Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News
Monday, Feb. 5, 1968
Ed Crawford
Talks To
Crescent PTO
Ed Crawford, juvenile proba
tion officer, was the guest speak
er at the meeting of the Cres
cent School PTO. He gave a talk
on juvenile problems in our co
unty.
Mrs. Ronnie Kelley introduced
the speaker.
The meeting was held in the
school cafetorium with the pre
sident, Mrs. Ed Baker, presiding.
The pledge to the flag was gi
ven and Miss Cathy Vaughn
gave the devotional.
Mrs. Mac Garrison, secretary,
gave her report and Mrs. How
ard Wallace, treasurer gave the
treasurer’s report.
Mrs. Wallace announced that
the spaghetti supper will be held
March 22 from 5:30 to 8:30 at the
school.
Officers were elected as fol
lows:
President, Mr. and Mrs. Mac
Garrison: first vice president,
Mrs. Doug Whitaker: second
vice president; Mrs. Ed Baker;
corresponding eecretary, Mrs.
John Lowrimore: recording se
cretary, Mrs. C. B. Reeves; trea
surer, Jim Demski.
The group voted to give D. T.
Smith SSO for free lunches and
also to install a light in front of
the school.
Miss Brisendine’s first grade
won the grade count. The class
also won $5 for having the most
parents paid in PTO.
MOVING
ANNOUNCEMENT
Now that I’ve moved into my
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serve you even better with the
best in auto, life, and fire insur*
ance. Just drop in anytime
you’d like to discuss your
family insurance /■ ■ 1
needs. My new of- *'*’"“*•
lice address and
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listed below.
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523 E. Taylor Street
Phone 227-2168
state farm insurance companies
SIOMS OFFICES: BLOOMINGTON. ILLINOIS
F - .-.-r-? -,- . x —
I & ■
“One Thomas Edison
in a generation
is no longer enough. ”
Charles F. Kettering
First President, Thomas Alva Edison Foundation
Thomas Edison defined genius as “one percent
inspiration and 99 percent perspiration.”
His achievements are beacons of the free
enterprise system. He gave the world the first
incandescent lamp. He invented the motion
picture, fluoroscope, phonograph. And Edison’s
research stirred waves of thought that produced
radar, radio and television.
Edison held 1,100 patents. Started the first
industrial research laboratory. Launched 100
businesses of his own. And conceived and built
the first electric utility system.
Charles Kettering was right. Not one, but
thousands of imaginative, industrious young
people are needed to sustain our kind of progress.
Now a new generation of dreamers must con
tinue Edison’s explorations. The future depends
on their bright discoveries.
New "Edisons’’ just mail coupon and start exploring.
Department B
Georgia Power Co., P.O. Box 4545
I Atlanta, Georgia 30302
Please send my free booklet of electric
experiments I can do.
| Name |
| Address - |
I City State Zip— I
I - I
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
•• *
7
Femininity Gets a Head Start
By PATRICIA KING
NEA Beauty Editor
NEW YORK — (NEA) -
Dreamy, entranced and
purely romantic is the look
we’ll be anticipating.
Gone with the wind is the
. boldness of tough chic, hard
cut hairstyles of past seasons.
In fact, in Paris everything is
; so girly that Alexandre now
advises his international cli
-1 ents to give up wearing their
heirloom clips and pins on
their clothes and weave them
instead into party headpieces.
On this side of the ocean
the smart money is on a col
lection of completely Ameri
can-made (how refreshing to
see “made in U.S.A.”) hair
pieces and wigs, not the jew
els that adorn them.
The wig company is mak
ing sure that the woman of
35-plus and the silver-tressed
grandmother are no longer
neglected. Unfortunately, the
beauty and ease of handling
is not fully understood by the
older woman. It is in this age
group that the ravages of
overdyeing, tinting, rinsing,
permanenting, teasing and
time have taken the heaviest
toU.
Since grooming time and
money are major factors
among older women, hand
washable, drip-dry hair de
signs that brush into style at
your dressing table are the
most practical. A froth of
curls eliminating the flat-top
look at the crown and cover
ing thinning areas are the
most popular. They fill out
the head and uplift morale.
This dream of a wig wearer
never needs setting and will i
hold its style in wilting
weather. However, the curl l
must dry thoroughly before'
BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Begin the new year by pay*
ing all your bills, and the
bank will be on your neck
with a scream that you're
hideously overdrawn.
