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The Times and Democrat from Orangeburg, South Carolina • 7
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The Times and Democrat du lieu suivant : Orangeburg, South Carolina • 7

Lieu:
Orangeburg, South Carolina
Date de parution:
Page:
7
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of of of of of of of of of he 0 "DAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1965 THE TIMES AND DEMOCRAT, ORANGEBURG, S. C. PAGE SEVEN Obituaries Sam Zeigler ST. MATTHEWS, S. C.

Fuservices for Sam Zeigler, who died in Augusta, Wednesday afternoon, will be held at 3 p.m. Friday at the Wesley Chapel Methodist Church with the Rev. E. M. Heape officiating.

Burial will be in the church cemetery. The body will be at the Dukes Harley Funeral Home in Orangeburg, and will be placed in the church an hour prior to the service. Active pallbearers will be Boyd Rucker, Dreher Rucker, Johnny I. Zeigler, Marvin Pound, Carl Inabinet and Raymond Ayers. Honorary pallbearers will be Hayden Inabinet, Frank Crim, H.

D. Ott, W. S. Inabinet, Herman Rucker and Fletcher Ezekiel. Mr.

Zeigler was a veteran of World War I. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Gussie Staley Zeigler; two daughters, Mrs. Herbert Lee Rucker and Miss Ann Zeigler, both of St. Matthews; a son, Aubrey R.

Zeigler of Cayce: a sister, Mrs. Clarence Rucker of St. Matthews; a half brother, Abby Zeigler of Cayce, and seven grandchildren. Mrs. rearl Hutto Davis COLUMBIA, S.

C. Mrs. Pearl Hutto Davis, 68, widow of Willie Clifton Davis of 4326 Woodsidehaven Drive, died Wednesday afternoon in the Ridgewood Division of Columbia Hospital after an extenned illness. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday in Willow Swamp Baptist Church, near Orangeburg, the Rev.

Edward N. Taylor and the Rev. W. D. Henshaw officiating.

Burial will be in the church cemetery. The body will be taken to the church at 10 a.m. Mrs. Davis was born in Orangeburg County, a daughter of the late Lawrence and Hattie Hutto. She was a member of Willow Swamp Baptist church.

Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. H. L. Bodiford and Mrs. J.

C. Koon, both of Columbia, Mrs. Robert Chellberg of Miami Beach, and Mrs. B. H.

Fields of Norfolk, two sons, Melvin J. Davis of Swansea, and Bill Davis of Columbia; a sister, Mrs. Tom Charpia of Summerville; a brother, Son Hutto of Norway. Shastri Says--- (Continued From Page 1) stroyed i in a battle near Sialkot and more than 200 vehicles were left burning by Pakistani fighter-bombers in raids on a large convoy southwest of Jammu in Kashmir. An Indian Defense Ministry spokesman reported only fighting in the Sialkot area, indicating a slackiming everywhere else.

Radio Pakistan claimed 326 Indian tanks and 91 planes have been destroyed since Sept. 9. In the air war, Radio Pakistan reported Indian planes raided Peshawar, an important base 100 miles west of Rawalpindi, Here's A Deal For Someone TRENTON, N.J. (AP) New Jersey is trying to sell its million-dollar pavilion at the N.Y. World's Fair for a dollar.

It boils down to a matter of convenience and economics. The state must get rid of the pavilion when the fair closes Oct. 17. If it finds no buyer the demolition crews take over. "A demolition contract would run about $20,000," said Roy Cowan, pavilion manager.

"We'd much rather sell for the nominal fee of $1." There may be a buyer. "Negotiations are under way with a development corporation interested in establishing a park in a town in Illinois," said Cow. an, "It would be the center of a part setting." ME CHASE CARS? NOT WHEN I OWN ONE Many dogs like to chase automobiles, when they get the chance, nard, feels she owns this one. She lets her owner, Gary Wayne (left), 21, drive it. She lets his girlfriend, Pam but Heidi Bel, a 100-pound St.

Ber- Zarit, ride in it. (AP Wirephoto) WASHINGTON ON EDUCATION Speaking the Smithsonian Institution, President Johnson said he is going to ask Congress rext January to help launch this country on "a new and noble adventure" in learning. He said he has created a special task force to draw up a broad and long-range plan of U.S. assistance for education in developing nations. "We mean to show that this nation's dream of a 'Great Society' does not stop at the water's edge," he said.

