Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, June 15, 1967, Page 14, Image 14

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Griffin Daily News 'i/fW // 1 'flO® >// IB •Kk s’" 0 ~ xR II #sf Z vlk : -% y - JMk&w #- if (I f i /-J? \ L<> JE> Ihr-. • v ■Li ws*w» >/ wSmwS wMBsaoMF ■wP w ■■I z ■ / ■ ■■■•■ ■ ■■•• *■**•-_•■<■'<•'•:'■••■'AX' z <-v.y.-.-.-,-.v:--x. , .y*.fA»x«-*A*A"*vz<'-X'Xv-'-*‘<'«-’<-v/ZA-.<-’^-yA|pz ( i ( tjOk ' y" ' M / Wl Hut./-' ■-■■ t Jr ’* A . a ' \ V W %*' -«l ' gw .»* >. sbF \ '7 V t !&...& fl ' /• SW- *'•• -$W .; ; ; . X. •.;., z . YOUNG HEADGEAR HAS THE INTERNATIONAL LOOK this year. It all adds up to a code that spells soft, crushable, kicky and bright. One version of the soft, crushable look is the rippled brim hat of striped cotton (top left). For the beach, sports car or any casual occasion the polka dot sunshader of crushable cotton (top right) is an ideal choice. For a featherweight, cool summer look (lower left) the cuffed brim straw is a happy choice. Any girl going to the shore or the tennis courts will enjoy the soft cotton saiari hat (lower right). All the hats shown here were chosen for her wardrobe by Judy Gecson, the 17-year-old British actress now starring in “To Sir, With Love.” Quirks By United Press International MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) — Along with a state flower, stone, 1 bird and song, the Wisconsin 1 Geological Society wants the ] legislature to adopt a state < AUTO - SAVE’S MONEY - SAVING... VACATION TIRE SALE! FRONT END cmea wheels alingment sZpO BALANCEDSISO make first payment our very best tire... AUGUST IST PREMIUM ULTISSIMO No Handling Charge for 6 Months Compare Quality and Price! No Money Down. AUTO-SAV PREMIUM RETREADS Jilin """ 825*14 p | 800,11 26.88 I i i 81545 9C QQ 2.33 710-15 26.88 2 FOR 2 FOR 2 FOR 27.88 1590 1790 1990 xIEBp if “ TS ~ BwXr^ a „ d Nylon Cord Body recappable tire. recappable tire. recappable tire. "’ 1 " s, “ "XS XS FLATS FIXED rk BRAKES 6-33x13 7.50x14 46c 8.50x14 55c FA PA 6-50x13 36c 8.00x14 51c Mtal4 61c UUC UvC 6-50x14 370 6-70x15 46c 7.60x15 55c " — * ,ltxls ” c S.OM.2IWS & _ 8 A.M. to 6P. M. L"»H 37.1t.wn «e (sfcM 62e nptN* lAt HUB fYPE RETREADS—WHITEWALLS >I.OO EXTRA PER TIRE " AUTO-SAV HAS A TIRE /Mb FOR YOU AT A GOOD AW MONEY SAVING PRICE! 4 4w W S '” •' fcUJ ««.!»,-Smk. USED TIRES S3OO Up 803 W. Taylor St. phone 227-0661 14 Thursday, June 15, 1967 fossil, the mastodon. The mastodon, an extinct prehistoric elephant, got the society's recommendation over the cephalopod, a kind of mollusc, after a vice president said, “Ask one person on the street what a cephalopod is and he’ll think you’re swearing at him.” “As for the mastodon,” he added, “most people get excited about it.” MAKES LITTLE CENTS MANILA (UPl)—Leonlco Ca nlllo, 21, was sentenced to prison for four years for robbing a bus conductor of four cents at gunpoint, the Philippine ews reported today. Perfume Center of the World By PATRICIA KING Beauty Editor Newspaper Enterprise Assn. GRASSE, France—(NEA) — Grasse traditionally has been known for more than a cen tury as the center of the world’s perfume industry. Other countries have built up small local industries, such as the roses of Bulgaria, but nothing has ever measured up to the 90 per cent of the pop ulation of this city directly concerned with perfume. Either growing the flowers and aromatic plants in fields cut out of the steep hills over looking the Mediterranean or working in the factories that process them, nearly everyone is in some way connected with that sweet-smelling stuff. The south of France is one of the few places where cli matic conditions for the essen tial oils obtained from flow ers and plants is most perfect. And it was at the essential oil factory of Antoine Chiris, the oldest in Grasse, that an in ternational group of beauty editors sniffed their way through roses and geraniums from Morocco, sandalwood from the Pacific islands and cloves from Madagascar— only a few of the aromatic materials gathered from every corner of the earth. Grasse is where you see how perfume is made. Per fume is said to be personal, as individual as a love affair and as universal. So it is in the heart of the Alpes Maritimes that the per fumer practices an art with the skill and