Cradle Call
Kathryne Elaine Andrews
A daughter, Kathryne Elaine,
was born to Mr. and Mrs. Caswell
Andrews of Carrboro on Septem-
' her 16 at Memorial Hospital. Mrs.
' Andrews is the former Marjorie
Johnson of Carrbor. Mr. Andrews
is employed at Memorial Hospital.
Riggsbee baby
' A daughter was bOrn to Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Riggsbee of Carrboro
on September 18 at Watts Hospital
in Durham. The Riggsbees have
two other children, Ned, six, and
Reeky, three.
Mary Cary Esser
A daughter, Mary Cary, was bom
to Mr. and Mrs. George H. Esser,
Jr., on September 16 at Watts Hos
pital. She is their first child. Mr.
Esser is with the Institute of Gov
ernment.
David Wayne
A son, David Wayne, was bom
I to Mr, and Mrs. H. D. Maynard,
! Jr., of Durham on September 17
I at Watts Hospital. They have one
! other child, H. D. HI.
By Press Photo Service
^g^ement Is Announced
CHRISTMAS OPENING
The official opening celebra
tion for the Christmas shopping
season here will be on Novem
ber 28, the first Monday after
Thanksgiving it was announced
today. Joe Robbins, Chairman of
the Merchants Association Trade
Promotions Committee said that
arrangements were being com
pleted to stage a parade of six
or more floats on the evening
of this day. The parade is to be
followed by a community sing
and appearance of Santa Claus
in front of the Association of
fice, he said.
engagement of Miss Helen
ifwis’fof Graham and Chapel
)Ra^.oncl Pendergrass, son
andlSrs. J. A. Pendergrass
of Carrboro, is announced today
by her mother, Mrs. James Lewis
of Graham. The wedding ceremony
is set for late October in the Con
cord Methodist Church of Graham.
Miss Lewis is employed at Hos
pital Saving, Chapel Hill. Mr. Pen
dergrass, who attended Chapel Hill
High School, works at the Chapel
I Hill Tire Company.
fm
W
seen in
%
»>¥•
Glamour
Mademoiselle
Charm
Personal Mention
(Phone 8444 For Contributions To This Column)
Mrs. Olive Crow has recently purchased and moved into the house at
403 Patterson Place, formerly the Dewey King home. Visiting with
Mrs. Crow is her sister, Mrs. Beulah Armstrong of Baltimore,
Maryland.
Bishop Reginald Mallett has bought the Crow home at 519 Hooper
Lane and is expected to move into the house early next month.
Mr. and Mrs. John Council and baby of Boone have bought the Clar
ence Kuhlman house on Chase Avenue in which the John Mag-
gards, who have moved to Tennessee, lived. Mr. Council, a gradu
ate of the University, has recently returned from a tour of duty
in the Navy, and has entered the UNC Law School. '
Recent guests of Dr. and Mrs. Duncan Getsinger were Mr. and Mrs.
Berkley Mitchell and son. Tommy of Fredericksburg, Virginia.
Weekend guests of Dr. and Mrs. Louis Vine were Mrs. Vine’s parents
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. Levine and Miss Barbara Levine of
New York City;; also, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Unger of New York,
uncle and aunt of Mrs. Vine. Mrs. Levine remained for a longer
visit.
Mr. and Mrs, Clyde R. Bell have recently returned to make their
home in Chapel Hill. Mr. Bell, who is member of the UNC fac
ulty, and Mrs. Bell, the former Sarah Fore of Chapel Hill, are
living at 36 Oakwood Drive.
Mr. and Mrs. Cass Johnson, who have moved into their new home at
811 Woodland Avenue, will have as their guests over the week
end Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Keene of Norfolk and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Smith of Wilson.
Mrs, Tom Potter and two children of Beaufort were guests early in
the week of Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Hoft.
Prof, and Mrs. Eugen Merzbacher, who spent the summer in Europe,
have returned.
Dr. Charles Usher has returned to Memorial Hospital after a vaca
tion at his home in Savannah, Georgia.
Mr. and Mrs. Duff Browne have moved from Glen Lennox^ to Roose
velt Avenue.
Colonel Robert McDonald Gray of Fort Bragg will spend the eoming
weekend with the Walter Spearmans. Mrs. Spearman and Mrs.
Gray are sisters. Don Gray, son of Colonel and Mrs. Gray is a Uni
versity freshman.
Mrs. Charles Nottingham, her two children and Mr. Nottingham’s
mother will leave tomorrow for a visit with the former Mrs. Not
tingham’s mother in Roanoke, Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Owen have moved from Plant Road to their new
home On Rbosevelt Avenue.
Ml’S. William Cherry and Mrs. Wait Baucom returned Sunday from
Hamilton, Alabama, where they attended the wedding of Mrs.
Cherry’s sister.
R. E. Dickinson, Jr., left yesterday on a business trip to Jackson, Mis
sissippi, and Mobile, Alabama.
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Stevenson of Richmond, Virginia, were recent
guests of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Adams
on Old Mill Road. ’
Ben U. Clark, administrator of the North Carolina Sanitorium System
and Joseph Leonard, Business Administrator of Gravely Sani
torium, are attending a meeting of the American Hospital Asso
ciation and the American College of Hospital Administrators in
Atlantic City, New Jersey.
Dr. Lucie Jessner and Dr! James T. Proctor represented the Univer
sity at the Neuropsychiatric Institute held yesterday in Princeton,
New Jersey.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moore returned Tuesday from a trip to Ohio.
Mrs. Wilbur Kutz and Mrs. Romie Pendergraft spent Tuesday and
Wednesday in Winston-Salem.
