The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 March 1966 — Page 6

4 Th« Daily Bandar, Graancattla, Indiana Wadnasday, March 2, 1966

Miller School News

Rain, snow or shine — con-

struction continues at Miller School. The masons will start laying Mocks this week. Mrs. Rockhill’s Second Grade toured the DePauw campus and enjoyed instructional presentation on the Weather by Prof. Robert Loring. This is always a profitable experience for the children. An Interesting plant found while hiking and kept for sev-

ALfRfD P. SLOAN JR. (above), who headed giant General Motors from 1923 to 1956. is dead in New York at 90. Be got into the auto Industry by convincing the Olds Motors Go. early in the century that roller bearings would work better than greased axleei

eral weeks in the library terrarium, has been identified by Dr. Winona Welch as a ground pine. This is a rare plant for Indiana, the last having bean, identified by a DePauw student

in 1892.

Mrs. Hurst’s Sixth Grade visited the Public Library. Each child selected books which would meet his own needs and the requirements fen* a unit in Language Arts. Those from Miller School who attended the recast PTA program at Jones School appreciated the presentation of legislative items given by Horace Herold, District PTA Director and Jr. High Principal at Bloomington. Any legislative recommendations at the state level has its beginning within the local PTA’s. Dr. Ross from State Department of Public Instruction visited and inspected our Special Education programs. He was well pleased and is recommending for next year that M-3 taught by Mrs. Davis be extended in time daily—suggested is 9 a.m.-2 p.m. March 7th at 3:30, Miller School will host the Greencastle Elementary Teachers for a professional growth session. Dr. Clara Appell of the School of Education at Indiana State will discuss an aspect of the program for the educationally disadvantaged.

[YOUR NOVK . _ flMilffons of American# move avZI' cry year. Hass are several help* Ail hints that wiN make that move easier for younger mem- . ben of the household Discuas the move and reasons * for it prior to moving' day. If possibly tafco the children to their new neighborhood in advance. Encourage them fo make new friends, but maintain friendly ties with the old neighborhood. And, let the children participate where possible in moving day organization and packing. In this way they fed more a part of the big day;

ICE FLOW

If you’re in a hurry and don't have time to wait while * thirsty plants soak up water, try this: Put ice cubes around the base of plants right on top of the dirt. As they melt, the cubes will water your plants and you won't have to wait for it to soak in. HOOSIER HAPPENINGS Every year during the month of March a common mad- • ness known as "Hoosier Hysteria" overtakes Indiana.

Symptoms of this disease are: Bleary eyes caused from crying at missed free throws; hoarseness from yelling at the top of lungs for the winning basket, and a runny nose caught while welcoming home the victorious team in a freezing downpour. May your team and mine meet in the final game, but that's where the friend- 1

ship ends.

ALL TIED UP When wrapping a gift package for mailing, place a rubber band around it temporarily to hold the paper in place while you tie the ribbons or string. TIDBITS FROM THE TABLE For a new look and taste In

W'\\

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salad dressings, try serving whole kernel com in French dressing. When making chicken croquettes, add broken nut meats for added flavor. Try a spoonful of fruit jam in- '*** stead of sugar to sweeten tea.

Send your family's favorite ideas and recipes to: Keeping Current, 1000 East Main Street, Plainfield, Indiana.

PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA

BANNER Ads Get Results

THE ODDS «* 10,000-to-l that he will try ior the Democratic nomination for the U. 8. Senate from Michigan, aays G. Menken Williams in Washington. He is assistant sscretary of Stats for African Affairs.

Asks Health, Education Action WASHINGTON UPI—President Johnson asked Congress Tuesday to enact a broad-mging package of health and education programs that would benefit the needy old people and hungry school children. Many of his proposals in a special message to Congress consisted of expanding and extending present federal activ-

ities.

But he urged "a major redirection" of school nutrition operations so that “no child in an affluent America would be without an adequate diet." One feature would be the setting up of test programs to provide hot b r e a k f a s t s for school children from impoverished families.

One of the bast known salads served in famous restaurants, and always a favorite with men, is Caesar Salad. It has line flavor and is heartier than an ordinary green salad. CABEAK SALAD 1 sieve omits; wumtarad K cup salad ail 2 cups 14-in. bread cubes 1 large bead each lesmlee and iceberg lettuce W cup grated ponsessa cheese V4 cup ennobled blue theme V4 cup salad ell 1 tbsp. Lea S Perrins woresstersUre K tap. sedt 14 tap. freshly ground blade pepper 1 raw egg Juice of 2 lemons Place gartie in 14 sup salad oil and 1st stand. Toast bread cubes In 300 deg. F. even about 20 minutes, until golden. Tear greens into big bitesize pieces and place in big wooden salad bowl. Sprinkle the cheeses ea top. Combine 14 mm oil with Worcestershire, sedt and pepper and pour ever the greens. Toss gently until every leaf is coated with the dressing. Break raw egg onto the greens, add lemea juice. Toss again until all specks of egg disappear. Remove garlic from oil, and pour ell ever bread cubes. Toss them guiekly and sprinkle them ever the greens. Toss salad again and serve.

