FRIDAY ISSUE Next Issue Tuesday Vol. :?2. No. 67 About 3,000 Children to Enroll in Carrboro and District Schools Sept. 5 Miss Glenn i First Polio Victim Here Mary Carolyn Glenn, 10-year old daughter of Mrs. Nancy Glenn Thompson of Carrboro, is in Watts Hospital being treated for poliomyelitis. She was taken there on Wednesday of last week and is the first polio case to be reported Orange County this year. Hospital authorities said yesterday that she does not show any definite evidence qf paralysis. Miss Glenn had not received any polio shots, I)r. O. David Gar '.in, the District Public Health Of ficii, said in reporting the case. In the same home with her were her nine-year-old sister, who had received three shots, and her seventeen year-old brother, who had received none. Dr. Garvin added that Miss Glenn's illness i. a reminder that teen-agers as well as younger children should get polio shots. K. A. Cameron Is Hack From Seattle K. A. Cameron returned Sun day from a two-week trip to Seattle, Washington, where he attended a meeting of the Amer ican Mathematical Society and thr- Mathematical Association of America. He took part in the proceedings as a member of the Association’s special committee on mathematical personnel and education. Mr. Cameron made most of the trip by traiu. Taking the north ern route, he went from here to Winnepeg, Canada, and from there westward on a Canadian Pacific trar ‘o»‘ioerital t.'-s’n. He stopped overnight at Banff, rode a bus next morning to near by Cake Louise, and there re boarded the train. At Vancouver he boarded a ship for Seattle. Mr. Caremon said the Cana dian Rockies are magnificent beyond belief. He added that he enjoyed traveling by the northern route and recommends it highly. Baldwins Are Home From Vacation Trip Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Baldwin and their ten-year old son, Ar chie, returned Wednesday from a vacation trip during which they visited relatives and friends in South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. At Fort Benning, Ga , they visited Mr. and Mrs. Bald win’s son-in-law and daughter, Master Sergeant and Mrs. F. W. Bradshaw. In Florida they saw Silver Springs and went to Daytona Bevh, where Mrs. Baldwin and ArJHe stayed two or three days while Mr. Baldwin visited his brother Ernest in St. Peters burg. On the way home they stopped off in Greenville, S. C., to visit the F. W. Davenports, who are former Chapel Hillians. From Greenville the Baldwins drove north to the Great Smoky Mountains. They visited Chim ney Rock and other points of in terest in western North Carolina.; paralysi Holiday Monday Monday, Labor Day, will be a general holiday throughout Orange County. All public offices, including the University’s, and local bus inesses with the exception of service and entertainment es tablishments gHgJJ be rs |§ '**l day. a groin d*alchr the post be no wi3„ rier deli\ Chap Eviderll in* en rl a.m. Md| SVednesda Bob LeJ Carolina Is one week < meeting of tarians ti Hodges, bu iana so rr and joine<£ to the ham. 5 Cents a Copy t About 3,000 children are ex pected to register in the schools of Carrboro and the Chapel Hill Administrative District rv*xt week, a survey indicated yester day. Some of the schools will be j pushed for space, others will not |be so crowded but will feel the ‘first effects of the growing school i population, principals said. The principals based their es timates of enrollment on the fig ures at hand, histories of late registrations, and some guess work. But, by and large they are not expected to be far off. By schools, the breakdown in anticipated enrollment on the first day next Wednesday fol lows : Miss Mildred Mooneyhan, prin cipal, said she was expecting about 050 students to register at the Chapel Hill F.lementary School, but that she did not ex pect any serious overcrowding. The Glenwood E 1 e m e n tary School expects about -100 stu dents, according to Principal Raymond Kiddoo, and there will more than likely' be more than 1 30 pupils in some of the class rooms. Cart boro Principal Reid Suggs said he looks for about; 475 pu pils to show up next Wednes day. That will necessitate use of I every available space iti the , school. Prinpicaff. .). Wesley Noble is looking fui about 425 students to register at the Chapel Hill High School, which will cause the school to begin feeling the effects of crowding. For instance, use of the visual aids room this year will be shared by the phy sical education class. Mr. Noble also reminded new students, whether they are new i comers to town or from feeder | schools in the county, of the j special orientation program at , the high school next Tuesday morning at 10:30 o’clock. They will meet the teachers, tour the building, and become acquainted with the Chapel Hill High School program and methods. Principal C. A. McDougle an ticipates the Lincoln High School enrollment will be about 405, but believes it will increase before the end of the month. Some of- the rooms will be over crowded, he added. At Northside School Principal lames i’ease is making prepara tions to receive more students than last year when the registra tion was 015, That will crowd almost all rooms there. Considerable work was done in and around the this !summer, and much of it was in complete this week. At the Chap el Hill Flementary School where I fire towers were being installed and some floors tiled, the scene ;could be called a mess. It was doubtful whether the work would be completed by next Wednes day. At Glenwood, the playground space has been trebled in