Page Four As Mrs. Wm. Meade Prince Portrays Ruth in “The Pirates of Penzance” in Memorial Hall gragyßV . . ’;HpSbE^: * r-j'v.?«'»' Jw '. '^K-5>VA' iJ'/'t - ■gp«• | _ . I)irk Dashiell Stolen Car—and with the Tires On! Mr. and Mr. John F Dashieli have b< pr their ft th< strangt tale of how th*‘ir son Dick, who is - por" • editor of the Asheville Timer, got back hks stolen car. A few rlgb* - ago sohiebodv. wont off w ith the car : rum w tier* it was parked on Ckarview ’let race it; Asheville. Dick followed the usual routiru of .notifying the police and paving them complete’ description of the stolen prop erty. He thought he might get, the car back, but of one thing he was sure: that he would never see the tires again.’ And in these days that would he the same—for a long timi anyway, until tire rationirij et as' ha no car at all. On the fifth day after llm theft the sheriff of Buncombe county called Dick on the telephone and said: ‘ A farmer out toward Klk Mountain tells m<- a car’s U*en on the edge of the road near his place for three days. From what he says, I think it must be yours." KXKOTOR'S NOTICE Having qualifit*i a.- Kxwutor of tb< aatate of .) E Clark, Ulk* Coal you need. catUy warm tube* yam ratam. ■" —— Bennett & Blocksidge, Inc. Telephone 6161 Half aii hour later Dick found hi.- car tilted over in a ditch be road 11 had ali its tiros, and they were in ; ; 0.. i condition as they had boon before the theft, A I hop igh . examination showed that th* only rm.- ing were the radio .dial, the cigarette lighter, and the dashboard cabinet door. The or.iy damage was a hole in the muffler. The key was in the switch. The car took its owner back to Ashe , viile under its own’power The farmer, F J Crouch, said : ‘When 1 saw the car there Satur day night, J just thought some body had left it for a while arid would come back for it. But when 1 saw it again Tuesday I decided .;ther« wa somethin’ queer about it, so I told the sheriff ” Civil Service Examinations ■ • The C S. Civil Service Com mission announces examinations for th<- following jobs: trainee junior inspectors in aeronautics, to get $2,G00 a year and may progre-s to inspector jobs pay ing from $2,200 to $5,G00 ; brace makers, shoemakers, leather workers, limbmakers, and skilled general orthopedic mechanics, $2,000; lithographers, $1,400 to ’ $2,000; photogrammetric and topographic engineering aids, sl,llO to $2,G00. Full informa tion may be obtained from J. R. Webb at the post office. A schoolboy defines “civil rights” as the -“right to be civil.” Some grown ups think it’s the right to be uncivil. Torrington Register. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY, CHAPEL HILL, N. C. ! Aliens Here Must Re-Register ' There will he a re-registration of all German, Italian and Jap anese aliens in Chapel Hill at the 'post office from February 9 (this! doming Monday) to February- 28.1 All such aliens above 14 years old must register in this period, | whether or not they have regis tered hen* previously. Every registrant will he required to furnish three photographs of himself or herself taken within '3O days of the registration. The registration, which will follow the procedure of the one held here in 1940. will be under the direction of Postmaster Hogan and Assistant PostmasterStrowd. Translators Needed The U. S. Civil Service Corn mi- ion has announced an open competitive examination for translators. Those accepted will be paid from SI,BOO to $2,300 a year. Translators are needed for j the follow ing optional languages : (".bin -o Dani-h, Dutch, French, C,i man, Hebrew, Italian, Mag , yar Modem -Greek* Norwegian, | pol.’-'h, Portuguese, Russian, h, and Swe< 1 The - ng aty foi ipj cal . March 17, 1942. f ull informa * ? - tii - j • , the exam nation,.and application sorer , may be obtained from -J. R. Webb at the Chapel Hill post office. Lindsey Morgan Flying Lindsey Morgan of Jackson’s Creek, N. (’., an alumnus of the University’s law school, recently 1 completed his primary and basic * flight training at the Navy’s living school at Jacksonville, Fla.. Jiftd ha- begun six weeks of advanced training at the Naval Air Station a* Miami. Citadel Beats Carolina Boxers The University’s boxing team ' lost to the Citadel, fiL to 2>5, in a meet held here last Satur day evening. The most exciting match on the card was the j heavyweight fight, in which the University’s 240-pounder, Wal ter Williams, scored a technical I 'knockout over Alec Kolerson. Williams floored Kolerson twice in the second round and knocked him clear through the ropes 35 seconds after the start of the third round. Kolerson was then B unable to resume the fight. Wil liams, who is from Old Fort, N. C., did the damage with a looping right to the head. The only other Carolina winner was Milt Harris in the 135-pound class. Johnny Johnston, the