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The Childress Index from Childress, Texas • Page 11

Location:
Childress, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

7Afi by CtaAwvi Budinqtm JOdlaiui (aMftiw TIM mh THl STORY: Artcmut Thumb veiled threats against Columbine, Apparently he that the obtained Icfjgoge, containing sinister objects, by mistake. XVII They drove to The Grove of Daphne, put away the car and walked to the office! Simpkins rushed in, wringing his hands. Miss he exclaimed. a simply awful mess! A couple of tnipectors in the kitchen. They have a list of violations longer than ait Columbine said, questionably has legal aspects.

Will you be so good as to Mr. Jones to come with all possible Columbia with Barbara at tier side, hurried out to the kitchen, where two men were iinishing their inspection. saw such a mess ofi the inspector wis saying as Columbine approached. 4 1 got no authority to can appeal to Department of They gathered their papers and went away. Columbine studied Lester Duchesne, the chef, with narrowed eyes.

if what 1 think is the she said to him, inspectors would not dare to make such a report unless actual violations were found Duchesne said. She shook the inspection report in his face. do you account for that, Mr. said the chef, father had an in. Maybe he sweetened some palms.

she said austerely, explain I don forlably furnished and made even more homelike by odds and ends and photographs belonging to Barbara herself. Barbara went into the bathroom now, stood on the white chair and opened the sliding door of a high, narrow closet over the bathtub. She took from it a tightly wrapped parcel and stepped to the floor with it. Barbara cut trie and folded back the paper. I she said nasally.

kit of burglar tools I recognize from description, but what in tunket is a desiccated hand, and a wax doll complete with pins, and this the little chamois Columbine directed. A shower of ving fire cascaded upon the white bedspread and lay there, scintillating, as sun rays entering the window were reflected by the myriad facets of the jewels. Those Playboy Girls: 'CAUTION: DO NOT FEED THE BUNNIES' me Barbara Let me deduce like Sher- vApiam i UUII mean the palms of anybody on 11 r' 1 the Dopartmem of i lead d.ouble -r By day you were a dry-as- Duchesne swelled as ii he schoolmann, instructing arith- ugget, you re a second-storv I merely picked up the suitcase and walked oil these articles are 1 7 contents. 1 such an intimation. In 9 1 you do not resign in1 1 he 4,0,1 ins plan opened.

had righteous a we classification than I do not! You can there was a lower than fire me, but I do not 8 you get it the i 0f jlim an(1 pms wjlcro indeed. Mr. Duchesne, they will do the most.good. The gusi scnooimarm, instr woiild burst. you accusing young in virlue and me? Me, Lester I noetic.

By night Miss Dr only insinuate. 1 mly state a second-storv wo Possibility. From time im-; 0. I mere close ou down, but when this memorable. chefs were said to wronK suitcas toes in there 11 a sight of be.

temperamental and vain. I with it And 1 changes and improvements. Or wondeirthat vour vanity can "nntpnts else i (or said rudelv. representation of a person. Southern European black You wish death, so you make an image By DICK KLEINER Newspaper EnierpriV Assn.

NEW YORK (NEA) is one school in New York where the pupils have to learn to dip, turn down $500 and take care of their ears. The course i.s run by the new Playboy Club for the girls who wear abbreviated costumes and wait on and it has been running a double session so the 135 bunnies can be fully trained when their hutch opens. On the sixth floor of a Manhattan office building, a dummy cocktail lounge has been set up. There are tables, chairs, a bar (manned by licensed bartenders who serve up mock drinks) and dozens of beautiful girls who circulate among the tables. Every-! thing but booze At each table is an instructor, making like a customer.

One of these is Keith Hefner, who is in charge of the instruction; a brother of president, Hugh Hefner At other tables are bunnies brought in from operating clubs to help in the crash training program and Joan Howard. the for the New York Club, A pretty bunette in a briuhl green dress sauntered over to the I table where Miss Howard sat The rookie bunny delivered herself of the regular routine (word for word it must be said) and asked Miss Howard for her member's key. Miss Howard, to test the girl's reaction, said she was using a borrowed key. is the name of the asked the girl politely. what is your W.

said Miss Howard. When the girl moved away lo fill the order, another one moved up. This one had not yet mastered bunny a peculiar, back-to-the-table bend which the management favors in serving drinks to customers. bunny explained Miss Howard, adopted be cause it looks more graceful than leaning over th0 table. In the costumes the girls wear, if they leaned over look awful from the back and too good from the Being a bunny has its advantages and disadvantages.

