Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / June 4, 1937, edition 1 / Page 8
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Nancy Hart Home News Before you get your new per manent wave, be sure the oper tor knows his business thorough ly. After all the machines are standardized but your hair isn’t. And here are a few tips on per manents—if the ends of your hair seem dry rub a little po made on the ends alone. As for hair tonic, apply it after the shampoo when the pores are open, rather'than before. And don't forget yeur hair brush. Brushing won’t ruin your permanent wave—it’s good for it. In fact hair needs to have the oil brushed down to the ends even more after a perman ent than before. And brushing is the best daily routine to sti mulate scalp circulation. Start ing from the base of the neck at the hairline, brush up to the crown, working backward from ear to ear several times until your scalp feels warm and ting Iv. Brush with a vibrating move ment all around the ^Taceline, working from the scalp to the ends of the hair to loosen parti cles of make-up and dust that become embedded with dried perspiration around the front hairline particularly in summer. Then return to the back of the head, space the hair in small sections, pick up one piece at a time and brush from scalp to ends with a turn of the wrist. Start with the brush sideways against the head and roll the full length of the bristles. Be sure you feel the brush on the scalp, and hold the hair up as vou brush so that the bristles get underneath instead of just hitting the high-lights. One more word on hair exer cise—be sure you have a good long-bristle brush, The new ones with wave-like bristles that strand the hair are particularly good. Buttermilk is a gentle and elfectivf bleach for? freckles. Rinse your face in it at night after washing and let the butter milk remain on the skin until morning. * * Do your nails shrivel and break? A hot oil manicure once or twice a monfti will correct this condition. If you do your nails yourself, you’ll have to en list the service of a sister, dau ghter or friend to tie up your nails for you in bits of cotton staked in hot olive oil or al mond oil. File the nails first; then soak them in the hot oil for five minutes. Then the snaked cotton pads are tied on the finger tips and allowed to remain ten minutes. At the end of that time the nails are scrub bed wih warm sudsy water and a nail brush, and the manicure proceeds as usual. Trailing panels, scarves and elongated godets, multitudinous p'eated flounces in shell out lines, shirred apron, are among the latest fashion ideas from Paris. Summery odors are offered in the luxurious new toilet soaps the famous English firm of j\:orny is featuring for vacation use. The soaps are boxed in assorted colors and odors, Jas min. Gardenia, Rose, Lavender, Violet, Cologne and Lilac. * * * Clean your hair brushes and combs in warm, sudsy water. Follow with a rinsing in two or three ammonia of aromatic spirits of ammonia to cut any grease that may remain. Then rinse again in cold water. SAYS DICTATORS DOOMED Atlanta. — John Francis Ney ian, San Francisco attorney, forecast doom for dictatorships in a baccalaureate address to Oglethorpe university seniors “Within 10 years there will not be o single dictator in power in any civilized country, whether he be brown, black, red, white or any other variety,” Neylan declared. “How’s your wife these days?” “Not so good; she’s had qiuinfey.” “Gosh! How many does that make in your family?” ' Four Club Members To Attend National Camp In Washington , Four of North Carolina’s Joutstanding 4-H club mem bens have h<mn selected tc represent t>>is State at the national 4-H cl”b camo tc be held in Washington ■Time 17-23. Selected from amonc 42.000 club members ovei the State, the two boys and two orirlr will be guests oi the U. S. Department oi Agriculture along with de legates from other States oi the Union. While in Washington they will be given special training in leadership