felt better Then I washed every-
ever rains—in some localities it thing that I had worn, except my
never rains The Nile and the irri- shoes and hat Except for the socks,
gallon canals branching out from they were many shades lighter the
the river alone furnish water for n**t morning Wash n-waars art
the fields These Egyptians harvest *onderfuJ (The remaining articles
three crops a year Dr Me Lane of *iU he on Palestine i
the American University in Cairo. ——
told us that more intensive farm EntertOinment Sided
mg is done in Egypt than anywhere e . . c v
else in the world I can believe it ^OfUrday TOf TOUng
after what I have seen Men. w* People At JoanDO
men and children, all work on the \ Circus" for Intermediates .o.t
tittle plots of ground that they have. Young People will be held in the
and wherever they are needed recreation rooms of the Joanna Bap
There are two pictures that I very tut educational building on Sat or
much regret musing One was a day. Ortober 4. at 7 30 p m
group of men who seemed to he Tiekets are Vi cents with Millard
making brick just about the same Murphv and Freeman Evans as
i way the Hebrews must have made chairmen of ticket sales rhese
them, and pictured in the film, must be secured by Thursday aft
The Ten Commandments ’ Th* , rnuon October 2
other was a father and two little Mr and Mrs Carl Phillip* who
boys harnessed to a canal boat pull recently returned from tiermam
mg it from the side, while the W1 n a*,* ^ides of their lours
mother, standing at the stern, in
her typical black dress and veil, gqL. SMITH HOME
held the rudder We were late and u C ol F Vinton Smith
had a long way to go. so I did not mer PMSAT at Presbyterian
ask to ttop luge, arrived home Monday follow
There being no road fiwui the toll, mg a fourteen-months tour of duty
or mound, of ancient Rameses east in Korea After a 45-day leave he
to the Suez Canal, we had to re- will report to Headquarters, Fort
trace our tracks quite a distance McPherson, Ga., where he will be
back toward Cairo, to meet the road stationed
to Ismaiiia. on Lake Tlmsah, a
small body of water not far from CARIi OF THA.MLS
Laurens - Villa Habile Homes Uvm.Ci .lueh .he Suer 1 '» «“"» "»
Hie Co. of Camden. Alt, has Canal nuM We had traveled „ne, 1 fri.nds ami the staff oi Hays hee
SPACE•AGE TELEPHONE-
The "Vistab*th" gives a space-
age laak to public telepb—rs.
Designed by Bell Telephone Lnb.
•rntaries. Ibis is one t mnny ex
ploratory designs being slndied to
meet telepb»nr demands of tbe fu
ture The trial model of the
“Viotabootb" is made of olnml-
num with a troospareot ptaotk
'bubble dome” lor maximum
visibility.
for
Cul
Laurens To Get New
House Trailer Plant
within the industry would handle the
problems posed by declining prof
its and markets
Outlining some of the problems
facing,the industry. Bailey said U.
S. mamnacturers are at a serious ^ ^ _ ^
disadvantage in foreign trade where Squired property here operate ^ after 8 00 a - m ^ was P ltal fw D»e many kindnesses shown
they must compete against manu- -mnlnvinc about afler 2:00 P 01 wh<?n arrived rTU> during my illness and hospital
a— w gj person, y |t was confirmed here at Ismaiiia. so we were quite ready fa* a ^ convalescing at
Wednesday * for lunch W’e had some cookies and
facturers who have wage scales far
below the U. S. level.
Hien, too, Bailey said, American
manufacturers have to pay about
20 per cent more for raw cotton
than their foreign counterparts.
"Even American-grown cotton
has been available to foreign manu
facturers at a lower cost than it moved Vo a new location
can be bought for mills in
country.
The CUnton industrialist said the construction immediately on two
effect of these policies has been to
rob cotton of a competitive price
structure in domestic markets.
Bailey said the government’s
“stimulation of foreign competition
and the purchase of large amounts
of textiles offshore with our own
dollars seems to us an undeserved
penalty.”
a cold drink that kept us going
After lunch, feeling much better,
w^ drove along Lake Tlmsah, and
on to the south toward Great Bitter
"Lake, along the route very probably
boat buliders, have taken by Moses and the children of
Israel Both lakes were beautiful
Along bodies of water there is a
narrow strip of vegetation, but
i there is a desert at the southern
new buildings at the site just outside j end of Bitter Lake Bleak mountains
the city limits on highway 76 by- were seen to the west, and on down
P ass along the western side of the Gulf
The Arkansas trailer home build
ers have leased the building for
merly occupied by United Crafts
men, according to Yancey Poole,
owner of the property. United
Craftsmen,
t * v,s Mr Poole said Wednesday night
the Villa Mobile Homes will begin
home Your visits, flowers, cards
and gifts were deeply appreciated
—MRS F. M STITTS
WELCOME
People Of
Clinton and
Laurens County
to the 1958
Piedmont
Interstate
FAIR!
Opening At
Spartanburg
OCTOBER 13th
for 6 BIG
Days and Nights
$25,000
In Awards
Waiting!
Hundreds Of
Events!
Watch The
CLINTON
CHRONICLE
Each Week For
Advertised
Announcements!
The new industry will employ
some 65 persons at first, but will
eventually increase, that number to
150, Mr. Poole said. ,
A 17,000 square foot building is
located on the acquired site. The
Bailey added: “I am confident, lwo new b U imjng s w j]j he a 100 by
because of your interest, we can 30 affair to be used as a paint
anticipate more equitable treatment sb0 p and a 60 by 60 structure to be
at the hands of our government.” 1 - .. - - —
Winners Of Hula Hoap
Contest Held Tuesday
The following eleven children
were winners in a “Hula Hoop”’ con
test conducted Tuesday afternoon
by radio station WPCC:
Charles Smith, Joyce Ott, Carol
Sanders, Frances Cato, Peggy
Nance, Kay Poole, Gloria Cato,
Cathy Bigbee, Sue Bragg, Cathy
Bagwell, Ann Green.
used as a finshing shop. Both will
be of Butler type steel construction.
General Manager Eddie Barnes
was quoted here as saying the first
trailers would be coming out of the
plant in three to four weeks. Equip
ment and supplies will begin arriv
ing this week.
of Suez (the western arm of the
Red Sea)
TTie canal was very interesting,
with its many ships going in con
voy, so that they might pass other
convoys going in the opposite di
rection at appointed places. Dredg
ing has to be done constantly to
keep the canal open, for the desert
sands are blown into it, and would
soon reclaim it. It is estimated that
at least six times the amount of
sand, originally removed, has been
taken out of it by dredging since it
was first opened The Egyptian gov
ernment is now planning to widen
Mobile homes of all sizes, up to tt-
53 feet long and 10 feet wide, in- We were stopped a number of)
eluding three bedroom models are
constructed by Villa Homes Most
of the work here, however, will be
assembly operations, with basic
work done at Camden, Ark
times along the canal by military
police, but were allowed to pro
ceed. Our guide, who is an Egyp
tian, and rather dark himself, said
that things were made easier for us
7
TUNE IN
WPCC
1110 ON YOl R RADIO
FOR THE LATEST
NEWS
Listen To
7 O’clock WORLD NEWS
BROUGHT TO YOU
EACH MORNING EXCEPT
SUNDAY BY
THE LAURENS SAW CO.
ON THE H\ PASS IN I AI KENS
DEALERS FOR HOME UTS AND POT LAN
CHAIN SAMS
*1