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The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • 14

Location:
Atlanta, Georgia
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Cclcstlnc Sihletj wmews II Hula ooinnsr- October 27, 1958 Page 14 I. am ien men were en ill 7 71 AT Bogs Were Real the sofa. When his mistress entertains the "girls" for the weekly bridge club, the tiny toy terror resides blissfully in her lap, growling appropriately when the wrong finesse is made. DIET FACTOR Diet is a delicate factor in the life of these pee-wees. They turn their tiny noses up in typical blue-blooded fashion at the common, ordinary brands of doggie chow.

Their preference turns, instead, to such succulent slops as gravy-dunked bits of lamb, roast beef and the tenderest of sirloins. Baby blankets are used in the manner of the receiving blanket to cover the cuddlers who are more sus- V5 Mrs. Ann Mask, the hula -hoop victim, will forgive me if I seem to rejoice in her misfortune. Having spent some hours in what they call a traction a medical euphemism for being stretched on the rack I truly sympathize with the agony she is suffering from that gigantic backache. There may be more excruciating misery in this world than that coming from a bunged-up back but I'm unacquainted with it and I imagine Mrs.

Mask would say the same. The faci that she Is in the hospital with sand-bans hanging from her logs and the prospect of iwlergoing surgery all as a result of an encounter with a hula hoop is going (o help me ml In the days to come when my young and tumble family and friends urge that idiot dance on me. For weeks now as the hula craze spread I've been shaking my head gloomily and saying, "Taint safe, 'taint safe!" jrVp and down the hall my coworkers have gone out to lunch and come in bearing hula hoops. For children in their families, they said. But the people around here doing the giggling and wrig-pling have not been children.

Some of them are lissome little teen-agers, to be sure, but some are elderly citizens in their 30s and 40s. "Come on, try it!" they have called to me. And although I'm generally regarded as venturesome by my children, being amenable to doing bellybusters off the high rock into Holly Creek and climbing up on the roof to look for leaks, I have fled from bula hoops as if they were rabid dogs. To tell you the truth I didn't realize the hoops wer dangerous until Mrs. Mask of Fayet'eville made the front page of our newspaper with her wrenched back.

It's just that I knew how ridiculous I'd look swinging myself about in one of those revolving rainbows. Mrs. Mask, being but 27 years old, didn't have to think of that. But even when I was 27 years old I couldn't do the Big Apple. Even when I was 10 and all the children in Creola Grammar School were learning the Charleston I stumbled over my feet and fell flat of my intervertabrae disc when I tried it.

The Black Bottom was beyond me and so was the Shag. I have admired Jitterbugging from the safe distance of a good, firm, straight-backed chair in the corner for many years now, although more than once I've been sorely tempted to try it. (That step they call "the dirty boogy," don't you think it's pretty cute?) All the writers in the magazines today tell you that there's no virtue in what we used to cail recognizing our limitations. I think you're supposed to regard yourself as unlimited. Your handicaps can be assets, they tell me.

Well, for once, I'm ready to admit the truth In that. If you've seen a hula girl and looked in the mirror and seen yourself and you note a difference call it handicap and eschew the hula hoop! Now with the clipping about Mrs. Mask in hand I no longer have to listen to jeers about my advancing age and weight. I will simply wave the story about Mrs. Mask around and say, now with a ring of real authority, "Taint safe! 'Taint safe!" Tins LITTLE DOGGIE STAYS HOME Mrs.

Robert Walters Gives Pooch Manicure Miss By sard Is Wed To S. Perry Keziah At an evening ceremony solemnized on Saturday at the Broad Street Methodist Church in Statesville, N.C., Miss Virginia Lee Dysard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lee Dysard of Statesville, became the bride of Sarlford Perry Keziah of Atlanta, son of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Sanford Perry Keziah of High aiiiiiiiiiailiM'Jil iiiniiom I I lifful Ti Tr 1 -J--' i II 4 i 1 Miss Moon Is Bride of Mr. Giles Miss Kathryn Moon, daughter of Mrs. William A. Moon and the late Mr. Moon of Eastman, was married to Verlyn McDowell Giles of Jacksonville at an afternoon ceremony solemnized at her mother's home.

The Rev. Max O'Neal, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Eastman, officiated in the presence of members of the two families. William A. Moon the bride's brother, and Eugene Von Waaldner of Savannah, her cousin, lighted the candles. Edward Mixon of Cordele was best man for Mr.

Giles, and Miss Rosalyn Woodward of Eastman was the bride'i maid With her white lace dress, the bride wore an illusion veil attached to a bandeau of lace and seed pearls. She carried a nosegay of feathered white carnations. Following the nuptial service, Mr. Giles and his bride left for Florida State University at THIS LITTLE DOGGIE GOES TO MARKET Owned by Mrs. H.S.

