-am CABOUHA HIMB SMCTDAY. JUNE 14, |M» Special Job Ease Washday Modern hometnakers can make quick yet efficient work of doing the family laundry with the help of special purpose laundry products. For best home laundry results. Amway Corporation. Ada. Michigan, suggests the use of a bio-degradable (non-polluting to water supplies, low-sudsing compound such as S-A-8 plus and. to meet varying laundry conditions .. . water softener, dry bleach, fabric softener- brightener, rust stain remover and a sanitizer. The use of a water softener can make a bigger laundering difference than most home- makers think possible. According to Amway chemists, hard water is the largest single obstacle any laundry product or soap must overcome. Commercial laun- dries invest in expensive water- softening equipment, knowing that they'll save on soap and cleaning compounds, as well as assuring cleaner clothes. Home makers can have this same assurance with home laun- dry. too . . . with the use of a water softener. Adding a water softening compound to water that is even just slighdy hard will reduce the amount of soap and laundry detergents used while keeping fabrics whiter, brighter, softer, more absorbent and sweeter-smelling. The use of a dry bleach has certain laundry advantages, too. Used on fabrics, especially cottons, makes them last longer. Dry bleach has good stain re- moval qualities and is a good whitener when used in sufficient strength. A point to remember, according to Amway. is that all bleaches havecertain limitations. Some modern fabrics react un- favorably to bleaches, turning yellowish. Other fabrics, having had optical dyes and brighteners added to them when new, may wash out and bleaching cannot replace this added whiteness. For the best bleaching results, always follow package instruc- tions carefully. Fabric brightener is a modem version of old-fashioned bluing but outdoes bluing effectiveness because of its fluorescence which makes whites suddenly become whiter, colors brighter. It's also known as "optical bleach" (it appears to bleach without really bleaching). Using a brightener is not harmful to clothes, washing machine or skin and it doesn't fade or rub off. Another special job product available from Amway as a com- bination use with fabric brighten- er is fabric softener. A softener brings noticeable results to all nylon fabrics, making them static free and non-clinging. It makes clothes softer, too ... for easier ironing and fewer wrinkles while giving clothes the sunshine fresh- ness of outdoors. Iron or rusty water needn't be a home laundry problem. A rust stain remover, used properly according to directions, will chemically change yellowing clothes back to white. Consider a rust stain remover as a special purpose bleach. It is more effec- tive than chlorine bleaches in cases of iron causing fabric yellowing.Chlorine causes water- borne iron to deposit and its addition to laundry may actually yellow clothes. As a final home laundering step. Amway suggests the use of a sanitizer. Home laundry me- thods often do not kill a satisfac- tory number of germs 1h clothes but rather spread them. Deter- gent Age magazine states that neither the water temperatures nor the detergents used in today's automatic washers can be relied on to reduce the number of bac- teria in fabrics to a safe level. Using a sanitizer in the last rinse cycle is an excellent way to safe- guard family laundry against germs. Having these special job pro- ducts on-hand when doing home laundry will ease washday prob- lems and give the satisfaction of a job well-done. DESSERT TAKES THE CAKE. ifll PP'^Nk ,tr.vijK trJH dmm W IB Dessert can be prepared In a jiffy when you start with ready-to-serve Tip-Top golden pound cake. Simple ingredient* out of your cupboard can be your "magic wand" to create this delectable Tip-Topping Cake in a matter of minute*. TIP-TOPPING CAKE 1 Tip-Top golden pound cake loaf 6 tablespoon* butter, K (tick '/« cup light brown augar, firmly packed % teaspoon grated lemon rind V 4 teaspoon aromatic bitters 1 cup flaked coconut, 3-V4 or. package, or shredded fresh Cut cake into eight slices and place on cookie sheet. Place under broiler until golden brown, about 2 minutes. Remove from broiler and turn untocsted sides up. Meanwhile melt butter in saucepan over low heat; do not let brown. Remove from heat and stir in remaining ingredients. Divide mixture onto tops of cake slices. Return to broiler for about 2 minutes, or until tops are golden. Serve immediately. Yield: 8 