Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 218, Decatur, Adams County, 16 September 1959 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
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LOCAL PRESBYTERIANS TO HOST MEETING HERE The Naomi circle of the First Presbyterian church met Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Mary Jane Saylors, with co-chair-man Mrs. Richard Schauss presiding. < The Bible study. “Rejecting the Spirit." was given by Mrs. George Alton. Mrs. R. C. HerSh presented the program consisting of two interesting articles. "Small revolution in the Orient’* and “Welcome All association members are urged to attend the district meeting at the Youth and Community Center September 23. The meeting will start at 9:30 a.m., preceded by a coffee hour starting at 8:45. For dinner reservations call Mrs. Helen Rydell by the 18th. The hostess, assisted by Mrs. Jack Knudsen, served refreshments to the 11 members and three guests present. The next association meeting will be a fellowship auction at the church September 30.
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STYLE SHOW MODELS HAWAII. ALASKA THEME A total of 31 models will show the latest “fall fashions for 50 states'*, as the latest clothes are introduced to an Hawaii and Alaska background next Tuesday evening at 8 o’clock at the Youth and Community Center. The Psi lota Xi sorority will sponsor the fall showing. Tickets are available now for adults at 75 cents, and childrens' tickets will be sold at the door. All Psi Ote members have adult tickets for sale. Proceeds of the show will go to Psi Ote charities. Miss Kay Alberson and Mrs. George Bair are co-chairmen of the event, at which five local stores will exhibit their latest fashions. Mrs. C. William Freeby is in charge of decorations. Orchids will be given to all the ladies who attend, courtesy of the Hawaii Visitors Bureau. Gass Ready-to-Wear, Jani Lynn, Haflirh & Morrissey, the Kiddie Shop, and Teen Togs, will participate in the show. The Model store has withdrawn. Included among the models will be the following: from Teen Togs —Marceda Whetstone, Beverly Stults. Betty Haugk, Karen Braun, Nancy Gephart, Anita Zintsmaster and Janet Winteregg. Kiddie Shop — Jane Anspaugh, Liz Terveer, Mike Terveer, Pat Terveer, Lisa Isch. Tony Isch. Kevin Moore, Sandra Moore. Steven Strickler, and Diane Strickler. Jani Lynn—Mrs. Kenneth Singleton. Mrs. Jerald Lobsiger, Mrs. Lawrence Anspaugh, Mrs. Chalmer Barkley. Miss Jan Aumann, Miss Dee Schroeder, Miss Diane Baumgardner, and Miss Susie Baker. Gass Ready-to-Wear — Barbara Burk, Mrs. Joe Krick, Mrs. Jim Bleeke, Mrs. Robert Mutschler, Mrs. Fred Isch and Mrs. Don Schmitt. The Rosary society will hold its first meeting of the season at the K. of C. hall at 8 p.m. Monday. The business meeting will be followed by a social hour and refreshments. The Very Rev. Simeon Schmitt will speak.
ROMS DEMONSTRATION TRIP IN OCTOBER A home demonstration trip has been planned for Southern Indiana with the group scheduled to leave at 6 am., October 12, from the post office in Decatur and return four days later Thursday, October 15, about 9 p.m. at the same location. Points of interest which will be visited during the four days will include: Brown county and Bedford on the first day, spending the night in Vincennes. George Rogers Clark Memorial, William Henry Harrison’s home and office and other points of interest will be visited before leaving Vincennes on the second day. New Harmony and Evansville will be visited on the afternoon of the second day. The group will leave Dale on the morning of October 14 to visit Nancy Hanks Memorial, Lincoln City. Santa Claus, Wyandotte Caves, and Corydon. That evening will be spent in Louisville, Ky. On October 15 the trip will take them from Louisville, to visit Lanier Memorial in Madison then to Metamora, Richmond and Decatur. Many other points of interest not mentioned above will be visited. The cost of the four-day trip including transportation, lodging, insurance and some admissions will be S3O. Reservations from Home Demonstration women should be in the county extension office by September 25, after this date reservations from the public will be accepted. Only 41 reservations are availabel. Advance payment must be made before October 9. Make checks payable to the county extension office. EIGHT NEW MEMBERS IN WELCOME WAGON CLUB The September meeting of the Welcome Wagon club was held at the home of Mrs. Dan Tyndall. Mrs. Kenneth frhart and Mrs. Earl Cass assisted the hostess. Members opened the meeting by repeating the club prayer and then sang the club song. Eighteen