Carrboro By MRS. IRA MANN Telephone F-5502 Personals k-oster M. Spears of Miami, ^ came last week to Join his fpand daughter who have been iting in this section for the past veral weeks with relatives. Miss Joyce Ann Boone, who lderwent an emergency opera “ in Watts Hospital last week, recuperating her home here ice test Sunr>^ /. ti. Dxncan of near Or * e Church returned to her home ct Tuesday after a trip to Wash ed, D. C., to the graduation ercises of th£ American Uni ‘rsity in Washington. Her son, [mes C. Duncan, was a member the graduating class, with a ,gree of Bachelor of Arts in Re don . Mrs. Henry Johnson has been ,ry ill as a patient in Duke Hos tai for the past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Mc aiighlin, John and Rosemary cLaughlin have returned from visit to Mr. and Mrs, William cKensie in Hazel*®, Pa. The cKenzies’ young son, John ouglas McKenzie, has been stay-, ig with his. grandparents, Mr. nd' Mrs. McLaughlin, while his iother is in a Pennsylvania hos ital. Mr. and Mrs. J\ H, Bayles and iniily and Mr.'and Mrs. Clifton oyd and family • were weekend uests in Raleigh. . , Mr. and - Mrs .7 / John; ' Koenig, Tiss Trilla Hackney, Lindy Spar ow and Mr. a»d Mrs. Vernon IcCoy spent the weekend at W. Bs GLENN Oil Company Carrobor, N. C. White Lake. 4 Miss Nellie Emory of Durham was the weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Barker. _ Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Hackney, their daughters, Misses Merle Rose and Cookie, M. R. Hackney and Miss Callie Hackney were the weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. A1 Walker, in Asheboro. -o- _ Honor Graduates After the regular church service last Sunday evening, the Carrboro Baptist Church held a reception in' the church basement honoring j members of the graduating class i of the Chapel Hill High School from Carrboro. Punch, cake] squares, nuts and mints were I served the graduates and the I large number of church officials, j friends and neighbors preSfefit. -c Graduation Exercises Graduating exercises for the Carrboro School were held last ' Friday morning in the school au ditorium. The devotional was j given by the Rev. Thomas Bland ol. Carrboro, who also gave a short ’address to the class. Diplomas wove p'rdsemeir to the 26 gradu ates by the school principal, Ray mond J. Kiddoo. The entire au dience sang “The Carrboro School song written by the school several years ago, as the closing number to the program. ——o—— ; Counselor Miss Dorothy Hogan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hogan of near Calvander, who for the past year has been a htudent at the Woman’s College of U. N. C. in Greensboro, majoring"in physical education, will leave June 25 for Camp Greentops, near Baltimore, Md. to serve as junior counselor »for the. camp which is sponsored By the Maryland League for Crip pled Children. Miss Hogan will remain in the camp for eight weeks. At Camp Misses Joyce Oakley and Ear lene Perry of Carrboro and Misses Faye Hogan and Eloise Maddry of near Orange Church are .spending this week at the Future Home Makers of America camp near White Lake. -o Senior Outing On Wednesday afternoon the graduating class -of the Carrboro School and their teacher, Ray Say ‘I Saw It In The News.’ Thanks CHECKING Here’s an item on over 300,000 budgets being checked for a new year in the Piedmont Carolinas. QUALITY? UNCHANGED QUANTITY? PLENTIFUL AS EVER COST? /, 'LOWER THAN EVER IN .Anna fig TODAY'S VALOffl.’. . * ♦ V Of course you've guessed it. • • ELECTRICITY m°nd J. Kiddoo, enjoyed an out ing and picnic at Sparrow’s Pool in Carrboro. Those present in cluded: Ronnie Mann, class presi dent; Melba Sturdivant, vice pres ident: Bennie Jean Wright, secre tary; Jimmie Clark, Donald Riggs bee, Ann Maddry, Lloyd Mc Knight Thomas Taylor, Wilton Andrews, Bernice Chambers, Freddie Clark, Gladys Crabtree, Boyd Ellington, Christine Feather, Bennie Hackney, Jane Hogan, Wayne Ragan, Daisy Mae Hunt, Bertha Lou Ivey, Jean Riggsbee, Foy Mae Simms, Anna Tilsen, Donnie Ward, Claudia Williams, T. J. Williams, and Emily Sue Wright. o 1 Music Class Feted On last Thursday evening, 43 members of the music class of the Carrboro School were entertained at the home of their teacher, Mrs. Ira Mann, by Mrs. Clifton Boyd, Mrs. Duncan Ivey, Mrs. C. C. Ashworth and Mrs. Lois Garson, who have served as music repre sentatives this year for the music class in the Carrboro School. The home was - lovely with arrange ments of spring flowers. Music and singing was enjoyed in the living room, with many games en joyed on the lawn, where punch, cake, mints and nuts were served from a lovely" appointed* table on the lawn by the co-hostesses'. ■o Entertains For Graduates On Tuesday evening of this week Mrs. R. B. Studebaker, teacher of the seventh grade in the Carrboro School, entertained the graduates of the Chapel Hill High School who were in her grade in. the Carrboro School at a wiener roast at her home here. The former schoolmates thooughly enjoyed the evening togethe. - --—o'-— -. Odum’s Jersey Wins Medal Columbus, O.—Triple Louisox ford Queen a registered Jersey cow owned by Howard W. Odum of Chapel Hill, N. C., has com pleted a production record of 9.531 pounds milk and 530 pounds but terfat which has qualified fie for the Silver Medal award of The American Jersey Cattle Club, with headquarters in Columbus, 1 Ohio. The record of Triple Louisox ford Qdeen was made on 305 day actual production at the age of 3 years and 5 months. All her tests were verified by both the Uni | versity of North Carolina and The American Jersey Cattle Club. In compiling this record she produced more than two and one half times as much butterfat as the average dairy cow in the United States. She has also been officially classified for type by The Ameri can Jersey Cattle Club with the highest possible rating of Excel lent.. NOT SINGULAR, BUT PLURAL Travelers in the vicinity of Lake Waccamaw may be fascinated to hear natives talk of the hurrah bushes In Green Swamp, but they will look in^vain for this botanical specimen. ■ ’ When a lumberman is working in the marsh, and if he encounters a dense growth of” gallberries, myrtle,.. bays, laurel, bamobo, huckleberry, they lose their indi vidualism and automatically all become hurrah bushes. Hence, there is no such thing as a single hurrah bush, but there are, instead, unbearable millions of them. -o COMPLIMENT. If you travel by mule through the Great Smokies (which we do .not recommend), and if a Chero kee Indian offers your mount some corn, you should feel highly complimented. This was a ges ture reserved only for the most distinguished guests of the tribe. The staple of the Crerokee diet is corn—prepared in' a score of ways —and they believe that com was given by the Great Spirit only as food for me?n. RAY’S BODY SHOP Painting and Body Work CALVIN RAY TEL. 3535 Bulldozer For Hire By Hour or By Day Call F-3862. Chapel Hill TAXI Call 6