Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 94, Decatur, Adams County, 20 April 1957 — Page 3
SATURDAY. APRIL 20. 1957
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MR. AND MRS. E. J. ANSPAUGH, 4925 Holton Avenue. Fort .Wayne, have announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Betty, to King M. Sullivan, son _pf Mr. and Mrs. John J. Sullivan, Tillman Road, Fort Wayne.
Miss Anspaugh, formerly of Decatur, was graduated from Decatur high school and the St. Joseph school of nursing in Fort Wayne. She is a member of the Psi lota Xi sorority, and is presently on the nursing staff of St. Joseph hospital in Fort Wayne. Her fiance is a graduate of Central Catholic high school in Fort Wayne, and is associated with the Nickel Plate railroad. ’ The couple will exchange vows Saturday, July 6. — Photo by Anspaugh.*
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HP ASTOR YXRIAN cordially invites you to honor Jesus Christ by attending special Easter services on Easter Sunday. • Sunday School 9:45 A. M. “100” is our goal. • Morning Worship 10:30 A. M. ( . Sermon: “The Unexpected.” • Sunday Evening 7:45 P. M. - Sermon: “When CHRIST Appears.” ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH 1210 Elm St. Ph. 3-4771
1 ,Tl ' ■ Cion Pals The Union Pals 4-H club held their third meeting at the Inmanuel Lutheran school, April 9. The meeting was called to order and opened with the singing of songs. Pledges were led by Sandra Grote; roll call was answered by naming a superstition. Ann Lehrman read the minutes of the last meeting, followed by a report about the junior leader’s training school, given by Patsy Krucekeberg and Lois Jean Gerke. A demonstration was given by Nancy Adamson, Sharon Holt, and Barbara Rydell on a pineapple cottage cheese salad. A juding contest followed the demonstration. A health and safety report was given by Jean Wass, followed by initiation of the new members. A motion was made and seconded to adjourn the meeting. Refreshments were served by Lois Gerke and Katherine Bischoff. The next meet-’ ing will be held April 23. t The distance required to stop a car on ice changes from hour to hour. The nearer ice gets to the melting point, the more slippery it becomes.
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St. Vincent DePaul society will meet at the C. L. of C. Hall, Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. A dinner meeting of the Historical club will be held at 12.30 Wednesday, at the Trinity Evangelical United Brethren church. This will be the final meeting of this club year. The Ruth and Naomi circle of the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church will hold a regular meeting at the church, Wednesday afternoon at 2 o’clock. — Btosjajgl Mrs. D. Burdette Custer and son Johnnie left Friday via plane for Tampa, Fla., where they will vacation for several days. The two will accompany Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Custer home next weekend. M. and Mrs. Custer have spent the past five months at Lackland, Fla. Dr. and Mrs. John B. Terveer and daughter Mary Beth, Julie and Cathy, left Friday for Chicago, where the/ will spend the Easter holidays visiting with Mrs. Terveer’j parents Mr. and Mrs. William Derichs. Mrs. Dick Heller, Sr., was able to be downtown this morning, after being somewhat confined to her home on North Second street, with a painful ankle injury, .which she sustained earlier this week. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Smith and duaghters Jean and Deborah are spending the week-end at Pittsburgh, Pa., visiting with Mrs. Smith's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Holthouse and children, of Louisville, Ky., arrived today to spent Easter with Mrs. A. R. Holthouse. Kevin Whelan Jr., of Toledo, 0., arrived this week to spend the Easter holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Voglewede and family. Mr. Roy Bellinger, of Fort Wayne, is spending the Easter holidays with her son and daugh-ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Terveer, of Washington, D, C. Easter dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Rumschlag and daughter Susie, will be Mrs. B. T. Terveer and Miss Carolyn Terveer, Ivan Hakes, Miss Mary Martha Terveer, and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Rumschlag, and daughters Monica and Dorothy. Duane Davis, 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Davis, has been returned-to his home at 627 North Second street. from the Parkview memorial hospital. Duane has been a patient at the Fort Wayne hospital since he was struck by an automobile, March 26. He is in a complete body cast, but is getting along nicely. An 80-acre farm five miles north of Delphos, 0., has been purchased by the newly formed Delphos Country Club, Inc., for $26.000. - Witnesses at the $57,000 damage trial at Portland included Dr. Thomas A. Jean, Morristown; Dr. Robert L. Boze, Berne; Dr. Frederick O. Mackel, Fort Wayne; and Mrs. Elsie Springer, wife of the plaintiff, Jesse C. Springer, who claims the damages against Clarence G. Getting, from an accident which occurred five miles north of Decatur. W. Lowell Harper has returned from a business trip to New York City. ~ Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam Linn accompanied their granddaughter, Martha Scheel, to her home at Sheboygan, 111., after she had spent the past several days visiting here. Dr. Paul Hoile, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hoile, formerly of Decatur, now of Fort Wayne, is teaching marine zoology at the University of New Hampshire, Durham, N. H., where he recently completed his doctor's thesis on marine snails. Dr. Hoile, known to his schoolmates at Decatur high school as *'Piff r ’, is also a graduate of Valparaiso University, and received his master's degree front the University of Notre Dame. State Wheat Acreage Quota Is Reduced WASHINGTON (W — A wheat acreage quota about 7,000 acres below this year’s has been set for Indiana for 1958. The government set the quota at 1,137,045 acres, compared with 1,144,137 in an announcement Fri.day.
