Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 83, Decatur, Adams County, 8 April 1958 — Page 3

TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1958

SPRING TERM CLASSES WILL OPEN WEDNESDAY .. Wednesday from 1-4 o’clock, the spring term of Harry Brown’s art classes will open and be conducted at the fire station, it was announced today. Classes will also be held at the same location Saturdays from 9 - 12 o’clock noon. These are several openings left for new students; therefore, if any are interested they are asked to contact Mrs. Brown by phoning 3-3349. CLUB ELECTS DELEGATES TO NATIONAL CONVENTION Mrs. James Murphy. Jr., presided at the C. L. of C.’s business meeting and conducted the election of delegates and alternates who will attend the national convention which is to be held in Mansfield, Ohio during the third week in June. The meeting that was held at the C. L. of C. hall was opened with a prayer and a salute to the flag. Following this the election was conducted. Elected delegates are Mrs. James Murphy, Mrs. Ralph Kreigel, Miss Edith Ervin and Mrs. Gerald Durkin. Their alternates are Miss Mary Catherine Spangler, Mrs. Richard Deininger, Miss Rose NessWald, Miss Rose Steigmeyer,, Mrs. William Kohne, Miss Rosemary Miller, Miss Virginia Laurent and Mrs. Andrew Foos. Following various committee reports, the meeting was closed with a prayer. EASTER PARTIES HELD AT LOCAL ROLLER RINK The sth annual Easter parties held at the Happy Hour roller rink Sunday afternoon and evdning were attended by parents teenagers and small children, alike from Decatur and surrounding towns. At each season each skaters was treated with a chocolate covered cream filled Easter egg. Attendance prizes were won by the following. Connie Sue Hullinger, Dave Gilpin, Kay Stevens, Daniel Johnson, Carol Lewandoski, Steve Hazelwood, Shirley Hindenlang and Stewart Me Millen, Jr., all from Decatur. Mrs. Donna Goldthwaite, Lloyd Gibson, Jack Clem, Sharon Gibson and Jim Salway from Monroeville, and Richard Ross from Bluffton. Plans are being made" for a circus party for a Sunday afternoon in May in co-operation with the Chamber of Commerce circus fathers. Edwards Studio Authorized Dealer POLAROID CAMERAS & FILMS r-, —...» ■' - • Enjoy Summer Printed Pattern Z \M M - /<•? I $ 9202 [J SIZES ft 12-20 \\ lif Cut for coolness, fun and flattery! Just FOUR main pattern parts — whip up this sun style in one day, enjoy it all summer. Have this Printed Pattern with or without bows in sheer cotton, seersucker; Printed Pattern 9202: Misses’ Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18. 20. Size 16 takes sty yards 35-inch. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate. Send FIFTY CENTS (coins) for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, care at Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept.. 232 West 18th St.. New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, STZF and STYLE NUMBER.

