Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 183, Decatur, Adams County, 4 August 1956 — Page 3
SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, IMw
geoimj
THOMAS D. BOSSE’ FIANCEE COMPLETE WEDDING PLANS August 18 is the >date that has been chosen for the marriage of Thomas -*David Bosse and Miss Barbara Louise Kirchner. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Ed A. Bosse of 517 W. Madison street, and .Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Kirchner of East Overlook Road in Cleveland. The double ring ceremony will be read on that morning at 9:30 o'clock In the St. Ann's Church in Cleveland, O. Miss Kirchner has asked her sister, Rose Marie, to be her honor attendant. Bridesmaids will be Clare Kirchner, another sister; ShiarineFulton, cousin of the bride-groom-elect; and Betty Kennedy of Winnetka, TH., and Bonnie Bernstein of Chicago. 111., both college roomates of the bride-elect. Beat man for the occasion will be Albert E.» R. Schneider. Jr., uncle of the bride-elect. Ushers will be Joseph V. Madigan. Walter Oswald, John Guthrie, George Hebb.! Frank B. Kirchner. Jr., and Donald Schuele, all of Cleveland. An afternoon reception will be held for the couple at the home of the bride-elect’s parents. Among the numerous pre-nuptial parties honoring the couple, will be a rehearsal dinner to be staged at the Skating Club in Cleveland on- the eve of the wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Ed A. Bosse will be host to this affair. * Miss Kirchner recently received her A.B. degree in French literature from Baret College in Lake Forest, 111. Bosse is a graduate of
' CANDY W . F>O!!M MtSH M B TUI DAY I. * I AOI . . . SMITH DRUG CO.
- ■ ■——****—-————i— T^W~'CITY — WlL>lz lip Ikdcmww daOM DECATUR . ■ . . ‘ !-.. ’ :1 • ' ■’“ t --. '."■ A *;.- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8 SEE THE HUNDREDS OF DOLLAR DAY BARGAINS IN MONDAY’S ■ '■■<•■ . . ’ ' Al.-... . ' . • <\.-7--' ~- .*>•„.,. «... - • •» ft* •■ *. (■-■ ' ,\., . _ ' ■ • . ' -a. •. .■> 9 DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT -' ■'>... ' .. . • — -.--- : L_^.... r : . '- — - ; — —
Decatur Catholic high school and Notre Dame University. He is now i a candidate for his master’s degree from John Carroll University in ; Cleveland., and fa associated- with the advertising department of the Cleveland Press. MRS. JAMES LOBSIGER FETED WITH SHOWER T A bridal shower was given in honor of Mrs. James Lobsiger, the former Kay Heare, at the home of Sonja Graig in ‘Monroe. Games were played and the prizes were presented to Mrs. Lobsiger. Guests included Mrs. Paul Lobsiger, Mrs. Ivan Heare and Emma, Mrs. August Schlickman, Mrs. Helen Schultz and daughter Jeanenne, Mrs. Velma Daniels, Mrs. Myrtle Daniels, Mrs. Doyle Rich. Mrs. Howard Rich. Mrs. Harold Arnold. Marjorie Becker. Marylin Arnold. Carol Egley, Carolyn Chrfatener. Mary Haugh. Mrs. James Habegger. Sue Roop, and Karen Snyder, j ;CATHERINE HABEGGER TD WED MAC SMITH Mrs. SaviMa Habegger of route two, Decatur, announces the engagement of her daughter, Catherine, to Mac Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Godfrey Smith of Geneva. Miss Habegger attended Adams Central high school and is employed at the Smith Brothers Furniture company. Her fiance was graduated from Geneva high school and is employed as a mason for the Herman Rieff Construction company of Bluffton. The couple is planning a fall wedding. The Women of the Moose met recently for their regular meeting. The next meeting will be held August 14 and it will be a patty. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur.
