Page Two The Chapel Hill Weekly Chapd Hill, North Carolina 12« E. Rwwiary T«tephon* »-1271 or 8461 Published Every Tuesday ami Friday By The Chapel Hill PaMishing Company, lae. Louis Graves Contributing Editor Joe Jones Managing Editor Billy Arthur - Associate Editor Chuck Hauser Associate Editor Orville Campbell General Manager O. T. Watkins Advertising Director Charlton Campbell Mechanical Supt. Entered u tecond- of the fruit without the consent of Black. The ownership of the entire tree as a unit i- determined by the location of the trunk. The law recognises the practi cal difficulties which would be involved in giving to each of the adjoining landowners an undivided .share of the tree in proportion to the degree of nourishment supplied to the m f Like Chapel Hill : == By Billy Arthur » —r-jjj My thoughts of having recovered from the pneu monia received a setback when Bob Bartholomew tele phoned. He had no sooner started talking than 1 began a coughing spell. “Huh,” he huhhed, “you don t sound well vet. You still got the Oteen giggles.” ♦ * * * Take it from me, if you want attention and con sideration, don’t pay your bills. While confined at home, I phoned and propositioned Bob Cox that if he would come by the house, pick up and make a bank deposit, I would pay him what I owed him. You guessed it. He never ran so fast on the gridiron. Then this week, my account settled, I asked for a ride down town in the early morning. You guessed it again. He drove right by the house without stop ping, as.if he didn’t know who lived there. So from now on when I want anything done, I’m going to hang folks on the arm, and keep them there. * * * * If you were lucky some weeks back, you could have entered Eubanks’ Drug Store and been enter tained by some melodious singing. The music came from Miss Joyce Nelson, the young and pretty pharma cist on the premises. Miss Nelson didn’t sing all the time. It was only when the store was empty of customers. When a cus tomer entered, she would stop. So you had to be lucky enough to steal into the establishment. Now it’s different. I’ve sneaked in several times trying to get an earful of music, but she’s not singing any more. The other day I asked why. “Well Billy,” she said, “I quit singing for good when they invited Norman Cordon instead of me to lead the Christmas carols.” • * • • Jake Conners says he knows the man in Texas “who claims to be the world’s champion barbecue ar tist. He says he can barbecue anything except the Word of God and sunset tonftrrow.” * • * * Getting a Christmas present for the missus always has been a laborious task so ofttimes I try to trap her into revealing what she would like. The other evening I read an advertisement and then started putting questions. “Lookit this—a mink trimmed petticoat. What would you do with one of those?” I asked. “If I had a mink trimmed petticoat,” she confessed, ‘Td wear it outaide of my dress.” —Photo by Lavergne AMOS HORNE is varied, not monotonous when you’re working on the outside.” Mr. Horne has been with the Chapel Hill Police Department for about two years. Before go ing with the force, he did con* struction work at the Univer sity. At present, he said, he and his wife ate caught in the chaos known only to home builders. ‘‘We wait only for the day we can move in,” he said. “The next time I want a house, I won’t build it. I’ll buy it ready made.” tree by the land of such own er-. Ownership of the tree Car rie- with it one of the rare in staitce* of a license, arising by law irrespective of consent, giving to the owner of the tree the right to enter on the ad joining land arid to gather the fruit growing on such over hanging branches. * 4 * The trunk of a tree is whol ly on the land of Black, but it# branches and roots extend nAn the land of White. Is ihiie liable to Bla< k if he cat* off the blanches and roots which have extended • upon hi.- land ? No. White may cut the branches and root- to the line without liability for any re sulting damage to the tree. The owner of a tiee ha.- no easement of natural right to have his tree continue to draw nourishment from and to shade Chapel Hill Chaff (Continued from page 1) she now did all her writing on the typewriter. This has enabled her to solve her mis spelling problem in away I never heard of before. ‘‘l have alw'ays been a poor speller,” she said, “and what’s given me more trouble than anything else is the question of which comes first, the ’e’ or the ‘i’, in words like ‘receive’ and ‘believe’ and ‘thief’ and ‘siege’. When I wrote with a pen or a pencil, I had to put it down one way or the other, and of course often I’d get it wrong. Now' I write it both ways. I tap ‘ie’ and then over the top of that I tap lightly ‘ei’. This makes it look as if I know how to spell the word but have just made a mistake on the first try by tapping the keys in the wrong order.” by virtue of ovei hanging branches the adjoining land of a neighbor. The cut ‘branches and roots belong to the owner of the tree, not to the neighbor who cut.- them. If the roots of trees extend across the boundary line into the premises (if an adjoining owner and cause damage, as by the clogging of a sewer line, there may be a recovery of damages for any injury sus tained. The injured property owner may also get a court order in the form of injunctive re!i»-fcagainst encroachment of such roots upon his property. ♦ * # Green and Blue are adjoining property owners. The trunk of a tree is directly on the bound ary line between the adjoin ing owners. Who owns the tree and what are the rights of the parties iri respect to the tree ? Where the trunk of a tree is growing directly on the boundary line, the tree belongs in equal shares to the two ad joining owners as tenants in common. Each has an equal in terest in every part of the tree whether on his or the adjoin ing land. If either destroys or injures the tree without the consent of the other, he is liable to the other for one-half of tin damage. The peculiar result of this doctrine is that the ten ant in common of the tree has less r ight to cut off its branch es than he would if it belong ed wholly to the adjoining own er. The only way a landowner can get rid of a tree growing directly on the boundary line without the eori.