ZION LUTHERAN MS WILL MEET WEDNESDAY Members of the Zion Lutheran Missionary society will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. in the parish hall. Devotions will be given by Mrs. Don Burk and Mrs. John Kiess will conduct the business meeting. "Missionaries Pray for Us" is the title of the topic discussion which will be led by the Rev. Edgar Schmidt. A recreation period will follow. Hostesses for the-meeting will be Mesdames Herman Dierkes, Phil Saure, and Ernst Ehlerding. 27 ATTEND FAMILY DINNER A family dinner was held Easter in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lenhart for the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cannelley and children, Carol, Janet, and Jimmy; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lenhart and daughter, Debbie; Norman Lenhart and the hosts, children, Judy, Connie and Carla, ell of Decatur; Mr. and Mrs. William E. Lenhart and children, Karen and Billy of Waukegon, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. Minos Sharpe and children, Jerry Mike, Martha Ann and Peggy of St. Mary’s, Ohio; and Mrs. Orval Lenhart, Monroe. William Lenhart is attending school pt Great Lakes Naval school but will return to his home in San Diego. Calif, after the schooling is completed in .June. MUSIC DEPARTMENT TO HAVE SPRING CONCERT Friday evenin beginning at 7:30 o’clock the junior high school band and choir of Pleasant Mills school will accompany the senior high school in presenting a spring concert which is to be held in the school auditorium. 'Die music department, which is composed of the two divisions, will present vocal solos as well as instrumental solos and combined music numbers. Awards will also be given out at this time to the students who have earned them in the past year. Women of the Moose are to meet Thursday evening, at. the Moose home. The officers are to gather at 7:30 o'clock and the meeting will begin at 8 o'clock. Ken Elliason is to be the guest speaker for the Methodist Women’s Society of Christian Service meeting, which will be held Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock at the ctapeL Die intermediate youths will be in charge of devotions. Mrs. Richard Jackson will entertain the members of the Holy Family Study club Monday at 8:30 o'clock. Unit 4 of the Women’s Society of World Service of the Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church is to meet Thursday evening at 8 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Simeon Hain. yMiss Wanda Lautzenheiser, a missionary home on furlough after having spent five years in Japan, is to be the guest speaker for the Baptist Missionary society. The meeting of the society is scheduled to be held in the church Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Anyone interested is invited to attend. I .. . Sheer Nylon Elastic Hosiery SUPP-HOSE 51-gauge “glamour” 'AI |pL hose to hide varicose veins — from famous , Spuntex mills. Sheerest fW Vy ever, yet scientifically // J II correct for firm support. I II Pair, just s4ss v i * ‘I i> ‘ REXALt* "THRU* —® —■— . Amazing medical discovery for Ikjdrij relievin « ir<| muscu,ar aches II and pains. only s |49 MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE SMITH I DRUG CO.

» J * fir JMBrs . F 5- : wF* H ML $ MR. AND MRS. PAUL KRUECKEBERG of route 5, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Alice Evelyn, to Sonny Leßoy Andrews, son of Mr. and Mrs. Noel Andrews, also of route 5. Miss Krueckeberg, a graduate of Decatur high school, is employed as a surgical nurses aide at Parkview memorial hospital, Fort Wayne. Her fiance attended Adams Central high school and is presently employed at the Dunbar Furniture factory at Berne. No definite date has been set for the wedding.

j The Research club's guest day , will be held Monday afternoon at ' 1 o’clock at the Youth and Comr ; munity Center. A luncheon will be 1 I for members and guests and lat- ■ er Mrs. Virgil Sexton will take ! charge of the program by review ■-! ing a current book. II ■j Members of the Epsilon Sigma I and Xi Alpha lota Exemplar cha- ■ | pters of the Beta Sigma Phi soror- ' I ity will meet Wednesday at 8 o’j clock at the Elks home. ’ A regular business , and social ' meeting is being planned by the ’ D.A.V. auxiliary for Thursday ' evening at 8 o’clock. Mrs. Mel ; Tinkham is to be in charge of the ! social hour at the meeting. ’ Tuesday at 7:30 o'clock, mem- ! bers of the Olive Rebekah lodeg 86 ’ are to meet at the Odd FeHows • hall. The degree staff will prac- ’ tice after the meeting. The Queen of the Rosary Study club members will meet with Mrs. r Bernard Staub Thursday evening ’ at 8 o'clock. Our Lady of Lourdes Study club i members are meeting Thursday ’ I evening instead of Wednesday at 1 the home of Mrs. Joe Geels. The ■ set time for meeting at 8 o’clock. Acting hostess for the St. Jude's Study club will be Mrs. Francis 1 Shell. Members are to meet at the home Thursday evening at 8 o’- ■ clock. , 1 —‘ The Tri Kappa sorority memSeire are to meet at the Youth and 1 Community center this evening for a regular business meeting. All members are urged to attend this meeting as it will be the last . before inspection. Candidate Is Found Critically Wounded WABASH — tip — Ted Wolfrum, 56, candidate for Noble Twp. trustee in the May 6 Democratic primary, was found lying beside his home Monday. He had been shot in the abdomen. He was taken to a hospital in critical con- ‘ dition. Authorities said Wolfrum was despondent over the death recently of a friend. Kentucky Youth Dies In Hunting Accident z . SALEM — (IB -- T. ■ J._ Asher, 15. Tremont, Ky., was injured fatally Sunday afternoon when a revolver a companion handed to him during a grounding hunt discharged accidentally. Columbia City Man Deputy To Steers INDIANAPOLIS — (IB — Indiana Atty. Gen. Edwin Steers late Monday named James A. Briggs, Columbia City, as a deputy state attorney general. Briggs was graduated from DePauw University and attended the university’s law school. The Fort Wayne native was admitted to the bar in 1957. Approximately 132,000 South Carolinians are employed in the textile industry. DON’T TAKE A CHANCE TAUtVT / PLENAMINS . Smith Drug Co.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA ‘

