Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 144, Decatur, Adams County, 19 June 1959 — Page 3
FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1959
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MISS ARDINA SCHEUMANN IS RECENT BRIDE The St. Paul's Lutheran church of Preble, was the scene of the recent marriage of Miss Ardina Scheumann and Ivan Lepper. The Rev. L. W. Schulenberg officiated for the. double ring ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry of Decatur. while the bridegroom, who is from Hoagland, is the son of Mrs. Ida Lepper. A gown of embroidered silk organza over taffeta was worn by the bride. The sabrina neckline was scalloped and the long sleeves of the bodice, came to points over her hands. Her very bouffant skirt was styled with a panel of embroidered, tulle. An organza cap held her veil of illusion and to complete her attire, she carried a bouquet of white roses centered with an orchid. Mrs. Edgar Lepper was the matron of honor and bridesmaids were Mrs. Alvin Lepper and Miss Jean Lepper. They wore gowns of pink and green nylon, respectively, and matching hats. Roses were carried by the attendants. Little Miss Cheryl Ann Bultemeier was the flower girl and the bride’s nephew, David Scheumann, was ringbearer. Alvin Lepper, brother of the bridegroom, was the best man, and guests were seated by Wilmer Scheumann and Leroy Lepper. MRS. WILBERT THIEME IS JUNE HOSTESS The June meeting of the Merry Matrons Home Demonstration club members was held recently at the home of Mrs. Wilbert Thieme. After the repeating of the club cred, led bv the president, Mrs. Erwin Fuelling, roll call was answered by the members describing their wedding dress. History of the song of the month. “How Can I Leave Thee,” was given by Mrs. Richard Marbach. After group singing, devotions were given by Mrs. Lewis Sheets, "who was also co-hostess. A health arid safety lesson on good bodv mechanisms and importance of family records, was given by Mrs. Arthur Krueckeberg. Reports of the homemakers conference at Purdue were given by Mrs. Erwin Fuelling, Mrs. George Ruble and Mrs. Otto Boerger. The club voted to send a donation to the multiple sclerosis society, after which the meeting was closed with the club collect followed with a social hour.* Eighteen members and two guests were in attendance.
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ARTHUR VOGLEWEDE'S TO HOLD OPEN HOUSE i Open house will be held Sunday ; at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ari thur Voglewede of 603 West Madi- • son street, in honor of their daughl ter, Barbara, Sr. Mary Martin, C SA. * Sr. Mary Martin graduated from ■ Decatur Catholic high school in > June of 1953 and in September of t that same year, she entered the convent of the Sisters of St. Agnes . at Fonddu Lac, Wis. She has been > teaching at a parochial school in i Milwaukee, Wis. Mrs. Anna Vogle- [ wede, Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Whelan ■ and daughter Patsy, of Toledo, . Ohio', and Mr. and Mrs. Robert I Voglewede and family of Detroit, [ Mich., will arrive Saturday to visit . with Sr. Mary Martin and the > Voglewede family. Members of the Pythian Sisters i Needle club should note that the i meeting scheduled for next Mon- ' day has been postponed until June 29. > . Members of the Zion Lutheran i Needle club will hold a picnic ■ Thursday at 12 noon at the Hanna- . Nuttman park. Members are to bring a white elephant gift. Those , needing transportation are asked to call 3-2598. The Ruth and Naomi Circle members of the Zion E. and R. church, will meet at the church at 12 o'clock Wednesday for a carry-in-d|nner with a birthday and gift exchange. Each member is to bring a covered dish, her own table ’ service, birthday pennies and a ' 25-cent gift for the exchange. Mrs. Carl Adler will be the leader for 1 the afternoon. Tuesday at 7:30 o’clock, members of the Rebekah lodge will ■ meet at the Qdd Fellows hall. Three Link will rheet following the ■ Lodge meeting. , The Order of the Eastern Star members will meet Thursday at ’ 7:30 o’clock at the Masonic hall. Mrs. Hugh Nidlinger will be hostess for members of the Live and Learn Home Demonstration club members Wednesday ait 1:30 o’- • clock. Wednesday at 8 o’clock, members of the Ave Maria study club, i will meet at the home of Mrs. Paul • Briede. i■ ■ - Bairfc At the Adams county memorial hospital: Forrest and Joan Bowman Hawkins of 1026 Master Drive, are the parents of a nine pound, one ounce boy born at 6:55 p.m. Thursday. - A five pound, 14 ounce boy was i born at 2:10 a.m. today Larry D. | and Darlene Fortney Myers of rurI al route 1, Monroe. i&gpM Admitted Hugh Hammitt, Bryant; Mrs. 1 Dora Massonne, Decatur; Levi R. Wickey, Geneva; Master Lester Fellers, Monroe. ( Dismissed I Master Greg Kiess, Decatur; Miss Donna Strahm, Decatur; Mrs. Paul Sowards and baby boy, Decatur: Robert W. Bradtmiller, Fort I Wayne; Edwin Bauer, Decatur; I Mrs. David Sovine, Pleasant Mills; baby girl Poling, Decatur; Mrs. John H. Hoskins, Bryant. i
