Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 123, Decatur, Adams County, 25 May 1959 — Page 3
MONDAY, MAY 25, 1959
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t > - DEMONSTRATION CLUB MEETS THURSDAY The Friendship Village Home Demonstration club of Blue Creek township held their meeting Thurs--1 day at the Kimsey school. Mrs. Lester Sipe, president, opened the meeting by having the group repeat the club creed. Mrs. Lulu Raudenbush read the scripture and a poem for the devotions. “Love’s Old Sweet Song," was sung by the group under the direction of Mrs. Norris Riley. A lesson on wills and deeds was presented by Mrs. Harry Workinger and Mrs. William Neadstine. Mrs. Charles Shoaf read the minutes of the previous meeting, after which roll call was answered by the members telling of their fondest memory of their mother. Eighteen members and two children were present for the meeting, which was closed with the repeating of the club collect. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Oscar Young, Mrs. Chester Bryant, Mrs. Lawrence Carver, and Mrs. Floyd Myers. PIANO RECITAL TO BE HELD IN BERNE The annual piano recital of student of Mrs. Sherman Stucky will present an unusual program Thursday evening at 7:45 o'clock in the Berne community auditorium. The students will select music from different countries and dress accordingly. Among the 25 countries represented will be Ireland. Scotland. Austria, France, Italy, Palestine, Japan and Disneyland. An exhibit of articles from all over the world collected by families and relatives of the students, will be shown and the audience is’ invited to view the display. An informal coffee hour will be open to those in attendance following the program. The Work and Win class members of the Union Chapel E.U.B. church will hold a hard times party Friday at 7:30 o’clock at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gaunt. Initiation will be held by members of. the Delta Theta Tau sorority who will meet Tuesday at 6:30 o’clock at the Dutch Mill restaurant at Bluffton. 4 Thursday at BT)’clock, members of the Emanuel Lutheran P. T. L. will meet at the school. . J Mrs. Jack Brunton will be hostess for members of the Ave Maria study club Wednesday at 8 o’clock. 7’ . • t Members of the Monroe W. C. ■j- T. U. should take notice of the - i change of the time for the meeting to be held Thursday at 7:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Jack Mcßride.
TUB _ BOWER JEWELRY STORE Decatur Indiana
WE’VE CHARTED OUR COURSE WE’VE LISTENED TO THE BIG TALK WE’VE CHECKED THE GIMMICK DEALS WE’VE WATCHED THE OTHER TRICKS IT DOESN’T MAKE SENSE BECAUSE THE EXTRA ADDED COST OF GIMMICKS, GIFTS AND RAZ-MA-TAZ MUST BE PAID FOR SOMEHOW AND WHO WILL PAY THAT EXTRA COST? WHY NATURALLY YOU WILL PAY FOR IT IN THE FORM OF HIGHER PRICES HERE’S OUR ANSWER LOW PRICES EVERY DAY LADIES' LADIES* Plain Dresses, Plain Skirts, Suits & Coats Blouses & Sweater* MEN’S MEN'S Suits, Topcoats Trousers, Sweater* & Overcoats A Sport Shirts Z 69c E 33c MEN’S HATS — CLEANED A BLOCKED _— «9c SHIRTS LAUNDERED —2O c Each —■ I ■■■ 1 " 1 11 CAfiH AND CARRY MYERS CLEANERS I Cor. Madison A Second Sts.
