Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 158, Decatur, Adams County, 6 July 1957 — Page 3
' SATURDAY. JULY 8. 1957
' F^^^HHF"' p- al ™HE't IZX. : 4 ■ .ViZ.* * '■ •Ha ~..£,'. ■ ;■ ' >*, T —■---’tJ - - - ■ A. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Byer
Linda Fuhrman Is Married Recently To Richard Byer Reciting nuptial vows at the Mount Pleasant Methodist church, Mias Linda Darnell Fuhrmap, eld* est daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl G. Fuhrman, route one, became the bride of Richard Byer, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Byer, route six, Sunday afternoon. Officiating at the 1:30 o'clock ceremony at an altar banked with palms and baskets of white roses and .blue delphiniums was the Rev. George Christian. Organist for the pre-nuptial musicale was Mrs. Nerval Fuhrman, and Mrs. Evelynn Kingsley was vocalist. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown of marquisette and lace. The fitted bodice was beautified with ruffles of lace and pearl buttons and designed with a double scalloped collar and fitted sleeves The fully gathered skirt fell to a cathedral length train. She chose a silk illusion bonnet and veil with deep imported lace edging. White roses surrounded a white rose corsage she later wore going away. Attending her sister as maid of honor, Miss Betty Fuhrman appeared in a gown of baby blue net over taffeta. The fitted lace bodice was topped with a scalloped neckline, while the full skirt was Boor length. Her headdress was of ruffles and flowered net. Miss Carla Snyder, route two. served as bridesmaid. Miss Barbara Fuhrman, sister of the bride, junior bridesmaid, and little Miss
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Joyce Ann Houser, Ossian, flower girl. Their ensembles were lavender, mint, and baby blue, respectively, and styled identically to that of the maid of honor. The honor attendant carried pink carnations; the bridesmaids yellow chrysanthemums. Groomsman was Leon Byer, brother of the bridegroom, and ushering the guests were Norbert Byer, brother of the bridegroom, and Earl Lee Miller, uncle of the bride, of Van Wert, route four. Master Dale Boroff, Ohio City, 0.. carried the rings on a white ’ lace heartshaped pillow. Mrs. Fuhrman attended her daughter’s wedding in an ice blue lace-over-taffeta dress with which she wore white accessories. Mrs. Byer selected a black and white linen ensemble with white accessories. Corsages of red roses completed their attire. Two hundred and fifty guests were received following the ceremony at the home of the bride’s parents. Pink and white crepe paper adorned the gift and serving tables, along with white roses. Centered on the lace-covered bridal table was the wedding cake. Servers for the reception were the Misses Claudia Caston, route one, Carol Bieberich, route two, Joyce Kirshner, route three, Doreen Beery, route two, and Marylin Reihking, route two * When the couple left for Michigan and Pokagon state park, the bride was wearing a nayy blue linen suit with which she chose white accessories, and the white rose corsage from her bridal bouquet. The bride attended Monmouth high school, while the bridegroom is a graduate of Pleasant Mills high school. Mr. and Mrs. Byer will make their home in Pleasant Mills. H f HBl Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoffman, 922 Line street, announced the adoption of a 13-week-old son, named Daniel T., yesterday. At the Adams county memorial hospital: To Lester and Sally Ross Schwartz, Berne, a six-pound, eight-ounce son was born at 8:50 p.m. Friday.
