Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 185, Decatur, Adams County, 6 August 1952 — Page 3
tVEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1952
w "l p Miss Carol Kirsch And Charles ; ; McCrory Wed In Ceremony Tuesday In a simple anti impressive double ring ceremony Tuesday evening, Miss Carol Kirsch and Charles; McCrory were united in inarriage in the Zion Evangelical Reformed church. . The Rev. W. C. Feller read the: nuptials at-six thirty o’clock with members of the iminediate families attending. The altar outlined with white gladiola ai\d candleabra.
Mrs. Fred Fruchte, as organist, - played the invocation, “Lohengrins Wedding March” and Neil Thomas as the vocalist, sang “Because.” “The Lord’s Prayer” and "Oh Perfect Love” were\play,fd during the ceremony. The bride is the eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ,Leo Korsch' of .the River Road/? add Mr.j and Mrs. J. L. McCrory of Berne, are the groom’s parents. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a ballerina length gown of hyacinth blue lace with a sweetheart neckline and a small white feather hat. Her, accessories were, in navy and she carried a white Bible, toppled with a single white orchid. 4 M)ss Nancy Kirsch,[.as her sister’s maid bf honor, wore a igrey French foille dress of ballerina length with white accessories. Her corsage was made up of red roses. 11 Mrs; Kirsch selected a navy sheer 1 dress with navy accessories, w'hile the groom’s mother wore a navy shantung dress with < white\ accessories. /Both mothers wore corsages 'of red- and white gladiola. Dr. James McCrory of Berne, served his brother as best man. Following the rites, a buffet supper was served to the guests i at the bride’s parent’s home. The was decorated, with the traditional wedding cake, flanked with white tapers and bouquets of white gladiola. For their wedding trip to northern Indiana, the new Mrs. McCrory wore a pink gabardine suit with navy accessories. After August 15, the couple will reside temporarily with the bride’s parents. L Mrs. McCrory graduated from I Monmouth high school and IndiIndiana University school of nur-
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\\ I 1. ’ , 'i : r - i i > ' , sing, She is a member of the lo- • cal Psi lota Xi sorortiy. Her husl band graduated from Berne high ; school and the .. Indiana Univer- ' sity school of business. At pres- ■ .ent he is manager of Pine Lake at Berne. I Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Farr, of • < Marion, the bride’s maternal grandparents, attended the wed- _____ < ‘ . MARY ADA EVERETT AND t LEO SHEETS WED SUNDAY , In a traditional gown of white t Satin, Miss Mary Ada Everett be- . came'the bride of Leo D. Sheets , Sunday in an afternoon ceremony solemnized nt four o’clock in the Pleasant Mills Baptist church. The double ring vows were read by the Rev. Robert Schrock, be- , fore a background of lighted tapers and baskets of seasonal flow-\ ers. ’ , j Mr. and Mrs. James C. Eierett are the bride’s parents and Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Sheets are the parents of the groom. Mrs. Poe of Berne, was the organist, and Miss Mary Hawkins was the vocalist and sang, “I Love You Truly,” “Always” ahci “Because.” “Indian LbVe Call” and “The Lord’s Prayer” were also selections played. The bride was given in marriage by her brother, Barney Everett of Celina, Ohio. Her dress was highlighted with a lace inset in thb fitted bodice and her bouffant skirt ended in a cathedral length train. Her veil was fingertip length and she wore a single Strand of pearls, a gift of the groom. She carried a white Bible, topped with an orchid. Mrs. Carl Rumschlag, as her sister’s matron of honor, wore a pink gown with matching mitts and head piece and carried a bouquet of American Beauty roses.
Franklin Buckner, former mayor of Bluffton and prominent citizen of that city, suffered a severe seizure of coronary thrombosis Sunday evening and has been ordered to take a complete rest. He is at his home on West Ohio street in Bluffton. Thf case of Alfred Beavers' vs Robert Everett, for damages, has been set for trial in the Wells circuit court, where it was venued, for October 23. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kitson and children, Dane and Mary Lou, spent Tuesday in Logansport.
