L^ii WEEK'S NEWS; 1 , open Monday In Convention [p«tor At Mt. Carmel Lion Pl«"« . Plana Meetlnfl 55. No. 35 THE (Published Weekly) V _ . • -.tv: >'p* of Orange County Interested In Omega Cotmtyf Then read The News of County for Hama of interest from all sections. It's reported factual ly, true and without color or bias. Your Home Newspaper Serving Orange County and Its Citizens Since 1893 HILLSBORO AND CHAPEL HILL, THURSDAY, SEPT. 9, 1948 Price: $2 A Year; 5c Single Copy Six Pages This Week —T— er 350 Ea joy anal Picnic Merchants IHore than 350 merchants of Kei Hill and Carrboro, their ■'■icves, and their friends gath ■ ,„r the Chapel Hill-Carrboro ■chants Association’s annual ■ . held Wednesday evening at K Hope church, six miles north K of the University village, ■he Chapel Hill Rotary Club, ■ch regularly meets on Wednes K evenings, joined with the asso ■ion for the outing. ■ighlight of the event was a ■ball game during the afternoon, ■■Such the “Yankees,” made up I employers and employes of ■ns located on the north side of ■nklin and Main streets of ■pel Hill and Carrboro, battled ■“Rebels,” composed of employ ■ and employes of firms on the Kth sides of the main streets of ■ twin villages. ■Winning by a score of 13-6, the ■torious Yankees walked off the Hying field with a bronze trophy, ■rented by Bank of Chapel Hill, Rich they will hold for one year. Ray Reeve, sports announcer for idio Station, WRAL, Raleigh* is guest of the association for the ent, and he gave a play-by play anint of the game over a public dress system.. " "" - In addition to the ball game, >rseshoe pitching, group singing, td square dancing were in prog ss during the afternoon and eve ng. At 6:30, the ladies of the ew Hope Presbyterian church >rved picnic supper to the crowd f over 350. Vic Huggins, president of the isociation, presided over the in umal session, and introduced the flowing special guests: Mayor nd Mrs. R. W. Madry, Chapel [ill; Mayor and Mrs. I. A. West, larrboro; Congressman Carl T. Durham and Mrs. Durham; Coach lari T. Snavely and Mrs. Snavely; Postmaster W. S. Hogan, who is klso president of the Kiwanis Club, find Mrs. Hogan; Dr. Frank P. Jraham, president of the Univer sity of North Carolina, and Mrs. Jraham; University Comptroller f,. IJ, Carmichael, Jr*, and Mrs. 'arsftichaol; and Thompson Green ret*ry, North ants , Association, Greenwood, Raleigh; Town Manager Winslow Williams of Carrboro; Town Manager Gi lbert Ray of Chapel Hill; Chief of {Police W. T. Sloan of Chapel Hill; [Chief of Police R. H. Mills of Carr [boro; Mrs. Marjory Bradshaw, re cently appointed, hostess of the as [soeiation; Mrs. Charlotte Creigh ton, who represents Station WDUK in Chapel Hill; BUI Shotts, who j managed the public address sys tem for the game; and Mr. and I Mrs. Reeve, of Raleigh. , A string band which furnished music for the square dancing was arranged by Willis Knight and composed of W. S. Hogan, violin; Edward Norwood, guitar; Hubert Meacham, guitar; and Ed Powell, banjo. L. J. “Spot” Collins called the figures for the dancing. James H. Davis was general chairman for the picnic. BEAUMEKT WHTTTON WILLIAM MUIRHEAD ROBERT PATTEN * Contractors Open Drive To Aid Education . - __ « v- - ■ / , Leaders of a $100,000 fund-raising campaign designed to advance the teaching programs in construction engineering at State College through the North Carolina Engineering Foundation are pictured here. They have been chosen to head the educational endowment fund of the Carolinas Branch of the Asso ciated General Contractors of America, sponsor of the drive.. Left to right: Beaumert Whitton of Charlotte, vice-president of the Southeastern Construction Company and vice-chairman of the cam paign; William Muirhead of Durham, campaign chaMnan and president of the William Muirhead Con struction Company; and Robert Patten of Charlotte, executive secretary of the Carolinas Branch of the Associated General Contractors, who will serve as campaign secretary. 