Wrapping up the holidays!
Last minute gifts and stocking stuffers from Mingei World Arts
This is it. The holidays are most certainly here!
Everyone is in a twirl, and Mingei has all manner of stocking stuffers, last minute gifts, and trimmings to finish off your holiday list with style and a smile!
Dust the sugar off your fingers, set your wrapping aside, remember to blow out the candles before you leave the house, and come in into Decatur for a festive last bit of shopping!
Don't forget to buy your chances for this beautiful Fuentes carving ! All proceeds will help Zeny and Reina Fuentes' daughter Fatima in Oaxaca, Mexico with medical and travel expenses for her thyroid cancer treatment. $5 per chance. Enter as often as you like! The winning name will be drawn Thursday, December 22 at 2:00pm! You need not be present to win. Good luck to all!
Fuentes deer
terra cotta pot candles
Candles from
Himalayan Trading Post
Perfect holiday scents:
Mistletoe, Orange Grove, Sage Pomegranate, Spice, Red Currant, and Wild Green Fig, to name a few--
in glass, terra cotta, wood and tin reusable containers
$16-$32
Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse--
Too cute.
Hand-felted children's slippers from Kyrgystan.
$36
Have other little feet needing
to be shod?
We also have handknit slippers from Turkmenistan and those adorable little baby shoes from Thailand, too!
From $18
Trimmings for the tree
Ornaments for alll proclivities! Buddha heads, Happy Buddhas, Golden Buddhas, Buddhas with flowers, Ganeshas too! And evil eye amulet ornaments, saints of all stripes, Mexican tin, glass ornaments from Nepal, and Hebron, felted ornaments from India and Turkey ,and lots more!
$4 - $30
Baubles, bangles
and beads.
Literally.
Our always amaziong assortment of vinateg and new necklaces, pendants, chains, charms, rings, earbobs, baubles, bangles and beads!
Starting, yes, at $1.
Promotion Name
The stockings are hung...
Felted stockings from India and mirrored stockings made of vintage Indian fabric.
$40-$72
And to fill them:
Worry dolls, bottlecap pins,
tiny Thai teasets, Peruvian fighty toys, Guatemalan beaded keychains, Mexican pocket mirrors, alapca finger puppets, Indian bindis, Afghan soap, bobble toys from Mexico, Thai frog noisemakers, milagros, hand-carved wooden utensils, sets of colored stick pencils from Thailand, hand-felted evil eye bracelets from Turkey, and plenty of other tiny treasures!
Starting at $1.00!
period pouches
And merchandise to benefit
50 Cents. Period!
Wishing all the warmest and most joyous of holidays!
All of us Elves at Mingei World Arts!
Mingei World Arts | 427 Church Street | Decatur | GA | 30030
The Glen opened September 1952. The owner/operator was William Greene who also was owner/operator of Palmetto Theater in Palmetto, GA.
The Glen was the only theater in the Atlanta,GA area that had push back seats installed. If someone needed to get by, you only had to push the seat back and they could pass without you getting out of your seat. There were also 2 cry rooms for crying babies. The total seating was 480 with a small balcony that seated 54. The projection booth had 2 Simplex XL projectors with Peerless carbon rod lamp houses and Simplex sound heads.
I started to work at the Glen on opening night in September,1952 (I was 16 years old) as usher/doorman. Later on I also worked the Concession stand and as Projectionist. I worked there untill January 1957.
When the Glen opened in 1952 the admission was Adult-35 cents, Children-15 cents. Popcorn was 10 cents a bag.
The weekly schedule was:
Monday thru Friday open at 3:00pm
Sunday & Saturday open at 1:30pm
Sunday & Monday———– Feature, Cartoon & News Reel
Tuesday & Wednesday——Feature, Cartoon & News Reel
Thursday & Friday———Feature, Cartoon & News Reel
Saturday———————-Double Feature, Cartoon & Serial
In late 1953 Mr Greene made the decision to change the Monday thru
Friday opening time to 6:15pm due to declining afternoon attendance.
The Projectionist was a union member and the union told Mr. Greene
that he would have to pay the Projectionist starting at 3:00pm. Mr.
Greene refused and the union operator walked out.
Mr. Greene bought in a Projectionist (a WWII disable veteran from
the Palmetto,GA Theater) who was not union. The union set up a picket line and kept up this line for over a year and then quit. A strange thing was that the men who walked the picket line were not union projectionist but were hired to walk the picket line. Those of us that worked at the Glen durning this time had a good relationship with these men.
The Projectionist from the Palmetto Theater taught Me, Eugene Leftwich and Bill Anglin how to be Projectionist. Bill and I did this untill 1957 and Eugene untill late 1961.
I do not know when the Glen started showing X rated movies. When I got out of the Marine Corps in 1960, I did some relief Projectionist work showing regular movies for about 6 months.
See photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/rgw55swd Photos made September,1956 durning Kiwanis Club free kids day. William Greene is standing at lower back door and I am stanting at projection booth door in balcony
Ron W