Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 25 October 1958 — Page 3

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1958

r Si ■ Wt* * 'WiifMfii*’ w» wHw Mr Wp^' t ; H®M ?< ... £ »j • i-WsOaEN • • ’ - •1M ■ •■’/IHII . Mrs. Daniel Richard Stably

Miss Ruth Amstutz Married Friday To Daniel R. Stahly Bouquets of white flowers, candelabra, and palms graced the altar of the First Missionary church of for the Friday evening marriage of Miss Ruth Annette Amstutz and Daniel Richard Stahly. The Rev. J. J. Klopfenstein, assisted by the Rev. C. A. Schmid, officiated at the double ring ceremony performed at 6:30 o’clock. Mrs. Gladys Chrisman, organist, presented nuptial music before the ceremony and the bridegroom sang “God Gave Me You” to the bride. Miss Linnet Sprunger, a bridemaid, sang the “Lord’s Prayer.” • The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Amstutz of route 2, Berne, and Stahly is the youngest son of Mrs. Irene Stahly of Geneva. Given in marriage by her father, the bride appeared in a white nylon tulle over taffeta gown. A Peter Pan collar embroidered with seed pearls fashioned the bodice of lace over taffeta. Long sleeves came to points over her hands. The tulle skirt, which ended in a long train, was appliqued with lace motifs. A fingertip veil fell from a headpiece embroided with sequins and pearls and she carried a white orchid on a white Bible covered with lace of the bridal gown. Attending her sister as maid of honor was Miss Myrna Amstutz. She selected a gown of deep rose taffeta with a waltz length skirt. A Dream to Sew Printed Pattern /Sv t ’ fOs o ii iilWi II \ 1 1.1 111 I i iii I Bi I /|\aVa ll I /Hl ll Il I B rtfew 1 11 * I n \ | 12-20 Choose your favorite length — Baby Doll, dress, or long —for Snappy-sew — no waist seams, this divine dream of a nightie! few pattern parts. Make one, two or three versions so thriftily in rayon, cotton, Dacron or nylon. Printed Pattern 9175: Misses’ Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 takes 4t4 yards 39-inch fabric. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate. Send Thirty-Five Cents (coins) 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.

The scoop neckline was outlined with a drape of light rose tulle as was the overskirt. Encircling her waist was a cummerbund which was accented with taffeta roses and which ended at the hem of the skirt. She wore a matching taffeta clip with a brief veil and carried a colonial bouquet a maroon and white mums. Miss Linnet Sprunger and Miss Jean Grove bridesmaids and friends of the bride, were attired identically to the maid of honor and carried maroon and white mums. Alan Baumgartner, a friend of the bridegroom, was the best man and Robert Schisler, Clark Stahly Dean Stahly, and Steven Bau-' man seated the guests. A diora blue jersey printed dress with blue and black accessories war worn by Mrs. Amstutz. Mrs. Stahly selected a black and white jacket suit. Both of the mothers wore pink carnation corsages. Immediately following the ceremany, a reception was held in the I educational unit of the Cross Evangelical and Reformed church. Servers included Mrs. Robert Schisler. Mrs. Bill Hill. Miss Claudia Amstutz. Miss Shi|ley Fenster- > maker, and Miss Alice Norr. The bride changed into a black i wool jersey dress with a blouseon I type bodice and a fitted skirt. She wore with it, black and natural ac- i cessories and a white corsage. A graduate of Geneva high' school, the new Mrs. Stahly attend- j ed Ball State Teachers College and is an elementary teacher at i the Geneva public school. The bridegroom is a graduate of Gen- i eva high school and is an uphols- j ter with the Berne Furniture com- : pany. After October 29, the couple ; will reside in the Grile apartments ! at Geneva. Crewmen Os Fishing Boat Are Rescued MANILA (UPD — The fishing boat Melita sank Friday night in waters churned up by this week’s “killer storm,” but all of its 25 crewmen were picked up by another ship. A navy spokesman said the motor freighter St. Christopher, crippled by engine trouble in the storm’s wake, went to the aid Os the Melita as soon as many rescuers had helped repair its engine. The fishing boat rounded and sank on Apo reef, 7V» miles off the west coast of Mindoro Island. - I Time Is Up For Coin-Boxes CHICAGO — (UPII — By the 1 end of the year some A.200 Chi- '< cagoans who have clung to old < private cojh-box telephone < t circa 1900) will be mourning their t mechanical relics. Illinois Bell is < replacing all the old nickel-operat- t ed box phones in homes and business places. The antiques require users to drop and in recent years owners have had to pay an additional monthly bill. Chicago is the last major city in the U. S. to replace the old phones. OVER 100 YEARS s ft°° BOWER JEWELRY STORE Decatur Indiana — - I

