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It becomes no man to nurse despair, but in the teeth of clenched antagonisms, to f ol low u the worth iest till he die— T ennyson. VOL. 14—NO. 18 Mrs. Carlisle, 36, Newberry Native, Killed In Lyman Word was received here early this morning (Thursday) of the accidental death of Mrs. R. (’. Carlisle, the former Miss Mar garet Davis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Munson P. Davis of New berry. Mrs. Carlisle is reported to have been struck down by an automobile in Lyman where she and her husband reside, while walking home from work early Thursday morning. She was 36 years of age and a graduate nurse, having trained at Newber ry County Hospital Nurses School. Funeral services for Mrs. Carlisle will be held in Lyman Friday afternoon at 2 pm. In terment will be in Rosemont cem etery in Newberry at 4 p.m. Other details were not available at press time Thursday. Whittles Away Bonded Debts The Newberry Bond Commis sion has recommended to City Council that a levy of 9 mills will be sufficient this year to take care of interest on bonded indebtedness of the city. This will pay interest on $139,000 of outstanding bonds. Two years ago a 20 mill levy was necessary to meet bond interest. With a re duction £f 2 mills last year and 9 mills this year the commission has managed to cut the levy in half of the two year-ago figure. Three of the nine mills now levied goes to pay interest on $70,000 of refunding bonds issued last year. The other bonds are dated 1939, 1925, 1924 and 1945. R. B. Baker is chairman of the Bond Commission and T. Roy Summer has long been its secretary-treasurer. Other mem bers are M. O. Summer, John T. Norris, and R. C. Floyd. The glory of a people and of an age, is always the work of a small number of great men, and disappears with them.—Grimm. NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1951 + 51.50 PER YEAR Newberry College 95th Session Opens Sept. 13 Newberry college will begin its 95th session on September 13th. The freshmen report for the orien tation program on Monday. Sent, loth. The formal openihg ex ercises will he held in Holland Hall on Thursday. September 13th at 10:0o a.m. Regular classes will begin on Friday morn ing, Sept. 14th at N a.m. During the summer months the physical appearance of the camp us has been undergoing changes. The new library building which faces the quadrangle is rapidly going up and will he ready for use sometime during the session. Wright recreation hall has been located just across Bachman street from the gym. The col lege streets, Bachman, Luther and Camion are now in the pro cess of surface treating. A large 45 degree parking strip has been provided for parking cars on Bachman street in addition to the parking area between the gym and the chemistry building. The street through the campus from Lvans to Bachman has been clos ed and filled, leveled and sodded to make it a part of the campus quadrangle. Dirt and top-soil hate been hauled in on the campus to level and grass areas on the quadrangle and between buildings. All campus improve ments give the college a changed physical appearance. New faculty members who will assume positions at the college in September are: Mrs. Wilda Lea Montgomery, Fd.l)., teacher of Elementary Education; Pro- lessor Willard J. (I. Brask, B.M., M.M., teacher of Piano and di rector of the Band; Prof. Alvin F. Nelson, Ph.D., teacher of Psychology and courses in Edu cation. Breeder’s Group Annual Meet Set Friday, Sept. 7 The annual Meeting of the Newberry Cooperative Breeding association will be held at the Newberry county court house on Friday, September 7 at 8 p.m. A program committee has ar ranged for Dr. Victor Hurst of the Clemson college dairy depart ment. to present an illustrated discussion on “The Causes of Re productive Failure in Cattle.” Mr. C. G. Cushman, extension dairy specialist. will discuss, "The Necessity of Breedbig Production in Cattle.” The committee one owning one of either dairy or not afford to la At the close of the public meet ing a short business conference of members will be held at which time six directors will be elect ed. feels that any- or more head beef cattle can- absent. Local And Personal News Of Interest From Prosperity Bishop Gravatt Be Here Sunday Bishop John J. Gravatt of Co lumbia. Bishop of the Upper Diocese of South Carolina will celebrate Holy Communion at St. Lukes Episcopal Church here on Sunday September 9th at 11:30 a.m. Bishop Gravatt has many stead fast friends here in Newberry both in and out of the church who will be glad to hear of his coming . The public is invited to the Services U. D. C. MEETING The William Lester Chapter J.D.C. will meet Friday, Sept. \ with Mrs. H. P. Wicker. Mrs. Vida C. Thomason and ler daughter, Joy, moved last veek from the Taylor apartment o the Langford apartment. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Fermenter md their children moved to At- anta Monday. Mrs. Fermenter ind her children have been with ier mother, Mrs. Cora Ross, vhile Mr. Fermenter was away >n construction work. Miss Ethel Counts and Mrs. i. T. Young spent Monday in Attle Mountain with Miss El- jerta Sease. M. P. Connelly left Monday or his school work in Rocky i'ord, Ga. Guests Wednesday of Misses Jusie and Mary Langford were drs. G. P. Boulware of Colum- >ia and Miss Bessie Earl Patter- ion of Asheville, N. C. Miss Katherine Counts left >unday to resume her work in he city school system. Mrs. J. F. Browne has return- ;d home from a visit with rel- itlves in Statesville and Cherry- dlle, N. C. and Pearisburg, Va. Rogers (Bo) Taylor left Mon- lay for Union, where he is a nember of the school faculty. Miss Martha Counts of the Hedical College at Charleston tpent the weekend with her Bother, Mrs. H. E. Counts, Sr. Guests last Wednesday of Mrs. A.. D. Derrick, Sr. were Mr. and ilrs. M. D. Derrick of West Co- umbia and their son, Sgt. Der ick of Fort Benning. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pugh and their children. Linda, Bobby, Billy, and Cora of Orchard Park, N. V. are visiting Mrs. Pugh’s mother. Mrs. J. B. Stockman and Mr. Pugh’s mother. Mrs. R. T. Pugh. Miss Cora Pugh will re main in Prosperity until time for her to return to Columbia Col lege. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cochran and their two children of Ander son were Labor Day guests of Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Cochran and Mr. and Mrs. Jake Wheeler. Miss Phylis Wise is visiting relatives in Portsmouth, Ohio. Miss Betty Sue Connelly left Sunday for Emory University Hospital in Atlanta. Ga., where she will serve a twelve months’ internship in Medical Tech nology. She was accompanied to Atlanta by her mother, Trs. M. P Connelly and her sister, Miss Ka\ Connelly who went on to Ros well, Ga. for a visit with friends Mrs. L. J. Fellers has re turned home from a few days visit with her sister, Mrs. Marpori Rawls, in Greenville. Mrs. Ed Dudis of Dayton, Ohio is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Long. Miss Mary Langford left Mon day for North Augusta, S. C., where she is a member of the school faculty. Mrs. James F. Goggans of Co lumbia spent the Labor Day week end with her mother, Mrs. C. T. Wyche. Sgt. and Mrs. G. R. Thomp son and their daughter Susan of Columbus, Ga., were weekend (continued on page eight) City Youth Rally Begins Sept. 16 Plans are now underway for the annual citywide interde nominational youth rally to be held at the First Baptist church. The rally begins on Sunday, Sept ember 16, and lasts until Thurs- day, September 20. The speak er for the occasion will be Rev. Hubert G. Wardlaw, pastor of the First v Presbyterian church in Lancaster. Rev. Wardlaw is ad mired by all young people be cause of his intense interest in them and in the interest of all young people’s work in the S. C. synod. A committee of representatives from all the churches of New berry met last Sunday afternoon at the Aveleigh Presbyterian church under /the direction of Rev. Neil E. Truesdale. Plans were made for a bigger and bet ter youth rally this year. All young people and friends of youth are cordially invited to attend these services. Major Holohan WASHINGTON, D. C. William V. Holohan, of the — of Strategic Services in World War II (shown), is named by the De partment of Defense as> the victim of a cold-blooded killing by two fellow American servicemen with the aid of two Italians, in Italy 7 years ago. Holohan and the two American servicemen accused were attached to the OSS and had para chuted behind enemy lines to get the low-down on partisan guerilla bands. Miss Turner, 18 Fatally Injured In Auto Crash Miss Blondell Turner, 18-year- old Newberry girl, was fatally in jured in an automobile accident last Saturday afternoon on high way 391, three miles north of Leesville. f Betty Clark, daughter of Mr. A. H. Clark of this city, an occu pant of the car driven by Miss Turner, was seriously injured. She