Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 23 August 1954 — Page 3

MONDAY. AUOUST'm, 1954.-

DECATUR GIRL WILL RECEIVE NURSE’S PIN Miss SaralynSu Braden, of this city and other members of the 1954 graduating class of the Indiana University Tntfhlttg School for Nurses, will be honored Thursday evening when the traditional ’pinning' ceremony will be conducted by Miss Crystal Halstead, apting director of the nursing school in Indianapolis. Miss Braden is the daughter of Mrs. Olive Wherry, 121 North 10th street. '<•’ Relatives and friends of the class are invited to attend the ceremonies which will be held in the formal garden of Ball Residence on the I.U. Medical Center campus at 7 p.m. Members of the class who participated in the Indiana Uniyersity commencement last June, will appear for the first time in the white uniform of the graduate nhrse. 1S Wearing of the graduate uniform and the pin of the I.U. Training School marks the completion of the three-year training program and the start of a professional nursing career. The speaker, Dr. Eleanor Clay of the Medical School staff. wi|l be presented by. the class president, Mrs. Betty Habegger Rekeweg who will also announce the class giftOthers participating in the ceremony will be Miss Joanne Ouendling, class sponsor, and Miss Mary Heckard, aslstant director of nursing service at Riley HospitalA reception in the lounge of the Student Union building wil| fpliow the pinning. - - ■ - «' KITCHEN SHOWIER HONORS SUNDAY BRIDE The former Miss Virginia Mitchel was honored with a kitchen

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shower Thursday evening by Mrs. Gene Bluhm and i.Mrs. Roger Bluhm at the latter's home. Miss Mitchel and Edward Nussbaum exchanged wedding vows Sunday. Upon her arrival the bride elect was, presented with a corsage of red snapdragons. Games were played and prizes were awarded to Mrs. Russell Mitchel, Mrs. Glen Stucky and Mias Arleen Freels. The honored guest's many gifts were caught to pink and green 1 streamers centered with a sprinkling can. Those attending the affair were the Mesdames Russell Mitchel, Fred Nussbaum, Ralph Bluhm, Harvey Rupert, Otto Ixtngenberger, Glen Stucky. Earl Stucky, Ralph Freels and the Misses Carolyn Mitchel, Arleen Freels, Marjorie and Karen Nussbaum and Doris Ann Bluium. Unable to attend were Mrs. Erwin Stucky, Mrs. Paul Stucky, Mrs. Emily Mitchel and Mrs. Emma Heyerly. WOMEN OF THE MOOSE MEET THURSDAY The Moose home was the scene of the Thursday evening meeting of the Women of the Moose. A social hour wai held and games were ■played. Mrs. Oran Schultz received the door prize. Delegates attending the national convention In Chicago this week are senior regeant, Mrs. Robert Judd; recorder, Mrs. Evelyn Kingsiey and Mrs. Dallas Brown. The next meeting will be held Sept. 2 with the initiation of candidates. MISSY MAYCLIN CELEBRATES NINTH BIRTHDAY Missy Mayclin observed her ninth birthday Wednesday with a party given in her honor by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark Mayclin. The affair was held in the shelter house at Hanna-Nuttman park. A picnic supper was served and games were played with Kathy Hain receiving the prize, Later the guest of honor opened her many lovely gifts. Assisting the hostess were the Mesdames Robert Mutschler. Herman Lankenau and C. I. Finlayson. Guests included Alyce Ann Lankenau, Jean Finlayson, Nancy Gep? hart, Jean and Linda Aeschliman Kathy and Terry Hain. Janet and Carol Kiess. Sharon Sudduth. Cynthia Collier, Candy Johnson, CynRita Norquest, Pat-, sty Roberts, Jean Lose, Kristine Mutschler and Susan and Peter Mayclin. - - The Mount Pleasant W.S.C.S. will meet Wednesday evening at seven o’clock in the church basement. Plans for the district group meeting will be made at this time. Members of the St. Ambrose study club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Herman Braun, route four. Dwight Peterson, of Indianapolis,' and Mrs. Lois Keller and son. Hale, of Fort Wayne, visited Sunday with Mrs. John Peterson. Miss Ruth Miller, of Georgetown Tex., has been visiting with her sister and Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Bleeke, and daughter, Debbie, for the , past three weeks. She will leave for Texas Thursday. Mrs. H.L. Koontz and daughter Marion have returned from a weeks outing at Lake Webster. Dr. Joe Morris has returned from a weeks vacation at his cottage at Big Long lake. Members of St. Rose’s parish, Monroeville, visited St. Mary’s church in this city Sunday on a Marion Year pilgrimage. The group visited two other Catholic churches in the Decatur area during the afternoon. Jesse G. Niblick, well known Decatur citizen entertained a dozen friends at Sunday dinner at his

