Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 148, Decatur, Adams County, 24 June 1959 — Page 2
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ISwpM ADMITTED Hiram Wittwer, Monroe; Master Kippy Schumm, Willshire, Ohio; Mrs. George Myers, Wren, Ohio; Wtiss Raye Charlene Pierson, Geneva. DISMISSED Miss Nancy Jean Yoder, Berne: Mrs. Annette Scheiner, city; Otis Banner, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Ned Yingst, Geneva. • t ■,, ' STORE FURS NOW! IN DECATUR'S ONLY refrigerated; ‘ HUMIDITY CONTROLLED VAULT KELLY’S DRY CLEANERS DRIVE-IN PLANT 427 N. 9th Street PHONE 3-3202 for FREE PICK UP and DELIVERY
llffil.-SAT.-MTETILLIPI i | "TH yi Hj W if ih IHI SAVE 50% jx& on SHOES For this Sale we are offering a Tremendous Selection of All New-* This Season’s shoes in Ladies, Mens and Childrens Spring, Summer, and year around SHOES in ALL COLORS—at Cost and Below Cost! These Shoes must be seen to be appreciated — As MANY of These Shoes as room will permit are on display — For your self selection —Our salesmen will be happy to serve you. SALE STARTS FRIDAY—JUNE 26—9:00 A.M. Nationally Advertised Nationally Advertised Nationally Advertised RED CROSS AMERICAN GIRL LADIES SHOES SHOES V SHOES TWO RACKS SALE-PRICE SALE-PRICE SALE-PRICE 9’ 90 5' 90 6 90 4" Regular to $13.95 Regular to $9.95 Regular to $12.95 LADIES FLATS MEN'S SHOES CHILDREN’S Sports - Dress SHOES CLOSE-OUTS ° NE RACK Tz T “ 2'99 J- 9 ® y-9C 3,99 Regular to $12.95 Regular to $14.95 Regular to $7.95 COMPLETE STOCK - THIS SEASON'S Men’s spring-summer shoes All Reduced! BLK., BRN., TAN — Weaves, Mesh, Ventilated, Shantung Bargain Table *1" 100 PAIR SHOES—SLIPPERS—ETC. - While They Last ____________ COME IN RIGHT AWAY—for Best Selections—Shoes for Casual, Sport or Dress . . . Shoes for Children, Teen Agers, Career Women, Matrons, Men and Boys at TREMENDOUS SAVINGS! COME IN! LOOK AROUND! - KAYE’S I BUT HOT nn iL J SHOE STORE 3 doors South of First State Bank Refunds OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 'Till 9 P.
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, , . ■ \ —■— ADAMS CENTRAL GRADUATES HOLD REUNION SUNDAY The second annual reunion for the class of 1957 of Adams Central schol was held Sunday after«oon at the Bluffton state forest. i Games were played after the renewing of acquaintances and prizes were won byv Miss Doris Cauble, for winning in a baby picture con- ' test, and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Corson, for winning in a makeup contest. A dinner was served later in the evening after which Miss Phyllis Singleton, past president, took charge of the election of new officers. Don'Gerber was elected to the post of president, and. Jim Steiner is the new vice president. Serving as secretary for the forthcoming year will be Miss Doris Cauble and treasurer is Miss Linda McKean. Class member's and their guests who attended the affair included Bob Wechter, Miss Amy Eicher, , Mr. and Mrs. Mike Lehman, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bluhm (Sonja Yoder). Mr. and Mrs. Larry Gaskill • Marjorie Sprunger), Mr. and Mrs. Berdell Leh Ai a n (Gretchen Schnepp), Charlie Heare, Mark Ripley. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Kershner i 'Nancy Frank), Mr. and Mrs. David Smith, Miss Jane Uhrick, Ron Gerber, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Corson (Arleen Freels), Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bailey, Miss Virginia Steffen. Phil Moser, Miss Barbara Arnold, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Duncan I
