The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 March 1964 — Page 2

Page 2 TUES., MARCH 24, 1964.

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

THE DAILY BANNER ‘ *

THE DAILY BANNER AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED 17 S. Jackson St. Greencastlc, (nd. Entered In the Pott Office at Greencattle. Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March 7. 187S. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 35e per week Mailed In Pntnam Co. $7.00 per year Outside of Pntnam Co. $0.00 per year Outside of Indiana $12.00 per year ‘Today V Bible Thought Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.—Exodus 20:8 Remember the Lord’s Day set it apart for true worship, for needed rest. Let nothing hinder worship. LOCAL NEWS PERSONAL & The Brick Chapel Ladies Aid will meet at the church at 1:30 p.m. Thursday. The Modern Homemakers Club will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Freda Nelson. The Bethel AME Church, 702 Crown Street, will have a ham and bean dinner Wednesday night. Mrs. Lou Branneman has returned to Greencastle from California and is at home in Hess Trailer Court. There will be pitch-in supper in honor of the basketball players April 3, 1964 in the Stilesville Gym at 6:30 p.m.

The Echo Club will meet with Melba Sutherlin Wednesday at 7:30. Mary Sutherlin will be the assistant hostess. Brick Chapel will hold their traditional Tenebrae Candlelight Service Maundy Thursday at 7:30. This family service will include Holy Communion. Women of the Moose will have an Easter Hat parade Saturday night at the Moose Home. All hats are to be homemade. Prizes will be awarded for the variety of hats. Easter Sunrise service of New Providence Baptist church and Union Valley Baptist churches combined will be held Sunday, March 29th at 6:30 a.m. at the New Providence church, south of Mt. Meridian. Walnut Chapel Friends Church south of Broad Park will present an Easter Program Sunday night, March 29th at 7:30 p.m. The program will include a Pageant. ‘‘The Biography of Christ”. Everyone is welcome. The Martha Washington Club will meet Wednesday, March 25th at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Margaret Glidewell. Please bring articles for Bingo games and note change of meeting place. Nina Shank will have the program. Roy and Frank Evens of Mayfield, Kentucky, have been visiting friends and relatives here in Greencastle. They were formerly residents of Cloverdale and Greencastle and are now in the publishing business in Mayfield, Kentucky.

The Automobile License Branch will be closed all day Friday and will reopen Saturday. Mrs. Dorothy Surber was the Saturday winner of the Kappa Delta Phi sorority gift certificate at Prevo’s. Women of the Moose No. 138 will meet Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. at the Moose Home. There will be initiation.

Caretaker for your clothes. Old Reliable White Cleaners. Racial Violence Flares In Dixie Racial violence broke out in the northeast Florida city of Jacksonville Monday night. A Negro woman was killed by gunfire from a passing automobile, a white man was tied to a tree and slashed with razors and at least three others were injured. In Atlanta, a crowd of angry Negroes and whites threw bottles and rocks at each other at a truck stop that has been the target of repeated sit-in demonstrations Peaceful demo strations continued in Birmingham. Angry bands of Negro youths ran through the streets of the Negro section of Jacksonville, throwing firebombs at whiteowned stores and bricks at passing cars.

Mrs. Albright Hostess To Rain or Shine Club The Rain or Shine Home Demonstration Club met at the home of Mrs. Claude Albright at 1:00 p.m. March 11. The meeting was opened by our president, Mrs. Carolyn Flint. Song of the month was read. Pledge to the flag and club creed were given in unison. The lesson Blending the Old and New in Furnishing was given by Marge Woodrum. Furniture styles are set by each generation. The term traditional refers to the styles of furniture that have been used generation after generation. Modern refers to present day styles. Contemporary is another term for styles used today. Good designs have lasted and are still being reproduced. It will be interesting to see which of the present day styles will last. A good rule to follow in blending styles of furniture is not to use more than two styles of furniture in a room. During the business session secretary and treasurer reports were read and approved. Garden report by Marlene Bitzer. Safety report by Ruth Albright. Meeting was closed by all repeating club prayer in unison.

