The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 February 1964 — Page 2

,r; - ,p DAilY BANNER

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

TUES., FEB. 25, 1964. Page 2'

I^PIANAPOLIS State Motor Vehif-les , Commissioner Allen Nutting said here Monday he will “try" to open -Ti irion County ilnd.) auto license branches Tuesday. $’it f i-ig closed the branches late Friday after a Marion Superior Court judge ruled the $10 “wheel tax" illegal on I* ssenger cars and ordered refunds to hundreds of thousands of Marion County motorists who aireac.y had paid tjie tax.

Lands Safely

MIAMI UPI — A Northwest Orient jet airliner, bound for Atlaata. with 60 persons aboard, developed trouble in one of its four Engines shortly after takeoff Monday but landed safely. The Boeing 720 jet circled the airfield for 49 minutes, jettison-

ing enough fuel for it to land without danger of an explosion. NOW YOU KNOW Six million Americans donned glasses for the first time during the past three years, according to a study by the Uhlemann Optical Co.

BITES OFF HIS FAR While patrolman John Hancock grips the head of a gunman and his cousin. Richard Hancock. helps to hold the culprit down, an excited Pittsburgh Police K-9 dog bites the ear off Richard. Hancock holds his ear in pain (lower left) and (lower right) is put onto a stretcher.

TIMELY LITTLE T-STRAP. Tailored to suburbia in supple textured leather with a low T-strap and smart square toe . . . this contemporary Cobbie measures up to fashion on a brisk inch of stacked heel. Looks so dashing. Feels so soft and light. And fits with the ease that makes you cherish Cobbies! TANGIER, 12.99

MOORE'S SHOES

WEST SIDE OF SQl ARE This product has no coonoction whatever with The American National Rad Cross

THE DAILY BANNER AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED 17 8. Jackson St. Greencastle, Ind. Entered In the Post Office at Greencastle. Indiana, as Second Class Mall matter under Act of March 7, 1878. Subscription Prices Home Delivery :c,c per week Mailed In Putnam County S7 U0 per year Outside of Pntnam Countv $8.00 per year Outside of Indiana $l£.00 per year

PERSONAL & LOCAL NEWS

St. Paul’s Study Club will meet Thursday at 1:30 p.m. in Parish Hall. Mrs. Leonard and Mrs. Minnick called on Mr. and Mrs. Lee Reeves Sunday afternoon. The Modem Homemakers Club will meet Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. with Mrs. Doris Stoelting. West-Madison Home Demonstration club will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with Mrs. Ivan Ruark. Mrs. Roscoe Hardwick has been called to Lafayette, due to the death of her father, Clarence Shipley. Martha Washington Club will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. with Ethel Conklin. Fern Pitts will be the leader. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Whitman have returned home from Vero Beach. Fla., where they have spent the last five weeks. Mrs. Molly Goodwin. Fillmore, is a patient in the Putnam County Hospital. She would like to hear from her friends. Her room number is 204. The Home and Child Study Club meeting has been postponed until Monday, March 2nd. 8:00 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Russell McIntyre. Mrs. Zella Leonard, Mrs. Sallie Minnick and Mrs. Belle Heaney, visited in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Collins in Putnamville, Sunday afternoon. All ladies invited to the Brick Chapel Church to clean-up day— Thursday. 10 a.m., February 27 - bring sack lunch and stay as long as possible. The Home Guardian Demonstration Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Argil Haltom at 7:30. Wednesday. Please note change of meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trail wishes to announce the arrival of a baby daughter, Marsha Susan, born February 3. 1964 and arrived February 24, 1964. Dr. Donald J. Cook will speak to the American Association of University Women tonight at 8 p.m. Dr. Cook's subject will be “Science and Religion..’’ The meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Perry Michael, 643 Seminary Street.

BRIDE-ELECT

4 H o rid Of Style

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Duane Callings The First Christian Church of Ronald Higgle brother of the

bride, both of Roachdale.

The alter was decorated with

Gary branched candelabra surrounded

with palms and accented with a bouquet of white gladiolus and

The bride is the daughter of ref j p 0 i nse ttj as>

Mrs. John T. Wilson of Roach-

If your clothes are not becoming to you you should be coming to us. Old Reliable White Cleaners.

