Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 118, Decatur, Adams County, 19 May 1958 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
IB] ■ ®Rfl HbJI II WfflF sl6o"° OFF IN TRADE as * ,274 ■ ■ Regular sjg A| ffc-95 Price 449 Less Long _ « /L 4U-<>(> Trade 1 OU You Pay «* g> Only ______ 137 OR Sue ftft A ONLY WEEK Newest ’SB Features • Big Family Size • Freezer Store 49 lbs. • Double-Depth Storage Door , • Five Year Warranty HAUGKS Heating - Plumbing Appliances 209 N. L3th St. Ph. 3-3316
Refrigerator Motor Becomes Overheated The Decatur fire department was called to the home of Mrs. R. O. Gentis at 266 Marshall street this afternoon at 1:30 o’clock. A refrigerator motor became overheated and started smoking, in an apartment in the rear of the home. Summer Term will begin June 9 Degree Coweee ta I Betlnen Adminbtratiaa •ad finance Executive Secretarial Drefetiloaal Accounting Approved far Veteran Training War Orphan Ed. Program International College j Fort Wayne, Indiana
Strawberries FRESH —RED RIPE JQTS. SJ.OO FRESH MILK GAL. with purchase O Os Berries HAMMOND FRUIT MKT. 240 N. 13th St. — OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK — 8 A. M. to 10 P. M.
fl KROEHLER Co-operated g Outstanding Buy for j Holte i'ff i i'fff I®L r id ■ / s 9n / PM z w 4. w / i all IVS > atfMJL-RIW ’ H! < fJA'-. ■■ ■■ ;-- w ** IW K X -1 K * -J *> ■ U iifl • iw Sllfl If-4 f f jUMB-^.' '»-L. ■ - -..J / HBkE W’> '-.•»■’' *’ ~~ ~ •< a # * * *"'i _ "fc. • '" •* • H Regular ’Price $289-NOW 'Mkdlß ■ BE 90 DOLLARS. AHEAD H ICR n F UIF R $a Ou $ Ok || U £ n LC 11 ■ Bookcase Bed Balance on Easy I ' / ■ a W 0 ■ Landscape Mirror Monthly Payments furnitureJhWFwr _ “Pennanlied” construction gives you features which mean Here . g a mwlern bedroom beauty at a bar- ■!■ lil I ■ years of evtra service—dustroofed cases; dowel jointed gain! Finished in lovely .Moonstone Mahog- MgM IfIaVIW (■'! M H strength; genuine plate glass mirrors: fully finished, cen- any! The broad sweep of the thick curved IM I| 11 I W ./|W| ter guided drapers; oven- «‘»P- ‘^P l .? aerpcnUned top drawers, ■ Efl ■■ ■ ■ 7 I >. ~, . .... , . , and the smart hardware combine to give ■ ■ ,W\ fl fl OuC’INC- ■ KRREMLER\ rubbed finish, slllte a feeHng o( elegaßCe . And .. V anI «mKW«um. I . II H..?MX aH<l ~“‘li‘, “‘ li ‘ , _ , y a ’ guard” is constructed with quality materials FuRNITUPF > ..,■ > J tures - * > and details usually found only in much high- ■ vrsisi ■ wrwoa ? ■■ If,, er priced furniture. 239 N. 2nd St. Decatur. Ind. Phone 3-3778 <•:■• •••-•avawi,-.-.s-.-<. .;. rs;,.. . . ...... . x .....,.» A .w.,................................. ••,•.*.•/.••.• ••.••.•-•.•. •-s’-- ••*•>•<•>■-••>! ‘ I < >r ILlttouse -> UJtfinUS6 r I ■ miiW a L&fe 1 Sh WSB j i
Plan Bible School Al Trinity Church Vacation School To Open Next Monday The Trinity Evangelical United Brethren church, Ninth and Madison streets, will hold a vacation church school, opening Monday, May 26, and closing Friday, June 6. The school will provide Christian training for boys and girls four years of age to boys and girls who have completed the sixth grade of elementary school. Theme of the school will be “Jesus.” Pre-enrollment is already underway and more than 100 children are expected to attend. Bhys and girls not attending another school are invited to' enroll. The enroll- ' inent cards may be obtained from
THE DBCATUB DAILY DBBOOIAT, DKCATUH, ■»IAHA
Mrs. Thurman Haggerty, 603 West Adams street, phone 3-4438. The school will be held each morning from 8:30 to 11 o’clock, with the exception of Memorial day, May 30, when the school will meet from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. There is no cost to the children but they are encouraged to bring an offering each day. Teachers for the vacation school are: Kindergarten—Mrs. Cedric Fisher. Mrs. Robert Butcher, Miss Becky Jackson, Mrs. Paul McAtiK ren, Mrs. Chalmer Bollenbacher, John Paul McAhren and Miss Cheryl Bollenbacher; primary — Mrs. David Wynn, Mrs. John Kelly, Mrs. Clifford Hoverman -and Miss Onalee Barkley; juniors\~ Mrs. Thurman Haggerty, Mrs. Virgil Andrews, Mrs. Herbert Kitson, Miss Kay Wynn and Miss Linda Jackson. The Rev. J. O. Penrod, pastor, is dean of the school, with Miss Elaine Cochran as assistant. Greenland’s icecap, a great flat dome crevassed on the- edges, covers 700,000 square miles. In some, places the ice is more than 10,000 feet thick.