Miss Sally McCullough has been confined to her home with the flu over the weekend. Miss Mabel Hoagland of Highland Park, Mich., visited over the weekend with Mrs. Lionel Brentlinger and Miss Etta Mallonee. Mrs. Robert Templin and childreln Pampela, Timmy and Tommy of Milwaukee, Wis., are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bittner. arrive Thursday- V Out-of-town visitors at the Decatur public library Saturday to see the Easter eggs tree were Lil--1 lian Habegger and Julia Panning, of Toledo, O.; Gae Emenhiser, Inez Bobilya, and Clarence Bobilya, of Monroeville; Rebecca Susanna Wier, of Macon, Hl.; Martha Trent, Fort Wayne; Dorothy MorelK*se, Fort Wayne; Mary Heller, Ada Weaver, and Jartice Heller, . of Convoy, O.; Vera, Sandra and Candace Teeter, of Berne; Dr. . and Mrs. M. C. Stewart and Mona, Marcella, Milton, and Melinda, of Wren, O.; Mrs. Rodney Kling and Melinda and Brenda of South Bend; Mrs. James S. Norris, of Elwood; Jane Steury, of Lima, O.; Eileeh Brown, of Fort Wayne; Mrs. D. M. Wait, Suzy and Lindy, of Fort Wayne. , Earl Taylor, ,of Geneva, and Jesse Rawley, of Berne,- have been dismissed from the Jay county memorial hospital. Roy Moser, 29. of Berne, has been charged in Wells county by the state police with driving more than 50 miles an hour through Petroleum on state road 1. Herbert S. Gerber, 20, of Bluffton route 4, has been fined a total of $20.75 for exceeding the state speed limit in Wells county. A parked auto owned by Paul Lobsiger, of Monroe, received S2OO damage Monday when it was hit in a three-car crash in Bluffton. It was driven into a tree by the impact of the two moving vehicles. Chicago Man Killed In Vole Argument Man Killed Outside One Rolling Place , CHICAGO— A policeman today shot and killed a man in front of a South Side polling place after jin argument over voting. There were two versions of the shooting given investigating officers. One said the man who was shot, Nathaniel Housely, 38, be- ‘ came angered when policeman Curtis Bell ejected him from the polling place after judges challenged his registration. The other was that Housely was shot because he was standing in front of the polling place and frightening voters. Police said Bell shot Housely in . the left side. Housely was pronounced dead on arrival at Roseland Community Hospital. Officials said it was the first . killing in several years at an elec- ; tion here. Both Housely and Bell . were Negroes. How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Place Do your false teeth annoy and embarraaa by slipping, dropping or wobbling wban you eat, laugh or Ulk? Just sprinkle • little FABTEETH on your plates. This alkaline (non-acid) powder holds salsa teeth mtn* finnly and more comfortably. No gununy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling Does not sour. Checks '‘plate odor’ T (denture breath). Get FASTEKTH today at 1 any drug counter.