The girls are the cream of the young (18-22) beauty crop and they stand to make good money. They work only for tips, which Miss Howard estimates should come to nearly $3(10 a week for a bunny quick on her paws. The girls are told about one Chicago girl who plans to retire at 30; already she has bought an $80,000 building on her tips. But the club is no place for a girl who wants to meet her dream prince. The club is positively BUNNY MOTHER Joan Howard (seated) and Chicago bunny Kelly Collins (right) watch a movie practice the Dip' at N.Y.

school. hysterical about bunnies dating customers. Immediate dismissal is the penalty for a girl caueht giving out her last name or phone number Undercover operatives circulate throughout the club: they try to get bunnies to meet them later, offering uu to $500. Woe to the bunny who falls for this bait. Rules are spelled oat In the vrtiich each girl gets along with her ear.

cottontail and costume her choice of color.) This 37 page booklet includes a schedule of demerits (docked from her tips.) Among them: gum, eating while on duty: 1st 10." to attend bunny 25 Besides thc demerit schedule, the manual details things which every young bunny know. This includes a list of and thc proper glasses for eath. Miss Howard says some of the girls are so naive they know what Scoteh is. 'Hiey learn fast. The New York Playboy Club auditioned some .1,000 girls to get flock of 135.

In the extra-special VIP Room, the minimum is $15, all the bunnies have foivign With clubs blossoming nationwide. the bunnies can look forward to transfers if they request them. They also must pass physical examinations, always be neat and courteous and do best at all times. When you think about it, its something like the Girl Scouts. Get Results iiu structural changes to UUU1S 1 said the other eliminate.

As to disinfectants is spcctor, got the right to condition of food supplies. inspect and report what we cleanliness of utensils, and siVana ls A- find, with rccomm ndations. forth, see that these are cor Which most generally get fol-reded b.u! lowed." i Barbara occupied a pleasant ls sheei insanit; no right of room with its own com- (To Be Continued) Jraver mpiottsly, i 2 ve. rt a rie Kirkland News MRS. A.

B. CLEMENTS Special Correspondent Earl Cook was brought home from the Childress Hospital Mon-j day. Mrs. Porter Steffey and Mrs. J.

Harp of Childress visited the A. Ii. Clements Monday. Mr. and Mrs.

Bill Hinton and baby and William Rose of Pa- ducah were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hinton.

Ray ook of Fort Worth re-1 turned home after visiting with his father who is ill. Mi. and Mrs. John Belt were, house guests of the John Ryders, of Seymour. Raymond Hardin and Charley Jarrell visited friends in ChU- dress.

Mesdames C.tis McDaniel. Ruby Storm and Terrell visited. in Quanah Monday with Mr and Mrs Terrell. West of Childress visited in the Ravmond Hardin home. Mr and Mis C.

McEntyrei of visited with Mr and Mrs. Clarence McEntyrc and lamih. and Mrs. A. L.

Myers I in Arlie with Mr. and Mrs. S. Motsenbocker. in A Pickrel visited sev-j era I davs in Quanah with F.

Leonard. Mr. and Mrs. R'igie Leu is and ps of Dodsen were guests of Mi Mrs. A.

L. Myers Sunday. Mr and Mrs. Dee Pickrel it'd relatives in Childress. Mr.

and Mrs. Bobby Tinnns of visited with Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Timms. Mi and Mrs.

B. E. Gressett and Randy visited in Childress writ Mr. and Mrs Jerry sett. Mr.

and Mrs John T. Fowler returned recently from Galveston. M. G. Jones was in Snyder and Odessa this weekend on business.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jackson attended the funeral of a cousin in Uvalde recently. Mrs. Hubert Cocham, Tab and Lisa of Clovis.

N. M. spent several days with her parents Mr and Mrs. Murray Cartlidge. Murray Cartlidge was in Paducah recently.

Ray Cook of Fort Worth, Bruce Cook of Tulia Mr. and Mrs. John Dickson and Mary Ixni of Levelland were here with their daddy, Earl Cook, who was in the hospital Mrs. M. Leonard and Mrs Dwayne Edmondson of Quanah visited friends here and Mrs T.

A. Pickrel returned home with them. Bobby Timms of Amarillo visited his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Timms and Steven Mr.

and Mrs. Henry Givens of Fort Worth and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Givens of Quanah visited with Mr. and Mrs.

Earl Cook. Jaurine Pryor of Dallas the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. L. V.