V.F.W. AUXILIARY MEETS MAY 18 May 18, a meeting of members of the V.F.W. auxiliary was held at the post home with 15 officers and 19 members in attendance. A business meeting was held and Mrs. Wanda Hubert took obligation into the auxiliary. Final arrangements were made for the coming state convention to be held at Terre Haute June 18 to 21. Those named as delegates are Mrs. Glennys Martz, Mrs. Betty Butler, Mrs. Alma Hunter, and Mrs. Katheryn Birch. After the business meeting was held, games were played and refreshments served by Mrs. Crystal Hook. The Woman’s Association of the Presbyterian church will hold a meeting Wednesday at 8 o’clock at the church. A memorial service will be conducted by members of the Order of the Eastern Star who will meet Thursday at 7:30 o’clock at the Masonic hall. Birtta At the Adams county memorial hospital: Albert and Jennien Kimberlin Huston of rural route 3, are the parents of a six pound. 12 ounce girl born at 2:50 p.m. Saturday. A six pound, five ounce girl was born at 4:21 a.m. Sunday to Stanley E. and Linora Barber Mcßride , of New Haven. A girl weighing six pounds, eight and pne half ounces, was born at 1:43 p.m. Sunday to Jerome and Rosemary Long Minnich of Berne. At 5:11 a.m. today, Jesse and Vivian Baumgartner Singleton of Berne, became parents of an eight pound, three ounce boy. Joseph F. and Joan Stabler Emberlin of Berne, are the parents of a boy weighing eight pounds, 13 ounces and born at 4:08 a.m. today. HHwpfeD Admitted Mrs. William H. Wolfe, city; Mrs. Marion Yoder, Geneva; Miss Shelia Foreman, Decatur; Mrs. i Nile L. Williamson, Decatur; Mrs. Pearl Yake, Decatur; Master Mark Belella, city; Miss Nancy Stucky, Berne; Master Jack Baxter, city. Dismissed Baby Michael Zimmerman, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Lester Schwartz and baby girl. Berne; Mrs. Bill Schlickman and baby girl, Willshire, Ohio; Mrs. Harry Sheets, city; Master Stephen Ross, Decatur; Master James Hammond, Decatur; Miss Marilyn Shoaf, Decatur; Mrs. August Witte. Decatur: Mrs. Stanley Wagner, Monroeville; Mrs. Don Wilder and baby girl, Decatur; Mrs. Robert Thompson and baby boy, Hoagland. 7 St. Mary's River In Sharp Decline St. Mary’s river dropped six feet over the weekend as weather observer Louis Landrum reports the level at 6.76 feet today. The river had been only .1 inch shy of the theoretical flood stage of 13 feet Saturday after almost three inches iof rain fell in the Decatur area. <
CLOTS Calendar items Bor today's put ■ *cation must be phoned tn by 11 •JR. (Saturday 8:30) Phone 5-ZUI Martie* Roop 1 MONDAY , F i i Democratic Wo m e n’s club, Berne Bank building, 8 p.m. I Junior Women, Mrs. Ned Knape, > 7:30 p.m. • Adams County Home Demonstra- ! tion chorus, Mrs. David Nussbaum t at Berne, 7:30 p.m. ! St. Ambrose study club, Mrs. ■ Arthur Lengerich, 7:30 p.m. > Pythian Sisters Needle club, ’ Moose home, following Temple. Lady Bug hunt, V.F.W. home, 8 1 p.m. TUESDAY 1 K. of C. Auxiliary mother-daugh- : ter carry-in supper, K. of C. hall; , 6:30 p.m. . Eta Tau Sigma sorority, Mrs. i Lawrence Rash, 6 p.m. . Root township Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Leo King, Sr. 1 , p.m. i Sunny Circle Home Demonstra- . tion club, Preble township comI muntyy building, 8 p.m. t Kirkland Ladies club motherdaughter banquet, Family Inn, 6:30 p.m. Adams County Historical Society, Decatur public library, 8 p.m. Circles 1 and 4 of Methodist W. S. C. S. May breakfast, Mrs. Adrian Baker, 9 a.m. 1 Jolly Housewives Home Demonstration club, Bobo school, 7:30 p.m. i Delta Lambda and Xi Alpha Xi 5 chapters, Mrs. Jerome Keller, 8 > p.m. Delta Theta’ Tau sorority, Dutch j Mill restaurant in Bluffton, 6:30 - p.m. WEDNESDAY St. Vincent DePaul Society, C.L. t of C. hall, 2 p.m. t Ruth and Naoni Circle, Zion E. I and R. church, 2 p.m. Friendship circle of Zion E. and ; I R. church, Mrs. Fred Corah, 7:30 ■ f p.m. t Live and Learn Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Louis Drake, , 1:30 p.m. . /] . Woman's Association, Presbyter- ; j ian church, 8 p.m. - i Ave Maria study club, Mrs. Jack i Brunton, 8 p.m. THURSDAY ' Emanuel Lutheran P.T.L., < school, 8 p.m. Order of Eastern Star, Masonic hall. 7:30 p.m. Monroe W.C.T.U., Mrs. Jack Mcßride, 7:30 p.m. - FRIDAY ■ Work and Win class of Union . Chapel E.U.B. church, Mr. and j Mrs. Tom Gaunt. — ■ Mr. and Mrs; Glenn Roop of t Gibson City, 111., spent the latter : I part of last week visiting with . their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. David Roop. Saturday, j • both Roop families were supper • • guests of Mr. and Mrs. Luther ( i Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Fred ( . Browp, and Sunday they attended i , dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gottlieb Stauffer and son j Jack. j Major Vaun Liniger of River ’ Side, Calif., was guest of honor at ( a dinner held Sunday at the home j of his mother, Mrs. Frank Liniger. Among the guests were Mr. and j Mrs. Walace Liniger and family, . Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Parrish and sons, and Mrs. Max Ellen Wagner • and daughters. < 215 Pupils Enroll j At Lutheran School 1 1 Total enrollment for the vacation Bible school at the Zion Lutheran church, which opened this morning, was 263, including 215 , pupils and 48 staff members. The ( school will continue nine more < days, beginning at 8:30 a.m., and , students may still ehroll. 1
Sorry I can't attend your bridge club. I must go to Haugk Heating and Appliance to see the new Philco Refrigerator they are selling for just $299.95 and trade. I've heard It's a 12.3 cu. ft. two-door automatic model with deluxe appointments. Hope you can come over next week. I'll show you my new Philco. fa ' I J . ’ ’ ■ ‘ ■ .1 - ■■—■mu | <a
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
