Page 6 | • • REAL ESTATE • • j REAL ESTATE HEAL ESTATE i I JUST SOLD I Weather’s good and so’s real estate. Foushee-Olsen just sold another good Estes Hills house leaving us with one with 7ft rooms, 2% baths, house on I a boy’s dream of a heavily wooded, deep, down-to- I creek lot. $27,500. Let’s go in it. NEED 6 BEDROOMS? Want five bedrooms (or four and a study) now ■ with another big one all ready to finish and 3 l|| full baths. Cistom-built, easy maintenance mod- I eru brick home. Fine plaster walls, the best oak H floors, a bult-for-children and wear, recreation I coliseum with room for several ping-pong games, I etc; acoustic tiled ceiling, and a separate outside I entrance. Storage abounds in the basement, attic, and throughout. Possibilities for a separate living unit. Large porch, carport with storage, central air condition- I ing and more, all on the big, wooded, in-city-limits lot with city water and sewer. CLOSE-IN COLONIAL This architect designed Colonial has grand 20 I foot master bedroom with two closets, a light I and spacious high ceiling living room with fire- I place and handsome casement windows, a private I screened porch and sundeck too. A comfortable I panelled den, plus a basement and permanent stairs to the big attic area. The construction stands with the best. You can walk to campus and hospital from this fine neighborhood. All city I utilities and services and the price is only $27,900. CHOICEST BUSINESS LOT I Another fine, new, very well located business lot I just listed. Several close-in. LOTS I Fine lots a specialty. For instance: in choice I Greenwood, 2 above the road with good trees, and I water and sewer. RENT-OPTION Try out this sound three bedroom (or 2 and a den), two bath house if you’re not quite ready to buy. Basement, air conditioning, separate din ing room and porch; water, sewer, paving, curb L| and gutter, pleasant private rear view -from liv ing room and dining room. New FHA commitment already set up. FOR RENT- Several three bedroom houses. STARTING; " jjip Three to five bedroom, two and three baths houses. I Factory finished kitchens and built-ins, for home- I making ease. Pretty, easy maintenance baths too, I with vanities, mirrors, ceramic tile and water- I proof papering available too. Choose colors and I materials. Just sold one before foundation was I started but others getting under way. Exclusively Foushee-Olsen .City water, sewer, and paving, I proven plana, (landscaping and drives included). I Call us for more of Foushee-Olsen’s top listings I in all ranges. First in listings, sales, and satisfac- I tion. Professional, experienced Realtors with 40 I years total, combined service as Chapel Hill home I agents. DIAL 968-4431 J REALTORS I——l 6 HORNADAY & COMPANY Realtor Exclusive Agents for Estes Hills Lots WE HAVE NICE LEVEL LOTS 5 MILES OUT ON OLD DURHAM ROAD FOR SALE. ® Col Mer Cobb & Associates Bldg., 140? E. FranUia Phone 942-5365 RKAI ESTATE REAL ESTATE “Service with a personal touch ” Herb Holland Company REAL estate ami HEADQUARTERS OF GOOD LISTINGS ★ Homos ★ Farms ★ Acreage • Commercial Property ★ Building Sites FOR SALE - NICE HOMES IN CHAPEL HILL AND SURROUNDING AREAS SpLD! BUT ANOTHER ONE S GOING UP IN HILLSIDE TATES. A real dream, and very modern. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, l'ving room with fireplace. Entry from enclosed court. Large kitchen, plus dining room. Basement is all brick interior—with fireplace. All brick garage, dining terrace, patio, and service porch. Realtistic price: $21,500. WOULD YOU LIKE TO BUILD? We can help, you with the lot, the budding, and the financing. Let us show you how easily you can plan a new home. We have some of the finest budding prop erty in Chapel Hill—At a reasonable price. This is a good time of year to look! LAND Several tracts near Chapel Hill. Some acreage with timber. Several large tracts. LICENSED REPRESENTATIVES: J. P. Goforth Mrs. Gladys Williams Jim Watson •W-8204 9*7-3251 942-1804 REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE ~ I*l Chapel HilTs Finest Address I I JILL JsL. AU/zAr/ TOWNE HOUSE .OF CHAPEL HILL PHONE 942-2163 9 A.M.