and will be taken on tours tc various government depart ments and other places oi interest, said L. R. Harrill 4-H club leader at N. C. State College. North Carolina’s dele gates are: Ray Morrison, Iredell County; Graham Penny. Johnston Countv; Alice Falls, Cleveland Coun ty; and Mary Lily Foard, Iredell County Morrison has made a re cord in cotton and corn projectsr but is best known for his dairy calves. He has probably won more prizes than any other calf club member of the State. Morrison calves have won the grand championships at tre State hair 4-H call show three surcessive years. Last year he was awarded the Cameron Morrison four year college^scholarship for his excellence in calf club work. Penny has excelled in corn, tobacco, babv beef and pig projects. He won the grand championship if the State Fair 4-H judging contests in 1936. Active in club work, he ras shown leadership ability. Miss Foard, now in her rnventh year of club work, has made unusual records in clothing, food conserva tion. home beautification, gardening and home im provement projects. Her furniture exhibit won first prize at the State Fair. Miss Falls, completing her fourth year as a club member, was president of the Fallston Club in Cleve land County when it was awarded a banner for the best individual club record in the State for 1936. Eight dairymen of Yad kin County recently order ed nine bushels of Eureka ensilage corn seed and sev en other dairymen later or dered 10 bushels for de monstration purposes. Book of the Week: “The Outward Room, by Millen Brand is a fascinating story }f the inner workings of a woman’s mind by a new md widely hailed young writer. Kh M) THE ADS USED TRUCK SALE i Due to the big demand for NEW DODGE TRUCKS L We have just traded-in 8 used trucks that we are offering at reduced prices for quick sale. Fords, Dodges, Chevrolets( t pickups, panels, in 11-2 and 2 ton. NEW DODGE AND PLYMOUTH TRADE INS ’36 Dodge, Coach ’35 Chevrolet Sedan ’35 Plymouth Sedan ’33 Plymouth Coupe ’36 Plymouth Sedan ’31 Chevrolet Sedan ’34 Chevrolet Coach '31 Ford Coupe ’30 Chevrolet Coach ’29 Ford Coach ’27 Buick Coach ’27 Dodge Sedan . $45 Several cheap cars McC VALVES MOTOR CO. : ' * ry and Kannapolis i . ... UIITl —— THE HERALD SNAPSHOTS I I A Giant Baby Panda At r Home — Brookfield, 111. — Su-Lin, the Giant Baby Panda captured in China and brought to this coun try, comes through the hol low log especially con structed at the Chicago Zoological Park here to resemble his natural habi tat. He is nine months old and weighs 35 pounds. When he grows up, he will weigh 225 pounds. * mimmmsmmmmmmmmSBSBs New Shooting Game — Jean Rogers, Univer sal's pretty movie player, practices daily with her new Targeteer a i r pistol. This is the gun that has the whole country trying to pop bull’s eyes and make ” the birdies spin. * America Ib Too Serious—Believing that the world is too full of wars, labor disputes, murders, taxation and other current griefs, William Piel, of Brooklyn, N. Y., one of America's greatest brewers, sportsmen and civic leaders, is engaged in a cam paign "To put some fun back into American life" and is sponsoring various activities centering around sport and healthful recreation. He be lieves America is in no danger from labor or political disputes and that twe will reach a new understanding and prosperity within the next three years. if—nri "inn tfc Tom Henrich, new Yankee 1 outfielder, is playing sen sationally. World's Tallest- Man ® Valspars world's nar rowest house, Boston, Mass Robert Wad low, nineteen years old, who according to all historical records is the tallest man who ever lived, and still growing, paid a visit to the world’s narrowest building on state street, Boston, a two-story structure housing a lunchroom. He Valsparred the building. The house is 20 feet high, 58 feet deep and 4 feet 7 inches wide, jammed between two modem buildings in the business section Photo shows Robert Wadlow wielding a paint brush in high section with no difficulty whatever. p——-■ .