Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Dec. 30, 1967, edition 1 / Page 3
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Usind y by Sylvia Schltltr J*-#- CONSULTANT TO FASHION TMSS, INC. ZJFj Ik. HINTS FOR HOLIDAY BEAUTY It's when you are the busiest with holiday shopping, decorat ing and entertaining, you have the least time to spend on your self. And just when you want to be your prettiest and most glamorous! Rushed holiday hostesses and shoppers will find nothing puts their minds at ease so much as to have absolutely no concern about their hair. Can you imagine, all you have to do is •hake out your party dress and your pre-styled wig and you're all set! You can now buy a lightweight, reasonably priced wig in exactly your shade and style. Regardless of trying to beat the clock or the weather conditions, you can look and feel as fresh, relaxed and re newed as if you just emerged from the beauty salon .. . day Who Needs A Second Car! > m J '/ CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. lf you need a second car but your budget wont permit it, how about a sidecar for mama's bicycle? She can take at least one youngster along when she goes shopping and still have plenty of room left to carry packages or groceries. It also provides a fun vehicle _ for traveling around town and getting some exercise at the same time. Built similar to those used on motorcyles, the new pro duct is called the "Satellite" and is manufactured by Atchi son Products, Inc. here. According to the manufac turer, the unit can be installed on any 26-inch-wheel bicycle In five minutes. Its high strength body is finished, in baked white enamel with Nau gahyde-covered foam cushions and plastic windshield. A mm TURKEY 8 YEAR OLD STRAIGHT BOURBON (3) WHISKEY- P 101 PROOF m $Qi5 iwiu> m f \ hIRKEYJ w RraUKMT tOUMON WHBUT ! Ik wMikMtu Y;« AUSTIN, NICHOLS & CO., INC. NEW YORK, N Y. after day, night after night. Another holiday hint... hang your party dress in the bath room in a plastic bag with holes in it over the tub. Leave it there two or three days. Each time you take a bath, it will get steamed out so by the night of the party, you will not have to fix either your dress or your hair. And a Christmas stocking bonus for a glamorous daugh ter, sister, friend, a pair of short, thick fur lashes by Gigi. Just press them in place, and they're settled for evening. And you get an extra lash for either side, in this festive little package called "a pair and a spare". If you have'a beauty problem, write to Sylvia Schaefer, 1900 Purdy Ave., Miami Beach, Fla. 33139. roomy storage compartment is located behind the seat. White wall tire and chrome fender are included on the deluxe model. A special ratio reducing front sprocket makes the "Satellite" easy to pedal. Available from bicycle shops or direct from the manufac turer, the standard model is priced at $69.95, the deluxe at $79.95. That's a lot less than a sec ond family car. It saves a lot of money on baby-sitters too! Report Shows How Youth May Improve Status WASHINGTON A. few months ago, Royzelle Lowe, an unskilled and uneducated teen ager from Atlanta, and his seven brother* and sisters lived on welfare. His family eked out a tneager existence on public assistance funds. Today, with the help of the Neighborhood Youth Corps, Royzelle is permanently em ployed as a laboratory aide in the Atlanta Health Department. He is learning valuable skills, earning wages, and beginning a promising carrer. And he is no longer on welfare. Youngsters like Royzelle who come from families on Wel fare account for more than one quarter of all Neighbor hood Youth Corps enrollees. The story of how NYC is helping these disadvantaged youth move from public assist ance to steady, worthwhile jobs is told in a monograph recently released by the De partment of Labor. The report, one in a series describing Departmental man power programs, is aptly titled "Neighborhood Youth Corps: From Welfare to Wages." The publication explains how NYC programs across the country are helping disadvan taged youngsters trapped in the poverty cycle become self-sup porting. Enrollees are given the chance to prepare for per manent employment., at the same time that they are per forming worthwhile work ir their own communities. Ninety percent cf the funds invested in NYC come from the Federal Government under the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, and these funds are bringing fast returns. The report points out that New Men's Scent Has Self-Defense Instructions For Him vs. Her [jj NOW they're producing men's such powerful allure that the newe instructions on how men can defe: In case" of an over-dose applicat one of the oldest forms of hand-to memorize these methods of wardinf If iho should tuccood in knocking you down, you'vo roolly hod itl So bo on guard. 1. If your girl (or your wife) should start squeezing you too hard, force your arms under hers with thp palms facing. 2. Take a deep breath and push arms vigorously skyward, while springing from the knees. Now her hohi is broken. 