Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 101, Decatur, Adams County, 29 April 1954 — Page 3
THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 195*
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—" 1 ■■ V. F. W. TO HOLD DISTRICT MEETING The V. F. W. lodge withhold a district meeting at South Whitley Sunday afternoon at one-thirty o'* <dock. Nomination and election of officers will be conducted. Fourth district corn man der , John Valenti, will be in charge of the V. F. W., fourth district president, Inez Wolfe will be its charge of the Ladies auxiliary, and fourth district senior vice-commander, Ray Ballard, will be in charge of the Fathers auxiliary. LOCAL SORORITY MEETS TUESDAY EVENING Mrs. (Robert Lane, assisted by Mrs. Glen Custer, entertained Xi Alpha Xi and Delta Lambda chapters of Beta Sigma Phi sorority Tuesday evening at the former's
fa Exe,M * ive > / \ olli'- Jfe & Come in and thrill at the I sensational new numbers arriving daily. I Fill your Bummer Wardrobe now - Choose from I - -i%y~'FTyiW dressy dresses, sleeveless ■MB:'-’ I and sun ‘ backs - ' s 6-98 I I and 1 | VICKY VAUGHN Ehinger & Kortenber “THE BOSTON STORE” w- — m
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hgnje, Fteal plans were made for the members Io attend the founders day dinner at the Zion hall in Fort Wayne this evening. It ‘was also announced that 35 people were present at the carryin dinned held Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ziner. Canasta was played during the social hour, after which delicious refreshments were served by the hostesses. MUSICAL PROGRAM SCHEDULED FOR MAY 4 Tuesday evening at seven-thirty o'clock Mrs. Earl Chase will present her piano and Hammond organ pupils in a program at the Union Chapel church. The public is invited.
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Those taking part are: Thane Custer, Luann Lehman, Karen Snyder, Jimmy Brown, Bobby Andrews, Carolyn Crozier, Karen Grice, Jimmy Welty, Larry Macklin. Shirley Harden, Julia Ellsworth, Janet Habegger, l Sharon Harden, Rita Gantz, Nancy Gase, Virginia I'oor, Janet Fell, Missy Maeylin, Sheldon Light, Beverly Stults, Jackie Hurst, Joe Smith, Donna Keller, Kay Burke, Gloria Agler, Janelle Norris, Lucille Knittie, Thelma Whitaker, Jackie Burke, Barbara Harden, Sara Frank, Virginia Taylor, Patsy Krueckeberg, David Light, Tommy Davidson, Alicia Levy, Judy Stauffer, and Dianna Davidson.. MRS. EARL CHASE IS HOSTESS WEDNESDAY “Pie, America's Favorite Dessert” was the interesting lesson subject presented at the Wednesday afternoon meeting of the Union township home demonstration club, held at the home of Mrs. Earl Chase. Mrs. Hugh Nidlinger and Mrs. Glen Roughia were lesson leaders. The meeting was opened with the singing of the song of the month, “Last Night the Nightengale Woke Me,” after which the president, Mrs. Fred Marbach, gave the devotions, entitled “Just Easter.” with Mrs. Marian Stults offering prayer. The club decided to tour a dairy and the Parkview Memorial hospital early in May. Members desiring to make the tours are to contact Mrs. Ivan Barkley, Mrs. Paul Morgan. x>r Mrs. Rolland Gilliom by May 10. Mrs. Don Smith was welcomed into the club as a new’ member. In closing, the club prayer was given in unison. Nineteen members, two guests and nine children were present. Mrs. Chase and Mrs. Glen Roughia then served a new kind of pie for refreshments. Vs .11. ■ The 'Women's guild of the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church will hold a carry-in mother and daughter banquet Wednesday evening. Each lady is to bring a covered dish and table service. The banquet will take place in the church basement and will begin at six o’clock. The Everready class of the Methodist church will meet Thursday evening at seven-thirty o’clock at the home of Mrs. Albert Lanning. Members are to note the change of meeting place. The Ladies auxiliary of the V. F. W. lodge will hold a social meeting Monday evening at eight o’clock at the post home. The organ--1 ization has reached its, metplW\ | ship quota. The C.Y.O. will sponsor a square dance at Sun Set park this evening from nine o’clock to 12 ©''clock. Admission is 50 cents. A box social will be held at seven-thirty o’clock. Seniors are invited. The Rebekah drill team will meet at the Odd Fellows hall Tuesday evening at seven o’clock. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results