size and, according to Principal Kid doo, “is now 400 percent better.” Carrboro had work done on the ! basement room which was wet and subject to considerable cri-j tieism last year. The room is now said to be dry. Patrons of | that school are hoping construe-j tion of the proposed new school i will begin about November. At the Lincoln School, the gymtorium has been completed, isome repairs made, and the ex iterior of the building painted, i Patrons and school officials hope ! construction of a shop will be gin later in the year. The Chapel Hill Weekly Religious Education Director Named For the Chapel Hill Baptist Church The Rev. Samuel Tilden Habol yesterday announced the ap pointment and the arrival of a new full-time director of religi ous education for the Chapel Hill Baptist Church. She is Miss Bet ty Hodges of McAdams, Miss. M iss Hodges will begin her duties tomorrow (Saturday). Her principal work will be with the young people of the church, with emphasis upon those of high school age. In addition to her special work with young peo ple, she will assist with the en tire educational program of the church and with visitation. Mr. llabel said he considered the church fortunate in being able to secure Miss Hodges. “Her work marks a new era in the life of the church,” he said. I The new educational director ; is 26 years of age, holds a Bache lor of Science degree from Wil jliani ( arey Coljege and her Mas ters degree in Religious Edu-: cation from the New Orleans; Baptist Theological Seminary. She ha-, hail considerable exper ience in denominational work j with young people, having serv jod two summers as field worker Chapel Hill Golf Players Invited to Compete in Tournament This Weekend All golf amateurs who live or work in the Chapel Hill area are i invited to play in the third an nual Jaycee - sponsored golf tournament this Sunday and Monday at- the Finley Golf j Course. Players may enter the | tournament Sunday morning at jthe course, without previous no tification, but they may want to J phone the clubhouse (3-1562) in (advance to check on their pro i liable starting times, j On Sunday, the first day, play jers may make up their own four (somes and choose their own j starting times, but on Monday | they will be grouped according to their first-day scores and as signed starting times. The en try fee is $2, which will include greens fees for; both days. The Calloway handicap system will be .used in scoring the tourn- Keynoter Invited To Address Bally Gov. Frank Clement of Ten nessee, keynote speaker at the recent Democratic convention in Chicago, has been asked to be the principal speaker at a Young Democrats rally on the University campus this fall. UNO Young Democrats will launch a drive for new mem bers at the rally to be belli in September, President George Miller of Spencer said. Winsors Will Move The A. S. Winsors will move to Virginia Beach, Va., in the near future to make their home. They plan to sell their home! here. Mr. Winsor explained that he had a number of relatives there. An ardent golfer, Mr. Winsor is pleased with his new Virginia Beach home because, he says, it’s only about 15 yards from the first tee of the Cava lier Country Club course. New NROTC Instructor Lt. (j.g.) James G. Abert has joined the staff of the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps Unit at the University here. Lt. Abert will assume his duties as assistant professor of Naval Science at the beginning of the Fall semester. He will instruct first year students enrolled as midshipmen in the NROTC unit here. CHAPEL HILL. N. C.. FRIDAY. AUGUST Si, MB MISS BETTY lIOIMIES for the Mississippi Training Un ion Department and two sum mers as staff-member of Camp Garaywa, Clinton, Miss., a camp operated for young people by the Woman’s Missionary Union of Mississippi. This past summer Miss Hodges served as assistant camp director. ;ament, and IK holes will be play jed each day. Trophies will be j awarded flight w inners, and ro tating trophies will be awarded ; low gross and low net winners. Fail Blackburn of Fowler’s I Store, and Gordon Perry Jr. of I I he University National Bank are chairmen of the tournament. Carrboro School Registers Tuesday Registration for children en tering school for the first time will be held at Carrboro and six other Orange County schools next Tuesday from 2 to 4 p.m. The other schools which will register new pupils Tuesday at the same time are Cameron Park, Caldwell, Efland, Murphey, West Hillsboro, and White Cross. All pupil's who will enter the! school for the first time must be present with at least one of their parents for the registration. The; parents must also bring along the child’s immunization record and birth certificate or a certi-1 fled copy of it. Book fees will be I collected at the same time. Dancing Schools Taking Enrollments ( Impel Hill’s two outstanding schools of dance—the Hounds Studio and Mrs. liaghy’s art- to day announcing the start of ■' classes and their programs for | the year. Enrollments are now being taken. Mrs. V. E. Bounds will begin I classes at her studio in the < 'arl Smith Building, 115 North Co j lumbia Street, on September 10. Mrs. English liagby will begin classes at the Little Bed School House and at Mrs. Wettach’s Kindergarten during the first week of October. Mrs. Bounds will offer pre ballet instruction for children from three to seven years of age, beginning tap dancing, bal , let and toe classes, intermediate and advance tap instruction, adult-beginners ballet, high school arid adult couple ball room dancing, and