The Greenville News from Greenville, South Carolina (2025)

Data From NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE. NOAA, U.S. Dept. of 80 Commerce 70 60 70 80 70 2 8 80 Rein 90 COLD Showers REIN 100 90 FORECAST Figures Show High Temperatures 90 Expected For Daytime Sunday Isolated Precipitation Not Indicated- Consult Local Forecast -the Grienollle News June 23, 1974 13-Year-Old Youth Dies Storms Strike Midwest Area After Being Hit By Car By United Press International Weather Data GREENVILLE TEMPERATURES Saturday Year Ago High 92 84 71 68 Average 82 76 Normal 77 High for month (22nd) 92 Year ago (17th) 91 Low for month (17th) 49 Yeor ago (1st) 56 Accumulated excess (plus) deficiency (minus) For month to date -45 For vear to date HUMIDITY a.m. Noon p.m.

PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 8 p.m. 12 hours ending 8 p.m. .0 For month to 8 p.m. 1.45 For vear to 8 p.m. 23.24 Accumulated departures (plus or minus) For month to 8 p.m.

For year to 8 p.m. Sunrise Sunday 6:16 a.m. Sunset Sunday 8:46 p.m. Mountains: Partly cloudy and warm Sunday and Monday with chance of thundershowers. Highs around 90.

Lows around 70. Probability of rain 30 per cent Sunday and Sunday night. Westerly winds 10 to 15 mph Sunday, and 5 to 10 mph Sunday night. Coasts: Partly cloudy and warm Sunday and Monday with chance of thundershowers. Highs in the 90s.

Lows in the 70s. Probability of rain 30 per cent Sunday and Sunday night. Winds westerly 10 to 15 mph Sunday, and 5 to 10 mph Sunday night. SOUTH CAROLINA: Partly cloudy and warm through Monday with a chance of thundershowers. Lows in the 70s.

Highs in the 90s. NORTH CAROLINA: Showers and thundershowers through Sunday night, followed by partly cloudy and considerably cooler Monday. Lows in the 60s mountains and 70s elsewhere. Highs Sunday in the 80s and 90s. Highs Monday in the 705 and 80s.

GEORGIA: Partly cloudy through Monday with thundershowers likely during the afternoon and evening. Lows in the 50s north to around 70 in the southeast. Highs Sunday in the mid 80s to around 90. Highs Monday in the upper 70s north and upper 80s south. News Capsules Gas Consumption Rises WASHINGTON (UPI) Gasoline consumption in the United States hit a new record in 1973 despite a supply crimp, the president of the American Petroleum Institute (API) said Saturday.

Frank N. Ikard said Americans used 106 billion gallons of gasoline last year, or 4.3 per cent more than in 1972. 4 Bodies Found WAYNE, Okla. (UPI) The bodies of a well-known Wayne, homebuilder, his wife and two children were taken to Oklahoma City Saturday for examination by the state medical examiner. The four were found Friday shot to death in their home.

The McClain County sheriff's office said Shirley Brakefield, 40, a former high school administrative secretary, shot and killed her husband, Ray, 44, their son Jeff, 14 and daughter, Kelley, 10, early Friday and then killed herself. An older son, Steve, was not at home at the time of the shootings. U.S., Spain WASHINGTON (UPI) agreed Saturday base their principles similar to the new way toward a renewal of leases A State Department spokesman Henry A. Kissinger and Spanish dented declaration on principles homic cooperation in Madrid July Agree The United States and Spain relations on a declaration of NATO guidelines, smoothing the on U.S. military bases.

said Secretary of officials will sign the unpreceof military, political and eco9. Pope Sees New Hope VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope Paul VI said Saturday there is a new ray of hope in the Middle East and urged a just and dignified solution to the Palestinian refugee problem. Addressing the Sacred College of Cardinals in his annual State of the Church and the World Message, the pontiff said: 2 Men Take Film CHICAGO (UPI) Two men with bogus police badges, apparently thinking the film was either too dirty or not dirty enough, burst into the projection room of a West Side theater Friday night and stole a copy of "Deep Throat." Projectionist Leo Posner, 63, said the well-dressed, middleaged pair flashed the badges, handcuffed him to a railing, covered his mouth and eyes with adhesive tape and ripped the film from the projector. Policeman Killed BELFAST (UPI) A long burst of submachinegun fire from a speeding car Saturday killed one uniformed policeman and seriously wounded another in a Protestant area of Belfast crowded with weekend shoppers, police said. A civilian also was wounded in the spray of gunfire.

The shooting raised to 1,039 the death toll in nearly five years of strife in Northern Ireland involving Protestants, Catholics and security forces. The gunmen got away through the crowded streets and their abandoned car was found minutes later two miles away in the Roman Catholic Bone area of the city. Bicycle Patrol CONCORD, N.J.(AP) Patrolman Robert F. Libby has. installed a bicycle rack on his police cruiser and carries a 10-speed cycle around for use as a crime fighting tool.

He often leaves the cruiser, mounts the bicycle, and patrols back alleys and parks. In the experimental program begun Friday night, Libby uses one of the abandoned or stolen bicycles the department has collected. If the experiment is a success, other cruisers will be similarly equipped, said Police Chief Walter Carlson. "We kicked it around in a staff meeting and it didn't have ovewhelming support," Carlson said. "But maybe it'll be a deterrent to catch a burglar or two." Deaths ALEXANDER, B.F., Greenville Paul, Laurens CHAPMAN, Mrs.