MIBS SARAH FRANK HONORED AT MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER Miss Sara Frank, bride-elect of L. J. Montague, was feted with a miscellaneous shower Friday evening at the home of Miss Shirley Workinger. Miss Mary Harkless .was assisting hostess in the event. Tonight at 6:30 in the Union Chapel Evangelical United Brethren church, the couple will be united in marriage. Pink and white dominated the color scheme, and a bridal doll under a flowered arch with a bouquet of pink flowers was the centerpiece for the gift table. When she arrived, the bride-to-be received a kitchen corsage—constructed with a dish towel, three measuring spoons, and a metal choreboy, tied with a pink ribbon. She also received an apron autographed by the guests. In the games played during the evening, Mrs. Jim Moser and Mrs. Barbara Andrews won the right to present prizes to the .guest of honor. ■ ,*• H . Refreshments were served to the Mesdarties Myron Frank, Floyd Andrews, Max Andrews, Frank Crist, Richard Speakman, Robert Workinger, Jim Moser, and James L. Wilson, and the Misses Mildred Grote, Marilyn Foor, Donna Venis, Donna Fast, and the honored guest. Unable to attend were Mrs. Maude Lister, Miss Shirley Wass, and Miss Helen Roth. ROLAND MILLERS HOSTS TO FIRST MITCH REUNION . Thirty-four of the Mitch family came to the country home of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Miller, when they entertained for the family’s first reunion, Sunday. Dinner and supper were served and the remainder of the after and evening were spent in games—including croquet, ball, and horseshoe. Present for this first version of what is to be an annual occasion were: Bryce Miller, Greenville, O.; Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Mitch and Debbie and Patti. Van Wert. O.; Mrs. Lawrence Strunkenburg and Cindy and Cristy, Convoy, O.; Mr .and Mrs. Kay Miller and Debbie, Wren, 0.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller and Yvonne and Cindy, Mr. and Mrs. Max Kanter and Diana and Connie, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kanter and Mrs. Vora Kranter. New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. David Furthmiller, Fort Wayne; and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lough and Karen and Vicki, and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Mitch and Carol and Dianna, Decatur. Monroe’s Better Homes demonstration club will convene Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Herbert Fruechte. The meeting is slated to begin at 7:30 p.m.
Admitted Mrs. David Neireiter, Decatur. Dismissed Mrs. Marie Slusher, Decatur; Charles Bohnke, Hoagland. Graduates Recently 1/Lt. Max Franklin Andrews, son of Mrs. Floyd Andrews, was recently graduated from the officers candidate school at Fort Benning, Ga. He, his wife, the former Barbara Hilyard, and two children are presently in Decatur visitins with relatives, after which the family will move to Fort Riley, Kan., where Lt. Andrews will begin his new assignment.
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Society Items ft>i today’s publication must be phoned in by 11 a. m. (Saturday 9:30 a.m.) Phone 3-2121 BARBARA FIECHTER ~ SATURDAY Jolly Housewives home demonstration club bake sale, Western Auto store, 8:30 to noon. SUNDAY Ice cream social, Immanuel Walther League, Immanuel Lutheran church. County Farm Bureau Picnic, Lehman Park, Berne. 12 noon. MONDAY Past Presidents Parley, Amerif can Legion Home, I p.m. TUESDAY Rose Garden club, Mrs. C. D. Amick, 2 p.m. Eagles’ Auxiliary, Eagles hail, 8 p.m. Mount Pleasant WSCS, Mrs. Lionel Brentlinger, 1 p.m. Monroe Better Homes Demonstration club, Mrs. Herbert Fruchte, 7:30 p.m. THURSDAY, Officers of Women of Moose, 7:38 p.m., general meeting, 8 p.m., Moose home. Story Error Leads To Wrong Impression A mistake in a story concerning an application for hardship discharge by John A. Kintz, Jr., might lead people to believe that some farmers were allowed to put acreage in the soil bank after the March deadline, Mrs. Mafy Howard, secretary of the ASC, said today. The story implied erroneously that John Kintz, Jr., put 12 acres in the soil bank after the March deadline. Actually, the land was put into the soil bank by his father, John Kintz, Sr., in February, when he decided that he would be unable to farm it this year. Parents Arid Friends Association To Meet Chapter three of the parents and friends association of the Fort Wayne State School, will hold their regular meeting at the Wolcottville park Sunday, July 14, at 6:30 p.m. Feature of the meeting will be a potluck supper. Hot and cold drinks will be provided. During the business meeting, officers for the coming year will be elected. For persons who have a child there or are interested in one at the State School, the group extends this invitation: “Please come out and help us plan how we can make him happier there.” Sugar-Sweet! Printed Pattern * Ur . Lr •f\ s /vl * J •• y u— -L4- — J±f\ •/> I \ AB 1 I w I I * * (wn 9070 W VJ sizes /yrr 2—B f » uTMifaHinkcffM A yoke of frosty white pique, with tempting “cherry” trim!. Little girls are sure to love this summer dress; it's s-0-0 pretty! Sew it in gay checks, plaids — with our easy Printed Pattern! Printed Pattern 9570: Children’s sizes 2,4, 6, 8. Size 6 requires 2 yards 35-inch fabric; % yard for contrast yokes. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, faster, accurate. ’’ Send FIFTY CENTS in coins fpr this pattern—add 5 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing,j Sand to Marian Martin, care of Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE. - SIZE and STYLE NUMBER.
