Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 191, Decatur, Adams County, 14 August 1959 — Page 3

‘ FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1959

FRAUHIGER FAMILY HAS FORTY-FIRST REUNION Approximately 150 members of the Frauhiger family gathered for their 41st annual reunion Sunday at the Wells county state game preserve. For the basket dinner at noon, Lewis Yake asked the blessing. The afternoon was spent in visiting, playing badminton and horseshoe. Sherman Gould won the horseshoe trophy. The children got balloons and bubble gum treats. During the business meeting that began at 3 o’clock, new -officers were elected. Noah Yake is president; Robert Bucher, vice president; Mrs. Sherman Gould, secre-tary-treasurer, and Mr. and Mrs. James Lovellette, entertainment chairmen. The group decided that the next year’s reunion would ba also at the state forest. After the business meeting, ice cream was served, and square dancing, singing, and music by the "Rockin’ Rebels” ended this year’s Frauhiger reunion. Attending were Mr.' and Mrs. Adam Frauhiger; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bushee, David, Judy, Connie, and Danny; Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Steiner and Susan; Miss Joyce Felger; William H. Frauhiger; Mrs. Paul Scott, Debra and Billy; Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Frauhiger and Wilda; Mr. and Mrs. John Frauhiger; Mrs. Blanche Johnson, Allan, Ronald, and Lorin. Mrs. Pearl Longenberger: Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bertsch, Shirley Ann and David; Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Redding, Janell and Joan; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Longenberger; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bucher and Karen; Mr. and Mrs. August Schlickman; Mike Heare; Mr. and Mrs. Dorphus Schlickman and Sue Ellen; Mr. and Mrs. Forest Mankey and Laura; Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hoffman, Carolyn and Larry; Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Denis, Donald and Connie; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Mankey, Winnie, Clinton, and Gwen; Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Gould, Bradley, Kevin and Shuana; Mr. and Mrs. Glen Mankey and family; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Dafforn. Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Mcßride, IMPRINT CHRISTMAS CARDS on display. Please order early. Will hold for future date. Boxes of 21 for SI.OO, $1.25, $1.50. MARGARET BRAUN, 222 N. 7th St. Phone 3-3820. 190 3t CARWASH SATURDAY, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Nuttman Ave. U.B. Church .00 or $ j .25 188 • * (for W.W.) Sponsored by NUTTMAN AVE. U.B. YOUTH FEATURING GOLDEN BROWN “BROASTED” CHICKEN AT SHAFFER’S RESTAURANT 904 N. 13th St. Phone 3-3857

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CJLWS Calendar items for today's puu cotton must be phoned in by 1’ «ja. (Saturday 8:80) Phone 3-2111 Marilon Roop FRIDAY Ladies' Aid, Calvary E.U.B. church, Mrs. Roland Miller, 7:30 p.m. Mt. Tabor WSCS, Mrs. Lawrence Andrews, 7:30 p.m. SUNDAY Gals and Pals square dance club, family picnic and square dance, Joe Geels' barn, 5 to 10 p.m. MONDAY VFW and Ladies’ Auxiliary business meeting, Post home, 8 p.m. SUNDAY Ladies' Aid, Preble Lutheran church, ice cream social and bake sale; schools grounds, north of Preble; all evening, with program at 8 p.m. Fackler Reunion, junior fair building at Van Wert Fairgrounds, noon. Weldy Reunion, Irvin Zimmerman home, Preble. MONDAY Decatur Woman’s Bowling Association, Mies Recreation, 8 p.m. Adams county home demonstration chorus, Monroe Farm Bureau building, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Pocahontas lodge, members and husbands, Mrs. Theron Dull, 6 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma, Joe Rash residence, 8 p.m. C.L. of C. August potluck dinner and social night, C.L. of C. hall, 6:30 p.m. Decatur Garden club ,Mrs. Ghil Baughman, 2 p.m. Tri Kappa Pledge picnic, Boy Scout shelter, Hanna-Nuttman, 6:30 p.m. THURSDAY Zion Lutheran Needle club, Parish hall, 1 p.m. Norman, Lois, Keith, Joyce, Clara, Lowell, Max, Bruce, and Vivian; Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Miller and son; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Koenemann and Kathleen; Mickey Hower, Miss Coleen FraSick; Steve Fenton; Bill Mcßride; Harold Spenn; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Yake; Mr. and Mrs. Noah Yake, Fred, Donna, and Kenny; Mr. and Mrs. Evan Yake and Carplyn Jo; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Henschen and Karen; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Liechty, Rodney, Beth, Floyd and Deryll. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Siela, Jr., Debbie, Deanna and Denny; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Frauhiger; Mr. and Mrs. James Lovellette and Debby; Roger Snyder; Miss Mary Ann Kelsey; Mr. and Mrs. William Wegman, Ricky, Jeanne Anne, and Gail, and Noah Frauhiger. PARTY MARKS LESLIE LOUGH’S FIRST BIRTHDAY Wednesday afternoon 27 visitors helped little Miss Leslie Kay Lough celebrate her first birthday at a party given by her mother, Maxine Lough. Ice cream and cake were served. Attending were Mrs. Helen Hawkins, Danny and Nancy; Mrs. Pat Hiser, Debbie Kay and Ronnie; Mrs. Kenneth Hawkins and Beth Ann; Miss Jewel Sudduth, Mrs. Darlene Linnemeier and David, Jr; Mrs. Hazel Brunner and Tammy;