• • »
Our colleague says he’d
bum his draft card, if Civil
War documents weren’t so
valuable.
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CURLS ARE BACK and the quickest way to enhance any do with their prettiness is a
pin-on wiglet. This piece (upper left) arcs the crown with curls, loose and open while
your own hair beneath is sleek simplicity. The more mature woman (upper right) may
enjoy the limitless beauty benefits once considered for the young. Drake Zachary (inset)
designed the hairpieces shown. The backswept coif (lower left) has a cluster of soft
waves and rolls. The young busy mother (lower right) wears a wig that never wilts,
brushes to shape in minutes, handwashes and drips dry.
you brush it back into style.
The 29 shades available
sparkle with quiet glints
which come from the many
color mixtures. Honey-beige
blonde, for example, has hints
tl
Betty Canoky
Recognizing the Good Guys
By BETTY CANARY
Wouldn’t it be nice if children would wait
for a quiet chat with parents to bring up
questions? Os course, what really happens is
that they want explanations only in the mid
dle of the supermarket or when father is
figuring income tax.
Just the other night we were going out for
dinner and I was trying to get ready while
Bob Honey sat patiently in the living room
singing, “If It Takes Forever, I Will Wait
(for You.” That’s when our son and his friend,
jSammy, came to me for explanations.
I “Tell him I only have one grandmother,”
|Tad said.
I
I “Yes,” I explained. “One grandmother in
Michigan. Our other grandmother is dead.”
“Who shot her?” Sammy asked.
“My goodness, Sammy, NOBODY shot her.
She died of what is called a “stroke”.
“Who hit her?”
“Ask your mother to explain!”
“Tell him,” Tad said, “what prison dad
was in.”
“Your father has NEVER been in prison!
What’s the matter with you?”
“He fought in the war, didn’t he? Didn’t
he help win the war?”
Mrs. O’Quinn
Talks To
Mt. Zion HE
Mrs. Martha O'Quinn pre
sented the program at the Feb
ruary meeting of Mt. Zion Home
Economics Club. She gave a de
monstration on making nylon
lingerie.
The meeting was held at the
home of Mrs. Judge Camp on
the Newnan Highway. Mrs. Cl
ark Putman, president, presid
ed.
The slate to the flag was giv
en. Mrs. Sara Robinson feave
the devotional, after which the
Lord’s Prayer was said.
Mrs. Willie Ebetino read the
minutes and called the roll. Each
member answered by telling of
a current event.
Mrs. Ruth Stringer gave the
• draperies
• bedspreads
• carpets
Fine furnishings
for your home.
•
Complimentary
Decorator
Service.
Goode-Nichols
Furniture
of ash and golden tones. Au
burn, blonde and amber tints
highlight some of the darker
colors.
So that all may enjoy the
beauty benefits a versatile
group of hairpieces is avail-
Sammy nodded sagely. “Everybody knows
the guys who won the war were let out of
prison to do it.”
“Sure they do. All the smart guys go to
prison first and then they help spy and every
thing.”
“Listen,” I said. “You have got all mixed
up by watching Garrison’s Gorillas and To
Catch a Thief on television. I think you
should ask your father to explain about the
requirements for the Army.”
I could understand how little kids could
get confused about who is the good guy and
who is the bad. 1 consider myself quite adept
at watching television but there have been
times when I’ve been confused. I mean, even
with all my training as a little kid going to
movies where the hero wore a white suit andl
the villain wore black.
I know I was really surprised when watch
ing Mission: Impossible to hear the good guy
snarl and say to a bad guy (after the bad
guy had been savagely beaten) that the laws
of this country aren’t made for rats but only
for decent folks. His white suit took on a
decidedly dingy hue with those words. I
think the Constitution guarantees the laws are
for everyone—just in case somebody gets
mixed up about who is wearing what color
suit.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
treasurer’s report.
Following the program a Val
entine buffet was served by Mrs.
Camp to the following members:
Mrs. C. D. Waldrip, Mrs.
Mary Wurley, Mrs. Martha O’-
Quinn, Mrs. Marian Cobb, Mrs.
Sara Hand, Mrs. Carolyn Pilch
er, Mrs. Willie Ebetino, Mr s.
