Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 1, 1967, edition 1 / Page 7
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tlf . . . answers questions about Junior Miss etiquette, Uroomin/t and interests. Q. Boy, I'm in the doghouse! l ast niKht Mom had company for dinner and she used the good dishes. When I dried (hem and pul them away, a few got scratched and one was chipped. Is she mad! A. Mom's good china docs deserve extra care' And it is more fragile than everyday pot tery. But here's a tip for all dish driers and stackers: Lay a Kleenex dinner napkin (opened to one-fourth its total si?e) be tween each plate as \ou put them back in the cupboard. This protects plates, saucers, bowls as you put them away and again when you get them out the next time. Suggest this to Mom and see if >ou aren't on her winning team again! Q. I bought a bottle of per fume last week that took half my allowance! I thought it would be great then and now I don't like it. How can you tell if you will like a perfume? A "Testing" a perfume can do away with costlv trial and error' Almost even place where cologne or perfume is sold ha> test bottles of the fragrances they displav So try it out first Spra\ a little on \our wrist and some on a Kleenex tissue Then go do something eKe. After, an hour or two. snitf the wrist area and >our tissue to sec if >ou like the fragrance. If \ou don't, go back another day and try again. Don't try two the same day or sou will confuse the scents. If sou do like the perfume after living with it for an hour or so. that's jour cue to buy! Q. 1 have a very embarras sing problem. I perspire a great deal. It's bad enough during winter, but with hot weather here I'm in a real panic. I keep trsing different deodorants, but nothing seems to help. A A good deodorant is just one step in controlling this And, let's face.it. it is . ■essential to good grooming First, a deodorant is not in tended to stop perspiration, but is meant merely to control odor. Some deodorants contain bacte riostats and might be more help ful to \ou than those which do not If these are not satisfactory \ou might try an anti-perspirant which contains chemicals that actually reduce the amount of perspiration to reach the skin. Dress shields will help prevent staining when you do perspire, hut remember that both shields and clothes need regular laun dering. Your daily bath with a mild anti-bacterial soap will help control odor. too. |H ipfWcJ By Mary Whitman You can get a variety of In formation from stamps of the world. Every nation's economic and political history is reflected on Its postage. Countries honor not only their own histories, but those of other nations as well. "One of the great benefits of stamp collecting is the knowl edge you acquire as you go along," notes Ervin J. Felix, stamp editor at Whitman Pub lishing Company, Racine, Wis. Nations will commemorate great events, tragic and other wise, on their stamps. The Island of Martinique, for ex ample, issued a stamp show ing the Mont Pelee Volcano, which, erupted in 1902, killing thousands of people. Czechoslovakia recently hon ored the American Indian in a series of stamps. Africa's Nyasaland has a stamp show ing how tobacco is dried in that country. Austria issued a stamp illustrating a page from the first Lutheran bible. A Turkish stamp depicts the famed Trojan horse. One of history's riddles is the source and meaning of ancient writ ing on a large stone on St. Vincent's Island. The stone is depicted on one of that Is land's postage stamps. Know when and where Alex ander Hamilton was born? If you collected stamps from the West Indies, you'd probably know. He was bom on St. Christopher's Island Jan. 11, 1757, and the event is com memorated on a postage stamp. "There is virtually no limit to the interesting factual in formation available on sumps." says Felix, whose firm manufactures stamp collecting albums and accessories. All you have to do Is picK your country or subject. Chances are there's ft line pf stamps to match your Interest. And before you know it. you ve become an expert In some field - without even opening a textbook. | | LETS HAVE A gssr "nncvunuun ncnov ,». •-—. uni/nuunu utnoi %ooo! ■> |H YOUR FRIENDLY CHOICE ... CHUCK J ARMOUR STAR ■ "srsr STEAK ™ cqJ lunch ■«* Ml CLOSED i 9 A Hftlll LB. c MEATS JESSE JONES "FUN-IN-A-BUN" CHEESE • SPICED LUNCHEON ~ oS src FRANKS LB 59 c ™. 29 c COLONIAL STORES] FRESH-DRESSED ... WHOLE ... GOV'T. INSPECTED "PAN-READY," TRAY CUT 33c n| NEVER VH "FINF-FOR-THF.-GRILL" SPLIT IV piFROZEN * BROILERS . lb. 33C I n BREAST OR ■ .■ K ■ Blllf LH - WKL mi «LIII II HOR MELS LEAN BONELESS KAYBFE CUBE (17'i-OZ. PKG.) .«. JFJ£ MFRES I£ SALA ?? r CURE 81 " HAM "'" 5129 STEAKS : | . AI) 69c pI . UMHOSE SLICED CIIOPI'LI) BEEF TENDERI.OIN JSS&, 3^ $ r° |-S EN " 49cICOOKED HAM 6 9c STEAKS - 39 , ~* r ' •" . T t- *.*. v ••••••••• KING OF CLUBS (GULF CHARCOAL LIGHTER « ,,art 39C) • P,CN ' C ammmbm BIG STAR KM tttk ■ nil a pen Al. #Oc • "■ W llfVllllllfiH BM #9 * * POTATO CHIPS S£ 39c CS BRAND I SANDWICH • DRINKS "lis as si.oo ICE BREAD 4.«. s l°°: SEE- ; » MM SAVE UP TO 8c ON .. . # MUSTARD 10c # MILK SALAD DRESSING .. "X 59c A 49c I "sr-XtiZ" ~™j™ » 51M owar- ~ m *. hamburger or •ES" IQc iU ™" J ™ 1_ puites ' 79c St 15 I HOT DOG BONS SA\F MORTON'S FROZEN FRUIT iWIW ■ • 100', IWW 150'* yI. IJ • • V ~ ~ wmm *■ c« »Ac 'ollyt-O*. PKf ;- 2 0F «««• aSfipffs9c PIES «29 COLD CUPS.... 69c • 2 . SAVE Kk> TO 20c ON PURE VEGETABLE . . . LIMIT 1 OF YOUR CHOICE WITH A $5 ORDF.R OR MORE SHORTENING 1? 59 .' • ' ••• V *■' .'■ v •. : . •■•.* ■ " . .>. '.;/»•• **'»> «-- \ ""«v ; ••' ," ;; •* *•" «- i,.:. • ♦ ./> • ♦•. *, f'-; v " { TROPI-CAL-LO . . . "LOW IN CALORIES" "RICH-IN-VIIAMINS" II FRESH YOUNG TENDER II LARGE JUICY CALIFORNIA ■IB ■■■ t . _ _ "HOME-GROWN" SUNKIST LEMONS BHlij : "rAT PUNC H ' GALLON $1 .00 rRFFIU FRFSH^.^N^HANK AJnAIII ImiJ * KSr J .s, 1 \j it tit. wi p AS cAL ■■■■■■■ VI ■■ DrflllTC STALK | U.S. NO. 1 NEW RED BLISS PRICES GOOD THRU MONDAY. JULY 3, 1967—QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED II I FIR TOMATOES^ D POTATOES.. 5 a 39 c 2»»39c isr i BIJNCH Ip| TH WORTH° N PURCHAsH > OF i j^^^OLDBONDSTAMP^^ IiWKITaTI iWKITaT I SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1967 THE CAROLINA TIMES— 7A
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1967, edition 1
7
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