OPEN SUNDAYS 8 A. M. to Midnight Cold Cuts - Coffee Olives - Potato Chips Milk « Bread - Cakes EQUITY DAIRY STORE
Mrs. Esther Bleeke Cunningham has been admitted to the Parkview memorial hospital in Fort Wayne, where ehe underwent surgery. Her room number is 307. Mrs. Helen Dugan Unkefer of Philadelphia, Pa., is visiting her mother, Mrs. C. A. Dugan in Decatur. Mrs. Cloyd Ruckawanifadaughters of Texas are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Tyndall here. Bob Rucker, a son, has been In Decatur for the past month with his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. -B. J. Clark and daughter Rosemary will leave Sunday for a week’s outing at Odessa Lake in Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gentis anddaughter Kathy of Wauseon, O„ are visiting relatives here for a week. Miss Bertha Heller, becatur librarian, will leave tonight for a two weeks* visit at Lake Chautauqua, N. Y. Steve Sutton, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sutton, who underwent an emergency appendectomy two weeks ago, is still confined to his home on North Second street. The Misses Sally McCullough and Gloria Koeneman left Thursday night for midwest rural youth camp at Camp Shaw, in Chattham. Mich. Mr.sand Mrs. Melvin Taylor and daughters of Three Rivers, Mich., have been visiting with relatives in Decatur. Mrs. James Newton and son Jimmy will travel to Chicago, 111. Sunday to visit James Newton, who is working at Mandel Brother’s jewelry store for the Jiext two weeks, replacing the manager who is on vacation. Mr. and 'Mrs. Lohmas Mclntosh & children Jerry, Tom and Linda will leave Monday for Fort Lauderdale, Fla., where they will spend one week. Mr. and Mrs. WflHatft Hoffman and their daughter Betty, of Indianapolis are visiting Mrs. Clara Runyon and Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Adams.
■ RTHSI At the Adams county memorial hospital: Richard and Alice Hoile Moses of Decatur are the parents of a baby boy born today at 9:10 a.m., weighing seven pounds and five ounces. Today at 5:56 am., a baby girl was born to Vernon and Colleen Evans Hirschy of Decatur, weighing six pounds and 9% ounces.
- THE DECATUR DATLf DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
■■ ~ — Society Item* for today's publication muitt be phoned in by 11 a. m. (Saturday 9:30 a.m.) Karen Striker —— phone 3-2121 SUNDAY Limberlost Trail Riders, Dr. and Mrs. Edward Peck, 1 p.m. * MONDAY Sacred Heart study club, Mrs. Dick Shell, 8 p.m. V.F.W. Jadies auxiliary, business meeting, 8 p.m. TUESDAY Happy Homemakers home demonstration olub, Mrs. Floyd Mitchel 7:30 p.m. Happy Homemakers home demonstration club, Mrs. Floyd Baker' 7:30 p. m. THURSDAY Mt. Pleasant W.S.C.S., Mrs. Robert Fuhrman, 1:30 p.m.
011O 11 Ml Admitted Henry Gerke. Decatur. Dismissed Wiley D. Morrison, Decatur; Robert Bebout, Decatur; Mrs. Roland Poling. Decatur: Mrs. Hai*old Sprunger and baby hoy. Berne: Mrs. James McCollum and baby boy, Geneva; and Mrs. Byron Lines and baby boy, Fort Wayne. Pedestrian Killed By Passenger Train GOSHEN, Ind. (UP) — Albert Vantine, 60, was killed Friday near his home when he stepped in the path of a New York Central Railroad passenger train. Farmland Man Killed As Tractor Overturns FARMLAND, Ind (UP)—Lafayette Sayre, 52, Farmland, was killed late Friday when his tractor Overturned while moving grass along Ind. 28 east of Farlanmd. State police said the tractor struck a cement highway marker and overturned, pinhing Sayre beneath it. The St. Peter Walther League .(Fuelling) is holding an Ice Cream Social, August sth, on the School Grounds, starting at 8:00 p. m. Everyone is welcomed. 181 t 3
Kismet Concludes Music Theater's Franke Park Year “Kismet,” a two-hour joy-ride on a musical magic carpet, concludes the Festival Music Theater’s 1956 season at Franke Park, Fort Wayne, with six performances scheduled August 17, 18. 19. 24, 25. 26. Authored by Robert Wright and George Forrest — the two men who turned "Song of Norway” into a hit — this lavish “Arabian Night set to music” will star Robert Coeherilte as Haaj the Beggar, and will introduce a newcomer to the Festival stage — Carol Ann Reed — who conies from Duqesne University, Pittsburgh, to co-star with Cocherille in the role of his daughter, Marsihah. James Voors, the festiva”s comedian, returns to play the Wazir of Police, He was seen earlier this season es Luther Bills tn ”SoUtti Pacific,” which also starred Cocherille as Emile De Becque. Richard Smith, the Ligonier baritone will portray the Cqliph, and Wanda Newman Pohl will depict the glamorous Lalume, wife of the Wazir. Filled with some of th'e most exotic music this side of Bagad, “Kismet” features “Stranger in Paradise,” "Baubles. Bangles and Beads,” “This Is My Beloved,” "Not Since Nineveh," and many others. Mail orders should be addressed to the Festival box office 411 Standard Bldg., 217 E. Berry St. A self-addressed envelope should accompany all orders. Phone reservations may be made on Anthony 2582. Ticket prices ares2.sO for box seats, >1.75 for terrace seats, and $1 for general admission, the latter seats all unreserved.