ARROW leeates Davenport, lows (90,000) and Reek Island, DL (95,000), where a giant ice jam is backing up the Mississippi River, endangering both cities. Army engineers estimated it would take a million tons of TNT to dislodge the jam, which would endanger all communities in ths vicinity.

At Home With A French Designer

PARIS UPI—How does a rich, handsome and famous Paris fashion designer live ? While Pierre Cardin's spring collection of clothes had the “nude" look, his home has the “clutter’’ look. A fortune in paintings, bric-a-brac and collections of boxes and dolls has turned his sevenroom (plus kitchen and bath) town house on the Left Bank of the River Seine into a home more colorful than a movie set of a Paris bachelor’s diggings. The designer invited several hundred fashion, press and store buyers here for the spring style shows to a party in his 19th century home. Like international soirees anywhere, there were beautifully dressed ladies and buffet tables laden with vodka, champagne, whisky, salads, cakes, hors d’oeuvres, and such. There was a booming ye-ye band and a new French singing sensation, Maria Mathieu, who at 19 has a voice something like the late Edith Piaf. There was Mme. Herve Alphand, wife of the former French Ambassador

But the house itself made the perfume bottles, candlesticks party. The foreign guests spent and boxes—on top. The room more time inspecting Cardin’s was lined with cases of old ‘ clutter look rooms than the books on women's fashion,

bar and the food. . j

I would hate to have to dust j “ Art nouveau" period paintthis house every day. It has in & s toun 8 from the of more bric-a-brac per square bookcases, as well as a collecinch than an antique shop, un tion o w si l ver «8& s and an * Liic piano in the second living* unals dangling from chains,

room, for example, are scattered 30 antique black lacquered

Guests crowded around one

, . „ table from an old drum that

COI,lU, ‘ held , collection of 10 torge tor-

toise shell boxes edged with silver. Above hung a Picasso

Ask Membership

roughly $50 and up.

Tne piano also holds—a lamp

wa. . Due of silver flowers, J,"’

bronze statue of a boy playing a violin, a gigantic ivory snake with a silver head and tail, a! black Atrican carved wooden head, an old black Italian lyre j

and a stack of phonograph rec- UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. ords entitled “Uamelan music UPI — Blast Germany today from Java.’’ J formally applied for memberCardin's fashion designs are ship in the United Nations.

“far out’’ modern but his home '

is completely antique and stuf- | The ^ucst for membership fed with “art nouveau,’’ turn-of- i was contained in a letter from the-century objects once re- ! East German Communist party garded as horrors which now! leader Walter Ulbricht to Seethe in or camp in New retary General Thant, a U.N.

York, Paris and London.

T . , , , spokesman announced.

In addition to books, a book-

THEY’RE JUST FRIENDS, says ths Whits House of Lynda Bird Johnson and actor George Hamilton, shown at a race track, but Lynda’s friends say she’s in love. He's been a guest at the White House, they were in Acapulco together, and at the Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

to the United States, who is case held a bust, candelabras

now public relations chief for

Cardin.

STATZ! OF INDIANA M COUNTY OF PUTNAM IN THE PUTNAM ' cincurr court JANUARY TERM. IMS IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF DESSIE ETHEL GREENLEE, DECEASED Estate No. 10,462 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF DESSIE ETHEL GREENLEE In the matter of the Estate of Desele Ethel Greenlee, deceases. No. 10.462 Notice la hereby civen that Venice Earl Lawrence aa Administrator of the above named estate, has presented and filed hit final account In final settlement of said estate, and that the eame will come up for the examination and action of said Putnam Circuit Court, on the 20th of March, 10M, et which time all persons interested In said estate are required to appear In aald court and show cause, if any there be, why laid account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others Interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any pan of said estate. Samuel M. Conner, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court Attorney for Estato James M. Houck Mar. 2-7—Jt

made from elephant tusks, and a huge Georgian wine horn trimmed with silver, one of four scattered around the house. On the back of a tufted green velvet sofa wore two old Italian mandolins. Six silver boxes and a silver and bronze dragon covered a brass Indian stable. Two old Japanese masks hung on the walL Cardin is obviously the kind of fellow who doesn’t buy just one of anything. Carved heads of dogs and hunting scenes decorated the dining room, off a huge glassedin terrace filled wtih real trees and giant plants, a veritable indoor garden overlooking the river. Gigantic Japanese screens dominated the main living room with a black marble floor. But the “clutter" look was best in Cardin’* den. An ordinary television set had seven silver objects—old

DAVENPORT ICE JAM—Here Is a saw-tooth view of past at the Mississippi River ice jam at Davenport, Iowa. Dam at left, flood-threatened downtown Davenport in background.

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