Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 163, Decatur, Adams County, 12 July 1948 — Page 3

IONDAY. JULY 11. 1911

27 WEDDING , Announced icwaent ha* Im-«-u Hd. sn.-l Mrs. Richard Hili „■ Rptarmll atraat, of th*- June 27 gping of their eldest <1 u»m-i Stale. tad John W. Be-ki--. M ,n Era John Bec-kler, of near Bluff | CVUuil! ring VO*h were S* the Rev. F. H. Willuni in ‘Bethany <ltM«elicai United k toss ihtjrcb at two o<-)<M-k <>u 1 day. Only the imm.-dia ■<• fam Band a few clone friend- Aim. - ■fe* nuptial rife. bride choao for her wedding tote suit and a misty veiled halo hat. Her accessories neseatsd with gold. a« her suit and hat Her cor-1 ti waa a large orcbid. tied with streamer ilbbon* ’•« Dixie Hill, alater of the and William Chrisman. of Mton, attended the couple "r bride la a graduate of De< at Igh school. Mr. Bei kler grad 1 front Bluffton high school J la now employed at the Dun Furniture Co., in Berne. | Bowing the ceremony a re ’ on waa held at the home of •ride’s parent*, where a tiered «4lng cake, topped with a mln e bride and groom featured eraratlona of the serving table *o new Mr. and Mrs. Heckler returned from a wedding trip 1 iagara Falla and Canada and >j residing in their newly fur ’l td apartment in Geneva. * Ife- ■ Ww*B««»**w» AMOR ANN JAMINSKI B weu RICHARD BRIEDE a. Martha Jaminski. of Vlr- , Minn., baa announced the gement of her daughter. EleanAnn, of Milwaukee Wia., to xrd C. Brlede, eon of Mr. and Paul Brlede. of this < tty. The g couple plan a late summer Ing. a bride-elect was graduated Jlftooaevelt high school of Vir- ’ and is employed in the offices : ie Frankfurth Hardware Co.. Uwaokae. Mr. Brlede. a grad of Decatar Catholic high fl. attended Bt. Joseph’s co)’and plans to enter Marquette this fall. 'e Profit and Pleasure Home \ontics club will meet at seven j o’clock Wednesday evening if he home of Mrs. Leonard n- 1 " a Happy Homemakers club Boot st the home of Mrs. Paul >tuasday evening at seven thir j e Decatur camera c.ub will its regular meeting this evenJ it seven thirty o’clock at 3t»s i ball street. James Borders will • guest Os the club and speak ( VCCESS DRESS lleiiVh/’ 3 TV /) > wr / ilrJ ’■rh I In >r . j|j to make this M career, busttern 9234 is a r, gores, soft y straightaway m perfect fit. la lets, illustrated on every step. ies in sixes 11. Size 1« takes tbrlc. FIVE cents in rrn to Decatur Pattern Dept t. Chicago «o. Tour Name Ise and Style Ireseea Just as -e them In our Pattern Hook lee as exciting g of news-mak ■ra for Fifteen sd right in the ten and direr lllty beg'