— • (Karen Reed) .and son Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Arlen Mitchel (Cynthia Lehman) and daughter Vicky, Mr. and Mrs. Terry Shoaf and son Tommy, Miss Linda McKean, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Meyer (Carol Kaehr), Miss Phyllis Singleton, Miss Doris Cauble, Miss Barbara Fiechter, Emanuel Gerber and former class sponsors, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Gallivan. — ■ CELEBRATION HELD AT D. C. SHADY HOME Saturday, relatives and friends gathered at the D. C. Shady home in Kirkland township to celebrate the birthday of Mrs. Shady and the wedding anniversary of the couple. Those who attended the noon dinner were Mrs. Floyd Ehrman, Joe< Baumgardner, Ruoen Smith, Robert Weber, Mrs. Pearl Yake, Mrs’ Clara Bell, Mrs. Rosa Ceirpenstoll, Mrs. Lena Sherlock, Mrs. Cathrine Ehrman, Mrs. Emma Briner, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bauer, Mr. and Mrs. Milton A. Hoffman, and Robert Ehrman. Members of the Past Madam Presidents club of the Eagles auxiliary, met Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Richard Baker. Guests at the rpeeting included Mrs. John Morgan, Mrs. Ray Venis, and Mrs. Ray Kramer. Just before Mrs. Baker served refreshments to the group.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
cubs Calendar ttema Tor today** pob •cation must ba phoned la by 1 •.aa. (Saturday 9:10) WEDNESDAY Friendship Circle of Zion E. and R. church, Mrs. Clarence Snyder, 7:30 p.tn. ’ , Ave Mari* study club - Mrs - Paul Briede, 8 p.m. Pleasant Mills Methodist W.S.C.S., Mrs. Lawrence Ehrsam, 7:30 p.m. Bethany Circle of Zion E. and R. church, Mrs. Cal Yost, 7:30 p.m. THURSDAY Our Lady pf Victory study group, Mrs. John Schur ger, 7:30 p.m. Women of the Moose open and formal installation, Moose home, 8 p.m. Zion Luhteran Needle club picnic, Hanna-Nuttman park, 12 p.m. Order of the Eastern Star, Masonic hall, 7:30 p.m. Ladies fellowship of Decatur Missionary church, Mrs. Myron Hart, 6:30 p.ro. potluck supper. St. Anne’s study club, Mrs. Fred Wagner, 2 p.m. FRIDAY American Legion Auxiliary, Legion home, 8 p.m. Friendship Circle of Missionary church, Mrs. Ed Summers, 7:30 p.m. SUNDAY Pleasant Mills alumni picnic, high school, 12 noon. David Meshberger family reunion, Lehman park Berne, 12 noon. MONDAY St. Ambrose study club, Mrs. Jake Heimann, 7:30 p.m. Friday at 7:30 o’clock, members of the Friendship Circle of the Missionary church, will meet at the home of Mrs. Ed Summers. Mrs. Jake Heimann will be hostess for rfiembers of the St. Ambrose study club inembers Monday at 7:30 o’clock. The Pleasant Mills alumni picnic for graduates of Pleasant Mills high school and their families, will be held Sunday noon at the school. Members are to bring a covered dish. Sunday at 12 o’clock noon, members of the David Meshberger family will meet at the Lehman park in Berne for a reunion.
ts ■ | Miss Karen"* Striker left this i morning for Manhattan Beachy j Calif., after a week's visit here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Striker. Ken Eliasson, former exchange student here, has written that he is visiting in Paris for two weeks ■on a sightseeing tour after com. I pleting his junior year in his Swed- | ish high school at Gothenburg. This summer he will be an English ini terpreter for American Field Serv* lice in his home town. Henry D. Murphy was .recently j admitted to the Veterans hospital I in Fort Wayne. His room number is 721-10. Miss Debbie Nussbaum was a j guest at thd recent birthday party held in honor of the seventh birthI day pf Brokaw. Miss Mildred Niblick, Mrs. i Laura Bosse, and Mrs. Eugene Durkin left by train Tuesday for Chicago, where they will spend a | few days. j Mr. and Mrs. Bob Heller, Dan, and Mrs. Harriet Cowan took John Cowan, Stewart Knodle, and Tom Cravens to DePauw Monday for a I ten-day science course. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Sutton of ; Columbus, 0., were weekend i guests ■of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sutton: Carl Gerber, Wilbur Petrie, Harold Engle, and Bill Schnepf went to South Bend Tuesday afternoon for a district Rotary golf, tourney. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lower of Yonkers, N.Y., are visiting with Mrs. ■ Ada Lower and other Decatur ; relatives this week. Mrs. N. A. Bixler has returned
DECATUR DRIVE-IN THEATRE Tonight & Thursday Blistering Shock Story Os a Small Southern Town! YUL JOANNE , MARGARET Brynner Woodward Leighton ALSO—3 Stooges-Kartune Karnival - x t , —o_o— --- Fri. & Sat. —“Man With a Gun” , & "High School Confidential” Sat. Midnite Bonus Hit “Great St, Louis Bank Robbery” , - 0-0 Sun. & Mon.—"Watusi”—Color & “King of Wild Stallions—Color O—O Starting Tues;, June 30— "H-Man” & “The Woman Eater.”