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FORMER DECATUR MAN IS MARRIED FRIDAY Miss Maianne J. Grauel of Cleveland, Ohio,' was joined in marriage Friday to John T. Meyers, formerly of Decatur, at the Aldersgate Methodist church in Warrensville Heights, Ohio. The Rev. Robert A. Raines' officiated at the candlelight ceremony. ' The bride, a graduate of Collinwood high school in Cleveland, and an employee of the Ohio Bell Telephone company, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David W. Grauel. Mr. Grauel gave his daughter in marriage. The bride's sister-in-law, Mrs. David G. Gauel, was her matron of honor, and bridesmaids were Mrs. Joseph Buron and Miss Carol King, both of Cleveland. The groom, a graduate of Indiana University, where he was a member of Sigma Chi fraternity, is an audit superivsor for the White Motor company of .Cleveland. He is the grandson of Mrs. John T. Myers and Mrs. H. D. Lower of this city. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Lower of Yonkers, N. Y. Robert W. Comer of Chi* cago, a fraternity brother of the bridegroom, was the best man and Daniel C. Thomas of Decatur and CjJril V. Regan of Cleveland, acted as ushers. The couple plans a wedding trip to the Great Smoky Mountains and will reside at 21003 Ellacott Parkway, Apt. 12-D, Warrensville Heights, Ohio, after November 1. LEGION AUXILIARY MEETS FRIDAY EVENING A social meeting was held by the members of the American Legion Auxiliary Friday evening. During the evening, games were played and prizes were awarded to Mrs: V. J. Borman and Mrs Dee Fryback for Winning in word bridge. In pinj ochle, Mrs. Wilson Beltz and Mrs. , Nelson Doty were declared win- | ners and Mrs. Art Meyers and Mrs. Otto Fuelling were presented with prizes for winning in bunco. Following the game period, HalI oween refreshments were served |by the hostesses. Mrs. Charles Chew, Mrs. Kenneth Singleton, and Mrs. Joe Hunter. Announcement was made that the district meet* ing will be held November 12 at LaGrange. Women of the Moose met Thursi day evening at the Moose home for i their regular lodge meeting. Plans 1 were made to attend the annual fall invocation meeting at MichiI gan City, Sunday. After the lodge i meeting, the monthly birthday anniversary party was held with those celebrating their birthday | anniversaries receiving a gift. The ! next meeting will be held Novem- . bet 6. The Delta Lamba chapter of the : Beta Sigma Phi will meet at the ' i home of Mrs. Joe Morris Tuesday | at 8 o’clock. Lesson leaders are i ' Mrs. Dale Death and Mrs. Carl | Gattschall. Members of the Methodist Evening Council will meet in the church lounge Monday at 8 o’clock. Miss Carol Haggard will be a guest speaker. Monday at 7:30, members of the Decatur Weight Watchers will meet with Mrs. Marcile Hill. Members are to bring a white elephant -gift. Mrs. Martha Kindel will be hostess to members of the Monroe’s Christian Temperance Union Thursday at 1:30 o’clock. At 8 o’clock Tuesday, members of the Delta Theta Tau sorority will meet at the home of Miss Rosemary Spangler. Early Start HASBROUCK HEIGHTS. N. J. 'UPD — George Maysonnave, 23, a graduate of the University of Caen, has been hired by the Board of Education here to conduct an experimental program in French conversation for pupils in the fifth through eighth grades.

NOTICE TO OUR CUSTOMERS Please Call and Pick Up Merchandise Over Sold On Our - - FALL REXALL ONE CENT SALE! SMITH'S REXALL ORUG STORE

