- Haroid E. Gulick visited ■**£* at WCUNC in Greens last Wednesday. . •^ Rebecca Bacon, who is a Lit at Flora Macdonald Col spent the weekend visiting ^♦her Jim Bacon. f Earl Bason returned home Jy from Watts hospital where has been a patient lor several personals S H. Baucom and daugh Sindra have returned to their fif Hickory alter a visit with Baucom’s parents, Mr. and W M. Chance, Sr. ’{cs Violet Slye ol Durham t the weekend with Misses iee and Christine Hayes. “h Burch, who is now making home in Burlington, and E.W. a of Greensboro, visited Mrs. j. Latta, Sunday. ' Julian Cate and daughter, v visited Mr. and Mrs. J. lie Davis ol route 2, Hillsboro, d&y* . and Mrs. Chase Boggs ol sboro and Mr. and Mrs. D. T. ■er of Greensboro visited Mr. Mrs L. C. Boggs ol Hillsboro. .r and Mrs. R. O. Forrest and iren, Phyllis and Bobby, visit ors. Forrest's mother, Mrs. C. Butler in Reidsville. S. M. Gattis, Jr., ol Win -Salem is visiting Mrs. S. M. tis, Sr., this week. ' tr and Mrs. H.F. Watkins spent day in Graham visiting Mr. and E. C. Smith. [r. and Mrs. Harris Ray and ^liters, Jean and Rebecca Ann, it Sunday evening with Mr. and I. W. Ray. f. and Milton Mincey ol Dur i spent-the weekend with Mr. Mrs Fuller Johns of Hillsboro, r. and Mrs. E. C. Wilkinson it the weekend with Mrs. Wil lon’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. th, of Fuquay Springs. . r. and Mrs. Dupree Smith and ig son, Larry, of Raleigh, it the weekend with Mr. and . W. L. Smith. mmy Richmond, son of Mr. Mrs. J. W. Richmond, returned !e Sunday from McPherson )ital where he underwent an •ation on his nose. Cl 11 ZENS’ NStJRANCE AGENCY General Insurance and Surety Bonds one 73 E. H. Collins Smnaey-Walker Vows Hedged On Saturday evening at i o clock in the parsonage of thi First Baptist church in Hlllsbon Miss Hilda Summey, daughter o fJfr. and Mrs. H. O. Summey o: West Hillsboro, became the "brid< of Earl E. Waiker, son of L; E Walker and the late Mrs. Walkei of Hillsboro. The bride wore an aqua sui with black accessories and a cor sage of red rosebuds. Mr. and Mrs Frank Pierson were the only at tendants of the couple. The bride is employed by Em Mills and attended Hillsbori school. The bridegroom also at tended Hillsboro school and is nov employed by Western Auto stori here. The couple plan to make theii home in Hillsboro. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Teer, Pats: and Billy Teer and Miss Carrii Jackson returned Sunday from j sightseeing tour to Florida. The; visited in Miami, St. Petersburg Jacksonville and St. Augustine They also visitecf with Mr. an< Mrs. C, E. WaU of Miami. Mrs. J. W. Fogleaai Honored at Party Saturday evening, January 18 Mrs. J. W. Fogleman, Jr., recen bride of Burlington, was honore< at a miscellaneous shower by Mrs J. E. Laws and Mrs. W. E. Wilsoi at the home of the former in Hills boro. Guests were greeted at the doo by the hostesses and invited inti the two living rooms where the; were entertained with games am contests. The honoree was present ed a corsage of white carnation upon her arrival. : The guests were invited into th dining room where after the brid was showered with gifts they en joyed (refreshments consisting o sandwiches, bridal cookies, am Russian tea. Miss Ruby Law^ as sisted in serving and Miss Mabe Roberts poured tea. Thirty guest were present. , Aycock FHA News The Aycock chapter of the Fu ture Homemakers of America me in the home economics buildin; Tuesday morning, January 21. In stallation of new officers was held SPECIALS Apples, Cabbage, Pears, Tomatoes, Sweet Potatoes And All Your Needs in Staples R. C. MINNIS GROCERY Hillsboro. N. C. —Dressed Lumber We will be glad to dress your lumber bv means of our new planing-mill outfit. Bring it to— - -o * FITCH LIMBER COMPANY Carrboro Phone 7291 DRUG t REMEDIES ' For all your Livestock Healthystock for you I Keep your farm animals in tip-top condition. . . guard against disease and loss with a suppb 0111 vaccines, liniments and other med cations. We carry the finest medi cines at lowest prices.