Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 185, Decatur, Adams County, 7 August 1957 — Page 3

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1957 nnil

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MOORE-BOLINGER VOWS ARE READ IN VAN WERT CHURCH Guests from Defiance, Toledo, Marion, Painvine, Lakewood and Montpelier, O„ Sturgis, Mich., and Decatur and Winchester, attended tiie Saturday evening marriage of Miss Betty Lou Bolinger, daughter of Mr. and. Mrs. Frank H. Bolinger, 331 West Crawford St., Van Wert, O„ to Noel Edvard Moorse, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis H. Moore,, 721 North Washington St., Van Wert, O. Dr. Paul D. Childes officiated at the dduble ring rites, read at 7:30 o’clock. Mrs. Herbert Jones, organist, and Robert Scheldt, vocalist, presented a pre-nuptial musicale. Given in marriage by her father, the bride appeared in a gown of white Chantilly lace and nylon tulle. The lace bodice was fashioned with a V neckline, and long bridal sleeves came to points over her bands. On her head was u chantilly lace bonnet, sprinkled with sequins and pearls, which held her fingertip illusion veil. She carried a white orchid surrounded with lily of the valley and white ribbon streamers tied in love knots atop a white Bible. Matron of honer Was Mrs. Jerry Spoon, sister of the bride. She was attired in a ballerina length ! gown of eyelet sneer over aqua taffeta, and her flowers were harvest moon carnations. Miss Kathleen Moore, sister of the bridegroom, in a gown identically styled to that of Mrs. Spoon’s, served as bridesmaid. The attendants' headdreses were coronets of lace and rhinestones with circular veils. Wayne Richard Moore attended his brother as groomsman, and Holden Heath, Jr., and Robert Folwer, both friends of the bridegroom, Seated the guests. In the church social room, the bridal party received guests afterwards, with the Misses Jean Bolinger, Phyllis Cook, and Jane Haley and Mrs. John serving. Miss Colletta Collette tended the guest book. When the newlyweds left for northern Michigan, the bride wore a white linen suit with contrasting black accessories and the orchid from her bouquet. Mr. and Mrs. Moore will reside at 1789 Beacon street, Brookline 46, Mass., after September 1. Guests from Decatur included Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fortney, Mrs. Goldie Hilyard, Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Hilyard, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mies. < BACKACHE Mr*, MM Km, Ua Mw mmhlot saw Mi Rb hl ata■to* with Special hrirro Tlbtah, with Mtwyrwtic actio* and Vitamia C w accessary to health and etestierty a connecting tissue in joints and body. Rosiilts tvnrnntMd No harmful drop. $1.50; »2.75; $4 00 sins. Cat PRUVO today st druggist's tor mors comlortable liuinp. SMITH DRUG CO. /

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BETTER HOMES CLUB MEETS WITH MRS. CLAUDE LAISURE Mrs. Claude Laisure was hostess to the Monroe Better Homes demonstration club Tuesday evening, with a potluck dinner on the lawn and a business meeting and a circus afterwards. Mrs. Erwin Stucky assisted Mrs. Laisure. Balloons decked the stene of the dinner, and the hostess provided fried chicken for the club members. Opening the short business meeting was the president, Mrs. Harry Crownover. Mrs. Glen Stucky gave the history of the song of the month, "Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming,” and the group read the song in unison. Devotions and prayer were offered by Mrs. John Floyd, and roll call response was "my part in the 4-H fair.” Repeating the Lord’s Prayer, the group was dismissed. The Laisure home was the scene of the Better Homes circus following the business meeting. Each member and guest received a gift from the fishing pond conducted by Mrs. Laisure and Mrs. Gaylord Weaver. Mrs. John Floyd, the "animal trainer,” led her large police dog in several tricks. Among the group, a circus parade of animals was led by Mrs. ‘Laisure, who acted as the circus clown, with Mrs. Erwin Stucky leading the elephant, Mrs. Floyd leading the giraffe; the elephant performed several of his stunts. Mrs. Richard Everett and Mrs. Glen Stucky “came rowing through the lawn in their souped-up speedboat," to background music sung by Mrs. Herbert Fruchte and Mrs. James Nussbaum. When the circus left, each of the 26 members and four guests returned home. Guests included Mrs. Lawfence McCullough, Mrs. Gene Hike, Mrs. Thomas Johnson and Miss Cynthia Johnson. EXECUTIVES OF METHODIST WSCS PLAN YEAR’S PROGRAM At an executive meeting of the Methodist WSCS Tuesday evening, at the First Methodist church, 15 officers helped map out the new year’s program, which included schedules for meeting times and plans for distributing hostess’ duties. First meeting for the WSCS will be September 19. From then on. the monthly’ meetings will be slated for the second Thursday of the month. Other dates on the program are the county group meeting, at Monroe September 11, and the New England dinner, a yearly occasion when the WSCS holds a cafeteria luncheon at noon and a turkey dinner in the evening, for November 20. Meetings will be patterned after this schedule: 10:30 a.m.. executive meeting; 11 o’clock, all circles meet; noon, the paid 35-cent luncheon. with half of the members of each circle serving as hostesses. The general meeting will begin then at 1 p.m.