Mrs. Victor Sutherlin Is Hostess To Club The March meeting of Home Demonstration Club met with Mrs. Victor Sutherlin at Cloverdale Mrs. Lealyn Milhon, president presented Mrs. Katharine Benner, Home Demonstration Agent, who gave an interesting lesson on foreign trade, common markets and tax proDiems. She also showed slides on several European countries. Mrs. James Goodin, gave the history of the song of the month, ‘‘Flow Gently Sweet Afton, by Robert Burns. The club welcomed three guests, Mrs. Benner, Mrs. Ruby Wood and Mrs. Dan Ooly, Mrs. Ooly became a welcomed member of the club. Mrs. Cloyd Allen received a friendship basket, containing gifts from each member of the club, Mrs. Allen is recovering from a recent illness. Mrs. Charles Chestnut gave an interesting out-look item. Mrs. Barbara Boscheu recently gave a public interest lesson for a club at Brownsburg, Ind. Mrs. Anna B. Wallace and Mrs. Jack Anderson were commended for good work as telephone girls. Mrs. George Walton and Mrs. Charles Chestnut received Secret Sister gifts. Mrs. Sutherlin served refreshments in keeping with Easter season, after which Mrs. Chestnut gave contests, which were won by Mrs. Lionel McCabe, Mrs. Cloyd Allen and Mrs. Lealyn Milhon. Mrs. Maye Truex will be hostess for the April meeting and the lesson on program planning will be given by Mrs. Victior Sutherlin. Mrs. Ralph Cox, Mrs. Lionel McCabe and Mrs. James Gooden, Ways and Means committee, passed out papers for a Bakeless Bake Sale to raise money for our April Club meeting. Mrs. Woods invited our bulb members to the Tulip festival to be h-*ld in Holland Michigan in May.. Our president discussed the Home Demonstration conference at Purdue in June. Several plan to attend. Mrs. Benner gave a humerous reading on “Life Begins at 40”. The club prayer led by Mrs. George Walton, closed the meet-

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stitch the wound in his right thigh. He was given a transfusion because of “considerable” loss of blood. Reischauer was saved from possible further injury by two Americans who wrestled with his assailant, Kowa Shiotani, and held him until police arrived. then gave first aid to the ambassador.

A ITorid of Fashion

The Great White Wave Of Fashion ■ 5

Ways To Bask In It Beautifully

Ml ■Ml Us

The First Church of the Nazarene, will conduct their annual spring revival services beginning March 25 at 7:30 o'clock and will continue through April

5.

Lloyd and Gertrude Ward, nationally known evangelists, will conduct the services. Rev. Mrs. Ward is a dynamic, forceful preacher of unusual ability. Although a victim of polio and unable to stand, she has been traveling in evangelistic work and preaching from her wheel chair since 1931. An accomplished musician, she plays the accordian and specially equipped hammond organ. She also gives her own religious readings. Mr. Ward is an outstanding chalk artist in this field. Speed and precision of his work and his finished gospel pictures are amazing. His portraits of Christ are beautiful. The pictures are highlighted with fluorescent chalk and a black-light, along with colored illumination, which makes them unique, realistic, and appealing. Mr. Ward is also a song evangelist, leading the congregation in an inspirational manner. The Wards have a varied musical program, singing solos and duets. They have worked in revivals and camps from coast to coast, their travels having taken them into Canada, Mexico, and Cuba. The public is invited to attend these services.

John S. Evans Died On Monday John Summers Evans. 65, died Monday afternoon while eriroute to Hines Hospital at Chicago from the Veterans Administration Hospital at Indianapolis where he had been a patient several weeks. He was a son of James and Lenna Summers Evans and was born Nov. 22, 1898. His wife, Esther Hughes Evans, died Dec. 26 1962 Mr. Evans was a veteran of World War I and a member of C. W. Scribner Post 255 of the American Legion in Russellville. Surviving are a daughter, Sue Evans of Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Rose Hester of West Lafayette; two brothers, Howard Evans of West Lafayette and Harold Evans of Duluth, Minn., and nieces and nephews.

Second Surgery For Gen, Mac WASHINGTON UPI — General of the Army Douglas MacArthur, 84-year-old hero of three wars, was reported reacting “satisfactorily” today to his second major operation in less than three weeks. A team of surgeons at Walter Reed Army Medical Center worked for six hours Monday to halt severe internal bleeding in the general. His spleen was removed and 16 pints of blood were administered during the operation. In a medical bulletin issued shortly before midnight Lt. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton, the Army's surgeon general and the man who headed the surgical team, said: “Considering the seriousness of the operative procedure, Gen. MacArthur continues to react satisfactorily. The vital signs, which include pulse and blood pressure, are holding up well.”

