Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 170, Decatur, Adams County, 21 July 1954 — Page 3
Wednesday, juLy 21, iwu
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SOCIAL MEETING HILO TUESDAY A social meeting was held by the Catholic Ladles of Columbia last evening at the C. L. of C. hall. Cards were played and prizes awarded to the following: bridge, (Ethel fervin; 500, jam 'Ervin; and pinochle, Mrs. William Kohne. Lovely refreshments were setved later In the evening. •Mrs. Grover Clouser and Mrs. Jerome Deßolt were co-chairman of the committee tn charge. A*slating were the Mesdatnee R. J. Hoop. Ralph Roop, Mart Bra\in, Harry Frltzlnger, Ben Eiling, Vernon Krugh. Cleon Kortehber, Bernard Clark, Francis Millet, Charles Omlor, Joe Trlcher, Leopard 'Meyprs, Robert Miller, William Schumacher and MisS Virginia Judge. DEMONSTRATION CLUS ENTERTAINED RECEMTLY Members of the Happy Homemakers Home Demonstration club were pleasantly entertained recently at the home, of Mrs. npeman Walters with Mrs. .peter Miller m cohopteao. <- .5 The meeting opened with the club creed following with dsvotlona by M rs. Mabel Hawkins. Mrs. Myr* sen* gave eri mtereetspg lesson and demonstration on oatmeal mix; samples of muffing were given to the group. Mid. Spite and Mrs. Miller then reported on their trip to Purdue univehlky, '' Mre. Dorothy Wagley, president, presided at the business geMloa., Plans were made for the food for the 4-H fair and a lake outing in August was discussed. Mrs- Fenstenmaker, co-preaident, was present and reported on the recent club council meeting. Mrs. Walters and her daughters Genevleva and Fhyills. and Airs. Miller served refreshments to the group. Attending were 14 members and six guests. iMrs. Bertha Miller, Mrs. Flo Brandt, Mrs. Neva WorkInger; Mrs. Leßoy Belberstine, Mrs. Phyllis Everett and Mrs Fenstermaker. Mrs. Richard Harkleas will be hostess Tuesday afternoon at one
Quality Photo Flnhhlng •■ ijffjh AU worinm beflWnoon on Thursday— ready ths, - a«t day, Friday, at ‘ HOLTHOUSK DRUG CO. - - • ||t „ , , , — —* ■ ... Notice My office will be ’ closed July 16th to August Ist, inclusiveJohn B. Tervecr, M. D. - JX—... --- ■ ’ • . M '
SAME DAY SERVICE —■ i • ■ - BRING YOUR CLOTHES IN BY 9:00 A. M. THEY WILL BE READY AT 4:00 P. M. MONDAY to FRIDAY KELLY DRY CLEANERS Driv«-In Plant • 3-day Delivery Service - Uptown Store 427 N. 9th St. PHONE 3-3202 155 S. 2nd St, Timebss ia Their Beauty *' Are Sub Memories That memoriae of the final tribute may prove a lasting source of comfort and spiritual inspiration, we faithfully observe every wish, carefully attend to every detail. ! “Serving Families of Every Faith" GILUG&DOAN FUNERAL HOME DECATUR PHONE 3-3314
thirty o'clock for the Root Township Home Demonstration club. I ’YY ■ -'*“ r --- Among local denefal Electric employes whp are planning to visit the West coast during the G. E. vacation period is Miss Shirley Fuelling of Berne. She will fly to Los Angeles Friday night and visit friends and relatives there. IMto. George Hakes, of Decatur, has returned to her home from Parkview memorial hospital, Fort Wayne, where she -underwent surgery. She may now have visitors. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Beehler and daughter Barbara have returned 1 home after a two weeks' vacation at Banff park in Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Beehler and sons have returned to their country home near Madison. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Begun and daughter visited in Rockford, 111., ■ over Sunday and Monday. Clarence Ziner, one of the city's ardent fishermen, holds a record. He caught a three pound, 11 ounce , bass in Clem's lake last Saturday, . ahd Clarence said It was the largest bass ever hooked there. ; Mrs. iR. F. Kartell and children, . Grapt, Bruce and David of North ( Caldwell, N. J., are visiting with , her parents, the Rev. and Mrs. Otto C. Busse of Preble, x ■ Mrs. Fonda Lake attended the funeral Saturday of her sister, Mrs. ' John Bailey. «0, who died at the i home of her daughter, Mrs. Elmer . (Morriss, of Cecil, O. Survivors Are her husband; two sisters, , (Mrs. lona Coil, of Fort Ways*, and Mrs. Lake; seven sons; four daughters and several grandchildren. The funeral was held at the Gerig funeral home. Auburn, and ‘ burial was in the Litchfield, Mich, cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Brewer re- ’ turned recently from a two weeks vacation at Lake James. Simon Schwartz, editor of the Berne Witness, ts taking a two Weeks’ vacation. The Misses Edith and Ethel Ervin and their nephew, Patrick Durkin, left today for a vacation at Mackinac Island, Mich. - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson and two daughters of Los Angeles, Calif., are visiting here with the former's parents, (Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson. A famed Indiana ed on the Los Angeles (Mirror. He . is planning to resume his newspaper work in the midwest, He started his journalistic career as > a reporter and feature writer for the Indianapolis Star. ■, - ' V* 1 wHfcd Admitted Baby Daniel Gillum, Bryant; Clyde Webb, Monroeville; Mrs. lv< Brodbeck, city. Dismissed * . Mrs. Thomas Sheeham and baby girl, elty; Mrs. Lewis King. Bryant p Mrs.' Robert Cook and baby girl, city; Clinton Mathys, Geneva; Herman Myer, Willshire, O. . *
■ -M %sSI • II fl I La ■ ■ ■ i£ jut Bv JSb t- <* / r /' W J flflßfl I ' &l Jfl Mr ' GHbb- I ; a . A- ■ ¥ - -JifflW ■ THE ENGAGEMENT and approaching marriage of Miss Betty Jean Hollingsworth and Staff Sgt. Ralph E. Lutz, son of Mr. and Mrs. (He Lutz, of Portland, has been announced' by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Haffner, of Markle. L Miss Hollingsworth, a graduate of Decatur high school, attended Indiana university and' is a graduate of the Michael Reese hospital school of nursing, Chicago. BL She is the daughter of Mrs. Ruth i Hpßlogsworth Haffner and the late sheriff Hart Holingsworth, tannery of this city. Her fiance. ,a graduate of Portland high reboot, attended Indiana Central college and is now serving with the U. S. marines. A fall wedding is being planned. — j 4
A baby girl, weighing 8 pounds and t ounces, was born to IMr. and •Mrs. Joseph Barbieri. Jr., Fort Wayne, at the St. Joseph hospital in Fort Wayne at 9:30 p. m. Tues, day. This is the third child and second daughter. Grandparents are Mr. and (Mrs. Raymond Kohne, of Decatur, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Barbieri. Sr., of Fort Wayne. Robert Arnold is the name of the first son and fourth child born to Mr: and Mrs. Alvin D. Fennig, Galesburg, 111., Tuesday. He weighed 9 pcwinds. (Maternal grandmother is IMrs. Bachant, of Pleasant AHUs, and (Mr. and (Mrs. Alvin L, Feonig, of Decatur, are paternal grandparents. At the Adams county memorial hospital: , „ Mrs. MguHcf’ Miller. Convof, 0.. became the parents of a baby girl at 6:21 a.m. Wednesday. She weighed 6 pounds and 12 ounces. > A baby son, weighing 8 pounds and 2 ounces, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Lambert Kraft, Hoagland; at' a.m. Wednesday. Jfr. and Mrs. Norvin Bultemeler, city, became the parents Os a 7 pound, 12 ounce baby girl at 12 noon » Wednesday., Annual K. C. Picnic Scheduled Sunday The annual Knights of Columbus stag pfchio will take place Sunday at Subset park southeast of Decatur. Degftnring at noon, the picnic win be an ail day affair. A Committee including Jerry Martin. Bin Lengerich, Charles Coqk and Jerry Kohne will be in charge of arrangements. A fried
1%: nJ fl--J p Vk r JHL •z WiM flB ■k flB MtN, IF the ladies Invade the pipe emokina field, aa Robin Brook eeema to be doing aa ahe light* up a aebra striped pipe which # matchea her ewimeuit, there won't be much left in the men-only •field but fatherhood. This fetching acene reaulta from faahion show put on in New York by the Pipe and Tobacco council. 2 It featured plpea for ladies. The council estimates there are 150,000 women pipe smokers in the U. 8., thinks there will be SOO per cent increase if the ladies are lured. (International Sowuifhotoj 1
DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
'' ■■ < ■ » •oelety Items for today’s publication must be phoned In by 11 a. m. (Saturday 9:30 a. m.) Sharon Kimble Phone Ml2l WEDNESDAY Mt. Tabor W. S. C. S., Mrs. ‘ Lloyd Daniels, 7:30 p.m. 1 Decatur Home Demonstration ’ club picnic, Hanna-Nuttman park, 6:30 p.m. THURSDAY ' Union Chapel Ladies aid, church, ■ all day. St. Paul's Ladies eld, (Mrs. Clara Dague, all day. 1 Executive members of Monmouth P. T. A.. (Mr. end Mrs. Robert ' 7J»-|SC*'** m, ****‘** Women of the tMoose, Moose home, 8 p. m., executive committee, 7:30 p. m. FRIDAY Church of God Missionary iad- : ies ice cream social, Legion Memorial park, 6 p. m. St. Luke's Evangelical and Reformed church ice cream social, church lawn, 7:30 p. m. Adams County Ayrebire Breeders association, Verl Lautzenheiser, 6-;30 p. m. ' TUESDAY Root Township Home Demonstration tlttb, Mrs. Richard Harkless, 1:30 p.m. : chicken dinner will be served St noon and the evening menu will feature hoodie soup. The next meeting will be held Monday night in the K. of ! C. hall.
* ■ Area Dairy King On Television Thursday Carl Bluhm, recently named dairy king of the Fort Wayne area in a contest sponsored by the Wayne Cooperative Milk Produc*r», Inc., WKJG and WKJG-TV, will be honored on a television, program Thursday at 6:25 p.m. over WKJG-TV. Carl will appear with his father, Ralph Bluhm of Washington township, who is also the young dairy king's 4-H leader. Another Adams county 4-H mem.bmr who will J>e honored on the name program writ”be Miss Lois Gerke, a princess in the contest. She will receive a ril jacket. Theywill be on the program with Miss Mary Campbell of near Cotfvoy, dairy queen; her 4-H leader and other princes and princesses in the —--nr-— — t-*- —■. — ? Contracts Awarded By Toll Commission Architect, Engineer Contracts Awarded INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Architectural englneering ooptracts covering some >lO • miUtod worth of construction woribalong Indiana’s first modern toll road have been awarded to Indianapolis and South Bend firms. The toll road commission reported Tuesday afternoon following its weekly meeting that Charles W. Cole and Son, of South Bend, was awarded the architectural engineering contract for the 10 service areas along the 156-mile east-west toll road across northern Indiana. James-Williams and Associates, of Indianapolis, was given the architectural engineering contracts for utility buildings, toll booths and lighting at the 11 interchanges on the proposed super-highway. Construction cost for the service areas ‘n expected to total $6.5 million, and the Cole firm will get a four and one-halt per cent tee, or $292,500 for its work. Construction of the utility buildings, booths and lighting at the interchanges is to cost about $3,550,000. The successful Indianapolis firm, composed of Edward James, architect, and Clyde Williams, engineer, will get a five per cent fee, or $177,500. - Dr. Dillon Geiger, of Bloomington, 'Who was re-elected chairman of the commission, explained that the body agreed to adopt the fee schedules of the American society of engineers and the American so- • «|ety of architects so as to be jfhre The successful bidders got a "fair and reasonable" profit. Meanwhile, an Indiana survey team of some 15 persons was scheduled to leave July 25 for a two-w'eek survey of toll roads in eight other states.