I Ar// * I Society Items foe today’s publication must bo phoned In by II a. m. (Saturday 9:80 a. tn.) Sharon Kimble Phone 3-2121 MONDAY Flo-Kan Sunshine'Girls, K. of P. home, 6:30 p. m. TUESDAY Delta Theta Tau sorority, Han-na-Nuttman park foousA, 6:30 p. m. Root Township Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Robert Carr, 1:30 p. m. Rebekah lodge, 1.0.0. F. hall, 7:30 p.m. Three Link club, 1.0.0. F. hall after lodge meeting. St. Marys township Jolly Housewives Home Demonstration club, Pleasant Mills school, 7:30 p. m. Ladies auxiliary of Eagles lodge formal party, hall, 8 p. m. WEDNESDAY . Commission of Worship and choir of Methodist church potluck dinner, church, 6:15 p. m. Ruth and Naomi circle of lon Evangelical and Reformed church, church, 2 p. m. Mount Pleasant W.S.C.S., church basement, 7 p.m. THURSDAY St. Ambrose study club, 7:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Herman Braun, route four. FRIDAY / Story-book hour, public library, ♦ >,’<B. - . ‘ .'J — SATURDAY Lawn supper, bake sale and bazaar, Antioch Lutheran church, residence, -303 N. Second St., in celebration of his 70th birthday. He was born in this city Aug. 16, 1884. Mrs. Broocks Dalton, formerly Miss Nancy Bell of this city, is teaching a special class of soldiers at Fort Knox, Ky., where her husband is stationed. A graduate of Indiana University’s school of teaching, Mrs. Dalton taught two years in the Goshen public schools. The Misses Sarah and Sharon Sutton are spending a week with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sutton in Freemont, O. They made the trip by train from Fort Wayne. Mrs. Charlie Voglewede of this city became grandmother for the forty-third time Sunday with the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Voglewede of Hampton. Va. The father is an engineer with the" aeronautics division of the armed forces. > »< ’Mtas Marilyn Foor and Miss Carolyn Hakes spent a week touring Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama. They also visited friends in Iron City, Tenn. Mrs. Lloyd Ruse, Decatur, has returned from a four-weeks tour of the west. She left with the Elex club of the Fort Wayne General Electric Co. and visited Royal Gorge, the Rocky Mountains, San Francisco, and other places of interest. Mrs. Ruse remained in Los Angeles when the group returned to Indiana and she and Mrs. Lola McCauge, Fort Wayne traveled to Prescott. Ariz. where they visited the former’s sister, Mrs. Opal Gunnell. _ Harvey Hoffman. Glen Oak, Mich,, returned to his home after spending the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. "Robert Fritzinger. Saturday he attended the funeral of Mrs. Otto Overlin. / At the Adams county memorial hospital: Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Senna, city, became the parents of a baby boy at 1:30 p.m. Saturday. He weighed 6 pounds and 14 ounces. A baby daughter, weighing 6 pounds and 9 ounces, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Russel Stanley, city, at p.m. Sunday. ■ of r '' A&JOSIIITAL Admitted Mrs. Katherine Cole, Geneva; Miss Esther Hirschy, Monroe; Mrs. Ben Lehman. Berne. Diamiased Mrs. Raymond Lichtenberger and baby son. Berne; Mrs. Gerald Sprunger and baby son, Berne; Mrs. Ivan Hakes, city; Mrs. Thomas Garner and baby son. city; Mrs. Jeese Senna and baby boy. city; Mrs. Leo Hackman and baby girl, city; Fred Selklng, Monroeville: Mrs. Earl Sprunger and baby girl, Berne. Use The Daily Democrat Want Ads