CLUBS. Xlendir item* for today’s put cation must be phoned in by 1 «JB- (Saturday 8:80) Phone 3-2UI Mariloa Boo* FRIDAY V.F.W. Auxiliary, post home, regular time. Preble Township Farm Bureau, Friedheim Lutheran school, 8 p.ih. < SATURDAY Christian Companions class of Trinity E.U.B. church, Lehman SUNDAY St. Gerard study club, postponcd* MONDAY Pythian Sisters, Moose home, 7:30 p.m. Pythian Sisters Needle club, postponed until June 29. TUESDAY Rebekah lodge, Odd Fellows hall, 7:30 p.m., Three Link to follow. Root Township Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Dale Moses, 1 p. m. Kum-Join-Us class of Bethany E. U. B. church, Lehman park in Berne, 6:30 p. m. WEDNESDAY Friendship Circle of Zion E. and R. church, Mrs. Clarence Snyder, 7:30 p.m. 1 Ruth and Naomi Circle, Zion E. and R. church, 12 p.m. Live and Learn Home Demonstration club,. Mrs. Hugh Nidlinger, 1:30 p.m. Ave Maria study club, Mrs. Paul Briede, 8 p.m. I THURSDAY Zion Luhteran Needle club picnic, Hanna-Nuttman park, 12 p.m. Order of the Eastern Star, Masonic hall, 7:30 p.m. Miss Karen Striker, of Santa Monica, Calif., arrived in Decatur Thursday evening for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Striker. / Mr. and Mrs. Clyda Gould have received word that their son. Jay, has arrived at Grand Lake, Colo., Rocky Mountain park, where he will be employed at the Coner Cupboard Inn for the summer. The younger Gould will be a junior at Indiana University next fall. Mrs. Alex (Annette) Scheiner is now allowed to have visitors at her room, n u mbe i; 105, at the Adams county memorial hospital. Miss Susan Singleton and Terry Hilyard will appear on the WANETV program Dance Date, Monday afternoon. K Miss Barbara Scheel of Sheboygan, Wis., is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Linn. Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Collier and family returned Wednesday from Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri, where they were joined by Mrs. Collier’s father, Felton B. Moore of Lincoln, Neb., her brother and his family, Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Moore and family of Kansas City, another brother. Perry Moore of Omaha, Neb., and a sister and her family of Oak Ridge, Tenn., Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Holzes.
Heavy Rains Addin? To Miami's Misery United Press International Torrential rains today added tc the misery left by a tornado that swept Miami. The rains dumped more than seven inches of water on the city in 16 hours ,and in one three-hour period Thursday night, five and onehalf inches fell. Virtual rivers of water flooded streets and delayed mopping up operations after the twister that left almost 1.000 persons homeless Wednesday night. A severe thunderstorm with oneinch hail pounded Bartlesville. Oklahoma, the Weather Bureau said, and nearly an inch of rain hit the Burwell, Neb., Srea. Scattered showers and thunderstorms swept the southern Rockies and the upper and middle Mississippi Valley. New England also had showers. Showers or thundershowers were expected today from the West Coast eastward to the central plains and from Pennsylvania northeastward into New England Elsewhere, skies were expected tc be fair to partly cloudy, with few major changes in temperature.
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Local Students To Science Institute Three students from Decatur will attend the first junior engineers’ and scientists' institute (JESSD at DePauw University June 22 to July 2. All students at the Decatur, high school, they are John Cowan, 126 Porter Vista; Thomas Cravens. 412 Limberlost Trail; and Stewart Knodel. 23 Homestead. They are among the 66 high school juniors and seniors who have been selected to participate in the 10-day affair. Quadruplets Born To African Woman JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPI) — A 38-y ea r-old African mother of 10 has given birth to quadruplets in the South African port city of East London. The mother, Nobilka Leve, and three of the quads are reported doing well. 1116 fourth quad was described as in “doubtful” condition. Among the mother's previous 10 children were two sets of twins, one born in. 1952 and one in 1957. Complete Testing , For Speech Clinic The testing find classification of Decatur and Berne children for the Adams county crippled children’s society speech clinic has been completed with 37 being tested in Decatur and 18 in Berne. Miss Barbara Baitey, Fort Wayne speech therapist, who will conduct the clinid, said today thajt air Decatur area pupils are to report to the Lincoln school Wednesday at 8 a.m. for class schedules. The pupils at Berne already have their schedules. The clinic, which begins Monday and continues on Mondays and Tuesdays for six weeks in Berne, and on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays in Decatur, will enable school-age children and some pre-school age children the opportunity to correct speech difficulties that have impeded normal speaking until now. Miss Bailey will be assisted by Miss Anita Smith, a 1959 graduate of Ball State Teachers College, and Miss Sue Petrie, a junior at I.U.’s speech and hearing department. The sixth annual clinic is one phase of treatment offered by the Ipcal crippled children’s society.
