Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 152, Decatur, Adams County, 29 June 1954 — Page 3
Tuesday, junk go, mi
Miss Janet Schrock Is Married In Church Ceremony To A. W. Kettler, Jr., Friday Beautiful simplicity lent solemnity to th® single ring marriage ceremony in the First Presbyterian church at two-thirty o'clock Friday afternoon when Mias Janet Schrock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Schrock of this city, became the bride of A. W. Kettler, Jr., of Fort Wayne. Their vows were received by the Rev. Ray J. Walther, pastor, in the chancel graced with white majestic daisies, gladiolias and palms.
The bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mre. A. W. Kettler, Sr., 4600 Mill Road, Fort Wayne. ( Wedding music was presented by Mrs. O. H. Haubold, organist, and Miss Helen Haubold. vocalist. Selections included -Romance" by Fidelis Zitterbart and “Wedding Prayer” by Fern Glasgow Dunlap. The bride appeared in a ballerina length gown of imported whit* lace with a matching lace hat. Her bouquet consisted of an arrangement of white Amazon lillies and Stephanotis. . Attending as matron of honor In a pale blue embroidered tulle ballerina gown was Mrs. E. F. Kettler. She carried a bouquet of shell pink carnations. E. F. Ketjler was best man to his brother J and William P. Schrock. Jr.; escorted the guests to their pews. The bride’s chose a French blue lace gown for the occasion and Mrs. Kettler was attired in a navy blue and white gown. Both mothers completed their ensembles with white orc-hid' coreages. The home of thp bride’s parents was the scene of the reception which followed for members of the immediate families. A white Maderia cloth covered the bride’s table, which was decorated with white and pink flowers and cen-
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—«—■ — —v tered with a white tiered wedding cake. were of crystal and Silver. Serving the guests were Mrs. Alice Johnson and Mrs. John C. Carroll. For traveling the bride selected a light blue suit accented with white accessories. Mr. and Mrs. Kettler will make their home in Fort Wayne. » LEBAMOFF-AHR VOWS READ SUNDAY AFTERNOON *• The Rev. Kyril Yancheff of To’ledo, 0.., officiated at the rites uniting in marriage Miss Eleanora Lebamoff and Thomas Lloyd Ahr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd B. Ahr of Decatur. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James D. Lebamoff of S. Clinton Court, Fort Wayne. The ceremony was read in St. Nicholas church Sunday afternoon after Mrs. Jeanne Brown Bosselpiann presented organ selections. A Chantilly lace and nylon tulle-over-satin gown was chosen by the bride. The bodice was enhanced with a portrait neckline and long sleeves came to points over her hands. Her bouffant skirt ended in a cathedral length train. A jeweled lace crown held her triple? tiered veil of illusion and she carried a cascade of white Stephanotis centered with an orchid.
Miss Luba Lebamoff served her cousin as maid of honor in an aiiltle length gown of camellia pink nylon tulle. Wearing identically styled gowns in ballet blue were the bridesmaids, Mrs. Boris Kebamoff. Miss Marie Ann Lebamoff and Miss Milka KachiameniSr cousins of the bride; Miss Sheila Ahr, sister of the bridegroom, and Miss Joan Kemp. Dorrle Atzeff was flower girl, Carl Lebamoff, cousin of the bride, was best man and ushering for Mr. Ahr were William and Nick Lebamoff, brothers Os the bride; John Ognenoff, cousin of the bride; Herman Andreas, and Dr. William Freeby. Danny Replogle' the bride’s cousin, was ring bearer. For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs. Lebamoff chose a rose mauve lace and tulle dress with silver accessories while the bridegroom’s’ mother complemented her peacock blue gown with pink accessories. A wedding dinner was held at St. Nicholas church hall and serving at the reception wb|ch followed were Mrs. William Kozma, Mrs. Jack Tuttle, Mrs. Bill Breeden and Miss Helen Geroff. 'After the newlyweds return from a wedding trip west,, they will reside at 437 W. Fleming Ave. In Fort Wayne. HOME DEMONSTRATION COUNCIL PLANS MEETING Mrs. Theron Fenstermaker of Geneva will preside at the meeting of the Adams county home demonstration council Tuesday, July 6, in the Berne bank building. The meeting, which will begin at 9:45 am., will feature a discussion of the 1955 program. Attending the meeting will be the program chairman and president of each of the 19 clubs in the county. The individual clubs have al : ready discussed ideas for the 1955 program. At the council meeting a vote will beWaken and then a report will be sent to Purdue university. The program committee in charge includes Mrs. iR. C. .Hersh, Mrs. Dwight Schnepp, Mrs. Kenneth