Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 41, Decatur, Adams County, 18 February 1953 — Page 3
'WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1958
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P. T. A. FOUNDERS DAY TO BE Founders day will be observed, by thfr Lincoln School Parent Teachers’ Association Thursday evening at seven thirty o'clock in the school auditorium. P. A. was formed on February 17/189 7 snd has had remarkable success in improving parent, teacher and child relationships. A one act play,, directed by Mr. and Mrs. Reid Erekson, well known in the Fort Wayne Civic theater, entitled “Deep Are The Roots” will be presented, comparing the 19th cftptury schools wjth those of the present. Fred Corah will be narrator: Watson Maddox, radio commentator; Taya Erekson, 19th century child; Mrs. Lucille Theobold, l»th century mother; Miss Mary jo Hoffman. 19th century teacher; Suette Johnson, 26th century-child; Mrs. Erman Johnson, 20th century mother, and Miss Florence Haney, 20th century teacher. \ ; 1
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Another feature of the celebration will he band music by the . Junior band qnder the direction of Clint Reed. A; trumpet solo by Jack Dailey will «bi* .included in the variety of musical dejections. ADAMS CENTRAL P. T. A. MEETS MONDAY Approximately 100 parents were present for the i Adams Central Parent Teachers’ Association meeting Monday evening in the school gym. President Verl Lautzenhisor opened the session, followed with the Rev. Mecfcstroth of giving the. devotions' Secretary Vera, Lehman gave her repott and Oliver E. Hannon of the Public Service, Decatur, gave several suggestion's on the new school's sound ahd communication system.; Martin Steiner announced March [l3 as th4 for thb Monmouth Adaitis Central p|.T.A. basketball game and a nominating committee composed of Russell Mitchellj Satti Yacer and Gene Hike was elected-.tfof naming new officers, who will be elep.ted March 16, after a carry-in-supper al the school, honoring th«f basketball ’ team and coach. \ Guest. speaker for the evening was the Rev. Matthew Worthman, who talked on Abraham Lincoln.
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RESEARCH CLUB HOLDS , LUNCHEON MONDAY Members of the Decatur Re- ■ search club and met at the Methodist chiifech Monday afternoon for served by the ladies of the <murch. Mrs. A. R. Holthouse! voiced the opening prayer and guests were welcomed by Mrs. O. ju. Haubqld, president, wjio also introduced the speaker, Mr«. Sannjel ijjmerick. Appearing in a ' hyps« al period costume. Mrs. Dmeriqfc reviewed the book “Diary of a Williamsburg Hostess.” giving many amusing facts of the author. . ii> Table decorations wto in keeping with the theme of Mie program and each guest received a small colonial corsage. Thej! committee in charge of the occasion were > the W. \L. Harper, chairman. W. :E, Linn, Eugene Runyon. Samuel Emerick, |S. L, Everhart and W. Brown. Mrs. Robert Shralukai will be hostess to the Eta Tau sorority Tuesday evening at t o’clock, p The Pleasant Millay Methodist World Day of Prayer wis be pbsefved Friday evening at ‘|he church at seven thirty o’clock.i^The!public is invited. » iij i ■ '■ ■' r • ' J Members of the Kun Join Vs class of the Bethany Evangelical United Brethren < hurt’ | will meet at the church at seve t thirty o’clock Thursday evening! | ■ The Pleasant Mills b£t. A. will meet at the school Monday evening at seven thirty o'clock. Mrs. Lawrence Linn will be speaker and members are at ked to be present. ' ' : '! . ' ' ■' 'J Unit 2 of the Bethari r. Evangelical United Brethren c jurch will n|ieet Mrs. Everst Hutker Thursday at tfro o’clock. The Girl !Scout boar 4 of directors meeting will be h|ld Friday evening at eight o’clojk at the home of Mrs. Vincent jMr. and Mrs. Carl C. Humphrey motored to Mexico Citk, Mexico, two weeks ago and arts now enroute to Cortez. Fla., w&ere they will continue their wijifter vacation. Monroe WSCS To Hold Service Friday The women’s soeietjy otijChrisUan service of the Monroe igM ethodist church is sponsoring a social service for the World Day ;i>f Prayer from 2- to 3 p.m. Friday at the chufch.' I r.W .Mrs. Samuel Emerick, of Decatur, will be the guesit sp6aken; and Mrs. Harold Schwartiz, spiritual life secretary, will be in charge of the servlet. The public is\invite(fito attend. ■ X Trade in a Good CHOKED.•--'■GAS? THANK HEAVENS! Most atttejks are acid indigestion. When it strikes ti lie Bell-ans tablets. They contain the F Stest-acting medicines known to doctors fsr the relief of heartburn ahd gas. 50< refUftdeAif not satisfied. Send empty carton Bell-ans. Orangeburg, N. Y. Get Bell-ahi today. 25*.