MmW ■/ ■ ww . ' jMhwEaML. ctt& I •»_ ■. W*# f i- /-<>;'■■ . W|9BP S •■M&' .„ wMSjMfa :. g wMßßSipffi*** -' *’ i. I i W ?■ J i£ ’' j % ' <O3l 1 wHHI #< ■ w - wBI -ImMR _.wHB MISS LINDA JANELLE NORRIS, youngest daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence T. Norris, 121 South Fourth street, is engaged to wed Jerry Wayne Kaehr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dorris Heath, 324 Grant street. Kaehr was a member of the Decatur high school graduating class of 1957, and will attend Lakeland College, Sheboygan, Wis., this fall. He is currently employed at the Goodyear store. The bride-elect will be a senior at Decatur high school this fall, and is employed at the Decatur public library. \ No date has been set for the wedding.
Perry Stauffer, nephew of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Bolt, route five, and son of the former Lucile Ogg, formerly of Decatur, is making appearances on station WANE-TV. July 4 he appeared with the Boy Scout troop of which he is leader* As a member of Jthe Fremont Chamber of Commerce, he has led in youth activities, among them square dance calling for young people. Recently he appeared with a youth group—among them his brother Dave —on the station, and he will be making similar appearances later on. Mr. and Mrs. Theron Fenstermaker, of Geneva, and children, Shirley and Mike, will motor to the home of Elden Holsapple at Mitchell in Lawrence county thi# weekend for a southern-style chevon barbecue. The famous southern treat, consisting of young kid roasted over green hickory wood, will be the main feature of the visit. Staff Sergeant Robert Metzger and AIC Mike Coyne, of Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, D.C., visited in Decatur Friday. The two are spending several days with the John Metzger family in Ohio City, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Don Grant and family of Kokomo, are visiting over the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Zeser. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Beehler and family of Dayton, 0., visited in Decatur Thursday and Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Hann and family and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Beehler and family spent last weekend at the Hann cottage near Hanover. On vacation at Pretty Lake, north of Kendallville, beginning this noon, are Mr. and Mrs. Karl Reinking and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Reinking and their families. The Karl Reinking children are Janet, Larry, and Kathy, and Edwin’s are Marilyn, Connie, Denny, and Jimmy. Cassius Keller, and sons David and John, of Washington, D.C., will arrive in Decatur Tuesday, to spend several days visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Simeon Hain, Jr., and Bernard Hain and family. Still Ration Food In East Germany A copy of an East German ration card for meat, shortening, and sugar, received at the Decatur Daily Democrat recently, shows that 12 years after the end of the second world war, food rationing is still going on in that Communist country. In West Germany, food rationing ended in 1948, nine years ago. The East Germans are now allowed 45 grams of meat (1% ounces) a day: 30 grames of shortening (a little over 1 ounce}: and 40 grams of sugar <not quite 1% ounces). The ration card copy was sent by a group in West Germany which is interested in getting West Germans to send food parcels to East Germany to show the Communist East Germans how much better off the free West Germans are. The card sent was for March. 1957. HOLIDAY DEATH (CnntlwnMl from One) feet to her death. Mrs. Ethyl C. Hamilton, 55, known as Ethel D’Arcy, was giving her farewell performance before retirement, when the accident happened. At Prescott, Ariz., rodeo performer Odis Sullivan, 27, was trampled to de?th in a Brahma bull-riding contest. Trade in a good town — Decatur
