Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 7 October 1947 — Page 3
OCTOBER 7, 19 47
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FTBLker and cn » n ., 1 , WAUFF er wed , I N vio,a Baker ’ daUg f rWand Dan BSker , g UI M,I Hugh Stauffer of united in marriage at two o'clock K 'hanie of the bride in GenRoy pastoi 1 k ®» e v a Evangelical I nited reading the ~_ gB,- ceremony. Wit- Jja*' "’<* aver and ® ene EtJSttended the couple. KZ'X chose for her wedding royal blue wool with 'fS '' Kssories. She wore a ■EKKcklai a aift of the tierod wedding cake 'able decorations at held immediately folceremony. Assisting in gW|\ ll ?Me cues’' wet-" the Misses Vkm^F> !l ' l :i " e!, ' li ' Ali,rilyn and If f lne»P le later left on a wedd ' Dayton. 0.. and upon nir r®"' will reside with the 1118 - ■ is a graduate of Jefferand is now em--1(11 F'-'tW the Decatur General ’l’Kectrit®'’- Wr - Stauffer gradual.- !!"■ (rorfllartford high school and ■ etnplwetl at the Berne Furniture of World War I IeSEARCB CLUB I | A t OPENING TEA h »The ■search club held its open—JL, rneßim in the form of a tea ■■gjaKi the home of Mrs. C. R. Korslwith Mis. F. H. Heuer, J. Krick, Mrs. Eugene C. C. Langston and Kfwfl. Harper assisting. Mrs. 9|ra|all:ind presided at the Eutifuliy appointed tea table. Whe study topic "Nature is Kfc»'was illustrated by vocal Mrs. Walter Krick anil Mpo selection- by Mrs. O. H. HauMs. ws. Krick sang "Trees.” "To refill ’•op." "Do You Know,” "My Kden,” "Sunshine and HappSL,” |The Star.” "I Hear a MWilat Eve" and “Autumn.' K, ■ubold's selection was “A Poem." by McDowell. |llh«arl Pumphrey was welcomE|ick|into the club as a member, retrter members honored at the jg were Mrs. H. B. Heller, Mrs. IMRhiier. Mrs. 0. D. Lewton. £.[ D. Myers, Mrs. D. B. ErBBi Mrs Eugene Runyon and Mrs. delegation of club wofront here are attending the jßtietli annual convention of the Mhth district of Indiana FederaOs Club- jt the Bluffton coun■£elu’i today. HMregular business meeting of auxiliary will be held Mb evening at eight o'clock at J home. Miss Karlann jftftery for Women I H ™F I i IB to i ’/ / • I u 9413 I 1 F 11 sizes s I 1 *1 34-48 Ii ; / g | / J | j■ U- I I | | I 1 *♦» Tfi&Tftvs ■z'm And created just • Such flattery in the wav |S- half-peplum slendIM«Der X IP J' The skirt S ives IWnlent , effect ’ though cut P'hm’iudHi" Width ’ Easy trans ’ |h|lX pattern gives perfect fit. |tfcr «„°„ u ® e ; Complete, illusIS, step* Chart shows you k l 3 sizes 34 - 36 ’ 38, 40. ’ <B ' Bize 36, yards lleh TWENTY - f IVE cents in l^v t nJ hiß pattern to Decatut lISfN r«w° Crat ' Patt em Dept., Jefferson St., Chicago 80, IlbßE’d ™‘ nly your NAM E. 81z "
CLUB CALENDAR I Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesday V. F. W. auxiliary, hall, 7:30 p.m. C. L. of C. Regular Meeting, Hall, 7:30 p.m. « Dutiful Daughters Clase of Bethany Evangelical Church, Mrs.-Amos Ketchum, 7:30 p.m. W. M. A. of Nuttman Avenue United Brethren church, Mrs. G. A. Eddy. 7:30 p.m. Girls Missionary guild of Trinity Evangelical IT. B. church, Miss Shirley Sudduth, 7:30 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma sorority, Mrs. Ray Heller, 7:30 p.m. Tri Kappa sorority, business meeting, Elks home. 8 p.m. Weanesoay Flo-Kam Sunshine Council, K. of P. Home, 6:30 p.m. Girl Scout Meeting. Jr.-Sr. High School, 7:30 p.m. Profit & Pleasure Home Economics Club, Mrs. Harry Kerchner, 7:30 p.m. Business and Professional Woman's club, Mrs. Joan Wemhoff, 6 p.m. * World Friendship guild, Mrs. Leo Saylors, 8 p.m. St. Luke’s Evangelical and Reformed church girls guild, Beulah Jane Bertsch, 8 p.m. Thursday Eastern Star stated meeting, 7:30, Masonic Hall. So Cha Rea, Mrs. Dan Zeser, 7:30 p.m. Evening bridge, Mies Madge Hite, 8 p.m. Women of Moose. Moose home, lodge. 