The President spoke to scientists, scholars and others at the opening of a three-day celebration marking the 200th anniversary of the birth of James mithson, whose $508,000 bequest started the collectkon of museums, laboratories, galleries and research projects now known as the Smithsonian Institution. CIVILIANS The Defense MILITARY BILL President and had killed some civilians. In his report to Parliament, Shastri Thant's said request he to twice halt accepted. ties, once Tuesday and once Wednesday, but each time Pakistan made no response. Ayub said Thant's cease-fire was entirely unacceptable.

NEW DELHI, India (AP) Red China told India on Friday to pull out of a Sikkim-Tibet border area claimed by Peking in three days or face "grave consequences." The Chinese move apparently was aimed at helping Pakistan in its war with India. A blunt Chinese note handed to an Indian envoy in Peking in a postmidnight summons to the Foreign Office did not specify the nature of the "grave consequences." But the Chinese have struck hard before in border conflicts with India, rolling Indians back seriously in the heavy fighting of 1962. U.S. officials in Washington watched the situation anxiously. WASHINGTON (AP) President Johnson reaffirmed Thursday this country's support of the United Nations' peacemaking efforts and suggested the world organization might eventually help bring about an end to the nuclear arms race.

Johnson also restated U.S. backing for such international structures as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, from which French President Charles de Gaulle has threatened to withdraw. Johnson signed the revised billion military construction authorization bill with a bow to Congress for making the change he requested in vetoing the original version. "Few measures I have signed this year," Johnson said, "have so refreshed my faith in our institutions of government." He vetoed the earlier bill because it would have given congressional committees the power in effect to block the closing or curtailing of military bases. MISSISSIPPI On the eve of a final vote in the House, some 300 Negroes kept silent vigil outside the Capitol to protest the proposed dismissal their challenge to the election of Mississippi's five congressmen.

The Negroes. members of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic party, charged that Negroe were systematically excluded from the polls last November and that this made the election of the five illegal. The House Administration Committee, after a series of closed hearings, recommended dismissal of the challenge, mainly on the ground that the contestants were not candidates in the election. Victoria Gray, who is seeking one of the five seats, told reporters the committee's action points out "the evilness of the Dixiecrats." Some Northern congressmen said they will seek to have the case reopened with public hearings. CAPITAL FOOTNOTES Sen.

J. W. Fulbright, 2-Ark. drew fire from both Republican cans and Democrats for saying the Johnson administration Maj. Stoudenmire Attends School MD FORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan.

(AHTNC) Major Harry B. Stoudemire, son of Mr. and Roy Stoudemire of Elloree, S. C. is now attending the U.

S. Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. Major Stoudemire began the 10 month regular course of the college Aug. 20, along with 671 U. S.

Army and. 78 allied officers. The purpose of the course is to provide officers with a working knowledge for wartime and peacetime duty as commanders and general staff officers of divisions and logistical commands. Major Stoudemire was last stationed in Korea. He was graduated from Elloree High School in 1949 and Clemson UniI versity in 1953.

"All I said was: Show me a filter that really delivers taste and I'll eat my hat." A L.S./M.FT. LUCKY STRIKE filters TRY NEW LUCKY STRIKE FILTERS 4. 7. of 0. Manion QUICKIES CHICAGO (AP) Gen.

Maxwell D. Taylor suggested Thursday that American manpower in Viet Nam probably will have to be boosted beyond planned strength. He reported the fighting there is going "surprisingly well." He also predicted that 1966 will be "a year of initiative and offensive" for the Americans and their allies. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Fifty-two American women and children evacuated from Pakistan arrived in Beirut on Thursday after an eight-hour flight from Kabul, Afghanistan. The Americans, dependents of members of the military advisory group in Pakistan, drove from Rawalpindi to Kabul on Wednesday.

They arrived here aboard a chartered Afghan Airlines plane. SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) A machinists' strike hampered work at Boeing Co. operations from Seattle to Cape Kennedy, on Thursday but a union official said there is a strong possibility of government intervention to end the tieup. Construction work at the U.S.

moonport at Cape Kennedy was slowed seriously when nearly nalf of the 3,175 workers on major projects observed picket lines of the International Association of Machinsts and Aerospace Workers. Boeing's major plants in the Seattle area, where 25.000 of the aerospace firm's 34,000 production workers are employed, kept open under regular schedules. There were no picket line incidents and no immediate count of those crossing the lines. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Ambassador Arthur J.