Pryor and Mr. and Mrs. Theo Bierworth. Mr. and Mrs.

J. Hackler. and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hackler of High Point visits in Quanah with Mrs.

W. T. Newman. Claude Key and Mr. and Mrs.

Herbert Moates of Lubbock visited Mrs. N. E. Key in the hospital. Mrs.

E. L. Melton visited in Childress wih Mrs. E. Melton.

Mrs. M. G. Jones is in Corpus Christi with her son. Glen, who was hurt in an oil field accident.

Mr. ami Mrs. Floyd Bohannon and children of Wichita Falls visited Mr. and Mrs. J.

Bohannon. Visitors in the Klmcr Melton 1 home were Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Carlyle and children of Fort Worth, Mr. and Mrs.

Kenneth Melton and children and Mr. and Mrs. J. Melton of Childress, Mr and Mrs. C.

Weightman and Sandra visited in Chil- dress with Mr. and Mrs. C. Conwav. Mr.

and Mrs. Dick Lane and children of Childress visited Mr. and Mrs. J. C.

Campsey, Mrs. Velma Rush and Miss Sandra Collyer visited in Dennison. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Johnson Eldorado, Oklahoma visited the B.

E. Gressets Ernest Thomas and Doan were in Vernon recently. Vernon Key visited his mother in Childress. LIBRARY NEW YORK CPI) heat ions of special women: New pub- interest to World of Good Cooking" by Ethel Hulbert Renwick Simon Schuster): In demonstrating the universality of many foods, the author has up some remarkable and little-known recipes. Off-beat dishes include Australian curry biscuits.

Indian chicken and green banana casserole, and Central American chicken stew cooked in cider vm i prunes, olives, onions, potatoes and sausage. Wild Plums in Brandy." by Sylvia Boorman (McGraw-Hill): How to live off the land, on fruit, flowers, fish, vegetables, game, funk'i and wild fowl. Covers everything from arrowhead, a tuber, to woodcock, and includes three recipes for porcupine. You can roll quills and all. in clay and mud, then bake in an open fire.

Or coast or barbecue porky after cleaning and gutting. Scandinavian" by Shir ley Sarvis and Barbara Scott (Doubleday): These 100 recipes from home cooks range from standards like rich coffee cakes and Danish pasries to more unusual dishes such as wine- baked lamb shanks with dill grain's. Art of Spanish Cooking" by Betty Wason (Doubleday) Authentic Spanish cooking includes many dishes unfamiliar to as fried cauliflower, pisto and menestra (vegetable) stews, garlic soups, many fish and seafood dishes and polio con naranja, chicken cooked with almonds, orange juice, cinnamon and cloves. feeds fcoggess, March of Dimes poster bov, ake to a friendly llama at the zoo in Baltimore. Mil.

PRIORITY WATONGA, Okla. (UPI)-Ennis Smiddy probably worrying very much about a bank robbeiy charge against him hero. He is to arrest on the charge until 1980. That's when scheduled for release from the federal prison at Alcatraz. Smiddy is accused, along with John and Richard Doe of robbing an Okeene bank of $1,165.25 in im Before Blaine County officials could catch him, Smiddy had been apprehended elsewhere for another and sentenced to prison, Can money alone make your future secure? Whatever your feelings about money, probably agree that handy to have all by itself.

more, if you make it your business to save some pretty regularly, in a few years be all set for that new home, or your college expenses, or your own retirement. Or will you? Without the freedoms on which this country was founded, all the money there is be worth very much. A secure future takes and the freedom to spend it as you choose. the main reason why buying U.S. Savings Bonds is such a good idea today.

You do double saving on a single investment. You save money, at a gucir- anteed rate of interest. You provide funds that help Uncle Sam stand up for freedom right now, so you'll be sure to have it tomorrow. How about doing your saving with U.S. Savings Bonds? a move you can make today to make your future more secure.

WRMWt 4. skriisF. i i You find it printed on a Savings Bond, hut one of its benefits is the strengthening of freedom itself. Though this wall is in Berlin, Communism's rule of terror threatens free men everywhere. One way Americans help safeguard their freedoms is by buying U.S.

Savings Bonds. Keep freedom in your future with U.S. SAVINGS BONDS The U.S. Government does not pay for this advertisement. The Treasury Department thunks Thi Advertising Council and this newspaper their patriotic support.

he hildress I ndex.

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About The Childress Index Archive

Pages Available:
38,418
Years Available:
1953-1979