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Show "GAY GADGETS" I AmirtMfi(1 Nowuiinpnrii WNIf ITnttirn By NANCY PEPPER CASIIAII CUISINK What's your favorite iIInIi when you're cutting up nt the Cuslinli when you're mak- 1 1 , liiK talk, at t" 1(1 W marble slab? fW) What wo mean Q,j'j k 1m, what do you 'V f order at the cor- 1 -zjr)' ncr soda foun- - tain? Do you whittle your V f waistline, with a y ) lemon fizz or lo A you eravo those I cataclysmlo calories? Triple Threat Three balls of assorted as-sorted Ice cream each one dripping with nnother kind of goo. The combinations com-binations are gruesome. Horse's Neck That's what you ask for when you want 0 coke with ice cream. Ever try root beer with ice crcum? Lush Mu.shl Maiden's Delight or Epicure Special Spe-cial You have two names for this concoction, but we call it "Anything Goes." The idea is for the soda fountain jerker to use his own imagination. imagi-nation. Dusty Miller Chocolate marsh-mallow marsh-mallow sundae with malt sprinkled on the top. Telephone Special That's one name for vanilla cream, ehocolnte syrup, marshmallow and" peanuts. Forbidden Fruit Balls of ice cream with different kinds of fruit syrup. MORNING AFTER When she telephones you early As soon as It Is light And cannot wait to ask you, "Did you have fun last night?" (SHE DID!) If you try to change the subject With "Oh, it was all right," And don't even want to know If she had fun last night (YOU DIDN'T!) SPREADING CHEERS As far as we know this is the only newspaper reportage on high school cheers. If we'd known better, we probably wouldn't have done it eitherbut ei-therbut It's too late now. Our soda fountain FBI Is sending in cheers like mad, and we're honor bound to report them to you. Sorry no Bound effects! Nice Spirit I'm a raindrop, I'm a raindrop, I'm a raindrop Till I die-But die-But I'd rather be a raindrop Than a drip from Central High. For Blue Mondays Wash 'em out! Wring 'em out! Hang 'cm up to dry! Teh, Central High! Don't Get Dizzy Now When you're up, you're up. When you're down, you're down When you're up against Central You're upside down. Stand 'em on their heads, Stand 'em on their feet, Central, Central Can't be beat. TR1XIE TEEN SAYS Don't think you're the only teen tvho'i been nursing ambitions to be a movie star, a radio actress or a sinner with a band. No harm building castles in the air. But, just in case tlwse castles never come down to earth, you'd better be dig-ging dig-ging the foundation now for a more practical bungalow. Clicking a typewriter type-writer or selling behind the counter may not be your idea of glamour, but they'll certainly tide you over until the Talent Scout finds you. And find you, he will providing, of course, you have the Talent. Romance of Your Name By RUBY HASKINS ELLIS BALL This name is of Saxon origin and means "swift." Another authority gives the meaning "bold." It had many variations in spelling, suah as Balle, Bale and BaL Bal is also a Belgian surname. The first head of the Ball family i oil record is Vice Comes Ba, who is named in the Doomsday book as a I landed proprietor of Exon, England. Ja noted Puritan divine, John Ball, also a member of the English Ball family, lived in the 14th century. Another descendant, Thomas Ball, was a great warrior and defended the castle of Salonica a year against the Turks, and so well did he defend it, that Mohammed II, Emperor of the Turks, said of him that he had seen many heroes in the country of Peloponnesus, but only one man, Thomas Ball. William Ball of Wiltshire, England, Eng-land, was the father of Francis Ball, who was a settler of Springfield, Spring-field, Mass., in 1640. He married Abigail Burt, and all of the Balls of Massachusetts are their descendants. descend-ants. Edward Ball of Stamford, Conn., went to New Jersey with a party of New Englanders and assisted in building the town of Newark. The southern Balls of this country coun-try are well-known. Col. William Ball was the first of them to land in this country, and settled in Lancaster Lan-caster county, Va., 1650. He was a direct descendant of William Ball of England, who was the great grandfather grand-father of George Washington. |