Goldberg expressed belief Thursday that the outlook for the coming U.N. General Assembly has been improved by recent U.S.-Soviet collaboration in seeking an end to the IndianPakistani war. "I am optimistic about the work of the 20th session," the chief U.S. delegate said in an interview in which he assessed the prospects of the assembly opening next Tuesday. GENEVA (AP) U.S.

Am- bassador William C. Foster accused the Soviet Union Thursday of using poisonous words to blacken the reputation of the American government and blunt humanity's hopes for disarmament. He described as a tragic distortion charges by Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin that United States policies block all progress toward arms control. This constitutes "poisonous polemics," Foster told the 17- nation disarmament conference.

He was supported with equally strong words by Britain's Lord Chalfont, who spoke of "simpleminded polemics." Tsarapkin accused the United States of "launching into imperialist adventures" in the Congo, the Dominican Republic and Viet Nam. Such actions Tsarapkin said, have increased world tensions and made it impossible to have meaninful disarmament negotiations. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) U.S. and Vietnamese planes continued bombing targets hundreds of miles apart in North and South Viet Nam today, U.S. military spokesmen reported.

WARSAW, Poland (AP) War jitters swept Poland on Thursday. Housewives stripped stores of their entire stocks of flour, sugar, salt and other sta- ples. Man Held In Traffic Deaths Here A coroner's jury Thursday recommended that David Nathaniel Morgan be held for Grand Jury action in the traffic deaths of John P. and Mary Ruple. Solocitor Julian S.

Wolfe said warrants charging reckless homicide and involuntary manslaughter have been issued. Coroner Joe A. Deikey presented the following witnesses: Jimmy Davis, Patrolman C. R. Nichols and Dr.

Roy C. Campbeil. Dr. Campbell described the injuries and cause of death of Mr. Ruple who died on the day of the mishap.

He also described the cause of death of Mrs. Ruple. Morgan was traveling on Highway 178 and made a left turn, it was testified, to enter County Highway S-3864. Patrolman Nichols quoted Morgan as saying he did not see the motorcycle on which the Ruples were riding until it was upon him as he was making a left turn. Patrolmen Nichols said Morgan said he was driving about 5 to 10 mph.

Louri VISIBSES Petit Jurors For This Week Petit jurors were for the week Thursday afternoon after a jury was drawn for the second of such trials in Orangeburg County court of general sessions, Circuit Judge James B. Morrison of Georgetown officiating. There was one guilty plea taken, that of a white twelfth grade student charged with violation of the liquor law. Roger Rutland stood with his mother as Judge Morrison sentenced him to serve 90 days or pay a fine of $300. When Tom Friday, representing young Rutland, told the judge the defendant's family would pay the fine if given time, the judge granted 60 days before the sentence goes into effect.

One defendant was found guilty by a petit jury. Ho was Jesse Hilliard, charged with forgery. Judge Morrison sentenced him to serve three years, suspended upon service of one year, with probation for three years. The other jury trial, that of Joseph Tukes, charged with housebreaking and larceny, was declared a mistrial by the court at 1:40 p.m. The case had been started Wednesday.

Solicitor Julian S. Wolfe, representing the state, said that Friday morning will he devoted to the taking of additional guilty pleas in an effort to clear county jail. He noted that the panel of jurors to serve the second week of the term must report for duty Monday at 10 a. m. Leadership Shake-Up In USSR? MOSCOW (AP) The imminence of an important Soviet Communist party Central Committee meeting on economic problems has provoked rumors of impending changes in the top Soviet leadership.

Western authorities on Soviet affairs say they are inclined to discount the reports, or at least lean to the view that if changes are made it will be done this time in an orderly fashion. One of the most persistent reports concerns Anastas I. Mikoyan, the durable old Bolshevik who heads the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet in a role equivalent to president of the U.S.S.R. This rumor says Mikoyan will retire on his 70th birthday, Nov. 25.