THU DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
i. Society Item* for today's publication must be phoned In by 11 a. m. (Saturday 8:90 a. m.) Sharon Klmbla Phone Ml 21 THURSDAY Methodist Everready class, Mrs. J Albert Lanning, 7:30 p.m. W.S.W.S. of Bethany E. U. B. church, church basement, 7:30 p.m. < Aeolian choir, Decatur high school 7 p.m. So-Cha-Rea, Mrs. Tillman Gehrig, 7: *5 p.m. . Brotherhood of Unipn Chapel church, church, 8 p.m. Our Lady of Victory Study club, Mrs. John Alberding, 8 p. m. Circle 4 of Methodist W.8.C.5., Mrs. Samuel Emerick, 7:30 p.m. Dorcas circle of Methodist W. S. C. S., Warren home. Adams County chorus, Decatur i high school. 7:30 p.m. Monroe W. C. T. U-, Mr«. Martha Essex. 1:15 p.m. St. Ambrose Study club, Mrs. Julius Schultz, 7:SO p.m. Presbyterian Women’s association. luncheon, church, 1 p.m. Women of the Moose, Moose home, 8 p.m. FRIDAY Calvary Willing Workers, church basement, 7:30 p.m. and Win class of Trinity church, church, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY Monmouth high school band bake sale, Western Auto store, 9 a.m. Chicken noodle soup and bake sale, Ruth and Naomi circle of Zion Evangelical and Reformed church, city hall. 9 a.m. MONDAY V. F. W. Ladies auxiliary, post home, 8 p.m. Juniors of American Legion auxiliary and mothers, Legion home, 6 p.m. Decatur Woman’s club, public library, »7:45 p.m. TUESDAY 'Rebekah drill team, Odd Fellows hall, 7 p.m. Happy Homemakers Home Dems onstration club, Mrs. Carl Adler. WEDNESDAY Women's guild of Zion Evangelical Reformed church, carry-in Mother and Daughter banquet, church basement, 6 p.m. The Van Wert, 0., aerie of the > Fraternal Order of Eagles will : come to Decatur tonight to confer . work at the Decatur aerie meeting. I Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Koenig spent . several days traveling through southern Ohio and West Virginia with relatives. I Miss Jane Clark is visiting rela--1 tives in West Virginia this week. She will return home Sunday. r Mr. and Mrs. John Alberding, Sr., of Decatur, route 1, observed 3 their 57th wedding anniversary Tuesday. No celebration was held , because of ill health. The couple have nine children, 37 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. [WJOSRITAII yl Admitted Mrs. William Sautbine. city; Master Sherwood Sprunger, Berne. Dismissed Mrs. Paul Strickler and baby girl/ city; Mrs. Rachel Eichhorn, city; Mrs. Clara Christner, Berne. j At the Adams county memorial hospital: Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Heimann, city, became the parents of a baby 1 girl at 6:43 p.m Wednesday. She ~ weighed 8 pounds and 1 ounce. —A baby son. weighing 7 pounds J and 3 ounces, was born Thursday at 6:34 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Monroeville. At 7:56' am. Thursday a baby girl was born to Mf'. and Mrs. Everett Byr, city. She weighed 7 ' pounds and 14 ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Haggard, city, became the parents of a 9 1 poured baby boy at 8:34 a.m. Thursday. J GIRL SCOUT Brownie troop 14 met at the Lin- 1 coin school Wednesday. We made 1 something for our mothers. Patty Walters furnished the treat. Cheryl ' Lobsiger was elected president and Jessica Rich, treasurer. Scribe, Shery Price — — • —“—— ‘ 4 Brownie troop 11 met Wednesday afternoon. We elected the following officers: president, Dedra Murry; treasurer, Janice Rawley; scribe, Karen ; Ann Daniels. We J made May baskets and put in the 1 flowers we had previously made. Ann Schurger w£s hostess. I Scribe, Karen Ann Daniels ]