Runyon, Mrs. Lucile Miller, Mrs. Elmer Beer and (Mrs. Clifford (Essex. Also on the agenda for the meeting—are reports by the treasurer on the 'May pancake supper and the Purdue trip and by the travel committee on the fall sight-seeing trip. TWO WOMEN ATTEND NATIONAL CONVENTION -I— Miss Joan Wemhoff, a state delegate, and Miss Anna K. Williams, representingthe local Business and Professional Women's TlUbj are’ in St. Louis, Mo., this week attending the national biennial convention. The Jefferson hotel and Kiel auditorium in St. Louis will serve as convention headquarters. The hostess club has planned special events celebrating th 35th anmivrsary of tile organization. Highlights of the convention include the Indiana Federation luncheon today, the 'Missouri fun fest Wednesday and the formal birthday party Thursday. The convention will close Friday afternoon with a reception for the national officers. The executive committee of the local club met Monday night at the home of Miss (Evelyn Fro.hna.pfel. president. Plans were made for the annual picnic July 14 at HannaNuttman park. The committee also discussed plans for the coming year. LOCAL COUPLE RETURN FROM >|JROISEAN TpUR (Mr. Ohd Mrs. RobWt Mills have returned to their home in Decatur after spending a month in Europe. Their son. Dan, who is stationed with the U. S. air force in England, received a J4-flay leave and accompanied his parents on a tour through eight countries, namely Scotland, Ireland, England, Germany, Holland, France, Switzerland and Italy. '
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATTR, INDIANA
Society Item* for today’* pub- - llcatlon must be phoned In by 11a. tn. (Saturday #:SO a. m.) Sharon Klmbl* Phene M1«1 TUESDAY Pocahantas called meeting, Red Men’s hall, 7:30 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma sorority picnic, Hanna-Nuttman park, 6:30 p.m. Jolly Housewives Home Demonstration club, Mills school, 7:30 p.m. Kirkland Ladies club, Adams Central school, 7:30 p.m. Indies auxiliary of Eagles lodge, ■formal initiation, hall, 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY Psi lota Xi sorority pledge picnic, American Legion park, 6 p.m. Wednesday Bridge club, Mrs. Dora Cook. 7:30 p.m. Union Township Home Demonstration club, Miss Erma Rabbitt, 108 North Eleventh street, 1:30 p.m. Women of Moose installation, Moose home, 7 p.m. THURSDAY Ladies of Trinity E.U.B. church, church,-7:30 p.m. Unit 3 of W. S. W. S. of Bethany E. U. B. church, church basement, 2 pjn. Magley Ladies aid, church, all day. Zion' Lutheran Needle club, church basement, 1 p.m. Methodist Wesley dlass family picnic, Hanna-Nuttman park, 6:15 p.m. W. M. A. of Nuttman avenue U. B. church, Mrs. Ireta Thorton, 1:30 p.m. Unit 1 of W. S. W. 3. of Bethany E. U. B. church picnic, HannaNuttman park, 6 p.m. Union Chapel Ladies aid, church, all day. St. Anne Study club, Mrs. E. F. Gass, 7:30 p.m. Pleasant Grove Missionary meeHng, Mrs. Betty Burger, 1:30 .p.m 6* Pleasant Dale Ladies aid, parish hall, all day.. Cities of interest which they visited include Frankfort and Heidelberg in Germany and Rome and Paris. While in Holland they stopped at the quaint isle of Marken where all the inhabitants dress in the native costume. A day was enjoyed cruising I-ake Geneva, a 45 mile long body of water between the countries of France and Switzerland. ; One of the highlights of the trip the top of Jungfrau, the highest peak of the Bernese Alps. The track was narrow and progress was slow; three hour® were spent reaching the altitude of 13,642 feet. Mr. and Mrs. Mills left Decatur May 28, and traveled the entire trip by plane except in Switzerland, .where they went by train. The Pleasant Grove Missionary meeting will be held Thursday afternoon at one-thirty o’clock with Mrs. Betty Burger. This is a regular monthly meeting. Thursday all day the Pleasant Dale Ladies aid meet at the parish hall. Hostesses will be Mrs. Pearl Lash and Mrs. Hulda Leyse. The fourth district meeting of the American Legion auxiliary wiU be held at Albion Thursday, July 8. beginning at ten o’clock in the morning. Anyone who desires to attend is to contact Mrs. Herman Dierkes for reservations by Friday. Her telephone number is 3-2667. Petersburg Woman Is Fatally Burned PETHRSBURG, Ind. (INS) — Mrs. Clark McCain, 79. was burned' to death today when her clothes caught fire as she burned weeds from a field on her property near Petersburg. Marine Enlistees To California Base Indiana enlisting in the United States marine corps during July will receive their basic training at marine corps recruit depot, San Diego, Calif. The base is located on the shoreline of San Diego Bay which has been for thousands of marine recruits their first contact with the salt spray of the Pacific Ocean.