Calendar item* for today's pubication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30) Phone 3-2121 Miss Pat Zehr TUESDAY St. Joseph Study club, Miss Helena Wehmeyer, 8:15 p. m. Psi lota Xi, Community Center, 8 p. m. Dutiful Daughters class of the Bethany E. U. B. church, Mr*. Harry Fortney, 7:30 p. m. Delta Lambda chapter of Beta Sjigma Phi sorority, Mrs. Jqe Morris, 8 p.m. Eagles auxiliary, Eagles hall, 8 p.m. Decatur Circuit chapter of the Valpo guild. Zion Lutheran church, Frieidheim, 8 p.m. Happy Homemakers club, Mrs. Earl Harman, 7:30 p.m. St. Dominic study club, Mrs. 'Gladys Coffee, 7:30 p.m. Xi Alpha Xi chapter of the Beta Sigma Phi, Mrs. Jerome Keller, 8 p.m. Trinity W.S.W.S., church, 7:30 p.m. Indiana Roadside Council, Springmill state park, all day. Delta Theta Tau, Mrs. Kenneth Arnold, 6:30 p.m. Monmouth P.T.A., school, 7:30 p.m. Dorcas class, Bethany E. U. B. Church, 7:30 p. m. Monroe Better Homes demonstration club, Mrs. Willis Gierhart, 7:30 p. m. Decatur Weight Watchers club, C. L. of C. hall, 6:30 p.m 400 cal. dinner. Olive Rebekah lodge 86, Odd Fellows hall, 7:30 p.m. Tri Kappa. Community Center, 7:45 p.m. — u WEDNESDAY Historic ! club, Zion Evangelical and Reformed church, 12:00 noon luncheon. Ava Maria study club, Mrs. John H. Brunton, 8 p.m. •* Calvary E. U. B„ W. S. W. S., church, 7:30 p.m. Sacred Heart study club, Mrs. Carl Bauman, 8 p.m. District Past Presidents Parley of the American Legion auxiliary, Fort Wayne, noon luncheon. St. Catherine discussion club, Mrs. Jack Brunton, 8 p.m. , Business and Professional Women club, Zion E. anef R. church dining room, 6:30 p.m. Pleasant Mills .Baptist Women’s Missionary Society, Mrs. Paul McCullough, 7:30 p. m. /Evangeline circle, Zion and Re--1 formed church, Mrs. Richard ’cfl-cte" 1 Preiik«rW ■ church, Mrs. Tom Allwein, 8 p.m. 1 Knights of Columbus auxiliary, card party, 8 p. m. Epsilon Sigma and the Xi Alpha ■ lota Exemplar chapters of Beta Sigma Phi sorority, Tllks home, 8 p.m. Our Lady of Lourdes study club, postponed until Thursday. Zion Lutheran Missionary society, parish hall, 1:30 p.m. Naomi circle, Presbyterian ' church, Mrs. Dick Heller, 8 p.m. Ruth circle, Presbyterian church, Mrs. Tom Allwein, 8 p.m. THURSDAY Mt. Pleasant W.S.C.S., Mrs. Kenneth P. Singleton, 1:30 p.m. Order of the Eastern Star, Ma1 sonic Hall, 7:30 p. m. Unit One, Bethany E. U. B. j church, Mrs. Will Dellinger, 7:30 , P* m. JSmblem club, Elks home, 8 p. I ‘ , Pleasant Grove Women's Missionary association/ Mrs. Ermo ' SMfferly, 1 p. m. Mary Circle, Presbyterian ' church, Mrs. Will Schrock, 2:30 ’ p! m. Martha Circle, Presbyterian church, Miss Frances Dugan, 2:30 p. m. Monroe W. S. C. S., church annex, 7:25 p. m. St. George Study club, Mrs. Edward Linder, 8 p. m. W. S. C. S., Mrs. Charles ijbrkhart, 1:30 p. m. ~Needle club, parish hall, Zion Cytheran church. I p. m. Town and Country Home demonstration club, Edna ' Haviland, t 1 p. m. Martha circle, Presbyterian church, Mrs. Roscoe Glendening, ■ 2:30p.m. Women of the Moose, Moose ; home, 8 p.m., officers 7:30 p.m. Methodist W.S.C.S., chapel, 7:30 1 p.m. > Unit 4 of the W.S.W.S. of the - Bethany E.U.B. church, Mrs. Sim- • eon Hain, 8 p.m. Baptist Missionary society, r ’

Watch for the opening date of the BEE NEET BEAUTY SALON Featuring Flgurama . . The New Slimming Sensation. Lose Pounds had indies easily without disrobing.