7,500 Students Are Expected to Register At University For Term Starting Sept 25 Approximately 7,500 students, the same as last year, are expect ed to be enrolled in the University of North Carolina when classes be gin Friday, September 24. Registration is scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs day, September 21, 22, 23. Old students wrho registered be fore leaving last spring will not be required to register again, but all students not previously regis tered for fall term work will enroll during the period September 21-23. Transfer students will meet with their deans Sunday afternoon, Sep tember 19, at 3 o’clock. Freshman Week will begin Sat urday morning, September 18, at 9 o’clock whlpn Ghanfcellor R. B. House will welcome the new stu dents. Continuing through Mon da^, September 20, the orientation period will consist of placement tests, physical examinations, and meetings with faculty • advisers. The.freshmen will also, have an opportunity to get acquainted with their surroundings before settling down to class work. All qualified North Carolina stu dents for undergraduate work who. applied, for admission have been accepted,- provided housing space could be found for them, but between 5,000 and 6,000 out-of state students had to be turned down because of the trustees’ rul ing that aut-pf-state jjtudents must be limited to 15 per cent of the new students admitted and because of lack of housing space, said Roy Armsrong, director of admissions. The number of freshmen accept ed for admission went over the 1,000 mark this week, Director Armstrong said. This includes nearly 900 North Carolina high school graduates. In addition, nearly 300 young women who have not been’here before have been accepted as undergraduates. The number of new undergraduates ac cepted now stands at 1,800. The total enrollment for women students will be around 1,000, the same as last fall. The three new dormitories will provide space for nearly 900 occu pants, and the housing shortage will be relieved to that extent. - o —■ New Pastor At Mt Carmel Carrboro.—The "Rev. W. R. Wag oner of near Winston-Salem has beeir called to the pastorate of the Mt. Carmel church, three miles south of Chapel Hill, to fill the vacancy left by the Rev. Thomas Bland. Mr. Wagoner has already moved into the new parsonage just completed near the church at a cost 'of approximately $12,000. The Wagoners Have .one son, Otis Tuck er, three years old.. The family received an old-fash ioned pounding at the church on last Wednesday evening by mem bers of the congregation. The Sunday school sendees are held every Sunday morning at the church at 10 o’clock and preaching service at 11 o’clock. Allep J, White is the Sunday School superintendent and Vernon j Sparrow is president of the B. Y. !P.U. Dairy-Poultry Farm Combination Made By Cedar Grove Man W. G. Carruthers and son, Glenn, of Cedar Grove, have converted their farm into a combination dairy and poultry farm and like the re sults. Two years ago they built two large poultry houses and are now keeping about 500 laying hens. They have been selling a small amount of grade C milk on the milk route that ran by their house and this year constructed a cement block combination milking parlor and milking room. They are now selling about 20 gallons of grade A milk each day. Mr. Carruthers has constantly improved the fertility of their farm each year by turning under red clover and legumes. One ten-acre field adjacent to the Carruthers’ barn was seeded in oats last fall. With the aid of an electric fence, these oats were grazed off and on all through the late fall and until January 1. They were then allowed to mature and when harvested averaged 70 bush els, per acre. The” Carruthers are now harvesting a splendid crop of approximately two tons of lespe deza hay per acre off this same field and are storing it in their recently remodeled barn in which “they have installed a hay fork. The Carruthers have done prac tically all the building themselves and are able to carry on these many activities with the help of two tractors and mechanized equipment. What Do People Like About Chapel Hill? people like about What do Chapel Hill? r What is there within the com munity that has made it such a pleasant place to live in, work in, and life so enjoyable to the 13,500 townspeople and students who re side within the community? These questions, going unan-* swered for ever so long, have both ered a good many people, but none more so than the class in Commu nity Leaderships of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology of It was time, they thought, to get ,down to “brass tacks” and sci entifically betermlhe what the res idents of Chapel Hill thought about their community—not only the good things, but those that were not so good too. Under the general supervision of India Pitts Boozer* graduate as sistant in sociology from Charlotte, and under the direction of Gordon W. Blackwell, professor of sociol ogy and director of the Institute for Research in Social Science, a Questionnaire with scientific validi ty for analytical purposes was for mulated with the aid of Daniel O. Price, statistical specialist in the social science field. - The