Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 251, Decatur, Adams County, 24 October 1947 — Page 3
qCTOBER 24, 1947.
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MW, ,1 ■EorkeßS M eth ° dist We<lnes , ■Bp’*' I the lioin*' "* Mr ’ <UH AitlH'vl'-' memBg, . ( liiblreii in attendpjgt .rn- in December. so - Jiur. business meet«Zb. leHbyUiepre-Klont. ■.:.••■ ’ K( * rVert i®w> at a ia,, ‘ r i,our ' I THE moose INITIATION ■S ]: meeting of the Wow:ls held las ! \| ()O se hirne. formal 'conducted for a class lEcL and tbs chapter HL was -ponsored by . ehatrman, Mrs. ittßLw were given by Pat■Mß,..,■■ itui Carol Kluseman, M piano -elections were \li‘ s . mitclier. following SK r . w cotidm ted by the of frieiidsbin. I lie dooi wn Mamie Bashara. meeting will be held 6. ■glib has I. silie9S and Professional dub held a called meetvear ingen’s dining room evening. Plans were comthe rummage sale to be > corner of Jefferson and ■eets Saturday from nine ock. Members are asked heir articles to the buildour o'clock today, also announced that the received an invitation to inter-city conference on 10 at LaGrange. t meeting will be held at ic hall on November 12. D W. C. T. U. HURSDAY •kland W. C. T. U. met at the home of Mrs. Ellis Peterson. This was a ing with the Missionary the Antioch church, witn r present. issell Weller, president, the business meeting ions. An interesting ailJniversal Military Train" ladows Eclipse of FreeDr. J. Raymond Schintz, by Miss Terveer Ginter, g, entitled “Eight Go i also read by Mrs. Alice te program closed with a ging “Under His Wings” roup singing “Blest Be That Binds." K— — ■mart for Parties ■' w • , 7’/ 9320 ■' (■ sizes SB JSZZN S-14, 16 88/M’l M ■ 1 8. 20 i*''’i. vX. L ■ 40,42 • • a ii \ I m r~\ |llka>An UkhTtw H parti"'' n ! Serve in this at ■ew P ftin( h a " P, : n 9320 takes Sis al | View about aptO n anC ' ed wi ‘h a ■>UBtle.| )OW , a swish Pep uni ■ M'T Cn IVe ) S per£ect fit. is ■ Chart shS Ple ‘ e ' illU9t 'ated ■tern 9320 S y ° U ever y step. ■ (18-20) >a Small (14-16),. ■ ‘”A yilk ,- ee (40 ‘ 42) ' Small fabric. ■ for this nJ» PIVE Cents in ■ Dei hocra P U p„ n tt to Decatur ■ N Jeffers™ Rattern Dept, B Print Plainlv S vo Chicago sn > ■HESS, zonp your NAME. fe’wSg’ S,ZE AND K s ' G et *our <1 M * U d new 'Feason t a " and Winter A p MART ’ ■ Only fifteen Fashion Hook l» is “'■astrat^\ ce " ts hrlngs of easyf * new. FR] d th® best of i h 4 ln ’ba book ~ a pattern I hat a W bag k ’ a ?ay ma< ’-
CLUB CALENDAR I Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Phones 1000 — 1001 Friday Legion auxiliary social meeting, Legion home, 8 p.m. Mt. Pleasant Bible class, Mr. and 1 Mrs. Harry Miller, 7:30 p.m. Pocahonta lodge, Red Men hall, 7:30 p.m. Rainbow girls hay ride and barn dance, Masonic hall, 8 p.m, Philathea class of the Baptist church, Mrs. C. E. Bell, 7:30 p.m. Saturday Woman’s guild of Zion Evangeli- . cal and Reformed church pastry sale, church basement, 10 a.m. Business and Professional Women’s club rummage sale, Second . and Jefferson street, 9 a.m. Junior Fellowship of Methodist church Halloween party, church, 2 to 4 p.m. Tri Kappa bake sale, Gerber Meat market. 