State Traffic Toll Nine For Holiday Two Children Among Accident Victims By UNITED PRESS Indiana’s traffic death toll for the Fourth of July holiday period was hiked to nine Friday with fatalities counted in four - accidents? Two children were among the latest victims. t Nine-year-old Cheryl Kallas of Gary was injured fatally when her bicycle* was hit by a truck near her home. Five-months-old Vickie Lynn Weaver of Geneva (Adams Co.) was killed when an automobile driven by her 17-year-old mother left Ind. 116 and skidded crazily along the highway berm. The mother, Mrs. Vickie Weaver, was injured and taken to a Portland hospital. - . ....... Earlier in the diy, Sid Lathtftn,' 68, and James Sawyer, 17, Pembroke, Ky., were killed and three other persons injured when their automobile smashed into a concrete bridge railing near Fort Branch. Four other persons were killed in accidents on the holiday and holiday eve. _ Steury Herd Tops in Month Os June Franklin Steury’s herd tops the D.H.I.A. report for June for butterfat production with 50.9 pounds, Everett Rice, supervisor, reported today. Others, in order of production, are owned by the farmers named below and have produced the following number of pounds of butterfat in June: Ben and Noah Mazelin, 49.3 pounds; Rolandes Liechty, 49.2 pounds; Becher and Yager, 48.8 pounds; Martin Habegger, 48.5 pounds; Sol Mosser, 46.3 pounds; C. P. Steury and son. 46.3 pounds; L. Reuben Schwartz, 45.9 pounds; Paul E. Liechty and sons, 45.3 pounds; Lehman and Yager, 44.2 pounds. High cow for June was reported by Lehman and Yager, and it produced 94.3 pounds of butterfat. Other high cow owners and butterfat produced by the cow are: Martin Habegger, 94.1 pounds; Lehman and Yager, 93.8 pounds; Paul E. Liechty and sons, 89,1 pounds; Ben Gerke, 88.3 pounds; Franklin Steury, 87.8 pounds; Rolandes Liechty, 83.5 pounds; Becher and Yager, 81.4 pounds; Franklin Steury, 81.3 pounds; and Chris Stahly, 80.0 pounds. OFFICIAL WORD <('ontlnned from Page Oar) as minister of medium machine building. Saburov was out altogether. (Moscow Radio, in a broadcast beamed toward North America, said the Molotov group objected to the Soviet Union's “policy for peace and were trying to hamper its implementation.” (.“They were planning to change the policy,” the broadcast, monitored in London, said. “But now these plans have been frustrated and denounced by our party and people ”) I , r Pravda also accused the, Molotov group of trying to sabotage the Soviet agricultural program which is aimed at catching up with U.S. production. It said the former Soviet leaders opposed the abolition of compulsory grain deliveries, as a move to step up production. Almost immediately after the current shakeup began, the government announced that such grain de- | liveries would no longer be required.
Seek Evidence Os Teen-Age Violence 17-Year-Old Boy Dragged To Death HOBART, Ind. (Wl -r Polipe sought evidence of teen-age gang violence in the death of a 17-year-old boy dragged about 100 feet by an automobile Friday night. Larry Blair, East Gary, was dead on arrival at Methodist Hospital in Gary. Eye witnesses said two cars 'jammed with teen-agers pulled into a drive-in near here within minutes of each other. A group of eight youths, including Blair, charged from one auto to the second car and began pounding on it. Six youths were in the surrounded car which shot away from the scene with Blair snagged beneath it. Blair was shakeri loose about 100 feet away, witnesses __ said, and the car sped away. Friends of Blair said they had quarreled with the other youths earlier over a rear-end collision. Police from three communities said they were looking into the possibility Blair’s death was related to other reports of teen-age fights in the area. Five youths in the Blair car were held for investigation. Reconstruct Roof At Preble Tavern Reconstruction of the roof on the Preble Tavern is reported taking place at a very fast rate, with’a large number of workers taking part. An early re-opening date is anticipated by the owners, and it will be announced next week. To Attend World Church Conference The Rev. and Mrs. E. G. Steiner of the Evangelical Mennonite church west of Berne; the Rev. and Mrs. Olin A. Krehbiel of the First Mennonite church of Berne; Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Stucky and son Sidney will leave from New York Thursday for Karlsruhe, Germany, for the world conference of Mennonites. Mr. and Mrs. Menno P. Eicher, and daughters Nancy and Amy, also of Berne, will leave a week later to visit, mainly in Switzerland.
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k Jjßx * THE ENTIRE active membership of the Normandie Avenue Methodist church in Los Angeles, including the board of trustees, quit over appointment of Rev. Nelson Higgins (above) as pastor. (International)
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