Ilsboro
[appenings
and Personal
Telephone 419)
u5 shower at uie nomc ui
s Walters.
he living room was decorated
*attractive arrangements oi
Several games were play
Z the group Prizes weT€
Jed to Mrs. Foy R. Cole and
g c: Minnis Jr.
dining room featured _ s
jt arrangement with a minia
bride and goom before a man
hostesses served a dessert
of bridal, ices and cake
5 with mints, nuis arid gin
e to the following guests:
nes Melba Compton of Dur
ham, Madison Cates, John E. Haw
kins, It. C. Hawkins, R. C. Miin
nin Jr., Foy Cole, Nat Ellis, Clar
ence Walters, Dwight Walters, H.
G. Coleman Jr. and the honoree.
HERE . i
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Gooch of Ra
leigh visited Mrs. Gooch’s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Liner,
here last weekend.
MI8S BETTY SUE COLE
HONORED AT SHOWER
Mrs. Owen Allison and Mrs.
Randolph Parker entertained Wted~
nesday night at Mrs. Parkers home
with a miscellaneous shower' for
Miss Betty Sue Cole who wiH be
come the bride of John C.
Hawkins on December 20 at the
First Baptist Church in Hillsboro
The living room was decorated'
with arrangements of chrysanthe
mums, in mixed colors. Appro
priate games were played and
prizes were awarded to Mrs.
Clyde Scott, and Mrs. Marion
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Kennedy.
°ther guests present were: Mes
dames Modena Blackwelder, T.C.
Caldwell, George Tapp, Joe Priv
ette, AC. Cole, the hostesses and
honoree.
At the end of the games and af.
ter the gifts had been opened the
hostesses served a dessert course.
WEEKEND GUESTS ’
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. J.
James last weekend were Mrs.
Lib Wall, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Morris, and Mr. and Mrs. Sy Pili
gian all of Richmond, Va. The
group attended the Duke-Caro
lina game in Chapel Hill Satur
day. *
HERE I
Miss Sue Fryer of Stafford Col
lege arrived home Wednesday
night to spend the the thanksgiv* j
ing weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Fryer.
ON LEAVE
Cpl. Frederick A. Howerton,!
son of Mr. and Mrs. M. S. How-j
erton, who has been stationed in
Germany with the 54th Com. Eng.
Bn. at Struttgart and Frankfort
•is at home on a 39 day furlough.
He has been overseas 4%t years
and will return to duty at Fort
Jackson December 28.
Of 345 artixically sired dairy
heifers shown in recent State Di
strict Junior T>airv Cattle Shows
32 per cent won blue ribbons, 53
per cent won red and 15 per cent
won whites.
One out of every 10 carloads
of watermelons never reach, the
consumer because of marketing
waste.
EVERY INCH A QUEEN —
Tall, slim and lovely, England’s;
Queen Elizabeth II leaves Lon-l
don’s Empire Theater after see-]
ing a royal film show. She worej
black and white satin, and her]
■'—t was crowned with a jew-]
J
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HacNAUGHTON s
IMPORTED
Canadian WA&fy
PTA Hears Panel
.
Discussion On
Kellogg Program
The Hillsboro Parent Teacher
Association held its November
meeting in the High School Audi
torium on November 18, at 7:30
p.m.
An interesting panel discussion
on “The Kellogg School Improve
ment Program” was held .with
Superintendent G. Paul Carr as
moderator. The following took
part on the program: Dr. W.'E. j
Rosenstengel, Sidney Green, Mrs.
Donald Standford, the Rev. John
Ensign, Mrs. Clyde Roberts, Van
Kenyon and G. C. MdBane.
The Rev. Irving Birdseye con
ducted the devotional from Psalm
102.
A report from treasurer gave a
balance of $412.17 in the treasury, j
This increase in P.T.A. Funds
was due largely ta the Halloween
Carnival, and appreciation was ex
pressed to all who had a ppart in
making this project a success.
Mr. Vance Isenhour gave a re
port from the County Council
which had chosen as its project,
School Bus Transportation. A mo.
tian was made and carried to ap
point a committee to work with
oher P. T. A.’s on the problem.
Mrs. Dowdy’s seventh grade
won the attendance prize.
At the conclusion of the meeting
Mrs. E. T. Campbell’s home room
presented a very interesting play
—“Sally and the ViUian.”
-o--—
In 1951 the loss and damage on
approimately 15,000 carloads of
peaches was one-half million dol
lars, or $30 per car .
Of every 100 pounds of tomatoes
ppicked by the farmers, only 57
pounds reached the housewiCes
in 1951.
—-—
f B Seals, A Christens Tradition
The red Double-Barred Cross,
emblem of the 'people’s 20th cen
tury crusade against tuberculosis,
is traditionally featured on the
Christmas Seal. Adapted from the
historic Cross of Lorraine, it is the
registered insignia of the National
Tuberculosis Association and the
3,000 affiliated state and local as
sociations in the annual Christmas
Seal Sale to support their year
round programs for the control
and prevention of tuberculosis.
This year’s sale began on Novem
ber 17 and continues until Decem
ber 25.
This year the red Double-Barred
Cross is more prominently display
ed than ever before, occupying
nearly half the Seal’s surface and
lighted by a candle set in an old
fashioned brass candlestick.
There’s a special reason. Ibis is
the 50th anniversary of the Dou
ble-Barred Cross as the interna
tional symbol of the war against
tuberculosis. It was adopted as the
world emblem on October 23, 1902,
by unanimous vote of the first In
ternational Conference on Tu
berculosis, held in Berlin end at
tended by medical and lay lead
ers from 20 nations, including the
United States.
On May 17, 1906, the National
Tuberculosis Association, formally
adopted the Double-Barred Cross
as its official emblem, and, in
1920, in order to identify it un
mistakably with the voluntary as
sociations’ war on tuberculosis, the
NTA registered the Double-Bar
red Cross as its trademark.
To millions of American fami
lies the red Double-Barred Cross'
means life and hope and know
ledge. It means that tuberculosis,
killer that it is, can be defeated.*
Under the Double-Barred Cross, it
is estimated tha 6,000,000 lives
have been saved in half a century.
But TB today kills more Ameri
cans than all other Infectious dis
eases combined. It kills more per
sons between 15 and 35 than any
other disease. It kills at a rate of
34.000 persons a year, and at least
115.000 new cases are reported
every year.
Yet tuberculosis can be cured
and it can be prevented. Toward
this end the NTA and its affiliat
es are fighting tuberculosis in
every part of this, country through
case finding, including wider use
of chest X-rays to find unsuspect
ed cases of TB, through health ed
ucation, medical research, and re
habilitation of the tuberculous, in
cluding special services in meeting
their social, economic, and employ
ment problems. Under the Dofi
ble-Barred Cross, th* fftA
its affiliated associations
with the people, the medical
nursing professions, and the
cial health agencies to carry
crusade forward," for this is a peo
ple’s crusade made up of millions
of Americans working together in
their home communities.
-_
(This column is sponsored, in
the interest of better health, by
The Chapel Hlli-Carrboro Tuber
culosis Committee Mm. S. E.
Leavitt, Chairman.)
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