- - : - — 'fK Taking It Easy—Mary Carlisle knows the benefit of rest in Hollywood and manages to get as much of I it as possible before stepping before a camera. Her Beverly Hills home complete with swimming pool and badminton court is Mary's favorite winter and summer resort. _ i MODERN WOMEN i IODERN WOMEN . — A woman who has a social [plan for the development of a new type of human being is Airs. Minnie Drunker Ross, seventy-year old founder and president of the Home and Life Betterment Society. This plan embraces a local forum center in every community in the Unit ed States with regional centers and a national center. Here any person might present for fvee discussion an idea for education economic, scientific, recreational or religious betterment. She wants to call these centers "American Action Forums” and establish the, first one in New York. • * * After teaching for fifty years Miss Elizabeth S. Ferres of Brooklyn is retiring. She fav ors progressive educational me thods over the old-fashioned way and her one regret is that she cannot be on hand to watch how the new ways work. Four distinguished newspaper women have received prizes for their work during 1936 from the New York Newspaper Wo men’s Clu'b. They are Doris t leeson of the New York Daily News for the best reportorial work for covering the Republi can National Convention;'Anne O’Hare McCormick of the New York Times for her story on ‘‘Exploring the Hitler Legend;” Dorothy Thompson of the New York Herald Tribune for her rolumn on “An Invitation to Death” on the Hauptmann exe cution, and Emily Genauer of the New York World-Telegram for a series of articles oil Tele gram for a series of articles on interior decoration. The five judges, two men and three women, were distinguished news paper writers and authors with newspaper experience. * • • The only women now serving the United States as career di plomatists are Miss Frances Elizabeth Willis, third secretary of the legation in Brussels who has the rank of consjjl, and Miss Constance Ray Harvey, vice consul in Milan, Italy. Mrs. !. Borden Harriman of Wash Engton, D. C., has been , name .1 ■ On Dime Tour •uminninfffHiiifififlnriniififtmtflflfimvinnninmfmnrmMr—;nvBvyvw.n<v.-ir.v-.-i w. LOS ANGELES ... Sir Harry Lauder, now 67, arrived here from New Zealand on a round-the-world eruise which he is financing with dimes saved during his long stage career. Minister to Norway but ha unt yet assumed her official duties. * * » In Mexico, where women re cently cast their ballots for the first time, two women are in dependent" candidates for con gressional seats at the July elec tion. They are Mrs. Maria del Refugio Garcia and Miss Sole dad Orozco. They hope to force a Supreme Court ruling on the electoral law which forbids wo men to seek elective offices. ♦ #■ Mrs. Royal S. Copeland, wife of the United States Senator from New York, has made her guest book during her reign as a Washington htrstess, the basis of a book, her first publication. The volume, which she calls “Mrs. Copeland’s Guest Rook,” contains material about Wash ington people since 1922. MUSIC LEADER IS DEAD ' Washington. — Dr. Albert | W. Harned, 64, founder and (director of the National Capit-d Choir and organist of the Uni i versalits National Memorial' church here, died at Takomi Park, Md. He was a nativ° of Philadelphia, where he will be buried after funeral services here Monday. Pit'ora'.;e Ths Merchants That Advertise In This Newspaper The Family Doctor SUMMER FIRST AID The day’s outing for Mamma and the kiddies. . . Over on the creek four miles west. Shade and grasstrees and flowers; and— emergencies, for Mamma. She should be prepared, wisely. For here’s Bob; he will drive and he’s on the sunny side of the Ford; gets sunburn on the ieA ear, j till it looks like a wueat cake right off the griddle. ' Then Jun.ur, always an ex plorer, picks up a locust thorn: m his most prominent muscle—i it penetrates naif an inch. And Clarice, fond of butter flies, gets stung on the