Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Oct. 29, 1937, edition 1 / Page 3
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Friday, October 29, 1937 Kiwanis Delegates Go to Charlotte Six delegates, George Hellen, B. R. Strowd, W. M. Pugh, P. A. Reavis, J. P. Jones, and Allison Honeycutt, have gone to Char lotte to represent the Chapel Hill Kiwanis club at the 17th an nual convention of the Carolinas Kiwanis district. Mrs. Honey cutt is also attending the con vention. Mr. Honeycutt, former dis trict president, will take part in the program\Mr. Hellen is the president-elect of the Chapel Hill club, and Mr. Pugh is the sec retary. The convention, held at the Hotel Charlotte, is being attend ed by approximately 500 Ki wanians and their wives from North and South Carolina. It began yesterday and will con tinue through tomorrow morn ing. Kiwanis officials and prom inent speakers and singers will be on the program. Entertainment of the wives of the.-delegates is an important feature of the convention. They will be feted at a theatre party this afternoon and will conduct a Kiwanis luncheon of their own. They will discuss husband maV agement, the preparation of meals, and other household prob lems. They will also have time for shopping expeditions and sight-seeing tours while their husbands are attending the reg ular business session. Delegates and their wives were entertained together last night at an informal dance and Henderson Will Speak in Knoxville Today Archibald Henderson will ad dress the mathematics section of the East Tenhesaee Education Association this afternoon at Knoxville, Tenn. His topic will be “Some Intimate Interrelations of ElemeneitiT *»<f the Higher Mathematics/* When I heard about this it seemed so exciting that I asked Mr. Henderson to give me in advance some passages from his manuscript. One passage is: “It is a sin gular fact, full of a latent sig nificance, that the elementary problem which furnished the starting point of the present re search, should have baffled the best efforts of some famous mathematicians and given rise to a surprising number of inade quate and often grossly erroneous NOTICK OF 11 KB AI, K -l.fc.Mll - and by virtue of tha power conferred upon mo in s certain deed of trout, executed to me by Mack De- Graffenried dated September 4, 1036, registered in the Office of the Register of Deed* of Orange County <n Book 30, at Page 248, to secure the indebt edness therein described, and default having been made in the payment of the said indebtedness, and having been requested to do so by the bolder of the note evidencing said indebtedness, I will offer for ra-eale at public auc tion, to the highest bidder for cash, at the Post Office Door in Chapel Hill, N. C., at 12:00 noon, on WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1087, the following described property, to wit: Adjoining the lands of Staley Lon ff, Price Creek, Hillsboro and Pitteboro Road and others, and BEGINNING at a rock in the Hiliaboro and Pitta boro Road, Staley Long’s corner, for merly S. B. Petty** comer of a lot known at Lot No. 1, thence West 86 chains to a stake in a branch, W, A. Long's line, formerly Ju. Atwater's line; thence with said branch aa it meanders to Price's Creek; thence down the same aa it meandera to a white oak; thence Seat 8 chain* to a red oak, B. C, Wilson's corner; thence North 38 deg. East 4JO chains to the old road; thence North with the old road f chains to a stake; thence Norik it dag. Seat with the said road 18 JO chains to tha middle of the said Hiliaboro and Pitteboro Road; thoaao North Id dag. Watt with •aid road U.7» chains t« the ftrrt sta tion, coatefaiac Jf» acres, at veyed to tfaek PoGraffenriad If deed of C. L. Lindsay awl wife dated Sep tember 4, I*B4 recorded ht said Reg ister's Office Is Book 104, Paw 808. The bidding will start at 8840 JO. . Tha salt will bo hold opon for tm yesterday afternoon with a golf tournament. The most important events of the convention, the Governor's banquet and reception and ball, will be held tonight. No speech es will be made at the banquet. Instead, a musical extravaganza will be staged by Dorothy Baker, soprano; Maury Pearson, bari tone; Peter Martin, xylophon player; Michael Wise’s concert orchestra; the Charlotte male chorus, and several quartets. Among the prominent men on the convention program are W. T. Laprade of Duke University, W. P. Jacobs of Clinton, S. C., J. Lathrop Morehead of Dur ham, James P. Gallagher of Newton, Mass., Kiwanis inter national trustee; James M. Lynch of Florence, S. C., past international vice-president; and Joseph P. Sevier of Henderson ville, district governor. Mr. Jacobs, president of Pres byterian College, will speak this morning, and Mr. Gallagher will speak this afternoon at a fellow ship luncheon. Mr. Morehead will conduct an open forum this afternoon, and Mr. Sevier, who is president of the Fassifern school, will preside over the va rious sessions of the convention. Mr. Laprade will speak tomor row morping. Reports from every part of the dis#fct will be heard at the business sessions. The election of district officers will also be held, and the next place of meet ing will be decided upon. so-called solutions. Among the mathematicians, geometers, and physicists, of more or less emi nence, who have attacked the problem may be mentioned Tod hunter, Sylvester, Greenstreet, Lemoine, Maurice, Tarry, Lan vornay, Halsted, Birkboff, and Hopkins, 'The writer’s researches, the results of which are here pre sented, constitute the first basic study ever made of the geo metrical problem and its many inplications and repercussions in other branches of higher math ematics/* . Another: “The original prob lem has been shown by the writ er to be capable of wide general ization, and of / statement in a variety of forms, These gen eralizktions consequently give days to receive increased bids. This-the 18th d*y of October, 