January, 1945
THE ECHO
PAGE ELEVEN
Feminine ^ews-Views
SOCIALS - FASHIONS - RATIONING, SEWING AND COOKING HINTS
BY LUCILLE ROBERTS, At The Library
Hazel Smith
^eds Rinaldo Wren
The marriage of Miss Hazel
to Staff Sergeant Rinaldo
son of Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy
■ Wren, of San Jose, Calif., was
ynounced by the bride’s parents,
IV 1 Monroe L. Smith of
"'alhalla, S. C.
The couple was married on Jan.
Evelyn Myers Is Bride Of H. W. Orr
18th
in Pickens, S. C.
Mrs. ^Vren is employed in the
j'jSlytical Laboratory of Ecusta.
'"gt. Wren, in intelligence divi-
is now stationed at the Army
eni ■ ^'^®®*^villc, S. C. Before
firing service three years ago,
l^ught in the city schools of
cnififin
he
Jose, Calif.
Off
of their
Drake, to
ice Employee
Married In Florida
and Mrs. 0. M. Drake an-
the marri£
Ssi Miss Mi...,
Arm E. Tabor, U.
Mor corps, son of Mrs. Mack
and the late Mr. Ed Tabor
toQiP^I'dersonville. The marriage
H Miami, Fla., on Dec.
W i. Sergeant Tabor will soon
l^jj^^Woned at Keesler Field,
' Carter '''liere he will take aviation
' training.
„j Tabor was, until the time
fiw Carriage, employed in the
Dept, of Ecusta.
‘^^5't'oli
HEL^ WATTS AND
Warren married
MISS GALLOWAY WEDS
SGT. JOHN CAMERON
Mrs.
H. A. Watts, of
Of announce the marriage
daughter. Miss Helen
lip ’ to Harry Warren, son of
Of Mrs. Jones Warren, also
\?>tyre.
tajjv ® "'edding took place in Spar-
26 S. C„ on Tuesday, Dec.
barren, who has been em-
two r’ Endless Belt Corp. for
will continue to work,
^'sch ^’^'■en recently received a
from the army after
»ine months in service,
Vitij "'hich were .spent overseas
Army Signal corps,
itig ' ®^d Mrs. Warren are resid
ents home of the bride’s par-
. uume 01 in
''r the present.
gement
ANNOUNCED
ha^. Everett Talley, of Penrose,
his j*''’°unced the engagement of
Talig®'^S^ter, Miss Frances Louise
o{ j/’ to Lt. Boyd B. Meixell, son
also ; Mrs. B. B. MeixeU,
Lj Penrose.
Meixell has recently
Seas years of over-
i-^^’-^ice in the Pacific area.
Indj. stationed at Stout Field,
«H ^‘^Polis, Ind. Lt. “Ike” Meix-
t'uip a bleach operator in the
in before entering service
t>>ber of 1941.
® for the wedding have not
Announced.
^SONESTV DEMANDED
9cesj, (throwing down four
Sot M, guess I wins dis ole
S’a'^ight.
L° (angrily): You play dis
®5t! j driest, big boy, play it hon-
J'oij, Knows what cards I dealt
MR. AND MRS. HAROLD \V. ORR are shown above. They were
married in Greenville, S. C., on December 15th. Mrs. Orr, formerly
Miss Evelyn Myers, is the daughter of Mrs. Arthur McGaha of Bre-
vaid, Route 1, and is employed in the Inspection department of
Ecusta. Harold VV. Orr, RT 3-c, the groom, is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Orr of Etowah. He was one of Ecusta’s Chlorinator op
erators before he entered the Navy on Jan. 9, 1942.
Married Dec. 2nd
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Galloway
announce the marriage of their
daughter. Miss Marie Galloway, to
Sgt. John A. Cameron, son of Mr.
and Mrs. G. L. Cameron, of Valant,
Pa., in a ceremony on Jan. 4th, at
Pickens, S. C.
The bride wore a soldier-blue
suit with white blouse and black
accessories.
Mrs. Cameron attended the
Rosman high school and is now
employed in the Machine Booklet
department of Champagne. Ser
geant Cameron is just back from
17 months service overseas. He
served with the 45th division in
the European theatre, being in
three major battles. He is now sta
tioned at Mason hospital, Long Is
land, N. Y.