ESSEX FAMILY HAB REUNION SUNDAY AT SADDLE LAKE Twelfth annual reunion for the Essex family was held Sunday at the Saddle Bake pavilion. In charge of the arrangements were Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Essex and Mrs. Thora Ray, who will also make plans for next year’s reunion, The date will be the first Sunday in August at the same place. z After a family dinner the afternoon was spent in visiting and recreation. From Arkansas, members of the Essex family who came were: Mr. and Mrs. J a.sop Essex and Mr. and Mrs. Garold Essex, Almyra; John Harton, Eldorado; Mrs. Don W. Essex, Emily, Sara Jo and Keith, Stuttgart; and Jack Essex and sons Stewart, Jesse and Cooper, DeWitt. From Ohio came Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Long, of Toledo. Hoosier members of the Essex family were Mr. and Mrs. Lester Essex, David, Gerry, Steven and Joyce Ann, Columbia City; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith. Carol and Bobby, Wolcottville; Mr. and Mrs. i James E. Spuller, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Spuller and Jimmie: Mr. , and Mrs. Dean Smith and Barbara. Poe; Mr. & Mrs. Harold Essex, Miss Agnes Nelson. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ahrens, Kinley and Jo Ellen, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Essex, Pamela and Dianne, Fort Wayne; Sherman Essex, Mirl Essex, Mr. and Mrs. Gorman Kauff- , man, Leon, Kerry and Jirene, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Essex and Georgianna, 7? and Ray Kauffman, Monroe; and Mrs. Jo h n E. Nelson, Miss Bernice Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Parry Mcßae, Sharon and Michael, Mrs. Thora Ray, Donald and Jean Ann, Mr. and. Mrs. Jesse Essex and Janeen and ! Mr. and Mrs. Harry Essex, Decatur. AUCTION TO HELP DREAM OF CHAPEL COME TRUE “This new chapel will be a place in which the Valpo students may worship together,” Mrs. Louis Jacobs points out, explaining the enthusiasm showed in the hard work the members of Decatur cir-; cuit of the Valpo guild have put into the street auction slated for | Saturday afternoon and evening ' on Madison street. Students of the Reppert school of auctioneering will display what they've learned in their course so far by-selling the household appliances, yard tools, furniture, etc.— items collected by the women in the Decatur circuit of the Valparaiso University guild. Mrs. Jacobs, secretary of the national guild and publicity chairman for the auction, adds that the women of the Decatur circuit are quite excited about their current project, a fund to help build the new chapel-audi-torium for the Valparaiso University campus. The Reppert school is donating all funds from the auction to the Valpo fund. In addition to items the Decatur circuit guild members collect from friends in their ten regional churches, local ladies will visit merchants Friday, letters explaining the project and suggesting donations having been sent to the retailers this week. Mrs. Jacobs recalls the variety received last year, stating- -that the items received ranged from pitchforks to.