knowledge of a chemist. And it was here that the second most expensive perfume you can buy was christened. Gangs Rampage In Cincinnati Negro gangs rampaged through areas of Cincinnati, Ohio, In defiance of National Guardsmen Wednesday night, and Negro youths In Dayton, 40 miles away, smashed shop windows after a speech by a black power leader. WL ? ’I >*' & Ji ■ ajO-JX* 1 w f - 1M ■Wi wbt > z/sLJ* ORw* 7, 1& * * ImiSM J a- MnMMHHt-* ■apHH wHSS v ‘ / -i; MM / Bn X * '4, - K rV' , x 1 : THE FRAGRANCE OF A FLOWER or plant is due to minute traces of essential oil in a particular part of it. D. N. Davies, president of Lentheric, and Elinor McVickar of Harper’s Bazaar stand ankle deep in a cylindrical tank filled with violet leaves. These vats extract all the aro matic content from the flower and leaves. The perfume, Lentheric 12, is made and bottled in France and got its name from 12 in ternationally famous artists, from Annigoni to Dali, who were commissioned to paint their idea of a beautiful woman. A nose, chemical knowledge and creative imagination are the qualities needed to make a skilled perfumer and, of the 1 three, only chemical knowl- 1 edge can be acquired. ; About 350 to 400 Negroes marched to the Alabama capitol at Montgomery, demanding to present their grievances to Gov. Lurleen Wallace, and at Tampa, Fla., scene of three nights of racial violence, Negro “youth patrols” helped police keep the It would seem a relatively simple matter to capture the fragrance of a single flower, but a single flower has a dif ferent fragrance at different periods of the day and at dif ferent periods of its flower ing. Care must be taken in col lecting and processing the flowers. Roses should be gath ered before sunrise, with morning dew still on the blos soms. Jasmine must be cut peace Wednesday night. In Cincinnati, a white youth was shot and critically wound ed, a Negro youth was less seriously shot and a doctor, driving to a hospital to treat persons injured in the violence, was critically Injured when a brick smashed his windshield and caused the car to wreck. Youths Shot Police said the white youth, James Shirk, 15, was an innocent bystander, apparently struck by a bullet fired by Negroes shooting at a fire ■ station from a speeding car. Ollie Ingram, 17, a Negro, was wounded by shotgun pellets fired in the tense West End riot area. Almost 200 persons have been arrested in the Cincinnati rioting and damage exceeds $1 million from more than 100 fires. More than 50 persons have been injured. About 1,000 National Guardsmen were or dered into the city by Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes. There also was a possibility the guardsmen would go into Dayton, where they had to quell racial violence last September. Negroes smashed windows and threw rocks Wednesday night after a speech by Rap Brown, head of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. March Halted The march at Montgomery was stopped by police at barricades erected near the steps of the capitol. The Negroes demanded tha* Gov. Lurleen Wallace see them “or relinquish her seat.” They marched away after several speeches by Negro leaders, but said they would be back! Thursday night. Tampa was quiet Wednesday ; night and police gave a lot of the credit to Negro youths, wearing white helmets, who reported any signs of suspicion to patrolmen and took the licenses of all cars in the trouble areas. Negroes had burned buildings, looted and smashed windows the previous three nights. In Warren, Mich., calm fell over a four-block area after three days of angry demonstra tions near the home of a Negro man and his white wife. Police guarded the house. “But they (police) won’t be able to stay there forever,” said one neigh bor, “and when the police take down their blockade, the trouble will start all over again.” Nine of the nation’s major civil rights organizations have agreed to take part in a massive program designed to end racial discrimination in housing, education and jobs in You will fully un derstand how each family controls the cost if you pay us a visit. Haisten Funeral Home •UFFIM M0Nt3231-S2St ®L ' 1 WU iBI J t ffWr .J® i jwl HER SERENE HIGHNESS, PRINCESS GRACE of Monaco warmly welcomes Kenneth MacFarlane (left) of Australia, to Monaco, as