Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TEN
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Leap Year Has
-
Styles Leaping
-
With Allure
BY DOROTHY ROE
Associated Press Fashion Editor
Appropriately enough for Leap
Year, 1952 fashions will be loaded
with the subtler ingredients of
fomninine allure, with accent on
curves,
The small waist, the rounded
hipline, the accented bust and the
iadylike look are all prominent in
tiie Spring collections of top de
signers, while resort wear goes all
out for glorifying the female form
c¢evine—and if it’s not divine the‘
new fashions will do their utmost
to make it appear so. '
Two major silhouettes are in |
piospect far the New Year. ()nel
is slim and tubular, the other
uraped and bouffant. Lilly Dache,
aesigner of “tip to toe” fashiuns,,
ceseribes the Jekyll-Hyde fashion |
prospect thus: '
“Women have a choice of two
distinct ways to look in 1952—and
both are good. For the first look,
the hair is very short, worn in the
‘poodle’ cut, and the silhouette is|
sJaight and supple, with a cor
seled effect at the waistline, high
neckline, rounded hipline, sleeves
pushed up to three-quarter length
and shoes with slightly lower |
shuared spool heel. !
“For the second look, the hair
is long and worn in a chignon,
the skirt is full and one inch
shorter than the straight skirt; the
neckline is deep, the bodice draped .
and sleeves high and full in Gib
son Girl style. High-heeled pumps
go with this one.”
As for hats, Mme. Dache says
they will be “very large or very
small,” and Mr. Fred, of John
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GOOD QUALITY BLEACHED s 11
MUSLIN SHEETS THAT ®
REALLY SAVE YOU PLENTY!
LIMITED QUANTITY!
‘ HURRY DOWN TO PENNY’S BASEMENT
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¥ SO SHOP EARLY FRIDAY MORNING!
RAYON SHEEN GABARDINES, MENS
WEAR SUITINGS. BROKEN SIZES IN
10-20 MOSTLY!
SECOND FLOOR
Fredericks says:
“You'll be able to see the hats
next spring, no matter how high
the poodle hairdo goes. We'll have
no more of those controversies
about—‘Was or was not the Duch
ess wearing a hat'?”
On the beach, the body takes
the spotlight, says Frances Sider,
designer of bathing suits, sports
wear and, more recentl{ a new
foundation which she ca fs “the
body.” She says:
“For true fashion in 1952, wo
men must strive for a sculptured,
supple look, a light and modern
look of complete ease and com
fort. This is achieved by the in
side story of swim suits and beach
wear—a carefully fitted founda
‘tion to keep the curves under con
trol. The correct body lines pre
pares the wearer for the outer
look of small waist, high, defined
bust, smooth midriff and general
streamlined look.”
The younger set will go in for
the Gibson Girl look, says Emily
Wilkens, designer of junior fash
ions. She adds:
“The 1910 silhouette is still
good for 1952. We'll be seeing a
bustle effect on many fashions,
big sleeves and a pretty, feminine
look. The girls still will wear pet
ticoats, but not so many and not |
so full as those of the last year.”
So 1952 is the year in which you
pay your money and take your
choice. If ou fancy the streanr
lined look, go in for slim skirts,
smooth, drooped shoulders, slim
waist, rounded hipline—and a
short haircut. If you're the frilly
type, make a bee line for the leg
o’ mutton sleeves and the fluffy
skirts that also will be in the pic
ture.
In any event, you can't lose.
It's Leap Year, and open season
for all-out allure.
RAT CONTROL i
In poisoning rats, many small
baits are better than a few larger
ones, and pre-baiting is of first
importance. The bait used should
be put out three or four nights
without poison and then the poison
can be added. A rat’s life span is
approximately three years, and
each female produces five or six
litters per year with an average of
seven mice per litter.
PONY RIDING CHILDREN
FOLLOW STRAIGHT PATH
BY WAYNE HERBERT
AP Newsfeatures
COURTLAND, Calif. — If boys
and girls will follow the path of a
pony, says Paul V. Amick, sr.,
they will never get on a wrong
path,
Amick should know; he has 140
ponies attracting as many as 800
youngsters a weekend for free
rides on his 160-acre ranch.
