The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 July 1968 — Page 6
Friday, July 5, 1968
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Page 5
Fillmore Chapter holds meeting The regular monthly business meeting of the Fillmore Gamma Alpha Kappa chapter of Kappa Delta Phi national philanthropic sorority was held June 25, at 7 p.m. at the home of Mrs. John Tague. Mrs. Marion Sears, president, presided. The minutes of the May meeting were read by the secretary Mrs. Duane Bassett. Mrs. Jerry Ozment, treasurer, reported that the treasury is increasing with gifts being received from chapters throughout the state. The secretary also read correspondence from Mrs. Frank Kessler, counselor, thanking members for her appreciation gift. The by-laws committee presented the proposed chapter bylaws which were voted on. The finance committee chairman, Mrs. Ozment, announced that Mrs. David Kieffaber has started the travel basket. The members of the Ozment family were the lucky recipients of home-made ice cream brought to them by Mrs. Kieffaber. Program books were distributed by Mrs. Don Whitehead. Names were drawn for secretsisters. A picnic-social is being planned for Tuesday evening, August 13, at 6:30, with invited guests. A social hour followed the business meeting with the hostess serving refreshments. The hostess gift was raffled off, with Mrs. Dallas Nichols winning. The next business meeting will be held July 23 at the home of Mrs. David Kieffaber at 7:30 p.m.
Beauty parlor is ready to enhance the male image
TV CAMEOS: Hiimui iimf
TRANSCONTINENTAL RECORD Byron Young. 4r>. Sparks. New. rubs a tired tootsie on the George Washington Bridge at New Yol k as he sets a new record for walking across the continent San Francisco to New York in 55 days. That beats the old record set in 19HO by 11 days. Young is a pro bowler and an accountant.
Indians win string is snapped
\
in the standings Thursday.
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)—Just when the Indianapolis Indians were putting on a hot drive toward Pacific Coast League leaders Tulsa and Phoenix, the San Diego Padres came to town and, after bowing 10-1 in the series opener, doused the Tribe twice Thursday in a doubleheader, 5-3 and 4-2. The game-breaker in each contest was a three-run homer. In the opener, Padre center, fielder Billy Cowan broke up a 2-2 tie in the tenth inning, lifting the visitors to a 5-3 win and breaking the Indian win streak
of four games.
Third baseman Johnny Werhas had the same three-run homer trick up hi§ sleeve when he came to bat in the sixth inning of the second game. With his boys trailing 2-1 at the time,
he launched the baseball out of the park for a 4-2 lead that held
up.
The losses take some of the shine off the current Indian home stand. Going into the double-header, the Tribe had gone to the showers sweatty and smiling after eight of 10 ball games. Now Indianapolis finds themselves SVa games behind frontrunning Tulsa, after falling a half-game farther behind them
Wednesday night the Indian win spoiled the pitching debut of former big league slugger Jim Gentile. Gentile, 34, is looking for a way back into the majors with the Padres. He pitched two innings in relief, retiring the Tribe in order in the seventh, but allowing two runs on three hits and a pair of walks in the eighth. -
By WALTER LOGAN NEW YORK iUPIj—Well, it's come. A beauty parlor for men. You can have your hair scissor " cut, razor cut, • re-styled, shampooed, curled, straightened. darkened, lightened. You can have it brushed into a Harold Teen-like bun so you can be taller than she is. And if you haven’t any hair they'll weave you a wig, a moustache, sideburns or a beard. You can get your face washed. scrubbed, rubbed, sun-tan-ned. de-wrinkled. youthfulized, mudpacked. massaged, and your scalp treated, heated or knuckle dusted. They'll take out your blackheads and rub in skin toner that makes you look as if you had just come from the beach. A shave '$2.50i if you really want one. It’s part of th£ peacock revolution that began six or seven years ago and has suddenly gathered so much momentum you find some men in red velvet Nehru jackets and gold necklaces, daubing themselves with expensive scents and applying liberal quantities of perfumed deodorants. There have been barber shops since time immemorial and in recent years hair stylists who do many of the above services. But Gimbel's, one of New York s larger department stores, has installed an out and out beauty parlor for men. It's called Gimbel’s Salon for Men and is on a balcony directly across from Gimbel's Salon for. Women. Both are •reached by a common stairway and there is a common waiting room in between or. for the faint hearted, more waiting room inside. The invitation said to “come over and enhance your image.” There’s a revolving barber pole outside the door of the men's salon but the announcement said “there are no barbers’ here . . . only masters of styling, skilled in the art of bringing out the best in your appearance.” There was a tycoon of industry in one of the booths having his hair re-styled to make himself look taller. Another lay back luxuriously with white goo spread all over his face as Miss Marie, a red - haired French cosmetologist in a mini skirt, gave him the works.
