Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 183, Decatur, Adams County, 5 August 1954 — Page 3

THURSDAY. AVGUST 5.1954

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MISS ELDORA KIRCHNER IS HONORED GUEST Miss Eldora Kirchner was the guest of honor at a recent miscel-, laneous bridal shower given by Miss Donna Etzler, Miss Pauline Etzler, Mrs. Edwin Korte and Mrs. ’Robert Bieberich at the Etzler home. Miss Kirchner and Marvin Etzler, of Lima, 0., will exchange nuptial vows August 15 In the Zion Lutheran church, Decatur. iThe honored guest'd gifts were arranged under a green and rose umbrella over which pastil colored streamers were suspended. Other decorations were bouquets of summer Gowers. When the bride-elect opened her gifts, she found balloons tied to the packages which contained various questions concerning the future. Several games were played and the prizes were given to Mias Kirchner. Attending the party were the Mesdames Don Burke, Williard Fawbush, Herman Etzler, Paul Etzler, Reinhart Etzler, Edwin Etzler, Reinhard Schumm, Herman Gannett and the Misses Agnes Etzler, Gertrude Mintzlnger. Amelia Etzler, Elma Krueckeberg, Janet Krubckeberg, Joyce Etzler, Darlene Gunsett, the hostesses and the honored guest. Unable th attend were Mrs. W. W. Rafert, Mrs. Marlin Mintzinger, Mrs. Williard Etzler, Mrs. GeraMS MintningAr and the Mieses Mark lyn, Mary and Martha Etzler, Eunice and Gretchen Rafert and Ellen Mintzlnger. EBBEX REUNION HELD SUNDAY The ninth annual Essex reunion was held Sunday at Clem's lake. Those present were: -Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Easox, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Essex, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Essex and Georganna, Mrs. I Hague, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Kauffman and Ray, Mr. and Mrs. German Kauffman and sons, Mrs. Junior Ray and children. Mr. and Mrs. Merl Essex. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Essex and daughter, Mrs. John Nelson. Miss Bernice Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Parry'Mcßae and daugh-" ter. and Mrs. William Johnson, all of Decatur; Mr. and Mrs. John Strait, Middletown, O.; Mrs. Gladys Alexander, Monroe, O.; Mr and - Mr * Paul Spullor and 'aon ; s. roe? Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith and family, Wolcottville; Mr. and Mrs. Don Essex. Stuttgart, Ark.; Mt. and Mrs. Lester Essex and sons, Columbia City; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Arends, Jr. and family, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Essex and daughters, Miss Agnes Nel- , son. all of Fort Wayne, Mrs. Bertha Long, Napoleon, O. — *

BABER’S dlut d IIGINS! '• * J lu>P iffwji *Na. 1? i«w«ii. Zr * lyfc dff/ II tfxP 10*0 ELGIN i 9r HOOK. 21 I I gf ~ . 175.00 "*""'* l „-. „ Agf | I zfes. * I <? I N EVH. O I VI J*_ Z- 4 # J* [ff-± «* \w ’* Otll I I kI - iMirl *•*•'• I I I JD 13,75 ja\ «z V* 1 """ w&mt — ■ I Elgin fasa. (fJ I DfN *’ vi«w«i.. £T I tugfgf r,K *‘"**'** r *^ T *‘ I ... WATCH 1$ I ri»TiW« vrijinaf |SW »■ proper ly fUfQftd fAttt mpOAMf MfW V, t ■ ■■■■■■■ ■■■!■■■!! ■■■■■ ■—■— , ■■,„— ,■ ■■■ ■ ■■„■ , , TERMS AS LOW AS SI.OO A WEEK , N BABER'S Famous for Values DECATUR FORT WAVNE