* T -| Society items ror says publication must bs phoned In by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30 a.m.) Phons 1000-1001 Miss Betty Melchl Monday Decatur Camera club, .108 Marshall street, 7:30 p.m. C. L. of C. chorus rehearsal, C. L. of C. hall, 7:30 pm Juniors of Legion auxiliary. Legion home. 2 pm. Past presidents parley of Legion auxiliary, Mrs. Zelma Roop. 8 p.m. Pythian Sister Needle dub potluck supper, Hanna Nuttman pork. Girls Missionary guild of Union Chapel, Marilyn Beer, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday Happy Homemakers club, Mrs. Paul Erp. 7:30 p.m. Men’s brotherhood of Zion Evangelical and Reformed church. Hanna Nuttman park, 7:30 p.m, Rebekah lodge, I. O. O. F. hall, 7:30 p.m. Dutiful Daughters class of Bethany Evangelical U. B. church, hamburger fry, Mrs. Dallas Brown. 6:30 p.m. Zion Lutheran voters assembly, 8 p m. Monroe Better Homes club, Mrs. Otto Ixtngenberger, 7:30 p.m. Kum Join Us class picnic, Shroyers. 6:30 p.m. W. S. W S. of Trinity Evangelical U. B. church, Mrs. Mina I.ight. 7:30 p.m. Ux-al unit of W, C. T. U.. Mrs. Otis Brandyberry, Monroe, 10:36 am. Wsdneaday Bridge club, Mrs. Everett Faulkner. Jr., 8 p.m. Profit and Pleasure Home Economics club, Mrs. I Conard Schwaller. 7 30 p m. Flo Kan Sunshine council. K. of P. home, 6:30 p.m. Thursday American Legion auxiliary drill and degree team. Legion home, 8 p.m. Adams county nurses association. Margaret Eitlng. 7:30 p.m. Phoebe Bible class of Zion Evangelical and Reformed church, Hanna Nuttman park. 6:30 p.m. St. Luke Evangelical and Roformed Women's guild, church liasement. all day. Friendahip Village Home Economics dub. North Brick achool. on his experiences In photography and also exhibit some of his pictures. The men's brotherhood of the Zion Evangelical and Reformed ichurcb will meet at Hanna Nuttman • FOLLOWS TIP | Hj f • I Many requests for the famous fres bock. Finer Canned and frozen fruitt. come from women who first heard of it from enthusiastic friends. And there are thousands and thousands - expert* and beginner* alike —who’ve tried and proved the amazing secret thia book impart* It’s just a simple change in your preparation of the canning and freezing syrupa, yet it makes a world of improvement in the color, flavor and texture of the fruit you put up. The big. beautiful—free—l»M edition of Finer Canned and froaen frniti gives all the detail*- valuable Ups on relishes, jellies. ptckJes —a whole treasury of valuable Information on canning and freezing fruits, PLUS recipes for urn. For a copy. free, send a postcard, giving your name and address to HELEN HOLMES Dept. 11. P. O. Box <ll3. Cleveland. Ohio. Advertisement

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park Tuesday evening at seven thirty o'clock. Members of the Amerftau Legion auxiliary drill and degree team are urged to attend the linpoitant meeting at the Legion home Wednesday evening at eight o’clock. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp left Sunday for Kalkaska. Mich., where they will spend a week fishing in the nearby lakes. Mrs. Fred Smith and Mrs. Vance Hudson are spending several days at the Smith cottage. Lake Hamilton. Mrs. Glen Bartlett, of Buffalo, Wyo, and Miss Ida llllgerson, of Red Oak. lowa, who have been visiting their cousins, Mrs. Hugh Daniels and Julius Schultz, left Sunday for their homes. Mr. and Mrs Charles Massonne and family visited at Toledo, O. Sunday. Fifty members and guests of the Work and Win class of the Trinity Evangelical United Brethren church met at Hanna-Nuttman park Sunday for a basket dinner. Following lhe dinner, a social and devotional hour waa held. The Rev. and Mrs. William C. Feller and sons are spending a two weeks vacation at l.ake James. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Grant are attending to business in Chicago today. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Sanmsnn left Saturday for Fairbury. Nebr.. where Mrs. Sanmann will remain for a several weeks vacation. .Mr. Sanmann will return home in a few days. Mr and Mrs. Dick Durkin, of Fort Wayne, formerly of this city, visited friends here today. Their son. BUI. is at the Howe Military school’s summer catnp near Sturgis, Mich. Mr and Mrs. Herman Rumschlag. route 2, are parents of a son. born at the Adams county memorial hospital at 8:56 a m. today. He weighed 8 pounds. 4 ounces. Jack Me Is the name of the baby boy born to Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Aspy. Bryant, at 7:5# p.m. Bunday al the local hospital. He weighed 7 pounds, 2 ounces. Mr and Mrs. Roher; Brown, of this city, are parents of a 9 pound baby toy, born Sunday morning at 9:48 o’clock at the Adams county hospital. He has not been named. A baby toy was torn to Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stucky, of Bluffton, at 9:18 pin. Saturday at the Adams county memorial hospital. He weighed 8 pounds, 14*4 ounces und ha* been named Stephen. Mr and Mrs. Herman Hammond. 124 Grant street, are the parents of a baby son, torn at the local hospital at 5:37 o'clock Saturday evening. He has not been named A baby toy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Neidelgh. o* Willshire, O , at 2:14 a m. Sunday at the Adams county memorial hospital He weighed 9 pounds. i 4 ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Enos Ruhl, of Hoagland, are parents of u daughter, torn at 10:18 o'clock Friday night at the local hospital. She weighed 9 pounds. 14*s ounces. The city of Comanche. Okla., waa first named Wilson Town, for a member of the Chickaaaw Indian tribe, when the railroad waa built into the town before 1892. Vi . WITH L ■ ifeMlllAl 1 WALLPAMRS Smith Drug Co.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