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Ethel Barrymore's Death Is Mourned HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Stars of the theatrical world today mourned the death of Ethel Barrymore, the last of America’s royal family of the theater. Miss Barrymore, who would have been 80 Aug. 15, died at her Beverly Hills home in her sleep Thursday from a heart ailment. She had been bedridden for about a year. Tentative funeral plans called for Roman Catholic services Sunday or Monday with burial at Calvary Cemetery in the same crypt with the remains of John and Lionel Barrymore. In New York, the lights of the Ethel Barrymore Theatre were dimmed for five minutes before the start of an evening—performance Thursday night. “She was one of the most beautiful women of the theater," said Billie Burke, widow of showman Florenz Ziegfeld and a longtime film actress. “We have been through a lot together. I have always been devoted to her, and so was Flo.” “The first lady of the American theater is gone,” said Charles Brackett, prominent movie producer.. “Her accomplishment of
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stage and screen was glorious, and her contribution to life was even greater.’’ Actor-singer Frank Sinatra said “I don’t know what to say. She was a great lady.” Broadway actress Judith Anderson wept when she learned the news. " ‘There is a new star in the sky ... and the glory of the heavens is my infinite sorrow’,” she quoted. Miss Barrymore’s lest professional appearance was in a 1957 TV spectacular. Her son, Samuel Colt, was at her bedside when she died as was her nurse, Anna Albert. Miss Barrymore was born Aug. 15, 1879, in Philadelphia, the child of a theatrical family. Her fattier was Maurice Barrymore and her mother Georgianna Drew Barrymore. They headed a stock company. Her uncle was theater immortal John Drew. Muncie Lady One Os Daily Winners FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (UPl)—Mrs. Joretta M. Morrison, 28, Muncie, Ind., was one of four daily winners Thursday in homemaking events during the Mrs. America contest finals here. She took first place honors in the daily dishwashing contest.
Minstrel Presented At Pleasant Mills Approximately 250 persons were at Pleasant Mills school Wednesday evening to see the/blackface chorus, endtnen, and musicians of the “Molly Kay Minstrel.” Dick Johnson’s trumpet number, “Darktown Strutter’s Ball,” was one of the highlights of the evening, members of the audience later reported, for it received one of the biggest ovations. Other highlights of the program included Miss Pat Johnson’s baton twirling. In her act she used both iridescenttipped and fire batons. Gerald Vizard was Mr. Interlocutor; and his five endmen were Norman J. Young, Luther Sovine, Richard Mailand, Edwin Coil and Charles Backhaus. There were’ four special numbers: “Bye Bye, Blues,” by a quartet, Sharon Bebout, Carolyn Luginbill, Judy Williamson, and Kay Funk; “’Tucky Home,” by another quartet, Gary Millington, Dick Johnson, Lynn Mefferd and Larry Merriman, with a solo, “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,” by Gary Mil-
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Jjngton; and a piano sold. "Dill Pickle,” by Carolyn Luginbill. The Decatur General Electric company., provided the black lights for t|p show, while the Decatur Mustc House-provided the piano, and John Gifford Bunner, the public address system. * After the minstrel, the 40 bers of the cast. Lions club members and their wives and high - school students who were Pleasant Mills chorus members, gathered for watermelon. The group will also be guests of the Lions club : at their next meeting. Enough money was made, it was i reported this morning, to cover the Lions club sponsorship of both the high school and Little League teams and coaching instruction for boys in St. Mary’s and Blue Creek townships who are not on the teams. The Lions are having Saturday morning and weekly evening sessions for all boys who are not playing on either league team. Their three coaches — whom boys who would like to participate should contact—are H. A. Davison, Luther Sovine, and Gerald Vizard. The Washington Happy f Hustler's 4-H club will have a bake sale at Stucky’s in Monroe at 9 a.m. Saturday, June 20. 144 It