v , 1 .,,, w . ll Tuesday evening at six o'clock the Dutiful Daughters class of the Bethany E. U. B. church Util hold a picnic at Hanna-Nuttman park. ' The committee in charge will furnish the rolls, meat and coffee. Each person is asked to bring her own table service and a covered dish. The Order of Rainbow for Girls will meet at the Masonic hall this evening at six-forty-five o'clock. An ice cream social and bake sale sponsored by the Walther league will be held at the Friedhelm church Sunday evening at eight-thirty o’clock. Clem Holthouse and daughters of Tulsa, Okla., arrived here today for a visit with Mrs. Minnie Holthouse and family. Mrs. Jesse Sutton and daughter, Miss Susie operated the Sutton Jewelry store yesterday and today while Jesse Sutton and the regular clerks attended the gift show in Chicago. They were assisted last evening by Miss Leola Ford. Dianna Linn, Margaret Harris, and Devona Reed left yesterday to spend four days in Cleveland, 0. Mrs. Bernard A. Carden and chll- , dren. Silas W. and Mrs. Charles R. Reese, of Culpeper, Va., and Mrs. Rubymetto Smith, of Fredricksburg, Va.. visited Mrs. Callie Small of Decatur. Mrs. Carder and family are the first relatives to visit Mrs. Small since her grandfather and grandmother, Mr. and Mrs. Augustive Hawkins, left Virginia by wagon train 82 years ago. They are also visiting My. and Mrs. Sam Elliott and Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Lawden, of Fort Wayne, and will leave for Coldwater, Mich., to visit Andrew J. Hawkins. 4&Josrital V 1 W*l Admitted Eli Curtis Engle, Cdonroe. Dismissed Mrs. Theodore Sprunger. Berne; iMra. Kenneth Funk and baby son, Willshire, O.; Mrs. Clyde Jones, Ohio City, a I.KG Al. N OTICR Not ße is hereby -given that the Board of Zoning Appeal* of Decatur, Indiana, will meet at city hall August It at 4:15 o'clock p. m„ Central standard time (i;ls p. tn. p. S. T.) to consider a request of Gerald Visard and Dewis IE. Berry ,to erect building on North Thirteenth Street lot described by metes and bound*. Public participation is Invited. ' Clarence Zlner. Chairman

— —'-—in'. i—i Doubt Reform Os Red China For U. N. Seat Senator Sparkman Says China Merely Puppet Os Moscow WASHINGTON* (INSI- Capitol Hill 'foreign policy leaders could see little*reason today to hope that Red China would reform enough to win U. S. recognition or American acquiescence to a seat in the United Nations. President Eisenhower sgid in his netfs conference Wednesday that he is now opposed to admitting the Chinese regime to the UN but that we are always ready to see whether the sinner reforms and comes into the fold? Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala.), 1952 Democratic nominee for vice president, declared that In his book China was a Moscow puppet and that “so long as China is a puppet of the Kremlin, it should be regarded as ineligible for recognition or a seat in the UN." GOP leader William F. Knowland, Calif., refused to .comment on Mr. Eisenhower's statement that it is impossible to say that the U. S. will continue indefinitely to oppose a UN seat for tbe Chinese Communists. Knowland declared that his views have already been*made clear. Jie expressed them sensationally a month ago when he announced he would resign as senate majority leader if Red China is granted admission to the world organization. Sparkman and other ■ senators who- did not want to be quoted on the presidential statement agreed that Mr. Eisenhower was following a necessary rule of diplomacy when he said he would not take a rigid, permanent position on Red China. Diplomats long have shunned the word “never" because they realize conditions change so radically that a position which is valid in one era is invalid in another. Sparkman, pointed out that the traditional yardstick for diplomatic recognition requires: 1. Effective control of a country and its people. 2. Willingness to meet international obligations. ; "Ths real difference | between Britain and Are,” Sparkmaii con-| tinued, ‘Hies in the fact that we have added a new condition. That is the ccmdition that a government must be of the choosing of a people and not one Imposed on them from the outside.** — —■— I •ocialy items for today’s pun llcatlon must be phoned In by 11 a. m. (Saturday 9:90 a. m.) Sharon Kimble Wona MW THURSDAY Women of the Moose informal Initiation, Moose home, 8 p. m., officers, 7:30 p. nr. Bobo Mt. Zion W. M. A., Mrs. Fred Hilton, 7:30 p. m. W. S. W. S. Unit 1 of Bethany E. U. B. church, Mrs. Jennie McAlhany, 7:30 p. m. ■Ladles aid of Ualop Chapel church, church?, 1 all day.** Ladies aid of Trinity E. U. B. church, church, 7:30 p.m. Unit 3 of Bethany E. U. B. church, Memorial park, 6 p. m. Unit 2 of Bethany >E. U. B. church, Hauna-Nuttman park, 6 p. m. Order of Rainbow for Girls, Masonic hall, 6:45 p.m. SUNDAY 7 Walther league ice cream social and bake aale, Friedheim Lutheran church, 8:30 p.m. TUESDAY Women’s guild of Salem Evangelical and Reformed church, 8 p. m. Dutiful Daughtera class of Bethany E. U. B. church, Hanna-Nutt-man park 6 p.m.