Miss Marjorie Becher To Wed R. D. Lobsiger A fall wedding is being planned by Miss Marjorie Lou Becher and her fiance, 11 Robert D. Lobsiger. The bride-elect is the youngest daughter of Mrs. Clara C. Becher, route two, and ; the late Raymond O. Becher. Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Noble Lobsiger, 521 Madison street. Miss Becher is employed at the First Bank of Berne, and is a graduate of Adams Central high school. Lobsiger is an employe of Central Soya, and was graduated from Decatur high school. . ' —Photo by Anspaugh

Ann and Kathi Helm; Gloria, Yolanda, Sue, and Junior Cancino; Ruth and Sally Canales; Dianna, Sherrie, and Denice Durbin, Billy and Donna Ruth Dawson, and Mrs. Kathryn Dawson. Sunday, the Gals and Pals square dance club will have their annual family picnic and square dance, at Joe Geels’ barn, from 5 to 10 p.m. Members are to bring their own table service and a covered dish. The Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Ladies’ Auxiliary will hold a business meeting Monday evening at 8 o’clock at the Post home. At the C. L. of C. hall Tuesday evening, will be the Catholic Ladies of Columbia August potluck dinner and social night, beginning at 6:30 o’clock. The committee will provide meat and rolls. Mrs. Gail Baughman’s residence at 624 North Second street will be the scene of Tuesday afternoon’s meeting of the Decatur Garden club, beginning at 2 o'clock. Tri Kappa pledge picnic will be Tuesday evening, beginning at 6:30 o’clock, at the Boy Scout shelter at Hanna-Nuttman park. The Zioti Lutheran Needle club will meet Thursday afternoon at the parish hall, beginning at 1 o’clock. lEwpW Admitted Walter Reppert, Decatur; Mrs. Basil May, Portland; Mrs. Vilas Elzey, Decatur; Mrs. Andrew M. Hoffman, Preble; Mrs. William Fritzinger, Decatur. Disimissed Mrs. Arnold Weidler and baby girl, Geneva; Andrew Habegger, Berne; Otto Lehman, Berne; Cline Orr, Portland.

SEE REXALL'S HILARIOUS I rv I ’ r/r. STARRING A WILLIAM BENDIX ® < with TEDDY I ROONEY (Mickey's son) as “Red Chief” SUNDAY, AUCUST 16th. NBC TV See TV schedule for time and channel SMITH Rexall Drug Co.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Mrs. Hugh Lawrence, of Peru, is visiting in Decatur with her ■mother. Mrs. George Flanders. Sr. M. Gabrielita arrived yesterday from South Bend for a visit with her mother, Mrs. Minnie Holthouse and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Voglewede and daughter will leave this afternoon for Fond du Lac, Wis., for a visit with their daughter, Sr. Mary Martin, C.S.A. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Strickler have returned from a vacation trip to New York City, Boston, Mass., through Vermont and New Hampshire, and to Montreal, Canada, and Niagara Falls. Enrfa At the Adams county memorial hospital: Jerry and Jeanene Babcock Price, route six, became the parents of a baby girl at 5 a.m. today. She weighed 6 pounds, 15 ounces. Today at 11:15 a.m., Richard and Karen Young Herman, route one. Monroe, became the parents of a 6 pound. 2>-2 ounce baby boy. To Irvin and Mary Bieberlch Worthman. route two. a baby girl, weighing 8 pounds, 4 ounces, was born at 10:56 a.m.’ otday. Two Slightly Hurt In Accident Thursday Two Decatur residents were slightly injured Thursday evening when their automobile left the Salem road and crashed into a stone abutment, causing about SBOO damage to the 1958-model machine. Mary F. Brodbeck, 32. of route 3, the driver of the car, received cuts on both knees and a gash on the bridge of the nose, and Morris Brodbeck. 31, her husband passenger. was cut on the chin. A child in the back seat was uninjured. Mrs. Brodbeck told sheriff’s deputy Charles Arnold that she was traveling north on the roadway, about one mile from the junction of state road 118, when she turned from her driving chores to assist the child in the back seat. When she took her eyes off the road, the car went onto the berm, striking the abutment, according to the police report. Provides Rides For Monroe Celebration Lake Shore Amusements will provide rides, fun booths and concessions for the Monroe community days, Aug. 26-29 at Monroe. Many local stands will also be in operation, and a program of free entertainment is also being planned for each of the four days of the celebration. Mon Is Fined For Traffic Violation Dan C. Lantz, 46, of route 4, Decatur, was fined $1 and costs for allowing an unlicensed driver to dperate his motor scooter. Lantz was arrested by the state police on U. S. 27 and state road 124. He appeared in justice of the peace court last night, pleading guilty to the charge. Over 2.500 f fly Democrats ar» sold and delivered in Jecata each day.

