Newspaper Page Text
Page 8
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, March 26,1977
Miss Kathryn Gail Bunn
is bride of Mr. Mcßride
The marriage of Miss
Kathryn Gail Bunn to Mr.
William Thomas Mcßride was
solemnized Saturday, March 12,
at the First United Methodist
Church Chapel. The Rev. Elvyn
MacDonald performed the
ceremony at 3 p.m.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Donald George Duke and
Mr. Samuel Rutherford Bunn,
Sr. of Griffin. The groom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Mcßride of Barnesville.
Mrs. Darlene Gilbert,
organist, and Mr. William
Woodward, soloist, presented a
program of wedding music. Mr.
Woodward sang “The Wedding
Prayer” and Rev. MacDonald
sang “The Lord’s Prayer.
Miss Julianne Bunn was maid
of honor. Bridesmaids were
Anita Faye Ballard and Cynthia
Susan Ballard, all of Griffin.
The attendants wore long
gowns of mint green organza
with appliques of mint alencon
lace. The gowns featured
scooped necklines with puffed
sleeves, fitted midriff and a
CATFISH
CABIN
Highway 16 East
Jackson Road
Griffin, Ga.
228-7620
All You Can Eat
Friday Night
FRIED SHRIMP
(Reg. MJS)
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BOILED SHRIMP
$375
Monday Night
FROG LEGS
$395
Sunday
SUNDAY LUNCHEON
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$ ]95
Hours: Mon.-Sat 5-10p.m.
Sunday 12 Noon -10 P.M.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
10:00 - Sunday School
11:00 ‘ Worship
’* ! * /> Nursery Provided
Rev. Haco w. von Hacke Griffin Academy
Pastor, 227-6992 Wilson Road
2.
• I \ P
Groom and Mother
Simplicity, dignity and elegance are the tools of his
trade. His pictures are not accidents, nor does the emotion
in them come by chance. He knows what to look for and
what to do with it when he finds it His sensitive eye can
capture and hold emotion in a single photograph or in a
entire series.
Frank Ellis, Wedding Photography, formerly located in
Perry, Georgia, now in Griffin at 414 W. Taylor St next to
Cartledge Furniture.
When you think of Wedding Photography, Think...
" - tot |
circular skirt. They carried
French nosegays of multi
colored carnations, roses,
daisies and statice.
Mr. Bobby Cone of
Barnesville served as best man.
Ushers were Mr. Johnny
Mansour of Atlanta, Mr. Johnny
Mcßride and Mr. Richard
Mcßride of Barnesville.
The bride was given in
marriage by her father, Mr.
Samuel Rutherford Bunn, Sr.
She wore a wedding gown of
sata gio with Venice lace trim
outlining the high open neckline
extending to the bodice where
floating panels formed the
chapel train. The skirt and train
were laced at the hemline. A
matching mantilla extended to
the train. The bride wore the
diamond lavaliere given by her
grandfather, Roy S. Alford, Jr.
of Milledgeville to his bride,
Agnes Drennan. The bride also
chose his birthday for her
wedding day.
The bride carried a bouquet of
yellow roses with stephanotis in
cascade with a bride’s shower
of fleur de armour.
Following the wedding, a
reception was held in the
reception hall of the church.
Women joining men
in underground work
KELLOGG, Idaho (AP) - It
takes Mary Miner an hour to
get down to work.
She commutes on an under
ground railroad which she
boards at the portal of the
Bunker Hill Mine, one of the
world’s largest lead mines.
Once inside, she transfers to
a “skip,” a sled on steeply in
clined rails, to reach her job
more than half a mile under
the surface.
“I’m just one of the boys,”
said Mrs. Miner, 35, the mother
of eight children and one of six
women who began toiling 16
months ago side by side with
200 men in the mine.
Because of tradition, super
stition and perhaps a little
male chauvinism, women
haven’t until now been allowed
to work underground in North
Idaho’s Coeur d’Alene Mining
District.
Despite superstition, there
have been no cave-ins. The
Bunker Hill Mine is still intact.
“A few of the men don’t like
to work with women,” said
mine Supt. Harry Cougher.
“But this isn’t superstition.
They probably wouldn’t like to
work with women on the sur
face, either. If there are any
complaints, it is from the wives
of some of the miners, and
most of this is barroom talk.”
Six women began their min-
■ *4
I•
Mrs. William Thomas Mcßride
The reception was given by Mr.
and Mrs. Don Duke.
The wedding cake was served
by Mrs. William Howard of
Milledgeville.
The bride’s book was kept by
Miss Kitty Woodward.
Assisting in serving were
Mrs. Patricia Mcßride, Miss
Julie Woodward and Miss Cathy
Coker.
Mr. and Mrs. Mcßride will
reside in Barnesville.
FL-J
i
MARY MINER
ing careers after they were
transferred from jobs in the
smelter near the mine, where
they were exposed to high lead
levels.
