Newspapers / Sew It Seams (High … / July 1, 1956, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page Eight SEW IT SEAMS JULY ISSUE t Utility By Addie Weaver Thelma Smith celebrated her 12th wedding anniversary July 5th. Congratulations! Mabel Flynt enjoyed the moun tains during her vacation . . . Betty Bell and children spent a week at Myrtle Beach . . . Edith Horton and family toured: Fla. . . . Irene Dollar spent the week with her family in West Virginia. Girls who vacationed in the mountains included Mildred Turner, Ida Brame, Emma Charles, Minnie Spencer and Lillian Wood . . . Edith Hill went to Florida . . . Mildred Owens spent a few days at Va. Beach . . . Anne Weaver, your re porter, along with hubby, Paul, drove to Washington, D. C. Glad to have Ludie Mae Ing ram back after the few days she spent in the hospital . . . Our sympathy goes to Mazie Ed wards whose father died in Virginia. Several girls said they just stayed at home and visited: Jo Ann Edwards, Thelma Smith, Margaret Armfield, Dora Free man, Ruth Newton, Mary Car ter and Sylvia Pope . . . Marie Ferguson spent a few days with her father in Virginia. Also Vir ginia Jennings and Virginia Shively spent their vacations with families in Virginia. Ruth Newton has been sick for a few days . . . The girls in Util ity gave Peggy Brookshire a stork shower recently. She received many gifts. Hurry back, Peggy. Bill and Jessie Lehman spent their vacation just “taking it easy” in the mountains . . . Ludie Mae says to thank the girls in Utility for the flowers, gifts and cards she received while she was ill. Departments ^^Float” In Cokes “Pull over, buddy,” said the traffic cop, “you haven’t got any tail light.” The motorist stopped, got out and examined the back of the car. He looked so genuinely hor rified that the policeman was ac tually moved with sympathy. “Well, mister, it’s bad,” said ■the cop, “but not that bad.” Recovering his voice, the mo torist managed to stammer, “It’s not the tail light . . . what’s hap pened to my trailer!” Anvil Brand was practically “floating” in Coca-Colas one day recently when every sin gle employee in High Point and Independence paused for free refreshment, too. Several months ago the Safety Committee announced that any department which could complete three months without a lost-time accident, would be eligible for free Cokes for every person in that department. This last quarter everybody decided to give the Safety Committee a run for their money. When the quarterly accident reports were turned in, each department reported no lost time accidents. Thus the free Cokes. About 850 of them, too. However, the Safety Com mittee paid off cheerfully. And they say they are more than happy to come up with the free Cokes if the depart ments will come up with the accident-free reports. “Driving’s a lot like baseball —it’s the number of times you get home safely that counts.” —H. G. Hutcheson. You can remove white spots on mahogany furniture with an ordi nary ink eraser. Some people never get what they ask for because other people are too polite. If a man empties his purse into his head, no one can take it from him. —Benjamin Franklin ’Tis said you can air-condition your own car with a new $235 do- it-yourself kit of equipment, and lots of ingenuity. AUGUST BIRTHDAYS — ANVIL BRAND FAMILY 1 James Arthur Johnson 18 F. D. Mehan Howard Junior Troynham Ruth Andrews 2 Marie Hyde Patricia Ann Lambeth 2 Ila Maitin Bonnie Jackson Mamie Byerly 19 G. K. Hammes Nancy Steed Edith Hill 4 Hazel Marie Smith 20 Ila Leonard 5 Pauline Cannon Dorothy Slate Billy Joe Hooker Ruth Mann 6 Agnes Cameron Iris Evans 7 Clara Hartley 22 David Cowan Savannah Presswood Peggy Rae Bowman Austin C. Smith 23 Leona Kennedy Annie Kate Hodges Jessie Agnes Teague 8 Agatha Lucille McDonald 24 Rachel Earnhart Mary Alston Jessie Lehman Ellen Foxworth 25 Marion Lee Dunigan 9 Ollie F. Williams 26 Katherine Anderson 10 Edith Cleary Martha Lou Smith Shirley Burress Maggie Hinkle 12 Elsie Jane Motsinger Ida Hunt Jessie Hemric 27 Hazel Ward Mary Emma Wise Lonnie Hatcher Myrtle Lee Kindley Carolyn Martin Julia Ann Jones Rona Lusadie Comer 13 J. H. Macklin 28 William Horne, Jr. Bessie Vuncannon Doris Hooker Mildred Owens 29 Fern Marie Beck Verline Brower 30 Dorothy Brown Nancy Carol Porter Magdalene Dickens 14 Lorraine Eure Norma Jean McGaha 15 J. W. Parker 31 Beulah Gunter 16 J. Fausta Overby Mozelle Gross Naomi Phillips INDEPENDENCE Bessie E. Morgan 7 Thelma Lovelace Iva Jean Marshburn 11 Ruuth Bonham 17 Margaret Hill 22 James Boyer Opal Adams Alice Brinigar Frankie Joseph Evans 27 Betty Young Elsie Wilkes 30 Etta Jones Ladies Dept. No. 1 By Margaret Hill Gee, but did my husband and I enjoy my vacation at the beach. Wish the weeks weren’t so short . . . Grace Brannon enjoyed a few days of her vacation at Vir ginia Beach with her family . . . Charlotte Morgan visited the mountains and stopped in to see her husband’s grandmother . . . Mary Earomirski thanks the girls for the duster she received for her birthday and for the lovely cards. Dovie Dameron traveled two ways. First she went to Fayette ville to see her daughter and then went to Washington, D. C. . . . Viola Draper had a fine trip to Virginia and also visited her daughter in Asheboro . . . Grady Swacker went to Pulaski, Va., where her sister, Louise, lives. Bertha Hinson had a swell time in Florida and visiting her mother . . . Glad Jean Leonard’s sister, Barbara, is fine after an operation . . . Ronnie Brown visited her father in Youngsville. Theresa Willoughby had a nice vacation—her son and his wife and their son visited her . . . Betty Saltz stayed at home ex cept for a day visiting a friend . . . Virginia Davis was glad to spend the week with her family in Asheville . . . Dorothy West took two weeks off and went to the beach and to her mother’s home in Raleigh . . . Velva Hazel wood’s husband is doing fine af ter an operation . . . Geneva Lethco vacationed in Florida . . . Rose Marie Kidd and her hus band went to Washington . . . Peggy Quate had a nice time at Atlantic Beach. Well, this is all for now. So girls, settle back now ’til next Fourth of July when we’ll travel again. “If basketball players get any taller, a goal will be nothing more than a drop in the bucket.” —Jan Murray “She went on a strenuous 14- day diet, but all she lost was two weeks.”—Dennis Day. “I like Hollywood exjcept for two things—^the smug and the smog.”—^Bill La-wrence. !
Sew It Seams (High Point, N.C.)
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July 1, 1956, edition 1
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