Ponies and boys and girls are
Amick’s get-well hobby. Six years
ago he underwent an operation
and afterwards his health would
not permit him to continue grow
ing pears.
Amick’s project, since then,
“just grew and grew and grew.”
Now, he says at 60: “I never
felt better in my life.” : 1
Thousands Visit Ranch |
Amick estimates that as many
as 3,000 persons a year visit his
place, 85 miles east and a little |
north of San Francisco and 21
miles south of Sacramento. fi
The older neighbor boys and
girls help Amick out on rush
weekends. Sometimes there are as |
many as 30 helpers. There are also
from 8 to 10 hired men and all
the ponies are trained by proses
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: 5 | feel if more of our young children T
leie S 0 many definquents in the United Slates |
A | | foday. Certainly a child will never go on |
| the wrong path if he follows a horse, |
e Vit iis i i ! g
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HORSE SENSE is what Amick finds in polies for kids.
Metabolism Test Is One Way
To Check Activity of Thyroid
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
Written for NEA Service
Many thousands, perhaps hun
dreds of thousands take a basal
metabolism test every year. Con
sequently, Mrs. H's question “With
a metabolism reading of plus fif
teen, is it possible to determine if
the thyroid is toxic?” should be
of general interest.
The basal metabolism is only
one method of testing for the ac
tivity of the thyroid gland or the
presence of toxic goiter.
Ordinarily, however, a figure for
the basal metabolism between
minus 15 and plus 15 is consid
ered about normal and as a general
rule means that the body is burn
ing its fuel about right.
If the metabolism is much more
than plus 15 one is probably using
up foed and tissues too fast and
this may explain nervousress and
loss of weight. Most likety this is
the result of a toxic goiter and
medical or surgical treatment may
be needed.
The metabolism test is simple
enough for the patient. All one
has to do after a good night’s sleep
is to go to the doctor’s office or
laboratory without eating any
breakfast or drinking anything.
Then one lies down on a cot and
breathes normally through a tube.
What is breathed is ordinary air,
and there is no danger of suffo
cating as some nervous people
seem to fear.
But it takes time to make the
calculations afterward. The air
breathed is measured. To calcu
late the result of the test, the pa
tient’s height and weight must also
be known.
These figures are put together
in a formula and the final calcu
lation tells whether one is burning
up the food too fast, too slowly, or
about right.
' When the doctor gives the re
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NOVEL OFFENSE — Tom Pottenburgh, six-foo!, nine
inch basketeer, leaps high to let five-foot, seven-inch Bill Kirsch
dribble by in Siena College practice at Loudonvilie, N. Y.
THE BANNFZA-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
sionals.
Porky, a 28-inch-high Shetland
stallion, jumps through an auto
mobile tire three fdet off the
ground.
Then there is Golden King, a
Palomino upon which a dozen
children can ride at once.
Amick's two grandchildren,
Mary Lynn, 11, and Charles, 9,
are also in on the entertainment.
They can both ride Roman style—
each foot on a dapple grey pony
and they can do it at a full run.
Prepared For All Ages
Amick has two pony merry-go
rounds for beginners, with the
ponies fastened and guided se
curely in their leisurely circling
around the center poles.
But for the older and more ex
pert and venturesome, he has spe
cial corrals.
The smallest is only 20 by 40
feet and any child who can enter
‘it and climb to a pony’s back and
ride without assistance gets a red
star from Amick.
There is a quarter of an acre
corral and a boy or girl succeed
ing in it gets ‘a blue star. The
greatest test comes in a 2ls-acre
corral where the prize is a gold
star,
| sults he says the metabolism was
l plus so and so or minus some fig
ure.
Not Absolute
Once in a.while the metabolism
may be way below normal. This
| does not always mean that the
i thyroid gland is underactive and
l that one must take thyroid extract
to make up the deficiency.
But a low rate may mean this
and sometimes people feel enor=-
mously better if they get the need
ed boost from thyroid extract.
The basal metabolism test has
been of enormous help in making
a diagnosis and deciding how to
treat those in whom the results are
l abnormal.
IN HOLLYWOOD
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLYWOOD —(NEA)— A tor
rid glamorous tamale who rates
higher than Ava Gardner on the
Mexican movi¢ sex-appeal meter
flashed her biack, come-hither
eyes and admitted that she’s a
pistol-packin’ mama.