was taken to a Columbia hos pital for treatment. The ex tent of her injuries was not known yesterday, but she was reported to be somewhat im proved. The occupants of the other car involved in the accident were not seriously hurt, according to reports. Miss Turner was born and East Berlin Demonstration NT EAST BERLIN, GERMANY—The “World Peace Festival” in East Berlin through which Soviet rulers have tried but failed to convince the world they are the real champions of peace, staged a mammoth all-day demonstration along Berlin’s famed Unter Den Linden. These S hotographs show the climax of the demonstration which, according to last Berlin officials, attracted a million communist youths. At left is a general view of the -marchers. Jonathan Dozier Killed Thursday In Auto Crash Jonathan Dozier, 27, was in stantly killed last Thuisday after noon when the truck he was driv ing collided with a lumber truck on highway 22, three miles from Strother. Born in Columbia, he spent most of his life in Newberry where he made his home with his aunt, Mrs. Elvie Burton. He was the son of Mrs. Betty Lee Derrick Putnam of Rockingham, N. C., and the late John Dozier. A graduate of Newberry high school where he was an outstand ing football and baseball player, Mr. Dozier spent six years in the Navy. He was employed by the Newberry Packing Company, where he worked as a salesman for four years. Survivors include his widow, the former Miss Virginia Frick; one son, Larry Dozier; his mother, and a number of aunts and uncles. Funeral services were conduct ed Saturday at 3:30 p.m. from the Summer Memorial Lutheran church by the Rev. Horace J. C. Lindler and the Rev. Paul E. Monroe. Interment followed in Springdale cemetery. Sgt. Levi C. Singley Gets Combat Promotion For Korean Service WITH THE 7TH INF. DlV. IN KOREA—“Excellent performance of duty in action” has won a combat promotion to sergeant for Levi C. Singley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie L. Singley, of Newber ry, S. C. Sergeant Singley is a squad leader in the 7th Division’s 31st Infantry Regiment, which entered the Korean campaign at the Inch on landing last September. Dur ing the “Iron Triangle” offensive the 31st attacked north of Hwach- on to crack the eastern corner of the Communists’ defense. A graduate of Bush River high school, Singley entered the Army in September 1950. of Mr. and Mrs. Fletclrer E. Turner. She received her edu cation in the Newberry city schools. At the time of her erator at the Southern Bell phone Company in Columbia. was a member of Summer Me morial Lutheran church. Funeral services were conduct ed Monday by the Rev. Horace J. C. Lindler and the Rev. C. H. Stucke. Burial followed in Springdale cemetery. Surviving are her parents; one brother, Elzie Lee Turner; two sisters, Ellen Elaine Black, all of Newberry, and Olivia Turner of Columbia; a number of uncles and aunts and a nephew and niece. General Sessions Convenes 17tli Court of General sessioas will sit here beginning Monday, Sept ember 17 th with Judge J. B- Pruitt of _ Anderson presiding This is Judge Pruitt’s first of ficial trip to Newberry. The following jurors have been selected: Joseph B. Webb, Dewitt C. Bo land, Tom W. Suber, George A. Brock, J. F. Stockman, John H. Ritff, George B. Brehmer, James ^Hutchinson, Glenn E. Jones, D. Summer, L. F. Spearman, Koon, W. Roy Anderson, L. Dorroh, James B. Sum- Frank C. Rinehart, Lloyd Steve D. Reeves, E. L. ©k. Forest C. Oxner, Lewis healy, H. L. Dukes, Sr., Jacob G.’Ringer, William Gregory, Wil liam E. Turner, J. D. Caldwell, -CoHe B. Glenn, W. L. Matthews, Kenneth E. Stuck, G. E. Richard son, Otto Warren, Cyril Richard son, Vassie Ruff, J. L. Counts, C. A. Kaufmann and J. T. Hayes. Cam D. WaUace Sunday Speaker At Aveleigh Cam Wallace, a senior at the Union Theological seminary in Richmond, Va., will deliver the morning sermon at Aveleigh Pres byterian church, Sunday morning at 11:30 o’clock. A cordial invitation is extend ed to anyone that would like to be present Sunday morning to hear one of Newberry’s native sons, who is studying for the ministry. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace are spending this week in the home of Mr. Wallace’s mother, Mrs. Sarah D. Wallace on Caldwell Street. Other guests in the home - k, . Of Mrs. Wallace Monday and reared in Newberry, the daughteF ffuesday of this week were the f\ F A/f t» o n H Ayr r-C! xxf TH ’ . , . ., , . . parents, and brother and sister of Mrs. Cam Wallace, Dr. and Mrs. James Edward Bear and two children. Jean and Jimmy, death, she was a telephone op- They were enroute to their home Women’s Clubs Plan Workshop “Our Responsibility for Free dom” is the theme of the fall workshop of the State Federation of Women’s Clubs and the Ameri can Association of University Women to be held at Poinsette State Park in Sumter county September 28-30, according to Mrs. Angus Macaulary of Chester, state president of the SCFWC. Problems to be discussed by the two groups will include “The Need for a New Constitution,” “The Necessity of Calling a Con stitutional Convention,” and “In itiating a Juvenile Domestic Re lations Court System in South Carolina.” Registration for the workshop is scheduled for four o’clock Fri day, September 28. The last session closes at three-thirty Sun day afternoon. Every branch of the AAUW and every Federated Club is urged to send representatives to this important study conference. General meetings of common in terest have been arranged for both groups, but time has also been allowed for individual groups to study and discuss their own problems. The entire cost of the workshop is $7. Pre-registration fee of $2 should be sent at once to C. West Jacocks, State Forestry Commission Columbia. Richmond, after spending six weeks in Mexico. Miss Ray Of Union And George Ruff, Jr. Are Married August 18 Of interest is the marriage of Sara Elizabeth Ray of Union, and George Sligh Ruff, Jr., of Newberry and Union. The ceremony was performed at 8:30 p.m. August 18, 1951 by the Rev. Clyburn, pastor of the bride. Mrs. Ruff is the daughter of Mrs. Charley Long Ray, Sr. and the late Mr. Ray of Union. Mr. Ruff is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George Ruff, Sr. of Newber ry. After a trip to Florida, they are meaking their home in Union. Pres. Kinard Is Tenn. Speaker President and Mrs. James C. Kinard of Newberry College spent the weekend in Parrottsville, Tennessee, where on Sunday morning D.. Kinard was the guest speaker at the homecoming service of Salem Lutheran church. For two successive fall rallies while the congregation were rais ing funds with which to build a new church Dr. Kinard was the speaker. Now that the church is completed he was invited to return for the home-coming ser vice. The Rev. Walter C. Davis, D.D., formerly pastor of St. Matthew’s Lutheran church in Charleston, is the pastor. While in Charleston Dr. Davis was a member of the Board of Trustees of Newberry College. Aerial view shows new Oakland plant of Kendall Mills at Newberry, S.C., after modernization and expansion job costing over $4 million. Open house will be observed by the mill Oct. 9-10 with many dignitaries, including Senator Burnet R. Maybank (D-SC), present. LITTLE ITEMS OF INTEREST ABOUT FOLKS YOU KNOW 2-Day Open House Marks Oakland Plant Expansion Company Plans Guided Tours Through Mill The industrial magic inside a modern and progressive cotton mill will be shown and explain ed to the public and visiting dignitaries for two days here in October. / ... The program is in the nature of an “unveiling” pt,; Oakland Mill where over $4,000,000 , has been pent on modernization and expansion. A dinner for out-of town guests is being arranged by the city and chamber of com merce. There will be a prominent speaker on the program. Oakland Mill is one of 16 cot ton mills and finishing plants— six of them in South Carolina— operated by The Kendall Com pany. The mill now produces enough cloth in a year to girdle the earth at the equator about three and a half times with a strip over a yard wide. Open house will be observed by the mill for two days, Tues day and Wednesday, October 9-10, during v/hich guides will con duct the public through the main plant covering some 275,000 square feet or six and one-third acres of floor space. The tours, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., will begin in the opening room, where the bales of cotton are opened and blended, and proceed through each manufacturing step, ending in the cloth room with a period of music and refreshments. Small gifts and souvenirs will also await those making the tour and at the end of the trek the visitors will see an exhibit of the products into which the cloth made at Oakland and other Kendall mills go. The Cotton Mill Division of Kendall Mills processes about 100,000 bales of ’ cotton yearly’ into grey doth. Moat of this is ^finishing and thfc/Bauer ft Bladfc Divisions for further processing. The mills specialize