1037. _ *_L L : Trustee. NOTICE OF BALE OF LAND Whereas, on the 20th day of Decem ber, 1038, Ossie W, Brewer and Fan nie Brewer executed and delivered un to W. O. McGibony, Trustee for land Bank Commissioner, a certain deed of trust which is recorded in the office of the Register of Deed* for Orange County, North Carolina, In Book 80 at Page 42; and Whereas, default has been made in the payment of the indebtedness there by secured as therein provided, and the trust** has been requested by the owner and holder thereof to exercise the power at sale therein contained: Now, Therefore, under and by vir tue of the authority by the said _d*fd at trust the undersigned Trustee will on the 18th day of No vember, 1087, at the court house door of Orange County, North Carolina, at twelve o’clock noon offer for sale to the highest Udder for cash, the fol lowing real aetata: All of that certain tract of land containing Forty Five and 36/100 (4ft JO) acres, more or lees, lying and being on the waters of Phill’s Creek in Bing bus Township, Orange Coun ty, North Carolina, about five miles northwest from Chapel Hill and bounded on the West by the' lands at U. O. Brewer; on the South by the kndi of Herbert Watson; en the Bart by tha lands o t Lesley, and on the North by the bade of It 0. Brewer Vrilaart The property fai more fully described by notes and hounds In the deed #f Nnrt to which ref- TWs the Ilth day of Ostehnr, 1997. W. O, IfaOIBONY, Trusts*. Bemtar D. Sawyer, , Agssit and Attorney for Trustee. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY, CHAPEL HILL, N. C. Henderson Expounding To His Students rise to a group of interesting, interrelated theorems. The writ er has been so fortunate as to arrive at three different proofs of the generalized theorem in its first form; and proofs of all the other generalizations and the particular theorems immediately arising therefrom. In conclusion is given the writer’s proof of the original problem by means of the elegant technic and discipline of projective geometry.” I became deeply concerned when talking to Mr. Henderson about this lecture, and my con cern was presently expressed in this question: “What about the Carolina- Fordham game next day ? Won’t you run the risk of missing it?’’ “Not on youp life,” he replied. ’Tve figured out my schedule, and I can get here in time for the kick-off.” By nightfall tomorrow Mr. I "You’ll be ahead with a CHEVROLET!" You'll b« ahead in 9»yU—bwauty— imartneii—with this bigger-iooldng, ! better-looking low-priced carl " You'll bo ahnid with a Clmrolotr Th*f. tl» enthusiastic verdict of more and more people ... as they see, drive and compare the new 1938 _* .TSTidd 7 . cn% - A,,d we br,irv * l il will y ,mr ver«li«*t. One.tride ' when you consider all the exclusive extra value* M new to £ (WITH samty SMI au Yuu’ll be ahead in style—comfort- safety. Ifi larger interior.-lighter, And you’ll also be ahead in ali-round Knuttuny, ferighter cetera-end U«l- for Chevrolet’s fsoious Vatt*-in-H*ul Englnt jiaj S |j||S2|A|Sj|j|JU9 uses less gas and oil, and operates with a mini- M wtety. mum of upkeep. See your nearest Clievrolr.t • dealer today for a thorough ibmonairation of Chevrolet superiority. ottoweV Umiijljlill duevaourr motor division. Mm* u, SjUM o*y and dependability. BKWHI red-. UKTMOIT. MICHIGAN t-n-W AT*«. /n*dbn«r l‘U» M • r ~i.i . .. AM' las . *— stumfrty sv mti /'U-- j— re Giving protection ago** d-ott., .moke, wlndrftleld 4 il. .1 uantihitiilM *<■ Jf Ay '. n- MHHW 'll - jirfriF il niSm Mot.r.4 '•"teI?. c 21 MM] Tufts Chevrolet Co., Inc. Henderson will have put the meeting in Knoxville behind him and will be prepared to lecture on "Some Intimate Interrela tions of Elementary and Higher Football.”—L.G. * “ : 1 " University Alumna Dies Mrs. A. D. Ellison of Valdos ta, Ga., a University alumna, died recently of a heart attack# Better known here as Miss Jes sie Langdale, Mrs. Ellison was a student in the University last year. She was married in July. Lear Buying Yackety-Yacks The University’s Publications Union board is offering $1.65 apiece for copies of the 1937 Yackety-Yack. If you have a copy for sale take it to J. M. I/ear’s office in Bingham hall be tween 2 and 5 o'clock in the af ternoon. New Teacher Training Division The establishment in the Uni versity of a division of teacher training has been-annr anced by Dean Robert B. House. “This new division,” Dean House says, “will unify the efforts of the various departments concerned with teacher training, to the end that students may be more' ef fectively guided in the planning of their programs.” The new head of the education depart ment, Harl R. Douglass, will be chairman of the division of Elgin, Hamilton & Popular Priced Watches Largest Stock in Town Join rrf A Small Our L-fJ iw^J,wni Lay-Aw.y ■■QQ IkJ OQHHB Plan [gg-AJ Article L. R. Dekle, Leading Jeweler & Watchmaker—Phone 8611 Headquarter# for Pine Jewelry Over Andrews Henatager The Carolina Playmakers ” \ • present “Johnny Johnson” . by % Paul Green Music by KURT WEILL Memorial Hall, Chapel Hill Today and Tomorrow, Oct. 29 and 30 8:30 P.M. General Admission 50c. Reserved Seat SI.OO Phone 4256 for ticket reservations “The first anti-war play to use laughing gas in its attack on the stupidity of mankind, and to my mind the most effective of all satires in its class.”—Rob’t. Benchley, “New Yorker.” teacher training, which is to be composed of members of the education department and at least one member of each of the other departments in the college of arts and sciences. A Big Sweet Potato W. M. Perkins, a farmer who lives about nine miles north of here, dug some unusually large sweet potatoes out of his patch one day. this week. The biggest one weighs 6 pounds, 4 ounces. It is a foot long and 19 inches in circumference. Page Three
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1937, edition 1
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