And she totes the weapon right
along with her lipstick, autograph
pen and comb.
“You sorprise?” asked gorgeous
Katy Jurado (pronounced Kah-ty
Hurrade if you aren’t plumb
speechless by this time).
‘Just paralyzed.”
“Bot don’ your beeg stars here
een Hollywood carry peestols?”
“Just Frank Sinatra’s makeup
man.” i
“Ah, bot I'm always carry pees
tol in Mehico. I call heem Jua
nita.
“Kes neo bullets we'en I'm home
een Mehico City, Only on poisonal
appearings one lohst be careful.
People een leetle towns in Mehico
know I sarry Juanita. They know
I use heem eef sometheeng bad
happen.”
Katy, imported from the south
of-the-border sound stages by
Stanley Kramer as Gary Cooper’s
leading lady in “High Noon,” said
that so far she hadn’t pumped
anybody full of hot lead.
But she’s aimed Juanita at more
than one over-passionate male ad
mirer in the cactus wastelands.
Different Types
“You mohst understan’ Mehican
mans,” Katy slipped it to me. “All
the times mans try to serenade
me. I walk down street., They
wheestle and holler. Mans knock
on horns of the cars wen I'm pass
on street and tie up traffeec. They
yell, ‘Ay, Katy, you know you got
a great body?’”
“What about American wolves?”
“Ah, very deeferent,” winked
Katy. “Ees because maybe you got
more policemen here, huh?”
I wasn’t to get her wrong about |
her' “publeec,” sizzling Katy cau
tioned.
In Mexico, she said, stars mingle
with the common herd and any
emoter who tries the frigid-shoul
der act is a dead duck at the box-
W & g WS
/cs A " 1952 >{? p_— P o
oICE \ Y s}4@ e | [
46-0% 28¢ ; Pesal Vg i // VM’ nf /3 f /
F Vo W 4
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e — / Q AN
fbk ' ‘ ; After a season of f (200 DA \ l’/\' A
c solved to s spending, everybody’s re- | \¥ ~ )
] ro Cs COLONIALla‘(I::m::reh:;e" the answer—SHOP d"; *
N 7 @ Marg | i e —
B Sagy, | it o I
Bofoz‘ p ;‘l;hrm ghout t‘he New Year, we p::;prfovec;", '4 / Ti ;
le 2 nue our policy of everyday low pri o / /
- 2¢ B friendliest, most courteous aervicp ces, high quality and the (g .‘,
\k'?\ the store for you in '521 B e Y
> YOUR FRIENDLY COLONIAL § 4 e
L O ,43
! “??‘&c‘ Faditional Vlew y"“" s Favorite!
‘ sa“ o P FANCY DRIED BLACKEYE
i 1-Lb. y
cl“:';’ff 75 & eds - 15¢¢:2: 29¢ Y
: . SMOKED ‘ Jl%
¢ l'log Jowl COLONES
wis - 25¢
{2 / G’r,,p:;T | - e "ifii-maat__f-"fli"@m“w
/ J ruj s ALMON REDGATE No.l
) 46’OZUICt " PINK Coa.n 49¢
Can - 2 Tl D WASHING
< l ¢ POWDERS z ‘gl-(gsz. ¢
BEETS - "= 10°
e—— A B U
MARGARET HOLMES FIELD
No. 303 ¢
WITH SNAPS e
REDGATE CUT
N BE ANS No. 303 loc
Can
REDGATE GOLDEN
No. 303 25 ¢
CORN oo v: 2 .
T——————_
FACIAL TISSUES
PKG,
SCOTTIES .. 14¢
DIAMOND SOFTEX
TISSUES 2 . 23¢
ROUND THE CLOCK PROTECTION
REG.
DIAL SOAP 2 ::. 27¢
SOAP PADS
M.
BRILLO s Ide
COLONIAL'S GUARANTEED FRESH MEATS
PORK CHOPS Garden-Fresh o
Cent ¢ Econ ¢ R g
or e 59tesur «47 UTABAGAS
BEEF CUTS ... ot o CA':Q:M 6¢ MeolUs
IZE
ROAST -75¢--68° | Turnip su. = . 4
T Lb.