WOULD YOU SELL YOUR HOME for the amount you have-Jt insured? Check your policies today! COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS ' j™ COWENS t 209 Court St. Phone 3-3601 Decatur, Ind.
Fair, Rather Cool Weather In Indiana Heaviest Rainfall \ Recorded At Kokomo By UNITED PRESS Fair apd “rather cool” weather overspread Indiana today after a rather warm and humid weekend. Scattered showers fell Sunday as a t*ave of fresher air moved into Hoosierland, ending temperatures in the 80s at least until midweek Kbkomo’s .76 of an inch topped a rainfall report by the Weather Bureau. Other precipitation totals included .58 of an inch at Bluffton, .36 at Newberry, ,26 at Shoals< .22 at Indianapolis, .15 at Terre Haute and .13 at Evansville. The mercury hit highs ranging from 76 at South Bend to 86 at Evansville Sunday, then dropped to lows ranging from 48 at Goshen to 63 at Evansville this morning. Forecasts called for highs today in the 70s, lows tonight from ' the upper 40s to around 50, and highs Tuesday in the 70s.
No rain was in sight until late in the wegk. The five-day outlook for the period ending next Saturday called for temperatures to average near normal highs of 70 to 80 and normal lows of 50 to 61. “Warmer Wednesday and Thursday. turning cooler Friday or Saturday,” the outlook said. "Precipitation will average one-quarter to one-half inch as showers Thursday or Friday.” Jewelry Salesman Is Robbed On Train SIOO,OOO In Gems Reported Stolen CHICAGO W —. Authorities today concentrated their search in the East for a bandit who robbed a jewelry salesman of $75,000 to SIOO,OOO in gems aboard a speeding New York-to-Chicago train. Arthur King, 45, owner of a Miami Beach, Fla., jewelry store, was found bound and gagged in his Pullman compartment Saturday by a porter aboard the Pennsylvania Railroad's "Admiral/” King told railroad police and FBI agents a man knocked on his door and overpowered him when he opened the door. King said he was taking the jewels for a “series of private showings” in the Midwest when he was robbed. Authorities said a check of the passenger list showed a man left the train at Altoona, Pa., and the ' search for the bandit was centered ; in that area. The missing man had I bought a ticket to Chicago and had j not used his Pullman bed.
