OCTOBER 24, 1955 ^01 Irs- Bei, • (is; ofpij, tioisl, U»| Heir lit Is i pri Jsy Bi ilillSl sat; OlFf Illillt tiat I) )fii| sFait CHAPEL HILL NEWS LEADER PAGE THREE \A/omen's News Nancy Winborne Women's Editor gfy Alice Jamison Is Wed /v\r. Griffin Here Saturday Cradle Call ■ Mary Alice Jamison, daugh- in Indianapolis, Wellesley College, !^j,. and Mrs. William C. and Indiana University, where she ' ol Sullivan, Indiana, be- was a member of Kappa Alpha L bride of Robert M. Grif- Gamma sorority and from which ■jf Route'One, Chapel Hill,! school she was graduated. 3 Griffin of Philadelphia, j Mr. Griffin attended St. Alban’s "’Ifcrday morning at 10;30. , School in Washington, D. C., and R vlVance Barron perform-; ^Villiams College, from which he tide-ring ceremony in the |^graduated. He is now taking ^Hill Presbyterian Church graduate studies in the Depart- ' f ferns and white ment of City and Regional Plan Im'nrf 1 alter'of ,j in marriage by bride wore a gown of white her fath-, Carolina. ning of the University of. North i,ce?cap and veil, and car-1 Planned This Thursday white orchid bouquet. ! Chapel Hill Jaycees and their matron of honor, Mrs. Dan ' wives and guests will have a Hal- arker of Houston, Texas, her loween party this Thursday eVen- wore a gown of pink chif- ing at the Chapel Hill Country jraped accents, a pink head Club. and carried a pink orchid ! The affair will include a buffet 1 dinner and dance with music by had his father. Ad-1 Jim Crisp and his combo. William M. Alexander, club social chair man, is in charge of the event ^ and Ted Danziger will prepare edding breakfast at tlfe Car-; and serve the dinner. About 125 [nil for the two families and , pei’sons are expected to attend, close friends followed the ' et. Griffin ..— Robert M. Griffin of Chest- Ill Pennsylvania, as his best Quiz question: How can you . Jjny. On their return Jrom a | . —. ,, „„ " b unannounced points the , turn $75 into $134.68 in less than will live at Mr. Griffin’s ' 20 years with one simple opera- j tion. Answer: Buy a $100 Series on Route One. I . bride attended Tudor Hall E. U.S. Savings Bond. Victor Stonebanks Denny A son, Victor Stonebanks, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Emery B. Denny Jr. of Whitehead Circle on Thursday morning at Watts Hos pital. The baby is named for Mrs. Denny’s father. The Dennys have another child, Elizabeth, age 20 months. Mr. Denny is an attorney. I Nancy Elena Voitle I A daughter, Nancy Elena, was born to Prof, and Mrs. Robert B. Voitle of Country Club Road on October 13 in Memorial Hospital. The Voitles have another daugh ter, Jane, who is three. Nancy is named for her paternal grand mother. John David Kelton j A son, John David, was born to I Prof, and Mrs. John Dobbins Kel- I ton of Hamilton Road on, October 16 in Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Kel ton is the former Paula Abernethy of this state. I Edward Allan Pell j A son, Edward Allan, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Allan Briggs Pell of Maxwell Road on October 14 in Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Pell is the former Sarah Jenkins of New Jersey. Mr. Pell is a tobacco rejiandler in Durham. Wanita Faye McCartney j A daughter, Wanita Faye, was I born to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Clinton McCartney of Carrboro on October 11 in Memorial Hospital. They have two other children. Mr. McCartney is a machinist at West ern Electric. William Dudley Peyton A son, William Dudley, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Peyton of 92 Hamilton Road on October 20 at Memorial Hospital. They have another child, Ann, age two. Mr. Peyton is Administrative Su pervisor of the Out-Patient De partment at Memorial Hospital. aisfi ino bjtli iimII tobk Over These Bang-Up Cut-Down Prices! lit» ii JJrdi MR. AND MRS. ROBERT GRIFFIN JR. Wooten-MoiUton Photo KEMP’S High Fidelity Equipmerat S A Audio Net Price No. 405 Attachments Manual Rwette Crystal ..... 