Guest Soloist Eugene Killnski, pictured above, will be the violin soloist who will appear with the Decatur high school orchestra and junior band in their "Variety in Rhythm” show Friday at 8 p. m. in the school tom. Killnski has performed with the Chicago, Boston and Indianapolis symphonies and has played first violin under Jose Iturbi. He has .also toured Europe where he flayed with the Berlin and London symphony orchestras. He will present three numbers in the Decattir program. . Ignoring Os Cancer Signals Is Tragic 2 1 Third Os Victims Die Needlessly • NEW YORK UP — The American cancer society today presented a representative sample of the 74,000 who are saved annually from death from cancer in the hope of saving another 74,000 who could be saved but aren’t. To cancer experts, the great American tragedy is that so many people ignore the “seven danger signals” and pass automatically from the people who could be saved into those who can’t be. Approximately 222,000 persons die annually of cancer in the United States. The society’s statisticians calculated that one-third of that number died needlessly because early surgery or X-ray treatment would have cured them. The sample “seven who were saved” was headed by C. C. Smith of Waukesha, Wis„ wlm being 77 years old is hedff of a manufacturing plant employing 500 workers. He underwent his curative cancer surgery in 1939, 15 years ago. — Col. C. *P. Simpson of Houston felt a small lump on his breast eight years ago. He asked his friend, Dr. Warfield M. Firor, emminent surgeon of the Johns Hopkins University school of medicine, to look at it. The surgery was immediate. In Simpson’s words, “It's not only women who get breast cancer.” The others of the seven: Charles Hoy, Ardsley, N. Y., cured of larynx cancer seven years ago; Mrs. (Evelyn "Vincent, Boston waitress, cured of intestinal cancer 17 years ago; Mrs. Ora Locke; Boston, cured of breast cancer 13 years ago; Mark Seatnons, 15,"Logan, Utah, cured of an eye’ cancer when he was two months old; Mrs. Marion Wise, Dorchester, Mass., cured of intestinal cancer seven years ago. The “seven danger signals" are: 1— -any sore that does not heal; 2— a lump or thickening in the breast or elsewhere; 3 —unusual bleeding or discharge; 4—any change in a wart or mole; 5 — persistent indigestion or difficulty in swallowing; 6—persistent horaseness or cough; 7 —any change in normal bowel habits. Urban Hawk Dies At Fort Wayne Hospital Urban K. Hawk, 68, died at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at St. Joseph hospital, Fort Wayne, where he had been a patient 16 weeks. He was a brother-in-law- of Mrs. Wid Michaels and Robert Sovine of near Monroe. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the D. O. McComb & Sons funeral home, with burial in Prairie Grove cemetery. .. . Friday Is Proclaimed x Arbor Day In State INDIANAPOLIS, UP — Governor Craig has proclaimed Friday as "Arbor Day’" and has urged schools to have tree-planting ceremonies. "The conservation and increase of our trees," Craig said, “is beneficial to our and future generations. Our forests are a renewable natural resource under constant pressure from further exploitation. We must accept responsibility to plant trees throughout Indiana.” Bake Sale, Chicken noodle soup and potato salad. Sponsored by the Ruth & Naomi Circle of Reformed Church. City Hall, Saturday, 9:00 A. M. 100t3x
Pope Grants First Audience On Sunday VATICAN CITY, UP — Pope Pius XII will grant his first audience Sunday since he became ill I
r ~ r . u K ........ , , „ . I 1 . lililfiiih tbs U yovn® pc'n* •< view in *’ iew W j ■ I W \ It’s Spring... time to ■ I Y choose from our beautiful lx collection of Life Strides... new designs, new colors, new heels. They’ll keep you on your fashion toes—these Other Styles $1J.95 to $0.95 s “ iking desig “ ,hat J - / " look twice the price! Gotham Gold Stripe Color Keyed Stockings! For Your Dress or Suit. 6012 - - - $1.65 Specially Dyed Stocking Shoes, 2051 - - - $1.50 That are Costume Coordinated. KNEE HIGH - - - $1.15 **VUY*HOK*iN * 4 / dßfyff SHOES DECATUR ♦ BLUFFTON I ■■ w ' . . • "" ....1 Again! Niblicks’ Reduce Prices on «w . V" . Toppers Coats Suits fHaOWiv Hats . i l-it l»■ ' r - ** wife . w - ll’ - Don’t Wait! Now is the **»■ Time To Buy! ■> J —-— : ■ — - -
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in January, it was announced today. He will go to St. Peters haf|i|ica in solemn procession to address a brief message to Italian sdhoo! children who will convene in Rome on a special Marian Year visit.
Regular Coats I * Sizes 7to 15 Bto 18 j WAS NOW f $49.95 $35.00 $34.95 $25.00 $29.95520.00 HALF SIZES $34.95 $28.00 ■ Suit Sale. ; - ' I . ■ *• Sizes 9 to 15 10 to 18 Navy - Grey - Beige WAS NOW $16.95 $12.00 $19.95514.00
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