Speeders Trapped By Electric Timer I State Police Make Several Arrests The state police had the electric timing device in operation over the weekend, and several arrests resulted from people disregarding the speed limit in Preble on U. S. 224. The people arrested were given fines in justice of the peace court Saturday. The fines for each offender amounted to $16.75 for the charge of speeding. Those arrested were: Garland H. Harvey, Beaver Dam, O.; Sherman E. Langley, Lincoln, Neb.: George J. Schotsch, Cleveland, O.; Buford O. Botteron, Kansas City, Kan.; Edwin D. Florence, Charleston, O.; Agnes M. Davidson. Oberlin, O. Two others arrested on the same charge will appear in justice of the peace court at later dates. They are: Cyril Heimann, Decatur, and Helen M. Miller, Alliance, O. Two other fines were paid Saturday in justice of the peace court for improper passing. Sylvia Sidney, New York, was arrested on U. S. 33 one mile southeast of Decatur, and Stanley J. Yoho. Oak Park, 111., was arrested on U S. 27 at the intersection of the Winchester road and the highway, Salvador Jarequi, Decatur, paid a fine of $16.75 for reckless driving Saturday evening. He was arrested by city police. Charles E. Drake, route two. Monroe, paid a fine in city court this morning for disregarding a stop sign four miles east of Decatur on U. S. 224 Sunday. His fine totaled 5>16.75. Hold Craft School Saturday Afternoon A craft school for 4-H boys and girls enrolled in the craft project will be held at the Co-op building In Monroe Saturday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock. The craft school is sponsored by the crafts project committee to give the youths, and their parents, who are also invited, some ideas on display suitable in various craft fields. Members of the sponsoring com- ' mittee are Mrs. Ed Gerbers, Mrs. I Richard Harkless, Mrs. A. A. Fenner, Mrs. Stanley Arnold, Mrs. I Merle Foor, Mrs. Ernest Girod, Mrs. Irvin Worthman. Connie Ber-I gman and Mary Ann Gerbers. Rev. J. 0. Penrod Attends Institute The Rev. J. 0. Penrod. pastor of the Trinity Evangelical United Brethren church, is attending the Indiana conference north ministerial institute at Oakwood Park, Syracuse, today and Tuesday. Speakers at the annual institute will include Dr. Dale Oldham, pastor of the Park Place Church of God Anderson; Dr. H. Clair Am- | stutz. Goshen physican; and Bishop R. H. Mueller, DD.. LL.D. bishop of the west central area of the Evangelical United Brethren church. Sputnik In Different Orbit From Rocket MOSCOW — (IB — Sputnik HI. which completed its 50th circle of the earth today, no longer is following the same orbit as its carrier rocket, the official Soviet i news agency Tass reported. It said the rocket carrier now was moving a little below and ahead of the earth satellite. The rocket will gain seven minutes on Sputnik today and this difference will continue to increase gradual-1 ly. Tass said.
It's Storage Time PROTECT YOUR FURS & WINTER GARMENTS AGAINST MOTHS, HEAT, FIRE & THEFT BY HAVING THEM CLEANED & STORED IN OUR MODERN AIR-CONDITIONED STORAGE VAULTS AT These Low Prices MEN’S SUITS PLAIN SKIRTS TOPCOATS & OVERCOATS TROUSFRS LADIES’ SUITS qWFATFRQ DRESSES & PLAIN COATS CLEANED, A | A) 11 CLEANED, |||| STORED I 1U STORED & MM A INSURED Mt (JO INSURED fjVY FUR COATS—CLEANED, STORED & INSURED $6.50 FUR COATS—STORED & INSURED ~ s£29 MYERS CLEANERS & FURRIERS, INC. Cur. Madison & Second Sts.
MONDAY* MAY 19, 195«
Two Local Students Are Honored At LU. BLOOMINGTON, -Ind —Paul E. Schmidt, 115 N. 11th St., and Theodore R. Schrock, 632 S. 13th St., both of Decatur, werw honored as outstanding students In chemistry at Indiana University as a recognition banquet given > Friday night by the L U. Department of Chemistry. Schrock received third prize and Schmidt one of three honorable mentions among freshmen taking the course in general chemistry. Local Lady’s Grandson Awarded Scholarship Richard M. Allen, 17, of Park Ridge, 111.. grandson of Mrs. Fanny Christen of near Decatur, is one of four Chicago area boys recently awarded four-years college scholarships by General Motors Corp. Allen is the son Mrs. Naomi Christen-Allen, of 8 N. Home, Park Ridge, 111. He plans to study mechanical or chemical engineering at Purdue University. An older brother, George, is studying business administration at Miami University, Oxford, O. also on a GM scholarship. Nephew Os Decatur Man Valedictorian George Cannon, of Farmville, N. C., a nephew of John Joseph of this city, has been chosen valedietprian of his high school class. The young man will enter Notre Dame University next fall. A visitor in Decatur last the student won many honors during his four years at Farmville high school. He also attained the rank of Eagle scout. Quality Photo Finishings Al Work Left Before 8:00 p. m. Monday Ready Wednesday at 10 a; m. Holthouse Drug Co. SHOE CRIPPLES HIT ARK OUT OF OATS Foot-so-Port Shoes are built over special graded lasts which insure perfect fit regardless of size or width. This means your feet receive the full support of Foot-so-Port engineered construetion with its exclusive patented features. FOOT-SO-PORT SHOES 7/ Jut Ortho Shoe Clinic 145 So. 2nd St. i Phone 3-4134