TWE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

- Snyders To Observe Golden Anniversary ’LairT'• 1 A . .fIF 1 aRHHEmI Ofl

Fifty Years Ago MR. AND MRS. GEORGE C. SNYDER, formerly of Ossian and Fort Wayne and now of Monroe, will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary with a family dinner at the Cardinal Room Sunday, Sept. 5, at noon. A reception will be held from two o’clock to five o’clock at their home near Monroe; relatives and friends are invited to attend. -Mr. and. Mrs. Snyder are enjoying good health at the age of 72 and: 73 respectively. Mrs. SnyderUs the former Dove Osborn. The

I. U. Extension Plans Fall Term • • • - - ■ i •. Ft. Wayne Center , Has 60 Teachers The Indiana University Fort Wayne Center will begin fall semester classes. Sept. 20 with a faculty of some 60 members, and more than 130 college credit courses and many courses in adult education scheduled. Dr. Ralph E. Broyles, director, announced. Registration will begin Sept. 13 to continue through Sept. 18. Orientation tests required of ail freshmen, will be given at the Center building 1:30 p.m.. Sept. 15. College credit courses will be offered in practically every department of learntn including pre-me-didhe, pre-dentistry,' pre-phamv* acy* pr6'lawf'*^sfl»essr^Mf< , W i training, liberal arts and ip'any others. High school graduates may complete two full years of college at the Center. Students may enroll on a fuller part-time basis in day and evening classes. A number of graduate courses in education are also offered. The departments covered by th© college credit courses include botany. business, chemistry, economies, education, English. Fine Arts, French geography, German, government; health, physical education and recreation; history, mathematics! music, philosophy, physics, psychology, sociology. Spanish, speech and zoology. The courses in Adult Education, including a number of new ones, are History and Philosophy of Religion, Home Furnishings, Fashions in Foods, French for Pleasure and Profit, German for Pleasure and Profit, What Expectant Parents Should Know, Fine Film Club, in-

IHp €’ ” ■ jk W > * 3 T IKE - ? Bo* & ‘ 1 \ls k s BmFhMj MtehiwX— ■ .’x JMlMfcili I Initial MB NEBRASKA'S GOP Senator Eva Bowrtng presents President Eisenhower with a western hat on behalf of the Sand Hills Cattle association of her state. Scene Is at White House. (Intemattonal)

COLD STORAGE —■ OP '■ ■ . ' FURS and WOOLENS — CALL — KELLY DRY CLEANERS Drive-In Plant - 3-Day_Delivery Service • Uptown Store 427 N. 9th St. PHONE 3-3202 155 S. 2nd St.