3. Get her in a tight half nel son and shake her back to real ity with a stern warning, such as "Watch it, sister." SECURITY AUTOMOBILE VACATION EDUCATION Save for your special purpose Pick your purpose for saving money. Then, open your account here and start saving for the things you want MUTUAL SAVINGS and Loan Association 1U W. FAIRISH ST. DURHAM, N. C I * every unemployed youngster who becomes a job holder or continues his education to the hiring point with the help of NYC reduces the need for gov ment welfare spending. In many cases, youngsters helped by NYC are breaking a chain of poverty and welfare payments that is passed on from generation to generation. In these cases, welfare for these youngsters was a form of "inherited poverty." Often, more than the indi vidual NYC enrollee is affect ed. Enrollees often help sup port younger brothers or sis ters, or have a child or chil dren of their own. An example cited in the monograph shows how NYC helped an 18-year-old unwed mother of two find employment that enabled her to take her Vets to Receive $223 Million In Dividends During Year 1968 WINSTON - SALEM Vete rans now holding G. I. insur ance policies will receive $223 million in dividends during 1968, W. R. Phillips, Manager of the Veterans Administration Regional Office, announced this week. Dividends will be paid on the anniversary dates of the policies with dividends pay ments beginning January 1 Phillips said. For approximately four mil lion World War n veterans, their National Service Life In surance dividend will total S2OB million. The average payment will be $52. The 1967 dividend colognes and after-shaves with est, Hai Karate, is packaged with ;nd themselves against women, ition of Hai Karate, named after i-hand combat, males are urged to ig off hugs and kisses: All this is available at local stores for around only $2.25 for the Hai Karate cologne, and about $1.50 and $1.75 each for an after-shave lotion and after shave foam. What a gift! G«f h«r in o Half nclton and back to reality with a warning, lik«, "Watch It, liitarl" This scented new weapon is produced by Pfizer's Leeming Di vision in New York. They advise, "Be careful how you use it!" small children off welfare. An 11th grade droupout, the girl's limited education handi capped her in finding work. Her NYC job enabled her to return to high school at night, however, and after a year she was ready for a job as a labo ratory aide with the State Board of Health. If her pro gress continues, she will be- Her earnings will rise to S6OO come a laboratory technician, a month, and her children will be able to grow up without welfare. For this girl and hundreds of other disadvantaged young sters, the Neighborhood Youth Corps is providing a happy ending to a long story of pov erty and welfare. It is also helping them start a happy story of their own. totaled $196 million. Individual payments averaged $46. The dividend for some 190,- 000 World War I veterans with United States Government Life Insurance will total sls million, with payments averaging $79 The 1967 dividend also totaled sls million but averaged $? less. While dividends will vary ac cording to plan, age and amoun of insurance coverage, Phillipr (Continued on page 6) Local Births The following births were reported to the Durham Coun ty Health Department during the week of December 18 through 23: Parham and Vivian Shaw, girl; Steven and Addie Mann, gitl; Claiborne and Mable Webb, boy; William and Net tie Bullock, boy; Charlie and Barbara Justice, girl; Charles and Sue Williams, boy; Arthur , fv 9' r? I IS HE ADEQUATELY INSURED? Each year this time the 'National Insurance Association designates this period as NATIONAL SERVICE MONTH. The purpose of National Service Month is to help achieve the well being of all Americans through adequate insurance. During this period your North Carolina Mutual agent will try to reach every policyholder, to work with them in checking for cor rectness and adequacy, and acting to revive all lapses. C CX NORTH CAROLINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY MUTUAL PLAZA DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA »7TOt Speed Up Assembly Line Plenty Of Trucks For Youngsters' Toy Season yjyWykjjgr ■U^H THE WORLD'S BUSIEST TRUCK assembly line, shown here, isn't in Detroit; it's in Mound, Minnesota, where TonkalCorporation is producing tens of thousands of steel toy trucks every day to meet i* 1967 goal of more than ten million individual toys before Christmas. Rolling off automotive-type assembly lines, these dump trucks are made of automobile-gauge steel, finished with real truck paint. 1968 Opel Sport Coupe The 1968 Kadett LS sport coupe, one of the four new models all wi th new bodies ln the six-model Opel line built in West Germany by General Motors and distributed in the U. S. through Buick-Opel dealers. The LS (for luxus super, or super deluxe) has as standard equipment a console gear shift, adjustable seat back, flow-through ventilation, 55-hp engine. Optional are 80-hp and 102-hp engines. and Mavis Page, boy; Jerry and Frances Garrett, girl; Carlos Ida Thomas, boy; Edward and SATURDAY, DEC. 30, 1967 THE CAROLINA TIMES- Oriel Reid, boy; Isaiah and Willie Taylor, boy; Charles and Joyce Wright, girl; Jerond and I Helen Belton, boy; Robert and •Lillie Bass, boy; John and Lucy Williams, girl. 3
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Dec. 30, 1967, edition 1
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