Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 71, Decatur, Adams County, 25 March 1957 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Rural Youth Host Seniors Thursday High School Seniors Os County Guests All Adams county high school seniors have been invited to be the special guests of the Adams county rural youth at the annual senior night meeting on Thursday night at the Lincoln school gym in Decatur beginning at 7:30 p.m. Earl Yoder is chairman of the senior night committee. Farm Bureau and extension advisors will serve on the reception committee and registration will be in charge of Nancy Shoaf. Rowena Merriman and Sondra Brown. Legora Markle will lead the group singing and special features from the Adams county high schools will be included on the program. John Marks, state consultant from the Indiana Farm Bureau in Indianapolis. will attend the meeting and explain the rural youth program to the seniors. Attendance prizes will be awarded with Barbara Lewton in charge. Gloria Koeneman aad Sally McCullough will be in charge of the t recreation and refreshments will

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be served by Alice Kukelhan. Merlin Alt and James Schmiege. All high school seniors, rural youth members and anyone interested in the rural youth program is invited to attend this meeting. Rural Youth Board To Meet Wednesday A district IV rural youth board meeting will be held Wednesday evening, it was announced today by Gloria Koeneman, district president. The meeting will be held at the Farm Bureau community house in Huntington beginning at 8 p.m. Rural Youth members comprising the district board include the county presidents and secretaries and the district officers. Any other interested rural youthers and advisors are invited to attend. Items to be" discussed at the board meeting include: April district meeting April 15 at Tipton; district square dance June 15; district bowling tournament; district week-end trip; week-end officer’s training school, reorganization of the Blackford and Miami county rural youth clubs, and the final plans to reach the membership goals before April 15. Huntington county will serve the refreshments at the close of the meeting.

Four Persons Fined In Decatur Courts Three Are Fined On Traffic Violations - Fred Engle of Rugg street, who entered a plea of not guilty to a charge of public intoxication last Monday in city court, appeared in court again this morning for trial. He was found guilty of the charge and was sentenced to six months in the county jail, with five months suspended. He was also fined $1 and costs. Also in city court this morning was Rufus Stucky, of Dierites street, who was arrested several days ago by state police on a charge of improper passing. He was fined $1 and costs. Two motorists appeared in justice of the peace court tot answer charges of traffic violations. Daniel Overly of Washington Court House. 0., was .fined $1 and costs for speeding on U. S. highway 27. William H. Fisher, 32, of 239 North 13th street, arrested Saturday on Mercer avenue for speeding and reckless driving, was fined $1 and costs in J.P. court. Trade in a good town — Decatur

TH® BBCATOB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Cattle Feeder Tour Is Slated Wednesday Adams county cattle feeders will have an opportunity to see several types of feeding operations at toe tour Wednesday, reports Leo N. Seltenright, county agent. Russell Browr, extension animal husbandman, will be the discussion leader on the tour. At Kenneth Schnepfs, a large dry lot feeding operation will be seen using upright silos for silage feeding; at Marvin Stoutenberry s the cattle run to a self-feeding bunker silo and self feeding hay keeper; at Bill Schnepfs a silo unloader will be observed as well as a mechanical feeding bunk. Heifers on dry lot feeding will be seen at the L. Martin Busche farm and steers on a self feeding bunker silo at toe Ernest Busche farm. The tour starts at 9:30 a.m. at Kenneth Schnepfs, goes to Stoutenberry’s at 10:30 a.m., to Bill Schnepfs at 1 p.m. and to Busche’s at 2 p.m. Everyone interested in cattle feeding is invited to attend this tour. - Judging Contest Scheduled Tuesday The annual Adams county 4-H and FFA poultry and egg and

crops judging contest will be held Tuesday, at the Berne high school agriculture room and shop. In charge will be agriculture teachers Bill Journay. Martin Watson, Eugene Sprunger, and county agent Leo N. Seltcnright. Live birds for the poultry judging will be furnished by the following hatcheries: Decatur, Model, Globe, Berne Hi-Way, Baumgartner and Limberlost. The judge will be Wayne Detwiler of Steckley’s Hatchery at Kendallville. Eggs will be furnished and judged by Ed Meyer of the Northwestern Ohio poultry association of Napoleon. FEAR (Contir -M from r*n» nn«> A special Santa Fe rescue train, made up of two diesel units, reached Amarillo from Clovis,’ N. M., at 12:01 a. m. Trains Rescue Motorists Twenty-eight stranded persons that had been picked up along the way were riding in the cabs of the locomotives. They included 16 passengers and a driver from a Texas. New Mexico and Oklahoma bus, and 11 motorists. Another Santa Fe train from Lubbock reached Amarillo at 3:30 a. m. Sixty persons who were picked up from stalled buses and Cars were on the train.