Tar Heel captain, got a draw with Lloyd Williams in the 127-pound division. i 7th Human Relations Institute A broadcast of the well-known radio program, "America’s Town Meeting of the Air,” will be made here this spring or sum mer in connection with the Uni versity’s 7th Institute of Human Relations, it was announced this week by Harry Comer. I • N. C. COLLEGE FOR NEGROES Preneat*. Dorothy Maynor, Soprano IN CONCERT I Wednesday, February 11th, 8:00 PM. B. N. DUKE AUDITORIUM ! I * j Reserved Seats $2.50 General Admission $1.50 For tickets or reservations address: N. C. College for Negroes, Durham, N. C. Or Phone P-9261 I « Hayes Writes about Gestures Everywhere Last Saturday’s issue of Col lier’a magazine carried an article 1 entitled "Tribal Gesture, Please,” | written by Francis C. Hayes, for mer student and faculty member ; here, who is now an associate {professor of modern languages at Guilford College. The article, which described some of the strange and amusing j gestures used by var ious tribes; and peoples throughout the 1 world, was illustrated with comic I photographs of Harpo Marx, the, movie actor. Collier’s sent Mr. Hayes on a two-weeks trip to Hollywood last fall to direct Marx in the making of the photo graphs. ~ Mr. Hayes’s research in ges tures is an outgrowth of his in terest ;:i folk lore, which was aroused here by R. S. Boggs about eight years ago. His first realiza . lion of the tremendous but neg lect'd importance of gestures in speech came from his observing a ( üban woman talking with both hand- over the telephone. He has collected hundreds of gestures from all over the world. Returning missionaries, foreign itors, returned tobacco buy ■ i r-, literature, and his own per onal observations during travels abroad have all added to his col lection. Mr. Hayes wrote an article on gestures for the 1941 edition of the Encyclopedia Americana. In 1940 he published an article in - the Southern Folklore Quarterly on"“Should We Have a Dictionary of Gestures?” He is to come here ome ’ im< this month to broad : cast a talk on gestures from the ■ University’s radio studio. Beer Drunk in North Carolina j North Carolina’s consumption of 426,475 barrels of beer in 1941 netted the federal, state,and local [governments $4,934,959 in taxes. "This,'’ says Claude S. Ram ’ sey, public relations director of the Brewers and North Carolina ' Beer Distributors Committee, ’ : "represents an increase of sl,- 1 H10,477 over the tax yield of $3,- 124,482 for the calendar year of 1 1940. "Consumption increased from ’ 299,191 barrels in 1940 to 426,- 475 barrels for 1941. Sales for ' every month in 1941 were larger than those for the corresponding 1 month in 1940. September and October accounted for more than ' one-fourth of the year’s sales. 1 "In 1941 the federal govern -1 rnent collected $2,671,037, the !istate $2,111,371, and local units | $152,550. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Having qualified a.s Administrator of the estate of Rozelle Parker John son, deceased, late of Orange County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the es tate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Chapel Hill, N. C., on or before the 30th day of January, 1943, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 23rd day of January, 1942. L. J. PHIPPS, Administrator of the Estate of Rozelle Parker Johnson. Cold Weather Items! Anti-Freezes Light Motor Oils Arvin Hot Water Heaters Texaco Products, Exide Battery Service "30-Minute Recharge Service" University Service Station H. S. Pendergraft, Prop. I Quality Products Quality Service j HJnJSpSESI mii.k some foods but in terms of calcium-- t hi- mineral so necessary (o Iho strength of tones and ten*h—Gold Seal Mill is far - • i <>r _ >’ .I’>r ex mpk quart of Gold p Milk ! as much ealc a.-> in 7 1 jl pounds of carrot-, or G ;t \ pounds of cabbage, or 39 egg'-, or 2H oranges oi 2.7 pounds of potatoes. That’ why we say for the golden unit- of health and : beauty, drink plenty of Gold Sea! Milk. Durham Dairy Products 110 E. Franklin St. Telephone 7766 “CHAPEL HILL’S COMPLETE DAIRY SERVICE” - ■ j Model Market & Grocery Co. 1 The Place to Shop to Get What You Want 1 In Quality and Price I RED HOT SPECIALS I KLEK POWDERS £ K 2 f r 15c I SALAD DRESSING & 30c I WHITE LABEL BACON "Z 31c ; | TOMATO JUICE , 23c | PURE VINEGAR “ l,rin,f S iag 29c I SPECIAL NOTICE 8 Please don’t wait until 10 o’clock to telephone . 8 your order. It takes time to get up an order, and ■ if everybody waits till the last minute to telephone, , B ’it causes deliveries to be late. I Your cooperation is appreciated I SOUR PICKLES « luarls 19c | DILL PICKLES 19c I POST TOASTIES S 2 f,,r 15c | CREAMERY BUTTER ST 45c I EGG NOODLES TSr 3 ,or 25c I Model Market I and Grocery 1 Dial 9831 or 9841 W-E D-E-L-I-V-E-R Friday, February 6. IDI2