Grace Bernice Dodgens, Rt. 2, Pickens DILL, Arthur Wory, Greenville DOVER, Thresa Lynn, Spartanburg ELLENBURG, Roy Anderson, Rt. 2, Central Jessie David, Kings Mountain, N.C. GREER, Mrs. Willie Lee, Greer Dewey Easley JOHNSON, Michael Cleveland, Greenville JONES, James Cleveland, Greenwood KAUFMANN, William Portland, Maine McALLISTER, Mrs.

Horace Anderson McDOWELL, Harry Foster, Greenville PINION, Roy Henry, Rt. 1, Easley PINSON, Mrs. Luther, Greenville SALTER, Noah Lee, Greenville SANDERS, James Wheller, Greenville William Marion, Whitmire SMITH, Lonnie Clinton STEPHENS, Jesse Earl, Pelzer WEST, Mrs. Horace Spartanburg WILLIAMS, Homer, Greenville later. Obituaries on Page 34 Tornadoes, threats of tornadoes, torrential rains and flooded streams and highways formed Saturday's dreary weather picture for an already drenched Midwest.

Storms broke out unevenly throughout the area. But the strongest concentration was in Iowa and in Illinois where one tornado touched down 1 near Congerville in the west central part of the state and damaged a house and barn. Funnel clouds dipped from dark skies near Kewanee and Cameron in central Illinois and more than two inches of rain poured down in the Peoria and Moline areas of the state. Iowa was pounded by a third series of storms this week, and at least one northwest section of the state, including Sioux City and the farming community of Maurice, was soaked with a fourinch rain. Waterloo officials and crews cruised by boat from door to door, residents from their southside homes after torrential rains caused flash flooding.

A Remsen, Iowa, woman was electrocuted when her car snapped a utility pole and dropped power lines on her car. Reports, difficult to confim because of downed power lines, said that Hardin County officials in Iowa called Marshall County to borrow emergency rescue equipment and scuba divers, presumably to rescue drowning or floodstranded victims. Damaging wind and hail accompanied several thunderstorms, overturning mobile homes and breaking windows near Macomb, Ill. Storm gusts unroofed a former skating rink at Casey, and threw trees across roads. N.C.

Man Is Slain SPARTANBURG David Waters, 28, of Rt. 2, Bostic, N.C., died at Spartanburg General Hospital Saturday at 2:30 p.m. after being shot in the head in Rutherford County, N.C. Authorities at the Rutherford County Sheriff's office said George Murray, 21, also of Rt. 2, Bostic, was being held on a murder charge without bond.

Officers said Waters was shot with a .22 caliber magnum pistol about 1 p.m. They said the shooting apparently climaxed an altercation which began Friday night. Murray was arrested at his home about 30 minutes after the shooting occurred, officers said. The Greenville News. PIEDMONT P.O.

Box 1688 ZIP CODE 29602 305 SOUTH MAIN ST. ALL TELEPHONES 242-5011 Published Saturday and Sunday except Christmas holiday. Second class postage paid at Greenville, S.C. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed int this newspaper as well as all AP dispatches. Subscription Rates When Delivered By Carrier in Cities and Towns Where Carrier Service Is Available: 3 6 Wk.

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$6.00 $13.00 $26.00 $52.00 Daily Only $4.50 9.75 $19.50 $39.00 Sunday Only $2.50 6.50 $13.00 $26.00 Single Copies At Newsstand: Daily, 15c; Sunday, 35c All remittances should be made in the form of Post Office Money Orders, Cashier's Checks, Express Money Orders or personal checks. The Greenville NewsPiedmont Company cannot be responsible for currency unless sent by registered mail. Travel Topics by TOM LIGON Hawaii was originally settled by the Polynesians who migrated there in large seagoing canoes around the sixth century A.D. The English explorer, James Cook was the first Eu-! ropean to visit the island, sailing through the winter months land on Kauai on January 18, 1778 to be followed by missionaires in later years. and the westernization of Hawaii be.

gan. Whether you travel by canoe, sailboat, or by more conventional you will find the heritage Hawaii offers well worth the trip. These islands are so beautiful. Not matter where you travel, come to WOODSIDE WORLD WIDE TRAV. EL.

12 West MeBee Enjoy the carefree enchantment and unique magic of Hawaii. It is relaxing, tropical, and glamorous Call 233-4118 Open Monday Friday 9-5, Saturday by appointment. NGS TO REMEMBER: It is often as easy to travel with children as to leave them at home inquire about possible arrangements. Adv. Michael Cleveland Johnson, 13, of 210 Bear Drive, Chestnut Hills community, died Friday of injuries suffered Thursday when he was struck by a car while riding his bicycle near his home.

Born in Greenville, son of Jack T. and Shirley McDuffie Johnson, he was an grade student at Tanglewood School and attended Judson Pentecostal Holiness Church. Surviving also are a sister, Miss Cathy Johnson of Greenville; two brothers, Rickey and Randy Johnson of Greenville, and a grandmother, POTTERY By DON LEWIS An Unusual Wedding Gift Available from HAMPTON GALLERY LTD. Mrs. Estelle McDuffie of Greenville.

Funeral services will be 4 p.m. Monday at Judson Pentecostal Holiness Church, with burial in Graceland Cemetery. The body is at Thomas McAfee Funeral Home and will be placed in the home on Sunday. MONDAY SPECIAL LUNCHEON MEAT LOAF Two Vegetables Coffee or Tea 1.50 Vince Perone's McAlister Sq. Only Sunday Dinner BUFFET Featuring16 ASSORTED SALADS SEVEN VEGETABLES 3 DELICIOUS ENTRES INCLUDING ROAST BEEF OR ROAST TURKEY DRESSING Holiday 100 S.

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