^ A Ik 4 Prompt, Proper Cooling Preserves Quality Vital to High Grade Milk ) By IRA MILLER form Electrification Burn» Top quality la milk, the preserve ; Uon of #hich Is as important as its initial achievement, depends upon milk being properly and promptly ; cooled shortly after Bossle has made most farmers have turned from tea and water to electricity as a more economical, time and labor saving method for solving their milk cool ing problem. Electric milk coolers are of two general types - “wet” and “dry." The first type employs elec trically chilled water, automatically her contribution to the nation’s food > welfare." t The advantages of healthy herds, t the use of clean, sterilized dairy uten sils and sound farm management , practices, can slip out of a farmer’s grasp as easily as a greased pig at the county fair, unless milk is cooled below 50 degrees within appraxi : mately an hour and a half after milk > ing time. r Milk is cooled on tarms in one of I three ways: by water, ice or me chanical refrigeration. Just as storm cellars cannot function adequately as 5 storage places for perishable farm produce, so water alone cannot ner ; form the job expected of it in cool ; ing milk to a point where bacteria | growth is halted. The addition of ice !> to water, often proves too costly even , When a sufficient supply is available. 1 Tests show that from 75 to 175 pounds of ice are needed to cool and store 1 40 gallons of milk per day in sum 5 mer weather, bringing the cost of cooling, in some instances, to as much as $40 per month. Faced with uncertain results on one hand and high costs- on the other, kept at the proper cooling tempera ture by thermostatic control. The "dry" cooler requires an aerator for cooling the milk, which is then stored in a refrigerated compartment Often the refrigerated compartment is large enough to be of the “walk-in” vari ety, suitable for the cold storage of meat poultry, eggs, fruit and vege tables, in addition to milk. In immersion coolers, milk cans are placed in insulated tanks, filled to the proper depth with “refriger ated” water. A number of coolers of this type are equipped with agitators, which circulate the water, thus pro viding more rapid transfer of heat from the milk. In aerator coolers milk passes over a corrugated, metal shield, which is cooled by a constan' flow of temperature-controlled water, kept in motion by electricity. The operating cost of electrical milk coolers averages about 1 kilo watt hour of power per 40 quarts One mid-western farmer figures he spends $1.71 per month for elec tricity to cool 19? cans of milk in hit | 6-can immersion cooler. The incoming officers are ,as fol lows: Sara Ann Frazier, president; Martha Foushee, vice-president; Nell Liner, secretary; Dot Dorseit, treasurer; Mary Boland, parlia mentarian; Margaret Vaughn, re porter; Sarah Vaughn, historian; and Mildred McCulloch, song leader. Doris Taylor was appointed as new refreshment chairman and Rita Vaughn was appointed^ as chairman to_ begin planning for a Valentine party. — Margaret Vaughn, reporter. r India Native Ends Study In, Talk Here The Rev. R, D. Immanuel of Jubbulpore, India, was the ftiesf< minister at the Presbyterian church in Hillsboro Sunday night, Jan uary 26, climaxing the observance of the Foreign Mission study sea son in the local Presbyterian church. The Rev. Mr. Immanuel, pro fessor at the Methodist Theological College of Jubbolpore, India, is now enrolled in Duke University’s graduate school. He received one of the Crusade Scholarships foi Christ, which are awarded" by the Board of Foreign Missions of the Methodist church to train .men foi key positions in the church, and left his native India for the first time last fall to come to Duke to work for a Ph:D. in philosophy of religion. I With his two Dromers auu mice sisters, the Rev. Mr. Immanuel grew up in a home where, in ad dition to prayers, seven chapters from the New Testament were read every day. After attending a mission school in Tuticorin, in the southernmost part of India, he went to Madras' Christian College where he was graduated in 1920. Prior to his present position at the Theological College in Jubbolpore, he served for 10 years as pastor of the Methodist church in Madras, i church which has a membership of 1,500 people. It was not without hesitation that he accepted the scholarship