Boling roint, N.u The Bev. Julian IJndsey read the nuptial service at 8 o'clock, and it was followed Immediately by a reception held at the Dysard home on Elm street in Statesville, with the bride's parents as hosts. Pamela Dysard was maid of honor for her sister, who chose as her bridesmaids Tina Joiner of Albany, Carolyn Lamb of Balnbridge, Joan Reich of Statesville, Mrs. Arthur Little of Hickory, N.C., Mrs. James Cheatham of Statesville, and Mrs.

Robert Banks of Greensboro, N.C. Dysard gave his daughter In marriage. Her gown of antique silk mist taffeta featured a bodice of re-embroidered Alen-con lace, a sheath front and a billowy back extending from the empire line into a court train. Her veil of illusion cascaded from a coronet of matching Alencon lace encrusted in seed pearls, and she carried an armful of calla lilies and a small, ivory-covered Testament given her as a child by her paternal grandparents. Paul Byrum of High Point was best man for Mr, Keziah, and serving as his usher-groomsmen were Wallace M.

Wright, Blaine Kelley James Johnson Jr. and Jerry H. Cates, By JOYCE GEMMILL Back in the days when men were men and ladies pulled the apron strings together instead of the purse strings, there was' a creature of sizable proportions called a dog. According to Mr. Webster, this was a carnivorous, domesticated mammal A fairly authentic skeleton of this flesh-consuming beastie may be seen at the Museum of Natural History in New York.

Often referred to as "man's best friend," this animal was said to reach dimensions large enough to protect a man's domain, flush a covy of quail and generally handle himself in a fashion befitting a dog. Today, however, it is becoming evident that along with the reduction of the male status, dogs are diminishing in stature, too. A NEW TOY Sweeping the feminine social circles is a new bug (the toy dog) which is hardly larger than the flea that resided in the hide of an old hound dog. Any mite measuring over 6 to 10 inches in the toy Chihuahua class is just too big to be socially acceptable. These little neck nestlers are said to be as sensitive as a lie detector.

They cuddle up to "mama like a new-born babe and woe to the extended finger of the stranger who might try to pet them. Only a peasant or a hardhearted husband would ever relegate one of these tiny hanks of hair to anything as undignified as a dog house or kennel. "Baby" prefers the sanctity of satin pillow or the center of Miss Lucile Nix Heads Dixie Librarians Miss Lucile Nix, chief library consultant, has been elected president of the Southeastern Regional Library Assn. A native of Commerce, Miss Nix attended Furman University and holds a library degree from Emory. She had held library positions in Winston-Salem, N.C.; Knoxville, and Emory University.

i Miss Nix is active In the American Library the Georgia Congress of Parents and Teachers and the Adult Education Council. HAN Atlv.tt Ct, 1 ogs ceDtible to colds than their larger counterparts. Ardent recipients of constant primping and pampering, the more feminine of the high order of the social cast spend hours manicuring tiny nails, combing and currying their petite pets and buying or knitting the most expensively woven sweaters. The woman who has really "arrived" wouldn't dream of going shopping or to the bank without carrying her pride and joy with her. And more than one "undercover" plot has been pulled to smuggle the capsule canines into "no dogs allowed" areas.

Large pocketbooks and coat pockets are favorite hideaways. 1 T'-'J SiiAMPi wash'n curl TUDIMAJUC y1 lor IlLS OOED Tins LITTLE DOGGIE EATS ROAST BEEF Mrs. C. P. Clover Goes to Bank With Pet WillS AE1 GAll HOW BE Small Hands Repay Debt To Dynamited Temple By ELIZABETH MORGAN Small coins from small hands are repaying a big debt to Atlanta's bomb-ravaged temple.

In 1948, E. Rivers School burned down, the devastating result of an attempt to burn out wasp nests under the eaves. The Temple invited the turned-out teachers and students to hold classes in its religious school building. K3T0 YOUR HAIR! HEW PROTEIN WAVING SHAMPOO Conditions and curls while it cleans! Long lasting! Guarantees 'natural waves from shampoo to shampoo! No more costly permanents! No more nightly pin-ups! ye i Try Tossing a Salad Featuring Fall Fruits 1 WEDS ATLANTAN Mrs. Perry Keziah all of Atlanta, Robert F.

Marler of Washington, D.C., Paul Hardin III of Durham, N.C, and Robert L. Neill of Winston-Salem, N.C. Mr. Keziah and his bride flew to Nassau for a honeymoon. On their return to Atlanta they will reside in the Roswell Court Apartments.

Mr. Keziah is a tax attorney with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service here. But it will fit into most any menu, and literally at a moment's notice. It's made of apple, pear and banana slices and halved, salted peanuts.