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Society items for today’s publication must be phoned in by H /ii. m. (Saturday 9:80 ft. m.) ; Kathleen Terveer ; Phone 3-2121 z WEDNESDAY Shakespeare club, Mrs. Maynard Hetrick, 2:30 p.ml St.iPaul Ladies Aid, all day, Mrs. Floy4 Smitley. • Psi lota Xi social meeting cancelled. Doeatu{. Home Demonstration club, [Mrs. Gilbert Strickler, 2 p.pi. ( /Hi»torical Club Guest Day, K. of P. Home, 1:00 p. m. * THURSDAY UnV 2, Bethapy E. U. B. churchy Xlrs. Everett Hutker,. 2 p.m. Kuim Join Us class, Bethany E. U. Bl church. 7:80 p.m. Rainbow Girls, Masonic hall, 6:45 Jp.np Women of Moose, Formal Initiaation; 7:30 p.m. Moose bofne. ’trinity E.U.8., D.Y.B. class, churdh, 7:30 p.rh. Adams -County Nurses tion.fC. L. of €. hall, 7:30 p.m Unit 3, W. S. W. S., Bethany Er Uv B. church, Mrs. R. O. Gentis, 2 p.jji. Pleasant Mills Methodist W. S. C. Mrs. Carl Frey, I:3d p.m. Friendship Circle, Ziori E. R. Miss Kay Yageh-T:3O p.m, Lincoln school P. T. A., Lincoln school. 7:30 p.m. ’ Little Flower study club, Mrs. RoselTanvas, 7:30 p.m, , Ladies Aid of Union Chapel, all day. Philathea class, Baptist church, 7; 30 p.m. » SL Luke E. R. church Ladies Aid, all day, Mrs. August Schlickman. ip • * J Friendship Village club, Kimsey school, 1 p.ih. FRIDAY Pleasant Mills Methodist World day of prayer, 7:30 p.m . ; ; kixm Lutheran churcL Communion announcements, 2, 4. 5,7, ahd s p.m ( Adams County Federation of clubs, Mrs. Gerald Durkin, 2 p.m. . SATURDAY Zioh Lutheran Missionary Bodietyi Bttke Sale, City hall, 9 a.jft..; ■ . ? SUNDAY I '.'•’/'J,''' Ziott Lutheran Sunday School Tdnchlng stoff, Pot-lucjk dinner, Parish hall, 12 p.m. Lutheran Walther League, hall, 4-6 MONDAY j ■Pleasant Mills P. T. (4., bchoot' 7r30 |>.m. Tri; Kappa, Elks home 8 p.m. Zion Lutheran Membership clasp and Open Forum, Parish hall, 7:30 p.tttt I • TUESDAY Eta Tau Sigma, Mils. Robert Shraltika. 8 p.m. Asserts Red Agents Supply Narcotics SESUL, Korea UP J-Narcotlcs used ij by some Americain soldiers in Kbrea are being supplied by Comrijiunist agents. South Korean President Syngman Rhae said today; J: ‘"We have captured Communists > with ; quantities of drugs which were for U. S. troops and South Koreans,” Rhee said. “They do thjis to undermine our morale' and get gold.” RR uft// fl V Jfl djl ojt>KE'; ' 1" ’ I r " V I S : Mi KF : ■ mJ ' iifil wi SI "LEAVi ME alone, you bums," wm the greeting from Barbara Harmon, 31, shown walking toward court in New York, when photog* raphers showed up and this photo was made. She is a witness in vice trial of Mickey Jelke. The proeecu. tion says 19-year-old Pat Ward was ftent to her by Jelke for instruction.* . £Z«ter«aNoßaU ■ Bl
Trinity Church To Mark Lenten Season Opening Service To Be Held Tonight Plans for special services for the Lenten season at Trinity Evangelical United Brethren church were announced today by the pastor, the Rev. plohn E. Chambers. The Wednesday evening services of worship which havei been held for several years will begin this evening, Ash Wednesday, at 7 o’clock. All a£e-groups meets in the sanctuary for the worship service and after the story sermon, the boys and girls go to the chapel on first floor for their own service. Special music! this week will be provided by Mrs. Marie Deßolt and Mrs. Don Cochran. : The regular Sunday services will be held each Sunday with Sunday school at -9:15, with Chalmer Bollenbacher as general superintend-! ent. Thft worship service at 10:30 Sunday will include the observance of the Lord’s Supper. The special communion offering goes to the support of Mrs. Jossie Divine in Santa Cruz, New Mexico. The regular Sunday evening service is held a,t 7:30 and is informal in nature. , Special evangelistic services are to be held ecah night during the week of March 8-15. Dr. C. W. Miller of the St. James Evangelical United Brethren church at Peru will be the guest preached. Dm Qerig, music instructor at Hartford township high school, will be tie sohg leader, • An invitation is extended to the public to attend these services of worship. Wilis .•Announcement of twins born to Mr A and Mrs James Eck of Montoursville, Pa., has been received ttftre by friends. The twin boys arrfxed Feb. 12 and have been named Stewart Evan and Stanley Eric, weighing six pounds, and five pounds, eight ounces respectively. The Beks now have six children. The mother is the former Beatrice Light of this city. J The Rev. and Mrs. Wallis Turner of Willshire, Ohio, are the parents Ofi. a baby boy, weighing 8 lbs., 10 oz., and born at 6:25 p.m. Tuesday qf the hospital. lo;O7 a.m. Tuesday at the hospital, a baby boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Richard Girod and weighed 6 lbs., 14 oz. 1 Weighing 9 lbs., ft oz.. a baby boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Marvel Johnson at the hospital at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday. \ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Schwartz of Monroe,, are the parents of a 6 lb., v 8 oz., baby girl, born at 11:10 p.m. Tuesday at the hospital. ■A bjy>y boy was born at 9:20 a.m. t&iay at the hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Chalmer Barkley and weighed 8 lbs., 6*4 oz. ' Mr. and Mrs. William Harmon are the parents of a baby girl, born at 4:37 a.m. today at the hospital and weighed; 6 lbs., 12 oft. Admitted: Dale Rich, Berne. Dismissed: Eltner Garwood, Con- 1 voy, t)hib.