MRS. EDWIN BOOTH AND DAUGHTER HONORED Friends gathered\ at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin D. Booth Monday evening, to honor Mrs. Booth and daughter. Edwina .Mae. on the occasion of their birthdays. After a delicious supper,- entertainment followed and the honored guests received many gifts, befitting to the day. Present for the evening were the Misses Grace Fuhrman, Marylyn Hutchinson and Sue Miller, Mr. and Mrs.. Edward Gase and' children, Donald and Darlene, Mr. an Mrs. Oliver E. Harmon and children, Judy, Janet and Jane, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rumschlag and daughter, Chert Linn, Mrs. Henry H. Foreman, Edwin Booth and the honored guests. Her gift from the bride, was a double strand of pearls. \ Mrs. Everett attended her daughter’s wedding in a <reen floral print dress with dark accessories, while the groom’s mother wore J a light blue dress with white accessories, Both mothers wore pink rose corsages. Lewis Sheets served his_ brother as best man and ushers seating the wedding guests were Clyde Everett, brother of the bride and Lloyd Sheets, brother of the groom. \ A wedding\ supper followed the nuptials for the bridal party and immediate families. The reception was held that evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Sheets, brother and sister-in-law of the douple, for approximately 250 guests. Serving were Mrs. Miles Nisheyama, sister of the groom, Mrs. Lewis Sheets, Mrs. Whitie Parment, Mrs. Lloyd Sheets and Mrs. Gloria Geeamari of Fort Wajvne. The bride’s table was centered with a wedding cake, wit'll candles at each side and bujiquets of flowers coihpleted the decorations. » r 1 . ■ ' .\i When the young couple left for a wedding trip of unannounced destination, Mrs. Sheets wore a light blue L dress ! with a matching jacket trimmed in white, and white accessories. The bride is employed at the Kroger store as a checker and at-, tended Pleasant Mills high school. Her husband attended Decatur high school and 1 is engaged in farming. They will reside at 957 Walnut street in this city, with the gloom’s parents. 1 Guests from a distance included Mr. and Mrs. Lindall Milheim and family of Tecumseh, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Miles Misheyama and family of 6rand Rapids, Mich.;. Mr. and Mrs. Barney ’C. Everett and family of Celina, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Coral Everett and family of Union, City; Mrs. Fae Spry of Van Weirt, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. John Blakey, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Blakey, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bleeke, William Bleeke, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bleeke and family, and Mr. and Mrs. Crist Bonke and family.
The Bobo Mt. Tabor W. S. C. S. will meet with Mrs. Dorwin Drake Friday evening at seven thirty o’clock. Each member is asked to bring an article for the silent auction to be held. At eight o’clock Monday evening the Adams county chorus will hpld practice at the Monroe school. P ■ x Children attending Worthman field play ground dre asked to
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A 1 ' //4 /"sx i' I '"V I / I L I i HA.FIF’cONN. / » \ / Ru. '-1 I ? < \ / / Ran: A 1 \ I X 'X y r® - ng —vfe* . V—-J I I J L \ / I ( \ Xx \ e k\ \ Ur- ha. z I . / \\\ \ f \X I U X y’V' STATES SUFFERING from drought are shaded. Area most seriously affected Is In the southeast, declared a disaster area. Agriculture department offlcials scheduled a meeting in Nashville, Tenn., to consider action. New England also may be declared a disaster area. The Great Plains wheat area has had some rainfall.
bring a sack lunch for the picnic planned for tliem Thursday. The picnic will be heid from 12 noon until one o’clock. The picpic of Unit 1, W. S. W. S. of the Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church planned for Thursday evening has been postponed until August 14. It will be held at the Legion Memorial park and members and their families are invited. The picnic will begin at six o’clock. \ A regular meeting and social hour will be held Tuesday evening at the Eagles hall of the \Eagles auxiliary. The session will begin at eight o’clock. The Order of Rainbpw girls will meet at the Masonic hall Thursday evening at slx-forty-five. (y 1 Admitted: Mrs.. Frank Tarres, Decatur. Dismissed: Mrs. Robert L. Sipe and baby boy, Berne. \ * ! Mr. and Mrs. Earl Geyer are the parents of a baby boy, weighing 7 lbs., J 3 oz. born today at 2:25 a.m. at the hospital, i \ Says Auto Thieves p Step Up Operations WASHINGTON, UP — FBI di rector J. Edgar Hbover today warned car owners today that auto thieves are stepping up their operations throughout the nation. According to local police reports from 381 communities, he said, car thefts increased 21.2 percent in large cities during 1951 and 15.1 percent in rural areas. He valued the cars stolen at $95,312,596. Thej FBI chief said the racket is so highly organized that cars frequently are stolen by “special order”—a car thief is provided by his ring with the particular make, year, model and color desired. Says Still Used To Make Feed For Hogs SOUTH BEND, (UP) — Fred Fulce, 40, told arresting policemen the 35 gallons of mash' and homemade still in his basement were being used to make feed “for my hogs.” * . Police isaid the only hitch in his story was that he didn’t own any hogsl Democrat Want Ads Bring Results '..v \
. ■ i • ■ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Reports Slugged, Robbed Os $9,125 INDIANAPOLIS. UP — George Hartwick, 54, Indianapolis, told police today lie was slugged and rob- 1 bed of $9,125 in cash which he carried to close a business deal. Hartwick said an assailant approached him from the rear as he stood outside his office Tuesday flight and slugged him. Prior to the slugging, Hartwick said, he and two companions discussed business in , a tavern. He said he was planning to share in the purchase of a Lumber mill and stand of timber in Mexico. Hard To Find \ SAUGUS, Mass UP —Historians restoring the nation’s first iron works at Saugus had to search the United States to find a tree that could be used as the shaft for the old waser wheel. They needed a’ long, straight oak shaft free from knots and finally found a tree that fitted the bill in Maryland. - ' !, A Rules Are Rules SPRINGFIELD. Mass (UP) -+■ Someone attached an address to a dollar . bill, stuck a three-cent stamp on it and dropped it into a mailbox. Postal employes canceled the stamp and delivered the bill. Their superiors ruled that regulations forbidding the deducing of U. S. currency were violated when the stamp was canceled. The United States expects to have its second largest 'wheat crop on record this yean Production is estimated at one thousand three hundred and twenty-six million bushels, second only to the record crop of 1947 of one thousand three hundred and fifty-nine million bushels. \
Trade in a Good Town —Depatur: For Sizes 34-48! nrj ■ 1 '&•>» f j uW ■V : 11 If I Want a smart, hew dress — FAST! Sew this, and give thanks fpr its casual good looks whenever friends drop in — whenever you go out with the family! Comfortable, \ slimming and cool —it’s right for summer and fall in cotton, raybn or silk. Pattern R 9130: Women’s Sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Size 36 takes 4% yards 35-inch fabric. Thi* easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, illustrated Sew Chart shows you every step. Send Thirty-flv© cents in for this pattern to Marian Martin care of Daily Democrat, Pattern Dept P.O. Box 6740, Chicago 80. nt Print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS, ZONE, SIZE vid Number.
