Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 140, Decatur, Adams County, 14 June 1956 — Page 9

Annual Flower Show Winners Are Listed Annual Show Held By Decatur Clubs T The Decatur Garden club and the Rose Garden club held their annual flower show Saturday at the Decatur public library. Three acredlted judges from Muncie were on hand td judge the entries. Mrs. A. R. Ashbaucher won the tri-color ribbon for having the most outstanding arnpfgemant. Sweepstake ribbons were given l to Mrs. Don Mac Lean, Mrs. (Grover Levy and Mrs.- Harold Owens for winning the most blue ribbons in horticulture and arrangements. Other winners are sis follows: class A, first, Mrs. Paul Daniels: second, Mrs. Laurence Green; third, Mrs. A. R. Ashbaucher honorable mention Mr£ M. Zimmerman. Class B: first, Mrs.

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

M. Zimmerman: second, Mrs. G. D. Mac Lean. Violas: .. first, Mrs. Cal Yost, Clematis: first, Mrs. H. Owens. Shirley Poppy: first, Mrs. Harold Owens. Pinks: first, Mrs. R. Mailand; second, Mrs. Clem Koretnber; third, Mrs. D. C, Danner. African blue violets potted: first. Mrs. Loe Miller; second, Mrs. Charles Beineke; third, Mrs. Don Gage; honorable mention, Mrs. George Sprague. African white violet double: first, Mrs. Don Gage. House plants: first, Mrs. Amos Yoder; second. Mrs. Robert Garard; third. Mrs. R. Mailand; honorable mention R. Garard. . Sweetheart: first, Mrs. S. Brightwell; second, Mrs. A. R. Ashbaucher. Roses and wood arrangement: first, Mrs. P. Daniels: sec-’ ond. Mrs. H. Owens. Little old lady arrangement: first, Mrs. G. Levy; arrangement: second, Mrs. J. Arnthird. .Mrs. G. Durkin. Green pasture arrangement: first. Mrs. A. R. Ashbaucher; second. Mrs. G. Levy; third. Mrs. G. Durkin; honorable mention, Mrs. R. Mail-

and. Spirit of 1776: first, Mrs. G. Levy; second, Mrs. H. Owens; third. Pat Durkin. Tea roses: first, Mrs. Don MacLean? second. Mrs. J. Brunton; third, Mrs. Cal Yost; honorable mention, Mrs. V. Amacher. Red roses: first, Mrs. Don Mac Lean: second, Mrs. C. Kortenber; third, Mrs. C. Yost; honorable mention, Mrs. Bertha Rfce. White roses: first, Mrs. Joe Schultz; fiecond, Mrs. Bertha Rice; third, Mrs. J. Brunton. Pink roses: first. Mrs. Bertha Rice; second, Mrs. Schultz; third. Mrs. William Kohls.. Red florabunda: .first, Mrs. J. Brunton; second. Mrs. C. Yost. Yellow climber: first, Mrs. Don Mac Lean. Yellow Florabunda: first, Mrs. James Strickler. Double Florabunda: first, Mrs. Bertha Rice. Pink florabunda class A: first, Mrs. Bertha Rice; second. Mrs. M. Zimmerman; third. Mrs. C. Yost. Pink florabunda class ts; first, Mrs. P. Daniels. Japanese -peonies: ffrtt. Roy McDaniels; second Mrs. G. Levy. Perenials: first, Mrs. M. Zimmer-

Decatur, Indiana, Thursday, June 14, 1956.

man; second, Mrs. V. Amacher. Single peonies: first, Roy McDaniels; second, Mrs. G. Levy. Red double peonies: first. Roy McDaniels; second, Mrs. John Arnold. Semi-double peony: first, Mrs. C. O. Danner. Double pink peony: first, Roy McDaniels; second, Mrs. Agnes Andrews. Double white peony: first, Mrs. H. Owens; second, Mrs. D- Mac Lean: third, Mrs. L. Green. Double light pink peony:' first, Mrs. Walter Krick; second, Mrs. G. Levy. Pansies: first, H. Owens; second, Mrs. Owens; third, Mrs. G. Durkin. Shasta daisies: first, Mrs. L. Green; second, Mrs. R. Mailand. Columbine: third, Mrs. Cal Yost. Day Lily: first, Mrs. G- Levy.; second, Mrs. C. Danner. Tiger lily: fIT-Bt, Mrs. C. Kortenber. Enchant ment lily: first, Mrs. Victor acher; second. Mrs. E._Berri; third; Mrs. Charles Beineke. Orlen tai? soppy: first. Mrs. L. Green; second, Mrs. R. Bierlj; third, Mrs. P. Daniels; honorable mention, Mrs. R. Garard. Painted