regular members answered the roll call. New members welcomed into the club were Mrs. Gerald Cowan, Mrs. David Butler, Mrs. Wilbur Wells, Mrs. Peter Satile, Jr., Mrs. James Stokke, Mrs. Ray Shell, Mrs. Milton Spence, and Mrs. A. J. Richert. Plans were started for the Christmas party, Mrs. Wilbur Wells won the door prize. The October meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Victor Kneuss, and will be a Halloween party. AFRICAN MISSIONARY AT BETHANY THURSDAY The Rev. Jack Thomas, a former missionary in Sierre Leone, West Africa, will address the W.S.W.S. of the Bethany E.U.B. church Thursday at 7:30 p.m. All Decatur E.U.B. W.S.W.S. members are invited to hear Rev. Thomas, who grew up in the Anderson area as neighbor to the Rev. Emmett Anderson and Mrs. Paul Bevelhimer of this city. Rev. Thomas, his wife and two children have returned from West Africa after three years there on a furlough, and will return next
DSCATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DRCATUR, INDIANA
School Reporter To Be Resumed Thursday
With the return of school comes the return of the School Reporter column and this year five girls will be representing the northern half of Adams county. Miss Judy Shoaf will be writing for Pleasant Mills and the Decatur Catholic reporter is Miss Pat Ruble. Decatur city residents will learn about their school from Miss Alice Allwein, and reporting for Monmouth will be Miss Margaret Boerger. Miss Marcia Zimmerman is the Adams Central high school reporter. First reports from the girls Will appear in the second section of Thursday's paper. Miss Shoaf, reporter for Pleasant Mills, is a senior at that school, where she has Miss Becky Lehman for an English teacher. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Shoaf and is a member of the chorus, choir, and pep club. As for future plans, Judy plans to work awhile and then go to school to become a secretary. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Boerger are parents of the Monmouth school reporter, Margaret Boerger. A senior in high school, Miss Boerger will be assisted with her column by her English teacher, Mrs. Hugh J. Andrews. Margaret is an officer in 4-H, belongs to Walther league in her church, where she is also a Sunday school teacher, and is a
year in March for further service in Sierre Leone. He will give his impressions of the two million inhabitants of the small country, their modern cities and stone age villages, friendliness* and intense nationalism, and the need there for Christianity and education. • The Delta Lambda and the Xi Alpha Xi chapters of Betaifiigma Phi sorority will meet Sunday at 6 p.m. at the Hanna-Nuttman shelter house. This is a guest picnic. Members are to bring table service, covered dish and a white elephant gift. A ham dinner and bake sale will be' given by St. Peter’s ladies aid (Fuelling church) Sunday. Serving will begin at 11 a.m. Cub Scout Loaders Will Meet Thursday A meeting of the Institutional Representatives, chairmen, and committeemen of Cub Packs 3061, 3062, and 3063, and Scout troops 61, 62,' ffi hnd 65 will be held at the Decatur high school at 7:36 p.m. Thursday. '< Manager Os Local Store Is Honored Don Whitaker, manager of the local Gamble’s store, was honored last Weekend at a meeting of district store managers at Angola. Whitaker was presented a check for the largest increase in sales of any store in the area.
member of the school's Future Homemakers of America club. Upon graduating, the Monmouth reporter plans to begin nurse's training at Parkview school of nursing. Being editor of the Greyhound Gazette, Adams Central high school publication, Miss Marcia Zimmerman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Zimmerman, will have lots of experience in the reporting field. Among her extra-curruicu-lar activities, Marcia is head cheerleader this year and a member of the Sunshine Society. After graduation, she plans to attend college. College plans are being made by Alice Allwein, Decatur high school reporter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Allwein, and a senior this year. Taught English by Deane Dorwin, the reporter is also editor of the Ravelings, school year book. She is a member of the choir, girls’ volleyball team and in the past has been a cheerleader, class officer, and member of the student council. Miss Pat Ruble, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Ruble, is the Decatur Catholic high school reporter. Sister M. Gregory is the English teacher of the high school senior. Pat says as yet she has not outlined her extra-curricular activities and as for future plans, she is indefinite.
