Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 141, Decatur, Adams County, 16 June 1955 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

and ’l-5® Price* Plu* Tax YAK DLEY AFTER SHAVING LOTION SOOTHING-REFRESHING LEAVES THE SKIN COOL AND COMFORTABLE SMITH DRUG CO.

Oil - -J I U ‘ yOU re my K I f „ VAN HEUSEN E 1 ; •!.> The best of gifts for the best of Dads, to express Mg \ you w »nt to say, the way you want to say it. R. . X Each ha* a handsome gift card (many With good- '' ' ZX hjck charm* attached) that needs only your signa- Hiply' . t Mretbs*y,”Yes,Dad,lamluckyyou’remyPop!” JAMES STEWART in Paramount's STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND Filmed in Vista Vision—in Technicolor ,A : I 4K ■■. \ ' lw*»> -' ?F •?• • j i • r -1 xflSi / Bk ' ’ * f jBaK; V jKg \ \ *ESSI r Jr i JI R JI bI > sKBB Amh VAN HEUSEN CENTURY 100 . m < gill There’* a revolutionary difference between the Van Tleusen RH3? ,8 " ,,,, " ,, "® I BSO ft ■ Century Shirt and ordinary shirts! The Van Heusen KBRL-— jfcß Century collar is made in one single piece that’s woven to *;■ fit the curve of your neck smoothly, perfectly. Make the \X. / / ' |||| *foel test”—*ee for yourself the difference between it and LX |g|H ordinary, old-fashioned collars. The Van Heusen Century A 1111 l collar can’t wilt or wrinkle like ordinary collars because ® |||| there's nothing to bunch or buckle. A charm in the laundry, V. H. CENTURY 20# |H|I too. Just iron the collar flat, flip it, and it folds perfectly: 5 I The fold-line is woven right in. Amazing! But the Century lllir .' costs you even leas than many ordinary shirts. BP SB WHITE t OQK SUPERFINE WHITE $5 ~ ▼ colors >4.50 I V SINGLE OR FRENCH CUFFS v . h. cJtuky ;w# g| I BEGUN’S I ■ CLOTHING STORE R,< Mhw—gaßpg

Summer Assembly Will Open Sunday Annual Assembly Os Methodist Church The annual summer assembly ot the North Indiana conference of the Methodist church will open Sunday morning and continue through Friday at Epworth Forest on Lake Webster. The guest speaker at the Sunday morning worship service will be the ißev. Howard J. Brown, pastor ot the Church of the Saviour, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and the evening lakeside speaker nightly at 7:30 p.m„ will be Dr. Willard J. McLaughlin, head of the Vellore College board in New York and former missionary to India. The morning Bible lecturer "will be Dr. W. A. Smart, member of the faculty of Emory. University school of theology in Georgia. Presiding at the sessions of the Wesleyan service guild, beginning at 1:30 p.m. Saturday and concluding with a service at 2 jp.m. Sunday, will be Miss Mary Meeks, Farmland, conference secretary of the guild. Miss Victoria Lang, missionary from Africa, will be the speaker for the Saturday evening service. Mrs. B. H- Franklin, Logansport, will be dean ot the school of missions of the Woman’s Society of Christian Service to be held Monday through Friday. During the afternoon sessions the women will attend departmental clinics, workshops, and a general mission hour. Mrs. Charles Hartman, Monroeville, will be In charge of Camp Yo-Pe-Ml-Ca (young peoples mission camp) for youth ot high school age during assembly week. Miss Janice Kreischer and Miss

