Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 184, Decatur, Adams County, 6 August 1959 — Page 3

THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 4059

Btnwwa

YELLOW ROSES DECORATE SHOWER FOR MISS LANE Yellow and white, with roses and streamers, was, the color scheme for the recent miscellaneous shower honoring Miss Judy Lane at the home of Mrs. James Engle lyMrs. Engle, Miss Barbara Kalver, Miss Janice Voshell, and Miss Janalee Smith were the hostesses. Miss Ldne is the bride-elect of Gayle Ainsworth. Upon her arrival. Miss Lane received a corsage of yellow roses. On the gift table stood a yellow and white umbrella with yellow streamers spreading around the table, and bride and bridesmaid dolls standing at the foot of the umbrella. Roses decorated the corners of the table. In the center of each of four card tables was a white kitchen to we*, colored thread and four needles. Each guest was asked to sew her name or initials on a corner of the towel. Guests included the Mesdames Wilbur Lane and Joseph Hiles, Fort Wayne; Verne Ainsworth and Marlene, Monroeville; Mart Mitzner, Indianapolis; Robert Lane, Sr., Dave Heller, Robert Lane, Jr., Alta Kraft and Karen, and the Misses Susan Custer, Kathy Cole, Gretchen Lankeanu, and Susan Gerber. i Unable to attend but sending gifts were the Mesdames Ezra Garringer, Fort Wayne: Flora Lane, Butlervillp; Robert Gay, John Don, Neil Keller, Robert Keller, and the Misses Ann Keenan, LaGrange; Judy Smith, Rosie Conrad, and Sandra Stevens. MRS. LAISURE IS HOSTESS TO MISSIONARY SOCIETY Mrs. Pearl Laisure was hostess recently to the Nuttman Avenue Missionary society. “Achievements in the Middle sast” was the topic for the opening devotions, for which Mrs. Iris Hai'kless had charge of the song and Scripture reading. Mrs. Paul Parker, leader, offered prayer and gave the lesson chapter on Armenia. The monthly missionary letter from Miss Alice Blodgett, Africa, was read. After the business session, the hostess, assisted by her daughter, Mrs. Bill Huss, served refrehment. The Happy Homemakers home demonstration club will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m., at the home of Mrs. Clarence Mitchell. Rainbow for Girls will meet this CARRY OUT! A WHOLE Barbecue Chicken • Freshly Cooked • No Breading • No Grease 98c ALSO AVAILABLE • Baked Beans • Potato Salad • Bean Salad • Cole Slaw • Corn Relish • Herring ... Wine or cream sauce. FAIRWAY Don't Forget the BARBECUE RIBS . . . served with or without Barbecue Sauce I

I DECATUR _ Last Time Tonicht — noivr.iN BUCX NITE! UKIRMH “Young Philadelphians'’ THEATRE Paul Newman, Barbara Rush Fkl&sAT. "T o ” , "‘“ a ‘ —-» Two Exciting First Run Features—Both in COLOR! JOCK MAHONEY-KIM HUNTERI7 JHHhI TIM HOVEY tent hnk JjLJS WILLIAM CAMBELL ■ IM CHANEY • TOM MAKE M a x JAMES UEASM - JUOY MEIEMTI - PM.LP TEMY <9ll WHMI 13R PLUS—Action-Packed Story of the Arabian Nights! "SABU and the MAGIC RlNG"—Sabu and Hugo Cast! _ Here's Colorful Adventure For the Whole Family! SAT. MIDNITE BONUS HIT—“STOWAWAY GlßL*’—Sensational! 0 O— Sun. Mon. Tues.—“AL CAPONE** With ROD STEIGER, Fay Spain <

