(On Top of Old Smokey)
"on top of old smokey all covered in snow I lost my true Lover by courting to slow oh courting is pleasure and apart is a fried a false heart is a sweetheart is worse than a thief" ... lyrics to songs continue.
(Front) "[illegible] Train Program WESC Greenville South Carolina Tuesday July 31, 1956
Give Mother My Crown - Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs
Where No One Stands Alone - [illegible] Davis also Wally Fowler and Sunshine Boys
Jesus Saviour Pilot Me - George Morgan
It's a Dark Dark Place - Maddy Brothers and Rose
From the Manger to the Cross - Johnnie and Jack - Carl Story
Mrs. Lillie Plumley
508 Poplar Drive
Greer, South Carolina"
More songs are listed on the back of the paper.
"Chesnee, S.C.
R.F.D. #2
Dear Aunt,
I am sending you those songs you wanted.
Write to us & come when you can.
Love,
J.K. Lindsey
P.S. Write to us & let us know if you get your songs.
Greenville News Thursday, October 5th, 1933
Title: "Ku Klux Klan is Instrumental in Returning Child"
"Baby, Six Weeks Old, Taken From Father and Turned Over to Mother"
A week before the publication of the newspaper a father beat his wife and kidnapped their 18-month-old escaping to a family member's home in Mills Mill. The Poinsett Klavern No. 26 decided to take the baby from the father and return it to its mother. The child was reported to be healthy after the incident. It was also reported that the father had stopped working and required the mother to support the family independently.
Transcription of a news story written in the Greenville News titled "Ku Klux Klan is Instrumental in Returning Child". Transcribed on October 5th, 1933. See item 2024.13.1.2 for more information.
Tup Lucas purchased The Greer Citizen from P. W. Smith on June 1, 1936. He owned it five years until 1941. Tup had formerly been editor and publisher of the Easley Progress, and then was with the Seneca Journal.
In 1938, he began a commercial printing business in Greer called Economy Press.
The Greer Community Council was formed in April 1938, and Tup Lucas was named President. In July of that year Mayor H. J. Lanford appointed Lucas to a committee to study the possibility of bringing a modern hospital to Greer.
In August 1938 he was voted in as one of 12 directors of the Greer Chamber of Commerce. He served as president of the Chamber in 1939-1940.
On August 2, 1941, a Greenville News article reported that Lucas, the former owner of the Citizen, had purchased the Seneca Journal and was moving to Seneca.
In March 1942, Lucas purchased the Greer Citizen for a second time from Reese Combs. He sold the Seneca Journal and moved to Greer. On June 1, 1942 he brought in Edd Burch as publisher and editor; the Greenville News reported that Lucas would "remain connected with the weekly in another capacity." On June 11 the Walterborough, S. C. Press and Standard reported that Lucas had sold the Seneca Journal and moved back to Greer to "resume management of the Greer Citizen" and that he had "found a new editor" for the paper — referencing Burch. In May, 1943, a Greenville News article called Lucas the former owner of the Greer Citizen and reported that he had purchased the Philadelphia, Mississippi Neshoba Democrat, taking over on May 1. The family moved to Mississippi later that year.