daisies: first, Mrs. Don Mac Lean; fcecond Roy McDaniel; third, Mrs. L. Green; honorable mention, Mrs. M. Zimmerman. Iris? bearded: first, Mrs. H. Oweife; second. Mrs. G. Levy; third,'G. Levy; honorable mention, Jtfrs. M. Zimmerman. Iris beardless: first, Mrs. C. Amack; second. Mrs. V. Amacher; third, Mrs. P. Daniels. Moon is blue arrangement: second. Mrs. G. Levy. Kitchen bouquet: first, Mrs. P. Daniels, second, : Mrs. S. Brightwell: third, Mrs. G. Durkin; honorable mention, Mrs. A. R. Ashbaucher. Minature first, Mrs. G. Levy; second, Mrs. S. Brightwell,•’'third; Sliss Dorothy Milroy. In a toy: •first, Harold and Allen Mailand; second, Daniel Durkins. , V »■ ' North Dakota Agriculture College officials say it takes 12 ■ months to produce a crop of wool, WSt that a few minutes of careless : shearing can reduce its value 10 I ip 25 i>er cent.

Number Os Women Ministers Growing Two Denominations Make Clean Break WASHINGTON (UP) -i- Two of the nation’s largest Protestant denominations are making a clean break with St. Paul's classic advice to early Christians: “Let your wwnen keep silent in the churches." ' Henceforth women will be able to speak—with the full authority of ordained ministers—from Methodist and Presbyterian pulpits. The Methodist Church, which previously had granted only limited AUnisterial licenses to women, voted overwhelmingly at its recent quadrennial General Conference at Minneapolis. Minn.,' to grant full clergy rights to iquaJified women. The Presbyterian Church in the Ul S. A., so-called northern branch of Presbyterianism, approved the ordination of women ministers at ; its annual General Assembly at; ' Philadelphia late in May. The proi posal had been rejected twice be- | fore in 1930 and in 1947. I The National Council of Church--es estimates that approximately 80 I U. S. religious bcAies now ordain i or license women for the ministry. But most of these are comparatively small and little-known sects. Among the larger bodies which have long permitted women to serve as preachers are the Northern Baptists, Congregationallsts, Disciples of Christ, Church of God, Unitarians, UniVersalists, Salvation Army and the Volunteers of America. Quakers do not ordain ministers, but they “recognize” members of either sex, without discrimination. as pastoral leaders of Friends’ meetings. The 1950 federal census showed 6,777 women ministers in the United States, or 4.1 per cent of the i total number of clergymen. This ; was an all-time high for women ministers, more than double the figure for the 1940 census. ; But a survey conducted by the Yearbook of American Churches i in 1951 indicated that only 2.896 or leas than half, of the ordained women ministers actually had jobs as pastors of churches. The National Council’s Department of United Church Women

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LABOR COLUMNIST Victor Riesel, blinded when acid was thrown in his face April 5, kiss*? hand of Sister Mary Fintan on leaving St Clare's hospital In New York. He said, "I am going to continue w’here I left off”—attacking racketeering. (International/

sponsored a study in 1953 to determine why such a comparatively saiall number of qualified women were able to find pulpits. Mrs. Pearl S. Hemingway, a Congregationalist leader who directed the study, reported that “in spite of the. shortage of men for ministerial positions, a church seldom calls a wc nan except as interim or summer supply when no man can be found for the job. “Objections to women as ministers were listed as their lack of vocal power, especially in the larger churches, and their handicap in carrying out pastor«. duties, particularly calls made Ct night," she added. The study showed that some denominations still accept St. Paul’s admonition as sufficient grounds for barring women minis‘ers. But others, Including many fundamentalist groups which stress literal interpretation of the Bible, take the view that the apostle’s advice was intended for specific churches of his own day, and was in no sense an edict binding on modern churches.

SECTION TWO

Graceful Retirement ITHACA, N. Y. (tP) Farmers make a better adjustment to retirement than other occupations, a Cornell University study shows. The school found that farmers gradually taper off work while non-farm' workers are more likely to be subject to sudden cbmpulsary retirement upon reaching a certain age. , _J. Physicist To Denmark ROCHESTER. N. Y. (UP) -Dr. Harry W. Fulbright, associate professor of physics a'Cthe University of Rochester iflid winner of a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, plans to leave in August for Denmark wLtre he will conduct experimerts at the Institute for Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen. An authority on cyclotron construction. he expects to visit other laboratories in Europe during his year abroad.