THE CAROLINA TIMES SAT., DECEMBER 2, 1867
6B
BAK^ y PHOTOORAP " ER RESTAURANT REPAIR
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pearance of first pubflie»tion
ARE YOU A
_ HAPPY
jif% CHRISTMAS
SHOPPER?
*% ' JL
The happiest shoppers are those who have
Christmas Club checks to shop with.
You can join these happy shoppers next
year by joining our Christmas Club for
1968 right now.
Come in this week and pick the size
check you'll .want in November 1968.
- & ec^anics^^j^ B
J:* P|| l»lM. t»illn«
« --
•14 WIST PARRIIH »T DURHAM, H. C.
r Tonight's
easy pick-up
BUCKET OF CHICKEN A7C
15 Pieces Tender, Tasty Chicken *
1 Pint Delicious Cracklln' Gravy
Melt-in-your-mouth Bit/nif«
(serves 5 to 7 people)
Take It from the Colonel... "h*f finger BcHn'
goodly Take home Kentucky Fried Chicken
tonight All you da ii pick it up. 11M Krvico
iiiuddea.
We fix Sunday dinner
seven days a week
COLONEL BANDERS' RECIPE
Kfltfolcy fried
RINALDI'S TAKE HOHE
♦lO MIAMI BLVD. 806 9TH STREET
DURHAM. N. C.
ROSEMARY A FRANKLIN STS. CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
(jlTmrtou
magnificent \ . 9
GULtSrAN PALACE, with ~ *■ '' . ■
ITS PRICELESS CROWN
JEWELS, MAS A SPARKLING JfZ -
MIRROR-MOSAIC. AMP A A- ' ■
collection of gifts , wlSifcnjlE&r/ |T~
FROM RULERS OF MANY - -=-p '
COUNTRIES. THE PALACE IS J[
3EST-k:novvn for its - — ' f."\_
PEACOCK THKONE MAPE OF ,_i_ gArS\tjr —U.
&OLP AMP ENCRUSTED WITH
PBEOOUS STONES.'
(Iranian cooking is SISiIB
NOTA&LE FOR ITS MANV 888¥S
■ UMUSUAL TOUCHES- FOR
EXAMPLE,VOU MIGHT FIMP
A STEW OF RICE, CHICKEM !i!l I
AMP ORANGE RINPS TOPPEP ft'l ! l 11 111-
WITH r >'"T*--'r" *i ■ "IT -, ir -
THE FAMOUS PERSIAN .C ■■ ■■ • ■-ZkJIBBL—. _
- ZAFERAN .' SAMPLE IRAN'S "'
FAMOUS &ELU&A CAVIAR,
PK£ ?Vv tfvE PEST HOTEL /NT&WN
'/ VT 'IK. IS SITUATED AT THE FOOT OF
, i I du TWE SNOW-CAPPEP ELBURZ
II Il| , \\\ nfTTJ ( MOUNTAINS. THE 15- STORy
\V TEHRAN HILTON IS
J/\ /\ SURROUNPEP &y A 22-ACRE
' I' l ' A jh-hi\yi EXHIBIT ANP SPORTS
\'Y/ 4,111 AREAS ANP FEATURES
jlli l Xfjf 7® COMPLETE RESORT
I M/r\9r facilities. occupants
J of each room have
XC I MOUNTAINS OR TO WARP _
| TEHRAN □
GERMANY SAYS "FRtihUCHE WEIHNACHTEN"
From Germany, where some
of our own Christmas customs
originated, comes the greeting,
Frohliche Weihnachten( Merry
Christmas), and an invitation
to Americans to visit Germany
this holiday season.
Martin Luther, the 16th cen
tury German theologian, is be
lieved to have been the first to
decorate a Christmas tree, and
today the Christmas tree is
.still as popular in Germany as
it is in the U.S.
The custom of hanging
Christmas stockings is also be
lieved to have started in Ger
many. According to Lufthansa
German Airlines, German
children receive candy and
cookies if they've been good,
but Santa leaves only an emp
ty potato sack for bad ones.
The Advent wreath—a large
evergreen wreath hung on Ad
vent Sunday-is another cus
tom observed in many German
homes. On the first Advent
Sunday, a large red candle is
fastened to the wreath and
lighted. On each of the follow
ing Sundays, another red can
dle is placed on the wreath.
The fifth candle is put at the
center of the wreath on Christ
mas Eve.