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S.i RANKtD BY COURT ATTiNDANTS, Mrs. Dorothy Barry is pictured tn New York Federal Court testifying before the House subcommittee Mvestigating Communist influence in New York department store unions. The whitehaired store employee accused Mrs. Esther Letz (right, rear) of embracing a Russian flag during a 1945 union meeting and shouting, "This is the flag we take orders from!” (International)

SUPREME | (Cont. From Psge One) creative action of Its own." Its; | record, he said, “is one of the most dismal record* of stultification. reaction and retrogression in our annals." Sen. Francis J. Myers of Pennsylvania and Mayor David L. Lawrence of Pittsburgh also assailed the GOP In their addresses • of welcome to the delegates. |< Myers predicted President Tru- , man would be returned to the 'i White House in the November elections and that the Democrats , would be returned to power In ( congress. He said a Republican! victory In November would mean “not just a walk, but a rush back to reaction." Myers charged that the dominant leadership of the Republican party is isolationist He said former U. S. Sen Joseph Orundv of Pennsylvania “owns the first mortgage" on GOP presidential’ nominee Thomas E. Dewey. Referring to D«-wov as ”a young shifting knight of old or old Kins Joe the tariff-maker." Mvers said "Grundy named him land > Grundy usually collects his debts." McGrath hailed the record of the Democratic partv the past 16 years as one of "solid, constructive. progressive achievement . . . unmatched In the hi«tory of our own or anv other nation." He lauded the party’s achieve-! mon is “under the superh leader-1 shin of Franklin De'ano Roosevelt.” And he said that the per-j tv has “under the outstanding leadership of Harry S. Truman fnllv proved Itself worthy of victory ” On the other hand, he said, the Republican party's 1948 platform and presidential candidate **unmistakeably" show that It would "attempt again to make this gov-1

Don, Alec, j IMk John—each loved Anns! / JLJ l/l (sis y /1 by ALICE ROSS COLVER I I Anne, caught in the tangle of three live* at Scone / ’ House, runs the gamut of undercurrent emotion / \ M »Fic struggles to find an answer to her heart / \ while awaiting Alec’s return from the / \ Pacific. Look for this new story of / \ love and marriage by the author / of such popular novels as / Homecoming and The / Merrivales. Begin it Wednesday, July 14, in DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

