Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1949.
P ————————————————————
ies -- Gl Style
Nighties-- G
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AP Newsfeatures Wriler
gAN FRANCISCO For to
day’ veteran’s su s story we
offer Herschelle. - #&
BIRDSEY'S
QUALITY & SAVINGS
AT’?’:‘ P
Your local Birdsey Store
FLOUR' .
BIRDSEY’S BEST 904
'_).i—)-IAbS. g b e .‘}‘»fi‘a}*
4-BROTHERS & 4 .87
25-IJbS- b .Q‘:fil
MONEYSAVER, 1.74
95-Lbs, .. .&eas
~ COFFEE%
BIRDSEY’S BEST Lb.
Vacuum cafi %."f“‘- 50
- Tee e
4 BROTHERS ..* 40
FAIRPLAY . . ¢3O
w,_,__w,,___.___—-——-fk—.__-._-———-—
BIRDSEY'SREEED
GROWING Gt
MASH A 50
100-Lbß, .. + . 4
BROILER MASH 4,55
100=L.D%. v B o B
SCRATCH g
GRAIN ; .00
JUU"IJbS- . SR e "8 4
LAYING MASH 4,50
100-Lbs. .. B 3
DAIRY FEED __ #.BO
1”‘)-1;1)S., 20 (fi: . '.;;? 3
PIG & HOG.i" ' A.OO
FEEDS, 100-4bs. 4
HORSE FEED 3,75
SOO-Lbs. .. s,
FAIRPLAY CHICKS
Place Your Orders Now
For Future Delivery.
BIRDSEY FLOUR &
FEED STORE
447 East. Broad
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tter-firm
B s/ ‘y
N NS
RIS &(¥ R o
\ Mortons ARG morlON
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Plain : W f X Y T B
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NOW OFFERS
5 :I'lrips to Gainesville
1 Trip to Chattanooga .
3 Trips to Dublin
2 Trips to Savannah
2 Trips to Brunswick ;
2 Trips to Jacksonville *
UNION.BUS STATION
Phone 2141 .
In six months this burly young
ex-GI has made the West Coast
ladies lingerrie business look to its
laurels. '
Herschelle claims to be the guy
responsible for the pantaloon pa-
Jama, the mother-and-daughter
matched nightie set, and the sear
sucker shorty. He says that be
fore Herschelle, pajamas were
just a nocturnal slack-suit. Short
ies came generally in unglamorous
flannel. Mothers and daughters
apparently slept in unmatched
nighties.
The man who did something
about this situation is 26 years
old, weighs 183 pounds, ‘and
stands nearly six feet tall. His
ideas about nightwear for West
Coast ladies have inspired them
to seek far more of his products
than he can supply. It makes him
unhappy, but he has to turn donw
big orders from the east, too.
Herschelle was born 'in Pitts
burgh, Pa., as Harold Stein. His
father is a poultry-and-egg dealer
and wanted Harold to go into the
business.
“But I always liked to draw,
and especially I liked to dray
girls,” says Herschelle. So after
high school he went to an art and
design school and found he liked
to draw girls’ clothes, too.
This was the situation in 1943,
when Herschelle enlisted in the
Army. Within three’ months he
found himself in England, in the
amphibious engineers, poised for
the Normandy invasion.
There were buzz-bombs and air
raids, but the realy interesting
part of it all to Herschelle was
when he got'to Paris, a place
where they think a lot about
women’s clothes. Herschelle felt
at home there.
The war took him on to Ger
many, and back to America for
demobilization. It wasn’t long
before he was back in Paris,
studying how to make clothes for
women.
“I made enough money selling
designs to pay n:y way and do a
lot of traveling arcund Europe,”
he recalls.
He returned to America two
years ago and worked in a couple
of ladies garment factories on the
west coast, designing and manag
ing production.
“It was all right, and I learned
a lot,” says Herschelle, “But you
turn in a good sound design and
the louse it up right away with
some gingerbread or something,
and I got tired.” .
