The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 31 March 1964 — Page 2

Page 2 TUES., MARCH 31, 1964.

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

THE DAILY BANNER

Bainbridge News Mrs. Zelma Ellington of Greencastle is spending this week with her sisters, Mrs. Inez Hanks and Mrs. Hazel Scobee. Mrs. F. L. Pries* and her upcle, Mr. George Marcum visited the funeral home in Terre Haute Tuesday to pay respect to Mr. Rome Marcum, uncle of Mrs. Priest and brother to Mr. George Marcum. Mrs. Harry Elliott entertained Tuesday afternoon, a number of little friends in honor of her son. Monts Ray’s fifth birthday. Those present were Steve

and Neil Miles, Richard Rooker, Mona Lisa and Stacy O’Hair, Lauri Porter and Neil Harvey. An Easter Egg hunt was enjoyed and games, after which ice cream and cake was served. Mrs. Elliott was assisted by her sister, Mrs. Frank O’Hair and Mrs. Robert Rooker.

The Women’* Association of the Presbyterian Church will meet Thursday at 1:00 in the church for a salad luncheon. The committee will furnish drinks and sandwiches. Please bring table service. “Youth Program by the League of Women Voters will be given by Mrs. Frank McKenna. A baby sitter will be provided.

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THE DAILY BANNER

AND

HERALD CONSOLIDATED 17 8. Jacuson St. GreencasUe, Ind. Entered In the Pest Office et Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter nnder Act af March 7. 1878. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 35c per week Mailed In Pntnam Ce. 87.04 per year Ontslde of Pntnam Ce. $8.00 per year Outside of Indiana 812.00 per year LOCAL NEWS PERSONAL & The Clinton Falls Ladies Aid will meet Thursday at 7:00 p.m. with Mrs. Betty Lambermont. The Well Wishers Club will meet Wednesday, April 1st nt 8:00 p.m. at the home of Mrs. William Kauffman. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Hartman, of Putnamville, are the parents of a son born Monday at the Putnam County Hospital. Mrs. Mary Hunter, Indianapolis Road, has returned home after visiting her grandson, Tim Hunter in Champaign, 111. A daughter was born Monday at the Putnam County Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Norman Stewart. 733 East Seminary Street. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Davis, Fillmore Route 1, became the parents of a daughter Monday at the Putnam County Hospital. The Country Reading Club will meet Wednesday, April 1st. 2:00 p. m. with Mrs. Franklin Torr. Mrs. Forest Hutchison will have the program. The Voters’ Service Committee of the League of Women Voters will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Clem Williams, 523 Anderson Street. The Thursday Reading Club family dinner will be held meet Wednesday, April 1st. at Greencastle Savings and Loan room at 6:30 p.m. Bring covered dish and own table service. City firemen were called to the John Westfall residence, 503 Bloomington Street, at 3:05 Monday afternoon. They reported that a furnace pipe fell and filled the house full of smoke. The Fourth Quarterly Conference will be held at Putnamville, April 1st, beginning with a pitch-ln supper at 6:30. After the dinner the District Superintendent, Dr. William Burton, will show slides and describe his trip to Africa. The business session will be immediately after the program. This is an important

meeting. Everyone interested in the Putnamville and Cloverdale churches are cordially invited to attend. Members of the official boards are expected to be there. Please bring food and table service and plan to attend.

Mrs. J. R. Smith Hostess To Study Club Mrs. J. R. Smith was hostess for the March meeting of the Bainbridge Study Club. Mrs. Earl Sutherlin presided and opened the meeting by reading a poem, “A Lenten Thought.” Mrs. Sutherlin also announced the convention of the State Federation of Clubs in the Claypool in April. The club voted to make a donation to the Cultural Center in Washington D. C. Mrs. William P. Luther reviewed the book, “The Heartland — Ohio, Indiana and Illinois” by Walter Havimglurst. The April meeting will be held in the home of Mrs. Luther.

teresting report on how to trace family geneology. Contests were conducted by Mrs. Grace Thomas and were won by Mrs. Olive Knight and Mrs. Blanche Reel. The April meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Ruth Craft April 22nd.

Exemplars Hold Special Meeting The Exemplar Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will hold a special business meeting Tuesday, March 31, at 7:30 p.m. with Clovis Ratcliff as hostess. This meeting will be recorded for International reports and all members are reminded and urged to attend. This meeting will make-up one of the two cancelled due to inclement weather at scheduled meeting date.

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DETECTORS

Mrs. Mary Skelton Is Club Hostess The Reelsvllle Social Service Club met at the home of Mrs. Mary Skelton March 25th. Seventeen members and five guests were present for a lovely noon meal. The afternoon meeting was reported for the flower fund. Mrs. Ruth Craft gave an in-

NEW YORK (UPI) — Keeping the Queens-Midtown Tunnel under the East River in New York free from deadly carbon monoxide fumes from automobile exhausts is a king-sized job. Each minute giant fans remove the stale air, simultaneously blowing about 4,312,000 (m) cubic feet of fresh air into the tunnel, while a battery of electronic detectors (Leeds and Northrup) continuously chart any potential concentration of the dangerous gas.