troduction to Credit and Collection Management. Russian Conversation, Civil Defense, Insurance, Student Chorus and Review Course in Business English. . • A faculty counselor is available to prospective students who wish guidance in planning their work for the coming fall. The Center Is approved for Korean veterans and all veterans who ■plan on enrolling are urged to get their certificates of entitlement at once at the local V. A. office. Bulletin giving complete schedule of courses and classes with descriptions, may be had at the Indiana University Center office, 1120 South Barr Street, Fort Wayne. SAVE SALABLE MILK A young calf must get colostrum milk before U is 48 hours old if it is to get the benefit globulin, a study at the. Wwconstn -ateUott shows. On m - liand. ‘Y'olof trufifififi ymiw yoa -£» whole milk as a feed even though U doesn’t supply protective material to calves older than 4 days. When the Montana station substituted first-milking colostrum for normal whole milk at the beginning of each 16-day period until calves were 80 days old, reports Capper’s aFrmer, there was no scouring and the calves did as well as those fed normal whole milk the full 80 days. So go ahead and feed extra colostrum whenever you have it. It will save" marketable milk. SLICK POST PULLER A short piece of chain with a heavy washer welded to it works fine for pulling steel posts with tractor hydraulic power. The washer is dropped over the post and the hook on the chain attacked to the hydraulic drawbar, boom, manure loader, or cultivator lift arms, says Capper's Farmers. If one upstroke fails to free the post, the

< And Today couple were married Sept. 1. 1904, at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Osborn. Ossian, with the Rev. Lacey officiating. They have four children, five grandchildren and one greatchild. The children are John W., Indianapolis; Mrs. Raymond (Daisy) Harrison, Mrs. Harold (Marybelle) Schwartz. both of near Mon rye, and Mrs. Menno (Genevieve) Nw-baum, Berne. Photo by Anspaugh.

drawbar or boom is lowered for a second “bite.” The washer drops of its own weight, and always catches the post on the lift. If yon nave something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur.

FIRST TIMS SHOWN I 111 * I uIhH •’Mt HHHBHHP •***l • I 1 11 ■ 111 i I ill ill I •" * \UI \ 111 IWn \ 111 W,TH A SAVIN6S 0F ® \ffl «242 s ysjs kw rOR Y ®“ OM ™ ,s eKa H 54-PIECE SERVICE FOR 8 M H TOTAL V4IAIE *lO4. 10 \ 1 $^ M *79. 75 ™ 111""" ft jp(L m iw w ill Ih^ lS / ’ ’ HANDSOME . I J ANTI-TARNISH CHEST I / Included with your set of oil these pieces ~ . 16 Teatpoonz, 8 Soup Spoons, 8 Knives, 8 Forks, 8 Salad Forks, 2 Serving C r '-yr.', 1 Butler Knife, 1 Sugar Spoon, 1 Pastry Server, 1 CoH Moat or Serving Fork. k . fld| ■..-■■■■ g* •» LTO. -Ao ~/• '' f j#ir * 1 B Famous for Values DECATUR FORT WAYNE

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INVISIBLE GLOVE You can protect tools a full storage season with one wipe of a new cloth saturated with silicones which resist rust and moisture. Protec-" tion lasts for several days on tools used frequently, notes Capper's Farmer. Trade-in a Gooa town — vecatur

PAGE THREE

Indianapolis Woman Shot During Burglary INDIANAPOLIS (INS) —Police today Investigated the story of a 26-year-old woman who was shot in the right knee while allegedly tooting the Thompson Poultry Company with her 17-y ear-old brother Sunday. The woman, Mrs. Paatline Collins, of Indianapolis, said a man she knew only as 'Tennessee", persuaded her brother and her to attempt the burglary. She added that he pried open a window to het brother and her to biu wheg police approached. WANT HARDER SHELLS? Egg producers who had many so their eggs graded down last summer because of thin, weak egg shells will be glad to know somebody is trying to help them. USDA scientists, working on improvement of shell quality at the Beltsville station, say a hen’s ability to lay eggs with good Shells is inherited. relates Capper’s T'armer. Here’s how they determine shell quality: An egg with a thin, porus shell dries out faster than one with a thick, hard shell, so they check air-cell size after eggs have been incubated 2 weeks. The thin-shell-ed eggs are removed and the others allowed to hatch. Hatcherymen. following the lead of this research, could produce quick improvement. Trade In,a — Decatur. If yoh have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results. TEE P L E MOVING & TRUCKING Local and Long Distance PHONE 3-2607