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White House Assures Open Press Parleys Eisenhower Not To Dictate Questions WASHINGTON UP — White House officials t assured reporters today that President Eisenhower has no intention of dictating the subject matter of his future news conferences. They also predicted that he will henceforth aWow more time for questioning; certainly more than he allowed Tuesday when he cut White House news conference to about 15 minutes bf give-and-take after his prepared announcements. His debut left reporters. With the distinct impression that Mr. Eisenhower wanter firmer (control over the course, duration and subject matter of his news conferences than was exercised by his former Democratic predecessors, Presidents Roosevelt and Truman. This was indicated chipfly by the manner in which Mr. Eisenhower laid down the basic topics for and then ended\ the conference on his own initiative instead of waiting for a reporter to say “thank , you. Mr. President,” the traditional signal that questioning is through., ■ | One of the President’s Closest associates said, however, .that it would be unfair to Mr. Eisenhower was attempting to channel or control the questioning Tuesday. He said the President felt he could devote only 30 minutes to the conference and decided to open with a voluntary discussion of five of the most volatile subjects before Washington todhy; Ttpces, price controls, the farm program, secret agreements and the Russian atom bomb. t Other White House sources \said Mr. Eisenhower hais no intention es trying to avoid liot or embarrassing questions, and insisted that hfs first conference should not in any sense be taken as a definite pattern for the future. Presidential press secretary James C. Hagerty, speaking before the Women’s National Press Club shortly after Mr Eisenhower’s news conference, defined the White House news policy thes# < Tell the truth, put out no trial ballons, answer all questions as fully as possible, and refrain from talking off the record. Hagerty added ruefully: “Since I’ve been in Washington L have found {that the only way you can talk off the record is to go in a closet and talk to yourself. And even then it may leak.” He said the President will hold another meeting with newsmen next week, but probably not on Tuesday because there have been some objections to jhat day for the weekly conference. i —4— Schoolboy Is Found! Hanged In Basement A LINTON, Ind., UP —A coroner’s Eiquest was scheduled today to desrmine whether the death by anging of Chester Watson, 12, a Linton schoolboy, was an accident. The boy was found hanging from a rafter in the basement of his hpme Tuesday shortly after he finished practicing on the piano, His parents.aMr. and Mrs. Walter Watson, \said he often used the basement for and gymnasts If you have something to sell or rooms for tent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.
GIRL SCOUT r Brownie Troop 18 met Tuesday after school; im the kindergarten rooip. The Brownie Promise opened the meeting and officers were elected. We decided to make signs fior the Juliet Lowe program, to be put in the store windows in the city. The meeting closed with spng. | a V Scribe, Helen Walters. i Girl Scout Troop 3 had a meeting Tuesday after school! We i|ominated officers as follows: president, Patty Waugh, vice-president, Sandra Bauman, secretary, Janice Aumann and treasurer, Sally Jo Hobbs. Then we played games and practiced the Girl Scout laws for pur ceremony. /, Scribe, Janice Aumann. i The Priscilla Circle of the FJrst Christian church met Mpnday evening with Mrs. Ray 'Schwartz. After a short business meeting, Mrs. Thurman Wooley, program leader, gavel the devotions. “Health (for Congo” Was the lesson of the feveLJ ; rl ’
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nlpg. The hostess served refreshments during the social hour which followed. Brownie troop 19 met at the Lincoln school Monday afternoon. We had election, of officers as follws: president, Angella Pursley; secretary, Joyce Vian and scribe, Mary Rickord. We planned a cookie sale for March 9 and refreshments were served by Kathleen Smith. We closed with a song. Scribe, Margaret Rickord 1 '
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