And the secret of its beauty is the antidarkening agent of ascorbic acid which makes sure the fruits are as bright and fresh at supper time r.v 1 5 UP RABBIT FOR SUNDAY Flutfy Whipped Cream Dressing VZ Anyone Can Afford STAUFFEfl As Low As $10 Per Month Kever befori fess this famous plan cf effortless exercise and calorie ridtiction been priced so low. J. v. Isagine! As little 33 a tty rcts Ilia Staffer Kama Imagine YOU actually waving and curling your hair yen wash it! Whirls of wished-for curls! Wonderfully obedient, silken-soft waves that last and last, thanks to Wash 'n Curl, the exciting new kind of shampoo! Think of it! From now on, no more fussing with extra lotions, neutraliiers, end papers or hair spray sets. Forget about expensive permanents and bothersome rightly pinups.

All you do is shampoo with Wash 'n Curl! liquid is a scientific blend of precious, health-giving proteins and heart-of-lanolin that gently conditions, curls and cleans at the same time! It's the first perfect all-in-one shampoo! Except for the first and seventh grades, school personnel attended classes at The Temple for almost two years. Ten years later, the area containing those classrooms was bombed. Last Thursday and Friday, 30 teachers, 972 students and their parents at E. Rivers School gave $625 to The Temple's building fund. Commented Miss Florence mlloughby, principal at the school, "They took us in for nearly two years and went out of their way to make us comfortable.

We are presenting the money as a token of our sympathy, understanding and affection." It isn't really a matter of money, continued Miss Wil-loughby, but rather a "love gift, a thank you gift" to express the feelings of the people at E. Rivers. The idea began in a PTA executive board meeting. Dr. and Mrs.

Tom McPherson are presidents this year. There was no organized campaign to gather funds, boxes ere set up in each room where the youngsters could drop coins if they desired. "No financial need is being met," explained Randolph Thrower, past president of the PTA. "We are expressing our regard and respect." According to Miss Villough-by, the youngsters responded "beautifully." "We nil think the bombing was tragic," she declared, "and the response was warm and generous." When Rabbi Jacob Rothschild heard of the gift, he made this statement: "We are overwhelmed by this gesture and we are deeply grateful. It's nice to know that our building will, be strengthened by the friendship and concern demonstrated in this way by the people at E.

Rivers." Fisa ia fcome. Pbone cr send ccirpca today for complete details! CsfySlauffer- GVm Yea Ibeu AdYantstes Stauffer't "Matfe flit Posture-Re Jt provides controlled rhythmic motion. Ho streams exercises, starvation diets! Reduce at borne -no disrobing! Stauffer helped more than nmea remake their Fcr firrtltr formation, as they were when they were prepared a couple of hours before. Tossed fruit salad 1 red-skinned applet 2 bananas 2 peart 2 isps. antMarkenlnf agent Jj nip water greens )i rup raited peanuts, halved Fluffy Dressing In advance, core apples and cut into cubes.

Peel and slice bananas and pears. Mix fruit together. Combine antidarkening agent and water and pour over fruit. Toss well to be sure each piece is well coated. Set aside in the refrigerator until ready to serve.

Wash and dry greens. Just before serving, tear lettuce into bite-size pieces in a salad bowl. Add fruit and halved peanuts. Pour on the fluffy dressing and toss well. Serve with extra dressing if desired.

Makes 6-8 servings. FLUFFY DRESSING: Whip 14 cup heavy cream until it starts to thicken. Add 2 tsps. prepared mustard and beat until stiff. Fold in tsp.

salt, a dash of pepper, i sugar, 2 tbsps. lemon juice and cup orange juice. Makes one cup. Golden Age Club Plans Open House New headquarters for the Golden Age Club will be opened Wednesday, Oct 29. Members of the club will hosts at an open house from 3 to 5 p.m.

in the clubhouse, 7 11th St. If you've never tried a tossed salad that features fall fruits instead of spring vegetables, here's your chance. And fortunately, the season is right. This one was designed to accessorize a piping hot cheese rabbit on a cool Sunday night. FRUIT SALAD DRESSES Tosj Fresh Fall Fruits Viith a WAVES AND CURLS! Wsh hair ts whh My ordinary shampoo.

et lather remain 5 minute, thea rinse and set. Guaranteed for all ages, alt hair types. Dry, oily, normal, bleached, dyed, damaged, prmanent-waed eves ehUdrea's toe, uraly hair or your money back I ii cur wash sWAVIHO SHAMPOO SSI STA'JFfER HOME REDUCING 1147 PtacMrtt N.E., I I I I ill reqestrea M.f N.t., AHanro, Ga. Please send me bottie(s) or Wash 'n Cur! Waving Shampoo 0 Si. 50 plus tlx each.

Nam Please rush mt mort information about the Stauffsr Homt Reducing Ren now et the lowest price in history. No otkgtr tion, of course. I Hi- I I Or Ovtdk ffry.

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Pages Available:
4,102,255
Years Available:
1868-2024