CHERRY DELUXE CAKE 74c |7i7 j n I (wfeoe) | -ssa* "■"■rs”"’| •

evening at 6:45 o’clock in the Masonic temple. All dues will be due tonight. ILosgilk Mr. and Mrs. Gail Grabill, of 120 Porta Vista, left this morning to visit relatives in Florida for aweek with their son and daughter. They are expected to return by August 17. Mr. and Mrs. David Roop returned to Decatur Wednesday from Gibson City, 111., where they attended the weekend wedding of Bill Rainwater and Shelby Benningfield. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gerber and family and Mr. and Mrs. Luther Brokaw and son Norman, visited over the weekend at the cottage of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Urick at Aliver Lake. Miss Cynthia Cravens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. -Cravens. Limberlost Trail, is spending 12 days at Camp Ella J. Logan, at Syracuse. She will be home August 14. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Semke and son Mark and daughter Kathleen, Clinton, Mass., were visitors this week with the Rev. and Mrs. Benjamin G. Thomas. The Semkes are on their way to LeMars, la., where Semke will teach ’at Westmar college. Ralph Thomas returned Sunday from a week’s retreat at Rocky Mountain national park near Denver, Colo., under the leadership of the Rev. Bruce' Hilton, editor of “Friends,” junior high magazine of the Evangelical United Brethren church. He spent the summer counseling at junior and junior high church camps at Camps Oak, near Syracuse, and Lakewood, near Kendallville. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sudduth and Mrs. Otto Ross spent Sunday with his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Brunner. 904 Line street, to celebrate the 78th birthday of his father, Albert Sudduth. Also there to celebrate Mr. Sudduth's birthday were Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Alway and daughters; Mr. and Mrs. John Brunner and children, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Golliff and daughter. ADMITTED Mrs. Reynaldo Tarriaga, Decatur; baby Dennis Alberding, Decatur. DISMISSED Mrs. Keith Igney and baby boy, Decatur: Mrs. Donald Dick and baby girl, Decatur: Mrs. Raymond Schwartz and baby girl, Berne; Master Jesus Serna, Decatur. Efiirta At the Adams county memorial hospital: At 1:13 a.m. today. Merlin W. and Alice Schug Habegger, 118 Adams street, Berne, became the parents of a baby girl weighing six pounds, seven and one-half ounces. A six-pound, eleven and onedialf ounce baby girl was born to Grover and Ada May Foor-Odle, 620 j Grant street, at 5:18 a.m. today.

K D ' a I F 1 J F ■■ ' I SR ■

Thomas Jay Swoveland Claims Bride Recently

Miss Betty Faye Neal ant 4 Thomas Jay Swoveland were wed Saturday, July 25, in the First Baptist church here, the Rev. Stuart H. Brightwell officiating for the double ring ceremony. Miss Neal is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Carl Neal, Berne; and Swoveland is the son of Mrs. Gertrude Swoveland, Decatur. The bride was attired in a waltz length gown of lace and nylon over taffeta. The bodice had a scoop neckline and cap sleeves with a jacket. She wore a finger-tip length veil and carried an orcjiid on a white Bible. Miss Shirley Hartman attended her friend as maid of honor in a lilac flocked and printed sheer nylon dress. Her headpiece was in a matching color and she carried . a bouquet of yellow daisies.

Thor Missile Fired Toward Caribbean CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPD —The Air Force fired another Thor missile toward the Caribbean Wednesday night, paving the way for the launching of a “Paddlewheel” satellite late this week. A Thor, one of the nation’s most versatile war rockets, will be used in an attempt to put the new satellite into an extremely flat orbit around the earth. The Thor, which blasted of at 9:48 p.m. c.d.t. had a plastic data capsule in its nose cone. The Air Force hoped to recover the capsule, containing a tape recorder, to learn how the cone behaved on its 10,000-mile-an-hour hop. If the Thor followed its planned flight path and if the recovery device worked, the data capsule sprang free of the cone. as it plunged toward the earth and came to rest on the ocean’s surface. The impact area was near Antikua Island in the West Indies. United Press International reported July 27 that the Paddlewheel moonlet would be fired this month. Officials hope the satellite's orbit will extend about $20,000 mies from the earth at. its most distant point and come'with 150 miles at its closest approach. Joseph Kohne Named On Youth Program WASHINGTON, DC. — Joseph Kohne, route 4, Decatur, Ind., has been selected to take a prominent part in the youth program of the 31st annual national conference of the American institute of cooperation at the University of Illinois, Urbana, August 9-12, when he will serve as a participant of a youth discussion section discussing “Going Into Business in America.” The three-day meeting is the largest annual gathering on farm business opportunities, techniques, and problems, drawing some 3,000 leaders in the fields of farm business, cred't, marketing, agricultural extension and rural education, including an expected 1,200 farm youth and young farmers who will participate in their own program. Over au x. Uy Democrats ar* sold a d delivered <n Decatur each day J *