in the weaving of “tobacco cloth,” the textile trade designation for the low-count fabric which is the base material for surgical gauze, sani tary napkin gauze, cheesecloth, tobacco seed bed covers and many clothing, trade and industr ial products. The two plants at Pelzer in this state, however, make heavier and finer cloths, which include diaper cloth, broadcloth, poplin, wide sheeting and print cloth. Other Kendall plants in South Carolina 'include the Mollohon mill at Newberry, the Wateree mill at Camden and the Addison Mill at Edgefield. One cotton mill is operated at Paw Creek, N. C., near Charlotte, and one at Turners Fall, Mass. The cotton buying office for all the mills is at Newberry. The dinner for out-of-town guests will be held Tuesday evening in Community Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Campbell and children, Billy, Joe and John of Spartanburg, spent several days last week in the home of Mr. Campbell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Campbell on Harring ton street. Misses Mary Louise Lominack and Harriett Reid will leave Tuesday of next week for Spar tanburg, where they will enter the freshmen class at Converse College. Mr. and Mrs. James Hayes and two small children, Jimmy and Anne, of Anderson spent a couple of days last week with Mrs. Hayes’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Halfacre in the county. Mr. and Mrs. David Dominick of Memphis, Tenn., are spendfng this week in the home of Mr. Dominick’s grandmother, Mrs. L. W. Wilson and family on Cline street. Mrs. C. L. Pless, who under went a major operation in the Newberry Memorial Hospital on Tuesday, August 28, returned to the home of her mother, Mrs. L. W. Wilson on Cline street, Tues day, and is recuperating nicely. Miss Mazie Dominick left on Monday of this week for a week’s vacation in Asheville, N. C. Tommy Johnson and Miss Nancy McKean, of Sharon, Pa., spent Sunday through Tuesday in the home of Mr. Johnson’s mother, Mrs. P. Duncan Johnson, Sr., on Boundary street. Enroute to Sharon they visited Mr. John son’s sister, Mrs. H. B. Kirkegard and family in Silver City, N. C. Miss Mary Johnson and W. F. Smith, of Columbia, were Sunday and Labor Day visitors in the home of Miss Johnson’s mother, Mrs. P. Duncan John son, Sr., on Boundary street. Rex North, Jr., of Natchez, Miss., spent the weekend here with his wife (Dorothy Ruff), and children. In the ^hhme of Mr. srtttet:- We ■ »ar home by his family after spending the summer here with the Ruffs. Mrs. George L. Epps, Sr., and daughter, Mrs. E. M. Lipscomb, spent the weekend and Labor Day in Augusta, Ga., in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Epps and family. Mrs. Tom Lewis, Mrs. R. E. Livingston and Mrs. Elmer Shealy, spent Tuesday in Charlotte, N. C. on business. Mr', and Mrs. Ben F. Dawkins, (continued on page eight) V.F.W. AUXILIARY TO MEET MONDAY NIGHT The V.F.W. Auxiliary will ’ old their regular monthly meeting Monday night, September 10, at 8 o’clock in the V.F.W. hut. All members are urged to be present. Local Recruiter Enlists 21 Men For Armed Forces Twenty one young men from Newberry and surrounding count ies, volunteered for the U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force during the month of August, according to the local Recruiting Sergeant, Jesse Holland. Those from New berry are: James Hamilton, 40-year-old veteran, reenlisted and has been assigned to Shaw Field in Sumter; Robert E. Holsenback, 29-year-old veteran, reenlisted and also assigned to Shaw Field; Billy H. Turner, 27, Ralph E. Frick, 19, assigned to Lackland Air Base, San Antonio, Texas; Herbert Duckett, Negro, 17, sent to Fort Jackson. From Whitmire, William W. Prince, 17, Arthur R. Mitchell, 17, Doyle E. Neal, 19 and William Lee Wilbanks, 19, were all sent to Lackland Air Base in Texas for basic training. JOHNSON-SMITH Mrs. Pope Duncan Johnson, Sr., announce the engagement of her daughter, Mary Wilson, to William Franklin Smith, son of Mr. John Smith and the late Mrs. Estelle Alfred Smith of Colum bia. The wedding will take place the latter part of October. Blood Is Needed In Korean Theatre Mrs. Perkins, 80, Dies In Columbia Mrs. Carrie E. Perkins, 80, passed away at a Columbia Hos pital late Sunday night. She had been ill for several months. She was born and reared near Prosperity but had spent most of her life in Newberry. Mrs. Perkins was the daughter of the late Henry and Elizabeth Boozer. She was a member of Central Methodist church. Funeral