Reports in medical journals
said women exposed to such
levels could give birth to chil
dren with defects or suffer
stillbirths and miscarriages,
the company said.
Mrs. Miner is the engineer on
what salty miners call a “moz
tor.” It’s a five-ton, battery
powered locomotive which
hauls a string of 3M>-ton ore
cars. The other women operate
motors and hoists used to
transport ore, miners and
equipment.
“There aren’t that many
women excited about working
down there,” said Cougher.
“Sometimes the motor oper
ators have to lift heavy tim
bers. A great deal of physical
strength is required.” Humidity
in the big lead, silver and zinc
mine is nearly 100 per cent.
Ann Scott, 36, a grandmother
and mother of six children, was
operating an underground hoist
before she took a leave of ab
sence.
“Some of the men figured a
woman would run a hoist the
way she drives a car,” sighed
Mrs. Scott. But the attitude
didn’t last.
Karla Rose, 22, the youngest
woman miner, enjoys operating
a motor, but doesn’t like to get
her face dirty. Miss Rose,
whose hobby is barrel racing in
rodeos, plans to continue work
ing underground “until I retire
or get married, whichever
comes first.”
She was recently given a
raise —2OO feet up to a higher
level in the mine.
f;
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RESTAURANT
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Phone 957-4827
Russell Oldag
Miss Marguerite Kallal
is bride of Mr. Smith
The chapel of the First United
Methodist Church in Griffin was
the setting for the wedding of
Miss Marguerite Anne Kallal,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
Edward W. Kallal of LaGrange,
Illinois, to Mr. Walter DeWitt
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs.
DeWitt Talmadge Smith of
Griffin.
The ceremony was performed
March 19 at noon by the Rev.
Lamar Cherry.
The bride, given in marriage
by her father, wore an ivory
Lucerne sheer gown with a
chapel length veil of silk
illusion. A circlet of yellow
roses and baby’s breath in her
camelot type headpiece
matched her bouquet.
The matron of honor was Mrs.
Michael Collier, sister of the
Hairdresser calls cutting an art
By VIVIAN BROWN
AP Newsfeatures Writer
Richard Stein of New York is
a very unusual hairdresser. He
doesn’t brush hair or color it.
He doesn’t curl it or tease it or
spray it. He just washes it and
cuts it.
“I strive for an anti-coiffeur
look —a really natural hairdo
— cut perfectly for easy care
at home between haircuts, a
haircut that is unique for the
individual."
Most beauty parlor minis
trations “are addictive,” in his
opinion. If you begin using a
hair conditioner, you must con
tinue using it; color or bleach
must be maintained or hair
roots will darken. Or it might
be a permanent wave that will
need to be kept up, he said.
“Hair care has become too
big a deal for women. And too
expensive. Why put a lot of
energy into devices — curlers,
pin curls, sprays and so on—
when you can, instead, give all
that time to improving the hair
itself,” he says.
“I am trying to introduce a
European approach to. hair
cutting, treating it as a craft,
an art, a very serious busi
ness,” explained Stein, who
was born in London and ap
prenticed there at 15, coming to
the United States 10 years ago.
“We want to show customers
how to care for their hair be
tween haircuts, a period of
about two months.”
It takes 30 to 45 minutes to
get one of the super haircuts at
his salon, where his staff has
been trained in the technique.
It is all done with scissors and
comb.
At the end of the cut, the hair
is almost dry, anyway, he
points out. If a little help in
drying is needed, a blow dryer
is used for a few moments, oth
erwise no heat is used. He
doesn’t use hair brushes, which
“can break the hair.”
“It is really an uphill
struggle, though, to sell the
idea,” the 29-year-old father of
two explained. “But once a
woman has such a haircut, she
usually is thrilled.”
As if to confirm his state
ment, one of his young custom
ers who had just had a haircut
by a member of his staff eager
ly volunteered her pleasure.
Her own slight wave was stim
ulated into body and movement
that provided a kind of con
trolled bounce.
"If you understand what hair
will do, you can find hair
cutting a great challenge, pro
viding possibilities for changing
styles with one cut. It need not
be covered with rollers, teased
or sprayed,” Stein maintains.
For spring he anticipates
longer layered hair. To get it in
shape he suggests washing it
once a day with seven parts
water to one part shampoo be
cause “most shampoos are too
concentrated and leave a film
on the hair.” If the shampoo is
diluted, the hair can be washed
bride. The bridesmaid was Mrs.
Lee King, sister of the groom.
The flower girls were Mary
Jordan Collier and Marcy Lowe
Collier, nieces of the bride.
The attendants wore
matching dresses of sea green
quiana with circlets of daisy
chrysanthemums in their hair
and carried matching nosegays.
Best man was Mr. David
Beard of Moultrie, Ga. Mr.
Edward W. Kallal, Jr. of
Durham, North Carolina, was
groomsman. Ushers were Mr.
Rob Robinson of Atlanta, Mr.
Bruce Huggins of Valdosta and
Mr. Steve Stathem of Griffin.
