Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 183, Decatur, Adams County, 5 August 1958 — Page 3

TUESDAY. AUGUST 5. 1958

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COMMITTEE NAMED FOB SATURDAY AUCTION Mrs. Paul Wolf and Mrs. Erwin Franke, co-chairmen of the public auction to be hel<VSaturday at 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. on Madison street, announced the complete committee for the afternoon sale as follows: Cashier and clerk will be Mrs. Harold Hollman and Mrs. Edwin Graft. The food tent, which will be open at noon, featuring sandwiches, home made pies and drings, will be operated by the Mesdames Wade Tyler, Walter Mueller, Lora Bultemeier, Arthur Doctor, Ted Lepper, Arthur Gjrewe, Arthur Fiedler, Albert Bieberich, Rudy Seddelmeyer, and E. L. Nicol. Key women in each of the ten Lutheran congregations who are responsible for collecting the articles for the sale report that many interesting and useful items., including a kitchen cupboard, dinette set ,dog house, swing set, etc. have already been promised. The students from the Reppert school of auctioneering will auction all the articles, the entire proceeds of which will go to the project fund of- the Guild to be used in the extensive building program on the campus at Valparaiso University. The public is invited to inspect the articles and have lunch from noon Saturday through the evening. Thursday the Monroe rural fire department will meet for this month. Members will gather at the fire station at 7:30 p.m. Town and country home demonstration club August meeting, a picnic, has been pistponed untli been postponed until Thursday, September 4. Thursday’s regularly scheduled dance for the Gals and Pals square dance club has been cancelled. The next dance will be Thursday, August 21, at the Cominunity center, at 8 p.m. Miss Beulah Bertsch To A tend oCnference Miss Beulah Jane Bertsch, formerly of the St. Luke's Reformed church at Honduras, will be one of’ five delegates from Fort Wayne to the national conference on Christian education to be held at Purdue university Aug. 19-22 by the United Church of Christ. Both the Congregational Christian churches and the Evangelical and Reformed church, nbw united into the UCC, have for centuries emphasized the importance of education as a basis for responsible church membership. The backbone of the conference will be 100 study groups on every conceivable facet of Christian education; More than one-third of the pre-registered delegates are under 25 years of age. Keynote speaker will be Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, U. S. Senator from Minnesota and a Congregational Christian layman. James Murray will be the delegate from Bluffton. . TOMORROW TOTS DAY AT Edward’s Studio

i When Cost Must Be : Considered • ___ “ • ■ ■ ; • Because bereavement rarely finds • the family financially prepared, • Zwick Funeral Home offers a solu-tion-funerals that are moderately • priced. And the price marked on J the casket is complete. There are • no “extra” or “hidden” charges. Budget terms are always available. { ZWICK • J Zwick • Elmer Winteregg • S'r>c»Jß?B • «•»<> W • PHONE l-ls 3?

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ISO] Calendar Items for today's pubication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30) * Phone 3-2121 Miss Marilou Uhrick TUESDAY Eagles auxiliary officers meeting, Eagles Hall, 8 p. m. THURSDAY M.Y.F. of Methodist church ice cream social, church, 5 until 10 p.m. Ladies Aid of Trinity E.U.8., church, 7:30 p.m. Rainbow Girls, Masonic hall,. 8:45 p.m. Unit 3 of W.S.W.S. Bethany E.U. 8., Mrs. Dean Byerly, 2 p.m. Unit 1 of Bethany E.U.8., Mrs. Clarence R. Smith, 2 p.m. Church of God Missionary Society, fellowship hall, 7:30 p. m. Unit 2 of Bethany E. U. B. church, postponed one week. » Monroe rural fire department, frfestatl6n,"7f3op:m;“” ——— Gals and Pals square dance cancelled. Next dance Thursday, August 21, Community center, 8 p.m. FRIDAY Unit 4 df Bethany E. U. B.‘, Hanna-Nuttman shelter house, 8:30 p. m. SATURDAY — Street auction sponsored by the Valpo Guild, Madison street, 1:30 and 7:30 p. m." v SUNDAY St. Peter’s Walther League social, church, program begins at 8:30 p.m. Funeral Held Today For Rev. Houseman The Rev. Mark Houseman, 50, native of Russia and a resident of Berne for the past year, died last week in a hospital in British Columbia. Canada, following a cerebral hemorrhage. He was a traveling evangelist and associated with the Hansbury orphanage in Jamaica. Surviving are the wife, two , daughters and a son. Funeral services and burial were held in Lans- . ing, Mich., this afternoon. I . ✓ City Health Board In Monthly Meeting The city board of health met with Mayor Robert Cole Monday at their regularly scheduled meeting helo ' at city hall the first Monday of each month, Dr. John B. Terveer, city health officer said today. Action was taken on the complaints on outhouses in the city. One on Patterson and one on First street were removed by the property owners and filled in with dirt. Ray Lehman, city health inspector, gave a detailed report for the month of July to the board. Lehman stated that cooperation of the restaifrant and food market owners in complying with the new health laws is approximately 99 per cent. The next meeting will be held September 1. Great trials are often necessary to prepare us for responsibility.

