The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 September 1967 — Page 6
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Tha Daily Bannar, Braancastla, Indiana
W4dnasday, Saptambar 13,1967
WARDS 9S TH ANNIVERSARY
/vVoNTGOMERY WARD
II S. INDIANA OL 3-5191 Men., Tuei, Wed., Thun., Sat. 9 - S FrL 9 to 1:30
Save *31 on Wards sofa
SMART BISCUIT-BACK STYLING, 98-IN. LONG!
199
Reg. 229.99
00
• Upholstered in nobby tweed fabric e Cushioned with Super Ward-Foam* e Supported by a coil spring base Make this good-looking contemporary sofa the focal point of your living room. Styled with a deep button-tufted back and sleek "T” cushion seat design, it’s bound to bring compliments. Choose from a variety of decorator colors* * Wards high density urethane foam
Modern bedroom cut *40
INCLUDES BED, DOUBLE DRESSER AND MIRROR!
00
139
Reg. 179.99
• Rich walnut finish hardwood 1 • Laminated plastic dresser top > resists burns, stains, scratches Subtle and sophisticated, this contemporary suite is a natural for today’s homes! Its sturdy construction includes center-guided drawers and attractive brass pulls, i Roomy 4-drawer chest, now 48.00
12x12" vinyl asbestos tile for any fleer!
Total of 13 colors in pebble, c^ : o, travertine or stone. 22c Embossed stone design vinyl asbestos tile in 4 smart colors. Ea.. 20c
$30 savings on 5-pc. pedestal dinette
199 00
Foam* padded bucket seats and 48" round table rest on bright aluminum bases. Walnut plastic table top; expanded vinyl upholstery. m Wards lab-tested urethane foam
Reg. 229.99
iig
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liillli
Dynasty 501® tweed carpet of nylon pile
DuPont continuous filament nylon — unsurpassed for long wear, clear color, easy
care. 4 tweed colors. ^ $q. Yd. Inst, w/padsq. yd.... 12.79 Reg. 10.99
Nyalle 501® carpet in tweed nylon pile
9
Continuous filament nylon pile. Choose our best-selling. Sandalwood or from 9 other soil-masking tweeds. Inst, w/pad sq. yd... 9.09
6
Sq. Yd.
Reg. 7.99
Color is the story of Fall shirts
By Walter Logan NEW YORK UPI—The white shirt for business wear may soon become a thing of the past. Colored shirts are out-selling the white for the first time, and the percentage increases as houeswives discover that high fashion now comes in Permanet Press. Color is the story in this year’s Fall shirts and it ranges from a deep French blue through every conceivable shade of green to cinnamon, salmon, bronze and copper. The pale pastels of recent years are going out with the solid whites. Patterns are more popular than solids. Stripes, wide track ones more than an inch apart are by far the most popular with young businessmen but the style leaders are going for tattersalls and checks and almost invariably on a colored background. The button down collar style remains almost a uniform on the college campus and is currently the latest fad in Europe. But the newer styles are very widespread collars, long points which look like button downs without the buttons, some with pins, and short spread collars.
White shirts look pretty drab [club figures on a tattersall; allwith the new Fall suits but the over patterns against a widebig three manufacturers—Van track colored stripes; medallion Heusen, Arrow and Manhattan print against a window pane —introduced permanent press check; club figures against a in white only and housewives check. And in a color combinawon't have anything other than tion that coordinates with the PP. And, it turns out. house- suit. wives do most of the buying. Some of the standouts: This year every manufactur- j Van Heusen’s flared spread er has taken it up in one form deeptone shirt in a Kodrel-cot-or another—solid cotton broad- - ton blend, a wide spread colcloths, various mixtures of co- lar blue on blue pincheck, cornton and such polyesters as binations of blue/y e 11 o w,
Kodrel or Dacron. They have added colors and pattern and high-style collars and it still comes out of a washing machine needing little or no ironing. A new factor making its appearance in shirts this year is something called soil release. The polyester fibers in PP shirts had an affinity of oil stains which had to be scrubbed out by hand. Soil release factors have been added and the oil stains come out in the wash. And a few pointers on what tie to wear with the new patterns: A burgundy and yellow stripe on a solid pink; blue and white polka dots on a narrow blue and white stripe; regimental stripes narrow stripes.
