The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 April 1964 — Page 2

Page 2 TUES., APRIL 7, 1964.

GREENCASTtE, INDIANA

THE DAILY BANNER

Local Women To Attend Luncheon Indiana Society of the National Society United States Daughters of 1812 War will meet April 11, at 12:00 noon for a luncheon in the Driftwood Room, Marott Hotel, 2625 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis. Mrs. Russell T. Card, State President will introduce the speaker, Hubert Hawkins who will give an illustrated history of Indiana Governors. Special guest will be Myrtle Barker. Members and guests will attend from Tippecanoe Chapter in Greencastle, Major David Steele Chapter in South Bend, and Philip Schoff Chapter, Indianapolis. Mr. John Rush, South Bend, State Chaplain, will give the Invocation. Miss Carrie Pierce, Mrs. Elmer R. Seller, and Mrs. Russell Pierce plan to attend the meeting.

OES District Meeting Held At Rosedale The spring meeting of the 9th district OES was held at Rosedale Masonic Hall. A bountiful pitch-in dinner was held in the dining room. 18 chapters were represented with 115 people registering. After dinner, the meeting was called to order by president Ida Adkisson. District Deputy Joyce Koenig was escorted to the east, introduced and welcomed. Past Presidents of District 9, present matrons and present patrons, and Grand representatives were introduced and given a hearty welcome. The welcome was given by the Worthy Matron of Rosedale Chapter, Rosemary Griffin. Response was given by Phyllis Twitchell of Oriental Chapter. Officers elected to serve next year are: President—Emily Cox, Morton Chapter 1st Vice President—Ruby Collier, Gatlin Chapter 2nd. Vice President—Lois Patton, Athens Chapter Secretary—Mary Whitely, Rus-

sellville Chapter Treasurer — Cynthia Seybold, Gatlin Chapter A party to honor President of District 9, Ida Adkisson, will be held at Oriental Chapter, Linden, Indiana on May 9th. A potluck dinner will be held at 6:30 DST. The District will also have a picnic at the Shades Park July 19, 1964. The meeting was closed with Max West singing “How Great Thou Art.” followed by prayer. A program to honor the special committee of new Worthy Patrons or their representative was given by President Ida Adkisson. She was assisted by District Deputy Joyce Koenig, 1st vice President, Emily Cox and Treasurer, Rachel West. The meeting was turned over to program chairman Marlene Waters of Rosedale Chapter. Margaret Moody gave a Humorous reading “Letter to Grandpa." Then Austin Kircher of Greencastle was M.C. for a very enjoyable program similar to that of Art Linkletter’s House Party. The fall meeting will be held at Linden. Date will be announced later.

Her program was very enjoyable. The closing of the Chapter business was in accordance with the ritual. The social hour followed with the hostess serving delicious cake and coffee. The door prize was won by Mona Harlan. The next regular business meeting will be held April 14, with Mona Harlan as hostess.

THE DAILY BANNER AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED tt - 28 S. Jackson St. Greencastle, Ind. Entered In the Pest Office at Greencastle. Indiana, as Second Class Mall matter under Act of March 7, 1878. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 35e per week Mailed in Putnam Ce. 87.00 per year Outside of Putnam Ce. 88.00 per year Outside of Indiana 812.00 per year

Today

PI RDLE GIVES TESTS Susan Lydia Ormsby 4521959, a six-year-old owned by Marion F. Ferrand, Greencastle, produced 21,493 lbs. of milk and 797 lbs. of butterfat in 365 days. Purdue University supervised the production, weighing, and testing, operations, in cooperation with the official breed improvement programs of The Holstein-Friesian Association of America.

Bible

Thought

Mrs. Ratcliff Sorority Hostess Doris Ratcliff was hostess for the Exemplar Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi on Tuesday, March 31, at 7:30 p.m., in her home. The meeting opened with members, response to the ritual. During the business meeting it was decided to help provide dues for childrens’ membership in different school activities. The Founders Day Banquet will be held in the private dining room at Torr’s Restaurant on April 28. At this time pledges will be given the Ritual of Jewel Degree. Eno Hoskins gave the lesson and her topic was England. She used newspapers from England and a scrapbook with pictures of different localities in that country.