Ava Bolton, Mrs. Clark Putman,
Mrs. Ann Bolton, Mrs. Ruth St
ringer, Mrs. Sara Robinson, Mrs.
Jude Camp, and one visitor,
Mrs. Marie Daniel, daughter of
the hostess.
HOME OWNERS
2nd Mortgage Real Estate Loans
Payment Schedule for 60 months
Cash Y'ou Receive Monthly Payments
SIOOO.OO $26.64
1500.00 38.92
2000.00 51.89
2500.00 64.87
3000.00 77.84
ALL PAYMENTS INCLUDE LIFE INS.
118 West Taylor Street, Griffin, Ga.
Phone 228-2744
Ask for Horace Fletcher, Wayne Edwards
or Eddie Burchfield
able to deal with all sparse
hair problems. Each design
is ounces light for comfort in
heated rooms or under tropi
cal sun. Incidentally, they are
fade-free.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
FOOD TOWN
Lucky Register
Tape Numbers
for Saturday
7948, 1724, 3423
for Sunday
8390, 3778,2303
Must be claimed 3 days
after purchase-
Sb fSW
POLLY’S POINTERS
House Warming
DEAR POLLY — The sweet
est sound in the world is that of
children laughing. The biggest
gift in the world to give these
children is time. We busy peo
ple work to supply support but
spare time is something we too
seldom find. Every day take
time out to play and get to know
your children. The years fade
by so quickly and the time de
librately put aside for your
family will be the only Impor
tant thing to remember later on.
—ELMER AND JUDY
DEAR READERS — If I was
ever tempted to say Amen to a
letter, this was it. — POLLY
DEAR POLLY — I do not
think it is proper for Mrs. D.H.
to give a house-warming for a
relative. I was given one (but
not by a relative) and the guests
each brought a covered dish and
each gave money rather than a
gift. The money was clevely
taped together to form a long
roll and then placed inside a
food can which had been cut
open in the middle and then tap
ed back together again. The la
bel was carefully removed and
then replaced, so the can looked
unopened. This was presented
with a can-opener. — MRS. R.
L.A.
DEAR POLLY — Help! Do
any of you know how to remove
mineral stains fro mthe outside
of window glass? These marks
were caused by rain, dirt, the
sprinkler and sun — all or both.
The glass company just suggests
buying new glass, Also, hoy
does one take alcohol stains off
dark furniture? — BOBBY
DEAR POLLY — Mrs. D.D.V.
wrote to say how much her son
in Vietnam appreciated receiv
ing a money clip. A large paper
clip, about two inches long,
makes an ideal substitute for a
money clip. A box of these could
doubtless be bought and mailed
to Vietnam for the price of one
money clip. Every boy in the ser
vice has many buddies who need
the same thing and he could
pass them around. — MRS. R.
DEAR MRS. R. — That is one
of the nice things about the ex
change of Pointers among read
ers, one good idea so often leads
to another. — POLLY
DEAR POLLY — Our son in
Vietnam loves to receive litera
ture about new cars. All the
dealers I have asked for this are
very nice about giving it to me,
although I have told them that
SniiVßoietfa
"First In Fashions'*
A bra that it completely drip-dry, I Y !f\
completely flattering and most of all — jjyll vtVX. fi
comfortablel Answerette contour bra has
polyester flberfill padding to add fullness V1 %
where needed. Drip-dry fabric of poly-. V ' '' ’ <-J
ester,'nylon and cotton has nylon and \ 1 " l| "" 1
Lycra® Spandex power net inserts. White, A V'
Black, Limelight, Parfait Pink, Frosted Blue 4/
or Naturelie in A, B, C 32-38. $4.00 Ny
®du Font's rsg. t.m. Padding shown above is detachable
from inserts .. , never hampers
their stretchability..
Miss Melza Postel
Sv i Gossard Consultant
j Will be in our Foundation Dept, today and
Tuesday, February sth and 6th to advise you on
your
Foundations — Street Floor
my son has another year of ser
vice. — MRS. L.B.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly uses your favorite home
making idea, Polly’s Problem
or solution to a problem. Write
Polly in care of this newspaper.
Barbs
Our secretary is no financial
whiz, but she draws 100 per
sSfc\ J* ®
—ill
lent interest in her short-skirt
outfit.
• • «
Our secretary has a
noiseless typewriter, but
we wish she’d make a little
racket on it once in awhile.
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