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Roachdale w'as the setting for the marriage of Miss Kathleen

Mary Westbrook and

Duane Collings The bride is

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Riggle of

Roachdale, and the bridegroom dale was pianiat> and Miss denis the son of Mr. and Mrs. Duane da p urce |j 0 f Roachdale sang Collings of Roachdale. “Always" — "We ll Walk With The double ring ceremony was God” — “Our Wedding Prayer” performed by Rev. Timothy — and "The Lord's Prayer.” Kribs. The bride’s mother wore a The bride wore a floor length white brocade suit, accented with gown of Peau de soie with a biown accessories. She wore a scooped neckline and long sleev- corsage of red carnations. The es. The cumberbund was enhanc- groom’s mother wore a craned with a large motif sparkled berry suit accented with white with sequins and pearls, as were accessories. She wore a corsage the richly detailed motifs scat- of white carnations, tered over the front and side The reception table held a panels of the skirt. Tiers of lace three-tiered cake encircled with ruffles accented the back of the smilax and white poms. Assisting skirt. Her veil was secured to were Mrs. June Garner, of a cabbage rose accented with a Roachdale, Mrs. Kay Gatlin, of pearl droplet. She carried a nose- Bainbridge. sister-in-law of the gay bouquet of white and Jac- bride, and Miss Jo Williams of queline roses with ribbon showers Roachdale. backed with lace. A handkerchief Guests from Indianapolis, Flat of a very dear friend's grand- Hock, Greencastle, Carmel, mother was carried in her bou- Ziorisville, Fillmore, North quet. Salem, Bainbridge, Hillsboro, Miss Sharon Broadstreet of Russellville, Waveband, CrawFill moie was maid of honor, fordsville, Lebanon, Danville, Bridesmaids were Miss Nancy Rockville, New Market, RoachStafford of Roachdale and Miss dale, and Laurel, Maryland were Linda Williams of North Salem, registered by Mrs. Janis Van All wore red taffeta bell shaped Vactor of Danville, dresses with' scooped necklines For their wedding trip, the and elbow length sleeves. They bride chose a three piece white earned Jacqueline roses on white wool suit and black accessories, fur muffs. Their head pieces Her corsage was white carna-

were also white fur. tions.

Mr. Ted Whitecotton of Wave- Both the bride and groom are land was best man. Attendants 1963 graduates of Roachdale were Donald Van Vactor of Dan- H igh School. The bride is a gradV1, !° and Daniel Westbrook of uate of Central Business College Roachdale, brother of the bride. of Indianapolis, and the brideSeating guests were Steve Col- groom is a student at Indiana lings, brother of the groom, and state College in Terre Haute.

Betty Sue Haltom To Wed Ia*ster Kruuiniett Mr. and Mrs. Renos Haltom, R. R. 1, Quincy, announce the approaching wedding of their daughter, Betty Sue to Lester Gone Brummett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Brummett, R. R. 3, Cloverdale. The wedding will take place Sunday, March 1st. at 2:30 p.m. in the Quincy Methodist church, a reception will be held at the church following the wedding. All relatives and friends are invited.

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North on 43

I .S., MEXICAN ACCORD President Johnson and President Lopcz-Mateos of Mexico raise clasped hands at Fiesta in Los Angeles where they received a rousing response. In a joint statement, the two hemisphere leaders pledged their nations to work for the protection and strengthening of the ideals of human liberty and dignity by supporting the efforts of the Alliance for Progress. Both were concerned over Castro, but while the U.S. feels that the OAS is the proper agency to handle the Cuban issue. President Lopez-Mateos believes that U.S. difficulties with Cuba should be taken to the United Nations. Between the two leaders is Mrs. Johnson while behind Mateos is Dean Rusk and his wife.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fiitzinger of Greencastle wish to announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Brenda to Larry Hammond, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Hammond, R. R. 2, Greencastle. The marriage vows will be read Sunday, May 17, at 2:30 p.m. at the First Christian Church. All friends and relatives are invited. Shriners Plan Ladies' Night The kick-off dinner, a ladies’ night feature, for the Putnam County Shrine Club's 1964 activities will be held in the Country Club ballroom at 7:30 Monday evening, March 2nd. An informal reception will be held at 6 p.m. for Potentate Leroy Francis of Terre Haute’s Zoriah Temple and Potentate Alex Clark of the Indianapolis Murat Temple. After the dinner, Toastmaster John Earnshaw will assist with the recognition ceremonies when Murat Temple's ceremonial team installs the new officers, and last year's president, Herb F’.int, hands the gavel over to incoming president, Wayne Hopkins. The Shrine Club which has known only one other president, Larry Goodhue, consists of over 80 members and boasts such accomplishments as sponsoring a local child at the Shriners’ Crippled Children Hospital in Chicago, and paying admission for over 500 children to the Annual Shrine Circus in the city; to say nothing of paying an annual assessment to support the seventeen Crippled Children's Hospitals throughout North America. Entertainment will be by the Scooters from DePauw Univer-

sity.