State Convention Os K. C. Underway Fourteen members, of Decatur’s Knights of Columbus council 864 attended the banquet and dance at the annual state convention in Fort Wayne Sunday evening. Grand knight Art Lengerich and Ralph Kriegel, past grand knight, were official delegates to the convention. Business sessions are being conducted today with election of officers highlighting the meetings. Others from the local council besides the delegates who attended yesterday’s opening session were Mr. and Mrs. Herman Geimer, past state warden; Mr. and Mrs. Art financial secretary; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Braun, deputy grand knight; Mr. and Mrs. Dave Terveer, chancellor; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lose, past grand knight; Mr. and Mrs. Victor Braun, lecturer; Mr. and Mrs. Don Heimann; Carl Braun, past grand knight; Gerald Meyers, Max Meyers, John Held, and Tom Morrissey, Sil, guests. The fourth degree and third degree members, their wives and guests from the local council participated in the 58th annual meeting of Indiana Knights of Columbus which included a parade to the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception for the conention mass Sunday morning. The Most Rev. Leo A. Pursley, bishop of Fort Wayne, lauded the organization for aiding the Catholic church in America in his banquet address late that day. Farm Bill Battle Raging In Senate WASHINGTON (UPI)' — The battle over farm legislation has brought cries of “foul” from both sides of the Senate aisle. Sen. Karl Mundt (R-S.D.) charged the Democrats showed political “duplicity” by cutting 50 million dbllars from the soil bank fund in the House Appropriations Committee. The House went along with the cut. ' I Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (DOre.) accused Republicans of “fighting a sham battle with the farm question” in Senate debate on wheat price support legislation. Two other senators from farm states also spoke up on agriculture problems during the weekend. Chairman Allen J. EUender (DLa.) of the Senate Agriculture Committee said in a radio interview that “the average American farmer is not getting fat” on the agriculture program. He said only $1,500,000,000 of a $3,900,000,000 farm money bill the House approved last week could be charged to the price support program. Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.i in a speech at Milwaukee accused the Eisenhower administration of “tragic manipulations” in the dairy program. He said a Democratic victory in 1960 was needed to “save the family farms.” I Mundt said in his weekly newsletter that the action of the House Appropriations Committee in cutting the soil bank fund “again demonstrates that certain Demo- , crats willingly walk both sides of the street.” He said the Democratic majority in Congress had not offered any legislation “devised or designed to provide the country with an improved farm program.” Neuberger's criticsim revolved around Senate rejection of the administration’s wheat legislation in favor of a Democratic - backed plan. The Oven A slow oven means one with a temperature of from 250 to 300 degrees Fahrenheit; a moderate oven, one of from 300 to 350 degrees; and a hot oven is from 400 to 450 degrees.
Hoffa Pledges Union Aid To Steelworkers BOSTON (UPI) — James R. Hoffa Sunday pledged the support of his giant teamsters union to any steelworkers’ strike. Hoffa did not say what his union would do in way of support for the 500.000 steelworkers. Last week Hoffa was reported to have threatened a nationwide strike if Congress passes a hill to apply anti-trust laws to unions. Hoffa later denied making such a threat in a speech at Brownsville. Tex. He said his remarks were misinterpreted . The fiery Teamsters boss told 2,500 cheering local union members Sunday that the union would stand solidly in back of the steelworkers, even thoiigh that union once voted to throw the Teamsters out of the AFL-CIO. Hoffa said he would work for the steleworkers “because if the employers destroyed them they would try to destroy us.” He also indicated he had notified steelworkers chiefs of his decision. The steelworkers and representatives of the nation’s major steel companies are currently negotiating a new contract in New York. The union boss blasted Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.), coauthor of the Kennedy-Ervin labor reform bill passed by the Senate. He said the bill was a “masterpiece envisioned by a professor who sits at school and doesn't know the rear end of a truck from the front.” He said the measure would destroy organized labor. “What does Kennedy know about labor?” Hoffa asked. “He was delivered to school by limousine and waited on by a handmaiden all his life.” Fort Wayne's 6. E. Workers Vote Strike FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPD— General Electric Co. workers at plants here have voted about 5 to 1 to strike unless local and national grievances are resolved, union officials said today. President Cecil Onion >of Local 901 of the Internation Union of Electrical Workers, said* the decision to strike was left up to the union executive board and its negotiating committee. • Principal issues, he said, are "wages, hours and working condi ? tions.” No strike deadline was set. The union represents 4,500 of 6,800 local workers and its contracts expire in September, 1960. Fashion Winner Printed Pattern > j • • — v<7 J L N\ •» r i \ W W V ILiR 1 I ‘ Wt m\\ 9377 H Wllr SIZES l x M 12—20 ’ Inj am Attract all eyes coming and going in this new spring fashitw! It’s sheath-slim in front—flowing in back beneath a softly bloused .waist. Collar curves away from neck to frame your face. Printed Pattern 9377: Misses’ Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18. 20. Size 18 takes 414 yards 35-inch fabric. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easley accurate. Send Thirty-five cents (coinsl for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for first-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.
