PAGE TEN CHAPEL HILL NEWS LEADER Got ^Clothesline Job' Done. . . Davie Circle Weekly Enters Local News Scene I Latest .iournalistic endeavor to enter the highly competitive news paper field in Chapel Hill is the Davie Circle Weekly, neighborhood news sheet now in its'third week of existence, edited by young Wal ter Cannefax. The mimeographed publication is distributed on Wednesday after noons and carries the bargain sub scription price of 10 cents a month. ours.’ ” (News, announcements, and ads, the editor notes, may be called in to 8-3411.) WAY TO LIGHT UP HIS iYES The editor, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Cannefax of 26 Davie Cir cle, served notice on his readers of the price increase in his latest issue with the following statement: “Because of lack of material you will have to pay a dime a month. We are very sorry. We promise there will not be any more changes.” Carrboro PTA fs Planning Yule Program I needlecraft group Mitchell Group To Hear Mrs. George Grosskreutz will be hostess to the Needlecraft Work shop of the Community Club to morrow at 10:30 a.m. at her home, 61 Oakwood Drive. Slifkin And Mellinger 1 is ‘ff W SPSCED TWOSOME Personol-siie jugs of Spiced Shove lotion, Spiced Cologne. Ideol travel companion for business and pleasure trips. Good Grooming Begins with ... Publication cost of the paper totals nearly $4.00 a month, so that on the subscription price there isn’t much room to get rich within the Davie Circle neighbor hood. But the editor’s father says that Walter, granting this, is glad to get the experience: “He says he may decide to go into newspa per work some day.” The publication contains a good sprinkling of customary newspaper features. For example: Out of three classified ads, the following might well be of neighborhood interest: “Help Wanted: Mrs. Robert Clark who lives on Strowd Hill would like someone lo rake her leaves. CalJe 5716.” And as a promotial postscript: “It really pays to adv'ertise in our paper! Mrs. Sweet’s clothesline job was done promptly by one of our readers. * , Children from several grades at the Carrboro Elementary School will present a Christmas program at this Thursday evening’s meet ing of the Carrboro Parent Teach er Association at 7:30 in the School Auditorium. ,'X f FOR MEN SUTTON'S DRUG STORE The news budget of the current issue features a plug for the Emp ty Stocking Fund with a note that Mrs. McAllister’s Girl Scout Troop is contributing toys for this pro ject. Date of the meeting was chat'ited from the usual time because o! the approaching Christmas holidays, Association President Mrs. Mars in Woodard said. 1 Thursday evening's program will include devotions to be given by Mrs. E. L. Petit’s second grade; a playlet by pupils in Mrs. Alexand er’s third grade; music by the first grades rhythm band under the di rection of Mrs. Studebaker and Mrs. Cates, and more music by Mrs. Harold Bierck’s instrumental mmsic group. There wil] also be group carol singing, to be directed by Gwen dolyn Womble with Mrs. James Phillips at the piano. All parents and friends are invited to attend the program. AY • *4 -'bs SOME TURNIP—Mrs. Arthur Womble and her grand-daughter, Jean Womble, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Womble of the Smith Level Road, hold a six-and-one-half pound turnip which sprung up from a strap seed in an uncultivated field near their home. They believe the big vegetable is a record growth hereabouts. News Leader Photo MYrm temperatures and lots of sunshine are more important than fertilizer in producing high-quali ty walnuts, nitrogen fertilizer will increase .the nut size and yield, says USDA. NOW PLAYING MISS IT AND YOU’RE A ZERO- HIT IT AND YOU’RE A HERO I, \ • il i ! ‘ V’ y/. / # ^ j >11 , ^ i?;'/ s^The'Storytof they Glory of the i ••MfNTrt *vWarner Bros.! RICHARD CONTE’PEGGIE CASTLE ■r^CHARLES BRONSON • RICHARD STAPtEY • L 0 -lONES CONNORS tcttscN SAM ROLFE ^OOi,K:CD 9r DiHECtED BT DAVID WEISBART ' ' HARMON JONES Phone 5531 159 E. Franklin St. Jokes close off the single page endeavor: “A Texan was bragging about Texas to an Australian when a kangaroo hopped by. With his mouth open the Texan stared and then said: ‘Weil, I gotta admit that your grasshoppers are bigger than AIR “THE RESOLUTE" “The Resolute,” dealing with Cyrus Field and the laying of the trans-Atlantic cable, will be aired at 9:05 p.m. this Thursday over the NBC radio network on the American Adventure Series, pro- j duced by the UNC Communica tion Center. Combined Glee Clubs Schedule Yule Concert Thursday Night TUESDAY A physicist and a psychologist from the University will be the speakers at the 524th meeting of the Eli.sha Mitchell Scientific So ciety tomorrow night, in 206 Phillips Hall at 7:30 p.m. L. M. Slifkin, assi.stant .profes sor of