Miss Virginia Lord of New Caanan, Connecticut, who has recently
come here for a year of study at the University, is living with
Miss Sarak Malpas.
Miss Ruth Hay has returned from a three month’s stay in Europe.
Word has been reeeived here from Mrs. John Cheshire in Greenwood,
S. C., that her husband has just been discharged from a Char
lotte hospital following an illness of several weeks. The Cheshires
operated the Rosemary Automatic Laundry when they lived here.
Mrs. Robert Bartholomew has returned from Franklin, Kentucky,
where she has been visiting her mother.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Koon spent the weekend in Clinton with Mr. and
Mrs. W. L. Paeker.
Constitution Week Exhibit Now At Library
By MYRA LAUTERER
The University Library has on
display this week, in the main
lobby, an exhibition in celebration
of Constitution Week, proclaimed
by President Eisenhower as the
period from last Saturday through
this Friday. The Library joins
other institutions in honoring the
168th birthday of the Constitution
of the United States, signed on
September 17, 1787.
Aagainst a patriotic motif, the
display presents a facsimile of the
document, pictures of some of the
signers, and books relating to the
formation and evaluation of the
Constitution. Included are two
foreign treatises, written in French
and Spanish; a British book com
paring our Constitution with the
1 Brilish Constitution, and Ameri-
; can work printed in 1806, and a
' plea to North Carolina for Federal
Union written in 1788.
President Eisenhower’s Procla
mation is the direct result of the
efforts of the Daughters of the
American Revolution. The Senate
Concurrent Resolution asking for
the resolution was introduced by
Senator William F. Knowland of
California at the request of the
j D.A.R. (Senator Knowland is to
j speak here next week in the Caro-
I lina Forum.) The National Defense
I Committee and many individuals
! wrote each Senator and member of
Congress urging passage of the
resolution.
AAUWToMeet
Tuesday Night
The first fall meeting of the
cAapel Hill Branch of the Ameri
can Association of University Wo
men will be held in the Morehead
Building faculty lounge Tuesday
evening at 8 o’clock.
Dr. Warner Wells, assistant pro
fessor of surgery at the University
Medical School, speaker for the
evening, will be introduced by
Mrs. Frances Gray Patton, author
of “Good Morning Miss Dove.’’
Dr. Wells will discuss “Hiroshima
Diary,’’ the first eye-witness ac
count of the bombing of Hiro
shima.
Coffee will be served from 7:30-
8:00 for all present members of
AAUW and those interested in the
organization. Mrs. A. S. Lineberger
will be hostess.
This meeting is open to the pub
lic and there will be no business
discussion.
Sonata Rose — Lovely new
silverplate pattern never before
offered at this low price , , .
Choice of these Pieces ■
Teaspoons
Dessert Spoons
R. B. Soup Spoons
Tablespoons
Bouillon Spoons
Iced Drink Spoon.s
I9f Each
Sugar Spoons
Dessert Forks
Salad Forks
Oyster Forks
Dessert Knives
Butter Knives
Snack or Cheese Spreaders
Made hy The World's Largest Silverware Manufacturer
Housewares—Downstairs Store
’-‘■k
%
Drs. Mitchell, Willis Are Wed
Dr. Henry Stuart Willis and
Dr. Gertrude Frances Mitchell
were married on September 10
at Grosse Point, Michigan.
The simple ceremony was held
in the Chapel Lounge of Grosse
Point Congregational Church
and was followed by an informal
reception.
Dr. Mitchell, a graduate of
the University of Mitchigan, has
been in the practice of internal
medicine in Detroit.
Dr. Willis is superintendent-
medical direetor of the North
Carolina Sanatorium System
•O'
A/-
f
iff? I
aradise
imitated,.. never duplicated
.. . here’s fashion
plus 8 comfort extras
lo Super-comfort Roomy Vamp
2. Elasticized Throat frees you from instep-bite
heoliie Soles for lightness and flexibility
4. Sponge-Cork Inner Soles for the utmost in comfort
5* Powder Puff Toes give you open-toe comfort
®* Softest Leathers pamper your feet
7. Gentle glove-grip heels; no slip, no rub
Smart low heel gives real walking comfort
Description of shoe ... 00.00
you re getting the real Paradise Kittens
A
Txm
.r
i
mmm
mm
■r
'J/A^
IMPORTED FANCY
DECORATIVES ^ EMBROIDERIES
LINENS
loo
b
/ >i
OutstandlrtT
.Values To
||$2.49
• PILLOW CASES
• BRIDGE SETS
• TABLE CLOTHS
• SCARF SETS
CMLY
• CHAIRBACK SETS
e HOT ROLL COVERS
e BRIDGE CLOTHS
• GUEST TOWELS
of Chapel Hill
MISS BARBARA ANN WHITE
Wooten-Moulton Photo
Barbara White Is Betrothecd
Announcement has been made
, of the engagement and approach
ing marriage of Miss Barbara
Ann White, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Elliott Sylvester White of
Greensboro, to CJharles Martel
' Barrett of Hickory, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Reid I. Thompson of
. C f M *
Hickory and the late Roscoe G.
Barrett.
The wedding date is set for
’ October 1 in the chapel of the
First Baptist Church in Greens
boro. Miss White is a secretary
at the University’s medical
school.
'CS-
• LUNCHEON CLOTHS
Wonderful for gift, bridge prizes, or your own home.
Come see, come save and make your selections
from this tremendous collection—Over 500 items to,
choose from.
' LINENS—DOWNSTAIRS STORE
•••••••••••••••..•..•.■I
CHAPEL HILL'S SHOPPING CENTER