Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 169, Decatur, Adams County, 20 July 1953 — Page 3

JtLY 20. 1*53

KIRKLAND W. C. T. U. HOLDS MEETING 'Mrs. Lucinda Yager was hostess to fifteen members of the Kirkland township W. C. T. V- recently. Deyotionals were in charge of Mrs. Alice Carper and' prayer was offered by Mrs. Flo Bright. .During the business meeting, conducted by the president. Mrs. ‘Floyd Stoneburner, the 'following officers were elected: president, Vickie Stoneburner; vice president, Barger; secretary Viola Baumgartner; assistant secretary. Frieda Yager; treasurer, Blanche Henschen; assistant treasurer, Pearl Yake. Plans were also corny plpted ,to collect donations for Look Good! Fool Good! In Clean Clothes. * CALL KELLY 4 DRY CLEANERS 155 S. 2rid St Phone 3-3202 (We operate our own plant) r ' ’I i

Quality Photo - Finishing Work left before 8:00 P. M. Monday, Ready Wednesday at 10:00 A. M. HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.

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fruit-juice for Servic«Tnen in Korea. MRS. 808 LENHART IS GIVEN SHOWER ‘Mrs. Elmer Doctor, assisted y the Misses Lucilje and Norma Werling, entertained with a linen shower for Mrs. Bob Lenhart, the former peloris Werling, on the lawn of the Doctor home in Fort Wayne recently. ‘Mrs. Lenhart was given a lovely corsage upon het- arrival, after which gamps ’ ware played and prizes won by Mrs. Charles connelly. Mrp. Bob KlUsoti, Mrs. Herman Lenhart and Mrs. Henry Gailmer, who in-turn presented them to the honored Luncheon Was served at a long table, centered with an arrangement of 'plufj and white gladiolus and tall blue tapers *Mrs. Lenhart received .many lovely gifts. Guests j intruded Mrs. William Werling, Mrs. Victor Baltzell, Mrs. Arthur Hall, Mrs. Otto Fuhrmann, (Mrs. Edwin Fuhrmann, .Mrs. Gust Koenemann, Mrs. Henry Coleman, Mrs. Bud Werling, Mrs. Henry Gallmer, Mrs. Minus Sharp.. Mrs. Charles Connelly, Mrs. Herman Lenhart Mrs. John Elzey, Mrs. Charles [Bowman, Mrs. Edgar Werling. Mrs. Oscar Werling. Mrs. Bob Ellison, and the Misses Lucille and Norma Werling. The Guardian Angel study club will meet Thursday evening at eight o'clock at the home of Mary C. Spangler. The Adams County Home Demonstration chorus will meet at seven thirty o'clock tonight at the Monroe school. L. E. Archbold and True Andrews will be gUest speakers at the Adams County Roadside counV