Another tycoon of industry sat off in a corner thumbing through a magazine. They weren’t doing anything to him. He had sent his hair piece in for a shampoo and restyling and merely was waiting until they had finished with it. Cleaning time is 20 minutes. The service is under the direction of Jerry Roman and his staff of Salon di Roma stylists whose hairpieces are all custom made and are never, never called wigs. The hairpieces start at $175 but you can get sideburns for a lot less. Roman, not surprisingly well groomed himself, has a chain of similar shops around the country but never b< fore in a department store where a man can duck in one door and his wife in another for rival total grooming concepts. We waved the invitation to him and he waved us over to.a booth where awaited Mr. Pierre, a Frenchman, who in turn was waving a. razor and a pair of scissors. “Bon jour,” he said. "Parle vous Francais?” and we knew we were in trouble. But it wasn’t so bad. He thrust us into a rubberized jacket that fastened up the back, spun us around and began shampooing with the back of our head over a sink. European style. The hair was chopped down to size with a straight razor and Mr. Pierre got ready to enhance our image. He did it with a hair drier and a comb, mumbling all the while that it had no body and was fine like a baby’s. So he reached it up along the part, held it down with something that looked like a loose tennis racquet and sprayed it with hair spray. "Magnifique,”' he said, though that was an obvious exaggeration, and led us over to Miss Marie waiting apprehensively in the wings. She set us down in a chair, flipped back the back < the legs did not rise, barber chair style i and went to work. Hot towels. Then the goo. “Eet will dry in 12 minutes, no less.” she said, spreading it all over our face. "Eet will dry into something beautiful. Eet will clean zee skin. Eet will remove all zee wreenkles." Then a bit of sunlamp, a touchup job by Mi\ Pierre, and we went out into the World, our image enhanced.
Huck Finn costly on TV
Phone threats stem from crackdown
your car deserves the best TIRES ALIGNMENT on car balancing 3-D AUTO SUPPLY
209 N. Jackson 01 3-3035
GARY, Ind. (UPI) — Gary Mayor Richard Hatcher and police chief James Hilton said they will continue the crack, down against crime in the northern Indiana city despite threatening telephone calls they received Wednesday. “I want it understood that this town is going to be shut down and shut down tight," Hatcher proclaimed after city police squads arrested 36 persons at eight alleged gambling and numbers games locations. An anonymous caller phoned both the mayor and Hilton and threatened them to ease up on the raids or else. A man told Hatcher he and his wife would be hurt if things don’t change. However, Hatcher is not married. “We don’t mind getting hit this way," a caller told Hilton, “but we don’t want to get hit this hard again.” Hilton said the raids are only a beginning of an all-out war
against crime in the steel city. Last week, the Gary City Council’s two Republican mem. bers and two white Democratic members demanded a grand jury investigation of gambling in Gary. They said no effort had Eight year old dies of burns INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — An eight.month-old Lafayette boy, Jeffrey Alan Vanderweilen, died Thursday at Riley Hospital for Children here of burns he received in an accident at his home. Jeffrey received the scalding burns over a large part of his body Monday when he was taking a bath with an older child in the family. When their mother left the room, the older child accidentally turned on the hot water, scalding Jeffrey.
been made to halt policy and other gambling in some areas of Gary. Woman killed by train BIRDSEYE, Ind. (UPI)—An elderly woman was killed here Thursday when she failed to hear a warning whistle from a Southern Railroad train and stepped into its path. Susie Towers, 76, was walking on a private path which crossed the tracks and apparently nei- . ther saw nor heard the train approaching at a speed of about 40 miles per hour. Authorities said the woman was extremely hard of hearing, and that the condition undoubt, edly caused her death. Birdseye is a small community In DuBois County.
Most of the raids have been in Gary's central district. -- Among those arrested was Robert Pullen, a Fire Depart, ment lieutenant. Chief Alfonso Holliday suspended Pullen pending a hearing. Textiles Top Finnish Exports NEW YORK fUPK — Textiles and manufactured textile products topped all Finnish exports durinvr 1966. reports the Finnish American Chamber of Commerce. "Analysis of Finland's 1966 export results now establish that textiles and manufactured textile products accounted for more than 100 million finnmarks of overseas sales, for an increase of 32 per cent over the 1965 level, and now represents the largest single group in the sector of Finnish consumer goods exports,” the Chamber says.
a Good Chair is Basic...
you can’t live without one! After all,it’s the situation that can’t be overlooked in making a house a home. Doubly attractive pairs answer many a decorating need. Use them in the corner. Hanking fireplace or picture window or facing at ends of your sofa, as an ideal conversation center. We’ve scores of decorator groupings. Don’t overlook comfort.. .no home is complete without at least one recliner or lounge chair and ottoman upon which the bread—earner can rest his weary bones and forget the cares of the day. When it comes to style, size and color that’s another story. Come in.. .our selection of first quality values is second to none. To be sure of perfect choice you need expert guidance and in that field we’re specialists. No matter what your needs our interior decorators will i completely inform and assist you in every way possible.
1 do mi
do more with your home and your money at HORACE LINK & CO.