DELATOR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Ted Swoveland, brother of the bridegroom’, was best man; and ushers were Bill Swoveland, brother of the bridegroom, and Alex Neal, brother of the bride. "Serving at the reception following the ceremony in the church basement were Mrs. Lloyd Jester, aunt of the bride, Mrs. Coy Ellis, sister of the bride, and the Misses Lydia Schwartz and Viola Schrock, friends of the bride. The bride is a graduate of the Berne-French high school and is an employe of the Berne Overall company. Th? bridegroom, a graduate of Pleasant Mills high school, is an employe of Decatur Industries. Mr. and Mrs. Swoveland plan to make their home at 215 South Eleventh street.

Khrushchev Flies To Summer Retreat I . ’MOSCOW (UPD — Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev flew to ’ his hillside summer retreat over- ; looking the Black Sea today to “gain strength” for his trip to the ; United States next month. ’ His meeting with President Ei--1 senhower the middle of September may be the number one diplo- • matic project of his career, and Khrushchev was believed to be ; preparing carefully for it. At a Kremlin press conference Wednesday, attended by 300 So- ■ viet and foreign correspondents, Khrushchev said the question of i a peace treaty with Germany would be No. 1 on the list of questions the two leaders would cover. East and West ended their Geneva talks on the German problem in failure Wednesday. Khrushchev made it plain he would stress the question with Eishower. “We believe the principal and most important question is that of liquidating the consequences of World War II,” he told newsmen. Khrushchev went out of his way to sound peaceful. Re spdke with a geniality that represented a marked change from the tone of his two earlir meetings with the press in the Kremlin. One of them produced the sixmonth Berlin “ultimatum” which has since been extended but never entirely withdrawn. Khrushchev said he is “going to America a peaceful man.” “I am prepared to turn out my pockets to show I carry no weapons with me,”, he added. “We must come together to talk peace without any sabre rattling.” Three Appear On Television Show Miss Penny McCammon, Miss Susan Hefner, and Miss Mary Lee Dull will appear on “Fun ’N Stuff,” channel 21, WPTA, Fort JVayne, Friday at 6 p.m. The three, students of Marge and Charles Dance studio, out of Fort Wayne, will dance. They are the daughters, respectively, of Mr. and Mrs. Glen McCammon, Mr. and Mrs. John Hefner, and Mr. and Mrs. Theron Dull.