Senate Passes Bill For Federal Corps WASHINGTON (UPD — A senate bill to set up a federal youth conservation corps went to. the House today. The measure, designed to save both the nation's teen-agers and natural resources from ruin; was passed by a 47-45 Senate vote Thursday despite Republican ridicule of the proposal. The bril wpuld 'establish a program similar to the New Deal’s Civilian Conservation Corps. In the first year, 50,000 young men, aged 16 to 21. would be enrolled in the corps. Eventually, it would grow to 15O.(X)O. Service would be from six months to two years. The pay/ would be S6O a month, plus room, board and transportation. Repubican Sens. Alexander Wiley (Wis.) and Milton Young <N. D.) joined 45 voting for the bill’. Thirty Republicans and 15 Democrats, mostly Southerners, opposed it. Sponsors of the measure said the corps’ work would remove potential juvenile delinquents from the "asphalt jungles” of the big cities and speed up federal timber, soil and other resource conservation. GOP critics complained that the program would soon cost 375 million dollars a year. Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen (III.), in a speech spiced with ridicule’ said the corps wouldn't helo many delinquents because the bill required apolicants to be of “good character.” I Real Estate Man And Family Threatened WASHINGTON <UPD—The Public Health Service reported today that 245 persons were stricken with paralytic polio last week. Non-paralytic cases brought the total for the week ending Aug. 8 to 432. The upsurge in paralytic polio over the previous week — which had a total of 183—represents a general increase in a number of cases rather than outbreaks of new major epidemics, the service said. Os 21 paralytic cases reporteo in North Carolina, 15 were delayed reports. There also were delayed reports from other areas. So far this year. 2.482 cases have been reported, 1,561 of them paralytic. During , the same period last year there were 1.365 cases, 668 paralytic. The service also noted that in 1955. the year Salk vaccine was first put on the market, over 3,045 cases of crippling polio had been reported by this time of year Connie Nicholas Loses Court Plea INDIANAPOLIS (UPD - Mrs. Connie Nicholas lost a plea to the Indiana Supreme Court Thursday for more time in which to file an appeal of her manslaughter conviction in the shooting death of' Forrest Teel in 1958. The court also refused to act on similar appeals for extensions from Elmer Sherwood and William Sayer, former state officials who were convicted of accepting bribes in the Hoosier highway scandals. Mrs- Nicholas, 44. was sentenced to 2-21 years in prison April 16 for slaying her married lover, allegedly f out of jealousy over another woman. Her attorneys asked for an appeal extension to Nov. 21 on grounds that a transcript of the trial cannot be completed by Aug 24, the original deadline. Mrs. Nicholas filed the appeal motion Tuesday. She is presently free on bond. Sherwood, former Indiana adjutant general, and Sayer, administrative assistant to former Gov. George N. Craig, asked for an extension from Aug. 14 to Nov. 14. Their attorneys contended that some of the essential legal papers for the transcript were missing. Both men were sentenced to 214 years imprisonment for taking $43,000 in bribes from highway equipment salesman Arthur - JMogilner in a highway purchasing scandal. , t Chief Justice Harold Achor and Judge Frederick Landis conferred most of the afternoon before reaching a decision. . Achor said the court, which is in vacation recess, could not act on the petitions until it has more information.” grade ii a «•' — Decatur