'The Store of Furniture"
i
FOR SALE Wall Paaeling $2.88 sheet $ ep 4*8'A” Black lasalatioa Board $1.39 shaat 1st Grada Cailiag Tilt 9< per ft. Heavy Duty Picnic Tables, lacladiag Hardware t Lamber $24.00 each WEST SIDE LUMBER CO. 1124 WEST NATIONAL AVENUE BRAZIL INDIANA FREE PARKIHG
By MEL HilMER HUCKLEBERRY FINN, who .'■eklom had more th;ui a nickel to his name, will bust out on the TV screen Give and animated) this fall in all his freckled, fish-.ng-pole glory and it'll cost $100,000 ]>er half hour to put together each episode of his adventures. That makes Hack's antics just about the most costly in television - and it makes the whole thing quite an achievement. to understate it, for Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera. Eleven years ago. they' were out of business. Bill and Joe were animated cartoonists and executives at MGM- Bill from Melrose. N.M., Joe from New York City- -for 20 years • "Tom and Jerry" was their babyi. when one morning they were told to discontinue production. "Twenty years of work ended suddenly with a single call.” they say. "The soaring costs of animation had. priced us out of the entertainment business, it seemed.” * * * BL'T it turned out to be their biggest break. In July. 1957. the boys incorporated Hanna-Bar-bera Productions, started doing planned animation for TV you've noticed, of course, that jt doesn't include the expensive detail that wouldn't be visible anyway on the small screen and went after the Saturday a m. kid audience with a bang. Nine and a half years later. They sold the whole shebang to the Taft Broadcasting Co. for $12 million and 60 thousand .shares of Taft stock. Today, the more than 500 H-B employe’s turn out cartoons, commercial films, industrial movies and phonograph records. "The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." featuring three young ones named Michael Shea Huck <. Lu' Ann Haslam > Becky Thatcher i and Kevin Sc hultz Tom Sawyer' is an off-shoot, .n a way. of the "Jack and the Beanstalk" special that H-B All-Star MUNCIE, Ind. (UPI) - Jim Roudebush, an outfielder for Ball State University, has been named to the second team AllAmerica squad of the American Association of College Baseball Coaches. Roudebush, from Fishers, IndJ, was the only Hoosier named to the first three teams. A lefthander .Roudebush batted .398 in 31 games this spring for the Cardinals. He slammed five homers and knocked in 37 runs. He was voted the most valuable player on the team and won the MVP for the Indiana Collegiate Conference, hitting .439 in league games. Roudebush batted .359 during his collegfe career. Czech Equipment to Cuban Factory VIENNA < UPI) — The The Czechoslovakian “Strojexport" enterprises has delivered equipment for a Cuban cement factory, one of Cuba’s new industrial undertakings. The factory, located in Las .Villas Province, will augment annual Cuban cement production in 1969 by 250.000 tons and in 1970 by 670.000 tons, according to Czech authorities.
Michael Shea (1.) will be the immortal Huckleberry this fall, with Lu Ann Hadam at Becky and Kevin Schultz at Tom Sawyer.
whipped up for TV a year ago. In that one. you may recall. Gene Kelly danced with animated characters “Mary Poppins" was a movie using the same dodge and in 'Huck.” the three kids will be acting with cartoon creations. Also to be seen - briefly will be Ted Cassidy. TVs' "Lurch" of yesterday. who will play "Injun Joe." the sinister redskin of the Mark Twain books. The nerve center of the Han-na-Barbera firm is a 3-story. $1,250,000 building near the Hollywood Freeway entrance to the San Fernando Valley. The layout is almost as famous as Disneyland, and not too long ago a speech on the floor of the U S. Senate by Sen. Thomas H Kuchel lauded the talented pair for "having delighted not only children but also their elders." More than 1.500 licensed manufacturers turn out 4.500 difNew coach EDINBURG, Ind. (UPI)-Stu Brown, 27, was named Wednes--day as head basketball coach and athletic director at Edinburg High School, succeeding Steve Baker who resigned to enter private business. Brown, who compiled a 26-20 mark in two seasons at Vevay, also will be head cross country coach. He is a Marion High School and Butler University graduate.
ferent products Flintstone window shades to Yogi Bear bubble bath crystals in co-operation with the studio. 'Huck Finn" will be shown in prime time by NBC. come September. and will take the three kids to Egypt for an encounter with a mummy, to India to recover the ruby eye of an idol and to a desert island where they find Gulliver's lilliputians. There will be action. Bill and Joe- promise, but no great violence for which parents still shaken by the recent assassinations will be grateful "Huckleberry Hound" was the first H-B hit it won an Emmy and over Bill's and Joe's desks are pictures of Huck. shaking hands with.them Thank you. Huck," is written on them "It may sound nutty to be grateful-to a mythical blue dog." the pair grin, "but believe us. we are." *&f*4**+A*4tRAY BRUSH PILL HUNTER KEITH G0SSARD PHIL COOPER STONER INSURANCE INC. (3*)
MOTORCYCLE SCRAMBLES RACE SUNDAY - JULY 7 MT. MERIDIAN, INDIANA START: 1:00 P.M. DONATION: $1.50 Wabash Valley M/C
0/ /O
ANNUM
certificates One year, $10,000 minimum. Earnings from the date of issue —automatically renewable. passbooks earn 4 ^ % per annum compoundecf quarter!)’.
SAVINGS & LOAN