servings. Your professional beautician knows the answer... Why does some hair break off when combing? Your hair Is precious and delicate... and none of us like to see it break off for any reason. Scientists tell us that excessive use of hot combs and over-processing of hair with chemicals often are major causes of brittleness resulting in hair breakage. But hair that is naturally curly and tangles easily frequently breaks off in everyday combing. Notice how irritated your scalp becomes when you comb in contrast to the way your beautician does? Your professional beautician knows that curly hair mats and tangles so easily that it should be softened before combing. Otherwise, unnecessary irritation to the scalp and damage to the shaft and ends of the hair occurs. To achieve this needed softening and a temporary relaxing effect that prevents break- age on all human hair (including wigs), most beauticians rely on Clairol* Hair-So-New* spray-on creme rinse. For combing ease and for beautifying your hair in many other ways, trained beauticians stock a complete family of fine Clairol products for your specific needs. Visit your expert hairdresser, who cares about your hair care and your comfort. Whatever the nature of your hair problems, only your professional beautician knows the answer for sure. 9 Clairol Inc. 1967 Courtesy of Clairol Inc. Says Flood Diaster Has Wiped Out Generation Gap ' WASHINGTON, D.C.-That feneration gap everyone's talk- ing about pulled a tut dto- appearing act in the Upper Midwest during Apriland May. Its closing, according to the American Red Croat, can be attributed to the way the high school and coHege generation pitched in to wage battle against floods that endangered a 500,000 square mile area stretching from St. Louis north to the Canadian border. In an Interim report on the Red Cross relief operation, the organization bows to help received from the "now" gene- ration and quotes an Oquawka, lIL, newspaper as stating that the youths who manned the dikes, sandbagged, helped feed emergency workers and the homeless "may look like Hippies, but it's because they're hip deep in water." The colorful booklet, entitled "What Generation Gap?" reports: "When disaster strikes or threatens, everyone is part of the now generation. This was true when Red Cross first moved to help victims in the Michigan forest fires of 1881. It was even truer in the spring of 1969 when flooding rivers waged a muddy assault on hundreds of communities in North and South Dakota, Min- nesota, Wisconsin, lowa, Illi- nois, Nebraska and Missouri. As the protection of life and property became the pressing problem of the day, the gene- ration gap closed tight." Much credit that the floods did not reach their threatened potential goes to the prepared- ness plans worked out by the Corps of Engineers, the Office of .Emergency Preparedness, the ESSA Weather Bureau, other federal agencies and the Red Cross under the name of "Operation Foresight," said the report. "Hopefully, the Red Cross, and the communities within which it exists, can make the most of this flood-borne com- ing together, for there are more than 18,000 disaster situations in the United States each year, and the need for unity in time of stress will exist wherever and whenever the next disaster strikes," the report concludes. STEP AHEAD ...with floor care know-how. Shinning, well-kept floors are a pleasant welcome mat (or household visitors ... and with floor-care know-how, your floors can always be company ready! Amway Corporation, Ada, Michigan suggests the use of a wax remover, surface sealer and floor wai to help maintain floor beauty. The secret of a beautiful, long-wearing floor is cleanliness. A quality wax finish protective certainly does help ... only until too many wax coatings build up. Then, all floor finishes should be removed down to the bare surface. Removing floor wax is too often a messy job involving back- breaking work which is why it's usually postponed. Wax remover, such as that available from Amway, completes the job quickly, easily and economically, too. It's also an efficient cleaner for bare floors and is recommend- ed as the initial step to using surface sealer and floor wax for the first application. Aplace to watch for wax build- up is the back entrance to the kitchen, right inside the doorway where traffic and tracked-in mud is heaviest. When this area re- mains dark despite scrubbing or additional coats of wax, it's time to remove the accumulated wax and start again. When selecting a floor