class enumerators, 45 in all, then went to work in earnest. -On the basis of 200 samples drawn at random from the population cards of people residing in Chapel Hill, excluding students, and choosing one out of every eight heads or wives of households in the com munity for personal interviews— t*1* students with the wholeheart ed cooperation of the townspeople to find the answers found before. Like Village Atmosphere After -weeks of interviewing, cheCkifig and tabulating, a sum mary-statistical report was prer pared by Miss Boozer revealing that most people enjoy living in Chapel Hill because it is a univer sity town. That, however, was not the only answer given • ■ < not *>y any means . . for the second largest number of people said they liked living in the community because Chapel Hill is a smalt town with a village atmosphere. Others liked it because the peo aro s6 desirable and such a homogeneous group,' While-addi tional persons preferred being id Chanel Hill because of its freedom and informality; the cultural and intellectual advantages of living in a university setting; the friendli ness of its populace; its geographi cal location and environment; and its cosmopolitan atmosphere. It is interesting to note that only five persons Wterviewfed pre ferred living in Chapel Hid be cause of the educational advan tages it offered their children, and only three mentioned the fact that Chapel Hill is clean as their mam reason for liking to live here. Some of the Need* "The majority of Chape! Hillians interviewed felt that the greatest needs to be met for the improve ment of their town were paved streets and adequate road mainte nance. The paucity of recreation facilities, especially for ^children and young people, was also noted, followed by these other stated de ficiencies: inadequate housing, the for more paved sidewalks. improvements in traffic control, especially at the post office, park ing facilities, better sanitation, more adequate sewage disposal, in adequate, telephone service, and a great supply, variety and quality of foods, both in restaurants and grocery stores. A number of people also felt that Chapel Hill could improve it self by increasing the number of nursery schools maintained, im proving the local church organiza tion to provide a more suitable program of activities and gearing the town’s facilities to its rapdly g»wng university student body. School Nefds Cited The answers to „ the question “What are the needs of the Chapel Hill Schools?” brought revealing responses. More than one-half of those interviewed said that the greatest needs of the Chapel Hill schools were better buildings with more space and more adequate equipment, and a well-planned ade quately equipped playground. More teachers, more teachers proficient in their teaching fields, and higher salaries for those en gagd in the teaching profession were uppermost on the list of rec ommendations as to personnel, ap plied to both the white and the Negro schools. Almost half df those interviewed preferred that the community adopt a single federated drive to include provisions for all local »im national agencies which raise money in the community—gather .than have a separate drive f A- each local and national agency, or even one fund drive to «n local and i each national agency. Outstanding Organizations The three most outstanding oro ganiztions aiding in |he soluton of community problems, in the opiSr Ions :of-the €hap^l Hillians .inter viewed were: For the whites: the Community Club, the Junior Service League, and the Rotary Club, followed In subsequent order by the Kiwanis Club, Community Council, Parent Teacher Association, the churches, League of Women Voters, and the Garden Club. For the Negroes, the clubs and organizations designated as giving most aid in solving community problems were: the Communty. Center, Elks Club, National Asso ciation for the Advancement of! Colored People, Parent-Teacher Association, 'and the Masons. "• | The study also revealed the fol-, lowing salient facts regarding lead- j ership in Chapel Hill. It appears that leadership among the white people residing in the comunity is diffused, with very little concen tration of leadership powers in the hands of any one person, or any Small group of persons. Among the Negroes, on the other hand, there is a marked tendency to rely almost exclusively on three individuals for leadership in Negro community affairs and problems. Boih die white and Negro commu nities in Chapel Hill reveal a lack of young, potential leaders to fill leadership responsibilities at pres ent occupied by- the more mature men and women of the city. This is Chapel Hill as Chapel Hillians see it, according to the survey. $2,000 Collected P°r Recreation Program Here the drive*flTfSlji/f* °f ni*y recreat|0n In H,l^h C°mmu receipt* of over $2 ooo °r° #h°W of the goal of thr ’ °°’ one'th,Pd ''^"8 fund,! c°rnmlttee no wa* wee^eatC°mmittee Wa® decided to orrf. * wh,lh 14 ^or the field Mohm matep'«'« became available* 1"° *“ ,und* P'«ced thi, week for "** •*ry pole*. They are .