r S'r ■ • ■ ; * ■ .■ y Mrs. Robert Lewis Haggard » . ; " -■

Miss Judith Burk Bride Sunday Os Robert L Haggard Shades of light and dark pink t and white formed the setting for the marriage of Miss Judith Ann Burk and Robert Lewis Haggard, which was performed Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock. Orgeon fern banked either side of the altar which was centered with white gladioli and pink carnations with « darker shade of pink ribbon. The f communion railing was lined with t candles interwined with smiliax - and pink ribbon bows and the - bride’s aisle was lined with tall - candelabra containing pink candles 1 and interwined with green smi- - liax and large pink bows of light and dark Colors. Each window j held an arrangement of fern, can- - dies, Ind ribbon. The ceremony was performed in the Methodist church in Portland, with the Rev. Virgil Bjork reading the double ring rites and the Rev. Willis Gierhart of Monroe administering communion. Background music was provided by Bob Platt, vocalist, who sang “Be--9 cause,” “Wedding Prayer,” and r the “Lord’s Prayer,” and the or--5 ganist, Mrs. Dan Freeby of Def catur, who played “Intermetigo,” . “Because,” “Indian Love Call” and "Longenderry Air.” Mr. and Mrs. James W. Beard . of 727 Race street, Portland, are t the parents of the bride and Hag- - gard is the son of Mr. and Mrs. . Harvey Haggard of route 2, Deca- , tur. > Miss Burk, who was escorted to . the altar by her step-father, ap- ; peared in a bridal gown of miram--5 ist taffeta and rose-point lace. The ’ empire bodice of lace featured a square neckline outlined with lace ’ scallops, and the long sleeves tapered to points over her hands. Her full gored skirt of taffeta , was enhanced by a panel of lace forming at the back of the empire waistline and and extending to the hemline of the Cathedral train. A contour crown of seed pearls held in place her waist length veil of French illusion and she carried a crescent shaped bouquet of white gradenias and tulle. She also wore pearl earrings, a gift of the bridegroom. Maid of honor was Miss Mary Helen Craig and bridesmaids included Miss Carol Haggard and Miss Joyce Haggard, sisters of the bridegroom, Miss Dorcas Condon and Mrs. Robert Cooksey. The attendants wore gowns of white chiffon taffeta styled similar to that of the bride. The gowns featured empire bodices of Viennese lace and the waltz length princess skirts were accented with harem backs. Complementing the gowns, were crowns of seed, pearls fashioned with illusion veils. Miss Craig carried a long cascade arrangement of dark pink roses and the other attendants carried bouquets of light pink carnations and dark pink roses. Little Miss Susan Hill was the flower girl in a gown of pink embroidered organdy over pink taffeta. The fitted bodice was accented with a sweetheart neckline outlined in lace and forming straps rf>ver the shoulders. Her full skirt fc/as caught in the; back with a Targe butterfly bow and streamers and she carried a white basket of pink flowers with steramers. The ringbearer was Master Stephen Spahr and he was dressed in a white coat ensemble similar to the ushers and carried a white , satin pillow decorated with lilies ! of the valley. Bill L. Arnold, of Decatur Ed- ' ward Dick, Howard Rich, Joe Volosin, Phil Queen, and Leslie