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Ming Jahn Wemhoff and Miss Anna K. Williams left Monday evening for St. Louis, Mo., where they will attend the four day national convention of Business and Professional Women’s clubs. They will officially represent the local club. Otto Hoffman, Adams county commissioner, was admitted to the Parkview Memorial hospital, Fort Wayne, Monday afternoon. His room number is 306. Mrs. Bess Erwin. Mrs. Bertha Heuer, Mrs. Anna Vance and Mrs. J. H. Heller motored to Hamilton take this, morning to spend the day with Mrs. J. L. Kocher, Sr. Kathleen Beavers, two and-a-half year old daughter of Dr. And Mrs. Norman Beavers of Berne, fell into the basement of the Fred Fennig house now under construction at Berne and received a fractured skull, neck injuries and severe bruises. She was rushed to the Lutheran hospital at Fort Wayne and was expected to be sufficiently improved to be returned to her home today. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Harvey end son, Mike, of Danville, 111., stopped in Decatur Monday noon enroute to a visit in Ohio. The Harveys are former residents of Decatur. Bonnie Lou Ritter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James ißltter, is a patient in Lutheran hospital. Fort Wayne, where she underwent surgery on her foot. Her room number is 454. Oscar Hoffman of Detroit is visiting his sister, Mrs. Eugene Runyon at Fourth and Madison streets. Ask Fund Increase For Civil Defense State Defense Head Requests Increase INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — The Indiana civil defense and the state budget committee will meet Wed- , nesday to consider an 81 percent I increase in funds for the coming fiscal year. State director Frederick T. Cretors seeks authority to spend $126,900 during the July I—June 30 period. Since the legislature appropriated only $70,000 a year for CD, the remainder would have to come from Gov. George N. Craig’s contingency fund. Authorities said the moww would be used to boost Cretoris pay from S6,W- t» J&.200 a yea?; to hire six area cb-ordlnators at $4,200 each a year; two assistant directors at $4,800 each; and two clerks at a totar'of $4,500. Indications were that the department would have a difficult time convincing the economyminded budget committee that the additional cash should be allotted. I Admitted Master Edward James Roe, Fort’ Wayne; Mrs. Merle Alberson, Geneva; Fred Kauffman, Berne. Dismissed Mrs. Richard Hirschy, Berne; Mrs. Joseph Kellinger, £prt Wayne; Master Sammy Joe Anderson, Geneva; Mrs, Richard Myers and .baby girl, city; Mrs. Robert Maines. City; Mrs. Otto Thieme and baby daughter, city. At the Adams county memorial hospital: ’* v A baby son, weighing 8 pounds and 1 ounce, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith. Geneva, at 2:30 a. id. Tuesday. Hartford City Man Crushed To Death HARTFORD CITY, Ind. (INS)— Oscar Z. Cook. Sr., was crushed to death Monday between two huge revolving rolls of paper in the Hartford City Paper Co., plant. It was Cook's 60th birthday anniversary and occurred a few hours before he was to have started a 30-day leave of absence to work as a special policeman in Hartford City.
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Guatemala Diplomat Resigns Position issues Statement Blasting Policies WASHINGTON (INS) — State department officials said today that they will give "sympathetic consideration" to the appeal of the Guatemalan diplomat who dramatically renounced his job in the Washington embassy and sought asylum in the U. S. They said that jyhen the request of Francisco Anguiano, 37-year-old first secretary of the Guatemalan embassy is receivedTlt will be forwarded to the justice department and immigratlttyl Jor prompt Anguiano took his "man without a country” decision Monday when he quit his post and issued a statement blasting the “machinations of international Communism” in his country. He denounced not only ex-Gua-temalan president Jacobo Arbenz Guzman who resigned suddenly Sunday, but the regime of provisional president Carlos Enrique Diaz which took over control. The Guatemalan official, who has served in Washington since May 1953, asserted the new military junta is merely a "new maneuver of the Communist minority to retain political control of Guatemala.” Anguiano declined to predict whether his action will precipitate other defections among the Guatemalan diplomatic family in Washington but he "made clear he despises botji Arbenz and the present provi|}Qpal rfg}fie..» f ; In a statement on Anguiano’s action, the Guatemalan embassy said the first secretary quit his job without warning by just leaving his written resignation on topg of the third secretary’s desk. It you nave something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.
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