TUB DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA "
Society Items lox today's publication must be phoned in by 11 a. m. (Saturday 9:30 a.m.) Phone 3-2121 GWEN HILYARD SATURDAY Easter Bake sale, at the Goodyear store, sponsored by the Chi Rho Sunday School classofthe Zion E. and R. church, starting 'St 9 a.m. Bake Sale by W.M.A. class of Nuttman E.U.B. church, 9 a.m. building formerly Gerber’s market. Bake Sale by Pleasant Mills high school band, 8:30 a.h., Western Auto store. Bake sale by V.F.W. auxiliary, .8:30 a.m., Firestone Store. ' MONDAY Monmouth Parent and Family Life Education study group, Monmouth high school, 7 p.m. ( Academy of Friendship, Women of the Moose, Moose home 7:30 p.m. Pythian Sister officers, 7 p.m., K. of P. home. Pythian Sisters, 7:30 p.m., K. of P. home. Past Presidents Parley of Adams post 43, of the American Legion auxiliary, Mrs. Harold Tieman, 8 p.m. - - - Evening circle 1, Methodist church lounge, 8 p.m. Decatur Woman’s club. Youth and Community center, 8 p.m. TUESDAY Jolly Housewives Home Demonstration club, 7:30p.m., Pleasant Mills school. Church Mothers Study dub, 8 p.m., Mrs. Raymond Lehman. Eta Tau Sigma sorority, Mrs Ray fieller, 8 p.m. Psi lota Xi “April Fool’s party, { Youth and Community center, 8 p.m. Olive Rebekah lodge, meeting and inspection, Odd Fellows hall, 7:30 p.m. Root township Home Demonstration club, Americian Legion home, 1 p.m. Delta Theta Tau sorority, Mrs. Kenneth Deßolt, 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY Women’s association of Presbyterian church, at the church, 8 p.m. Ruth and Naomi circle, Zion E. and R. church parlors, 2 p.m. St. Vincent DePaul society, C. L. of C. hall, 2 p.m. Historical club dinner meeting, Trinity E.U.B. church, 12:30 p.m. THURSDAY St. Paul’s Ladies Aid, Mrs. Lawrence Smith, all day. A six pound, 10 ounce son was born at 7:35 a.m. Friday, to Cecil and Matilda Costello Macias, of 717 North Second street. Ronald and Carol Case Gaskill, of route 1, Monroeville, are parents of a daughter, born at 1:11 p.m. Friday. She weighed six pounds, two and a half ounces. At 1:30 a.m. today, a six pound, six ounce son was born to Waldo and Helen Fennig Marbach, of 210 South Eighth street. ■' / *—■■ .. 4&|OsftlTAL Admitted Miss Sheila Mae Reynolds, Decatur. ;' 1 Dismissed Mrs. Opal Kehm, Berne; Mrs. Clarence Weber, Decatur; Mrs. Lester Manley and baby boy, Monroe; Miss Joyce Elaine Lengerich, Monroe; Mrs. Ronald Brian and baby girl. Monroe; Jay Donald Morrison, Berne. ———N--—-WBMMUR —— --- —; —■ — —- Serving CHURCHES ALL FAITHS WELCOMB WAGON Phone 3-31 M or t-Zm
Easier Services As Zion Lutheran Three Services ' On Easter Sunday The chief festival service of the feast of the resurrection of Our Lord wil be conducted at 10:30 o’clock Sunday morning at Zion Lutheran church, West Monroe street. Processional and recessional by the choirs, a guest speaker speaking on the Easter theme: “A Certain Hope,” (Job 19), 25), the intermediate chpir and the church choir singing joyful anthems, and ■the festival celebration of the Holy ers! mwill . m -tAwaYjott cxixitriit whi aUU LT TV irMlvu Spirit of this worship hour. The Rev. Edgar P._ Schmidt, pastor of the church, will serve as liturgist of the service and officiant at the Sacrament. Donald Bieberich will accompany the service and will precede it with a concert of hymns on the Carillonic bells. The nonchurched public is cordially invited to worship at this Easter service. ,The order of worship follows: Organ Prelude: “Risen Today" —Ellen Jane Lorenz. Processional hymn: “Welcome, Happy Morning!” - Invocation by the pastor. Confession of sins and absolution. The Introit, Gloria Patri, Kyrie, and'Gloria