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

ication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30) Phone 3-2121 Miss Marilou Uhrlck SATURDAY Christian Companions class of Trinity E.U.B. church, wiener ■roast at Hanna-Nuttman park, 6:15 p.m. Valpo Guild rummage sale, former Holthouse and Schulte store, 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. SUNDAY Fish £ry sponsored by St. Peter Lutheran Walther League, church, 4:30 until 8 p.m. MONDAY St. Ambrose Study club, Mrs. Oscar Miller 7:30 p.m. Academy of Friendship, Moose home, 7:30 p.m. Pythian Sisters, K. of P. home, 7:30 p.m., Needle Club to follow. Methodist Evening Counpil, church lounge, 8 p.m. Decatur Weight Watchers, Mrs. Marcile Hill, 7:30 p.m., bring white elephant gift. TUESDAY Xi Alpha Xi, Mrs. J. Fred Fruchte, 7:30 p.m., hard times party. Home nursing organizational meeting, fire station, 7:30 p.m. Adams County Historical Society, Lincoln school, 8 p.m. Jolly Housewives, Bobo school house, 7:30 p.m., come masked. Olive Rebekah lodge, 1.0.0. F. hall, 7:30 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma sorority, Mrs. Ray Heller, 8 p.m. Sunny Circle Home Demonstration club hard times party, Preble township community building, 7:30 p.m., bring gifts for mental health. Root township home demonstration club, all day meeting, Mrs. Omer Merriman, 10 a.m., bring covered dish and white elephant gift. < W.S.W.S. of Union Chapel E.U.B. church, Mrs. Earl Chase, 7:30 p.m. Delta Lamba Chapter, Mrs. Joe Morris, 8 p.m. Monroe W.C.T.U., Mrs. Martha Kindel, 1:30 p.m. . Delta Theta Tau sorority, Miss Rosemary Spangler, 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY C.W.F. of First Christian church, 7:30 p.m. St. Vincent DePaul Study club, C.L. of C. hall, 2 p.m. Union township home demonstration club hobo party, Mrs. Earl Chase, 1:30 p.m., bring tin cup and tin plate. The Aurora Borealis and the Aurora Australis are displayed of I light in the high levels of the j earth’s atmosphere. They are I most ferqiiently seen in broad i belts which lie approximately a- ; long the boundaries of the polar , regions. ■Mb « . ■ nn L ■ f IB AH, WINTER COMlNG— Winter's j coming, this polar bear seems to be saying as he rubs his paws iri Paris’ Vincennes zoo.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Voglewede and daughter Alice motored to Toledo Friday to spend the week end with Mrs. Charles Voglewede and the Kevin Whelan family. Mrs. Voglewede will leave November 3 rd for North Augusta, S. C., to spend the winter with the Wal- . ter Egan family.' I Miss Judy Denny of Kokomo, is visiting with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Tyndall. Mrs. Forest Deitsch has returned home from Enid, Okla., where ! she visited with her daughter and family, Cap and Mrs. Fred Reomker and daughter Amy. Mrs. Van Grant of Rensselaer is , returning home after spending a i week with her daughter, Mrs. Dick Heller. Roe Lehman and Garry Sheets returned today after spending eight i days in Florida. The two local residents stopped at Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach. At the Adams county memorial hospital: Gilbert and Delores Doctor Hartmann of route 1, Ossian, became parents of an eight pound, three ounce girl at 5:12 o’clock Friday afternoon.A boy weighing eight pounds and eight ounces was born at 8:13 p.m. Friday to Arnold H. and Shirley . Perkins Getting of route 1, Grabill. This morning at 4:26 o'clock, a six pound, seven ounce boy was born to Henry and Dorthey Ball Costello of 1003 Elm street. j 4&jOSMTAL Admitted Master Richard Adams, Fort ! Wayne; Pryor Gilbert, Decatur. Dismissed Master Keith Foltz, Bryant: Master Daniel Jauregui, Decatur. ARCHBISHOP (Continued from Page one) world's half-billion Roman Catholics Later today the violet - robed princes of the church will be sealed up in the Sistine Chapel until they decide on a successor to the late Pope Pius XII, who ■ died Oct. 9. Voting will begin I Sunday. I Diplomats from 42 nations attended the morning mass. Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, • bearded dean of the Sacred Col* ’ lege of Cardinals, set the suppli- • cant mood for divine guidance in a final public mass before the I great “Altar of the Chair” in St. Peter’s Basilica where the late pope was buried six days ago. Ask Divine Guidance Speaking for the primates of the church from 21 countries and five nontenants. Cardinal Tisserant began his chant before the candle-lit altar: “Deus, qui corda fidelium Sanctis Spiritus ...” “God, who didst teach the hearts of the faithful by the light of the Holy Spirit, grant us by the same Spirit to have right judgment in all things and ever to rejoice in this consolation. Through our Lord ... in the unity of the same Holy Ghost.” The blessed “Amen” from the Sistine choir reverberated through the vaulted basilica and Msgr. Antonio Bacci, secretary of briefs and the Vatican’s Latin expert, mounted the pulpit to exhort the cardinals to think only of God. “Lay aside all earthly considerations,” he urged. “Look only to God and give to the Holy Roman and Universal Church a capable and suitable pastor . . having only God before your eyes.”

'pcuwiat &)4t Yes, Gillig & Doan Funeral Home realizes that only by * '■ offering prices for every income and every taste can we properly serve the bereaved family. 1 v ’ ■ . • : : T" Our selection room is on the ground floor with no steps or stairways. (GILLIG & DOAN i FUNERAL HOME PHONE 3-3314

I Imlbv 'lMfejC > ■ -C_ AM ■Wf THE 50th WEDDING ANNIVERSARY of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Klepper was observed recently with a breakfast served at the Fairway restaurant. Mr. and Mrs. Klepper were married October 15, 1908, in the Fort Wayne Catholic church with the Very Rev. Msgr. Oechening officiating for the rite. Pictured above, standing from left to right are Robert of Tiffin, Ohio; Mary Margaret Shreck of Fort Wayne; William M. of Lima, Ohio; Delores Birdsall of Short Hill. New Jersey; Carl of Decatur; Alta Ruth Brodbeck of Akron, Ohio; and Donald of Huntington, all children of the couple. Pictured with Mr. and Mrs. Klepper is the Very Rev. Msgr. J. J. Seimetz, who said an anniversary mass for the couple Saturday.—Photo by Anspaugh.