19.95 'fUMBiA Deluxe "360" Automatic Phonograph 129.95 No. 416 Automatic Player 61.50 SOI* 'LUftBIA No. F 1 Transcription Type with speakers dual 81.50 “LUMBIA No. 412 3-Speed Manual Portable Players 31.95 Sale Price 16.50 100.00 51.95 63.95 27.95 99.50 54.95 jfUMElA No. 200 3-Speed Player Mar.„-. fllLLIPS No. 9762 Co-Axial Speaker 12" iHolland) No. 9760M Co-Axial Speaker 12" (Holland) '(fl-IPS No 9770M Co-Axial Speaker 8" (Holland) , WMANS axiom No. 22 12" ^“•Axial Speaker : 72.95 “Mans Axiom No. 80 10" ^“■Axial Speaker 68.50 land TU 55 TV Tuner Converter . 49.50 25.95 18.50 44.95 59.50 29.5,0 26.50 64.98 (bland 61.20 34.95 12 Watts Ampliphier & '^''6 Amp Riaa ' 73 50 AM/FM Tuner Deluxe 139.50 OGEN Lenco Variable Speed '^ntable. Used 52.50 BOGEN 8F 8 Watts Amplifier 39.50 59.50 122.50 25.20 29.20 Records & High Fidelity Equipment 207 E. Franklin St. Phone 5396 Mrs. Parker Will Address Junior League Personal Mention (Phone 8444 For Contributions To This Column) Catherine Berryhill Assists In Designing Of New Sterling Silver Flatware Pattern Mrs. Howard Daniel of Nashville, Tennessee,' is spending the winter j here in the home of her daughter, Mrs. M. H. Banks. Miss Katherine Carmichael, on leave this year as Dean of Women at UNC, was guest speaker at a luncheon meeting Saturday of the | Tennessee Deans of Women and Advisors of Girls, held in Nash- j ville. i Mrs. J. B. Sapp, Sr., of Leaksville is visiting here with' her daughter, Miss Peggy Sapp. I Dr. Fred Patterson was installed Wednesday as Vice-President of the North Carolina Academy of General Practice at the Seventh An nual Scientific-Assembly held in Charlotte. Miss Elizabeth Hendrick has recently moved from Pittsboro Street to 13 Hamilton Road, Glen 'Lennox. Dean and Mrs. John C. Erauer returned last Wednesday from San Francisco, . i Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sykes of Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts, were ! guests last week of Mr. and Mrs. Alton Sadler. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Warren and Dr, and Mrs. A. J. Warren left last Tuesday for a twoAveek’s visit in Pennsylvania. Mr. and Mrs. Richard-Donnan and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rogers spent the weekend in the North Carolina and Virginia mountains. Mr. and Mrs. Lew Carter spent the weekend in Winston-Salem. Mr. and Mrs. James Clack Robinson, Jr., returned from their wedding j trip on Friday and visited briefly with Mrs. Robinson’s parents, I Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Pierpont. Miss Ava Crawford, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Andrews and Mr. and Mrs. Drewery Crawford of Mehane spent the weekend near Asheville. Leonard Foshrooke of Montreal, Canada, is visiting here with his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mr.'^. Dan Cox. The A. G. Iveys will move next week from their present home on Oakwood Drive to 116 South Boundary Street. Miss Betty Ray of .Faison visited with Mrs. Alex Sessoms and other , friends in the community during the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Robert-Wade of Morehead City are. spending several days with their daughter, Mrs. Guy Paul Dixon, and Mr. Dixon. Mrs. Wade is a .sister of J,, S.: Bennett. Mrs. William S. Powell of Dogwood Acre.? spent last week in Raleigh with her family. Mr. and Mrs, Joffre Coe have started construction on their new home on Morgan Creek Road. S.S Miss Catherine Berryhill, daugh ter t)f Dr, and Mrs. W. R. Berry hill, Chapel Hill, and a student at the University, provided inspira tion for Reed & Barton’s newest sterling silver flatware design, Tara, through her participation in the company’s Annual Scholarship Program, according to a news re lease today from the Silversmiths’ mi HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Monday, October 24 Albert Neal, Mrs. David Wil- : borne, David C. Harris, John C. I Roberts, Jr., Milton Rosenbaum, Robert Minteer. Tuesday, October 25 Julius Page, Jr., James E. Tay lor, Sammy Habel, Mrs. F. D. Shipp, Mrs. Frank