physics, will give a paper on “The Physics of Semi-Condue- deliver ' a paper o„ ] «“I Color Space." Mellinger, ,.1,, staff in , undergraduate I University of . . isrsr*-: NOW SHOWING n.rASSOClAUSmiKH|.,.o,.,. B/G KM^ Released Jack Palance - Shelley Winw TUESDAY A Great Play GREATER on the S J ^GABRIEL FASCALwMMtiiiJJj^ |> '»ND«l>clal mdTHEUC t ittH SIMMONS.VICTOlmiiJ SHIRLEY The combined Glee Clubs of the 1 The program will open with a i University, conducted by Joel Car- j processional of familiar carols with ter, will present' their annual [ Hunter Tillman, Roxboro, and BOOTH ROBERT RYAN Christmas Concert in Hill Hall on Thursday, at 8 p.m. A quarter of a 'million foreign plants have been introduced into the United States since the year 1898, when USDA started to keep a record of them. NEW HOPE COMMUNITY NOTES Phone 8-3792Mrs. Sam Ray [£ UGGINS ARDVVARi Now Offers You Terri Lee Dolls for 00 Down Bal. "2-00 A Week Only 2 Love of a Lifetime- m i* S • 1 & & Ktrit Lady amorts dolls . . . Iov« of any 'Mittle mother’* . . . Terri Lee, Sweet and fragile-looking, -..y she's actually guaraifteed for * lifetinse of happy-go lucky play. An-d with over 1 ©’0 fnsKionS) she can he baud- box beautiful for every eco«ieny sooson or whim! 17* htgk , , . Ml CaM-Co« I The Methodist Youth Fellowship of Union Grove Church held their regular meeting Wednesday night with its leader Mrs. Keith Kepley and the Rev. Don Roettger, pastor of the church. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Goswick and family have moved from this com munity to the Buckhorn communi ty- visitors to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Davis last Sunday were Mr .and Mrs. T. I. Rice of Burlington; Mr. and Mrs. James Bryant and family of Parkersburg; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bryant and family of, Rock Point and Mrs. Edith Bryant and daughter Brenda Jean of Burlington. Mr, and Mrs. Louis Blackwood and children, Davis and Debbie spent last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Brack Pearson and family. A. J. Freeland, who is a heart patient at Watts Hospital in Durham, is some better, but is still on the critical list. Will Nunn is still improving at his home' after an accident while working on his tractor. He has had some of the cast on his leg and ankle removed. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Collins an nounce the birth of a son Bob Mc Manus Collins, Jr., on November 29 at Watts Hospital. They have a daughter Beverly who is one year old. Mrs. Collins is the former Gail Boone of Hillsboro. Sam Lockart of Lockart Turkey Farm is still improving after be ing in M''atts Hospital. The Lions Club of Carrboro held a Ladies Night supper on Thurs day Night at Camp New Hope Dining Hall. The women of New Hope Church prepared and served a delicious supper. Mrs. Maggie Lasly is improving nicely at her home after having been a patient at Memorial Hos pital in Chapel Hill. Shirley Carpenter, Oakboro, at the two pianos. Both glee clubs will sing groups of choral works before intermission. Tenor Raymond McGuire from the Grass Roots Opera Company will be guest soloist in Benjamin Britten’s cantata, “Saint Nicholas,” to be performed on the second half of the program. Mr. McGuire is currently singing roles in sever al operas produced by the Grass Roots Opera for the 1955-56 sea son. A 1954 graduate of Catholic Uni versity in Washington, D. C., he furthered his study at the opera workshop of the Aspen, Colo., In stitute of Music, where he trained under Phyllis Curtin, New York City Center Opera star. He has New York, Ohio, Maryland, and appeared in recital in Washington, his native state of Virginia. HAL WALLIS fRODUCTiON LESLIE Co-starring MARJIE MILLAR - ALEX NICOL WEDNESDAY starriRg. JOAH iACK FONTAINE • PAUNCE CORINKE ROBERT CALVET'DOUGUS i ^ OABBIBL PASCAL BBdAlAHYOmiGisjyTOlB WEDNESDAY I®! i M ii JANE'WYMAN ROCK HUDSON i! BARBARA RUSH iii 'J W.th AGNES MOOREHEAD • OTTO KRUGER- GREGG PALif®. > Here's How You Can Hel mui TO UFI Informal Photography (By appointment at your home) Wedding Photos A Specialty PRESS PHOTO SERVICE ROLAND GIDUZ Ofc.—News Building, Main St., Carrbore ■ Your Budget Avoid The Aniiu(| 'Christmas Crisis" //J 'K 'V i-' Christmas expenses caoi many to begin New Year in debt-' can be avoidtj S m M Sign Up For A Savings Account Now! If Christmas batters your budget—then you NEED a savings ac count to fall back on. Each week or month, set aside an amount for deposit in the Orange County Building and Loan Association, and when the need arises, you have these savings for use as you see fit—PLUS the interest earned all year! Call us today for com plete details! ORANGE COUNTY Building & Loan Ass'n W. Franklin St. phone 9-8761 i|w

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