Phone ’ Kathleen Terveer Society Items for day’s publication mutt be phoned In by 11 a. m. (Saturday 9:30 a. m.) TUESDAY \ C, L. of C. society, C. L. of 0. hall, 7:30 p.m. Pocahanias lodge, Red Men’s hall, 7:30 p.m. Tri Kappa picnic, Hanna-Nutt-man shelter house, 6:30 p.m. Eagles Auxiliary, Eagles hall, 8 p.m. I Ladies Aid, Trinity church, at church, 7:30 p.m. Women of Moose, social evening, Moose 'home, 7:30 p.m., officers 7 p.m. Magley Ladies Aid, all day, church basement. Order of Rainbow, Masonic hall, 6:45 p.m. , FRIDAY ~ I Ladies Aid, W. S. W. S., Calvary E. U. B. church, Mrs. Mary. Shifferly, 8 p.m. Bobo Mt. Tabor W. S. C. S„ Mrs. Dorwin Drake. 7:30 p.m. MONDAY Adams county chorus, Monroe school, 8 p.m. BOSTON UP —Louis F. Carter 43, of Brooklyn, N. Y. will be more hesitant in the future about offering tp teach his niece, Laura Cooke,' 16, of Boston how to drive. Miss Cooke stepped on the gas instead of the brake while taking her lesson and smashed the front of Carter’s car, along with a 50foot fence and a front porch. u Whale meat is invading American markets. Ten million pounds of it are expected to bp imported by the United States from Norway during the next 12 months. Some restaurants are beginning to serve whale meat and it is appearing in large meat and fish markets.
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Handicraft Project Is Judged At Fair Ruth Zimmerman Is Grand Champion Miss Ruth Zimmermap of the Berne Jolly Workers dub Was judged grand champion of the 4-H handicraft project at the 4-H dub show at Monroe. Ruth is 14 years old and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zimmerman, and has been a handicraft member for two years. She exhibited textile painted towels, crowded work_ and embroidery work. "\ Premium winners in Div. I. werq: Ist, Shirley Brandt. Preble Jolly Juniors; 2nd, Elaine Blakey, Union Pals; 3rd, Doris Ann Cauble. Kirkland Kut-Ups; 4th, Carol Heller, Kirkland Kut-Ups; sth. Robett Weiland, Union Workers. Premium winners in Div. II were: Ist, Ruth Zimmerman. Berne Jolly Juniors: 2nd, Coleen Egly, Jefferson Work and - Winj 3rd, Carolyn Zimmetman, Berne Jolly Juniors; 4th, Sharon Beltz, Preble Peppy Pals. , J ' / State fair, entries are: ' model train by Robert Weiland; three plaques by Shirley Brandt; textile painted blouse' and three candles by Coleen Egly; crocheted dolls by Ruth Zimmerman; toy ekhibit by Carolyn Zimmerman. ‘■“ The handicraft exhibit was judged by Paul Weaver, Allen county recreational director.
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When hair on human heads is left uncut there is little difference between the length of hair on a rpan’s head and on a woman’s. Wolves, like dogs, express pleasure by wagging their tails and put their tails between their legs when frightened. ; !■ When Nothing Else Win Help for ACID INDIGESTION Doctor specialists who treat nothing but stomach trouble say that a tablet like Bell-ans often gives comforting relief when everything else fails for gas. heartburn and acid indigestion. Get a 25c package of Bell-ans tablets at your druggists today. MORE MACARONI OfUCIOUS ■ il Pfl left Thursday will be ■ ifciivi ready at 3;00 o . C | OCk Friday.* Closed AII Day Thursday. Film may toe dropped through mail slot in door. EDWARDS STUDIO
WANTADS ■i In The \ .. DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