Miss Agnes Shaw, whose father was a Methodist minister, was born in Delhi, India. Having studied at Kinnaird Teacher Training Center in Lahore, she later received her B.A. degree from Isabella Thoburn College, Lucknow. She has been mistress of the Baptist Mission Gauge High School and Butler Memorial Girls' School, both in Delhi. Before her present furlough she was Manager of the Methodist Girls’ School, Mathura.

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Mrs. Emil M. Hartl is a member of the Board of Missions of The Methodist Church. She is a graduate of Massachusetts General Hospital of Nursing and studied at Boston Universiity. She is the wife of Dr. Emil M. Hartl, Director of the Hayden Goodwill Inn at Morgan Memorial (Church of All Nations) in Boston, Massachusetts.

GET THAT GREAT KEDS FAMILY FEELING get Keds fit, Keds comfort and Keds fashion Get the soft/cushiorf comfort-the snug but easy fitand the smart looks that all come with U.S. KedsM Economical, too, for Keds wear so well they’re your^ best buy in the long run. ComeJn.soon. Make yours a Keds family!,

Let us not love in wrord, neither in tongue, but in deed and in truth. I John 3:18 Love in word is not enough. The profession of love calls for deeds. Love in trutli offers help, makes a gift does a favor, or takes a burden. Personal & Local News Delta Theta Tau Alumnae will meet this evening at 7:30 writh Mrs. Ray Herbert City firemen reported thay made a false alarm run to 409 Ohio Street at 1 p.m. Monday. The Friendly Club will meet in the home of Mrs. Helen Ewing, West Berry St., Wednesday evening at 7:30. The Rain or Shine Club will meet Wednesday at 1 p.m. with Mrs. Glenn Woodrum. Please note change of meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Oral McCullough of Coatesville Route 2, will celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary April 8th. The Clinton-Madison Friendly Neighbors Club will meet Thursday April 9th, at 1:30 p.m. with Helen Martin. There will be a handkerchief exchange. Donald Hunter, 43, Greencastle Route 4, was arrested Monday by Sheriff Kenneth Knauer for failure to appear in circuit court on a non-support charge. There will be a sock-hop Saturday evening in the Roachdale Gymnasium. It will start at 8:00 p.m. The dance is being sponsored by the freshmen class. The Bainbridge achievement banquet will be held Friday, April 10th, 7 p.m. in the school gymnasium. The public is invited. Each family is asked to bring a basket of food and its own table service. The Fillmore Garden Club will meet with Mrs. Ruth Smith on Friday, April 10 at 1:30 p.m. There will be an exchange of seeds and bulbs, an auction of one article and a group discussion of “How I Care For My Favorite Plant.” Mr. and Mrs. John Buyno of Georgetown, Illinois, are the parents of a baby girl born April 4. She was named Rosemary. Mrs. Buyno was the former Marcelline Molter who previously had taught in the Fillmore school. The Putnam County Federation of Clubs Convention will be held April 14 at the First Christian Church in Greencastle with the registration starting at 9:00 a.m. Devotions by Mrs. McFerran followed by the welcome address by Mrs. John Boyd will be given at 9:30. Luncheon reservations should be sent to Miss Carrie Pierce, 202 S. Locust St., Greencastle by April 11. Mrs. Ralph West’s C W.F. group will serve the luncheon. Miss Carrie E. Pierce, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Seller and grandson James Seller, also their daughter, Mrs. Philip Ball, Mr. Ball and their son Kevin, were In Paris, Illinois, Saturday evening, where they attended the wedding of Miss Barbara Tiffin of Paris, to Walter Allen Newlin Jr., in the First Methodist Church. Mr. Newlin is a nephew of Miss Pierce and Mrs. Seller, and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Newlin of Casey, Illinois, They will make their home in Paris, after a short honeymoon. Chapter I of PEO will meet Wednesday 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Ernest Collins.