-6 P.M. DON RENTING o 65 Ft. Swimming Pool o Water Furnished • Recreation Areas o Individual Patio & Storage • 3-Bedroom Luxury Units Room • 2 Ceramic Baths o Washer ft Dryer Facilities • Complete GE Kitchens o Paved Parking Area with Disposal ft Dishwasher o Telephone Jack o Master TV Outlet 1,2, 3, A 4 BEDROOM APARTMENTS Entrances on Hillsboro Street and Airport Road REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE wmm I 227 East FranUia Sinai Plnaa 942-2892 aai 942-2166 I I For EXCLUSIVE LISTINGS I I First in Listings First in Sales I Mrs. Pete Ivey, Phone 942*2165 Mrs. Clifton Brock __ 967-1008 Mrs. Frank Klingberg 942-5524 • Mrs. Charles Milner _ 942-2224 Arthur Parque Miller 7423, Hillsboro Robert C. Deßosset _ 942-2137 Mrs. Arthur Whitehill Mrs. Peter Johnston 929-1651 Don Miller THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY - Winners Announced Winners of the Master Point duplicate bridge game held Fri day by the Friday Duplicate Club in the hall of the Chapel of St. Thomas More are as fol lows: SECTION A— NORTH-SOUTH I. .Mrs. Bob Quincy and J. C. Masson; 2. Mrs. Phil Jackson and Mike Alexander; Mrs. P. F. Jones and W. E. Hales of Dur ham. EAST-WEST 1. Marvin Greene and Doug Stewart; 2. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Fitzpatrick; 3. Mrs. Jeff New ton and Mrs. George Caldwell. SECTION B NORTH-SOUTH 1. Bill Norteman and Tom Reid; 2. Miss Ann Whitehurst and Buddy Gould; 3. Mr. and Mrs. Howell Riggins. EAST-WEST 1. Mrs. Virginia Griswold and Mrs. Eloise Hurysz; 2. Mr. and Mrs. Wally Lawrence; 3. Mrs. Marshall Davis and Mrs. M. A. Roycroft of Durham. The next game will be play ed Friday. Play starts at 7:45 p.m. All games are open. Mrs. Phil Jackson is the director. REAL ESTATE Parkwood NATIONAL AWARD-WINNING COMMUNITY PRICE RANGE: ’13,400 - *21,460 SSO total cash for qualified vet-! erans to move in. Maximum { FHA and Conventional financing j arranged. |j 10 Minutes from Chapel Hilij on Raleigh Rd. OFFICES OPEN I Weekdays 1M I Sundays 1-4 j DIAL DURHAM 596-3441 ysm^t Houm t* Counbuj (Riehoni rnKSj Oj Ph. 942-3462 READY TO MOVE IN BUY OR RENT Spank’n clean 2 bedroom home on charming large wooded lot, fenced in play area for the tots, school 2 blocks away for the older chil dren. Selling for $10,500. 130 Main St. at the “Reran” S«n REAL ESTATE BTOTHIBIBHi HH *60404 m K C.l—bh a 3 Bd. house on Hillview Rd. $75.00 REAL ESTATE CHAPEL HILL j j j j REALTY ; | Tankersley Bldg., next to Post Office 942-5361 Phone 942-3726 I John Allen Cates Thomas L. Hannaford • Sales * Rentals • Insurance § ||| Smu m mm * mmmmr* |p REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE '"• m '■tssm ' -.»;■ *§P ? '>' i|W< fc i " v? |P^‘ ; A,s * * ‘ 4*s: WBBEF ■ a ilHfck^^JM lap JrjffIMMWWWWBBp ,J^W^HB[ NEW TRUSTEE—HaroId D. Mey er, UNC Taylor Grandy Professor of the Art and Philosophy of Living, was sworn in this week as a member of the Board of Trustees of the North Carolina Hospital for Cerebral Palsy. Carrboro Parents To Meet Thursday Parents of Carrboro Elemen tary School second-graders will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. in the school lunch room to discuss cur riculum. The discussions are being sponr sored by the Carrboro PTA and will take the place of the regular October PTA meeting. Attend ing the meeting will be Carr boro Principal Klay Box, Mrs. Jesse Gouger, instructional super visor for Chapel Hill schools, and the teachers involved. Meetings of parents of students in other grades will be announced later. ST. JOSEPH ACTIVITIES The Rev. P. E. Jones of Hen derson will preach at the St. Jo seph CME Church Sunday at 3 p.m. St. Joseph’s recently or ganized men’s chorus will sing. The public is invited. Use the Weekly Classifieds ~ REAL ESTATE Judge William Stewart, right, admin istered the oath. The appointment was made by Governor Terry Sanford for a six-year term. The Cerebral Palsy Hospital is in Durham, —Photo by Town & Country March To Protest U. S. Aid To Diem The UNC chapter of the Stu dent Peace Union was scheduled to hold a demonstration this af ternoon protesting United States support of the Diem regime in South Vietnam. John Bailey Dunne, chairman of the UNC SPU, said the demon stration would start at 2:30 at South Building