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

Toth seated the guests. ..... Mrs. Beard chose for her daughter’s wedding, a pink re-embroid- I ered Alenson lace sheath dress 1 with matching accessories and a corsage of white gardenias. Mrs. Haggard was attired in a beige silk shantung dress with bronze accessories and a corsage of pink 'roses. The bride's colors of pink were used throughout the reception room.A five tiered wedding cake in pink tones with a miniature bride and groom nested in green smiliax was the centerpiece for the serving table. The smiliax extended to the four corners of the table and was caught by pink bows which rested on a tulle tablecloth in pink. Two tables were used for the punch bowls and they were covered by white linen cloths and decorated with ivy, candles, and flowers. Pink wedding bells strung on pink ribbon made an arch over the serving table. Hostesses at the reception were Miss Alice Nell Chancghr, Miss Carolyn Woodbury, and the Mesdames Darel Wendell, Arthur Harris, John Funderberg, and Joe Volosin. — — For an Eastern honeymoon, the new Mrs. Haggard changed to a light rose dress-maker’s suit with matching accessories. A grdauate of the Portland Wayne township high school, Mrs. Haggard is an alamna of Ball State and is affiliated with the Alpha Omicron Pi and Kappa Kappa So Slimming Printed Pattern ■ ■ - I®’ JT yl V r/ LI Al/r « wk L ft I# I & 1 b / in I) ||/ I 9279 SIZES 14%-24Mb inf Haif-sizers! This is the dress you asked for— a smooth and slimming sheath to take you smartly everywhere from now through fall. Note diagonal bodice line, touch of contrast. Printed Pattern 9279: Half, Sizes 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, I 24%. Size 16% takes 3% yards 35-inch; Vt yard contrast. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate. Send FIFTY CENTS (coins) for this pattern—add 10 cents for each pattern if you wish Ist-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number.

Kappa sororites. She will teach in 11 Decatur this fall. Haggard was | graduated from Kirkland high school and the Indiana College of . Mortuary Science. He is a morti- j can with the Zwick funeral home * in Decatur. The future residence of the couple will be 703 North Second street. Society Belle Is i ■ v n Serious On Acting ; Pamela Curran On | TV Show Wednesday By FRED DANZIG 1 United Press International f NEW YORK (UPI) — Today's f chapter in “The Pamela Curran Story” asks the question: Can a ] highly-publicized society girl, re- € nowned for her beauty, find hap- “ piness and success as an actress? Miss Curran, a green-eyed ( blonde with the face of a com- j bination Grace Kelly-Anita Ekberg j and the “ancheggiava,” or hip- • wiggle, of a Sophia Loren, says { the answer is yes But it takes { some extra hard work. “To star|»with,” said Miss Curran, “nobody thought I was seri- I ous about acting. You know, so- < ciety girl, model, all that sort of < . thing, J the columns, they think you can’t 1 be serious. People think of society 1 girls as dainty little things with < little white gloves, so I had to show I was serious.” To Appear On Kraft _ 1 She’ll do some serious acting ’ Wednesday night in an hour'J drama called, “Death for Sale,” lon NBC-TV’s “Kraft Mystery The- 1 |ater.” Miss Curran will play Lola, ! a hard-bitten singer who is ' marked for death after writing her memoirs. “This is the first part I've had ’ that is removed from the glamorous, languid type,” she said. “It’s , an acting job. I play an older, , wilder girl and I guess I can call . it my real TV acting debut.” < Miss Curran, who made her so- ’ ciety debut at Old Westbury, N.Y. in 1950, w r as a nationally known beauty long before that time. Her face decorated slick magazine covers and pages and she was earning S4OO a week at 15. “Mother said all that money and fame would be bad for me socially, so I gave it all up gradually,” sauj Miss Curran. Studys Acting Born in New York, she is the daughter of Helen D. Roosen and William G. Curran. Her mother later married the socially prominent Frank .M. Gould, a grandsop of' financier Jay Gould. Her highly-publicized debut was followed by a highly-publicized 'maffiage, t ;«> highly-publicized divorce and. last fall, another high-ly-publicized marriage to golfer Bob Sweeny. Between marriages, Miss Curran began to study acting. She was able to get minor parts on TV—acting and delivering commercials — and was summoned to Hollywood by 20th Century Fox. Her scenes in “Desk Set” were left in the cutting room, but Miss Curran didn’t let it bothor her. “I still had that experience of making movies and acting with Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. They couldn't cut that out.” Former State School Superintendent Dies FORMER STATE SCHOOL NORTWiI|ERNON, Ind. (UPD - Daniel non banker who was superintendent of Muscatatuck State School at Butlerville from 1933 to 1939. died Monday in a Seymour hospital. McCauley also was a former member of the North Vernon City Council. ■1 I """"'tiA few REXAti iphi GUARXHTttB *OV£RTIS£O Maarri’ ' CARA NOME “FAST” PERMANENT BUY ONE! Get One I FREE! $3.50 VALUE SPECIAL 2 ro/1-75 SMITH DRUG CO. mm!