Hoosier Girls Stale Election On Today
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPD— Delegates will go to the polls today to decide whether Linda Hirt of Indianapolis of Oarol Parks of Crawfordsville serves as governor of the Hoosier Girls State. , Linda and Carol, representing the Nationalist and Federalist parties, respectively, were nominated Tuesday for top offices in the one-week practical study in politics and government Other nominees for state offices by the Federalists are Carla Ewald, Anderson, lieutenant-gov-ernor; Bonnie Donlise, Wabash, state secretary; Judy Rice. Fort Wayne, treasurer; Ann Williams, Fort Branch, auditor; Linda Brown, Scottsburg, school superintendent, and Linda Parks, Lake Village, attorney general. Nationalists nominated,. Ann Frantz, Fort Wayne, for lieutenant governor; Jani Ernsberger, Indianapolis. -state secretary; Phyllis Sweet, Gary, treasurer; Beth Robinett, Anderson, auditor; Mary Stuart, Shelbyville, school superintendent, and Pat Johansen, East Gary, attorney general. Federalists also nominated for city mayors Jane Flanigan, Lebanon; Brenda Johnson, Valparaiso; Pam Freeland, Kirklin; Linda Morton, Lebanon; Linda Mason, Osceola; Nancy Redicker, Seymour: Linda Britt, Rochester; Mary Edmiston. Washington; Linda Davis, Terre Haute; Shirley Johanson, Gary; Marty Hudgins, Yorktown; Georgia Rogers, East Gary; Carolyn Martin, Fortville; Ann Waggoner, Anderson; Suzanne Whaley, Bloomington, and Jane Bauer, Carmel. Nationalist nominees for mayor included Pat Hull, Greensburg; Mary Jones, Pierceton; Karen Roeske, Hebron; Linda Hazzard, Muncie; Carolyn Humphreys, Linton; Linda Hefner, Indianapolis; Sharon. Anshutz, New Albany; Judith Pfaffenberger, Jasper; Joan Brooks, Indianapolis; Margaret McClain, Fort Wayne; Mary Egantz, Munster; Sharon Wilfong, Willow Branch; Carolyn Eastridge, Connersville; Sandra Hedges, Indianapolis; Donna Gill, Greenfield, and Wanda Reding. Summitville. Play Mishap Fatal To Indiana Youth MOUNT VERNON, Ind. (UPD — Peter Casper,. 11, Mount Vernon, died in an Evansville hospital Monday night from injuries suffered when a metal playground trapeze frame upset and crushed him as he played on it at his home.
from a trip to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., with her son. Mrs. Van R. Grant will arrive this afternoon for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Dick Heller. Mrs. Otto Beehler is expected home in about ten from Rochester. Minn., where she has been undergoing treatment for two weeks. Mrs. Carl Beehler and sons Butch, Skip, and John, have been visiting here meanwhile, and Carl Beehler will visit here this weekend. Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Leonardson write from London that they are, enjoying their trip very much, and ■ that Liberace and Phil Silvers were on the same ship with them on the trip oyer. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peterson of Detroit, Mich., have returned home after visiting several days with Mrs. John Peterson. 'Mrs.. Myrtle Sipe of Lake Charles, La., is visiting her sister, I Mrs. Dessa Moon of South First street, and other relatives this week. - ' Jerry F. Agler, 22, factory worker of near Convoy, and Sharon Miller, 18, office worker, of Willshire,■ have applied for a marriage li-j cense in Van Wert municipal court. Mrs. Milliard Aschliman, route four, was dismissed from the Clinic hospital, Bluffton, Monday after receiving treatment. Miss Deanna Small is spending the month at Camp Ella J. Logan, Syracuse, where she is a counsellor trainer. Mrs. Robert Macklin has returned from an 11-day visit in Evansville, southern Indiana and Ken- j tucky lake. Jay DeVoss le/t this week for a I seven-week tour of the western | states. A busload of young .people, under the direction of a University of Michigan professor, are making the trip, which includes a good amount of camping and hiking.