CLEARANCE SALE SUMMER ’ HATS Reduced To $2.00 each Just Received NEW FALL HATS Prices Reasonable. I’m now taking orders for name imprinted Christmas Cards. •Please Order Early! Maud Merriman 222 8. 4th St Phone 3-3724

TffE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

■■ ■■ ..,.w.*.s.iiS«*>M»riiiniiy invmrigiiWbliM'i'iiYlSMblriiiWirffrWiWiitWiii.ir, Says India Planning No Nuclear Weapons Nehru Is Opposed To All H-Bomb Tests > UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. (INS) —lndia’s chief delegate to the'UN, said today his government has no intention of producing nuclear weapons and “still less of using thenr# even to resist Invasion? At the same time, ambassador Rajeshwar Dayal declared fit Jt» interview with this correspondent* that prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru’s proposed “standstill agreement” by which hydrogen bomb tests would be stopped applied to such experiments throughout the world. Dayal said that Nehru’s proposal.which has been referred, to the next month's session of the UN general assembly, was not restricted to experiments Ih the Marshall Islands but applied to all areas. The U. S. spokesman told the UN disarmament commission recently that America shortly would resume H-bomb testa despite Soviet demands that they be halted. Some of the experiments report*, edly will be held at Australia’s remote Woomera range. v u >- Traffic Accidents Kill 589 In State INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Indiana traffic accidents have killed 589 men. women and children during the first seven months of 1954. State police superintendent Frank A." Jewswp said that was the toll up to midnight Aug. 1, and compares with 673 killed during the same time in 1953. Rural collisions claimed 461 of the lives and 128 died in urban crashes. Guatemala Asks For Extradition Os Pair GUATEMALA CITY (IN) —Provisional President Cartoe Castillo Armas announced Wednesday night that Guatemala has aeked (Mexico for extradition of former Guatemalan police chiefs, Col. Rogeiio Cnuz Wer and Major Jaime Rosenberg. The two men, who were accused of torturing and murdering hundreds of # anti-Cimmunists during “11 days of terror," fled to Mexico after Castillo Armas’ uprising forced the Red-backed regime ouC Trade in a Good Town — Deeatur. I - ■ ' — ■ .