auras Culendir items for today's pou> •cation must be phoned is by I ■mb. (Saturday 9:30) Phone 3-21X1 Martian Roo» THURSDAY Rainbow for Girls, Masonic Hall, 6:45 p.m. Pleasant Grove WMA, Mrs. Betty Burger, 1 p m. Unit Two, Bethany E.U.B. church Mrs. Wednell Seaman, 7:30 p.m. Unit Three, W.S.W.S. Bethany E.U.B. church, Mrs. Henry Adler, 2 p.m. Zion Lutheran Needle club, parish hall, 1 p.m. Monroe Rural Fire Department, fire station, 8 p.m. Church of God Missionary Society annual retreat, back of the church, 7 p.m. Union Chapel Ladies Aid, all day meeting, potluck dinner at noon, at the church. Auction, Northwest and Lincoln schools PTA and Reppert School of Auctioneering, 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY Limberlost archery and conservation board meeting, open to all members, Dwight Whitacre, two miles east of Decatur or, 224 and '/< mile south, the first house on the right, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Happy Homemakers home demonstration club, Mrs. Clarence Mitchell, 7:30 p.m. Kirkland WCTU picnic, Hannal Nuttman shelter house, noon. Trinity WSWS, church, 7:30 p.m. Whiting Council — Postpones Action WHITING, Ind. (UPD —The Whiting City Council Wednesday , postponed final action on an or- . dinance to force the strike-bound ' Standard Oil Refinery here to stop using supervisory personnel to man a gasoline-producing unit. . It agreed to take final action Aug. 24. The ordinance was approved unanimously after officials of the 1 striking Independent Petroleum Workers union complained that a dangerous fire hazard exists because there aren’t enough supervisory personnel in the plant to safely operate the equipment and provide for emergencies. However, refinery manager Arthur F. Endres discounted the danger of fire and said the supervisory crews “are as good or better” than union crews. The strike started July 28 when about 4.800 men walked off the job following a breakdown in contract negotiations. Shelbyville Man Dies Os Injuries SHELBYVILLE, Ind. (UPD— Thomas J. Adams, 39, Shelbyville, died Tuesday night in an Indianapolis hospital several hours after he was injured in a traffic accident two miles east of Shelbyville. Adams was driving on a gravel road when the car went out of control. He was thrown from the careening auto and it rolled over, crushing him. Convicted Killer Asks For Reprieve ATLANTA (UPD — Mrs. Anjette Donovan Lyles, scheduled to die in 11 days for the arsenic murder of her young daughter, appealed to Gov. Ernest Vandiver Wednesday for a reprieve. Her attorneys indicated they wanted more time to prepare an appeal to the Board of Pardons and Paroles asking that her sentence be commuted to life imprisonment. Mrs. Lyles would be the first white woman to die in the electric chair in Georgia. 1

For « woihltM way la paint— jEjiEfi™ PLAX for all enameling! Use indoors or out, on wood, metal, or plaster. pmpm for kitchens and bathroom. " For a durable, high gloss. qt STUCKY & CO. < MONROE, IND. OPEN EVENINGS EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

Two Men Killed In Crash Os Twin-Jet MILWAUKEE (UPD — Wisconsin Air National Guard officials today searched for the reason behind the crash of an FB9D twinjet Scorpion which killed two men. Authorities said a preliminary investigation indicated the pilot, Col. Seymour. M. Levenson, 39, Thiensville, Wis., may have deliberately crashed the figlder-in-terceptor into an off-shore barge in Lake Michigan Wednesday afternoon. The guard said the plane appeared to be malfunctioning and Levenson may have crashed it to avoid plowing into a row of nearby homes on a landing approach. Levenson, a founder of the Wisconsin Air National Guard and base detachment commander at General Mitchell Field, and Ist Lt. Robert Goham, 25, Milwaukee, the radar observer on the plane, were killed. The construction barge was moored at the end of a temporary pier off Jones Island on Milwaukee’s south shore. The crash touched off a fire aboard the barge, which carried five 50- pound boxes of dynamite. More Rain Is Needed In Subsoil Supplies LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPD — Weather and crop experts indicated today that this week's rains may have ended the last vestiges of a topsoil moisture shortage in Indiana. But still more rain is needed to replenish subsoil moisture supplies depleted by the June-July drought. “The soil moisture picture is greatly improved,” the weekly crop report by Robert E. Straszheim, agricultural statistician at Purdue University, said with reference to last week's showers. "Only 15 per cent of the counties now report a shortage of topisoil moisture. Most of these counties are in the western part of ' the state. Some southern counties [are reporting a surplus. However, 'about 40 per cent of the reporters ' indicate a short supply of subsoil moisture, mainly from the north 1 half of the state. “The increased moisture supply ' has helped pasture conditions a • great deal, but the condition is 1 still the lowest for this time of I year since 1954.” Straszheim reported that some • plowing for wheat has taken . place, that about 75 per cent of the corn crop has silked, 25 per cent of the corn is in roasting ear stage, more than 50 per cent of soybeans are setting pods, mint cutting is running behind because of dry weather earlier in the season and light frost in mid-June. “About 25 per cent of the tomato fields are being picked,” the report said, “the largest percentage by Aug. 1 since 1955.” Agronomist Dan Wiersma gave a report on soil moisture on the Purdue agronomy farm near Lafayette, showing that recent rains soaked'down about a foot. Modern Etiquette I By ROBERTA LEE I on■ . . — Q. How do we know when to wear full evening dress to some particular function? A. The form of the invitation ■ usually will tell you this. Sometimes the word “formal” is printed or engraved on the invitatinn. If the invitation is issued personally or by telephone, the host or hostess should state the type of dress expected. If you are uncertain, by all means ask what you are to wear. Q. What form should a bride and bridegroom use when extending invitations to a reception in their new home, after their return from their honeymoon trip? A. These invitations may be engraved and mailed—or they may be extended over the telephone.