Morton News By Mrs. Russell 0'Haver, Correspondent
Mr. and Mrs. Fay Scott, Mrs. James Wagner and Mrs. Russell O’Haver attended Friends Night at the Groveland OES last Thursday evening. Gene Unger is a patient in the Community Hospital in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barker accompanied their son, Dale, to Lafayette Sunday. Dale will be a freshman at Purdue University this school year. Many relatives and firends called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Goode Sunday afternoon to honor them on their 50th wedding anniversity. People were greeted at the door by their two sons, Eugene and Tressman, also Mr. and Mrs. Goode. The granddaughter, Darla, registered the guests and the two daughters-in-law served from a beautiful decorated table in the dining area. Mr. and Mrs. Vem Sigler called at the Perkins Funeral Home in Roachdale last Monday to pay their respects to the Orville Perkins family. Mrs. Harold Barker and Mrs. Don Jefferies and children called on Mr. and Mrs. Allen Stormes of Terre Haute last Friday. Friends and neighbors extend their sympathy to the Claud Irwin family also Cloyd Hall relatives. Mr. Hall passed away at the Putnam County Hospital Friday night and Mr. Irwin Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Harbison and Mrs. Golda Humphrey at-1 tended a household sale of a relative at West Point last Wednesday. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Caywood were Mr. and Mrs. Marion McIntyre of ( New Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Englehart of Gary and Mrs. Myrtle Boatman of Greencastle. Callers last week of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Yochum and Mrs. D. P. Alexander were Mrs. Helen Burr of Ft. Wayne, Mrs. Maude O’Haver, Morton, Mrs. Elsie McBride and Mrs. Shirley Beatty of Rockville, Mrs. Rafe McGaughey of near Russellville. Sunday callers were Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Romine and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Clodfelter. Mrs. Roscoe White and Mrs. Jake Martin called on Mrs. Mae Warden of Rockville last Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Eugene Callender and Mrs. Russell Buis of Greencastle visited Mr. Buis, who is hospitalized in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stultz were Saturday evening dinner guests of Mrs. Dick Parian at Sargent’s Steakhouse, Lafayette. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bunten and Mrs. Marty Schreyer of Lafayette. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Clodfelter and family and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitchell were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leland All good. Myrna Clodfelter spent Friday night and Saturday with Patricia Allgood and David Allgood spent Friday night and Saturday with Jo Ellen Clodfelter. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Denny and son, Glen, Mrs. Eva Fisher and Mrs. Grace Scott were Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Call. Miss Judy Stevens will enter: Porter College in Indianapolis |
this week. Her father and mother accompanied her to Indianapolis on Sunday. Judy will be living at 8120 N. Illinois Street. Mr. and Mrs. Vem Sigler called on Mrs. Earl Sutherlin and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Baird and family of Russellville on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stultz and sons were guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Woodrum Jr. and sons on Sunday to spend the day at a cabin on Sugar Creek, west of New Market Mrs. Elmer Bennett visited Mrs. Opal Phipps on Greencastle route 5, one afternoon last week. Brenda Terhune was absent from school last week due to illness. Dean Terhune of Jasonville was a guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Terhune and children. He came because of Mrs. Terhune’s birthday.
Record defense bill approved WASHINGTON UPI — The House approved a record $70 billion defense bill Tuesday but insisted on an amendment that could jeopardize a multi-billion dollar arms deal with the British. The measure, swollen by Vietnam war requirements, is the largest appropriation bill ever brought before Congress. It now goes back to the Senate. A compromise between separate bills passed earlier by the Senate and House, the legislation would finance the nation’s armed forces for the 12 months that began last July 1. However, the military tab confronting the taxpayer is expected to be even bigger before the fiscal year is over. Key members have predicted that President Johnson will ask Congress in January for several billions more to pay for the war in Vietnam. The bill already contains about $20 billion for Vietnam alone.
maize, brown, navy/light blue. Creighton’s deep color chambray BDs in such stripe combinations as nutmeg/navy, cinnamon/blue, blue/pumpkin. Hathaway’s PP in wedgewood blue, green stripe BD, its Lan-vin-designed widespread collar with & firm French lining in
stripes and vivid but darker solid colors; a new rough textured oxford tweed fabric for the “Friday suit,’’ narrow stripes with spread white collar. Manhattan's m u 1 i t i c olored stripe in a basketweave effect with a spread collar, a twill in a Kodrel-cotton mixture, Sero’s two color windowpane BD against a pale pink background; Arrow’s long roll collar in such combinations as narrow orange stripes against soft green; Embassy’s widetrack twin stripes with a flaring collar; Enro’s PP button downs in a big one-inch windowpane check, a cedar (gray-green 1 oxford BD with yellow and red stripes; a cotton cheviot oxford that looks like a pindot.
eNo ^Bathroom &o& When drawing a tub of water* run the cold water in first untH it reaches a depth of about an inch/ then add tha hot water. No steam aecumu* bteh
Have you ever tried nsfng dental floss instead of thread to tevr on those collar buttons your hu» band so easily twists off his shirts? They will never come off again.. Booster Happenings Sept 4—labor Day celebrations throughout tha state. Sept 9—Hoosfer Hundred—100 mite champiom ship auto race—Indianapolis Sept 13-16—11th Annual Com Ftettval-SuHivan Indiana Sept. 27-30—Persimmon Festival—Mitchell* Indiana Vtacui’t slice a straight piece of bread or bologna? Keep your eye on the main portion and not on the piece bring cut You'll be amazed at the result Oven Cleaning cMade Easy There ere ell sorts of new chemical oven cleaners on the market that make a tough job a lot easier than it used to be. But it's still a smeary, messy, greasy job. One that you can dispense with forever with a new electric range featuring the exclusive self-cleaning oven. You merely turn a dial and in a matter of minutes even the messiest oven becomes glistening clean. See them at your appliance dealers now. Many a driver has a way of bumping into a new acquaintance. Crumb Cure When Icing a cake* keep it from crumbling by spreading it with soft butter before applying frosting.
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Greencastle
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