House Probers Are Assailed By Curtis Declares Conduct Is Public Scandal WASHINGTON (UPD — Rep. Thomas B. Curtis (R-Mo.) demanded today House influenceinvestigators prove they have “clean hands” "before the House votes on their request for a contempt citation against millionaire Bernard Goldfine. ,< Charging anew the subcommittee's conduct “has become a public scandal,” Curtis said the House should get a full explanation from the group which investigated Goldfine, gift - giving friend of Presidential Assistant Sherman Adams. The congressman, a frequent critic of the subcommittee headed by Rep. Oren Harris (D-Ark.), listed a number of charges against the panel in a statement published in today's Congressional Record. i “These matters, unanswered, badly damage the reputation of Congress,” he said. “This subcommittee should make a formal report on these and other matters before the House should consider the request for a contempt citation.” Harris released copies Monday of a report on the recommendation for the contempt citation voted 30 to 0 last week by the House Commerce Committee. The report said the subcommittee’s effectiveness would be "seriously impaired” if Congress did not find Goldfine in contempt for his refusal to answer 22 questions about his financial transactions. The matter is expected to come up on the House floor later this week. The House is expected to approve the contempt citation and snd it to the Justice Department for prosecution. W 'Wil DENIES FAT At BEATING—Former Yale football star Joseph P. Crowley, sitting In a car in Tokyo, pleaded innocent before a Japanese court to charges that he fatally beat his brother* in-law, T. A. D. Jones, during a drunken brawl In their hotel suite last May. If convicted, he could be sentenced to 2 to 15 years. (Radiophoto)

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IlniHgKOr jigTmr * <> ft r r %■.' ■ The princess. | The attorney. HER FAVORITE — Favorite companion of Britain’s 28-year-old Princess Margaret during her Ottawa stay is reported to be Montreal attorney John Napier Turner, 29, who danced with her for two and one-half hours at Gov. Gen. Vincent Massey’s dinner dance. Also, she was with him at a post-dance record listening party, and Invited him to a “rest day.”

In Field Exercise BAMBERG, Germany (AHTNC) — Army Pvt. Raymond Litchtenberger. son of Mr. aod Mrs. William H. Litchtenberger, route 5, Decatur, Ind., recently participated in a field training exercise with the 3rd division in Germany. Litchtenberger is regularly assigned as a switchboard operator in mortar battery of the division’s 1 4th infantry in Bamberg. He entered the Army in November, 1957, and completed basic training at Fort Benning, Ga. The 23-year-old soldier is a 1954 graduate of Pleasant Mill high school. Tinkham, Kaehr Enlist Two Decatur youths, Larry Tinkham, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Tinkham. and Bernard L. Kaehr, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kaehr, have enlisted for three years each, M-Sgt. Stan Martinelli, of the Fort Wayne army recruiting station, announced Monday. Both have been sent to Fort Leonard Wood. Mo., for processing and basic training. When Tinkham completes this hitch, he will receive special training in infantry tactics and weapons, while Kaehr? will report to Camp Gordon. Ga.. to receive special training in the military police fieldAdmitted to the Van Wert county hospital were Mrs. Paulgene Clouse, Ohio City, 0., and Mrs. Russell Book, route one, Willshire, O. Attending the commencement of Miss Anna Marie Lengerich at the Holy Cross school of nursing, South Bend, Sunday afternoon were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lengerich and family, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hess and family, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lengerich and son, Mr. and Mrs. Elroy Winteregg, Miss Betty Baker, Miss Marcella

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Gillig and William Kruse, of%)ecatur, and Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Merck, Roanoke. A reception was held after the commencement exercises at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hess in South Bend, where friends and relatives of Miss Lengerich were in South Bend, where friends and relatives of Mis Lengerich were greeted. Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Miller and daughters Sharon and Angela have returned from a week’s trip to the east coast, where they spent three days at Quonset Point Naval air station, Wakefield, R. 1., visiting their son and brother, Marine Cpl. Robert J. Miller. During their visit to New York city, the four visited the Bronx Zoo. Cadet Ronald Robinson returned Saturday from Fort Riley, Kansas, where he spent the past six weeks at R.O.T.C. camp. Cadet Robinson is in the R.O.T.C. at Indiana University and Will e at senior at the university this fall. Mrs. Cleo Renigar, of Green burg, and Mrs. Edgar Yoder, of Berne, were shoppers in Decatur Monday. Mrs. Yoder is a former resident of Decatur. A 11 King-Size CARA NOMI 5^..,.. DUSTING POWDER Softer than softl Big, 13-oz. box with puff. 1 OQ piui $3.00 Value 1,0 U tu Save % RADIANCE Hand Lotion Big 12-oz. bottle ■ f ( $2.00 Vahit 980 tax fl NATIONALLY ADVERTISED SMITH L DRUG CO. I ..■■»■■■■■• BHBBMaßaaaaM —