C. Winter, Mrs. John Carrell, M. W. Ericson, Bill Joyner, JJr., John G. Kunstaiann, Dr, C. G. Peterson. NEWCOMERS Chapel Hill—Carrboro—Glen Lennox—Rural School Pupils Helping Out In Landscaping Mrs'. Jane Parker, Superintend ent of Public Welfare in Orange | County, will speak on the three facets of welfare work in this community at the October meeting of the Junior Service League to morrow at 2:30 p.m. in the Episco pal Parish House. Mrs. Parker, who will be intro duced by Mrs. Fred Cleaveland, began her work here soon after receiving her degree from the University in 1949. She is current ly working toward the Master’s degree in the School of Social work. Hostesses for the meeting will be Mrs. Ted Danziger, Mrs. Boland Gidiiz and Mrs, Thomas Winborne. Miss Lashley Engaged To Ernest Edwards The engagement of Miss Mabel Jeanette Lashley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Lashley of Chapel Hill, Route One, to Ernest Eu gene Edwards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Edwards of Chapel Hill, Route One, is announced by the parents of the prospective bride. The wedding will be held at Thanksgiving. Miss Lashley attended Pitts boro High School and Mr. Ed wards attended Chapel Hill High School. The pupils of the Glenwood Slementary School are doing their part to help beautify their school, in art work and in plain dirt-gar dening. The members of Mrs. Floyd’s sixth grade have exercised their imagination and ingenuity to produce the highly colorful and original posters seen around town, advertising the pansy plant sale of the Oakview Garden Club. The . entire proceeds of this sale will he used towards landscaping the' new addition to - the school. For the past two years the pup ils' in Mrs. Fank West’s third grade room .have been planting and tend ing the pansy plants and spring flowering bulbs donated by the Oakview Garden Club for the planter box which is an ai'chitect ural part of the east end of the school building. Mrs. Floyd’s pu pils will take over the responsi bility of the planter box on the west end of the new addition. Under the direction of their teachers, these children are learn ing horticulture for use in their MR. and MRS. M. J. MOVE, who were married in February, are living at 9 Hamilton Road while Mr. Moye is attending the Uni versity. Mrs. Moye, who attended Garland Junior College in Boston, is from Concord, Massachusetts. Mr. Moye is from Tarboro. MR. and MRS. HAROLD FEREE are living at 608 Collidge Street. Both are attending the Universi ty* Mrs. Feree, a transfer from Duke, is a a sister of Mrs. Milton Noblitt. Mr. Feree, who is a, law student, is from 'Winston-Salem., MISS PEGGY SAPP of Leaks ville, who is secretary to Dr. W. L. Fleming, has recently moved to 49 Maxwell Road. She attended East Carolina College in Green ville. lit - J THE 'TARA' PATTERN Legion Auxiliary Unit To Meet On Wednesday Plans for participation in the ■Veterans Day (November 11) ob servance will be made at Wed nesday evening's monthly meeting of the Chapel Hill American Leg ion Auxiliary Unit Number Six at 8 o’clock Wednesday evening in the Legion Hut. Mrs. Charlotte H. Heitmann, President of the Unit, announced that Mrs. D. M. Horner Jr. and Mrs. Franklin D. Horner would be co-h,qstesses for the meeting. Dues for 1956 are due and payable, Mrs. Heitmann said, noting that early payment was desirable ‘‘so .that our major program of rehabiliLd- tion and child welfare can be car ried on successfully.” Eligibility in the Auxiliary is limited to mothers, wives, and sister of Leg- ionaires, she noted. Wednesday, October 26 Dr. James A. Riley, E. E. Sellers, N. K. Orway, Dr. T. C. Toops. As Compiled By Huggins Hardware Birthday Calendar Up Street By MARY MacCAULTY Seen up street this week ... a highway patrol car in the Colum bia Street parking lot sporting a plywood hood ... Sign on the rear entrance of a business establish ment, for those of you who don’t I know how to open a door, “Turn I knob, pull.” ... A pick-up truck I headed for