Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 268, Decatur, Adams County, 13 November 1963 — Page 11
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER Ift, 1563
(j/amor for Holiday Evenings ■ $ . ■f F / * -T ™W S 1 K r<-B ■ i *B I’’ f Si W1 i v Gold, white and glitter will bring beauty to holiday evenings. One of the most important of the new evening looks Is the costume (left). Dress and wrap by Hattie Carnegie is in gold, white and aquamarine lame of nylon, and metalized yarns. The cape stole is fitted. An iron nylon and silk is the fabric used in long, Empire gown (right) by Karen Stark for ~ ** arneß - Dress has its own coat and sleeves and lower half of the straight, narrow skirt are embroidered with crystals. —- ’
State Committees Meeting This Week
By EUGENE J. CADOU United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD— State committees of both the Republicans and Democrats meet this week to discuss the effect of the Indiana city election returns on the 1964 campaign. The Republicans held their session today and the Democrats “will .gather Thursday. Other topics for the GOP chiefs were setting the 1964 campaign assessments of the major candidates, changing the state convention site if the blast-torn .Coliseum at the state fairgrounds is not available, the SIOO-a-plato ainner in January and the *T3ncoln Day dinners inFeburary. Robert N. Stewart, GOP state chairman,.. is < jubilant - because 1 Bb r 1 r ' f w ' Bw* j Wn I>l » jF* XB 1 B px* j OWN COFFEE BREAK —T. Eugene Thompson, St. Paul ‘lawyer on trial in Minneapolis, Minn., in connection with murder of his wife, Carol, carries a cup of coffee into the courtroom.
' "" 1 | ' 7 >'T W7 ' —T i ■ s ■ ■ S'*""- «,i x ~"'=*•*■• '' : z< s!&*- x j-jfflfc- ’’*' *'*^^ x * Ow *M ift*»*siL-' : - ''&' I 1 , V** '*7 , ' 5 <A I'' ' ' /f, ''•> 4 V'&■ ' Wii OMS i® a £l'''' ♦ - * ' ?' :< ORO® i L ■ ; ?•■ W W T ; -, ‘. ■ . ?g>, -MB, . Tffj gjiii^.....<7' * i * wEffixafa fz.. Jk. v ; "^^Mw< >||| v, ■ . \?As<' *ia| j w ** , C\, i X~^*i3aWJL^wW y yw^bK- «MjMe' ~ M "W 4 *' ’''' "". fTw.''' I Tt '*4 J ■ ' yKI/R^^WSS 1 MkW liiSraWffi f / I V~ \al -?■ / -*nr 71 fcT -* Al r : sWi W IhMH9lKbmb! RIGHT BACK UP THERE— Regardless of the danger, six of the seven Walleridas in the T,, act are on the practice wire again in Sarasota, Fla. Only last week their human pyramid collapsed with injuries for several. 7„* .. .
his party’s coffers will no longer be bare. Tambourine passing among the numerous new Republican city hall employes is sure to swell the party’s war chest. There was a $300,000 deficit after the 1960 campaign. Stewart likewise is elated because potent GOP city machines will be created with captive workers for 1964. Democratic State Chairman J. Manfred Core, however, is not too depressed because his party remains in charge of the city halls of Indianapolis, Evansville, Gary, Hammond and Terre p— —9 Modern Etiquette By Roberta Lee 0 ” T —. Q. What do you have to say about early-teen makeup for girls? A. The only makeup in good taste is light lipstick. You may think you look more glamprous with dark lipstick, lots of rouge, eye makeup, bright nail polish, and the like — but the chances are you’ll just look silly without realizing it. One of the greatest charms of young girls is that fresh, youthful, nature look! Q. Where should one’s return address be properly placed on the envelope of a letter? A. The preferred position is in the upper lefthand corner of the face e of the envelope — although when 1 the envelope is too small for this, the- return address is sometimes written on the back flap. • 1 . ft Q. When writing a letter or ni<ste to a brother and sister (both unmarried), may the envelope be addressed to “Miss Virginia Nor-, ris and Brother”? A. Never. The envelope may be addressed to either the sister or the brother, but never to both. Q. Is one supposed to leave the spoon in the sherbet glass after one has finished eating this dessert? A. No; place the spoon in the saucer under the sherbet glass.
Haute. Thousands of Democratic state employees also remain fair game for campaign contributions. _ Candidacies Coming Announcements of numerous candidacies for state offices are expected soon. Governor Welsh had issued a ukase against 1964 campaigning before the city elections and had fired a member of the Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Commission for rushing the season. Lt. Gov. Richard O. Ristine likewise had cautioned fellow GOP hopefuls against premature 1964 campaigning. An amusing sidelight is the fact that Ristine himself shifted his gubernatorial bid into high gear on election night. He had installed six telephones in l his Crawfordsville home over which he phoned congratulations that night to the successful GOP mayoralty nominees. That’s fast, high-powered campaigning. Democratic Sen. Vance Hartke has spent every week-end for nearly half a year in Indiana ostensibly campaigning for party nominees but also working a bit for Varifce. in 1964. ■' •. 1 No Rival Candidate Although no love is lost between Hartke and Welsh, there are no indications to date that the governor will bring out a candidate against the senior senator. Welsh’s chief concern is producing a winning gubernatorial nominee in 1964. He has announced he may endorse aucandidate in January after he heft estimated the potency of the various hopefuls with the party leaders over the state. Former Bloomington Mayor Tom Lennon, a gubernatorial bidder, was an early post-election caller at Welsh’s Statehouse office last week. State Sen. D. Russell Bontrager, Elkhart, cheered by the GOP municipal victory there and in other Hoosier cities, is expected to enter the contest for U. S. senator soon. He will have lots of company in announcements for other offices day by day. The Democratic state committee gathering in Indianapolis Thursday will be followed by another GOP meeting in Bloomington that night, a $25-a-plate 7th District dinner. Republican national • chairman William E. Miller, a New York congressman, will be the ehief speaker.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Virus Tennis Tops In Winter Games By DICK WEST United Presjs International WASHINGTON (UPD — In case you hadn’t noticed, the season of winter sports is almost upon us once again. Soon, with a gay fealloo, a large segment of the population will be participating in skiing, bobsledding, ice skating, curling, afternoon ,naps and that most popular of all winter ames, virus tennis. Evidence extracted from hieroglyphics and from fossils of the Phiocene period indicates that man has been playing some form of virus tennis since before the dawn of history. And believe me it requires real dedication to begin playing before dawn. In view of these findings, I cannot properly claim to fiave invented virus tennis. I believe the record will show, however, that I was the first to formulate written rules of procedure, tactics and ethics. Starts Season Early It might fairly be said that I am to virus tennis what Ab-
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ner Doubleday was to baseball. But I doubt anyone win say it. In my household, we do not ordinarily hold our first virus tennis tournament until after Thanksgiving. This year, how “~ ever, we opened the season early to accommodate my father, who recently came to visit us. My father lives in a climate that is still rather balmy at this time of year. He mistook the brisk autumn weather here as a sign of -winter and began clamoring for a game. He being senior among us and a guest at that, it seemed only right that we permit him to throw out the first virus. Pairings for the first round pitted my father against my 13-year-old daughter, who is the top-seeded player in my family. It was interesting match. Being an’old-timer, my father does not play the so-called “big game” favored by the younger set. That is, he does not try to blow his opponent off the court. He is, however, a dogged retriever and can come up with viruses that would pass right by the average player. , Once my daughter adjusted to his style of > play she was able to match him shot for shot, which included one penicillin and two streptomycin.
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