9 a.m. Monday Music department of Decatur . Woman’s club, Miss Helen Haubold, 7:30 p.m. Past Presidents parley of Legion auxiliary, Mrs. Clara Bauer, 8 p.fli. Holy Family study club Mrs. Herbert Foos, 8 p.m. Tuesday Church Mothers Study club, Mrs. I Edgar Reinking, 8 p.m. Decatur Home Economics club, Mrs. Gerald Durkin, 7:30 p.m. Root Tdwnship Home Economics club, Zion Lutheran church, 2 p.m. Kirkland Ladies club, Kirkland high school, 1 p.m. Wednesday Delta Theta Tau Halloween party, Boy Scout cabin, Har.na-Nuttman, 8 p.m. ! Historical Club, Mrs. Giles Por1 ter. 2:30 p.m. AEOLIAN CHOIR HAS HALLOWEEN PARTY New members of the Aeolian .choir of the General Electric club were entertained last evening with a Halloween party at Geels music • ranch. Games were played and 1 dancing was enjoyed. The barn was cleverly decorated 1 for the occasion. A delicious luncheon was served by the committee > in charge, Mrs. Harriet Pollock, ! Mias Dorothy Schumm and Miss Betty Melchi. SO CHA REA IN MEETING THURSDAY Mrs. Dick Deininger was hostess ’■ last evening to members of So Cha Rea. Following a brief business 1 meeting, bridge was played and prizes were won by Mrs. Fred Ful--1 lenkamp and Mrs. T. J. Metzler. Mrs. Walter Gilliom was a guest at the meeting. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Fullenkamp. ' ADD SOCIETY I SALEM W. S. C. S. i HAS ALL DAY MEETING The Salem W. S. C. S. met in the church basement Thursday for an all day meeting. Mrs. Kenneth Bentz, president, opened the meeting by leading the group in prayer. The lesson study, ‘‘Over Hills of Tomorrow” was reviewed by Mrs. Claude Foreman, and the topic, “Our Generation,” was read by Mrs. Clara Kelsey. The remainder of the day was spent in quilting. W. S. C, S. WEEK OF PRAYER ANNOUNCED Circles I and IV of the W. S. C.S. of the Methodist church met at the home of Mrs. C. R. Sgylors Thursday afternoon. The meeting was in charge of Mrs. John Myers. Mrs. John Tyndall, lesson leader, read the topic “Gospel for Our Generation,” The devotional period was in charge of Mrs. John Peterson, who read the seventeenth chapter of Mathew. Announcement was made that the W. S. C. S. week of prayer would be October 25 to Oct. 31. The prayer service on Wednesday of that week will be in charge of the W. S. C. S., and memSPECIAL ) This Week-End T-Bone and Sirloin Steak lb. 48c -52 c Beef Roast lb. 35c -37 c Swiss Steak lb. 52c Round Steak lb. 52c & 55c , Beef Chops__lb. 45c-48c-52c Boiling Beef Ay-- lb. 29c Fresh Ground Beef-_lb. 35c Beef Liver lb. 35c Veal Roast lb. 37c Veal Steak ___ lb. 52c -55 c Veal Liver — lb. 55c Sudduth MEAT MARKET S. 13th St. Phone 226
Observe Golden Anniversary * Mrs. Frank Heimann Frank Heimann Sunday October 2G, Mr. an I Mrs. Frank Heimann, prominent residents or Washington township, living four miles southwest of Decatur, will observe their 50th wedding anniversary. A dinner tor the immediate family will be served at noon in the C. L. of C. club rooms in the K. of C. building, followed by a reception at the Heimann home, from 2:30 to 5 o’clock. ' Mr. anl Mrs. Heimann were married in St. Mary’s Catho'ic church on October 26, 1897, by the late Rev. Theo. Wilken. Mrs. Heimann, be- 1 fore her marriage, was Miss Veronica Colchin, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Colchin. The celebrants have lived all of their married life in this county. Their a'tractive brick residence features their 200-acre farm southwest, of the city. Mr. and Mrs. Heimann are the parents of 10 children.