So last fall he looked around for
an opening to get started on his
own. In his opinion, “sleeping
stuff for gals,” as he calls it, was
subject to improvement. He began
by taking pajamas, borrowing a
touch from the harem to change
the pants into pantaloons, install
ed the bare midriff, and that did
it. Six seamstresses in his small
factory and a number of contracts
iet out to other makers stiii have
not made asmany pantaloon paja
mas ag the girle want to buy It's
the same with the matched nigh
ties, the new seersucker shortie,
and a simple hostess gown of eye
let material.
He tells you all this, and you
say he still looks like a truant
halfback.
“Basketball and socter used to
be my sport,” he says as he bends
back over his designing table,
“Now it's right here. I get here at
8:30 in the morning and never
get away before midnight.”
Plan New
Hobby In
Middle Years
BY ALICIA HART
NEA Staff Writer
The attitude of many middle
aged women lis expressed by
these familiar words: “I've lived
my life, so I'll sit by and watch
my children live theirs.”
When a woman begins to féel
no more interest than that in the
rich years ahead, she should give
her defeatist attitude a good go
ing over.
When a woman's children are
grown and her obligations to
ward them have \aen fulfilled is
the time for her to begin a stim
ulating new life for herseif. The
moment one new interest’ grips
her attention, her defeatist atti
tude expressed by “I'll sit by and
watch,” will be changed.
A plan to leaq a fuller and
more stimulating life, now that
the mother of a brood is_free to
pursue new interests, will make
her a more. fascinating woman to
her husband, friends and chil
dren. Her failure to *“grow” and
to enrich her personality is apt
to put her in that category, which
every woman wants to avoid, of
ebing a dull mother and wife
an a stick-in-the-mud friend.
Ribbons Prettify
Pumps For Party
You can make daytime pumps
double as Cinderella slippers, if
your budget says “no” to another
pair of evening shoes.
The trick of “glamming up”
daytime pumps — this goes for
shoes of black. suyede, of colored
linen and of “graduation” white
satin or ‘kid—s to strap them to
vour feet with matching-color rib
bon laces. e
Ribbon laces sewed to the bind
ing around the dege of pumps and
laced across instep and ankles will
not only dress. up daytime pumps
for evening wear but will hold
such shoes more securely to your
feet for dancing. . 5
1t there is no particular need for
tying pumps more securely to your
feet, you can skip the sewing chore
altogether. By strapping your
stockinged feet with ribbon laces
before you put on your pumps—
strap first across the instep and
then around the ankle where the
ribbon is tied — you can achieve
the same effect of glamorizing
daytime Rumps without sewing a
stitch.
Dairy Foods Are
Abundant Now
BY GAYNOR MADDOX
NEA Staff Writer
.If you like cheese, -milk and
other dairy products, then June
will be a happy month for you.
Are you a salad enthusiast? Good,
for (:i}xr,ing June lettuce will be
abundant, and therefore on the
budget list. ;
The United States Department
of .Agriculture lists the following
as plentiful foods for June for the
nation as large. e :
A.Vegefables: Lettuce Irish pota
toes, cabbage (East and Midwest).
Canned K'oods: Apricots mixed
with, corn, peas, (lower grades).
Other Foods: Fish, fresh and
frozen), died beans, dried peas,
oatmeal, corn products, honey,
‘peanut butter.:
Dairy, poultry Foods: Eggs,
broilers, fryers, dairy products.
Budget menus can ure these
plentifuls deliciously. "
Dinner: Chicken-noodle soup
pork chop suey, asparagus salad,
bread, butter or fortified marga
rinli, peach coconut Betty ,Coffee,
miik. :
Dinner:” Cream of asparagus
soup, salmon patties, succotash,
lettuce wedges with French dress
ing, hot biscuitts, butter or ,fogi
fied margarine, chocolate pudding,
coffee, milk. . .
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PAGE THREE-B