^ World Of Style

Smart Thiaking For Every Girl! Apparel Around The Calendar

By Natalie Gittelson

Miss Marcella Haltom became the bride of James Kennett on March 7 at 7:30 p.m. in The First Baptist Church. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Nina Haltom, Greencastle and Mr. and Mrs. James Kennett of Graysville, Indiana. The double ring ceremony was read by Rev. Elmer Evens. Bridal selections were played by Paul Evans. The bride, given in marriage by her brother, approached the altar wearing a gown of silk taffeta and alencon lace. The bateau neckline and bodice were accented with alencon lace appliques etched with seed pearls. The floor length bell shape skirt of taffeta fashioned from unpressed pleats with lace motifs and a detachable watteau train of taffeta and lace with appliqued bow back. Her finger tip illusion veil was fashioned to a crown tiara of seed pearls. She carried a cascade of white roses with ivy. Miss Dawn Haltom was her sister’s maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Ruth Hartman and Miss Candace Corbett, niece of the bride. Their floor length gowns in tones of blue taffeta had short sleeves with a bateau neckline. The full length sheath was fashioned with a trumpet flare at hemline with inset and detachable brush train. Their bowed head pieces were of matching color to the dresses. They carried nosegays of white and blue carnations. The reception held immediately following the ceremony was in the basement of the church. Guests were registered by Mrs. Richard Corbett, sister of the bride. Assisting at the reception were Mrs. Duane Monk, sister of the bridegroom: Mrs. Frank Cummings, Mrs. Kenneth Jones and Mrs. Joseph Galloway, sisters of the bride. The couple are at home at 1017 South Indiana Street.

I C

lines on your dresses when yo4 buy the BIG color of the yeai* So forego fads, unless you're very rich or you just don’t givli

a darn.

SEVERAL NEW off-Broad-day plays which are destined tp become four-season classics of American theatre boast start who dress in the four-seasons way. In the rousing musical show, “Trumpets of the Lord,* the beautiful and talented Cicely Tyson wears longsleeved pale grey jersey, cut straight i9 front, floating two panels like angel’s wings in back. Gray stockings and small-heeled gray strapped shoes complete a monotone look that is marvelously seasonless. HILDA HARRIS is the lovely > star of “Jericho-Jim Crow,” an ’ extraordinary, exciting theatri- \ cal offering which is a cultural ,i project of New York’s Presby- t terian Church and Brotherhood Synagogue. She bases her four-,, season thinking on navy blue—* in a suit with a pleated skirt,« a short, waist-cropped jacket ^ (slim enough to go under a coat* in cold weather) and a whitjp t silk scarf, crossed at the throat.' BOLD AND BRILLIANT red. j another never-fading staple in, the fashion spectrum, is the 1 star’s choice in a bold and bril-* liant American documentary. play called “In White America.” t Young Gloria Foster, who is^

IT IS NOTHING NOWADAYS to see simple dresses and suits with three hundred dol-lars-and-up price tags hanging on the ready-to-wear racks as casually as if they were a dime e dozen. While not all of us can pay this kind of important money for fashion (and wouldn’t, even if we could), the high cost of clothes, in general, makes a four-season wardrobe sound thinking for any smart

girl.

SLEEVELESSNESS, for instance, never goes out of style. An unsleeved black crepe dress, shaped to skim the figure, and set with a big flat bow near the throat is a twelve-months proposition, wherever in the world you live. Big daisy earrings give it strong summer signifi-

canse. . .jet or pearls for winter, the theatre, wears a simple, * In between, play black crepe slightly fitted scarlet dress with!! any way you please. a V-neck and little cap sleeves | PARADOXICALLY, the new that could go to dinner nicely* Paris penchant for long sleeves on any spring night; look equal-!* lends another sharp arrow to ]y pretty and proper next win-£ your four-seasons fashion bow. ter under a black wool cape or4 A princess coat or dress a coat of spotted fur. beautifully seamed, of sheer BUT THE POINT of time-£ white wool with narrow sleeves lessness is perhaps made most * that reach to the waist, need strikingly in Ted Mann’s breath- * only languish in your closet on taking new production of Euri-*