1 lication must be phoned In by 11 a. nt (Saturday 9:30 a. m.) Kathleen Terveer Phone 3-2121 MONDAY Adams County Home Demonstration chorus, Monroe school, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Bethany E. U. B, Kum-Join-Us class, Hanna Nuttman park, 7:30 p.m. C. L. of C. society, C: t. of C. hall, 6:30 p.m. Decatur Carden club, Lake Webster, Mrs. Delton Pass water. WEDNESDAY Ruth and Naomi Circles, Zion E. R. Church, Mrs. Charles Miller, 2 p.m. Ruth and Naomi Circles. Presbyterian church. Hanna Nuttman park, 6:30 p.m. THURSDAY lEmblem club. Elks, 7:30 p. m. Guardian Angel study club, Mary c. S pjn. FRIDAY Adapts.- County Roadside council. Winteregg park, Monroe, 6:30 pm. cil carry-in picnic supper Friday at six thirty o’clock at the Winteregg park in Monroe. Members are asked to bring table service. , t ... ! —L/ i i A The Emblem club have a called meeting in the north room of the Elks Thursday evening at seven thirty o’clock. Mrs. Fred Smith has returned home from St. Louis, Mo., where she attended the funeral of a cousin, Mrs. Roscoe Walkeys. Miss Frahces Dugan is visiting friends in Boston for several weeks. She will also spend some time at summer resorts on the coast of Maine. Mrs. R. T. Cnkefer of Philadelphia is visiting her mother. Mrs. Charles Dugan. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Smith, of Fort Worth. Texas visited here over the week-end with the Rev. and Mrs. James R.[ Meadows. "Mrs. Smith being a daughter of Rev. Meadows. They left this morning l for a motor trip home. Smith is the manager- of the Fort Worth zoo. Police officer and Mrs. Ed Mfiler of Winchester street have returned from a week's trip by car to Davenport. lowa, where they visited with relatives. Ed says there is no drought in Illinois as it was a sea of water when they crossed it Saturday. Convoy. 0.. is hunting j a pbstmaster. July 28 is the final day for applicants to file. So; far. according to the commission in Washington, not enough applications have been filed for adequate competition. >'■ The Rev, Ray Tucker of Kendallville preached his first sertnan at the Church of the Nazarene at Berne yesterday. He will be the pastor there. The Presbyterian church at Ossian Is enjoying the week as host to 12 boys and girls from Chicago who are enjoying their first vacation from the big city. The group will meet each morning for a period of class work and instructions before starting the day’s activities. Mr. and Mrs. Mont H. Fee will returnito their home at Hoosierland motel, Greenfield, after visiting here the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Robert .Garard, and with Mr. Fee's relatives at Waterloo and Butler. Ind. The descendents of George Garard met in a family reunion at Hanna-Nuttman park Sunday. Families were present front Zionsville’, Greenfield. Mishawaka. Fort Wayne, Decatur, and Bryan. Ohio. They will meet next year at Bryan, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schmitt of Colum'bia City visited with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schmitz Sunday. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democra’ Want Ad. It brings results. J . I' ■ ATTENTION DIAGNOSED ARTHRITICS Fatter, quicker pain relief is GUARANTEED by Lower Cost PRUVO Tablets. Feel your pains fade away almost at once like hundreds of thousands of Pruvo users — itart to enjoy more restful sleep. If first trail $1.50 bottle of Pruvo does not give you quicker, better relief than any other medicine haa given you, return bottle to maker for full refund. It costs you nothing to try the low-cost quick-acting Pruvo. Trial $1.50. Economy and Hospital sires $4.00 and 17.50. Take PRUVO Today Sleep Better Tonight SMITH DRUG CO. I

I TOE Dt’CATTR DAILY DfewodlUt, DECATUR, INDIANA

Radio Program Cast Aids Stricken Girl Special Birthday , Party For Child WASHINGTON, jIP Evali Conley, a pretty little blonde, un£ officially will be seven years old Tuesday. • Actually, if she lives — which according to her doctors she won't — Evah would not be seven until Sept. 20. But .along with misery, something wonderful is about to happen in the life of thijs child, who is dying of cancer. Not long ago. Mrs. Richard White, wife of a Washington policeman, wrote in to a CBS program saying that the kid of one of her neighbors in Hyattsville, Md. was sick. Woodrow Conley. Evah‘s dad and a disabled veteran, didn't have enough money td pay the tab for the X-rays, -the doctors, and the other things to make a sick girl well. | I The program isj cailled “Strike It Rkh.” one of those things w here you answer , questions and if you answer them all you come off with SSOO. Mrs. Conley struck if And through the medium of the video, other mOniels came in, tod. Warren Hull, who conducts the “Strike it Rich” show, is flying in to visit Evah. and he is bringing a lot of people with him. One is Bess Myersonj a former “Miss America,” and an Evah fan. Plus other celebrities. Dr. John Parkins, the child's doctor, said it was fine tliait 'Warren and company would come bearing gifts and. of course,, a prebirthday cake. But the dot tor had to disappoint the child. She' wanted to have all of the kids in the neighborhooif in for tp.e shindig. But. the, doctof said the children would ruffle her. and she is too sick for ruffling. “Let Evah have all of thd hours which re in a id-for her. the doctor said. “There are not ntan,y lefL She has cancer in all parts of her body.” Since her mother struck it rich lor her daughter, the gifts have been pouting in. - ' Mrs. Conley mentioned on the show that Evah had a-talking doll that wore out and wouldn’t talk any more. She has talking dollt| nil over the house, how. She wanted a hobby horse and there are hobby horses. She wanted to see in person her favorite TV star, a cowboy named l’i< k Temple. Pick came, bearing gifts, and left an autographed picture. . Evah knows that she has more than she can enjoy-,- although she doesn't know she is not long for this world. ‘ “Mommy.” she “aid recently: "let's hive some of these things to my playmates.” That’s what Mrs. Conley is going to do. Because Evah wants it that way. |<§Jospjtal 0 n Admitted Johnny Walker. Geneva; Luther .Mock. Monroeville; Mrs. Marion Logan, Bryant; Dismissed Balby Ann Wiilerkehr, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Walter Eix and baby boy. Fort Wayne, route 10; Mrs. Arinin Ludwig and baby girl. Monroeville; Mrs. Marcus Gerber and baby boy. Geneva; Mrs. Lester Burkhart and baby boy. citv.