- ■ ' ' — — — ttf Att atet flKk Mp- I tbHKh ' wOBB WFti JfflMg aSßwWsn ■kfvwbSh jMK mBHR mHSUw Haji WSRbwBWI i- V*/ ‘ f' -j?’ i \- 1' />j AbUaffißKl CONTIHUE TAXTT TYM miDAY 8 MItIHOM ' 1t... jruil Xu ±IN FIUL SUMMER OLEAUHSEI — ■ —... 1 ' 2 Bar Rayon Tricot x DRESSED COTTON PLISSE ll PANTIES 4 ,00 55 .007 6 oo $7.00 SLIPS . 1 Reg. 39e to 59c Pafr Value, to $17.95. Beat The Heal In Theo. Cool Cottons I SP R.g ’|'99 U « S?'’'' J Pair $ J.OO ■ , ” ■ I While They Last! First Quality __ ____ _2__ $1.50 SHORTS DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ’ “■ l,l """■'" 1 I- ■ PEDAL PUSHERS . ALL Now OfteTIIUC CULLOTTES $1.00&$2«00 GROUP OF GUSIUMt SKIRTS Were $1.99 to $5.95 BRAS JEWELRY W ■■■"O" 111 COTTON . NYLON Regular SI.OO ' ■ Values to $2.50 2fo'si.oo BLOUSES " a- aq 2 f0r5 1-5o Reg. SIJ9 to $3.99 Y I gnd ’ ■— '"I Cottons, Cool, Sleeveless OMR HOSIERY — Ih’JU Reg. $1.15 to $1.95 , — bKc. bathingsuits er A A $1 «OO Pair " JANTZEN and OTHERS VJVIHI Many CT3 * Reg. $8.95 to $17.95 More 2 Pair $2.50 : Entire Stock Must Go! B ar . T gains JANI LYN = $ “Tomorrow’s Fashions Today” Shop Every I — 119 N. Second St.- i “AIR CONDITIONED” Decatur, Ind. ■' -' >' — w ■■■ w. wws. mfvwt* — , 7«^ M * M|M,I "*WRTVW9VMP I TF1 iaRM * Ml r NI ”TTrV |l * <^PW> ,IB,a rVV | r ,|l 9 vl * l *^* w TßHW al *R aa^VM f aM VWl ||,^^* R (mvreKrt •»*»••■«*! w l 44’Mn»*i» ;* A. .4’ (

Three Brothers Are Booked For Robbery INDIANAPOLIS. (LN) —Three Indianapolis brothers were booked today on preliminary chargee of robbery. , Charles, 22, David,, Jr., 19, and James Craig, 26, are suspected of having committed a series of trolley cat robberies. They were arrested when a 40-year-old man reported they stole $5 from him, July 31. 158 Mental Patients Are Led To Safety EAST 'MOLINE, 111. (LN) —Nurses attendants and doctors led 158 mental patients to safety Wednesday night when lightning apparently touched off a fire' tn a dormitory of the East'iMoline state hospital. East Moline Police Sgt. Seraphin Versypt sai<| damage would run "into the thousands” but that no one was killed or injured In the fire.

Kidney Slow-Down May Bring * Restless Nights When kidney function slows down, many folks complain of nagging backache, headaches, dlssiness and loss of pep and energy. Don't suffer restless nights with these discomforts if reduced kidney function is getting you down—due. to such common causes as stress and strain, over-exertion or exposure to cold. Minor bladder irritations due to cold or wrong diet may cause getting up nights or frequent passages. Don’t neglect your kidneys if these conditions bother you. Try Doan’s Pilb-a mild diuretic. Used auscassfully by millions tor over 60 years. It's amazing how many times Doan’s give happy relief from these discom-forts-help the 15 miles of kidney tubes and filters flush out waste. Get Doan’s Pilb today! mm

It’s Indiana Time at HAMMOND’S Enjoy Fresh, Delicious Home Grown I Fruit & Vegetables! AV-a INDIANA 4 UJ/ O I-T - HOMEGROWN sSWy f A I CANTALOUPE Rj 41 S” 4‘l-®® •; / <. W yzt HOMEGROWN mL’ SWEET CORN FULL EARS uIBBMM * Doz. |EJ| v s * \ HOME GROWN I / \ WATERMELONS NBSII Guaranteed Red Ripe C \ rj! 79c t ' HOME GROWN TOMATOES ffi ”19c ' HOME CROWN /&V?* CUCUMBERS I K-f LARGE SIZE 3, ”* 5c . .ZoR POTATOES Peck ££ c Hammond Fruit M,ItET > ° PEN 21 H()l RS A I)AY ~ ~ DAYS A WEEK ;: 2 f° N< 13thSU . Decatur, Ind. I ....***«» wmwh »_ *|

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