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Decatur Family Hurt In Accident Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Smith and children Joe, Carol, and Peggy, are recuperating from an automobile accident near Omaha, Neb in which their car was totally demolished. A truck hit the Smith car, returning from a California vacation, in the rear, and the entire family was hospitalized. Mrs. Home# Lower, mother of | Mrs. Smith, was notified by tele-1 phone 'Thursday evening that all i of the family except Mrs; Smith! have been dismissed from the hbs-1 pital. Mr. and, Mrs. Ed Sharp of Lafayette have left to bring the family back. Mrs. Sharp is a daughter of the Smiths. General Telephone Seeks Rale Boost INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — General Telephone Co. today filed a schedule of proposed new higher rates for 22 exchanges with the Indiana Public Service Commission. The utility, wmcn serves patrons oh 92 exchanges, recently asked a review of its rates, contending it does not receive a fair return on its investment. A hearing on the increase has been set for Sept. 14 in Indianapolis. Officials filed a full schedule for various classifications of serving, among them (present and proposed rates for private resi dential service, present and proposed rates for four-party residential service): Albion, Churubusco, Hunter - town, Leo, Monroeville and Roanoke—s3.2s to $4.85, and $2.50 to $3.85. Dunlap, Elkhart and Lafayette —55.85 to $6.35, and $4.85 unchanged. Fort Wayne and New Haven—ss to $7.05, and $3.50 to $5.05. Glenwood, Milroy and Rushville —53.60 to $5.35, and $2.45 to $4.35. Goshen, Hobart, LaPorte, Lo - gansport and Middlebury — 5.60 to $6.10, and $4.60 unchanged. Harlan—s 2 to $4.60, and $2.25 to $3 85 Kimmel—s3 to $4.85, and 2.25 to 3.85, Terre Haute—s4.6o to $6.90, and $3.05 to $4.90. Championship Shoot Scheduled Sunday The championship shoot for the Limberlost archery and conservation club will be Sunday. Starting times at the club’s outdoor range west of Decatur will be at 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. The shoot will be a 56-target one, on a standard field round. Any members who are not able to shoot all day Sunday may get either 14 or 26 targets in Saturday afternoon or evening and finish Sunday after Sunday school or Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Harold Nash, secretary, announced today. Someone will be at the range all afternoon and evening Saturday for these members. Sunday noon a lunch will be served, and baby sitting service will be available.

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Whiting Refinery Workers Okay Pad GARY, Ind. (UPD —The Independent Petroleum Workers of America Local 1 at the Standard Oil Co. Whiting refinery today rat-i ified a one-year contract settlement, sending 4,800 strikers back I to work. About 2,500 union members ap- ■ proved a one-year contract with a ’ six-month reopener clause and an i off-set overtime provision in a ■ standing vote at the Whiting high I school' gymnasium. There was no i wage increase provision. The off-set overtime clause provides that men receiving overtime must take time off to allow fellow 1 workers to make up the difference . in pay. The contract terms were announced by union president Ralph Fulsche. Twenty men opposed the contract settlement which was reached early Thursday after a 15-hour negotiation session. Intense Hot Spell Settles On State United Press International One of the season's most inteni sive hot spells in Indiana settled down for a long stay today, with I • only the far north due for relief i before the middle of next week, i if then. 1 Temperatures hit highs ranging from 89 at Indianapolis to 97 in the Louisville area Thursday, and more of the same was expected through the weekend and well in- ( to next .week. Th extreme north portion was, : due for cooler readings from late j • Saturday through Sunday. Else- i where, the heavy heat was pre- ' dieted to hang on. ; Temperatures will average 3 de-! grees above normal north to 5 .. degrees above normal south dur-. j i ing the next five days. Normal highs are 81 to 89 and normal > lows 61 to 70. / 5 “Turning cooler north late Saturday and Sunday, warmer north j Monday. L i 111 e < temperature change south,” the c_.look said. There was a chance of scattered thundershowers in the extreme north Saturday, and in the central and south Sunday. Precipitation during the five days will average only .25 to .50 of an inch, " mostly in the north, early ifT the r period. 4 The mercury hit 91 at Fort Wayne and Evansville, 92 at Chi4 cago, 93 at South Bend, and 95 at Cincinnati Thursday, then • dropped to lows ranging from 68 4 at Indianapolis to 70 at South. ' Bend early today, although Chi-i 1 cago's low was a muggy 77 and f Cincinnati’s a relatively cool 62. : 1 Highs today will range from 88; ■ to 95, lows tonight from 67 to 72. 1 and highs Saturday from 85 to 95. r 1 Over 2.500 Dally Democrats are ' sold and delivered in Decatur ■ I each day.

PAGE THREE

rnur. snzvc.nr- .. ' ’ .'”■l '4 Former Bank Cashier „ Is Indicted By Jury f.j INDIANAPOLIS <UPI> —A federal grand jury returned an eightcount indictment Thursday charging a former New Castle baiik cashier with embezzlement and misapplication of bank funds. Russell, Punbar, 52, former cashier of the Peoples Bank and Trust Co., at Sunman, was accused of mishandling more than $60,000, Dunbar, arrested June 26, was a trustee of the State Teachers Retirement Fund and had been with the bank 25 years. Over 2,500 Dally Democrats are sold and delivered in Decatur each day.

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