jw -’’ja. < -t? KikW 1 - . r* THE FIRST of two new 250-ton target BUbmarines, the SST-1 sUdes down the ways of Groton, Conn. The'small vessel will be used for training surface and air anti-submarine forces. It will have a complement of two officers and 12 enlisted men and carry no guns. It is equipped with one tube for firing anti-escort torpedoes. (International)

Adjournment Os Congress Faces Delay Postal Rate Boost Put On Must List By Administration By L’NTTED PRESS Chances for congressional adjournment before the onset of August's “dog days” melted somewhat today when administration leaders put the postal rate increase bill on the “must” list for action,. _ Senate Republican leader William F. Knowland and hotise speaker Joseph W f ' Martin. Jr., sfill maintained hope July 31 adjournment. But they left a White House conference with President Eisenhower listing ■an impressive lineup of “must” legislation to be passed at this "ses*ston. They agreed, congress will be held-as long as necessary to get ,action. . The postal bill already has kicked up a first class row' in a house committed —where it is still bogged down. ’ The administration "must” bills included Mr. Eisenhower's emergency program to admit more than 200.000 over-quota refugees from Communist persecution. A first-class ; Senate fight could develop over that tyill. In other developments; McCarthy — Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) was denounced on the senate floor today *by Sen. Herbert HL Lehman (D-N. Y.), for “pure demagoguery.” ’ Lehman made the ( harge as he went to the defense of Sen. A. S. Mike Monroney (D-Okla.), who last week branded two of McCarthy's investigating su'l>committee staff members, jasi “[Keystone cops,” In return; McCarthy accused Monroney of a “flagran>t most shameful example of 'anti-Semitism” for the attack on the two— Roy M. Cohn and G. David*Schine. Lehman answered: "I. a Jew, sensitive to any religious have been strongly ([ritrcal of the behavior gs these young men. (Cohn and chine) . j. /’ I’n-American — The house' ,un,American ‘activities committee voted to hear J. B. Matthews, former McCarthy subcommittee staff member, in testimony he has said will prove his charges of Red infiltration of the Protestant clergjk Chairman Harold H. Velde (R-I11J) paid it was not decided wheMier Matthews will testify in public’ or Closed session and no date was sfet for his appearance,, but it will probably be after Oct. 1. Mail rated —The American paper and pulp association and the allied printing trades association supplied lead-off witnesses as mail users opened arguments against the administration's postal rate increase bill 'before the house post office committee. Veterans — The American hospital association told a house veterans subcommittee it opposes further construction of VA hospitals because more than enough VA beds are available for the anticipated peak load of service-con-nected cases. Harvey V. Higley, new veterans administrator-desig-nate. sat in at the hearing. He didn’t testify on the issue of more hospital space, but said he is eager to tackle the VA job—one of the toughest in government. Foreign aid—House Democratic leaders challenged President Eisenhower to demand congressional restoration of the $1,100,000,000