Gordon's gin
"365 -a| s O3O
«J4/SQT.'SI ZfPINT
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» DISTILLED M
k LONDONDRY 1
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ll|s oisiiiKos aonifo IN INF uSA IT
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10Ok NCIWAI SPIRITS OISTIILCO F»OU GRAIN. 90 ttOOf CONDON'S 0«Y GIN CO 110 HNO(N N. J
I Duorvano
On Christmas Eve everyone
goes to church for a service of
worship and song. After
church, Mother sits down at
the piano and plays O Tannen
baum; this is the signal for all
to join hands and enter the
parlor for singing around the
tree.
Soon St. Nikolaus-Santa
Claus—arrives dressed in a red
coat and wearing a long white
beard. He's usually the fami
lies' father or a friend who
queries each child and tradi
tionally distributes the gifts,
1 after the children recite a
| poem or sing a short song.
But no matter how busy the
Christmas season, Germans al
ways find time to extend their
famous hospitality to visitors
from far and near. Many
Americans, who travel to Ger
-1 many swiftly and comfortably
t via Lufthansa, find that Christ
s mas is an ideal time to combine
i pleasure and economy by tak
- ing advantage of off-season
- rates to enjoy the festivities
i. there. And it's an excellent
e jumping off place for seeing
- other European countries, as
well.
200
Americans
is in the
U.S.ARMY
RESERVE
• •
This 'nThat
I _ □
In Al STIN MCIIOI.S
Want to dross up that old
apple pie favorite for holiday
company? Slit hot pie crust in
five lengths; carefully spoon in
five teaspoons Wild Turkey
Bfiurbon; tip pie to distribute
liquor. Serve hot.
Speaking of turkey, have you
ever roasted one that resulted
in the white meat being over
done and the dark meat under
done? Try roasting it breast
down on a rack until the last 20
minutes. Then turn it breast
up to brown. Make sure too
your dressing is moist moist.
Grass a delicacy? Maybe not
in America. But Bison or Zu
hrowka grass is prized in Po
land where it's used in vodka
to lend taste and tint to the
practically colorless and taste
less spirit. The Polish vodka
prized, however, in America
and elsewhere is Vodka Wy
borowa. made by an original
process and so good that con
noisseurs will only drink it
straight in chilled glasses.
Speaking of originality
here's something to dream on
and to pass on to your poster
ity. Come up with a unique
recipe for a drink, like Cam
pari. franchise the bottling of
it. and keep ingredients and
mixture a closely guarded fam
ily secret.
PLAN YOUR PARTY
TO THE HILT!
New \ork (NAPS)— If you want
to plan a party your guests will
remember with pleasure for a long
time—give them something to play
with!
Games for adult> have been de
veloped to suit any type of guests
or party plan—from a seated dinner
to an informal group that just
dropped by.
"Concentration", the game Hugh
Downs made famous on television
tan now lie played by you in your
living room—and there s a new kind
of poker called "Strategy" designed
for those spur-of-the-moment par
ties!
"Oh No" i> a game that provides
answers to a party for six that
unexpectedly turns into a party for
twelve! It's a great way to liven up
the action. The guests lake their
shoes off and literally go "island
hopping" right in the living room!
First colorful mats are spread out,
then players position themselves
one foot here, the other foot there;
when their number comes up they
have to move. One by one the mat*
are removed until there are more
feet than mats... Oh No!
You can write for a free booklet
on adult games and party ideas to
Milton Bradley Company, Deptj
MS, Springfield, Mass. 01101!
Evangelist
Confined by
Pneumonia
Evangelist Dr.
Billy Graham was stricken
with pneumonia and confined to
his room at the famed Green
brier resort Monday for "com
plete bed rest."
A physician from the Green
brier clinic diagnosed the chest
condition. Since the clinic is lo
cated in the hotel, the doctor
ordered Graham confined to his
room rather than a hospital.
Patsy Wingo, publicist for the
resort. said Dr. Graham arrived
at the Spa Sunday night, "after
forling indisposed for several
days."
C. I. SHCPHIRCf
rcprmntlng thi '"J
Metropolitan Life
• munanat
K« ( iaaL,KT.
LIFE, HOSPITAL, GROUP
INSURANCE AND
ANNUITIES
!25 BROAD IT. 2U-77V
NEW IDEAS
PROTECT CLOTHES .
a
*1
Clothes may make the man.
but it's the woman who takes
care of them—and they are the
proof of her homemaking abili
ties.