r— I CT -— ▼ —T —• — ■.lJ**"’—wg ■r. & is rWW WINNER ANO LOSER— Bob Rosburg of Palo Alto, Calif, gives out with a big smile as he poses with the PGA trophy in Minneapolis, Minn., while Jerry Barber of Los Angeles sits (right) dejectedly by. Barber, who led the tourney, lost by one stroke to Rosburg's 277 when he bogied the 18th hole. Rosburg's son PauL 8. is with him.

LEAF APHIDS Continuefl from page one the most good it would do would be to put the corn in a healthier condition to develop the ares in spite of the infestation, he said. Corn that is just coming into silk needs rain to help the new ears to develop. Cost of Spraying High The cost of spraying with malathion is relatively high, the county agent added. Although there have been some reports of costs of $1.5 per acre for treating infested fields with malathion, there have been reports of charges of $3.50 per acre for spraying alone, excluding the cost of the chemical. Spraying rather than dusting is recommended, because the spray can penetrate better into the corn plants. One pound of actual material should be used, with 10 to 20 gallons of water per acre for' 1 the best penetration. The cost of spraying would take five to seven bushels per acre from the fall yield to pay for such spraying alone, Seltenright said. Purdue entomologists report that the most damage is done before the heavy infestation is noticed. Little is known about the treatment of heavy infestation, but spraying may be justified if the corn is in the pre-silk stage, when the ears are just developing.

/1/, di fl * 1 f —> * / Jjtj ‘ /M’lm MiyTttn Nationally f / advartlaod in I / Il Qrrmerica/n I / t-Jx I / No. 915 6-14 SUB-TEEN Rytoil: $5.98 A WARDROBE MUST FOR BOBBY TEEN ... A festerous solid cotton shirtwaist dress with sparkling faggotted back detail. Button trim Ivy League collar. Wash and wear. TEEN TOGS 121 N. SECOND ST. ■' - — - ■ ■ A

PAGE THREE

I Serves As Judge In Von Wert Contest Henry Rumple, Jefferson township farmer and a member of the Adams county memorial hospital board .served Wednesday as a judge during the annual Van Wert county plowing contest on the Cliff McCleery farm southeast of Van Wert. A number of interested people from the county attended .including county agent Leo N. Seltenright, 4-H club leader Marvey Sponhauer, Merle Kuhn, Bill Rumple, Charles Myers, and several others. In addition to the plowing program, a six-mile wagon tour, with Ohio State agricultural guides, was featured. On the trip, experiments with fertilizer, methods of seeding including minimum tillage, legume and grass variety plots were shown. V.F.W. Post 6236 and it’s AUXS. Homemade Ice Cream Social and trimmings Front Lawn, V. F. W. Post Home FRIDAY, AUG. 7 Starting at 6:00 p. m. Public Invited. i 1