™ DBCATTJR DAILY DBMOCRAT. DDOATUR, INDIANA

Connie Baxter of this city will attend from the local Methodist church. Miss Helen Clark of Fort Wayne, conference director of children’s work, will be in charge of the laboratory school for-Sun-day school teachers ot the children’s division. A Methodist men’s institute will be held from 10:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday under the direction ot H. O. DeWeese, conference lay leader. The Rev. Samuel Emerick, pastor of the First Methodist church in Bluffton, is the assembly dean, with the Rev. Robert Yunker, pastor of the First Methodist church in Mishawaka, a’s assistant. Those attending the assembly from the local church will stay at the church cottage during the week. Members of the local Woman's Society of Christian service will attend the sessions on Thursday. * . Funeral Rites Friday For Kohne Infant Julius Leon Kohne, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Kohne of Tri Lake, died Wednesday at St. Joseph hospital in Fort Wayne. The infant was born Monday night. Surviving in addition to the parents, former residents of Decatur, are three brothers, David, Richard and Stephen, and four sisters, Marilyn, Helen, Ruth and Rita, all at home, and the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Kohne of Decatur,. Funeral services will be held Friday morning at the Smith funeral home at Columbia City. The Rev. John Frawley will officiate and burial will be in the Catholic cemetery at Columbia City. Court News Marriage License Leo Francis Miller. 32. Decatur route four, and Elizabeth Mary Koors, 23, Decatur. If you nave someemng to sell oi rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.

Give HIM What HE Deserves! ather s Day isn’t the day to eat the left-overs from <he dinner P®°P ,e had on Mother’s Day. ' I Fathers should have a feast of their own. So why n °* U P the man at your house by cooking him a 011 ‘ n F an ‘ s * z c-steaJt ,on<Eath«r r s Day. t But be surtlo buy it from Carl Gerber .... it’ll brighten up Father’s Day for him, too. PORK tenderl ° |n r WHOLE or HALF lb. 89c J CENTER SLICES lb. 98c ’ — — j SWISS STEAK .. ' Ik 65c ' Csgf MINUTE STEAK lb. 65c 29c b., HOME MADE ————— HAM SALAD Lb. LARD - 5 fts ’ 69c FRESH GROUND REEF r BORDEN’S - 3 ib ß .s|.oo ICECREAM — l /a Gal. HOME CURED VEAL jowl : — PATTIES RACON PECANS 1}) -69c * 29c 12 oz. sj.io Gerber’s SSS 150 S. Second St. phone 3-2712

Foreign War Vels Open Convention Annual Encampment For Indiana Posts INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Indiana Veterans of Foreign War* gathered today for their annual tour day encampment in Indianapolis with 2,200 delegate* attending. State commander Glenn C. White, of South Bend, said a full ■late of resolutions face* the delegates including a demand for an efrnmediate end to treaties subjecting American servicemen to trial in foreign nation*. White said the group, whose business sessions begin Friday and continue through election of officers Sunday, will go on record as opposed to world government concepts and admission of Red China to the United Nations. The Hoosier VFW will favor adoption ot a system of universal military training—with the best air force in the world and adequate army, navy and marine corps forces. Near unanimous condemnation is slated for recommendations of the Hoover commission which White said would end construction of veterans hospital*, would close 19'VA hospitals and deny hospitalization to 19 existing veterans. The VFW program also will call for a separae pension program for the three million World War I teterans; continuance of VA home loans under thep resent system and increased pensions for .war veterans and their widows. Publicist Is Named By Toll Commission INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — State Rep. Wayne Kellams, of Edinburg, today took up his duties as a |7,500 a year publicist for the Indiana toll road commission.

Trinity Church Plans Father-Son Banquet The father and eon banquet of the Trinity Evangelical United Brethren church will be held in the baaement of the church Friday evening at 6 o’clock. The speaker wJll be the Rev. R. Paul Miller of Berne. Rev. Miller, who hae been an evangelist for many years, will speak on “The Successful Life." All fathers and sons of the church are urged to! attend this banquet. Humphrey Appeals For Debt Advice Treasury Head Asks Debt Limit Advice WASHINGTON GINS) Treasury secretary George M. Humphrey has appealed to Sen. Hary F. Byrd (D-Va„) for suggestions on what to do about the federal debt limit. ' Both men apparently are in agreement on the need for a tight ceiling as an effective means of keeping expenditures in check. International News Service learned today that Humphrey submitted to Byrd a few days ago the latest, official estimates on revenues and expenses for the fiscal year beginning July 1.~ Instead of making a definite suggestion, the treasury secretary reportedly asked Byrd in an informal way to study the budget deficit figures prior to hearings by his senate finance committee. The influential Virginia Democrat, who blocked permanent debt increases in the past two sessions, is said to be receptive to another temporary increase at the inoatbut only if a good case is made for it. Some decision is expected within 10 days to give the congress time for action before adjournment. With the end of fiscal year 1955