A. F. Hurlstone, chairman of Lentheric, looks on. The princess looked regal in her navy Yves St. Laurent coatdress, as she greeted members of the inter national beauty press conference in Monte Carlo. soon after it opens, otherwise its odor is modified during the flowering and its yield lowered. Orange blossom has to be processed immediately after picking, before fermen tation can set in. Since perfume is worn mainly for its effect on other people, a dab behind the ears is a waste. Perfume should be worn to its full effect. Place it on all the pulse spots; on the temples, behind the ears, base of the throat, bend of the Cleveland, Ohio. A spokesman hoped the summer activities in for the groups said today it is Cleveland will provide a “test tube” model for similar pro grams in other cities. The Cleveland program was the result of a secret “summit conference” of Negro leaders held at a Suffern, N.Y., motel earlier this week. Those who took part in the meeting and signed a unity statement pledging support for summer activities in Cleveland. DEVIOUS ESCAPE PARK RAPIDS, Minn. (UPI) —The deer knew how to escape barking dogs and the dogs were smart enough not to try to follow. The deer bolted through the rear glass door of an apartment on Main Street, walked up two flights of stairs, clumped down the hallway, went down two flights of stairs in the front of the building, pushed open the front door without breaking the glass and left town, observers related. No Down Payment To Veterans! Small Down Payment to FHA Applicants 1806 RIDGE STREET — New 3 bedroom brick veneer, 1J baths, built-in kitchen, paneled family area, central heating, single carport. Terrific buy at only $16,250.00 1730 E. MERCER DR. — L'ltra modern new 3 bedroom brick veneer, 13 baths, built-in kitchen, hardwood floors, carport, utility and storage room. Would you believe Just $16,350.00 1738 RIDGE STREET — Q/ll fX - ary style 3 bedroom. 11 baths, built-in kitchen, P ;, oUIU a,-ca > central heating, single carport. A real good buy at $16,350.00 1809 RIDGE ST. — Open the RED door of this buff brick beauty to a house designed for modem living. Living room, 3 bedrooms. 11 baths, built-in kitchen, beautifully landscaped lot. A real value at $16,350.00 1904 RIDGE ST. — White columned Colonial style model with spacious living room, 3 bedrooms, powder room - bath combination, kitchen - family area has sliding glass doors leading to patio. Almost completed, buy now and select your colors! Better act fast at this price! $16,350.00 320 S. 12TII ST. — CarpeteA|V| jvroom and living room with fireplace, separate 1 bath, 2 bedrooms, nursery. Very conveniently located. $14,500.00 736 - 738 MERIWETHER ST. - DUPLEX - 3 rooms and bath on each side. Will show good return on investment. Warehouse in rear. $13,500.00 212 W. TINSLEY ST. -Qftl n DUPLEX - 3 rooms and one side; 2 rooms and »qULU th ® n other side. Recently ed — good investment. $8,400.00 LOTS — Beautiful Building Lots throughout the city. WE NEED LISTINGS! CALL US TODAY FOR QUICK RESULTS! SPALDING REAL ESTATE AND CONSTRUCTION CO. PHONE 227-2283 Betty F. Cook James M. Joiner 227-9603 227-2773 elbows, on the wrists and be hind the knees. Don’t ever buy perfume until you have worn it for an hour or more, so it can de velop fully on your skin. The body chemistry of one woman can make a perfume react dif ferently on her than on some one else. Perfume should be chosen because you love it and feel that it enhances your person ality. They included the heads of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the National Associ ation for the Advancement of Colored People, the National Urban League, the Congress of Racial Equality, and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. WRONG PLACE SINGAPORE (UPI) — It wasn’t the best place to hold a political demonstration. Communists who massed out side Singapore’s Changi prison Tuesday night to demand the release of 150 political detainees watched in surprise as the gates swung open. The police herded them inside. A police spokesman today said a total of 345 demonstrators were arrested for disorderly conduct. SIGN OF TIMES NEW YORK (UPl)—Sign on an Unitarian Church directory in Brooklyn: “God is not dead. He visits here thrice every Sunday, at 8, 9 and 11 a.m.