surely destined for greatness in 4

Club Sixteen will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Jerry Ozment. Remember your April Fool package. The Women’s Study Club will meet Friday at 2:00 p.m. with Mrs. Ruth Savage. Mrs. James B. Johnson will have the program. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Clodfelter, Greencastle Route 3, are the parents of a son born Monday at the Putnam County Hospital. The St. Paul’s Study Club will met Thursday at 1:30 with Mrs. D. Romalia, 818 Gardenside Dr. Also don’t forget the card party Wednesday evening at 7:30 in St. Pauls’ Parish Hall. Three bids on Ramp Creek Bridge No. 3 were rejected by the Putnam County Commissioners Monday. All the bids for the bridge in Franklin Township were more than the appropriation of 515,000. The Evening Circle of the Presbyterian Church will meet Thursday at 8:00 p.m. with Mrs. Larry Cox, on the Albin Pond Road. Mrs. Laurel Corbin will be assistant hostess. The Bible Study will given by Mrs. Kenneth Eitel. Mrs. Charlott Peterson will be in charge of the Mission Study.

24TH ANNUAL MEETING

the very warmest day of the

year.

I MENTION BLACK and white specifically, because while more and more color fads are cropping up at every season of the year, perspicacious black and white will never, never date. Neither will the lovely neutrals like dove gray, beige and taupe. But two years ago, we had a

pedes’ “Trojan Women,” which-* was first set upon the stage int 416 B.C. The Greek chorus of * women w r ear classically beauti-* ful dresses fashioned of pleats' from neck to hem and worn with black stoles. Jane White,-4 as Helen, wears white silk chif-* fon with a gold cuff bracelet j high up on her arm. Although^, no one expects her clothes to

e _ i :, nnua mte ing o spring; last year, we had last from June through January

a pale blue spring; and this for 2,000 years, the meaning is year, it’s a yellow season. You clear: Fashion, well-chosen, can might as well embroider date- indeed go on and on—and on.

the Northwest Indiana Confer ence Woman’s Society of Christian Service of The Methodist Church will be held at City Methodist Church, Gary, at 9 a.m., CST, on Thursday, April 16. The theme of the meeting is

“Dedicated to Serve.”

The afternoon session will close with an address by Mrs. Emil M. Hartl, of Boston, Massachusetts. Other speakers intle, pastor of City Methodist elude the Rev. Richard C. ThisChurch; Mrs. C.J. Rogers, conference president; Miss Agnes Shaw, of India, a member of the “Team of Ten” missionary speakers; the Rev. Allan D. Byrne, associate pastor of City Methodist Church; Mrs. F.L. McDaniel, member of the Board of Missions of The Methodist Church and a past president of the conference; and Dr. Otis L. Collier, Calumet District Super-

intendent.

Roachdale Garden Club Held Meeting The Roachdale Garden Club held their April meeting in the Library basement. Mrs. Inez Wilson, president was in charge of the meeting. Roll call was answered by giving. Helpful ideas and garden hints. Minutes of last meeting were read and approved and a fin-

ancial report given. Plants and seeds were brought to exchange but decided to sell them at silent auction after the business meeting. All enjoyed refreshments served by Mrs. Richard Riggle. Charles Rady gave an interesting talk on setting bulbs and planting seeds and then they showed two reels of film taken at the Bush Gardens at Tampa, Florida.

Versitility is the u’ord in summer clothes. The Little Boy Look, the Little Girl Look, the shift, the slink, bright colors, all white.

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Before sewing, place a sheet under your chair. Dropped pins, hooks and eyes, needles and threads then can be found more easily.

ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Bill Hamm, So. Locust St., years old today, April 7th.

GRASSHOPPER One eyelet, tapered toe 54.50

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RELATIONS RESUME—Soon after the United States and Panama exchanged formal notes restoring diplomatic relations which had been severed since the January Canal Zone dispute, President Johnson nominated Jack Hood Vaughn for the post of Ambassador to Panama. Vaughn, currently chief of Latin American affairs for the peace corps is a former boxer and Marine Captain.

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GREENCASTLE