8 p.m., executive meeting, 7:30 p.m. Women’s Society of World Service of Union Chapel Evangelical U. B. church .parsonage, 1:30 p.m. Little Flower Study club, Mrs. .Ed Berling, 7:30 p.m. Queen of the Rosary Discussion club. Mrs. George Schultz, 8 p.m. Friday Work and Win class of Trinity Evangelical U. B. church, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Poling, 7:30 p.m. W. S. C. S. of Mt. Pleasant church dollar social and potluck, Mrs. Chauncey Sheets, 6:30 p.m. Legion auxiliary. Legion home, 8 p.m. Saturday Rummage and bake sale, Magley Evangelical and Reformed church. K. of P. home, 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. will give a report of girls state. The Eta Tau Sigma sorority will jneet this evening at seven thirty o'clock at the home of Mrs. Ray Jleller. \ The Little Flower Study club will meet at the home of Mrs. Ed 1 Berling Thursday evening at seven .1 thirty o’clock. I A meeting of the W. S. C. S. of the Mt. Pleasant church will he held Friday, evening at six thirty o’clock at the home of Mrs. Chauncey Sheets. This will be the annual dollar social and pot-luck supper for members and their families. Tri Kappa eorority will have a business meeting this evening at eight o'clock at the Elks home. Mrs. George Schultz will be hostess to members of the Queen of the Rosary discussion club Thursday evening at eight o'clock. 0
Mias Betty Graliker, of this city is president of the International Relations Club at Mount Mary College, Milwaukee, Wis. She is in charge of United Nations Week, October 6-11 and is a senior at the college. Dick and Max Burdg left Friday on a month’s business trip through Missouri and Texas. Mrs. Nick Braun and Mrs. Frank Liniger will attend the presidents and secretaries conference of the American Legion auxiliary in Indianapolis on October 10-11. Mrs. Max L. Burdg and Mrs. Dick Burdg visited in Geneva over the weekend with Mrs. Fay ShuEverybody loves flowers and everybody loves to receive them. Choose flowers as the perfect gift — choose jj" them from us . . . J”® always freshly cut, fragrantly lovely. Phone 100 Decatur Floral Co. Si Joe W. Kelley Greenhouse on Nuttman Ave.
BKH WMW *' J M St —-Ti KhIImL WED RECENTLY —Miss Delores Lengerich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. August Lengerich, and Carl L. Mankey. son of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Mankey. route 1, Craigville. were united in marriage recently in the rectory of the St. Mary's Catholic church, the Very Rev. Msgr. J. J. Seimetz officiating. The couple has returned from a wedding trip to Florida and is residing in Fort Wayne. (Photo hy Edwards)
macker and Mr. and Mrs. John Poorman, Miss Honora Schmitt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Schmitt, is home for a six weeks vacation. Miss Schmitt graduated from nursee training school at Loyola university last spring. Earl Fuhrman. Max Schafer and Arthur R. Holthouse attended the Rotary meeting in Berne laat evening. Labor Commissioner Kern of Indianapolis was the speaker. 0
rTT, HOSPITAL news
Admitted: Mrs. Sarah Stevenson, Fort Wayne. Dismissed: Mrs. Ivan Brubaker. Ohio City, O.; Mrs. Lloyd Youse and son, Hoagland: Mre. Walter Dove and daughter. Berne; Lydia Myers. Monroe. o
I ARRIVALS |
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Harvey, 651 Mercer avenue, are parents of a son, born at 8:52 a.m. Saturday at the Adams county memorial hospital. He weighed 8 pounds, 1 ounce and hat? been named Michael Bruce. A son was horn to Mt. and Mrs. Max Habegger of Linn Grove, last night at 11:46 o'clock at the local hospital. He weighed 7 pounds. 8 ounces and has been'named Frederick. Mr. ana Mrs. Erman Fogle of Geneva, are parents of a baby girl, born Sunday morning at 2:10 o’clock at the Adams county hospital. She has not been named. Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Steiner, of Berne, are the parents of a son, born at 11:30 a.m. Saturday at the Adams county hospital. He weighed 8 pounds, 9% ounces and has been named Donald Lane. o A process has been developed to apply radio waves to rayon tire cord. The rays permanently set the twist as the cord passqs through the high-frequency field.