social danc ing for children in the fifth through the eighth grades. Mrs. Bagby’s program in cludes fundamentals of the dance for young girls from kindergar ten through grades three, ballet classes for grades one through three, beginning toe dancing, and folk dancing for boys and girls. She will teach social and round dancing for boys and girls in grades five through eight at the Carrboro Mills to Celebrate Holiday i Carrboro Mills will close only Monday in observance of the Labor Day holiday and will not operate on the following Satur-j day, September 8, according to an announcement by Thomas B. Murray, Plant Manager . Mr. Murray said that a number of other plants in the Burlington Industries would close for the entire week because of poor market conditions in a par ticular segment of textiles. It is understood that plants of other major weavers of synthet ic fabrics will also close the en tirc week in many Chapel Mill Chaff L. G. I have never known an alumnus more devoted to the University than the Cuban, Thomas L. Llorens, who was here this week with his wife and pretty eight-year-old daughter, Maria del Carmen. He was graduated in 1911, and in the 45 years since then he has been coming every two or three years to see his friends and stroll about the campus and the village. Mr. Llorens has lived all his life in l’alma, a little city in eastern Cuba about thir ty miles from the big city of Santiago. He and his broth ers Francisco and Felix en tered the University in the fall of 1907. Their record of residence here, I feel sure, has never been match ed by any other students: four yeaj's without going back home a single time. Mr. Llorens speaks Span ish and F.nglish .with equal ease, but his wife and their granddaughter speak only Spanish. Excuse me, that’s not precisely true: I did hear two English words from Maria; when she accepted the offer of a piece of can dy she said “thank you.” She sat on a couch while her lather and I talked and she made a charming picture with her clear-cut features, her dark eyes and hair, and her dainty lace-trimmed frock. Women Voters to Distribute Leaflets Mrs. Richmond Bond, presi dent of the Chapel Hill Unit of. the l eagi. • of Women Vot ers, said yesterday that the league now has available and will distribute on September S leal lets detailing and explain ing the proposed amendments to the North Carolina Consti tution. The leaflets state the argu ments both for and against passage of not only the amendments relating to the schools but also those relating 1 to the sessions of the General Assembly and powers of at torney for women. ( hapel Hill Country Club, and ■ her High School Dance Club, which is limited to 10 boys and 10 girls, will have its first of six supervised parties on October 27. The complete list of classes and the schedules of both Mrs. i Bounds’ ami Mrs. Bagby’s schools of dancing appear else where in today’s issue of the Weekly. Hospital Traffic i Gets a New Lane This was a banner week for paint in Chapel Hill and for rno ■ torists who have heretofore had difficulty making a left turn into N. C. Memorial Hospital [larking lot from the Pittsboro Koad. » The Town of Chapel Hill this I week painted new directional ; markers on practically every I principal street in town. “We !used just about every drop we jhad," commented Town Mana ger Tom Rose. He, police, and hospital offi cials were apparently well-pleased that they had been able to work jout a traffic lane system to facilitate the left turn into Me morial Hospital parking lot from the Pittsboro Koad. j The new marking puts hos pital traffic into the left lane moving south and permits non-i turning traffic to move on the' extreme right lane. It will great jly expedite the flow of traffic, ,it is believed. Y. Z. Cannon Out j Y. Z. Cannon, who suffered a heart attack several weeks ago,! was able to be out .Wednesday! for the first time. He was down! ! street shaking hands with his i friends, but is not permitted to to work. 282 New Voters Two hundred and eighty-two new voters registered in Chapel Hill and Carrboro during the past three- weeks to vote in the forth coming election on constitution^ Governor Hodges Coming To Speak Twice Tuesday On School Amendments wbhbbib - 1088- B 9 BKto I "IH B ■hEB& sHB *The Magic Pin / Book by Ina Forbus, To Be Issued Next Week by Viking Press “The Magic Pin,” a children’s :book by Ina B. Forbus, who lives near Chapel Hill in an old mill house on Cane Creek, will be published next Thursday, Sep tember 6, by the Viking Press and autographed copies will be on sale at the bookshops here. Its price is $2.50. An announcement of the book’s publication says: “ ‘The Magic Pin’ is a tender fantasy of a small girl whose gift for understanding the lan-| iguage of birds and animals help-! ed to unravel a mystery. The animals down at Crickety Creek adopted her as their friend— j Ebenezer the mule, tienjie the crazy-talking bat, Mortimer Q. |Mole, and Arammta B. Bushy tailj better known as Minty the squirrel. As friends always do, they helped one another, anil be cause of this happy friendship wonderful things were accom plished. Delightful characteristics give warmth and reality to this 1 lovely outdoor story. "The book grew out of Ina Forbus’s special love for atu- Art Gallery’s Holiday The Person Hall Art Gallery will be closed throughout the Labor Day weekend and will re open Tuesday, September 4. Ren tal pictures normally due to be returned on September 2 may be returned Tuesday, September 4, and still be on time. Draw Winners of Television Set ’-j aMßib '