** "®CM' b - tact each memh*0 m"de to con' working |n /J-*■** .of *he force, Hillsboro nd“*trlal plants '•yed due to tack of b*e" de" «•% but thl. ,i7e!eW#Pf",,,‘ out and eonrtructi b"° WOrk*d ward ,oon IOn wi" Bo for tegion Delegates Set For Convention Starting Friday No. 85 f6fmthtrSAmIJi1ISb0r0 Post have been elected^,!*/1 Legf0tt Dr- D. Efland Fo^n^Uon are ertson, H. g Or? *' °wen Rob H Simpson, MaSn ranK Sr- J°hn Bivins, R L m nhICrabtree- H. O. Graham, Clare^h TVand A‘ * res‘ is chairman^ tlTe ffrDr‘ F°r* The delegation will c^°UP' candidacy 0f Miss a P?nsor the the position of iStn^ Maris for c N Legion Membership Campaign Is *®w progress Here Hillsboro "^Sreaih'sS AmeriCntnoIfefi0 membership quota per cent ot us . Legion con by the time the_a‘ • ;n Asheville, vention opens Friday it was said this%^e Legion is 452, The quota for tb ^ ^ # qUota but the Legion 1 hLast year the of 600 for^yea fey nearly Post exceeded its « g up 385 100 members in b members. membership® Approximately secured. for 1949 have already ° . bar In early October^ „ becue ior al local post, be”* barbecue will ® • Revival Meeting West Hillsbora Church Scheduled Revival "'“‘‘^RiU^onduUed S^Sb& —. the services. Anuians Attend Layton Funeral Mr. and Mrs. ^^vicesol Mrs. tended the fu^ejQel q Dayton, Sr., Auman’s uncle, . Sept- 5. of Ullington. Su eer Harnett Layton was P er real laymen. -- Shoe Quits Job On Town Council cv.ue a member of Thomas Shue, a d an ^nSTh* %.«>« * town limits. council .irrjisr*. »r t°,£'£rfUon ha. not bean fill* "S. Mrd and probably wlU Hillsboro town election. Orange county school doors i swing open Monday morning for an estimated 4,000 students, Glenn T. Proffitt, superintendent of schools, said this week. This will be the third attempt to open the county schools, polio hav ing caused two postponements of scheduled school openings prior to Monday’s date. Cciiool. will start at 9 o’clock T'rnday morning with a short day Jwhedule for the first day only. Starting with the second day, Prof l,tt said, all schools will operate on a full-time schedule. _ ' _ Z'.x of the seven new school buses awarded the county by the State have arrived and will be put into use on the opening day. School bus routes this year follow the same course they did last year with only a few,minor, changes in minor changes in some of the routes. By the middle of this week most of the Schools were in good repair for the opening. Proffitt said it was hoped to get around to all the Schools before the opening day. Teachers meetings are being held on Saturday with the white teachers meeting in the high school auditorium at 10 a. in. and the Negro teachers in . the Negro high school auditorium at 2 p. m.. The x-ray truck from the county health department will be In Hills boro Monday afternoon for the purpose of giving chest examina tions to all teachers. •-O Labor Day Holiday Quiet la Orange Orange county experienced a quiet weekend over the Labor Day holiday with no accidents, shoot ings, or murders being reported by the sheriff’s department. Sheriff S. T. Latta said Monday that it was one of the quietest La bor Day weekends he could recall in several years. All the stores in Hillsboro were closed on Monday and the streets were practically void of heavy traffic. , A few people walked around the streets and visited the drug stores, the only merchants to sitay open for the holiday. All offices in the courthouse were closed. Hillsboro P.-T. A. Plans Meeting On Sept 21 The Parent-Teacher Association of the Hillsboro school will hold its first meeting of the 1948-49 school term on Tuesday, September 21, at 3:30 in the high school library. The program will be an interpretation of public school laws of North Car olina, with the Rev. Charles S, Hubbard as speaker. The P:-T. A, having been active , during the summer, held a meet ing in the lunchroom in June, at which time the speaker, Mrs Smith, State lunchroom supervisor, com mended the lunchroom manage ment and urged several improve ments in order for it to conform to good lunchroom specifications. As an outgrowth of this and pre vious months of planning by school officials, Mrs. ' George Cannady has agreed to serve as dietitian for the Hillsboro and West Hillsboro schools. She will be aided by the , experience of Mrs. Clegg, who has supervised the lunchroom from its beginning and seen it grow from 50 to 450 students. A lunch period shortened to 30 minutes was urged, with full supervision in this way, the lunchroom can accommodate all children. Having been aware of the need for a public school music teacher, * especially in the grades, the P.