Rules Cheryl Crane To Remain Confined <1 Detention Hearing Scheduled April 24 HOLLYWOOD (UP)—Glamorous Lana Turner was reported in “a very bad way” today at her Beverly Hills home from the stress of the slaying of handsome Johnny Stompanato, 32, by her 14-year-old daughter, Cheryl. The blonde actress sobbed Monday shortly after Presiding Judge Donald A. Odell of Juvenile Court ruled Cheryl must remain confined for the death of her mother’s lover Friday night. . Odell listened to attorneys representing the actress and the girl’s father, restauranteur Stephen Crane, and then ruled she must stay in Juvenile Hall until a pre-detention hearing April 24 in nearby Santa Monica. The jurist said he thought it was in the girl’s interest to keep her away from the storm of pub- 1 licity about the knifing of Stompanato, former bodyguard in the gang of ex-mobstar Mickey Cohen. Cheryl plunged a razor-sharp butcher knife into Stompanato’s abdomen during an argument between Miss Turner and the exMarine. At the next hearing for the girl juvenile authorities will decide whether Cheryl -Will- be .tried for.. the slaying, freed, committed to the California Youth Authority or placed in a foster home. Attorneys Jerry Giesler and Arthur Crowley sought Cheryl's release to one of the parents or failing that the placement of the tall, dark-haired girl with her maternal grandmother, Mrs. Mildred Turner. County Coroner Theodore Curphey announced that a "routine” inquest would be held Friday into Stompanato’s death. The body of the underworld character was placed aboard a plane Monday night for return to Stampanato’s hometown of Woodstock, DI. At the Adams county memorial hospital: Karen Sue is the name given to the seven pound, three fourths ounce daughter born to Richard and Eldora Meyer Scheumann of route 2. She was delivered at 4.12 . o’clock Monday afternoon. I An eight pound, four ounce son was born to Lawrence and Orene e In* McMillen Beihold, o< Hoagland, at 4:15 p.m. Monday. Dalmus and Virginia Settles James, of route 5, are the parents of a five pound daughter born this morning at 7:41 o’clock. At 9:26 o’clock today, Norbert and Laura Witte Merckle of Ohio City, Ohio, became the parents of an eight pound, nine ounce son. 14&JO$lllTAll 1 0° uotu Admitted Mrs. Almeda C. Mock, Monroeville; Gus Mutter, Decatur; Miranda Bollinger, Monroe: Master Ronald Gene Erxleben, Decatur; Mrs. Alvina Amstutz, Berne. Dismissed Mrs. James Lovellette, Decatur; Master Kenneth Rumschlag, Decatur; Master Ronald Rumschlag, Decatur; Master Paul Lehman. Berne; Mrs. Don Pickford and daughter, Decatur: Cal F. Peterson, Decatur; Mrs. Gierhart Reinking, Decatur; . Andrew Cooper, Decatur; Mrs. Joe Loshe and daughter, Decatur; Mrs. Kenyon Sprunger and daughter, Berne. church. 7:30 p.m. D.A.V. auxiliary, D-A.V. ’ hall, 8 p.m. . — Queen of the Rosary study club, Mrs. Bernard Staub, 8 p.m. Our Lady of Lourdes study club, Mr*. toeiGeels, 8 p.®. St. Jude study club, Mrs. Francis Shell, 8 p.m. - FRIDAY Pleasant MIHs band, and choir ■ spring concert, 7:30 p.m. American Legion auxiliary, Le- • gion home, 8 p.m. MONDAY Hojy Family Study club, Mrs. ■ Richard Jackson, 8:30 p.m. Research annual guest day, Com- , munity Center, 1 p.m.