Other speculation centers about Leonid I. Brezhnev, 57, who is Nikita Khrushchev's successor as head of the Communist party first secretary and Alexei N. Kosygin, 61, who took the premiership after Khrushchev fell last October. CARPET 5-YEAR Guarantee Against wear on Pro-Rated Basis! Mothproof! Fireproof! soldier is Bringing Baby Home LANSING, Mich. Nine-month-old Michele a Vietnamese girl Spec.

4 William C. Lansing, won't be left when Kendall comes the war Sept. 29. Camille Sam Abood, attorney representing (AP) -(best birthday present I ever Marie, got," she said. acopted by The Kendalls, married seven Kendall years, have of no children of their in Saigon home from own.

"This isn't a complete endLansing ing," Abood said. "We have to Kendall's formalize the adoption now. wife, said U.S. Rep. Charles Chamberlain, arranged Thursday for temporary visa to allow the da girl to enter the country.

Marie's entry had been blocked by U.S. immigra- tie laws since the giri had been adopted without Kendall's wife, Sandra, ever seeing her. The latest report reached Mrs. Kendall on her 28th birth- FAT OVERWEIGHT Available to you without a doctor's prescription, our product called Odrinex. You must lose ugly fat or your money back) Odrinex swallowed.

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bungled the Dominican Republic Crss. Sens. Everett M. Dirksen, George Smathers, and Thomas J. Dodd, joined in defending Johnson's decision to send troops into the island republic Rep.

Wayne L. Hays, D- Ohio, declined to serve as a congressional delegate to the United Nations, saying he could not "conceive of my own self as being a Charlie McCarthy to Ambassador (Arthur Goldberg's Edgar Bergen." The House defeated a Republican move to force the postmaster general to give Congress the names of youths hired as summer WASHINGTON (AP) The time is near for first action on challenges of would-be voters listed by federal voting examiners in three Southern states dur. ing the past month. Civil Service Commisson spokesman said Thursday federal hearing officers are now reviewing what they referred to as 627 "challenges and so-called challenges" filed in Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi. The spokesmen said they anticipate that the hearing officers will begin filing decisions next week.

The challenges had to be filed against initial listings by Sept. 10 and hearing officers must announce decisions within 15 days thereafter. WASHINGTON (AP) Both Republicans and Democrats blasted Thursday at Sen. J. W.

Fulbright's charge that massive U.S. intervention in the crisis was a "grievous mistake" based on exaggerated fear of Communists. But Sen. Wayne Morse, D- applauded the A Arkansas Democrats contention that the Johnson administration's actions could stifle social revolution against military juntas and economic oligarchies in Latin America. Morse, chairman of the LatinAmerican subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee which Fulbright heads, said the Defense Department and the Central Intelligence Agency are trying to block the goals of the Alliance for Progress by aiding factions "that cling to the past." WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate passed Thursday night a much- revised version of President Johnson's highway beautification bill which he has pronounced fully acceptable despite the changes.

The measure includes a program for limiting billboards and screening junkyards from view along 266,000 miles of the nation's principal roads. It authorizes $120 million a year to be spent on landscaping and scenic enhancement along the right-of-way of all of the federal-aid highways. The bill, passed 63-14, goes now to the House where the Public Works Committee is preparing to approve similar legislation. It is on Johnson's must list for the 1965 session. CELEBRATES FOR WEEK TEHRAN, Iran (AP) Iran is in the midst of a week-long silver jubilee celebration of the reign of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi.

About 80,000 men and women began it at a midnight prayer session in the hills nearby praising Allah and the royal family and the shah's reforms, including votes for women, the literacy corps, workers' profitsharing, land reform and forest nationalization. day, and "It's the biggest and Mail orders Filled Admiral. DELUXE 30" Electric Range Model FE3052 PUTS THE HEAT IN YOUR IN YOUR KITCHEN! Fast heat, quick cool Flex-0-Heat surface units Single dial control Bake or Broil Oven operation Variable Broiling -just move the dial, not the rack even door simplifies oven cleaning Porcelain back panel, cook top, oven door Full width storage drawer 4 easy-access levelers high, wide, deep. Choice of White or Shaded Copper Bronze NO MONEY DOWN Only $2.75 Weekly! Furniture Company 174 Brouchton Street, S.W. Dial 534-6270 SALE! NYLON BROADLOOM CARPET WITH FOAM PADDING! AUTUMN BROWN AND DESERT BEIGE ONLY! REG.

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