TSE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

jewelry. * "A large chapel had been dreamed of for a long time," the national secretary says. This dream became a necessity when the administration - auditorium building burned down, and the students had no place in which to worship. Five services were conducted at the* local Lutheran church to accommodate the students and members, as a result, with worshippers waiting in line each Sunday to attend church. In June, 1958, when the chapel Will be ready for dedication, it will seat 3,300 people. Its design, inspired by the Church of the Nativ-' ity in Bethlehem, the chapel will be 40 feet longer than a football field. Eighty different chapels in the United States and Europe were studied before the octagon-shaped chancel and large fin-shaped piered design were chosen. Local students now attending Valparaiso are Jack Lawson, Dan Krueckeberg, Bill Zwick and Joyce Callow. Enrolled for the fall ferm as freshmen are Ronald Bittner, George Bleeke, Rogef Bieberich, and Jjm Klenk, according to Mrs. Jacobs. Unit Four of the Bethany EUB church WSWS will be guests of Mrs. Spencer Andrews Thursday at 8 p.m. Family picnic for the Rose Garden club will be Tuesday evening at 6:30 o’clock at the Hanna-Nutt-man park shelter house. Members are to bring table service and a covered dish. The committee will provide rolls and drink. Hostesses are Mrs. Robert Gay and Mrs. Ray Heller: the entertainment committee will be Mrs. Grover Levy and Mrs. Richard Mailand. Tuesday evening at 6 o’clock, the Dorcas circle of the Bethany EUB church will have a picnic at the American Legion memorial park. Each member is to bring a covered dish, and in case of rain, the group will convene in the church. When the Trinity church WSWS meets Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock, Mrs. Marie Deßolt will serve as leader. Hostesses will be the Mesdames Russell Plumley, Max Gilpen, and Paul Wietfeldt. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sauerer, of Homstead 31, have returned from a three-month tour of the West and Northwest United States. While in San Francisco, they were guests of Mrs. Sauerer's brother. C. Warren Cole. The Sauerers’ complete tour included Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, the Black Hills, and the Hoover and Grand Coulee dams. COURI NEWS Archbold Estate Notices have been ordered issued to Richard T. Archbold. Josephine A. Byron, Thomas A. Byron, and I the St. Joseph Valley bank trustee, in the matter of the trust created by the last will and testament of Roy Archbold, returnable August on hearing of the petition for authority to sell real estate. John L. DeVoss has been appointed guardian ad litum for Thomas A. Byron, a minpr beneficiary of the will.

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■■ 8080 ROCKEFELLER, who unwed zillionaire Winthrop Rockefeller to the tune of $5,000,000 and up a few years back, looks real perk as she leaves the liner United States on docking in New .York. She has been Europing. (International)

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Society Item* toi today’s publication must be phoned, in by 11 a. tn. (Saturday 9:30 a.m.) Phone 3-212) BARBARA FIECHTER THURSDAY Town and Country home demonstraton club, picnic, Hanna-Nutt-tnan Shelter house, noon. WSCS of Salem Methodist church, Mrs. Carl Schug, 7:30 p.m. * WSWS of Union Chapel EUB church, Mrs. Jess Sheets, 7:30 p.m. Unit Four, Bethany EUB church, Mrs. Spencer Andrews, 8 p.m. Monroe Rural Fire Department, special meeting, Monroe town hall, 8 p.m. Mount Pleasant WSCS, Mrs. William Fifer, 1:30 p.m. Happy Homemakers Home Demonstration club of Washington Township, Mrs. Clarence Mitchel, 7:30 p.m. Unit One, Bethany E. U. B. WSWS. Mrs. Francis Howard, 910 North Second. 7:30 p. m. Unit Four, Bethany EUB church. Mrs. Spencer Andrews, 8 p.m. ’ FRIDAY Harvesters and Y.P.M.8., Mount Zion UB church, Mrs. John Johnson, 7 p.m. MONDAY Pythian Sisters degree staff, K. of P. home, 7 p, m. TUESDAY Rose Garden club family picnic, Hanna-Nuttman shelter house, 6:30 p.m. Dorcas Circle of Bethany church, American Legion memorial park, 6 ' . Trinity WSWS, at church, 7:30 p.m. Rules Major Defect In Television Set Urge Industry To Strengthen Safety CHICAGO (UP) — A blue-ribbon coroner’s jury, composed largely of electronic experts, has ruled that a major defect existed in the television set which electrocuted a young boy. In ruling the death of Howard Erenstein, 5, accidental, the jury recommend'ed that the television industry strengthen its “safety codes and practices.” ~ .... The boy was killed July 14 in the kitchen of his Skokie home. The jury said "the probability is very great that the deceased died of electrical shock from simultaneous contact with the television set and the grounded metal trim on the kitchen counter-top.” The “lethal” defect occurred on the assembly line when a leakage of electricity was Paused by the pinching of a 135-volt bus bar (a type of electrical circuit) between “the mounting bracket and the vertical holding-control,” the experts said in their verdict. Herbert Riegelman, General Manager of the General Electric television department in Syracuse, N:Y., said "We have been unable to determine .how this (pinched wire) could have escaped our rigid factory tests.” The "tragic and regrettable accident” was the first to happen in the manufacture of more than a million sets, he said. Following the verdict, GE spokesmen said free electrical examinations would be made by distributors and dealers for owners of company-made portable TV-sets. •k u-i *i I ft S J ..j Pfc. Ralph D. and Deanna Johnson Burdett, became the parents of a seven-pound son the morning of July 26 in the Fort Campbell hospital in Fort ,£ampbell, Ky. The new arrival has been named Richard Scott, and the maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Erman Johnson of Decatur. Admitted Mrs. Daniel Neireiter, Decatur; Master Lonny Barkley, Dixon, O. Dismissed Mrs. Frank Baumer, Celina, O.; Mrs. Loren Jones, Decatur; Mrs. James Hackman and son, Decatur; Mrs. Thomas Brandt and son, Willshire, O.; Mrs. Forrest Fos- . naugh, Bluffton; Mrs. Vernon Kreigh and son, Decatur. OPEN TONIGHT and EVERY NIGHT till 8:00 P.M. DRIVE-IN * PARKING KELLY DRY CLEANING 127 N. 9th St. PHONE 3-3202