(7 Admitted f’ Mrs. Lura Journey, Portland; ' Mrs. Luther Wolfe, Willshire, 0.; 1 Mrs. Emma Rumple, Berne; Mr. and Mrs. John Chilcote, Decatur. ■ Dismissed i MrS. Donald. Christianer and i baby gjri, Decatur; Mrs. Sollie t Ankrom, "Geneva; Don Lutes, De- ■ catur. Mrs. Alma Brayton, former resident and teacher here, is visiting J with friends in Decatur this week. Miss Susie Sutton started her sophomore year at St. Francis College in Fort Wayne today. Fred Striker, of 402 Mercer avenue, returned today from a sales meeting with the Vigor-Tone Feed Co. representatives at Cedar Rapl ids. 10. He left Sunday for the two--1 day meeting. Hank Bultemeier, Martin Bultef jneier, Heber Martz and Louis teteffen returned recently from a 1 three-day fishing trip to Drum- < mend Island, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Edwards accompanied their son, Steve, to Hanover College at Hanover, Sunday, where he entered his freshmen year. Larry Fravel, a 1959 Decatur I high school graduate, and former . carrier-salesman for the Daily Democrat, has entered the Milo : Bennett linotype school at English ' for a three-months course of instruction.
Russia Shows Good Feeling Toward U.S. MOSCOW (UPI)-A new era of good feeling toward Americans burst upon Moscow today. Glowing reports ip the Soviet press and on Moscow Radio of Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s reception in Washington dissolved the traditional aloofness toward foreigners. Even the Voice of America was allowed to report factually and in Russian the news of Khrushchev’s arrival. For ten year it haj been jammed by Soviet stations. (Broadcasts by the American “Radio Liberation’* which mixed commentary, some critical, into its newscasts on Khrushchev were jammed as much as ever before, a spokeman for the American Committee for Liberation said in New York.) Moscow Radio, after broadcasting an account from Washington on Khrushchev’s meeting with President Eisenhower, ended with a special weather forecast for the eastern part of the United States (good) — the first time anyone could remember such an act. The usual stiffness toward foreigners began to unbend when the exchange of visits was announced. By the time Khrushchev landed the feeling was one of holiday mood. And with each passing hour ol his visit the feelings toward Americans became warmer. The Russians regard the Khrushchev visit as a prelude to the end of the cold war and act as if restraints are now off. Their attitude seems to say: “It’s okay now.” There were new departures in reporting, and Tass, the official news agency, carried Eisenhower's welcoming speech in full. The Soviet press told its readers today a “solid wall of 300,000 Americans” gave Khrushchev “stormy applause and ovations” when he arrived in Washington. The reports described the Washington scene as one of overwhelming approval by mammoth, friendly, handkerchief-waving crowds. Washington was so packed with people, said the official government newspaper Izvestia, that “there was not even a place to drop an apple.” “Long before the arrival of the airplane, several thousand residents gathered to greet the head of Soviet power,” Izvestia said. “Thousands of Americans expressed their approval by stormy
Town Is Stunned By Senseless Killings AMES, lowa (UPD—This quiet college town was stunned today by the senseless killing of a young mother and her adopted daughter by an honor student at lowa State University. Police said they were set upon Tuesday by Harry McDaniel, 20. McDaniel offered no explanation for strangling the two, police said, except to explain that he has had “momentary urges to kill.” County Attorney Donald J. Nelson took McDaniel, a junior student in electrical engineering, before Municipal Judge Albert Steinberg Tuesday night. McDaniel, a blond, curly-haired youth, pleaded innocent to two open charges of murder and was ordered held on $30,000 bond. Nelson said McDaniel was watching the arrival of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in this country when he got up from the television and walked outside. McDaniel lived in a campus area known as Hawthorn Court, rows of double-duplex homes for married students. McDaniel walked two doors away, Nelson said, and entered the home of Harold Larson, a graduate student at the university. Larson’s wife. Monice, 25, was carrying the baby, Kimary Ann, 4 months, from a hallway when McDaniel entered the front room. Story County Deputy Sheriff John Stark said McDaniel apparently strangled both of them immediately, grabbing Mrs. Larson around the neck and using a knotted cloth on the infant. McDaniel told Stark he dragged his victims into a bedroom and put them face up on separate beds, then left the house. Stark said McDaniel went back to the Larson apartment about 10 minutes later in an attempt to revive the child through mouth to mouth breathing. When this failed, he returned to his apartment and called his wife, Nancy, to admit the slayings. COURT NfWS Marriage Application Harry William Minton, 33, of Lima, 0., and lona L. Hill, 33, of Lima, O. Estate Case In the Earl A. Crider estate, the court ordered the estate to pay F. M. Miller Hardware and Lumber Co. a sum of $554.13. A report of insolvency and final account and application for settlement and allowance were filed. A notice was ordered issued, returnable Oct. 7.