in Excelsis. The salutation and the Easter collect. - ' The Easter epistle and the gradual with “Hallelujah" response. Intermediate choir: ‘‘Angels, Roll the Rock Away.” The Easter gospel. Confession of faith—The Nicene creed. Easter hymn: “Awake my heart with gladness” Sermon: “A Certain Hope,” Job 19, 25a. Offertory: “An Easter Offertorv”—Roy E. Nolte. Choir anthem: “In Joseph’s Lovely Garden,” by Dickinson. The Easter praver. The liturgy and celebration of the sacrament. Easter hymir “Jesus Lives! The Victory’s Won!” The thanksgiving and benediction. Recessional hymn: “Christ the Lord is Ris'n Today.” Postlude: “The Resurrection’*— Roger C. Wilson. Members of Zion Lutheran church will bring an Easter thankoffering to their risen Lord by special envelope and on all plate offerings at the-three Easter services. The offerings will flow into the church’s building fund. Also the Sunday school children have had special coin, folders during the Lenten season which they will bring Easter Sunday as their thank-offering to their living Redeemer. The children’s offerings will be gathered at the 8 o'clock festival service and at the Sunday school hour. Two other Easter festival services will be conducted at Zion Lutheran church at 6 and 8 o’clock. No two of the services will be identical. Easter To Pentecost Attendance Crusade Henry Krueckeberg and G. A. Schultz, elders and co-chairmen of the Evangelism Committee of Zion Lutheran Church, West Monroe Street, announced the opening of an Easter to Pentecost church attendance crusade at the Easter services Sunday morning. This crusade is intended to follow the sharing Christ plan with which the committee opened the Lenten season the early part of March. The special effort by the church and 90 members of the congregation who are calling on friends and prospects will cover a fourteenweek period, March 3 to June 9' Mrs. Herman Krueckeberg, secretary of the evangelism committee, recently mailed a detailed report of the March 3rd visitations made by the sharing Christ callers. The Rev Edgar P. Schmidt, pastor of the church, is instructing a class of 71 adults, most of whom were invited to the lectures as a result of the sharing Christ visitations. A complete schedule of the worship services from Easter to Pentecost will be included with the Easter Sunday church bulletins distributed at all Easter services, plus an insert announcing the Easter to Pentecost church attendance crusade. “These are the things we except to accomplish.” suggested Rev. Schmjdt in explanation, “We want our new members to join in our church activities; we desire that our new friends and prospective members became better acquainted with our church and its Christ-centered program; and we are vitally interested in holding the attendance between Easter and Pentecost at the same high enjoyed all during the season of Lent.” COURI NEWS Estate Cases The inventory for the estate of Matilda S. Wehmeyer has been filed. It shows $240 in real property, $l5O in household goods, $19.129.87 in money and S6BO in other property for a total value of $20,199.87. Proof of the notices of appointment and final settlement has been filed for the estate of Frank R. Braun. The final report has been submitted and approved. The executor has been discharged and the estate is closed.
? -.1 .1 \ v 7 J'J Z J ' BE ■ - ’ v . x olf fl 1T I I ils -■ -»bPI - A'' H •JBFbM.i Kbl ■<. < ■, | its. .. ■ ■. —<■ .-A.. '? "" .dJ THE CROWD OF GOOD FRIDAY worshippers pours forth from the Decatur Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church on West Monroe street. Services were held at the church from 12:30 p. m. Friday until 2 o’clock.—(Staff Photo.)