Catholic Nuns To Continue Teaching Wear 'New Look' In North Dakota Schools Bismarck, N. D . July 12-tUPi —Catholic nuns will wear the "new look" next fall so they can continue to teach In public schools despite a law designed to oust' them. The law. approved by the electorate- tn the June 29 primary election. prohibits teachers from wearing religious dress in publicschools. Two North Dakota bishops In a joint statement today advised nuns wh« have been teaching in some rural schoola that there will be no objection to their dispensing with the’traditional garb In favor |of “respectable" non - religluos dress. The statement was Issued by the most Rev. Vincent J. Ryan of Bi-j inarck and the Most Rev. Leo R Dworschak, auxiliary bishop of Fargo. Ryan said sponsor* of the new law had solicited support for It on grohnds It would keep Catholicsisters from teaching In public schools. But. he said he had been informed by competent legal counsel that no law can discriminate against any teacher because of religious membership or belief. “An emergency exists in many -districts Icec-ause of the shortage of teachers." Ryan said. "In view of the emergenc y the sisters will arrange to wear a respectable dress which In no way Indicates they are members of any religious order.” ernment the agent of the priviI leged few instead of the servant of all of the people."

World Polio Trend Toward Older Groups First International Conference Opened New York, July 12 (UP) — Infantile paralysis is striking down more teen agent and adults and fewer Infants, a world wide survey of the disease showed today. The report came from Dr. Albert B. Babin, professor of research pediatrics. university of Cincinnati, at the opening of the first international poliomyelitis conference here. He disclosed that the trend toward the older groups is stronger in such cities a* Copenhagen, Berlin and London, but that the age group affected by the disease also 1* on the Increase in the United States "The fact that 53 percent of the 228 paralytic cases in Copenhagen In 1944 occurred in Individuals over 15 years of age is perhaps an indication of what may l>e expected elaewbere in due time." he told the conference. The conference, sponsored by the national foundation for infantile paralysis, is being attended by polio experts from many foreign countries. Sabin reported that In 1916, 3.7 percent of the polio victims in cities in lhe United States were over 12. Today. 25 percent are over 15, he said. "One inescapable fact is that, regardless of how you analyze it, poliomyelitis is becoming less and less infantile In many parts of the world,” he said. Tracing a pattern of polio epidemics. notably in Europe and the United State*, Dr. Sabin showed that the trends of the disease noted year* ago In the Scandinavian countries may to the future trend* In the United State*. Sabin said there were aeveral theories why the age group wa* rising. i One. he said, may be the result tof a latent immunity which follow ed some mild, unnoticed contact with the disease in early life. Another theory, he *ald, might Ice the rising of hygienic standards in certain countries. It has been known that polio strike* mostly in communities where citizens are better led and live a more hygienic life Science has been unable to explain the phenomenon. He cited another theory to account for c hange* that have ca-curr-t ed in the incidence, age selection and severity of polio in certain b areas in the past st» years. It sug- ' ' At present there are 73 nuns f teaching in public schools. The joint announcement by the - bishops did not say whether the i new dress would be standard, or whether It would be left up to the - individual taste of the sister*.

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HAVING ISSUID a final ultimatum In which he "completely withdrew” «s a possible Democratic presidential candidate. Gen. Dwight Eisenhower goes about hi* duties as president of Columbia University, New York. Here he confer* his first honorary degree since taking that port ’ us recipient ts President Romulo Gallegos of Venezuela. (Jntec,

be due in some subtle influence water, soil, or.diet which resulted in difference* in constitutional resistance among people of various regions with different environments and ways of life. gexts, he said, that the c-hance* may Q n i , (Visiting ’• to 8 p.m.) Admitted Mr*. Adeline Hola seke. III.; Donna Richmond. Mon roeville. route 2.

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DlMmiKsed: Mr | ' Ted Dellinger and daughter. Willshire, (>.; Mr*. Charles Peterson and son, Geneva; Mrs. Sherman Byrd, Wren. <).; Mrs. Richard Borne- and daughter, route 2; Mr*. Ortell McClain and daughter. Willshire. O.; William Bowers. Sr., and William Bower*, Jr . 128 Monroe street. Trade In a Good Town — Decatur

Oil mi It will pay you to buy your New Waahlng Machine at Stucky & Co. MONROE. IND. We Deliver. NWWAMMAMMMMMMMM