How To Buy A Pre-Easter Wardrobe Without One Extra Fashion Dollar

lion now and later, through spring and summer: Surely America’s funniest musical comedy, aptly called “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” starring Dick Shawn, one of America’s funniest fellows, has more than its share of beautiful girls wearing sheer, sometimes see-through Roman robes that could be aptly translated into the prettiest contemporary cover-ups on the beach. Aquamarine chiffon, flowing from a gold collar, split at the sides right up to the neck would make the most attractive peek-a-boo shelter in the world worn over an

By Natalie Gittelsoh aquamarine bikini. (For bikiniEVERY YEAR. MORE AND collectors, by the way, “Forum" MORE Americans escape to the offers everything from a white warm and balmy (or the snow- leather cowboy bikini to Indian-and-ski) places for a\week or two sari bikinis to gold lame!) in March. Some timid, souls, how- RALPH ALSWANG, one of ever, are still plagued'by the old- America’s most prominent stage fashioned notion that a snazzy designers, has recently extended end-of-winter resort wardrobe de- his art into costume design. Th»: mands a whole extra outlay of clothes collection he created for

money, above and beyond’one’s the new young Broadway comenormal clothes budget. dy, “Fair Game for Lovers," is an THIS FIFTH-SEASON phil- American girl’s dream of spring osophy of vacation dressing is as and summer and holidays right

extinct among fashionables as the water buffalo. And put into practice, it can be just as cumbersome. A happy holiday, preEaster, requires no “extra” clothes, but just some long-range

now. There is a three-piece suit of white textured wool, goldbuttoned; an orange silk shirtwaist with a tucked front and lots of skirt; a long mint green silk skirt with a much ruffled

fashion planning into spring and pink silk blouse bound with deep summer (and even, possibly, next green velvet at the waist—all of

which will repay inspection for anyone who has a knack for copying simple, but splended

clothes.

PADDY CHAYEVSKY’S LATEST play, the extraordinarily ambitious ’’Passion of Joseph

blue pleated skirt will take you D.,” brings to mind the Russiananywhere in the world right this peasant look— three-cornered, very red-hot minute. It also adds fringe stoles; hand-embroidery; up to the best new Easter suit colorful aprons beneath basque that anybody could want. bodices; and of course the CONSIDER THE SWIM ubiquitous babushka. This, a SUIT you wear in St. Croix as wonderful young idea for summer

winter).

CONSIDER THE SUIT or the ensemble that you travel in as an integral part of your wardrobe for this coming spring. A w'hite flannel blazer, double-breasted with brass buttons, and a navy

your first beach purchase for summer, 1964. A green nylon jersey blouson suit with little cap sleeves and tiny maillot

pants stacks up as just about the inovational latest look at the shore. (For the new knitted

or winter holidays, depending on the way you play your fabrics

and colors.

A last word now about a truly

dress made of a stretch fabric that

very slim and very young, the looks like pretty, silky woven bikini type thing is still going mesh. It scorns conventional strong.) sizing, but miraculously fits like FOR THE SUGARBUSH SET, mad, even as to length. Unsleeva chick new ski parka bought for ed, this could be the final, inthe slopes on the first of March stant purchase for your holiday can metamorphose into a w^heel- trip or cruise. It costs only about the-baby-in-the-park parka, come $20. On receipt of a stamped, next November or so. self-addressed envelope, I will HERE ARE SOME GLAMOR- let you know' where to buy it in OUS ideas to take you on vaca- your neck of the woods.

The CHURCH OF CHRIST welcomes you! To A GOSPEL MEETING LECTURESHIP MARCH (si THROUGH the 6th Each Evening at 7:30 P. M.

Date SUNDAY i, MARCH MONDAY 2. MARCH TUESDAY 8, MARCH WEDNESDAY 4. MARCH THURSDAY 5, MARCH FRIDAY 6, MARCH

Speaker

GANG GARNER of MooresVUIe RAYMOND HARRIS of Spence* CLYDE PECK of Crawfordsville LEREN N. RAINES of 40th £ Emerson, Indianapolis AI DE MrKEE of Plainfield JOHME EDWARDS of Ellettsville

637 E. W ASHINGTON ST. GREENCASTLE, IND.

LIONS CLUB BROOM SALE TONIGHT - WED. NIGHT BROOMS T 5 DONATION WHISK BROOMS 75‘ DONATION