*'"" The team is to visit toll roads tn Ohio, Pennsylvania. New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts. Maine and West Virginia. A probable date of around September 1 was set by the toll road commission for ground-breaking on the east-west road after receiving a report from J. E. Greiner Co., Baltimore. Md., engineering firm, that the first construction bids may be opened Aug. 2 and contracts probably awarded % Aug. 25. As an nounced previously, the groundbreaking ceremony is to be held in St. Joseph or LaPorte counties. Tn addition to renaming Dr. Geiger chairman, the commission also re-elected John Stelle, of Brazil, vice-chairman. CEASE-FIRE IN (Tara Ps«r Fowl g-di cut of northern Indochina Twelve million persons — n.ore than half of Vietnam's population ,;nd inclduing two million Roman Ca.holi*a — will fall und»r tn»' Red rule of Ho Chi Minh. The nine »:■»■ trs of the cor.f ,r ence will “ta’e note" of thu ov**r oil settlement which provide i f »r: L rartitioning c* rich and heavily populate t \l«!.n.m at Hie 17th s>nn.»’el 2. A period of 306 davs for Fr»’..ch withdrawal from Hanoi. "The Paris of the East,” and Haiphong, the port where million* of
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Sheppard Refuses Truth Serum Test ■, r ■ Refuses Test On Advice Os Lawyers CLEVELAND (INS) —Dr. Samuel Sheppard spumed a request today that he submit to interrogation with “truth eerum” in the 17-day old investigation of his wife’s murder. Noted crime expert DnAlan R. Moritz of Western Ref»erW*uni verity said that tne Bay Village osteopath refused to take the test on advice of his lawyers. Dr. Sheppard said that he cannot face further interrogation because he still is emotionally upset by his wife’s death, fie satd he had undergone questioning after the crime while under barbiturte sedation and claimed that was the same aa truth serum interrogation. The prominent osteopath also explained that he is reluctant to place himself in. a spot where he might incriminate innocent person®. . The 30-year-old osteopah already has refused several times to undergo a lie detector test, claiming that because of his emotional state such a test would not be accurate. But medical and psychiatric expert® point out that such an objection could not be raised to truth serum. Cuyahoga county coroner Dr. Samuel R. Gerber eaid the test could aid Dr. Sheppard in recalling details about the man he eaid invaded his Bay Village home on the shores of Lake Erie before dawn on the Fourth of July, murdered hia wife and twice knocked him unconscious. Dr. Gerber said that “if Dr. Sam Sheppard is anxious to aid authorities in the solution of the horrible death of his wife and avojd unjust accusations, unbridled imagination, wild presumptions and character assassination, he will submit to this test." Meanwhile, the Bay Village city council ordered its mayor to ask the Cleveland police department to take over the 17-day murder investigation. The council appropriated $5,600 Tuesday night to be paid the Cleveland department for aid in teolving the case. dollars in U. S. military aid are stockpiled. 3. The military neutralization of Laos and Cambodia under their present free governments.
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UPPI HF v fl lsHw; V. tI 20-YEAR-OLD Marie Dionne .(above), the quintuplet who entered the Servants of the Blessed Sacrament convent in Quebec, has left her religious life due to ill health, it was reported. It ia "probable though not certain" she will return, it was said. (International) I ■" ' ■ :1 ■
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'Dancing Waters* A State Fair Feature INDIANAPOLIS (IN) — "Dancing Waters", a combination of water, electronics, lights, music,' engineering and showmanship, will be a feature midway of the Indiana State Fair, lieginning Sept. 2. It was developed in Germany, and made ltd American dejjuf ot the Radio City Music Hall in New York. ; . Other features of the entertainment lineup were Julius Laßoaa, <Eddie .Fisher, the Mills Brothers,Jab Garber, the Cisco Kid and 'Pancho; State Fair Follies, Irish Horan’s Hell Drivers, State Fair Horse Show, and Grand Circuit racing.
FILMS Developed by Edwards 24-HOUR SERVICE Kohne Drug Store