services were held Monday from the McSwain Funeral Home with her pastor, Rev. G. H. Hodges, and Rev. J. W. Tomlinson conducting the services. Interment followed in Rosemont cemetery. She is survived by three step children James, Clarence Perkins, Mrs. Alma Herndon all of New berry. Also the following nieces and nephews: D. E. Boozer, Augusta; Mrs. Pat Thrift; Zack Franklin; Olin Franklin; all of Newberry; Herman Franklin, Miami, Fla.; Mrs. Pat Wicker; Mrs. Olin Wicker, Mrs. Annie Mae Richardson and Mrs. Grace Metts. The Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit Newberry Thursday, Sept ember 13, at the Armory from ten o’clock a.m., to four o’clock p.m. At least 150 pints of blood will be needed to fill the quota as the need for blood is increasing daily for both military and civilian use. The department of Defense is planning a concerted effort to re plenish its “gravely depleted” supply of human blood plasma. This depletion of the Armed Forces’ plasma reserve is due pri marily to the extensive use of plasma in Korea, w'here its use in forward areas has kept many of the wounded alive until they could be evacuated to an area where whole blood was avail able. The use of plasma and whole blood in Korea is a major factor in the reduction of the mortality rate among the wound ed. The value of a reserve supply of plasma has been proved in Korea; yet it is one vital com- midity that assembly lines can not produce and money cannot buy. Plasma, a blood derivate obtained by separating red cells from human blood, has never been synthesized. It is manu factured only in the human body. To assure each soldier, sailor, airman, and Marine an adequate reserve of this vital fluid for use when and where he needs it, the Department of Defense has financed the expansion of blood processing laboratories, and ask ed the Red Cross to collect for the defense department nearly three million pints of whole blood to be processed into more than a million plasma units be tween July 1, 1951 and July 1, 1952 This means that 270,000 pints per month must be collect ed during this fiscal year for the Defense Department plasma re serve. The situation is serious and what has been coming in up to the present has been a trickle to what Is now needed. Dr. Nelson Is Named Professor President James C. Kinard an nounced this week the appoint ment of Doctor Alvin F. Nelson to the faculty of Newberry col lege as professor of psychology and education. Professor Nelson is a native of Nebraska. BUILDING PERMITS The following four building permits issued during the past week by building inspector Sam A. Beam amounted to $3,400. Aug. 29, Albert McCaughrin for repairs to dwelling on Cal houn street, $500. Aug. 31, Lillie Harris, one three room wood frame dwelling on Drayton street, $2700. Sept. 1, Willis Grey, add on® room- to dwelling on Drayton street, $100. Sept. 4, M. P. Padgett, repairs to stpre building on O’Neal street, $100. Deed Transfers Three deeds listing cash con siderations of $2400 were record ed in the offices of Pinckney N. Abrams, register of mesne con veyance at the county courthouse during the past week. All transfers involved were in Little Mountain District No. 6 as follows: W. David Shealy to Furman L. Dominick, 56.70 acres, $1000. Furman L. Dominick to E. N. Sons, 56.70 acres, $1200. Henry H. Kibler and Mildred Kibler to David A. Kibler, Rt. 2, Prosperity, S. C., 2.4 acres, $200. THEY LIVE HERE NOW Mr. and Mrs. William Frank lin have moved to 1907 Harper street in the Wilson Moore Home. The Moores are m >7ing to Spar tanburg to make thei. home. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Lee, are now residing at 1802 Har rington street. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bowers have moved to 1,420 Glenn street. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rowe are now occupying the former Lewis home at 941 Cornelia street. Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Dennis, have moved to 2301 Main street in the house recently vacated by the Hodges. Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Dowd have moved to Vincent street into apartment 42-K. BIRTHDAYS Cam Wallace, and J. D. Wicker, Sept. 8; Tommy Longshore and Mrs. O. B. Mayer, Sept. 9; Ralph Quenn, T. Roy Summer and Mrs. Gladys Chappell Kurtz, Sept. 10; Sedley Senn, ton of Mr. and Mrs. Tyrus Senn, Sept. 11; Keister Willingham, Mrs. O. O. Copeland, Mra. Cleo Morris and Thomas Bradley, Sept. 12; Mra. J. T. Dennis, Sept. 13th.