Twosomes Popping Up In Hollywood Swedish Import Is Bing Crosby Friend By ALINE MOSBY » United Press Hollywood Writer HOLLYWOOD ( UP)—Spring in Hollywood: Twosomes are popping up like crocuses around the cinema city, with such holdouts as Bing Crosby and Richard Egan in the romantic section of the gossip columns. The beautiful new Swedish import, Inger Stevens, apparently has replaced dark, pert - nosed Kathy Grant as Bing’s sometime dinner companion. But Inger, a vivacious Grace Kelly type, insists thiey’re "just friends” —an old Hollywood expression that sometimes camouflages the truth. Bing and Inger met when she became his leading lady in "Man on Fire," her first Hollywood movie. The couple also dated in Palm Springs. “I’ve seen hint for dinner several times, but it’s nothing serious," reports Inger. “I see a lot of people. I’m in the process of get: ting a divorce sometime this year so I'm certainly not thinking about marrying anyone. “Bing is a wonderful man. Naturally when you work with someone you become friends.” Rugged - looking Richard Egan and actress Pat Hardy admit they are closer to die altar. Joanne Woodward, expected to make a notable impact in “The Three Faces of Eve”, has told friends she may marry new star Paul Newman "after his divorce is final” (another Hollywood expression). Frank Sinatra’s latest flame is Hungarian actress Eva Bartok, in the headlines recently in a hassle with an ex-boy friend. Swedish actress Mai Zetterling’s friendship with Tyrone Pqwer has brought her to his movie set of “The Sun Also Rises” in Moralia, Mexico, The much - married Rita Hayworth. fresh from a divorce from Dick Haymes, has a new steady date—Jim Hill, the 41-year-old exNBC messenger boy who recently made “The Sweet Smell of Success” for Hecht-Hill-Lancaster, the most successful independent producers in the movie business. In the younger set, Natalie Wood and hotel heir Nicky Hilton still are an item. But, then, Natalie has to share Nicky with Joan Collins. Natalie also has another romance going, with Lance Reventlow, Barbara Hutton's son. Natalie’s ex - boy friend, Elvis Presley, already has taken up with a new beauty, Yvonne Lime. Like Natalie, she’ll visit the sideburned singer’s folks in Memphis. Then there are the perennial twosomes of Jayne Mansfield and Mickey Hargitay, Kim Novak and Mack Krim, Tony Perkins and Norma Moore. April 30 Deadline To File Payments Producers who sold wool or unhorn lambs during the period, April 1, 1956 through March 31, 1957, are eligible to file an application for an Incentive payment provided the application is filed at the Adams county ASC office not later than April 30, according to Oscar T. .Brown, chairman of the Adams county ASC Committee. Producers are required to present acceptable evidence of sales for both wool and unshorn lambs at the time the application is filed. Also, if the sheep or lambs were purchased unshorn after April 1, 1956, the purchasing evidence must also be filed in order that the producer may be eligible for payment. Payments will not be made for less than $3. Brown stated that sheep and unshorn lambs after April 1, 1957 will be eligible for payment under the 1957 program which began April 1, 1957 and ends March 31, 1958.
To Televise Pope's Message On Easter Radio Broadcast Os Talk Around World VATICAN CITY (UP) — Pope Pius Xll's Easter appeal for peace Sunday, will be heard and witnessed by the greatest audience in the history of the Roman Catholic Church. For the first time the Pope’s Easter Sunday address from the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica will be televised. In addition, it will be broadcast around the wJrld by the powerful Vatican Radio and witnessed directly by an expected throng of a quarter million jammed into St. Peter’s Square. At the end of the long address the 81-year-old Pope will impart his blessing "urbi et or bi" (to the city and to the world). The blessing applies to the radio and television audience too. At midnight tonight the bells of Rome’s 447 churches will signal the end of the 40 - day Lenten period of prayer and fasting and proclaim the 1,924th anniversary
EASTER SERVICE . " ■ XwL -a<-•• 9:30 A.M. “He is not here, for He is risen as He said.” A cordial invitation is extended to all those' “ not obligated to services elsewhere. One of the highlights of the service will be the use of the new Wurlitzer organ, supplied by the Decatur Music House, and played by Mary Schumm. CHURCH of the HAZARENE 7th & Marshall C. E. Lykins, minister I * wfs ■ Mas I 1 11 IjAi (W fyffi \i iwß ■ ( f Families in modest circum- - stances need'not overspend nor is the well-to-do familj penalized when Zwick’s' Is chosen. Every tribute, we conduct is complete, dignified and priced the same to all persons. ZWICK ,2; 'n.,er» J. Zwick-Bmer later egg Sinc»lß9t- ♦ e«ONf. M4OI
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of Christ’s resurrection. Today in Roman Catholic churches throughout the world the “tenebrae" rites were recited for the third and last day. At 7 p.m. the solemn Eastern vigil will begin in St. Peter’s Basilica. At 10 p.m. it will begin in Rome’s three other major basilicas. They will end with masses starting at the stroke of midnight. . • Baptist Brotherhood Meets Monday Night The Baptist men’s brotherhood will have its April meeting at the church Monday, at 6 p.m. The meeting will begin with a pancake and sausage supper. The guest speaker for the evening is to be Sgt. W. E, Hunter of the Indiana state police. Weldon Soldner will be in chkrge of the devotional period. Harrison J. Hakes, president of the brotherhood will preside. Every member of the men’s group is urged to be present. . ... - - - ... ■ ' DON’T TAKE A CHANCE TAKE PLENAMINS I f Smith Drug Co.