-ent of his neighbor is to cut it down and then he prepared to an swer in damages for one-half of the value of the tree. If you have angered your neigh bor, the chances are that he will place a higher value on the tree than you. If he sues you, the value of the tree will he determined by a jury. , , * This is the last of a fall series of articles that have ap peared weekly during the past three months. They have been written for the non-lawyer as a public service of the North Carolina Bar Association. “The Tools of My Trade” “There’s that word ‘stated’ I’m always encountering in print. Somehow it’s one of the printed words, for one never hears it in speech save from the lips of some bombastic speaker of the type that’s go ing to give you a thought to take ho/ne with you. The people I talk with just -ay things. They don’t state them. ‘‘While we’re on the sub ject of words, I make a motion we throw one in common usage srnaekdab out of the language. The word is “located.” Once in a blue moon it fills a useful purpose. For example, if the police have been looking high and low for some character and finally find him, then you can properly say he was located. But to say that a store is located at such and such an address is to say that no one knew where it was, but by George the fellow who wrote the copy finally found it, even if the merchant did try to keep his ‘location’ a secret. I suppose I like to talk about words for the same reason a carpenter likes to talk about a new saw. After all, words are the tools of my trade.”— C. A. Paul in the Elkin Tribune “R. B. House, Chanellor of the University, preached the laymen’s Day sermon at the First Methodist Church. He has the amazing knack of generating a wonderful warm th inaide you as he epeaks. This la a talent possessed by few men. It is difficult to deecribe. I suppose it ia the sincerity of the man coupled with a simple, friendly tone that makes what he says so pleasurable. It is a blessed gift."—E. A. Reach in the Chatham News of Siler City. On the Town r TnranmsSßHSlinriltKii l By Chuck Hauser cnMNNHMMHMMMNM Last year’s model of the family ear limped along with 180 horsepower. This year’s buzzed out with 200 horsepower and more. By next year, the automobile manufacturers promise, we will be able to buy a regu lation model sedan with a cool 250 horses throbbing under the hood. What a boon to the man who must drive back and forth between his office and his home every day! Few voices are heard asking, “Why do we need all this horsepower?” Few dare question the practice of making each year’s model more powerful than the last. The reason? Increases in power represent Progress, and the consumer has been told he is living in an Age of Progress. And colors! Colors to dazzle a sultan and awe p king! We have finally reached the four-tone stage, and the designers are happily mixing untold numbers of combinations for the future. A recent ad in Life magazine pictured a popular model car with a white top, a body colored half and half charcoal gray and red, And a bright orange-yellow panel swept back over the rear wheels to set off the pattern. The consumer is truly the Man of the Hour, and he has Progress thrust upon him by the snowshovel ful. He gets more powerful engines, even though he has no earthly need for them. He gets more length, in spite of the fact that he has trouble parking his 1955 jalopy between the white lines the police depart ment painted back in the days when cars were made in normal sizes. He gets more colors, though he secretly would prefer a nice conservative black or dark blue (but his neighbors have just taken delivery on a simple three-tone sedan—canary yellow, shock ing rose, and aquamarine). What else does he get? Power steering, power brakes, power windows and power seats (four-way). Electric-eye headlight dimmers, electronic station se lectors for the hi-fi radio, and taillights as big as fishbowls and getting bigger. Gimmicks, gadgets and gewgaws in ever increasing numbers. Alfred North Whitehead once mentioned the love of Americans for things “vivid, and red, and swift.” He was talking about fire engines, but his words could easily be carried over to a broader field of J’he American love for the noisy, speeding machin«B of mercy illustrates a pattern of behavior that is evidenced in our race to build bigger and faster and brighter automobiles. W hether this fascination with speed and power is merely a temporary upturn on a cyclic wheel or a blind rush toward inevitable oblivion, we cannot yet tell. For America is a young country, and it is shaking itself loose from slowness and caution and conservatism with a great burst of energy, as a giant shatters his chains and then, fascinated with the realization of his power and intoxicated with the appreciation of his new freedom, destroys everything around him. V‘ There is no thought of turning back. We have passed the 200 horsepower mark, and we have set our sights on 200 by 1957! And we are still employing wasteful internal combustion engines to propel our vehicles! There are varieties of color yet unmixed, and we will splash them around in four and five-tone combinations until we weary of such simple efforts and start painting each door and fender skirt a different hue. We will lengthen and widen our car bodies two-lane roads will have to be legislated into one-ways, and curbs will have to be repainted to indicate room for two or possibly three parallel-parked automobiles to the city block. We will add electronic gadgets until the driver will be able to push a destination button on the con trol panel, settle back in the comfort of his mobile parlor, enjoy a cocktail (mixed by an electronic sha (Continued on Page 7) ... to your futiwe^^^ when you make it a habit to save regularly! Clouda of adversity may gather . . . some rain may even fall. But money-in-the-bank will shine through your darkest hours . . . give you a sustaining sense of security when you need it most . . . fortifying your faith in sunnier days to follow. A steadily growing savings account is your soundest foundation for a happy successful life. Start it growing now! NAME COUNTY BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION We«t Franklin St. Tel. 0.8761 Friday, December 16, 1955