wax, it's wise to choose one which is self-polishing and buffable. Amway's floor wax is such a combination . . . it goes or easily as a self-polishing wax that dries quickly to a high gloss which can be renewed just by buffing. Using such a combination bridges the gap between water-based, self- polishing finishes and heavy-duty paste waxes, with the advantages of both and the drawbacks of neither. Self-polishing finishes dry to a high gloss but are not "water- proof so they tend to waterspot and dull floors when scrubbed or mopped, making it necessary to rewax the entire floor. Paste wax, on the other hand, elimin- ates this problem by being buff- able .. . but it's not easy to apply and must be buffed or hand- rubbed. Paste wax tends to be expensive and has floor finishes limitations. For keeping your floors look- ing their best, Amway Corpora- tion offers these floor-care know- how suggestions: 1. Strip down non-porous (pure vinyls and rubber tiles) floors frequently. The more coat- ings of wax allowed to accumu- late, the more difficult they will be to remove later. 2. Porous (linoleum, asphalt tile, cork, wood, etc.) floors should NOT BE STRIPPED AS OFTEN as several coats of wax may be necessary to fill the pores again and build up a new finish. Or, use a diluted wax remover solution for more frequent light strippings. 3. To keep the color true in light colored floors, stripping should be more frequent than on dark floors. 4. Always thoroughly rinse the floor with water after using wax remover or detergent before applying floor wax. Such residues may become gummy and will not produce a shine. 5. Frequent, light, cold-water moppings, followed with a light buffing, will keep a waxed floor looking new-penny-bright with- out applying many coats of wax. 6. Be sure ALL old floor wax is removed before applying the new. Gummy, dull spots will result if partially removed soften- ed wax is left on the floor and new wax applied over it. 7. When removing old floor wax, use very hot water, mixing with the wax remover according to directions. If there are many coatings of wax to remove, let the solution stand 10 minutes, apply more and let it soak through. 8. Floors maintained by elec- tric buffing need not be stripped as often because the wax is con- stantly re-distributed over the floor by the buffing action and kept to a minimum thickness. Check places a buffer cannot reach, especially corners, for wax accumulation. 9. NEVER mop wax remover and watersolution on wood floors because the water seeping into the crevices may cause warping. Instead, sponge remover solu- tion on wood floor sparingly then sponge lightly with clear water and dry with a tloth. 10. True cork floors should be heavily and frequently waxed. This will darken the coloi' some- what but, once dirt penetrates the wax coating and is ground into the floor surface, it's almost impossible to remove. A"THOREAU-GOING"ADVENTURE i But the film's impact is not ; just emotional. It is a visual i story, aimed at stimulating a child's imagination in a creative way. The film's award-winning producer, Robert B. Radnitz i says, "There's no reason why the children's film cannot be as artistically handled as that of adults." Radnitz has twice won the 1 coveted Venice Film Festival's i "Gold Lion", and the story . taken from a novel of the same name of Jean George has been accoladed with the Hans Christian Anderson Inter- national Award among others. Though young Teddy Eccles won his part as Sam by chance when one day he walked into Radnitz's office to ask for di- rections, his co-star Theodore Bikel was pegged and captured for the lovable role of Bando, the wandering folksinger who befriends the young adventurer. During their companionship in the film?peppered with snatches of songs?Bando and Sam trade nature lore such as ! how to make clay pots and syrup from the bark of a birch tree. But the film's real beauty is evoked by following the boy's awakening to the charac- ter of nature and his responsi- bilities as he approaches manhood. My Side of the Mountain combines the magnificent scenic wilderness of Canada > with a skillfully woven story ? and is an exceptional film r which should be a real source r of enjoyment for the entire family. The rugged wilderness has always challenged the seasoned outdoorsman, but when a' spirited thirteen-year-old boy sets out to re-enact the life of his idol, Henry Thoreau, a. new dimension is added. (100 years ago, Mr. Thoreau abandoned his comforts to live in the woods learning "what nature had to teach"). And now, splashing acrou the screen as a modern foot- note to the age-old story of man against nature, My Side of the Mountain, just released by Paramount Pictures, traces the triumphs and defeats of a small Reviving an ancient sport, Sam trains a falcon to hunt for him. boy defying nature in a tender and heartwarming new film for the whole family. Lyon Park School Sponsors Awards Day Wednesday, Jun. 4 The Thirty-Seventh Annual Award* Day Program was bald In the Lyon Park School Audi- torium, Wednesday, June 4 at 9:80 a.m. The guest speaker, Mrs. Mable H. Davis, Supervisor, of the Franklin County, Ele- mentary Schools, Louisburg, was introduced by L. M. Goode, Principal. [ In keeping with the theme, "Excellence Is An Art Won By Training," Mrs. Davis en- couraged the pupils to "study hard, speak quietly and talk gently." "Don't allow your- self to be thrown off balance, he quiet In sn unquiet world and to thine own self be true." Mrs. Davis recited Edgar A. Guest's Poem, "Myself," which tied in very beautifully with the theme. Mr. Battle's 6-1 Class and Miss Grissom's 6-2 Class gave the Prayer and Scripture, res- pectively. The sixth grade pupils under the direction of Mrs. S. 0. Barden, sang a Welch Folk Song, "AllThrough The Night." Reading of Awards and Citations were given by thefol- lowing Honor Pupils: Deborah Smith, Jennifer Richmond, Brenda Trice, Grace Elaine Thompson, Brenda Hamlettand Jefforey Eubanks. Awards were presented by T \ M. Goode, Principal. Deborah Smith and Jennifer Richmond were recipients of the Winslow Award and Brenda Trice was recipient of the Ele- menatry Award for highest scholastic ho no re for six years. Brenda Hamlett and Fefforey Eubanks won second and third places respectively for highest scholastic honors. Teh Stephens Awards to the fifth grade studnets for the highest average in Arithmetic were won by Eugene Jacobs and Mitchell Langley. Ella Watson won second place; Sylvester Cash and Daniel Jacobs won third place. The Cobb Award to the sixth grade boy for making the greatest improvement in con- duct was won by Ray Anthony Daye. Eugene Jacobs received the Audio Visual Aids Award. Fifth and sixth grade pupils receiving the Presidential Physi- cal Fitness Awards ware Kenneth Gates, Darlene Lynn, Blenda Smith, Clark Richard- son, Deborah Smith and Perry Williams. Citations were presented in the following twelve areas: Safety Patrol, Audio Visual Aids, Perfect Attendance, Readit% Class, Art, library books Read, Library Helpers, Music, Student Senate, "A" Honor Roll, Good Deeds and Speech The fifth graders aange"So Long" as a farewell song to the sixth graders. Congratulations were ex- tended to the -sixth grade pupils by L. M. Goode, Princi- pal. He encouraged to, "Study hard and stay in the educational race." The principal expressed gratitude to the Lyon Park School Staff , Student Body and Parents for their cooperation. The program climaxed by the singing of the School Soag, Benediction and Recessional by the Sixth Grade pupils. Mrs. V. R. Johnston was Chairman of the Awards Day Program. Pool D Cause Was Electricity A medical examiner's report Sunday indicated that Michael W. Seaman, 33, of 513 Emerson Drive, Raleigh, died as a result of electrocution. An IBM engineer at the Re- search Triangle, Seaman was killed about 4:30 p.m. Saturday as he cleaned water from a swimming pool in the back yard of his home with a rented portable electric pump. Seaman was standing in the water with the sump pump which was powered by an elec- tric cord leading from the house He was first seen lying in the water beside the pump by his v/ife, who looked out at the pool from a window. Wake Coroner M. W. Bennett said that both 6l Seaman's legs were burned bv the electricity. Medical tests were performed Sunday at Wake Memorial Hospital at the request of the countv medical examiner. mm tK 2g| \JA/ Wf /2- CEHTURY &-C- THE King R AMESESnr HUNTED GAZELLES MOUNTED ON A LIGHT CHARIOT U/SING A LIVER WHICH JAMMED A "SHOE" "Mi; / I,;: 0"£ THB BAZLieer B/CVCLCe HAP A FRONT WHEEL THAT WAS 58 INCHES AMD A REAR WHEEL OF 16 INCHES.' THE RESULT OF THIS (DISPROPORTION WAS THAT SUDDEN BCAKING ATWOOD, WITH ITS SURGE J* HYDRAULIC ORAKIWG SYSTEM, MAS COME UP WITH THE SAFEST f 3^ PEAKING SYSTEM IN THE TRAILER -ae&gSEfi] INDUSTpy. SIMPLE HOOK-UP AND ARE ALSO KEY AOVAMTAGES\u25a0 Mediterranean Style, Si! Expensive, No! njiij JH]w iiiiinlln *m w*i twffi im # \u25a0Jfi '£*?. Spanish grandeur plus all the comforts of home . . . that's the secret