■s„ ,7 I ■ 0 "" ■ 7l '■ J ■I ■Wk A fl 4-H HONORS GIRLS—Miss Lois Jean oerke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gerke, of route 5, Decatur, pictured above in the front row first from the left, was chosen as one of next years 15 honor girls at the state fair for 1960 for her excellence in 4-H work. Miss Gerke, who has been outstanding in county 4-H activities for many years, also received numerous blue ribbons at this year s fair and won an achievement trip for her ability. • Pictured above are: (first row, left to right) Miss Gerke, Mary Donna Caldwell, of Miami county; Louise Adamson, of Newton county; Inga Cox, of Boone county; Linda Powell, of Howard county; Gwen Stiles, of Marion county; Pat Heppenthal, of Lake county; Linda Markins, of Delaware county. Back row: Jean Ann Asterhoff, of Benton county; Ruby Jourdan, or Vanderburgh county; Janice Rumph, of Dearborn county; Gretchen Kint, of St. Joseph county; Glenda Mosbaugh, of Hamilton county; Bonita Lineback, of Tipton county, and Sharon Jackson, of Decatur county.
CMJBS Culendir items for today’s pu« ♦cation must be phoned to by I ML (Saturday 1:30) Phone 3-3111 Marßea Reep WEDNESDAY Zion Lutheran Emmaus Guild, 8 p.m., get-acquainted night. Decatur Home Demonstration club trip to Fort Wayne, meet at Gerber’s parking lot, 8:15 a.m. Town and Country Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Leo Teeple, 1:30 p.m. Decatur Home Demonstration club, C.L. of C. hall, 2 p.m. THURSDAY Little Flower study club, Mrs. Rose Tanvas, 2 p.m. Pleasant Mills W.S.C.S., Mrs. Robert Light, 1:30 p.m. Trinity E.U.B. Junior Best Class, 6 p.m. Zion Lutheran Needle club, parish hall, 1 p.m. Bethany E.U.B. W.S.W.S., church, 7:30 p.m. SUNDAY Ham dinner and bake sale, St. Peter’s ladies aid (Fuelling church), 11 ajn. Delta Lambda and Xi Alpha Xi chapters. Beta Sigma Phi, guest picnic, Hanna - Nuttman shelter house, 6 p.m. MONDAY Rosary Society, K. of C. hall, 8 p.m. C. Doyle Collier Is On Honor List C. Doyle Collier, local sales representative of the Columbus Mutual Life Insurance company has earned a place on the company’s honor list for the top 20 producers, according to a report from the home office in Columbus, O. The list is for the month of August. KHRUSHCHEV (Continuation page two) conciliatory in terne that he has ever made. ' Khrushchev made a strong pitch for increased U.S.-Russian trade. He said it is “high time to do away with the bankrupt policy of discrimination in trade” which "serves only to maintain mistrust in the relations between our states.” At a reception before the lunch speech Khrushchev in bantering with club officials said, “We are not as pictured sometimes — gobbling up babies. We eat the same as you do. We like meat and potatoes.” He said in the reception conversation that ”'m very pleased that—despite the strong propaganda against the Soviet Union, the Communist Party and myself as the leader of the Communist Party—the public . . . has been giving me, a good warm reception.” Even before his second day in the United States officially be-, gan, the Soviet leader emerged—in shirt sleeves—from Blair House for a front-porch' look at early morning Washington traffic. He commented in Russian that this is a “very good town,” then added in English "very good.”
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De Gaulle To Unveil New Algerian Plan PARIS (UPD — President Charles de Gaulle unveils a new plan today which may bring peace to revolt-torn Algeria — or, at least, pacify critics of France in the United Nations. De Gaulle discussed his 12-page report on the plan with his cabinet early today. At noon, he began recording it on film and tape. The plan is known to provide for “pacification” and “self-deter-mination” in Algeria. De Gaulle will explain the meanings of these terms in his broadcast report tonight. The report is being transcribed because De Gaulle will not subject himself to the hot lights used in night telecasts. A duplicate tape will be flown by jet to Algeria, where the speech will be broadcast at the same time as in France. The Algerian version will be broadcast not only, in French but in two Arabic dialects and in Kabyle, the language of Algeria’s Berber tribesmen. Most Frenchmen hoped the plan would bring the five-year-old Algerian war to an early end. Skeptics suggested that its main aim was to prevent a French defeat in the coming U.N. debate on Algeria. De Gaulle discussed the plan at length with President Eisenhower when he was here two weeks ago. The French president is believed hopeful of U.S. endorsement of the plan when it is laid before the United Nations.
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