Film Oscars To Be ' Awarded Wednesday Wardrobe Worry Os Actress Nominees HOLLYWOOD (UP)-Oscar time in Hollywood means a crisis a day, and today’s is the “wardrobe worry"—keeping those beautiful actress nominees out of plunging necklines and hoop skirts. Movietown is in a general flurry over Wednesday night’s 29th annual Academy Awards. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences even has assigned designer Edith Head, a six-time Oscar winner and double nominee this year herself, to ride herd on the movie stars' gowns. Miss Head must see to it that the female nominees and presenters look presentable on tee big televised event. One rule: No plunging necklines. NBC will have a wardrobe girl backstage with lace to fill in any wide open spaces. “We must be sure the audience looks at the girl's face and not her anatomy,” Miss Head explained today in het Paramount Studio office. Dresses Must Be Navigable “I also ask the stars not to wear costumes that look like a revival of ‘Gone with the Wind’, Some actresses figure the bigger the dress, tee better. One year g'star wore a hoop skirt and she ‘ had to be helped up the steps to the stage! “The stars must wear dresses that are navigable. They must be able to walk gracefully without cumbersome trains or too tight skirts. One year an actress slithered onto the stage in a tight dress gnd got a laugh. We can't have that happen again.” Deborah Kerr, Dorothy Malone, Mercedes McCambridge, Carroll Baker and other nominess also are warned by Miss Head not to bare their backs to the world. “The backward view is as important as the front view," she explained. Some Break Rules Last year a star click-clacked her way across the stage in backless pumps, sounding, as Miss Head says, “like the charge of the light brigade.” Now the nominees are asked to wear shoes that stay on their feet. They’re also told not to wear black or, with the men in black, tee event would look like a morticians’ convention. The gowns must be full length and minus glitter or two-tone colors that make them appear gaudy on television. Some stars brefk the rules—and Create a sensation. One year the actresses dutifully showed up in fluffy pastels. But Marlene Dietrich, not even a nominee but a presenter, stole the show in a slinky black tight dress slit to the knee. Another year Bette Davis won the most notice in an “illegal” black sheath dress plus a strange turban to hide her head, shaved for a movie role. “Well, they are great stars who can make their own rules,” admitted Miss Head.

MEIEEB f

EARLY WEEK FEATURES! Good Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Only! “SUPER-RIGHT" PURE PORK SAUSAGE 3 1-lb. seoo i ROLLS I FRESH, TEXAS GROWN Carrots 2 £ls* A & P’S OWN PURE VEG. SHORTENING dexo 3 2 79* CLARCO ALL-GREEN, LIMA Beans 4 Z 45* THE ABOVE PRICES ARE EFFECTIVE MONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY AT ALL A & P STORES. The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. CASH SAVINGS ARE YOUR BEST SAVINGS —AT A& P

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Society Items tai today’s publication must be phoned in by 11 a. hi. (Saturday 9:30 *.m.) Phone 3-2121 GWEN HILYARD MONDAY Benefit supper, sponsored by the Decatur Lions club, Community Center, from 5 until 7 p.m. pancakes and sausage. Pythian Sisters, K of P. home, 7:30 p.m.; Needle dub to follow. Academy of Friendship of the Women of the Moose, Moose home, 7:30 p.m. Sunshine Girls, K. of P. home, immediately after school. Circle I, Methodist W.S.C.S.. Mrs. John Ebersole, 8 p.m. Music department rehearsal, Zion Evangelical and Reformed church, 7:30 p.m. Evening circle II of Methodist W.S.C.S., Mrs. Sylvester Everhart, 7 p.m. TUESDAY Loyal Daughters of the Bethany E.U.B. church, Mrs. Clarence Smith. 7:30 p.m. Delta Theta Tau sorority, Mrs. Franklin Lybarger, 8:30 p.m. Eagles auxiliary, Eagles hall, 8 p.m. Jolly Housewives home demonstration club. Hubert Ehrsam home 7:30 p.m. Kirkland Ladies dub, Adams Central school, 7:30 p.m. • Preble Sunny circle home demonstration club, Preble Recreation center. 7:30 p.m. Church Mothers study dub, Mrs. Winston Rawley, 621 Winchester street, 8 p.m. Olive Rebekah lodge 86, Odd Fellows hall, regular time; Three Link club to follow. De ta Lambda and Xi Alpha Xi of Beta Sigma Phi, Mrs. George Bair, 8 p.m. ___ Root township home demonstration club, postponed until Wednesday. . WEDNESDAY St. Vincent DePaul society. C. L. of C. hall, 2 p.m. Ladies Shakespeare club, Mrs. George Buckley, 2:30 p.m. Ruth and Naomi cirde of Zion Evangelical and Reformed church, 2 p.m. Bethany Circle, Zion E. and R. parlor, immediately after church. Historical dub, Mrs. Roger Kelly, Stratton Place, 2:30 p.m. Root township home demonstration club, Mrs. Dale Moses, 1 p.m. Union township home demonstration dub, Mrs. Hugh Nidlinger, 1:30 p. m. THURSDAY Ruralistic study club, Mrs. Amelia Miller, 8 p. m. Zion Lutheran Needle club, parish hall, 1 p. m.

INSURANCE...; PROTECTION THAT PROVIDES PEACE OF MIND! CONSULT THIS AGENCY TODAY! COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS JIM COWENS 2W Court St. Phone 3-3601 Decatur, Ind.

MONDAY. MARCH 25. WCT

Monroe W. C. T. U., Mrs. Homer Winteregg, 7 p. m. Order of Eastern Star, Masonic hall, 7:30 p. m. Merry Matrons home demonstration club; Mrs. Vincent Wurm, 7:30 p.m, Outlines Growth Os National Tea CHICAGO — Presiding over the annual meeting of the company.’s shareholders, H. V. McNamara, president of the Nation Tea Co., outlined the company’s progress in store modernization and rehabilitation over the past 12 years under his executive management, during which the chain has growth to be the fifth largest in tee nation. In commenting on tee company’s growth, McNamara stated that National Tea Co. was operated 827 stores at the close of 1944, and in the ensuing 12 years under his management, a total of 601 new stores have been opened and paced in operation, of which 394 ajtores were opened in new locations, and 207 stores were relocations of older stores which had become outgrown. Decatur Student Is On Dean's List MADISON, N. J. — Mrs. Dana M. Brentlinger of Decatur, Ind., is on the current dean’s list at Drew University. This honor is based on her academic achievements for the first semester of the present school year. Mrs. Brentlinger, a graduate of Decatur high, school, is sophomore in the college of liberal arts. She is concentrating in economics.

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