of living pith classic design themes. Johnson/Carper translates Mediterranean traditions into modern scale with new furniture group- ings that reinterpret the best of the past. Comfort is the key in sink-in sectionals and high-back Gothic ladies' chair. . f.mmm -sli H * fl Lap-of-luxury bedroom is Spanish Ren- aissance revival twilight finished oak veneer in Casa Nova elegance. NEW YORK (ED) A villa in Italy, a castle in Spain, a petit palace in Portugal or a magni- ficent Moroccan retreat arc simply not in the cards for most people. In fact, if today's suburban homemaker thinks she's got an upkeep problem, just imagine the sheer logistics of trying to run any of the above! Yet if real Mediterranean living is not a viable dream, living with Mediterranean furniture and decor is. For many persons who are doing ?or redoing rooms, this furnishing style has become one of the.most popular. The hlending of the styles of several coun- tries bordering on the Mediterranean Sea has given this decor a wide and spectacular range. The Moorish influence has contributed beauti- ful horseshoe and trefoil arches, embossed leather, geometric inlays and the decorative incised star design. Portugal lent its tile work to the look. Italy gave the X-chair with the leather sling seat. And Spain contributed the heavy carved furniture, burnished brass and wrought- iron hardware and the dark "dis- tressed" wood finishes. In translating the traditional originals into contemporary Mediterranean adaptations, fur- niture makers have tried to keep the authentic appearance but have added modern advantages. Original Spanish settees, for example were sel- dom upholstered, but made of hardwood and rush seats while today's elegant Spanish style sofas are soft, comfortable and luxurious. Americans love upholstered furniture and a growing number are deciding to decorate in the warm, cozy Mediterranean manner, so it's not surprising that one of the country's lead- ing furniture manufacturers has combined these two elements in their newest line. The Johnson/Carper Furniture Company has many striking upholstered sofas, chairs and sectionals that blend together beautiful patterned fabrics or solid colored crushed velvets with contrast- ing dark carved medallion details in rich wood. Even though Johnson/Carper's new uphol- stery pieces are very luxurious in look and feel, the prices are quite moderate for such impor- tant pieces. And the very fact that they are important should be kept in mind when you're fashioning an at-home setting. The trick in doing ?or re-doing a room is to start with the most prominent item of furniture and then accessorize around it. The Mediterranean look is especially simple to sustain in accessories; wrought-iron decora- tive hardware and wall sconces, brass lamps, little Spanish jewel chests, black candle holders are readily obtainable. It's not surprising that with the elegant, moderate-priced, smartly- styled Spanish furniture now available, so many suburban families are sailing on to the Mediter- ranean! Funeral Tuesday 4 p.m., Hudson Memorial Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Frpnk Lem- mon Jr. Burial, Spring Forest Cemetery, Binghampton, N.Y. at a later date. Surviving: his wife, the former Arline Ropic; a son, Michael Paul; a daughter, Vickie Patricia, all of the home; his mother and step-father, Mr. and Mrs. William Jaskiewicz of Binghampton, N.Y.; and his ma- ternal grandmother, Mrs. Mary Prostudny of Binghampton, N.Y.; and his paternal grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Seaman of Johnson City, N.Y. The oldest legal fraternity in existence is Phi Delta Phi, founded at the University of Michigan in 18«9. ' w ~ PORTABLE TVPEW HUM " LUGGAGE WRIST WATCHES STEREOS RECORD PLAYERS DIAMOND RINGS Sam's Pawn Shop 122 "E. Main St. 1%. 882-2871 Durham, N. C. Af IV \ LET US PROTECT YOUR BUSINESS WHILE YOU SLEEP Vanguard Security Service PHONE 688-6281 Uniform Police ? Private Defective . Burgular Alarms 111 Arcade, Wallont Village Durham, N. C. CLCANERS LAUNDERERS 800 MAINGUM ST. 2514 UNIVERSITY OR PHONE 682-5426. > 1. i 11 - §New in town... and feeling lonesome... homesick? Don't worry . . . this is a friendly town and, when you got to know us, you'll bo glad you came. Come in and let u, wel- come you." We can help you get acquainted in this town. And after you've been in our bank,;,yoM'll never feel hqme- ilck again . . . we're friendly. . japy Mechanics & Farmers 'W BANK ' 4 TIBBTIB' ?* ewkaak M*Hk IM WUT PABBMN IT. - OVftMAM, N. C 2B