THE NINTH ANNUAL WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP EASTER SUNRISE SERVICE Easter Sunday, March 29, the combined choirs of the Washington Township churches will unite in the ninth annual Sunrise Service which is held in the Reelsville High School gymnasium. This year the choir is directed by Mr. Robert Haas, the music teacher in the Reelsville school. The public is cordially invited to attend this service at 7:00 a.m. Organ Prelude, Mrs. Glenn Williams. Choir Precessional Call to W’orship and Invocation, Rev. Dallas Rissler Choir Response, “The Lord Is In His Holy Temple.” “Rejoice The Lord Is King” Choir Unison Prayer, (Led by) Larry Bartley Scripture and Prayer, Rev. James Mackey Choir Response, “Hear Our Prayer O Lord” Coronet Solo, “The Holy City” by Robert Haas “Christ Arose.” Congregation “Now Let Us All Praise God And Sing,” Choir “Praise We Sing To Thee,” Choir Sermon: “A Troubled Question — A Wonderful Answer,” Rev. Larry Trueblood “Glory To The King of Kings,” Choir Benediction, Curtiss Strain Amen Response, Choir Recessional, Choir i i ANNIVERSARIES Birthday Mrs. Addie Clodfelter, Russellville, March 23.

By Natalie Gittelson WILL THE GREAT WHITE tidal wave sweep you up this spring? From the look of it — whoever you are, wherever you are — it seems inevitable. Never before in my memory has a color or a cut or anything else for that matter, taken over the ranks of fashion from the highest echelons to the basement budget racks — and at precisely the same moment. But the marvel of it all is that white has not become a cliche, either for Mrs. Moneybucks or her personal maid, you or me. It has an authentic radiance all its own, that’s why, and more moods to exploit than Lynn Fontanne. BRUNETTES FIND WHITEWASHED fashion singularly becoming — a boon to their dark beauty. Redheads love it for its astringent, clarifying quality. And it has a special blazing affinity for blondes, giving them the sort of dazzle that makes spectators blink. (For what other color — or non-color — can one say nearly so much as for this blinding blizzard

of white?)

THERE ARE ALMOST as many ways to wear white as there are women who want to wear it. The scintillating blonde Sally Ann Howes (one of the answers to “What Makes Sammy Run?” in the gorgeous new musical comedy of the same name) plays the combinations of white-with-color for all they’re worth. Snowed under she manages to look like a lovely lady, even when she’s singing torch songs. She has a tailored white suit, for instance — the jacket cut exactly like a man’s shirt, down to the slits at the sides; the skirt, belted and trouserpleated. Color play here: an electric blue blouse, bright

enough to see across the street. 1 Miss Howes also tucks a potent. * pink scarf into a double-breast-! 4 ed white vestee suit; flies a * vivid green scarf from a white ottoman coat. Black or browp; with white are dead issues for* *

« * «

this blonde who loves bold color.- *

- * *

NOTABLY, “SAMMY'S"^” naughty brunette, Bernice^ * Massi, a name (and a voicaK i you’ll be hearing from now on,! t wears white too — but for its’ • siren quality. That is, the sex-. « iest white evening sheath in, I town, buttoned in front bloused* * in back, lined in red silk and « split in front to the thigh! BESIDES BEING SIREN, sporty, or lady-like (depending on the way you take it), wltft$ also wins highest marks for out-and-out elegance this spring. Ice blonde Salome Jens* playing the consummate ele* gante in S. N. Behrman's worldly new comedy, “But for Whofn; Charlie,” the third play of the Lincoln Center Repertory The-.. atre's inaugural season, has an altogether brilliant wardrobe * designed by Theoni V. Aldredge.. Her ivory white evening dre§s, of silk chiffon — shaped with* a very low oval decolletage,-. its Empire bodice dripping with pearls and crystal — sums up the white-with-elegance movement for all time. With it, Miss Jens likes a white silk evening* coat with winged cape sleeves,, its high waist fastened with a diamond clip. The coat is lined in ripe peach silk — the only, spot of color on the Jens bigevening canvas. CONCLUSION: Wherever you are, whoever you are, wear white by all means. But season it the haute couture way — with handsome, high-key shades and, if you can’t afford diamonds, give it some rhinestone fireworks, please.

— City Council the Board of Works for action at the next session. Bids for gasoline and oil were submitted by Phillips 66; Sinclair Oil Co.; Cities Service; D-X Oil Co.; Standard Oil Co.; and High Point Oil Co. These bids also were referred to the Board of Works for study and recommendations at the next meeting. Mrs. Charles Rector, Jr., was present as a representative of the League of Women Voters.

Envoy Stabbed By Jap Youth TOKYO UPI — U. S. Ambassador Edwin O. Reischauer was stabbed in the leg today by a 19-year-old Japanese who police said was mentally retarded. Embassy officials said the fourinch wound was serious but not critical. Reischauer, 53-year-old former Harvard professor, underwent surgery for more than two and one-half hours to probe and

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