hers were urged to attend the prayer service on Thursday afternoon from two to three o’clock. During the social hour, lovely refreshments Were served by the | hostess, assisted by Mrs. Avon . Burk, Mrs. Peterson, Mrs. O. L. Vance and Mrs. Charles Feasel. The Holy Family study club will meet at the home of Mrs. Herbert Foos Monday evening at eight o’clock. Mrs. Eugene Durkin, Mrs. Lawrence Anspaugh, Miss Fan Hammel and Miss Betty Melchi will attend a province convention of Psi lota Xi sorority in Huntington Saturday. Mrs. Clara Bauer will be hostess to the past president’s parley of the Legion auxiliary Monday evening at eight o’clock. The Historical club will meet at the home of Mrs. Gile Porter water Wednesday afternoon at two thirty o’clock. h Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Bultemeier, route 2, are parents of a son, born at the Adams county memorial hospital this morning at 4:37 o'clock. He weighed 8 pounds, 316 ounces. Mr. and Mrs. James Beitler, Berne, are the parents of a baby boy, born at 7:15 p.m. Thursday at the local hospital. He wieghed 6 pounds, 14% ounces. A son was born to Mr and Mrs. Verlin Smith, at 10:50 a m. Thursday at the Adams county hospital. He weighed 7 pounds/ 7 ounces, i Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Uhrick, Geneva, are the parents of a daughter, born at 6:17 p.m. Thursday at the Adams county hospital. She weighI ed 4 pounds, 15 ounces and has not been named. ■ o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
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GLITTERING FASHION trends highlight Hollywood’s spectacular styl | show titled “California in This World." Irene creates white wool jacket (left) with face-framing collar and let-out waist tucks for tulip hipline to wear with slim, shirt-tail skirt, while Catalina uses brown and white cable stitch for strapless bathing suit and versatile skirt that can be worn as day-length dress by slipping it over the p head and using pockets as sleeves. CI at er national Soundphoto)
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Admitted: Kenneth Jennings, West Adams street: Harvey Largent. route 1. Admitted and dismissed: John Tailman, Huntington, Donnie Gene Blankenbaker. Jefferson street. Dismissed: Mrs. Harold Starrand son, Portland, route 4; Patrick Elienberger, Tenth street; Charlotte Fenstermaker, Geneva; Mrs. .George Martin and son, Monroeville: Mrs. Herman Heimann and i son, South High street; Mrs. Nellie Eady, Ninth street; Marilyn Baker, Geneva. O h— —— Russian Ambassador T. 11. S. Is Changed London, Oct. 24 —(UP)— Nikolai V. Novikov, Russian ambassador to the United States, has been recalled from his post and succeeded by Alexander Panyushkin former Soviet ambassador to China, the Moscow radio announced today. o — REFUSE TO DISCARD (Continued from Pagre 1) should reduce their poultry flocks even more than they had proposed. R, E. James of Austin, Tex., representing the National Turkey Federation. said Luckman’s analysis may be all right for the chicken industry. But he said the nation’s 500,000 turkey producers have an entirely different problem. Unless turkey is removed from the Thursday poultry ban, he said, the Agriculture department wdll be forced to go into the market to support turkey prices. He said this would be costly to both the growers and the taxpayers. Luck man also disclosed that he had turned down the pleas of 14 distillers to be excluded from the shutdown on hardship grounds. He said facts presented by the distillers did not justify exemption.
pERSOMAU .1. W. Calland of this city is in Lafayette to attend a meeting of the board of trustees o| Purdue University. He and Mrs. Calland will attend the Purdue-Illinois football game Saturday. Miss Eva Acker, school teacher , at the South Ward school for many years and who has resided at San Jose, Calif., the past two years, is here for a visit with her niece, .Mrs. Lois Black. The latter returned this week from a several months stay in Maine summer camps and cities. Funeral services will be held Sunday morning at the Christian church in Markle for the Rev. M. R. Scott, who died Wednesday while visiting his son at Holton. He was 74 years old and had been in the ministry more than 50 years, serving as pastor at the Markle church 20 years. Mr. and Mrs. C. 1. Finlayson of this city will go to Evanston, 111., Saturday, where they will attend the Northwestern - Indiana football game and the Northwestern University homecoming festivities. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Heller, Dave Moore and Jack Heller will motor to Lafayette Saturday to attend the Purdue - Illinois football game. Five Banana Cars • Derailed Thursday Mt. Vernon, Ind., Oct. 24 —(UP) — FiVe cars of bananas were on their way to their destination today after being derailed and causing a temporary re-routing of traffic on the Louisville and Nashville railroad here yesterday. The banana-loaded refrigerators and four other freight cars were thrown off the track when a broken brake beam dropped from one car and caught on a roadbed tie, railroad officials said. o —: The Yaqui Indians, who took refuge in Arizona after being ex lied from Mexico, stage their owm Passion Play each Easter in their adobe villages of Guadulupe and Pascua, Ariz. 0 Stockmen report that wool sheared with electric shears nets as much as 30 percent more cash because of improved fleece quality. Every occasion is the M right time tc send flowers. They lend a la festive air —a charm and graciousness to ® every occasion — big W or S Phone 100 I mt DECATUR I FLORAL CO. | Joe A. Kelley | Greenhouse on j Nuttman Ave.