and interrupted his teaching at the Methodist College where he has been for the past 15 years, but the Rev. Mr. Immanuel says that he is happy here and feels that it is a good experience. Pulpwood Catting Demonstration Is Slated Friday In connection with the recently established pulpwood market sponsored by the Duke school of forestry and the Durham Farmers Mutual Exchange, a pulpwood cut ting demonstration will be held on the farm of Burroughs Hogan, route 2, Chapel Hill, 9:30 o’clock Friday morning, January 31. V. G. Watkins, district forester, and Mr. Rudolph of the Duke school of forestry, together with members of the Soil Conservation Service and the Extension Service, will be on hand to assist with the demonstration. All farmers living in the Orange Church community and any others interested in the proper methods of utilizing their forest products are urged to attend the ddihon stration. i Permits Total $13,500 For Last Quarter Chapel Hill—According to fig ures recently released here by City Manager, T. E. Hinson, the) value of building repair and new construction permits issued dur ing the last quarter of 1946 reach ed a total of $13,550. A month-by-month classifica tion shows that October permits for new construction totaled $5,500 and, for repairs, $650. No vember new construction was val ued at $6,500, while repairs de clined to $550. The one permit is sued in December was for repairs worth $350. Due to relaxation in building restrictions and priority require ments which were in effect last year, these amounts are higher than those for the corresponding period in 1945. Mr. HinSan emphasized that building permits are issued only for construction and repairs with in the city limits of Chapel Hill, and that the figures do not include building done by or for the Uni versity. Valued at $7,500, only one per mit has been isued in January. W. B. Lyons, Jr., will begin con struction soon on his_new resi dence, to be located in the Gim ghoul section of the city. Well-Baby Clinic Scheduled Tuesday The regular monthly Well Baby Clinic will be held Tuesday, Feb ruary 4. at 2 p.m. at the West Hillsboro elementary school, ac cording to Dr. O. David Garvin, district health officer. Dr. Garvin urges parents to have their preschool age children protected against diphtheria, whooping cough, smallpox and ty ohold by their family doctor or at the clinic. An educational film on cancer wih be shown to parents and a comedy to.the children. Treats will, be served by the West Hillsboro Civic Organization. ATTENDS MEETING . Mrs. B. P. Gordon, Jr., business education teacher at Hillsboro high school, attended the meeting of the business education teachers of the district in Greensboro Monday evening to discuss a new curricu lum grade and course of study for business education as issued by the state superintendent of public in struction under the direction bf Dr. J. Henry Highsmith, director of division of instructional service. i 10 pet. Discount / ■' •' ' /""" : to anyone clipping this ad and bringing it to onr store. J. C. BISSETTE & CO. 217 E. Chapel Hill Street 11 Hi - I ■ ! , . a. » - , i,iiin«iiiiii"«!M,niinr«P Phone H-131 LOOK TOUR loveliest You ladies can look your loveliest even without a “thmg to wear," if you depend on Hillsboro Dry Cleaners and Laundry for your cleaning. Our mod ern way of keeping cloth es fresh, clean and bright actually restores the ori ginal texture to your gar ments. . .send your pret ty dresses,, gary printed suits, blouses, all your ac cessories, to us for clean ing. —GUARANTEED EFFICIENT SERVICE— HILLSBORO DRY CLEANERS and LAUNDRY Phone 156 Hillsboro —Located Across From Courthouse— S-T*A-C*C*A*T-0 P-R-I-N-T •'"klaKh* m»p» (AM Ml hra «*%My to ■ ‘.ttoir. $29.50 —of pure dge silk is like i dear, high melody against the smooth dtf k contrast. Bright as kollg ... vivid as t crackling fin.. perfect for holiday dates nd dancing! Some Winter Merchandise Still In Stock —-Just Arrived • BAGS • SLIPS • COSTUME JEWELRY • GOWNS * • BLOUSES, PRINT & PLAIN • aquatogs RAINCOATS Popular Dresses In Stock HENRY ROSENFIELD DAVID CRYSTAL LILLI ANN GINET Colonial Inn Annex Hillsboro.^ g

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