DANCE Round & Square Sat. 8:30 -11:30 —at the Decatur Youth «nd Community Center Sponsored By THE MUSIC BOOSTER CLUB
Miss Jeannie Smith Is In Mermaid Festival
An exciting Saturday IS awaiting Miss Jeannie Smith Decatur’s entry in the Mermaid Festival being held at North Webster this week. Entered as “Miss Soybean,” Miss Smith will vie with 58 other contestants for the tital of “Queen of Lakes.” , f The Decatur entry was one of the guests of honor at the mermaid ball held at the Tippecanoe Gardens on Tippecanoe Lake last Saturday evening. Jeannie, who was escorted to the ball by Stanley Agler of Decatur and chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Gene Rydell, told this reporter that it was a great thrill to be introduced to the large crowd in attendance. As each contestant’s name was called off alphabetically, a spotlight was centered on her and her escort and itj followed them to the center of the \ floor as a fanfare was presented by the orchestra.' Schedule Listed Plans completed now, Miss Smith expects to arrive at North Webster about noon Saturday. From noon until 2 o’clock, the queen hopeful will dress for the parade and receive' final instructions. Beginning at 2 o’clock the giant mermaid parade will begin with: Decatur’s entrant on a float featuring one of the new catamarn: boats. The float is not complete as | yet but the designers purpose to use a red and white boat mounted on a decorated trailer. Preliminary judging of the queen contestants will be held from 4 until 6 o'clock in the North Webster high school gymnasium. For the judging. Miss Smith plans to wear a powder blue satin formal styled with colonial lines and of floor length. A buffet luncheon for the contestants and their escorts will be held from 6 until 9 o’clock with Gov, Harold Handley as the special guest.To conclude the day, the final judging and selection of seven mermaid princesses and the “Queen of Lakes,” will be held from 9 until 10:30 o’clock in the high school building. Miss Smith will not be alone in the parade, for the band she usually leads as a head majorette, will be marching in the annual affair. Seventy five members of the Adams Central high school band plan to attend the festival. Jeannie will be a senior at that school next year,. Investigate Theft Here Over Weekend Adams county deputy sheriff Charles Arnold and Sgt. Walter Schindler, state detective, are investigating a small grain and supply theft which occured over the weekend in Adams county. The law enforcement pair are currently following up on leads uncovered in a. preliminary investigation Monday morning. Sun. Treatment Mattresses, pillows, cushions, and blanketß will last longer and be far more sanitary if they are placed outside in the sun one day. each week. The fresh, sweet odor! is very pleasant upon going to bed.'
I greater stability! IBB**' ■F : jp- ® i BF £ i! I Wheels are five inches farther apart. This widens the fl stance, not the car, gives you road-hugging stability, < ; I less lean and sway. Only Pontiac has Wide-Track Wheels! • SEE YOUR UKAu luTHOaiZEU PONTIAC DEALER DECATUR SUPER SERVICE I 224 W. MONROE ST. ~DECVTIR, IND. \ ■Bi .4 \
jgj F «1, Ml, ■Be Bk WK M 1 - tjT Report Luncheon On Multiple Sclerosis i Key workers of the multiple • sclerosis hope chest throughout the • state have been invited to a preliminary report luncheon June 25 < in Indianapolis. Mrs. Ronald M. 1 Hazeif? fund chairman, win be ‘ hostess at the Indianapolis Athletic '! club at 12:30 p.m. 1 ■ Each person has been asked to ! I bring an up-to-date report of ipul- ’ tipie sclerosis activities in each of i the counties in his or her area. Some of the counties have asked that the MS hope chest campaign . be extended until July 15 so they might finish canvassing their ’ territories. e j J Hagerty Showing Excellent Progress - WASHINGTON (UPD — The s White House said today that Prdss 1 Secretary James C. Hagerty is ’ “progressing very satisfactorily” 1 after removal of an inflamed 1 appendix, i
(WWA * THE LUXURY |F CA FOAMING BATH OIL I/EBm AT THE ECONOMY PRICE Treat yourself and your family to the soothing luxury of a bath in C') heaps of creamy fragrant suds. 'Y Hard water becomes soft as summer rain. NO BATH TUB RING Use Charm for hand laundering FLORAL or PINE sweaters, nylons and lingerie and pints s|2s „ discover a new fragrant softness. ' J Plus a delicately perfumed and QUARTS perfectly clean garment. piuatax. Wq Smith Drug Co.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1050 ’
Have you had all of your POLIO SHOTS? Is every member of your family PROTECTED ? The HEAVIEST Polio Season will soon • be here. Call your Doctor TODAY! HOLTHOUSE Drug Co. 1 -r - 11 "' y 1111 l - ,ll " llll1n J CARRY OUT! A WHOLE Barbecue Chicken i • Freshly Cooked • No Breading • No Grease 98c , ALSO AVAILABLE • Baked Beans r • Potato Salad i • Bean Salad • Cole Slaw • Corn Relish • Herring ... Wine or cream sauce. FAIRWAY Don't Forget the BARBECUE RIBS ... served with or 1 without Barbecue Sauce ; Trade in a good town — Decatur.