Need We repair and clean all makes of furnaces. Best I FtirnClCe materials —trained workmen. All costs based on Repairs? actual materials used and labor. Phone us now. r "Only used 5/2 toins ! ! Os coal" ■ ' "The Williamson Heater Company: We have a Williamson Tnpl-ife Furnace. We heated our home (5 rooms and bath) with 5% tons of coal and never was there a time when we were not comfortable —thanks to the heat j control. Firing was necessary only 3 times a day — in cold weather." . „ , „ , , g Signed—M. L. Davies. Indiana 5 Monthly Payment* To Suit — iamcom HAUGK inf Heating & Appliances Furnaces cleaned 4.5 uup Decatur. Indiana I More Precious Than Gold ... Baby s •: Health - r ii jMe- SR] Safeguard it. always, ~ ~ \ w * tb baby nee ds which i : '■ I - vou lilluw are ,1, “P , ‘nd- j M' ihc?a’»le. the finest and I ' "***■" most scientifically ad- i[ K..Wfy anced that money can > buy. We carry a com- ! p , ete ijne i Make Our Store Your “Baby Needs” Store I; | Kohne Drug Store ———n—. i I
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WED RECENTLY—Miss Phyllis Ann Werling, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Werling of Ossian, route 2, and Robert Jackson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Jackson of Berne, route 1, were united in marriage recently in the Bethlehem Lutheran church parsonage the Rev. Water Schwane officiating. The couple has returned from a short wedding trip and is residing near Ossian. (Photo by Edwards)
Two-Month Search For Girl Is Ended 20-Yeor-Old Girl Safe In New Mexico Franklin, Ind., Oct. 24 —(UP) —A two-month search for a missing 20-year-old telephone operator was ended by police today after she 1 turned up safe and sound in Santa Fe, N. M., with apologies for not advising her family where she was. Miss Doris Louise Davis, former, Franklin college student, disappeared from a rooming house here Sept. 2 under mysterious circumstances. She was not heard from until yesterday. Rev. Fred Baldus, pastor of the First Baptist Church here, s:rtd he received a letter from a Santa Fe church requesting a "change in membership” for Miss Davis. Rev. Clint Irwin of the Santa Fe Baptist Church later told a Franklin Evening Star reporter by telephone that Miss Davis was em-, ployed in a department store in VNL Relieve miseries direct —without "dosing” Aw^'o°n b V>CKS ON ▼ VAPORUO RUMMAGE SALE SATURDAY 9 A. M. Corner Second & Jefferson Sts. BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL WOMAN'S CLUB
Santa Fe and had been attending his church for several weeks. He quoted the girl as saying that she was “sorry” she had not notified her family in Davison, Mich. “I intended to let them know,” she said, "but I kept delaying It, then informing them seemed so difficult.” She said she went directly to Denver and on Sept. 8 arrived in Santa Fe. Miss Davts told Irwin she left Franklin because of "personal” reasons and did explain further. She disappeared a few days after talking with her stepmother, Mrs. ' Floy Crago of Davison. Friends here believed she might have gone to the west coast to enter a dramatics school. They said she had planned to study dramatics and hoped to go on the stage. She withdrew' $125 from a bank account and left most of her personal possessions behind at her rooming house. 0 _ Trade in a Good Town — Decatur Tri Kappa bake sale, Gerb- | ! ers, Saturday. g2t
=. tff a, v s . = 1 ’ SKL > “ i I I ffl' Sutton & ® Have Complete X>!j Selections of || America’s Finest jl Watches I < 111 $9175 | ' 1 #O UP n t Famous, nationally advertised watches in all the latest styles and iM*' ‘' models. Built for accuracy and I ■■M dependability. ■ I ’ I I JtWt LE- k j|" ~ ® ? ° =]frifcTt-,. •] J KJ: 1
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CARD OF THANKS We, the undersigned desire, in this manner to express our heartfelt thanks, to Mother Booth, to Mrs. No ward to Mrs. Osterman, and the other children and friends, who were so kind and helpful in our bereavement. We aiso want to thank Rev. Hail of the Monroe Methodist church for his kindly words, those who furnished the music and all who helped in any way. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Busche, daughter Lena, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Busche, son Freddie. 0 IN MEMORIAM In memory of our beloved son and brother Kenneth (Beans) Gause who passed away six years ago today. Rememberance is a golden chain Death tried to break, but all in vain; To have, to love, and then to part ' ' Is the greatest sorrow of one’s heart; The years may wipe out many things, But this they wipe out never — x.The memories of those happy days When we were all together. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gause, brother, and sisters. ff The appearance of things to the mind is the standard of every action to man.
r -rs Jnl ■ ' sr NATION S top-ranking war contracts authority, John R. Pauli, recommends that all war contracts above SIOO,OOO be renegotiated for excessive profits as he appears on the Senate war in* I vestigation committee's witness 1 stand. (Internationil)