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
initiation Held By Foreign War Vets A large crowd attended the initiatory rites at the Limberlost post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, ■staged last night as a part of the post meeting. A class of candidates was received into the post. Plans were made for several activities of the post during the approaching year. Details of these events are expected to be announced at a later date. o— Church Plans For Homecoming Sunday Berne, Ind., Oct. 7— The Winchester U. B. church northwest of Berne will have a homecoming and re-dedication service next Sunday. The church was repainted and redecorated recently. Morning and afternoon services will be held. The speakers will be Rev. L. D. Dellinger. Rev. Reamen and Bishop Albert M. Johnson, all former pastors of the church. •s , , o i: Lad's Leg Fractured When Kicked By Horse Berne, Ind., Oct. 7 — Larry Rich, 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Rich of northwest of Berne, suffered a fractured left leg when kicked by -a horse here Saturday during the horse pulling contests on Smith Field. Rich is at the Adams county memorial hospital. He was riding a horse and apparently rode too close to a team of horses tied to a truck. One of the horses reared and kicked the lad. The large bone is broken between the ankle and the knee. ———o Forty-six items were deposited in the cornerstone of the Wyoming state capitol in 1886. o PENNSYLVANIA (Continued from Pace 1) when the train approached from the north. The driver of the bulldozer jumped to safety as the train plowed into it.
Lincoln PT A Plans Ist General Meeting On Thursday Evening With the Rev. O. D. Wissler of Fort Wayne as the guest speaker, the Lincoln-P. T. A. today announced the first general meeting of the year, to be held at 7:30 o’clock Thursday evening at the Lincoln school auditorium. Rev. Wissler. pastor of the First Evangelical United Brethren church In Fort Wayne, has achieved an enviable reputation as raconteur, humorist and lecturer and has had considerable experience In his field. Before entering the ministry he was a Y. M. C. A. secretary, and has degrees from Earlham college and the Evangelical Theological seminary. He entered the army in 1942 and advanced to the rank of major, his last assignment being the chief chaplain in army correction work in a camp of 4000 detained soldiers. He was overseas for two years having been stationed at Casablanca, Africa and Livorno, Italy. Rev. Wissler will speak on an interesting phase of P. T. A. work. Following the talk, an important business meeting will be held at which the program and projects for the coming year will be outlined. The largest membership in the history of the Lincoln-P. T. A. has been enrolled and Mrs. Kalver, president of the organization, urges that every one attend the opening meeting. Refreshments will be served by the hospitality committee. — 0 COMMUNISTS (Continued from Page 1) ring up dissension. Nor are there any Communists in the French cabinet. It appeared that if the Communists ever took over the governments of France and Italy they would have to do it from scratch. Allied observer.? in Trieste, noting that headquarters of the “Information bureau” would be set up in nearby Belgrade, doubted that the free state could survive the ideological war between east and west. The American and British armies control 40 percent of Trieste. The remaining 60 percent is controlled by the Yugoslav army and for practical purposes had been moved behind the iron curtain. These observers said that since the United Nations Security Council is the only protector of the free state, it “cannot lie either politically or economically” without big four agreement. 0 L_ Trade in a Good Town — Decatur Q UN REJECTS (Continued from page 11 tition issue. “What would be the reaction in the United States — the most prosperous and humanitarian of states — to a suggestion that 50,000 or 100,000 children, the pregnant women and their husbands be permitted free entrance to the U. S.?’’ he asked. “The rise in the Jewish population since the last war has been an insidious form of aggression.” EX-GI BRINGS (Continued from Page 1)