Fort Wayne Bandit Enters Guilty Plea FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPI) — Dari Dee Parker, 28, Canton, Cftio, made a surprise plea of guiltjr today to bank robbery and jail escape charges at the opening of his trial before a Federal Court jury. Parker’s unexpected plea was accompanied by a request by his attorney, Raymond Marchbanks, that Judge Robert A. Grant sentence him immediately. Grant delayed the sentencing briefly and planned to announce it this afternoon. Parker was accused in the $50,104 robbery of a Fort Wayne hank in 1957. Later, he escaped from the Allen County Jail while awaiting arraignment. The alleged kidnaping of a hostage and the injury of a lawman also were involved in the charges against Parker. Shoe Leather Stains If there are shoe leather stains on white stocking or socks, use oxalic acid in the proportion of te-ounce to a pint of water ; rinse and repeat, until stains are removed, washing very thoroughly afterward. Borax water will also remove leather stains; soak them, then wash as usual. Over 2,500 Daily Democrats are sold and delivered in Decatur each day.
Bl enrmai cad ui tviAL run I MON. & TUES. U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED Fryer Parts — WITH RIBS THIGHS j*. 59 c »• 49 c SLICED BACON 49c SLICED BACON SS.. 59c A&P Brings You 8 Brand New 12” LONG PLAYING TRUE HI-FI RECORDINGS THIS WEEK A $3.98 VALUE MY FAIR LADY I - 39 Called the best musical of century. Each OTHERS TO COME: Qn A&p’g Kiss Me Kate, Showboat, King and I, ALBUM-A-South Pacific, Oklahoma, Grand ni AN f Canyon Suite & Piano Encores. WEEK "LAN I START YOUR SET THIS WEEK AT YOUR A&P! ■ 1 ■■■ '■ . I ■ I I I t ■* 4 FRESH, RED RIPE, • STRAWBERRIES ... 39c FIRM, RIPE HOTHOUSE TOMATOES “ m *. 39c —WWWIMIM— — JANE PARKER SLICED or PIECE Apple Pie , a 39c Swiss Cheese....». 59c Rye Bread .... LT 17c I^P 810168 2 49c son drinks 3 29c .BABY FOODS STRAINED 10,65 c BABY FOODS CHOPPED 6 57c ALL FLAVORS I V;. GOOD THRU ** ************* * cohww TUESDAY, may 26 xJJJEGiiMBftffIfIHMHi tfj Z ' II Will f'l llil ijriuiill ihi illl 1.111 l I 1
Agreement Reached With Eight Unions ST. LOUIS (UPD — Richard H. Amberg, publisher of the GlobeDemocrat, said today that agreement has been reached with eight of the 11 mechanical unions on termination of their contracts. The unions were affected by the Post - Dispatch purchase of the Globe-Democrat building and mechanical equipment. Both newspapers will use the same equipment, but will remain under separate and independent ownership. Amberg said he anticipated “no particular problem” in coming to agreement with the remaining three unions. He added that he “hopes” the Globe-Democrat will resume publication June 1, but said that depends on whether the St. Louis Newspaper Guild removes their picket line by the middle of this week.
i 11 " Marge & Charles Dance Studio Announces Registration , U NEW CLASSES STARTING Register Wednesday, May 27 4:00 P. M. to 8:00 P. M. Decatur Youth t Community Center
PAGE THREE
German Chancellor To Dulles Funeral BONN (UPI) — West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer will fly to the United States Tuesday afternoon to attend the funeral of Jtfhn Foster Dulles, it was announced today. The government also announced that Foreign Minister Henrich von Brentano would flv to Washington for the funeral. Trade in a good town — Decatur.
- I Will Be Out of Town From MAY 29-31 Dr. Melvin Weisman I 1 “ 1 ___________