Steambath Weather In Midwest, East Welcome Rain For Parched Southwest j «h i : By I’NITED PRESS " ABeambath weather — hdt and humid—tortured the midwest dnd east today as more welcome rain soaked ihe southwest drought bowl. A conibination o< 75-degitee heat and humidity of 75 percent e|arly today spoiled many ans’ sleep.- A high of 93 was foldcast, typical of the Great Ldfces and miswest ared. New Yorkers were warned to Expect, “quite warm and humid-’ weather, with a high in the SOS'. At that, it was welcome relief front weekend heat waves that broke records and contributed tq four deaths in the nation’s largest city. [ Thundershowers that were jranferal from the Rockies to the Atlantic Sunday and early todhy blessed drought - stricken Texas and Oklahoma scattetfed rains, some of them drenching.. Ini some areas the showers broke the :>ack of the four-year drought, worst in history. But agricultural experts warned that miich of the parched area still suffers franj lack of mqisture. Tien too. the rains were So spotry that it was “feast or famine.’ with some areas receiving soaking showets and others goiiig dry. Bqt more;rains were forecast for today. A small torlnado hit Lameda, Tex... SUnday, causing about s3ti.000 damage tmd destroying ofiq building and damaging two others; About 300 persons were treated at a first aid station at the world assembly of Jehovah’s Witnesses at Yankee stadium, attended by 82,861. Twenty-five physicians, 40 nurses and; nurses aides were ke|>t busy treating the victims—mostly heat prostration cases. About 1,300,000 crowded the beach at Coney Island, and Rockaway Beach attracted about jj 000.000. [ I• ' Sympathetic police relaxed New York laws against sleeping in public parks and many citizens spent the night under the stak. Much of. the Great Plains, evfeh in the drought area., enjoyed relief because of the rainstorms. Oklahoma City; for instance, recorded ja cool 74. ; 1 Policy said they believed tljat James Mcduire, 36. fell five flodrs to his death from a Manhattan apartment : window while Jeaning too far out to catch a breath :of fresh air. Tljie polar bears at Pittsburgli’s J : i 1 :• |( a house committee cut off his foreign aid program. There was nd indication whether the PreJiident planned to make a strong fight for restoration of the funds, ; Mix! Match! IcnilW h A Z \ I /, L lr : =| : ' / z jr ■ /= -11 I- : ini ii Half-sizers! Double your ward-|’ robe —sew tills gay trio of separates. Halterweskit. skirt, bolero to mix and match —never a “what-to-wear” worry all summer! They’re proportioned to fit ahd| flatter short, fuller figures! h b Pattern 9075: Half Sizes 14!4. 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%. 24%. SiMe 16% weskit and skirt 3% yards 39-inch; bolero, 1% yards. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit Complete, illustrated Sew Chart shows you every step. Send Thirty-flve cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pattern if you wish Ist-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Decatur Daily Democrat, Pattern Dept, 232 West 18th St, New York IL N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Site and Style Number. ■

Highland Park Zoo refused leave their specially-cooled pool even to eat. A thief in the same city apparently lost his sense of values in the heat apd stolq every belt from a swimming pool locker room. Young Democrats Name Tipton Man Attorney Elected Indiana President . INDIANAPOLIS. UP Howard Whitecotton, Tipton attorfiey; took presidency of the Young Demorrats of Indiana today. He was elected. 623 to 321. over William, Miller. , Evansyille attort ney, as the young Democrats cloft-j ed their eighth biennial convention Saturday. ! Whitecotton is regarded as a member of former Gov. Henry F. Schriever’s /action of the party. Roy E. Owens 1 , managing editor of the Princeton Clarion-News and| Democrat, withdrew front the* presidential race to fill the treaspost. Two won without opposition — Mrs. Elizabeth King, BoggstoWn. vice president, and Robert-Lin gs. Gary, incumbent national <oniniitteeman. ' -> The incuWrbent national commjitteewoman. Miss Barbara Suelzer. Fort Wayne, defeated Miss Eleanor Chochran, Indianapolis, to td , L L__

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keep her post: _ and Miss Jane Hai din, . Brownsburg, was ele<4ed secretary. “ ' ! ii■ 'Z ' '' j t i‘i ' f * *f' Public Sale Tuesday, July 21, i 6:00 p. m. 4 The John Bright Property, SI 5 North Third St. Real estate, house* hold goods,; shop tools and equioment. 167-T • H-r - ■ — l Democrat Want Ads Bring Results dtkLLTERM) I will begin September 14 Oegree Court*! m Profettional Accounting, Ex4c^ttfve Socrotoriel, [ \ SetiMtt Adminittrofion I ' ano Finance Approved for Veteran Training Prevlout Basinet* Training • I l ■ ( -,-J 1 NOT required - p [ International College Fort Wayne 2. Indiana determine .[ V • You can’t afford to guess or gamble where I heal,th is concerned. Determine now to Consult your physician and follow his «x---perienced counsel. And, of course, bring his prescriptions to this dependable source, where you are assured careful compounding 1 at uniformly fair Dijicr*. HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. —