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 JOHN FOUSHEE Mutual Insurance Real Estate 108 N. Columbia Tel. 9461 * Chapel Hill BEAUTIFUL SUITS tailored to individual measurements for men and women. Finest domestic and imported fabrics in almost any color pattern and weave. Reasonable Prices Always T. N. Boone, Tailors Greensboro Burlington DRIVERS WANTED... Men wanted between 24 end 35 yisr* pi age who ere interested in , earning up to $ 125.00 per weeV as professional drivers. Applicants wist be of good character, physically qualified, furnish reliable references and have good driving records. Our drivers enjoy family insurance, safe* driving bonus plan, annual paid vacations, clean and modern company bousing in Winston-Salem, N. C., and use of hew equipment. Send coupon for details, or visit our Employment Office, McLean Safety & Operations Building, 417 Waughtown Street, Winston-Salem, N. C., any day between 9 A.M. and 4 P.M., including Saturday and Sunday. *sm T S V riwin McLEAN TRUCKING CO., 617 Waughtown St. Winston-Salem, N. C. Gentlemen: I am interested in driving for McLean. Pleose send me without obligation information on employment and •rousing. NAME__ -_—— STREET or Pcnr~ ' - - . ■— town. 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 MacNMJGHTCNS i^aruu/mn f/h' A BIEND J <.*«*'“V **m*u*»c/sk 1 ' oP J „ $4-95 45 qt. \ 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.) FOI STERNS CAMERA STORE i€i Ei Franklin Chanel Hill IT 1 HI ■ Bk BB OT| "Wash** clothes so doanl" f "With wonderful Gyrafoam action I" . o "GantI* with your cloth** I" i Movtao is the /Uitomatio tot you All over America, three generations in the same families have chocor* washers. Grandmothers, Mothers, new homemakers—all believe Maytag is Lest! Famous Gyrafoam Washing Action — only the Maytag Automatic has it. Gentle water currents wash out even most stubborn dirt. * Completely Automatic Operation washes,, rtnses, spin-drir*. wii tt.” ~ self off. Thorough spin-drying Agaves clothes with no hard-to-iron wrinkles. Safety Lid — raise the lid ...... . . washing__ action stops; lower the lid, washing re sumes. Maytag means protection for curious youngsters! , /, ™ Made by May tag - quality Maytag construction means many extra years of trouble-free performance. * - ' ■ ; ALL THESE FEATURES, TOO: No bolt ing down . . . your Maytag is perfectly balanced. Adjustable legs. Beauty that lasts. Sediment "Trap. See the work saving Maytag Automatic today! }* $299.95 Hillsboro

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