Luckily, with today's con
stantly new laboratory devel
opments and time-saving ideas,
she need not wilt when she
thinks of keeping her family's
clothes ready for any occasion.
Shirt collars and cuffs, for
instance, can now be kept ex
ecutively neat and literally
stain-proof with the newest
breakthrough in spray starch."
Called Pruf, it contains a
stain-and-soil repelleat that
irons on a protective finish. So
if her husband or youngster
spills something at lunch, he
can just blot it off and look as
neat as he did at 8:00 AM.
Another time-and-trouble
saver in the new starch is its
guaranteed clog-proof, scorch
proof and stick-proof formula.
A hot tip if she's pressed for
time and hasn't used a scorch
proof starch is to keep a bot
tle of peroxide handy. A dab
on a bit of cotton will take out
most scorch marks from white
fabrics.
And for small fry clothes or
her own wide-necked dresses
the ends of hangers can be
wrapped with the new cello
phane tape that has the adhe
sive on both sides. It will make
clothes slip-proof and keep
them from falling off into
wrinkled heaps that mean an
unexpected ironing.
A modern tip for making his
socks shrink-proof is to wash
them in today's cold water
powder detergent. It's safer
for the material and will keep
him stocked in socks that fit.
Keeping up with modern
research can save
the alert hojnemaker both time
and clothes—and make her
family's appearance com
plaint-proof.
U. S. Seeks
Peace in
Cyprus
The United States is serving
as the major mediator for
peace in the explosive situa
tion in Cyprus, a State
Department official said at
North Carolina State Universi
ty Monday.
Daniel Brown, public affaire
adviser to the Bureau of Near
Eastern and South Asian Af
fairs, --was in Raleigh witfi
three other State Department
officials, after spending
sleepless nights on the
"Cyprus Watch."
Brown is one of a four-man
State Department team
speaking this week in Raleigh,
Durham. Greensboro, Chapel
Hill and Charlotte and ,
answering questions on
foreign policy.
Brown noted that special
Presidential envoy Cyru6 Van
ce had been back and forth to
Turkey and Greece in an all
out effort to help settle the
disagree ments between
Greeks and Turks over the
island of Cyprus.
He said the crux of the pro
blem lay in the fact that both
Greeks and Turks on Cyprus
maintain their national
allegiance to their mother
countries, and neither has,
formed a nationalism for
Cyprus.
Brown expressed the hope
that since Greece has ac
cepted Turkey's demands on
Cyprus, that full scale war
has been averted.
Other members ol the
d'plomati': team include "
Thomas McElhiney. State
Department country director
for South Eastern Africa:
Robert A. Lewis, Vietnam of
ficer in the Bureau of East
Asian and Pacific Affairs; and
William L. Swing, in
ternational economist for the
Bureau of Economic Affairs.
On the Vietnam question,
McElhiney said that Americar
withdrawal from Vietnam
would mean that "all the
countries of Southeast Asia
would probably go and the
Chinese Communists would
become heavily involved in
Southea-it Asia."
Physically Fit
MANILA (AP) - Manil's city
hall employes, their evening ac
tivities alrcMy curtailed, nave
been ordered, to stay physically
fit or be retired. Mayor Antonia
VrUeaas gave the orders as part
of his "n«w look" administra
tion. He already has told city
employes to stay #way from
night clubs, bars and
racetracks.
i PLANTS PtSlgNf -i9
11)01 NORTH BOXBQBQ jSli -i
VjcLtSoyJ^ft
"LAUNDERERS & CLEANERS
REFRIGERATED FUR STORAGE AND
BOX STORAGE
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BAKERY NEEDS
Pies - Cakes' - Donuts and Bakings
For Special Occasions
Quality Bakery
PHONE 682-3265
512 E. PETTIGREW ST. DURHAM, N. C.
SAFfcN
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check with us. Com
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CONSULT US ABOUT OUR INSTALLMENT
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Union Insurance & Realty Co.
•14 FAYiTTEVILLE ST. PHOn/kMIM
—!■ I I I 1 ~ I ~\ jfl •
Purefoy's Photography
Natural Color
Black & White
Commercial
Wedding - Family
Photos
Wt Proms - Dances
BHHHHHI and Groups
\
fCall: Day 682-2913, Weekend 682-73J6
FREE TOM'S 7 — l
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