Mrs. Christ Meyer Dies At New Haven Mrs. Christ W. Meyer, 66, died Friday at her home in New Haven following a long illness. She was a member of Martini Lutheran church. Surviving in addition to her husband are five brothers, Ben Schultz qf Decatur, Albert, George and Walter, all of lowa, and Martin of Ann Arbor, Mich., and two sisters, Mrs. Clara Stegemann of lowa, and Mrs. Martha Karro of Burbank, Calif. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Monday at the E. Harper & Son funeral home in New Haven and at 2 p.m. in the Martini Lutheran church, the Rev. Qtto A. Marschke officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Local Moose Attend State Convention Several persons from the local Moose Lodge 1311 attended the 1 state convention held recently at 1 Indianapolis, according to Ernest Worthman. secretary of the Moose. Those attending from Decatur other than Worthman were; Eve- ■ lyn Kingsley, Mr. and Mrs. Oral Fulton. Anthony Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. 1 Gerald Kreischer, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Roth. Bob Gerber and Marion Starr, Bluffton. Sheets, Fulton, Kreischer, and Roth attended the “Quota Club” , banquet held for Moose members I who have signed a given number of new members into -the Moose , lodge. The banquet was held at the Lincoln hotel in Indianapolis. Junior Lake Named State Lodge Officer Junior Lake, member of Pocotaligo Tribe 203, Decatur, was elected great junior sagamore of the great council of the Improved Order of Red Men of Indiana at the state meeting held this week at Indianapolis. Other elected officers are Don Fergerson, Anderson, great sachem; Earl Story, Indianapolis, great sagamore; Robert Spaulding, Bloomington, great propret; Irvin Brown, Greenfield, great chief of records; Frank Geis, Brookfield, great keeper of wampum, J. M. Breiner, of Decatur, was appointed as guard of the wigwam.

o ■ Modern Etiquette I By ROBERTA LEE I o o Q. If a man’s fiancee has broken their engagment, is it proper for the man’s mother to write to the girl and ask for the return of some linen she gave her as an engagement gift? A. This would be quite in order, since it was understood that the linen she gave was to be used in her son’s home. $ Q. Is it all right for a divorced woman, who has remarried, to attend the funeral of her first mother-in-law with her second husband? A. This would be in very bad taste. If she wishes to attend the funeral, she should do so alone. Q. What is your reaction to the popular custom of addressing a doctor as “Doc"? A. I think it is extreme rudeness and a show of disrespect to a highly-honored profession. J | Household Scrapbook | I By ROBERTA LEE | O o Pie Crust If pie crust is made up at least a day in advance of the pie baking wrapped in waxed paper, and stor-1 edin the refrigerator, it will roll out better than crust that is freshly made. This also applies to rolled cookie dough. Sandwiches The ordinary peanut butter sandwich can be greatly improved by the addition of some thinly-sliced tomatoes, and a lettuce leaf. Draperies You can make use of the faded > ( cretonne draperies by making them into landry bags or work aprons If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a • Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.

"What a Big Job €£■ They Gave MEI” Jrßb j. jxW "Perhaps my bark will scare burglars away, or sound the alarm in case of fire, but — the family ought to know that the safest place to keep their valuables is in a safe deposit box at the bank!" Rent one from us at low cost STATE BANK i Established 1883 MEMBER MEMBER F.D. I. C. Federal Reserve

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Sally Fraser is the beautiful starlet appearing in “War of the Colossal Beast” showing at the Adams theater Sunday and Monday. Dean Parkin is seen as the 6,8-foot giant, in the sequel to the sensational “Amazing Colossal Man." On the same program is another science-fiction thriller, ".War of the Puppet People” with John Agar and June Kenny appearing as doll-dwarfs. John Hoyt is the mad scientist who perfects a method of reducing human beings to small puppets. “The Lone Ranger” and the "Lost City of Gold,” produced in Technicolor, will be shown at the Adams next Friday and Saturday. Clayton Moore will be seen as “The Lone Ranger” and Jay Silverheels as “Tonto." The co-fea-ture will be the story of the fam*ed “desert rats,” “Steel starring Leo Genn. July 13 is a legal holiday in Tennessee — to celebrate the birthday of Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest.

MARGE & CHARLES DANCE STUDIO Lessons Every Wed. 4 P. M.—B P. M. Deeatur Youth and Community Center