Three sisters of the bride, Miss
Lois Galloway, Mrs. Van O’Kelley
and Mrs. Arthur Dishman, all em
ployees of Champagne, accom
panied the bride and groom to
Greenville, S. C., where they all
had dinner and the bride and
groom left for a short wedding
trip.
The bride will reside with her
parents at Rosman for the time
being.
REID-BLAKE WEDDING
Miss Jessie Bobbie Reid, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Reid, of
Oakland, N. C., and Harry L.
Blake, S-2c, U. S. Navy, son of
Mrs. H. N. Blake and the late Mr.
Blake of Brevard and New Haven,
Conn., were married Wednesday,
Dec. 27th, at Greenville, S. C. Mrs.
Blake is employed in the Inspec
tion Department, D Shift, and be
fore entering service, Seaman
Blake was also employed by
Ecusta, he returned to Sun Val
ley, Idaho, on January 3rd.
Your Guid^ To
Daily Living
From Washington Bnrean
this YEAR’S GARDENS—
This year you can start using your
Victory gardening tools on flowers
and ornamental shrubs, as well
as a few choice vegetables. This
year’s gardening theme will be
attractive surroundings,, economy
and recreation. There’s talk here
of urban agents who would help
town dwellers plan a flowering
hedge as carefully as county agents
tell farmers about hybrid corn.
GETTING YOUR NEW HOME
I built immediately after the war
will not be a simple matter. For
one thing, you will be competing
for materials with millions of
home-owners needing to make
major structural repairs. Officials
in Washington estimate about 15
I years will be needed to bring the
house supply of the nation up to
a satisfactory standard.
OLD CLOTHES—Soon you will
be asked to participate in another
used clothing campaign for over
seas relief. In Europe alone there
are 20,000,000 displaced persons
to be reunited with their families
and friends. Most of them have
been unable to buy new clothing
at any time during the war. Rus
sia, as a single illustration of
what the need is, has produced no
fabrics for civilian clothing in two
years.
ITEM TO A-CARD HOLDERS—
American planes operating from
Italian bases in June alone con-
I sumed enough gasoline to supply
1136,000 of you with rations for
[four years.
STILL IN THE TALK STAGE
I—but definitely coming—is the
plan to pressurize large cabin
planes so passengers can zip across
the continent 20,000 feet up. You
would see less this way, but it
would make more room in the air
and you could get their quicker.
MISS LUCILE LOCKMAN,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. L.
Lockman of Asheville, N. C.,
became the bride of Staff Ser
geant Victor F. Cameruci of
Moore General hospital, son of
Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Cameruci of
Springfield, 0. The marriage
was solemnized in a quiet cere
mony on December 3 in Green-
ville, S. C. The bride wore an
aqua two-piece dress with brown
accessories. The couple will re
side at 30 Ravenscroft drive for
the present. Before her marriage
Mrs. Cameruci was employed in
the Hand Booklet department of
Champagne^
TWO ECUSTANS WED
IN GREENVILLE, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobo Hollingsworth,
of Blantyre, announce the marriage
of their daughter. Miss Mildred Hol-
' lingsworth, to Mr. Bernice Roberts,
i son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul K.
Roberts, of Brevard, on D^ember
30th, in Greenville, S. C.
Mr. Roberts is employed in the
Machine Room. His wife; i?,.'also
employed by Ecusta in the Con-
1 trol Department.
TOO TRUE, EH, GI?
Two little sardines were swim
ming aimlessly in San Diego bay.
One suggested, “Let’s go up to
San Francisco for the week-end.”
“Oh, no,” objected his compan-
I ion. “It’s much too long a swim.”
“Well, we could go by train,”
1 ventured the first sardine.
“What! And be jammed in like
1 a couple of soldiers!”
Buy U. S. Govermnent Bonds
4n4 Stamps regularly.
NOTICE TO ALL
DEPT. REPORTERS
Deadline For
Feb. Issue Is
Wed., Feb. 14th
Pleaw get copy in
early, if possible.