Future Farmers The Future Farmers of Kirkland township met recently at the Pleasant Dale parish hall. The president, John Lantz, opened the meeting after which the 4-H pledge was Jed by Roger Schlickman. Donnie Egley then led the’group in a song and Keith Griffiths talked about his trip to Chicago. Continuing with the meeting, Roger Schlickman, vice president, spoke on the officers training school and Rene Brown and Junior Lantz gave a talk on safety with power mowers. Don Germann, reporter for the club, has announced that the Future Farmers 4-H division will hold their next meeting at the Pleasant Dale parish hall April 14. Union Pals Ann Lehrman opened and took charge of the Union Pals 4-H club meeting held recently in the Emanuel Lutheran school. The pledge of the flag was led by Donna Allison and Sandra Grote then led the group in singing. New members were initiated into the club at this meeting by the old members having them roll ice cubes down a table with their noses. Marlene Bleeke, Lorena Bleeke, -and-t Judy Thieme demonstrated howe to make a cocoa sponge cake, after which-various topics were given by Ann Lehrman, and Barbara Bleeke. A motion was made and seconded to buy a camera and flash bulbs for the club’s own use. Also during the business session, the girls judged chocolate cookies. 1716 next meeting will be held at the-school April 11. Melvin Simon Funeral Rites Held Today Funeral services were conducted at 2 p.m.'today for Melvin Simon. 11, at Wapakoneta, 0., who died there Friday unexpectedly of a heart attack at his home. A native of Domestic, he is survived by his uncles, Arnold and Dave Simon, and his aunts, Mrs. William Thompson and Mrs. Sam Liechty of Berne. The widow is the’ former Arlene Crandall, of Bluffton. Three children also survive. Fast Service GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (IP - ■ When Santiago Aguilar reportec ■ his car stolen at the Grand Repidi police station, the auto and sus > pected thief were waiting for him ; State troopers had arrested tht > man for running a stop sign anc took him to Grand Rapids wher : he was unable to prove ownership i of the car,— Cat Damage YANKTON, S. D. (IP) — Clair Potts was driving on the main street when his auto stalled. He found a dead yellow cat under the hood. The animal had bent the fan into the radiator, causing considerable damage.

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PAGE THREE

One Russian Guard Slain Al Brussels I » Reported Gun Duel Is Waged By Guards BRUSSELS (UP) - Belgian police and the Soviet embassy joined today to enshroud in mystery the death of a Russian guard at the Soviet pavilion of the Brussels World Fair. Persistent reports said two Russian guards duelled with guns and that one was killed and the other wounded. The Soviet embassy ascribed the death to a “heart attack” and Belgian police were silent The “admitted” book at the Bruggmann Hospital here shows a Russian named Nicolai Solotowski was treated for a gunshot wound in the head on Tuesday, April 1, He died a few hours after being admitted to the hospital. A Russian embassy spokesman said. “There is no mystery. One of our engineers died from a heart attack...the hospital records are pure invention.” But a hospital doctor who refused to give his name "because the police told me not to talk about it” said he treated two patients for gunshot wounds between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m. on April 1The first patient had a bullet in his head. The second, who arrived an hour later in the escort , of Russian consular officials had . a bullet in his hand. The doctor who said he re- ' moved this bullet added, “the bullets were from different guns. I thought there had been a duel.” Told about the Russian embas- ' sy denial the doctor said,- “I know 1 what a bullet wound looks like ' and also what a bullet looks like. Solotowski was wounded by a bult- let.” . - District Atty. Raymond Charles said he had nothing to say about the affair ‘/although one of my men made a report to say that Russian guards at the pavilion were armed." 1 American Marines guarding an , . atomic reactor and its fuel in 1 their pavilion have been refused , the right to carry weapons or wear uniformsBelgians were asking whether i the Russians had permission to mount armed guards on their pavilion. There was no immediate 1 answer to who gave permission—s if it was—and why the U.S. Mas rines were refused. Informed sources said later today the Russian guards have been relieved of their weapons following the "accident." Fair authorities issued a communique which ~ said merely “There are no armed d guards at the Russian pavilion. ’ They refused to elaborate. s- —— >. « Church-goer d MEMPHIS, Tenn. (W — Dawn n Smith, aged 11 years, hasn’t P missed a Sunday Church service since she was 11 months. r TOMORROW n IS TOT’S DAY i AT Edwar<Ts Studio