Two French Youths Are Blown To Bits MORLAIX. France (UP) — Two young French boys were blown to bits Friday by a World War II shell they .found in a field. Officials said the shell exploded as the boys tried to take it apart. Eight-Year-Old Boy Is Killed By Train GARY (UP) — Eight-year-old Odell Tenner, Gary, was killed Friday by a Michigan Centra.! Railroad train here while lizard hunting with his three brothers. Police learned the boy “froze” on the track when he was the train bearing down on Him. His brothers, ranging in age from 4 to 10, were not hurt. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur,
No Trace Is Found Os Bank’s Robbers Francesville Bank Robbed Os $27,777 FRANCESVILLE. Ind. (UP) — Calm returned to Francesville today on the heels of the excitement of a $27,777 bank holdup Friday. Meanwhile, police seemed to be running up a blind alley in their search for three men who staged the robbery by threatening three employes and a customer with two guns. State police said they had no clues as to the whereabouts of the bandits, who fled in a light blue Cadillac found abandoned hours later in a dense woods scarcely five miles from the scene of the crime. Tha. man ware described as swarthy, possibly of Mxican descent. They were believed to have vanished in the thickly populated Lake county area or Chicago. The car they used was stolen in Chicago. McDonald Signs Pact With Former Employer NEW YORK (UP) — David J. McDonald, president of the United Steelworkers of America, today signed a new steel contract with Jones & Laughlin, the steelmaking firm he once worker tor. •McDonald went to work for Jones ALaughlin at the age of 15, when George Flaccus Jr., vice president in charge of industrial relations who signed for the company, was only four.
DON’T TAKE A CHANCE TAKI PLENAMINS Smith Drcgr BUY “ and v SELL THROUGH CLASSIFIED ADS IN THE DEMOCRAT DAILY DECATUR
REDS PRAISE (CmHimted from «•■«» O»»> the canal cannot go unchallenged, but expressed confidence that the problem can be solved by moral rather than military force. Reports from Cairo said President Gamal A. Nasser will decide thia weekend whether Egypt will attend this month's Londan conference on Sues internationalizationHis answer is expected to be "no.” Cairo radio Friday night broadcast Egypt’s rejection of the Big Three declaration on Suez, but did not refer directly to the Western Invitation to Egypt to join 23 other nations in a discussion of the canal’s future. So far, Italy and Norway have formually accepted Invitations to the conference scheduled to open frere a week from Thursday, but a total of 13 nations have indicated hey will attend. Radio Mlscow today broadcast comments fro mt wo official Soviet organs denouncing the Western approach to Suez as “crude interference in the internal affairs of Arab countries" on behalf of “profiteering foreign capitalists.” The broadcast quoted the government organ Izvestia as saying Western actions demonstrate a "desire not for a peaceful settlement but for making the situation more acute.”
A FINAL MEMORIAL TRIBUTE... .... as we conduct it ... . is an effort to express a family’s devotion and respect, to meet their religious preferences, their needs — in short to render a thoughtful and helpful service to the living. —GILLIG & DOAN CONDITIONED FUNERAL HOME —— PHONE 3-3314
PAGE THREE
Auto Damaged Here ; Early This Morning ’ An auto driven by James Randen--1 bush of Decatur was damaged early this morning on North 12th street when thb underside of the car was ’ scraped by a manhole cover. Damage was estimated a SIOO to ’ vehicle. ' Robert V. Halsey, 19, of Biwabik, Minn., arrested Friday night for ’ speeding on U. S. 27 five miles j north of Decatur, was fined $1 and i costs In justice of the peace Floyd . Hunter’s court. . Court Budget For ’ 1957 Is Reduced Judge Myles F. Parrish of Adams ■ circuit court turned in his 1957 budget proposal to county auditor - Frank Kttson Friday and the Judge - had the distinction of presenting i the only proposed budget which - is less in dollars and cents. The court loppbd a little more than S4OO off the 1956 figure and he said In co doing, no salaries were ’ reduced. Most of the savings will ’ come from discounts in law library 1 books by paying cash for the new books and other small savings in 1 the various court operations.
