The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 89, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 16, 1964 Page: 2 of 14
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CHARGE IT!
. .. shadow panel aan-
forized cotton style in
two basic patterns (not
exactly as pictured) In
white. Sizes 32*44.
Sizes 3-6* and 7-14
Just Say,
“CHARGE
IT”
At BEALL’S
COMING
2 — Section T THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Thursday, April 16, 1964.
CANCER CRUSADE workers in the mailing department were these young Brownies. In
the front row. left to right, are Barbara Bryant, Jan Street, Anita Williams, Kathy Wyatt,
Debbie Crain, Beth Ashcroft. Retta Martin, Judy Crumley and Joy Faison. In the back
row are Ann Wood, Pam Bartley, Mary Lynne Garner and Linda Charles, all cadet scouts.
(Staff Photo by Cody Greer).
LISTEN LADIES
Legendary Irene Castle
Notes New Milestone
By KAY LAWRENCE
The legendary Irene Castle!
has turned 71—and it's hard to j
believe it, for she looks many j
years younger. Her face is
free
of lines, and her figure j inine
is as slim, erect and graceful beige
as it was when she was 18.
She was an 18-year-old girl
—Irene Foote of New Rochelle,
N. Y.,—when she became the
bride of British Vernon Castle.
That same year—1 i# 11-—Irene
and her dance-partner husband
made their debut as perform-
ers in a Paris cafe—and im-
mediately captured the fanry
of the public. Within six years
they were world-famous.
Vernon and Irene Castle
were responsible for revolution-
izing ballroom dancing in
United States by originating
among the newest spring fash-
ions. And they’re making quite
a hit—probably because they’re
so feminine looking and go
well with the current very fern-
spring dresses. White,
or pastel cotton lace
hand-knit stockings are the last
word in springtime glamor.
Inspiration
You never know where a per-
son is going to get an idea for
a new product. Take, for in-
stance, the manner in which
the executive of a shoe polish
company got his inspiration for
the throw-away shoe shiners.
He was dining in a restaurant
and liked the practical way in
which a pat of jelly was pack-
aged. He asked himself: “Why
the can’t I package shoe polish in
colors in the same way?” And
1
or developing specialties such ; the .result is those brand new
a? the tango, the one-step, the > little disposable shoe polish
Castle-vv a 1 k, the hesitation- packages, which are available
waltz, the Texas
the grizzly bear.
Introduces Bob
She also revolutionized wom-
an’s crowning glory
during the bob.
The fantasticaliy-popular
pair, who set the whole world
to dancing, continued as bright
stars for seven years. But the
Castle era came to a sudden
and tragic end-when Vernon
Castle, on duty training Amer-
ican pilots as an officer Sf the
Rpyal Canadian Flying Corps,
was killed in a Texas crash in
1918.
Irene Castle has been mar-
ried three times since then.
The year after Castle's death
she married Robert Treman.
She divorced him in Paris in
1923. Five months later she
married Major Frederic Mc-
Laughlin, millionaire sportsman
and Chicago coffee king. He
died in 1944. Her fourth hus-
band was George Enzinger, afl*
advertising executive. As his
wife, she lead the life of a
society matron in Lake Forest,
in. He died in 1&S9 and since
then she has. lived alone in
Eureka Springs, Ark., but still
keeps a ten-room house in Lake
Forest, not far from the fam-
ous animal haven she founded
in 1928.
Her red hair has turned gray,
but her violet eyes with dark
lashes see as beautiful as ever.
And she still has the vivacious-
ness which makes her the cen-
ter of attention wherever she
goes.
She still devotes most of her
time to anti-vivisection cam-
paigns. For forty years, she
has been lecturing on her
chosen subject. And her chief
interest continues to be the
“Orphans of the Storm,” &
shelter for dogs that she main-
tains in Deerfield, not far from
her home in Lake Porest.
She atill makes public ap-
pearances for this and other
causes—the most recent being
“America’s Ball of the Yew”
in New York City. It benefits
the Institute of Physical Med-
icine and Rehabilitation, a unit
of. Now York University Med-
ical Center. Directed by Dr.
Howard Rusk, the institute is
famous the world over for Ha
work in creating useful lives
fen persons, young and old, with
serious physical
| -
One never knows wher* a
new fashion is going to crop
up, in accessories as well as
in clothes.
Right new, the big aniprtaaa
here and abroad seen to be in
hosiery.
In London, them’s a
fashion rage which meet likely
will spread to these shores. OT
the fad for—of ell tl
white knee socks. It caught on
when patrons were fascinated
hy the ractuates of
in n Land
>*<
tommy and j in black, brown, white and neu-
tral. In seconds you can shine
your shoes—and those of any
t member of your familly—to a
by intro- { high globs, without brushing or
j buffing. It even restores the
color to shoes. And the shoe
polish is easier to spread than
the jelly which inspired its
packaging.
entree: baked lamb, baked po-
tatoes, a casserole of baked
eggplant and a salad of mixed
greens.
You can prepare rhubarb in
a jiffy this way: slice or dice
and cook briefly with sugar to
taste in a minimum of water.