upper; lip by a new species that she: finds buzzing over the horsemint bloom. Little Mary insists on carry-1 mg the lunch basket many times too heavy for her—trips over a! jump—takes off a section of epi dermis from one fat knee. Tom, the profound, none too energetic and peppy—picks up * at least a pint of chiggers—and :hey ALL depend on Mamma for first aid. All run to Mamma 1 when in distress. On that day’s outing take a long a kit containing (1) scis sors; (2) a roll of clean ad hesive plaster; (3) a bottle of iodine; (4) clean muslin or gauze for bandages; (5) a splinter forcep; (6) a jar of carbolated vaseline; (7) a can of antiseptic dusting powder. Don’t rely on liquid vegetable antiseptics—most of them are powerless for killing germs. If a cut finger, let it bleed awhile;, then pour iodine into the cutj and around it. Dry quickly and| apply adhesive plaster to close j wound. Treat “skinned” abra-j sions much the same, except use ; carbolated vaseline on gauze j next the wound. For the thorn in Junior’s j flesh—pull it out with splinter | I Jufascribe Today $1.00 Per Year " ' "-- - ~ ’ ■— forceps; soak the puncture with iodine; cover with adhesive. Treat the chiggers and sunburn at home. Soap and cold cream applied freely. TO FURNISH MORE VACCINES Raleigh.—Dr. Carl P. Rey nolds, State Health officer, said that the new three-story laboratory of hygiene building to be constructed here would enable the board of health “to furnish many more vaccines than it is now able to produce on account of the lack of space and equipment.” Joe Brown, 4-H club member in Watauga Coun ty, reports that his baby beef calf gained 108 lbs. in 30 days. The animal is being grown for the beef cattle club show at Ashe ville this fall. I'M A NEW WOMAN THANKS TO PURSANG >" Tes, Pursang contains, in properly balanced proportions, such proven elements as organic copper and iron. Quickly stimulates appetite and aids nature in building rich, red blood even in cases of simple anemia. When this happens, energy and strength W usually return. You feel like new. ^ Get Pursang from your druggist. REAL jj ESTATE \ VALUES I “Modern homes priced |; to fit modern in- g, comes” fl I FOR SALE | 200 W. Thomas-A real home 127 E. 11th St—6 room brick. Fine shape. Good terms. 129 E. 11th St.—7 rooms. Brick and heat. 710 Maupin ave—Fine home. 529 Mitchell Ave.—Good | terms. 125 Thomas St—A real home 603 S. Church—T rooms. 430 S. Church—8 rooms. Terms. 629 W. Innes—Brick and heat. 622 S. Fulton—8 rooms. 800 N. Fulton—6 rooms and store building. 807 N. Green—5 rooms. A 1 bargain. 408 Heilig Ave.—6 rooms. ■ 330 Heilig Ave.—6 rooms. 618 N. Main—Good buy. ! 206 Maupin Ave.—8 rooms § 725 S. Main—8 rooms. 317 S. Shaver—5 rooms. f 319 Vance Ave—Good terms 313 Vance ave—Good terms. A nice 6 room house m Gran ite Quarry on Main street. A bargain. f j FARMS C. E. Helms, 7 acre, 6 room house. Service station and tenant house. 361 ft. front age on highway 29 South of fair grounds. 10 1-2 acres—Bringle Ferry Road. 6 room house. Lights, water and bath. 96 acres—Stokes Ferry Road Terms. 10 acres—Stokes Ferry Road Terms. 5 1-2 acres—Morefield Road | 86 acres—On Stokes Ferry Road. Good terms. 1 112 acres—Bringle Ferry road. 304 acres—John McDaniel Farm. LUTS Buy a lot now. Some bargains in lots. List your real estate with us for sale. All lines of insurance ^ Siamsey Sealty & Insurance Co. Phone 1968 Salisbury, N. C. B»8MW»Tirw ■■■<■8—BW1—— WHIN YOU BUY THE usU*****. • You may be lucky at games of chance— but why risk your money buying unknown razor blades? Probak Jr.—made by the world's largest maker of blades and selling •t 4 for 10< is a double-edge blade of known quality. Ground, boned, and stropped by a special process, Probak Jr. whisks through dense, stubborn whiskers without pull or ' irritation. Your dealer has Probak Jr. PROBAK JUNIOR BLADES A MODUCV or TNf WOUBt lAte 1ST SUDS MAKUS
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 4, 1937, edition 1
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