Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 220, Decatur, Adams County, 18 September 1958 — Page 3
■THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1958
SOCIETY MRS. RICHARD MARBACH IS HOSTESS TO CLUB Mrs. Richard Marbach was hostess recently to 18 members of the Merry Matrons Home Demonstration club. The meeting was opened by the group repeating the club creed and devotions were read by Mrs. Lewis Krueckeberg on Paslms one. History of the song of the month
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was read by Mrs. Lewis Sheets, after which the members sang the song. Minutes of the last meeting were read by Mrs. Glenn Lehrman and the roll call was answered by the members telling, “Why I believe in adult education." Mrs. Wilbert Thieme presented the health and safety lesson on rural safety defense. Following her talk, a business meeting was held with Mrs. Lewis Krueckeberg in charge. Members decided to have a silent auction at theip October meeting.
During the business meeting, an election of officers was held, with Mrs. Erwin Fuelling elected as president. The other officers are vice president, Mrs. Walter Thieme; secretary, Mrs. Vincent Wurm; treasurer, Mrs. Lewis Sheets; leaders, Mrs. Edward Marbach and Mrs. Edwin Krueckeberg. Miss Lois Folk gave a lesson on pattern alternations and following her demonstration, games were played and refreshments were served by the hostess. MONMOUTH EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETS MONDAY Members of the Monmouth executive board met Monday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the school. Following the secretary and treasurer’s reports, a list of the committees and their chairmen for the new year were given. On the budget and finance committee will be Richard Lewton. Mrs. Russell Fleming will be in charge of membership and Mrs. Robert Rice is the new historian. Character and spiritual will be under the charge of Mrs. Robert Beery and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Caston will act as the hospitality committee. Different programs will be handled by Mrs. Otto Boerger and publicity will be taken care of by Mrs. Loren Jones. Parent and family life education. legislature, procedure and by-laws, and scholarship will all be taken care of by Mrs. William Fifer, Richard Harkless, and Clarence Bultemeier, respectively. To complete the list of chairmen there are, room mothers, Mrs. Leo Workinger; health and summer round-up, Mrs. Dallas Brown and Mrs. Carl Hurst; safety, Mrs. Robert Carr; national PTA and Indiana PTA, Mrs. Richard Moses; music, Da'rrell Gerig; and recreation, Mrs. Robert Kleinhenz. Plans for a spaghetti supper to be held October 16 were discussed and Richard Lewton will be the general chairman. Otto Boerger, program chairman, submitted his report and it was approved. The teachers will be in charge of the first regular meeting, which will be held October 14. The opening meeting of the Historical club will be held at the home of Mrs. Roy Price Wednesday at 12 o'clock for a carry-in dinner. Monday at 8 o'clock, members of the Methodist Eveing Circle will meet in the church lounge. | At the Adams county memorial, hospital: Carl and Mattha Louise Bailey Miller, of 566 Hendricks street, Berne, are the parents of an eight pound, 1314 ounce boy born at l:35 f a.m. today. A boy weighing eight pounds and nine ounces was born this morning at 3:32 o’clock to Frederick and Donna Grandstaff Fuelling, of route 3. At 11:30 a.m. today, Herman and Kathryn Stuckey Alberding, of 346 South Third street', became the parents of a four popnd, three and three fourths ounce boy.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Calendar Items for today’s pubIcation must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30) “ Phone 3-2121 Miss Marilou Uhrick THURSDAY Emanuel Lutheran P.T.L., school, 8 p.m. D.Y.B. class, Trinity E. U. B. church, 6:30 p.m., potluck supper. W. S. W. S. guest night, Bethany E. U. B. church, 7:30 p.m. Rleasant Mills W.S.C.S., church, 7:30 p.m. Gals and Pals Square Dance club guest night, Youth Center, 8 p.m. Order of the Rainbow for Girls, postponed until October 2. So Cha Rae club, Mrs. Clyde Butlef, 7:30 p. m., dessert meeting. Women of the Moose ritual practice, Moose home, 7 p.m. Past Matrons of O. E. S., Mrs. Robert Macklin, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY 'D.A.V. auxiliary, D.A.V. hall, 8 p.m. Kum Double class of Trinity E. U. B. church, carry - in supper, Hanna-Nuttman park, 6:30 p.m. MONDAY Pythian Sisters Needle club, K. of P. home, 7:30 p.m. Methodist Evening Circle, church lounge, 8 p.m. TUESDAY Psi lota Xi fall style show. Community Center, 8 p.m. Root Township Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Norbert Aumann, 1 p.m. WEDNESDAY St. Vincent de Paul society, C. L. of C. hall, 2 p.m. Historical club, Mrs. Roy Price, 12 p.m. Mrs. Te Frona Floyd had as dinner guests Tuesday evening Floyd Krick, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Parrish and son, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Eyles, T/Sgt. and Mrs. John H. Parrish and daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Parrish. The occasion was a farewell dinner for Pyles, who will enter the army Monday and T/Sgt. Parrish, who will leave for Nancy, France soon. Miss Marabelle Wolfe and Miss Sandy Stevens have entered, their freshman year at Purdue University. Both graduated from high school this spring. Miss Wolfe from Pleasant Mills, and Miss Stevens from Decatur high school. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Haynes, of Garrett, visited in Decatur Wednesday with friends. Mrs. Haynes is the former Barbara Lewton, and a fonner deputy clerk at the Adams county court house.