Instead of this rhubarb sauce,
you might prefer to make a
rhubarb pie. Serve warm, ac-
companied by wedges of yellow
cheese.
If you’re a waistline watcher,
make it the rule to select snack
foods from those low in calories.
For example, concentrate on
fresh fruits and fruit juices
rather than on rich doughnuts,
cookies and candy. Include
fresh, crisp vegetables, such as
carrot sticks, green pepper
strips and celery. This w a y,
you’re keeping your calorie
count down and, at the same
time, eating foods that are
good for you.
Our beauty hint for today
concerns' one of the new eye
creams. It may be worn 24
hours a day—while asleep to
soothe away lines and wrinkles
and under foundation cream to
continue its good work during
the day. However, eye cream
is never massaged in, as eye
tissues are very delicate. It
may be patted on gently with
the finger tips, then permitted
to melt into that area. Eye
shadow m a y be applied over
eye cream to offer a dewiness
through its color.
Ho—■waking Hints
It’s wise to examine die but-
tonholes on ready-to-wear gar-
ments before they are worn.
Then reinforce them, if neces-
sary. Fasten off any part of the
buttonhole that is not frayed.
Then rework the frayed section,
using s blanket or buttonhole
stitch. If the buttonhole has
raveled out completely, ma-
chine-stitch around it close to
the edge, then rework it Fas-
ten off the ends of the button-
hole with stitches that will
strengthen them. '
If your vinegar cruet looks
cloudy and a mineral deposit
has accumulated in toe bottom
of it, fiR it. with water, add s
little ammonia and let it stand
for several hours, or overnight.
Rinse with dear hot water. This
should leave it clean and spark-
ling like new.
Menu and Cooking Cum
Since rhubarb ia moderate-
ly priced and in fairly good
supply, why not let your fam-
ily enjoy thie seasonal treat?
You might make it the dessert
course today, following this
Inmate Claims
Dogs Trained
On Prisoners
Frankfurt, West Germany,
Apr. 16 Iff •— At the war
crimes trial in Frankfurt, a
former inmate of Auschwitz
concentration camp testified
that police dogs trained to at-
tack were sieked on newly ar-
rived prisoners. The witness
said, “The SS guards thought
this was a good way to intim-
idate newcomers.”
Yaniis Girls
Plan to Attend
State Meet
Miss Elaine Price
ry Little, members of the Yan-
tia -Future Homemakers of
America Chapter of Yantis
High School will attend the
state meeting of the Texas As-
sociation, Future Homemakers
of America, in Austin, April
29, May 1-2, according to Judy
McQueen, president of the
chapter. The three day moat-
ing of repreesntathrea of over
1300 FHA chapters throngfi-
out the state will include the
awarding of state degrees of
achievement to outstanding
members of the organization
and honorary memberships to
adults.
Business to be transacted at
the meeting by the state nomi-
nating committee will be the
naming of state officers from
the ten officer nominees who
have been elected by members
in the ten areas of the stake.
Delegates to the Natioasl FHA
convention in Chicago in July
will be designated.
Nearly 300 members from the
60,659 membership of the Tax-
es Association will receive th(
state’s highest award, the
State Homemaker Degree of
Achievement. Delegates will
confer 43 honorary member
ships on adults who hove con-
tributed in an outetandiag way
to the accomplishbeat of the
organization.
Mrs. Howard G. Schultz, Vo-
cational Homemaking Teacher,
will accompany members to the
Austin meeting.
Pill
asa
Aulo Makers
Crack Record
Detroit, Apr. 16 (J* — Auto-
motive News says makers built
more cars this week than ia any
previous week in 1964.
Output was an estimated
181,997, compared with
175,064 last week. The figure
was 169,756 in the comparable
week a year ago.
The calendar year total roee
to an estimated 2,600,060 com-
pared with 2,400,000 at this
same point in 1963. April as-
semblies hit an estimated
463,908 to date.
Truck assemblies this
were an estimated 35,513 unite,
compared with 33,605 test
week and 27,817 in Qra
able wwSskyear ago. The
to-date truck production hit an
estimated 506,851 versus
462,239 at this point a year
ago.
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Great Train
Robbers Draw
Prison Terms
Aylesburg, England, Apr. 16
(PI — A judge at Aylesbury has
sentenced 12 men to prison
terms up to 30 years for their
part in Britain’s great train
robbery. Seven men drew the
maximum and one got only
three years for the 37,680,000
robbery last August—the great-
est cash haul on record.
Greenville Jail
Break Thwarted
Greenville, Apr. 16 (ft—Jafl
er W. E. Bradley prevented a
jailbreak art Greenville fast
night.
A man awaiting trial for
burglary attacked the jailer
with a knife after he was lot
out of a cell to moke a tel
phone call.
The jailer subdued the pri-
soner with a blow to the stom-
ach and pushed him bsck into
his cell.
Try a Want Ad for
SULPHUR SPRINGS
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 89, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 16, 1964, newspaper, April 16, 1964; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824014/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.