Queen Mary Sailing Cancelled By Strike American Travelers Stranded In London SOUTHAMPTON, Eng. (INS)— A threatened sit-down “strike” by irate American passengers aboard the strike bound liner Mary dollapsed today before it xquld really begin. After a strong protest to the Cunard line, the American travelers, all first class passengers, filed off the luxury liner with the rest of the 1,175 persons who boarded the ship last night with hopes of sailing for New York. Cunard was forced to cancel the voyage when an estimated 350 to 500 crew members joined in the current wildcat seanien’e strike which is sloiwly strangling transAtlantic travel on British ships. The would-be passenger strikers had formed a committee and demanded the shipping firm either let them stay aboard or arange accomodations in already jampacked London. Cunard officials promised “every asistance’’ would be given to obtain alternative passage to New York by sea or air. The huge trans Atlantic liner had its usual number of well known personalities aboard and was scheduled to pick up more in Cher bourg. France. The passengers formed lines at telephones on the ship to make frantic efforts at getting hotel rooms in London. But the city already was crowded with travelers who were forced off the six other trans Atlantic ships which previously were forced to cancel sailings. The Cunard Line had made a superhuman effort to get the liner off, but lost out when a section of the vital engine room and deck crews refused to work the ship in protest over an alleged importation of labor from Liverpool, where* the unoficial strike started. In New York, the Mary's sister ship, the Queen Elizabeth, completed its turn around in a record 17 hours, I<l minutes. The world’s largest passenger liner took on fuel, baggage, water and food for 2.333 passengers in the brief time in order to maintain its schedule. The big ship had been delayed 12 hours leaving Southampton by the seamen’s strike. on June 30, the temporary increase of $6 billion will expire, and the debt limit will revert to •Wffs one billion above the actual debt. Latest published report on next year's budget shows a deficit of two billion 400 million dollars. This leaves to simple arithmetic the conclusion that either the deficit must be wiped out or the legal debt limit must be extended to cover, the shortage. Spring Conference Os Catholic Men Members df St. Mary’s Catholic church in Decatur will be among the delegates from Catholic parishes in the Fort Wayne area who will attend the annual spring conference of the Fort Wayne deanery council of Catholic men at St Patrick's in Fort Wayne June .26. The Most Rev. Leo A. Pursley, apostolic administrator of the Fort Wayne diocese, and the Rev. Andrew Grutka of Gary, diocesan moderator of the council of Catholic men, will be principal speakers for the conference. The presidents of the four districts of the deanery, including Richard Freistroffer of the Deca tur district, are in charge of arrangements. McMillen Home Is Damaged By Fire Defective wiring was given as the cause of a fire at the Fort Wayne home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. * McMillen Wednesday. Smoke from fire inside the walls, of the home accounted for heavy damage. McMillen is chairman of the board of Central Soya Co; and formerly resided in Decatur. Peacock Is Upset Winner Over Macias LOS ANGELES (INS) — Billy (Sweetpea) Peacock, a 3 to 1 un derdog, upset Mexico's Raul (Raton) Macias, the NBA world bantamweight champion, with a knockout that broke Macias’ jaw list night. \ - The stunning upset occurred at 2:29 of the third round of the 14th annual charity “Fight for Lives” at theO 'lympic auditorium. Washington — Residents of the U.S. had. 26 percent of the world income in 1338, and had increased It to 40.7 percent in 1948, according to recent estimates. STOP THAT ITCH ! IN JUST 15 MINUTES Your 40c ba’ek at any drug store If not pleased. Try easy - to - aiiply IT<.'H-.ME-NOT for the of eezenm. ringworm, insect bite.s, foot itch or any other surface ttoh. Today al KuUimi lorug Store. ‘

THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1955

I I SCHMITT’S I I QUALITY ■ | FRESHNESS | LOW PRICES M EVERY DAY g Fancy Tasty I * >or * l I I Tenderloin I I 89c I ? Fork Tender I B Round I w or fi I Sirloin I I Lb - 69c | 1 Extra Special Smoked I Sausage I I Lb - 43c I Fresh Sliced I I Pork I I Liver I I 2 lbs -39c I Seasoning | Bacon g I I I 2 ,bs '29c I J Home Made I Ring I | Bologna I I Lb - 29c | Long Horn j. County - Line ■ Cheese | I Lb - 49c I B All Cuts m Native I Veal I I Schmitt I I MARKET I