Cloverdale O.E.S. Public Installation Installing Officer—Eva Craggs, Cloverdale Installing Marshal — Betty McFarland, Bainbridge Installing Chaplain—June Harbison, Morton Installing Organist — Dorisann Albright, Greencastle Soloists — Sylvia Query and Alice June Hacker, Cloverdale Officers For 1964— Junior Past Matron — Sylvia Query Worthy Matron—Jean Stallcop Worthy Patron—Charles Branaman Associate Matron—Maxine Graham Associate Patron—Harvey Ford Secretary—Esther Fry Treasurer—Belle Lasley Conductress—Norma Ann Ray Associate Conductress—Evelyn McKamey Marshal—Bernice Davis Chaplain—LaRue Gray Organist—Jean Cochran Adah—Thelma Dwiggan Ruth—Peggy Ford Esther—Mabel Herbert Martha—Leno Poland Electa—Pauline Crawley Warder—Colleen Parker Sentinel—Howard Graham

A ITorld Of Style The "Jo" Look Revives A Burning Question:

By Natalie Gittelson

of the way things were and the way girls looked when they were neither hoydens nor hellcats nor screaming meemies but Young Ladies, down to their pristine white stockings and

gleaming T-strap shoes.

IF THIS SOUNDS like a drag to you, forgive me for pointing, but you couldn’t be more wrong. The “Jo” look is just abiut the loveliest thing to happen in a young girl’s world since the Alice-in-Wonderland haircut was causing everybody's teenage daughter to remember, every night, those crucial one hundred strokes of the hairbrush. It, too, comes with long, shining, nearly waist-length hair, proper headbands, little bolero jackets, hand-span waists and plenty of ruffles and bows. The “Jo” look also revives lacey

THEATRICAL PRODUCER Victoria Crandall, who has as much as pale blonde contempo-

rary chic as her musical comedy white pantaloons that peep out “Jo” who has good old-fashioned just a speck or so from the charm was talking animatedly hems of short, full skirts (what

DROVE OF DRIVERS SAN FRANCISO (UPI) — California had a total of 8,694,099 (m) drivers licenses in force in 1960 — a million and a half more than any other state in the union.

a cozy thought for chilly afternoons!) and look simply delicious with those long white stockings and T-strap patent

FOREIGN FISH AID OLYMPIA, Wash. (UPI)

The Washington State Department of Fisheries has shipped 100,000 pink salmon eggs to Norway in an effort to begin a

salmon run in that nation.

The department also has sent 100,000 Chinook eggs to hatch-

eries in Japan.

over coffee and cookies the other day in her warm and pleasant oasis of an apartment in New York’s surging Fifties.

“Don’t you think,” she asked leather flats. her visitor, “that this is the F or MORE RAKISH psychological moment to refresh TYPES, Jo herself clings to the atmosphere with some senti- g a y suspenders (as illustrated in ment, nostalgia and all these crimson cotton, green felt or other not-so-outdated vii^ues even pale blue satin for evening,

T ' * * /I ■Fl V 1 1 X r + 11 r< Lr ri T?

1864 EASTER PARADE—Here Is a prevue of the Cape May, N. J., Easter parade, where they’re turning back the clock 100 years to Victorian era fashions.

that Americans once loved”’

MISS CRANDALL HAD good reason for her rhetorical question. The sole producer for many years of the only professional music theatre in Maine, the Brunswick Summer Playhouse, she recently opened her first show, “Jo” in New York’s Orpheum Theatre. It is based on everybody’s first love of a novel, Louisa May Alcott’s “Little Women,” and it revives a burning question: Whatever happened to girlish charm

worn over carefully tucked shirtwaist blouses, often trimmed with soutache braid. (You can run up a similar example ensemble on your own sewing machine in an afternoon.) She also pulls down a darling plaid boy’s visor cap over her sparkling eyes and tosses a big red wool scarf — from the boy's department too — over the shoulders of her coat. Jo is a jot more audacious, fashion-wise, than those other immortal March girls, Meg, Beth and Amy, but neverthless she pos-

Particularly so since by some ^j ve ]y glows with that rare and

unwritten law of irony — it

The IDEAL Way Call IDEAL CLEANERS

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SEASONAL HAT being worn by Mrs. Lyndon Johnson is a beige rolled-brim.

opened on the very same night that those famous (or infamous, depending on your point of view) Beatles opened at Carnegie Hall. The Beatles gave the world a shaggy-dog haircut and the spectacle of the American girl-in-a-frenzy. Miss Crandall’s “Jo” gives the world a delightful and nostalgic reminder

precious commodity, wholesome

girlish charm.

WHOLESOME, God bless us, only means healthy; sound in body and mind. And this is indeed what Victoria Crandall's “Jo” has given us: the image, once again, of a healthy, highspirited, wholly adorable breed of American girL

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THE FAULT LINE opened by the earthquake in this Anchorage residential section separates this neighborhood in two, with the houses on the right drooped more than 30 feet.

TRUNK SHOWING ... FRIDAY and SATURDAY April 3 and 4 I ^ -' lr - Ed - Berry, NELLY DON REPRESENTAFIVE, will be in our Ready to Wear Dept, both " days with a complete summer collection.

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FACES OF FEAR—Cypriots huddle in Kitma, listening to a portable radio for news of th* waxrifl£ Greeds and Turk tecUons. Desaair. fear, hope are Bjggred oa thgirface*