Durham with a load ! of fragrant tobacco carefully cov ered with a patchwork quilt. firm in Taunton, Massachusetts. The release stated: “Her essay on silver design helped convince company officials that there is to day a strong trend among the Na tion’s young women back to senti mental or romantic design. The new sterling design, Tara, is a traditional pattern of great sim plicity whose time-honored motifs —the Georgian scrolls and delicate roses—have been endowed with a contemiporary freshness. The deli cate jewel-like ornament of Tara is carried the entire, length of the landles, leaving the smartly modelled surfaces sparkling in contrast.” Miss Berryhill, a third-year Eng lish major, entered the Company’s contest last year by writing in the reasons why she liked this partic ular pattern which the Company has now produced. How Would You Answer This Question How can you tell how much family protection you actually have? later years while participating in an enjoyable school activity. They plant and weed and water and cul tivate and in so doing they are helping to make their school a place of beauty.. This Wednesday is the final day to send in orders for pansy plants. Anyone wishing to obtain them may call 96852 for further infor mation. “For a long time to come there will be a mental stimulus in Chapel Hill because of the University of North Carolina. . .’’James Street. Women's Editor Goes To Press Convention Mrs. Nancy Winborne, Woman’s Editor of the News Leader, at tended the semi-annual meeting of the North Carolina Press Wo men’s Assiciation at the Hotel Sheraton in High Point yesterday. The conventicners held a bus iness meeting and discussion in the morning, had a luncheon as guests of the High Point Enter prise, and were taken on a tour of the Southern Furniture Market. Mrs. Winborne went to the meet ing with Miss Jane Hall, column ist for the News and Observer. Local NCEA Unit Set First Meet Wednesda'/ The Chapel Hill Unit of the North Carolina Education Associa tion willhold its first meeting of the new school year this Wednes day afternoon at 3:45 in the Chapel Hill Elementary School Auditor ium. A skit—“At St. Peter’s Gate”— will be presented. Miss Helen Wells, Field Secretary of the NCEA, will be present and will bring' greetings from the Nation al Education Association. Dr. Logan Wilson, former vice- president and provost of the Uni versity of North Carolina, is now president of the University of Tex as. Crowds at the State Fair last week all but passed by the prize apples, cakes, and cows; while they jammed the midway for the same fired old shows and rides. Fhlks froih the coast report the fishing was never better, getting king size drum Light from the SUI'f. ' ■ Correct answer; Put yourself in the position of your wife. Face the expenses SHE will probably have after you are gone. A rule of thumb is to take the total annual income she will have from y^our life insurance. . .and divide by 12. That’s what she’ll have to herself and the family for a month. Is it enough? MATT L. THOMPSON AND ARTHUR DsBERRY 2nd Floor Dawson Bldg. Next Door to University Nat. Bank. PHONES Day—9-3691 Night 8-5381 Northwestern Mutual LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY L. WATTS NORTON, General Agent Opposite Post Office Flower Shop Phone 4851 f ImeTo Trade? Yott can hold down on the cost with a fow-rate auto loan from our hank. Stop In! Tlie BanUb Hill F«trtl D«MUt UntruM toa. MR. AND MRS. DUNN—Mr. and Mrs. James Ray Dunn are shown at the cake cutting following their v/edding rehearsal on October 14. The couple was married in the Carrboro Methodist Church on October 15. Mrs. Dunn is the former Bertha Lou Ivey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Ivey of Route One and Mr. Dunn is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dunn of Jackson Springs. Wooten-Moulton Photo Three Conveniently Located Branches To Serve You Chapel Hill Carrboro Glen Lennox 'i.;, Ii' J

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view