A luncheon reception was
given by Dr. and Mrs. Kallal at
the Lewis Mills home.
The groom’s parents hosted a
rehearsal dinner at the Griffin
Country Club.
MF wßfefc
Longer back
New York haircutter Richard Stein shows two versions of
his new longer-back look, which are possible from one
haircut, combed forward on the face, left, or back to open
up the forehead, right
each day.
And if you want to condition
it, try mayonnaise — use a few
tablespoons of it, combing it
through the hair, cover it with
a shower cap and leave the cap
on for two hours before sham
pooing the hair several times.
It is a good treatment for dry,
coarse hair, he said.
Liquid vitamin E and baby
oil are other good hair condi
tioners, Stein says. Apply the
oil to dry areas with a cotton
pad, wearing rubber gloves.
Soak a towel in very hot water,
FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
REV. LAMAR CHERRY, PASTOR
REV. STEVE WINTER, ASSOC. PASTOR
MORNING SERVICE 11 A.M.
Sermon By Pastor
"WHAT HAPPENS TO YOU
MAHERS WITH GOD”
Evening Service 7:30
Sermon By Rev. Winter
"THE GREATEST
MIRACLE”
✓
I 7
i . tfb
Mrs. Walter DeWitt Smith
After a honeymoon in the
Florida Keys, the couple will
reside in Valdosta, Ga.
wringing it and wrapping it
around the head. Leave it on
until the heat dissipates. Re
heat the towel and repeat proc
ess from seven to ten times.
Shampoo the hair three or four
times to get rid of excess oil.
To give hair a sheen, rinse it
with a mixture of equal parts
of nettles, rosemary and dill
(two teaspoons of each) that
has been steeped in a pint of
hot water for about one half
hour. Use the strained cool liq
uid as a final rinse, he sug
gests.
Miss Cathy Ann Perkins
engaged to Mr. Bell
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur B.
Massey of Athens, Ga.
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Miss Cathy Ann
Perkins, to Mr. Duren Emerson
Bell, son of Mr. and Mrs. H.
Emerson Bell of Ellabell, Ga.
Miss Perkins is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas McKinley of Zebulon
and Mrs. Byron Massey and the
late Mr. Massey of Griffin.
Mr. Bell is the grandson of
Mrs. Lillie W. Smith of Ellabell,
Ga. and the late Mr. Smith and
the late Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M.
Bell.
The bride-elect is a 1976
graduate of the University of
Georgia, where she received a
BS degree in English education.
She was a member of Sigma
Kappa sorority. Miss Perkins is
a teacher .with the Madison
County School System.
Mr. Bell is a 1977 graduate of
the University of Georgia,
where he received a BS degree
in animal science. He was a
member of Alpha Zeta
Agriculture Honor Fraternity.
Mr. Bell is employed by W.
Preston White, a registered
swine producer in Alamo, Ga.
The wedding will take place
June 11 at Milledge Avenue
Baptist Church in Athens, Ga.
Mental health
affects work
NEW YORK (AP) - About
one third of a person’s life is
spent working, so it pays to
maintain on-the-job mental
health, says Dorothy M. Sailer,
executive director of the Amer
ican Association of Occupation
al Health Nurses.
The group’s 9,000 members,
all registered nurses, daily
counsel employes and see first
hand the effect of personal
problems on job performance.
Self-examination on the follow
ing points might be the key to
increasing your own happiness
at work, Miss Sailer notes.
—ls something at the office
or factory bothers you, do you
ever express your feelings — in
a nice way, of course — to your
boss? It might be a good idea
to do so.
—Have you had a physical
checkup during the past year,
especially on your blood pres
sure? It could be the root of
what’s bothering you.
—Do your on-the-job work
habits create stress for you and
your coworkers? Every com
pany has behavior and proce
dural norms that require a cer
tain amount of conformity.
—Do you have the right qual
ifications and skills for your
job? You may be in the wrong
field — or “over your head” in
your present job.
—What about your personal
habits? Are you smoking or
drinking too much. Are you
overeating?
Gospel Singing
Sat. Night March 26
7:30 P.M.
FELLOWSHIP
BAPTIST CHURCH
• The Rooks Family, Lawrenceville, Ga
• The Merritt Singers, Griffin
Rev. Wayman Merritt, Pastor
FRIENDSHIP
BAPTIST CHURCH
41 By-Pats South
Rev. Henry K. Neal
Evangelist
Secretary Metropolitan Mission
Ministries
Georgia Baptist Convention
March 27 - April 1
7:30 P.M.
Greg Hughes, Music Director
Pastor: Charles A. Jones
Miss Cathy Ann Perkins
FIRST
BAPTIST
CHURCH
Hill at Taylor
*
SUNDAY
SCHEDULE
9:45 Sunday School
11:00 Morning Worship
“What’s In A Face”
6:30 Church Training
7:30 Evening Worship
Observance of
Lord’s Supper
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can benefit
from
worship
at
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227-7381