STEAK -1. 91° |Lettuce s 57"
RIB v RG Hd ‘ 5
STEAK - 90¢..78¢ | Sollards o= /337
PLATE STEW BEEF . 39¢ ?mmons eiiow' 3 1 27‘@5
FRESH GROUND BEEF 1 65¢ § Fucesiosch¥ilien cuavons ouusy, o,
— e _2TURDAY, DEC, 3 TH,
Tt fiCEDABRcm(FoASTN Frosty-Fresh 1 rozen fibo(/;C T
W@Mx WINNER ¢ naby Limag et @
! &gm& ::t‘ QUALITY Lb. 49 Bn OCCOLI Brand 2 Pkgs. 35 >
oot v . 49° LTEACHES ..ol 2o
e Rt o T T R R IS
(O TRV . ’M*'W O
Washington at Pulaski-and-Broad at Spring
s . A O O M eo, Pt it eet
[omco.
~ What, T wanted to know, did
Katy find different about Holly
wood?
She blinked her sooty eyelashes.
“'Ollywood sorprise me about
beeg movie womans.”
“You mean , . .”
“l mean they can bee feefty or
seexty and they still Jook good. In
Mehico, womans get old fast. Ees
because we leeve more exciteeng
life, We eat too mohch. We love
too mohch.”
“What else?”
3 No In-Between
“Here is mohch in-between,”
Katy said, “In Mehico, we have
two ways—love or hate. We don’t
say, like you, swittie-pie or honey.
We say, ‘I love you and you love
me.! Or we say, ‘You hate me, I
hate you, so hokay'’ 1 make
peecture weeth actress I don’ like,
I say. ‘You wan’ fight weeth me?
Hokay.’ We are never medium in
Mehico. We don’t like medium.””
“1 got plenty temperament. On-
Wi
uonly?n
“Ees actors’ unions and we are
poneesh if we make sometheeng
wrong een studio, T'ree month,
seex mohnth, we can not work.‘
Once I am so bad in studio. 1 can
do nawtheeng, for thees time I am
——— —— T — A et 5
Our Pride Breads
OVEN-FRESH
SANDWICH BREAD ¢ l4c
ROLLS
BROWN 'N SERVE <. 19c
1009 WHOLE
WHEAT BREAD wor 19¢
OUR PRIDE
HAMBURGER BUNs % 16¢
wrong.
“So I take thees feenger, I am
so mad, and I bend her beck—all
the way back—and I'm break my
feenger right een front of direetor.
1 cool off pretty queeck, I ean tell
you.”
“High Noon,” Katy volunteered
the information, is her second
American film. She faced the grin
go camera for the first time in
“The Bullfighter and the Lady.”
She's made 27 Spanish-language
films as “bad girls, crazy girls and
girls who is all time taking away
other womans’ hoosban.”
INSECTICIDES FOR ’52
According to Department of
Agriculture officials, farmers
should put some thought on the
FOR PROMPTNESS, EFFICIENCY & COUBTERY
5 —IN—
- WRECKER SERVICE
ALWAYS CALL
SILVEY MOTOR COMPANY
?: Phone 246 Day Phone 393% Night
m
DIXIANA BRAND :
No. 2 loc
TURNIP cseens ',
REDGATE TASTY
16-Oz. 19c
PORK & BEAN‘ 2 Cans *
SMOKEY MT. CHOW CHOW
RELISH .5 “> 24°
OR HOT Jar ,
THUI*Y. DECEMBER 27, 195;
wi Mflnvforil;l—ie::h lues
and Wd.l in 1032, Oue ay
to avert some possible hatdla ~ks
in supplies is to buy part of | .
supply now,
Goodbye Hearthurn
feflo TUMS! |
B 8 iy soc o
oy
S e
—SU—NSHINE HI HO
CRACKERS -34
SNOWDRIFY
SHORTENING = 99¢
PINT BOTTLE 84¢
WESSON OIL . 65¢
‘ MAHATMA
RICE = 15¢ :: 40
STAR KISK SOUD-PACI_ LIGHT MEAT
"I'UNA FISH . 35¢