Savings Bond Sales In Chain-Letter Type Urge Banks Reject Such Applications INDIANAPOLIS (UP)—There is evidence that a lot of U.S. Savings Bonds are being sold in a unique “campaign” which Jack Storms wishes would stop right now. Storms is Indiana director of the U.S. Savings Bond Divisipn. Normally, he glows within when the bond sales reports come in from Indiana's 92 counties and show that the public is responding well and buying more than last month or the same time last year. But the campaign Storms doesn't like is an unsponsored effort which is supposed to reap huge profits for everybody who participates. A takeoff on the old chain-letter game, the bond-selling campaign is conducted by personal contact and not by mail which might make it in violation of the postal laws. Each “Invests” $18.75 Here’s the way it works: John Q. Public brings you a copy of a letter which contains 10 names in 1-2-3 order. The letter asks you to buy one $25 bond for $18.75 and mail it to the person whose name is at the top of the list. Then you take copies of the letter to two friends, after adding your own name at the bottom in No. 10 position and removing the name at the top of the list—the person to whom you mailed the bond you bought. The friends .repeat the process, and by the time your name moves up to No. 1 position which makes you eligible to receive bonds, you are supposed “to get $38,000 worth of so, a handy return on your $18.75 investment. What makes it theoretically unbreakable is that the friend who giv£s you the letter is supposed to go with you to a bank to buy the bond you send to No. 1 on the list, and to watch you mail it to the man in whose name you have the bond issued. You are supposed to do the same with your two friends, so you can protect your investment. “We don’t like it,” said Storms. “We don't want to sell bonds that way. It’s a sucker's game all the way. Somebody has to lose, and it leaves a bad taste in their mouth about our product.” Is It Legal? The chain-letter game has been reported from such counties as Marion, Madison and Miami. Several persons have phoned Storms’ office asking whether it is legal. Apparently nobody knows whether it is legal. But the Federal Reserve Bank only a month ago distributed circulars to all member agencies in the 7th Federal Reserve District, which includes Indiana, quoting a directive from the U. S. Treasury Department urging banks to reject any bond!

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ITALIAN HIM BEAUTY Gina Lollobriglda presents her new son in Rome. The baby arrived at 6 pounds, 10 ounces, and she said she would feed him herself. Also, she wants more babies later. Her husband is Dr, Milko Skofic. (International RadiopHoto)

applications they have reason to believe are part of the chainletter scheme. The Treasury Department’s directive was issued in February, 1955, so the scheme seems to have originated elsewhere and spread slowly to Indiana. Storms said he understood it started in Oklahoma two or three years ago. He said he had heard it operated in Ohio later. He started hearing about it in Indiana three or four weeks ago. Boy Uninjured When Auto Hits Bicycle Max Elliott, 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Elliott, of 311 North First street, was slightly shaken up but not injured, when the bicycle he was riding was struck by a car Tuesday noon. The young boy was headed north through an alley leading onto Jackson street, and because parked "cars obscured his vision, proceeded out into the street, and was struck by a car driven by Oscar Price, 66. of Geneva. No one was injured in the accident, but the bicycle received dents amounting to $5 in repair bills. Zandstra In Race For Senate Nomination INDIANAPOLIS (IP) — The name of Bartel Zandstra of Highland, last year’s unsuccessful Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor, has been added to the list of seven men in the running for the Democratic nomination for U. S. 1 senator.

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Zandstra, 52, former Lake County clerk and county and district party chairman, submitted his name to Democratic State Chairman Charles E. Skillen Tuesday. The winner of the Democratic nomination next summer will oppose Sen. William E. -Jenner in the fail election. Jenner is expected to try for his third term. Decatur Teachers Attend Workshop Hugh J. Andrews, Decatur high school principal, and Deane T. Dorwin, high school instructor, are attending the fourth annual Pur- : due economic education workshop for teachers, which opened Sunday at Camp Limberlost, Lake Oliver. Sixty-seven teachers from 26 Indiana school districts attended the opening session. I QUAUTYPHOTO FINISHING AU Work Left - Before fJoon on ThursdayReady the Next Day, Friday, at HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. 1