the Atlantic alone. “I stayed with the baby con-
RCA VICTOR HITS “So Far” — “A Fellow Needs A Gal’’ ‘‘Fun and Fancy Free’’ — “Say It With A Slap” “Stormy Weather” — “Body and Soul” “Smoke, Smoke. Smoke” — “Peg O’ My Heart" “When You Were Sweet Sixteen” — “Kate” “I Wonder Who’s Kissing Her Now”—“Yesterday” “That’s My Desire” — “Tallahassee” ‘‘l Wish I Didn’t Love You So” — “You Do" “The La’dy From 29 Palms” — “It Takes Time” “I Wonder, I Wonder, I Wonder” — “Cumana” “Tennessee” — “Kokomo, Indiana” “I’ll Be There” — “Love & The Weather” “Naughty Angeline” — “Ivy” “Sugar Blues” — “Bloop Bleep” “An Apple Blossom Wedding” — “Our Hour” “The Echo Said No” — “Christmas Dreaming” “Ain’tcha Ever Cornin’ Back” — “Crawdad Song” “Just Plain Love” — “Just An Old Love Os Mine” “Pop Corn Sack” — “Old Piano Tuner” “My Future Just Passed” — “Baby Come Home” “Love’s Got Me In A Lazy Mood” — "Ballerina” “Serenade Os The Bells” — “Je Vous Aime” “Across The Alley From The Alamo” — “Ask Anyone Who Knows”
j; w wW < ’kt x * jre 9 I' > j w A FIVE GENERATIONS are represented in the family picture:! above. Seated is the eldest, Mrs. J. F. Young of Blue Creek township, who is 80 years of age. She is holding her great-great-granddaughter, Deedra Ann Murray, 2, of Fort Wayne. In the back row. left to right, are Mrs. Young’s daughter. Mrs. O. G. Hakes of Decatur; her granddaughter, Mrs. E. O. Edwards of Decatur and her great granddaughter, Mrs. W. M. Murray of Fort Wayne.—(Photo by Melchi)
stantly for a week in London and learned how to care for him. I didn't think the trip would be easy —but it wasn’t as tough as I expected." Threatens Fight Leeds, Oct. 7-. —(UP) —Mrs. Marjorie Vincent, whose ex-GI husband “kidnaped" their 10-months-old son and took him to North Carolina, threatened today to fly to the United States, divorce her husband and open a court fight to gain custody of her son. “I hate him,” the 21-year-old brunette said, referring to her hubband, Curtis Elmer Vincent, of Greensboro, N. C. “when I married him I did not love him, but now I hate him. I was prepared to go out to him, as he pretended he wished me to do, but I lost all faith in him when he failed to carry out repeated promises to send me ■ money.” “Never in all my life have I known such a mean, despicable SPENCER INDIVIDI/AUY DESIGNED SUPPORTS T A Spencer designed y vX especially for you ossures y<> u com ' 1 .ZKzN—plete comfort plus r /1 IZrZ perfect figure con- | ,r °lJpTiiA Doctors' prescripI IIH tions accurately m -ikd. V> ml Mrs. y\ Uli Leota Connell U 1/ 209 S. 3rd St. \ I Phone 845 | i
trick,” Mrs. Vincent’s mother said. Both women sobbed as they talked with newsmen. Mrs. Vincent said she had received a. letter from her husband today saying: “By the time you receive this letter I shall be in America with the baby. It will be too late for you to do anything.” She said her husband intimated in the letter that he had no intention of returning to Britain or of giving her an opportunity to get the child back.
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® CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our wholehearted thanks and due appreciation to the neighbors, members of St. Luke's church, and everyone who helped us during our recent loss as the result of fire. May the blessings of God be with each and every one. Ora Ratcliff family. 0 ■ CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank each and everyone for the floral offerings’ and the sympathy extended to us at the time of the death of our mother. A special thanks to the North End neighbors for their help. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hahn i family Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Stahl & family. 0 Three qualities to admire are dignity, intellectual power and gracefulness.
LEAR RED I LUE RED I OSE RED B'Hw i :.:r Bi I . , J I ticks for your type in a , plastic S2OO oir case 5 PllllTllx I IX FACTOR I HOLLYWOOD I Smith Drug Co.