-T. A. has pledged its cooperation, to the newly arranged music sched ule, whereby the elementary school is allotted half of the public school music teachers’ time, and hopes that through concerted effort, a good public school music depart ment can be built up. Officers of the association are: Mrs. C. D. Jones, president; Mrs. R. L. Mohler, vice-president; G. A. Brown,- second vice-president; Miss Rebecca Liner, secretary; Mrs. Alton Williams, treasurer; and John Mftjgett, membership rh air . man. Mrs. Jones asks that members of - the executive board, which is com- 8 posed of officers and committee chairmen, meet on Thursday, Sep tember 18, in the school library, at 3:30 o’clock. 10-Day Grace Period tor Auto Inspections Ends Friday; State Requires Car Check jackpot question for hundreds of North Carolina motorists this week is “What will happen to me because I "failed to get my motor vehicle inspected before the August 31 deadline for models of 1936 and prior vintage and for 1947 and 1948 models?” Members of the State Highway Patrol hdve been issued orders to stop ■ motorists driving these past deadline models that have not been inspcted. However, the motorist will not be 'fined but given a cita ion to have his.car inspected within ten days. Actually this amounts to a ten-dgy extension or grace pe riod. “The wise motorist,” says Cole man W. Roberts, president of the Carolina Motor Club, “will have his car inspected as soon as possible and not risk this ten-day grace pe rroa'beeame-fhe1 deadline for and 1946 models is September 30, and those cars will be rolling into the inspection lanes throughout the State in a steady pasade all during September. “Also, most motorists feel em barrassed when they are stopped by the Highway Patrol for any rea son, and t.he majority would much rather that this did not happen. Lane inspectors will examine any mpdel^car regardless of deadline for thaV model and wilt not report late comers to the Highway Pa trol.” Regulation Number Five' issued by the Department of Motor Ve hicles Mechanical Division pro vides for the inspection periods for various year models and for semi annual inspection during 1949. This regulation designates that all models to and prior to 1936 and 1947 and 1948 must i>e inspected by August 31, and that all motor vehicles of the year models 1937 and 1946 shall be inspected on or before September 30. All motor Vehicles of the year models 1938, 1939, 1943. 1944. 1945 shall be in All motor vehicles of the year mod 's pected on or before October 31. els 1940 and 1942 shall be inspected on or before November 30, and all motor vehicles of the year models 1941 and 1949 shall be inspected on or before December 31, 1948. This information is provided in 1 . w.- j .fWli a small booklet which is being dis tributed by the Department of Mo tor Vehcles and motorists may ob tain a copy by writing the Meehan- * ical Inspection Division. Another booklet, also free, is titled Motor Vehicle Mechanical Inspection Re quirements and is available from Raleigh. -—-O Increase In Leaf , Exports Predicted By Fans Analyst ^Leaf tobacco exports during the current fiscal year may exceed those of last year by as much' as 100 million pounds, largely because of the Marshall Plan for aid to European countries, according to T. K. Jones, farm management an alyst at State College. Exports from July, 1947, through June, 1948, reached about 400 mil lion pounds, approximately two thirds of the amount exported dur ing the 2946-47 fiscal year. It has been estimated, Mr. Jones said, that exports might exceed 500 million pounds in 1948-49 and 600 million pounds in 1949:56. assuming ow funds are still available under the European Recovery Program for the payment of leaf exports and that there is some increas in avail abl dollar exchange for cash chases. "There seems to be little doubt of the increasing prqferenc of im porting countries for tobacco grown in the United States,” the analyst asserted. “In 1946, fourteen. West ern European countries obt about 69 per cent of their requirements of leaf United States