on the University campus and continue as a march to downtown Chapel Hill. The SPU is demonstrating now, Mr. Dunne said, while Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu, wife of South Vietnam president Ngo Dinh Di em, was visiting this country. Mr. Dunne said, “Our demon stration will be in conjunction with a nationwide protest being held today, sponsored by the Stu dent Peace Union and Students for a Democratic Society.” Mr. Dunne added, “We contend that the United States should withdraw all aid to the Diem regime and that the United Na tions should then be authorized to administer all economic aid to the peoples of both North and South Vietnam, and to hold free elections to determine the gov ernments of both countries.” —Carrboro— (Continued from Page 1) property west of town from Ag ricultural to RA-10. In other business the Com missioners: -Re-zoned the Carr Street property of Earl Eversole from residential to commercial. —Voted to pave Cheek Street and Sue Ann Court at the ear liest possible date. —lnstructed Town Attorney L. J. Phipps to proceed with the condemnation of property along Pleasant Drive for sew er easements. —Requested Judge Phipps to draw up a resolution to pre sent to the General Assembly, which, if passed, will give Cerr boro authority to swap land on a foot-for-foot basis with the Carrboro Lions Club. —Approved new street lights for Lincoln Park, and directed they be installed at the earliest possfole date. —New Road— (Continued from Page 1) reported that the County has ach ieved a compromise with State authorities over a planned reduc tion in State participation for ad ministrative costs of the welfare program. The settlement, he said, will prevent a sharp increase id the County’s welfare costs. The Commissioners approved the hiring of an assistant for a veterinarian, who will be con ducting a 30 to 60-day check for tuberculosis among unregistered cattle herds in the county. Mr. Gattis was also asked to in vestigate the costs of installing a microphone and sound equip ment in the Orange County court room, as requested by the County Bar Association. ' ‘ Wednesday, October 9, 1963 Similar demonstrations will al so be held in Washington, New« York, Chicago, Houston, Denver, Louisville, Philadelphia, Los An geles, and other cities, Mr. Dunn, said. ? The expected size of the dem onstration was not known, but a spokesman for the SPU said the chapter’s entire membership of* 16 would appear, and that more people were expected. — School Fees— (Continued from Page 1) , does not have whatever the money was requested for. In view of the necessity of fees to provide some school ac tivities the Board insisted that the fee schedule be made uni form throughout the system. In other business, the Board: —Appointed member Ben Per- , ry to assist Dr. Thompson in reorganizing the schools’ cafe teria program. Dr. Thompson said that valuable cafeteria workers were being hired away from the system, and that re organization was necessary, ~ probably to the extent of mak-fl ing salaries more competitive, g He offered the Board members the choice of improving cafe teria workers’ pay or one day finding themselves in the kitch ens mixing dough for bread. The Board chose the former 1 course of action. >i' —Heard a report from Chair man Grey Culbreth that UNC Athletic Director Chuck Erick son had agreed to lend the schools bleachers for use in Carrboro Lions Park for the remainder of the high school ~ football season. Bleachers now in Lions Park are inadequate. “ —Agreed to get estimates on grading a baseball field at Guy B. Phillips Junior High. —Agreed to let the Chapel Hill Art Guild solicit $1 mem berships through the schools. Solicitations in schools are for bidden, but the Art Guild was permitted to conduct its cam paign because it does not ac tually want to collect money in the schools. New York Life, a mutual com pany pays dividends, as declar ed, to policy owners only it has no stockholders. Write . . . Phone . . . Visit GEORGE L. COXHKAO, CJLU *o3)* Cast Franklin (Over Dairy Bar) Ph 942-4358 m NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE company

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