BPCIWBIWaF m Donald Bultemeier, gunner’s mate third class, USN, and son of Mr.and Mrs. Lawrence Bultemeier of route one, is serving aboard the Navy’s newest destroyer, the USS Hull, which departed i Bostqn, Mass., Sept. 2 for duty i with the U.S. Pacific fleet. San! Diego. Calif., will be the home port for the new destroyer, which was commissioned July 3. i y n wfci Admitted Theodore Schumm, Willshire. Ohio; Ruth and Keith Scherer, Monroeville; Mrs. Cora C. Miller, Bluffton. Dismissed Mrs. Gerhard Schultz, Decatur: Master Daniel Schnitz, Wren Ohio; Otto B. Lehman, Berne: Mrs. Leo Thieme and baby boy Decatur; Merl Essex, Monroe. The Marines landed in Panama six times between 1885 and 1903 to quell uprisings that were endangering United States property and the building of the Panama Canal. IN TEN DAYS OR MONEY BACK If you are overweight, here is the first really thrilling news to come along in yeans. A new & convenient way to get rid of extra pounds easier than ever, so you can be as slim and trim as you want This new product called MATRON curbs both hunger & appetite. No drugs, no diet, no exercise. Absolutely harmless. When you take DIATRON, you still enjoy your meals, still eat the foods you like but you simply don’t have the urge for extra portions and automatically your weight must come down, because, as your own doctor will tell you, when you eat less, you weigh less. Excess weight endangers your heart, kidneys. So no matter what you have tried before, get DIATRON and prove to yourself what It can do, DIATRON is sold on this GUARANTEE: You must lose weight with the first package you use or - the package costs you nothing. Just return the bottle to your druggist and get your money back. DIATRON costs 13.00 and is sold with this Strict money back guarantee by: , Smith Drug Store - Decatur - Mall orders Filled
Slate Republicans Bank On Farm Vote Expect Losses In Industrial Votes INDIANAPOLIS (UPD —lndiana Republican leaders are counting on the farm vote to save the party from defeat this fall. ; The GOP chiefs admit that the Democratic vote total will rise formidably in the industrial counties, but are claiming almost frantically that the current favorable prices for nearly all farm products except those received by dairy farmers will conserve the traditional Republican farm vote strength. Hog raisers enjoyed an average price of $20.50 during the 1957-58 marketing year (Oct. 1-Sept. 30). according to a report made by Purdue University economists this week. And quotations for the grains likewise have remained high. If the farmer voter looks ahead to 1959, however, the GOP prospects will be dimmed, because the Purdue authorities predicted a jump of from two to four per cent in farm production costs next year.
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Farming Profits Down? "Returns from farming will be a little lower in Indiana in 1959,” a report said. The Purdue experts predicted that hogs prices will average $2 to $4 per hundredweight lower next year than during the current marketing year, but added that beef cattle prices may be as high, or moderately higher, than in 1958. The Indiana farm price of No. 2 corn for the 1958 crop is expected by the economists to average between sl.lO and $1.20 a bushel. Indiana farmers traditionally vote Republican. However, the GOP lost thousands of their votes when Harry S. Truman was reelected President in 1948 and Thomas E. Dewey carried Hoosierdom by a narrow margin. In recognition of the situation, backers of Evansville Mayor Vance Hartke, Democratic nominee for United States Senator, have announced the organization of a Farmers for Hartke Club with its first meeting scheduled for Monday night at the Indiana State Fairgrounds. Hartke, who will address the gathering, said: "Cannot Control” "Farmers have special problems because they cannot control the elements which are essential to their production. They cannot con-
trol the conditions under which they market their goods at auction prices. i “American farmers have become more and more efficient and are being penalized for this efficiency. The more they produce, the less they get for their produce. All the while the prices they pay for goods, machinery and services keeps climbing. The spread between the prices the farmers get for their produce and the prices the housewives pay at the market grows greater.” A reliable Indianapolis newspaper poll was showing the Democrats carrying Marion County. Hartke was leading his GOP opponent Governor Handley, 55 -45 per cent, in the poll taken by the Evansville Press. The Democratic state organization also maintained a poll conducted by Lou Harris arid Associates showed 55 per cent of Hoosiers who have made up their minds prefer Hartke. Recession layoffs in Lake, Allen, Vanderburgh, Vigo, Madison, Delaware and in other large indus-
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PAGE THREE
trial counties also appeared to be enhancing the Democratic chances. Hayride, Wiener Bake Is Planned Tuesday A hayride and wiener bake is planned by the Adams county rural youth club for Tuesday, starting at 7:30 p.m. The group will meet at the home of Jerry Sprunger, two miles north of Berne on highway 27 and % mile east for the hayride, and return there for the wiener bake. The committee in charge of the event is Roger Habegger and Jerry Sprunger and all rural young people are invited to attend. Trade in a gooC town — Decatur.
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