Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 171, Decatur, Adams County, 21 July 1960 — Page 3
THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1960
|u|P*X '* ■ WB Xi j? T wir * TH® TENTH REUNION of the 1950 graduating class of the Decatur Catholic high school Was held recently at the Knights of Columbus “ a “• A dinner was enjoyed during the early part of the evening. Following the dinner William Schulte, master of ceremonies, introcu •J’ oa ~ York Pe'rt’ 1 ®- who presented the welcoming address, after which a speech was given by the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Simeon Schmitt. The committee for the reunion consisted of Josephine Beauchot, Ruth Butler, Judy Des Jean, Barbara Kohne, \Rita Linder, Patricia Mansfield, Elizabeth. Schulte, and Theodore Wemhoff. « • Pictured above are the members of the class. From left to right in the first row they are: Joann York Devine, Betty Braun Wellman, Jean Braun Rauch, Betty Koors Miller. Rita Loshe Linder, and Barbara Deßolt Kohne. Second row: Shirley Berling Smith, Marilyn D*:P le R°°P. Josephine Faurote Beauchot, Naomi Geels Alles, Patricia Appelman Mansfeild, Judy Meyer Des Jean, Frances Miller Gruss, Ruth Rumschlag Butler, Marcile Geels Alles, and Margorie Miller Russwurm. Third row: Robert Zeser, Louis Rumschlag, Carl Lengerich, Dan Kitson, James Meyer, Joe Adams, Ed Hackman, WiHiam Schulte, Joe Loshe, and William Gillig.
SOCIETY
ADAMS CENTRAL CLASS HOLDS THIRD ANNUAL REUNION The third annual reunion of the 1957 graduating class of Adams Central was held Sunday at Pokagon state park near Angola. Nineteen members of the class and their twenty-one guests were present and enjoyed activities such _ ■ . as swimming, boating, and badminton. o j At 4 o'clock the group gathered for a hamburger and hot dog fry. A business meeting, conducted by the president, Ron Gerber, rollowthe president, Ron Gerber, followed. A report was made by the secretary, Doris Cauble. . Officers for next year were elected. They are as follows: presidept, Mike Lehman; vice president, Charles Heare; secretary, Betty Reinhardt; treasurer, Karen Dun- • can. A committee consisting of Karen Duncan, Shirley Brite and Phyl Singleton entertained the group. The door prize was won by Reggie Steiner. Those present at the reunion were: Ron and Jane Uhrick Ger-
DRIVE-IN THEATER o i < — Last Time Tonight — ‘ONCE MOKE WITH FEELING’ Yul Brynner, Kay Kendall A “TALL STORY” Tony Perkins, Jane Fonda O O FRI. & SAT. ’ Daring! Different! Shocking! On rm's V# cf list... xw I yito beasts o** L B -<r* -* * a z Jra.^W , *’F*nppCO Us Wm ■ / 1 wPPP3m] ** - ADDED EXCITEMENT - "HOT ANOEL" Hot Rods in the Skies! — Sat. Midnite Bonus Hit! — “Valley of the Redwoods” O-O— — Son. A Mon.—Celor Senaattonl. “HOME FROM THE HILL” Robt. Mitchum, Eleanor Parker —o Coming — “I Passed for White” “Bells Are Ringing,” “Hercules Unchained,” “The A*artn>ent”
ber, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Steiner, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Lehman, Phil Moser, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Gallavin, class sponsors; Wayne and Edith Byerly, Charles Heare, Tom Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Ross, Bob and Betty Steury Reinhardt. Fred and Sonja Yoder Bluhrh and daughter, Bill and Karen Reed Duncan, Doris Cauble, Phyl Singleton, Joe and Shirley Hirshey Brite and daughter, Arlen and Cynthia Lehman Mitchell and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wechter, and Fred and Marji#ie Nussbaum Fox and son. BECKY AND CATHY SCHNEPP HONORED WITH PARTY The Misses Becky and Cathy Schnepp were honored with a party Sunday evening in celebration of their fifth and eighth birthdays at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Schnepp. The party got underway with the singing of “Happy Birthday,” after which the honored guests opened their many lovely gifts. A luncheon of sandwiches, ice cream, and cake was enjoyed by all. Those present at the party were Mr. and Mrs. Louie Drake, grandparents, Mrs. Lug Schnepp, grandmother, Mr. and Mrs. John Drake, Judy and Janet; Mr. and Mrs. Chalmer Knittie and Jerry; Mr. and Mrs. Max Drake, Gregory and Don; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Zeser. Donna Tim and Vicky; Mr. and Mrs. William Amstutz, and Sandie Nittle. Unable to attend but sending gifts were Mrs. Mary Ellen Kiser, Steve and Randy. The St. Mary's township Farm Bureau will hold an ice cream social and cake contest Monday evening at the St. Mary’s - Blue Crpek conservation clubhouse at 8 o'clock. The St. Ambrose study club will meet at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Braun Monday at 7:30 p.m. The Sunny Circle Home Demonstration club will meet next Tuesday at the Preble township community building at 8 p.m. Mrs. Dorothy Heckman and Mrs. Dorothy Erxleben will be the hostess. The Kirkland Future Farmers will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the Pleasant Dale parish hall. All members are urged to be present as this will be an important meeting. ■Hie Root township home demonstration club will meet Tuesday, at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Robert Johnson. Members are asked to bring a solid recipe. The Mt. Tabor Methodist church wiU have family night Friday at 8 o’clock at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Drake, 1334 High ... _ Stephen Rockefeller And Wife Hove Son NEW YORK (UPI) — Stephen Rockefeller and the former Anne Marie Rasmussen, his “Cinderella” bride of last Aug. 22 today became the parents of a 8 pound, 4 ounce son. / Rockefeller! son of New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, married the former Miss Rasmussen in Sogne, Norway, after ■ courtship that began in the Rockefeller home, where the bride was employed as a domestic. The baby was bort early today at Harkness Pavillion of Columbia Presbyterian Hospital.
Clubs Calendar items for each day’s publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30). Carol Bebont Phone 3-2121 THURSDAY Psi Ote Trading Post, 1-4, BarbFueUing and Ruth Gehrig. FRIDAY Mt. Tabor Methodist church, Mrs. Charles Drake, 1334 High street, 8 p.m. Psi Ote Trading Post, 1-4, Annabelle HeUer and Jane Reed; 6-9, Marion Koons and Phyllis Hutker. Ladies Aid society of Mt. Zion U. B. church, Mrs. Charles Wagner, 7:30 p.m. Friendship Village Home Demonstration club, St. Mary’s and Blue Creek conservation building. Zion Lutheran Needle club, parish hall, 1 p.m. SATURDAY Psi Ote Trading Post, 9-12, Nola Isch and Wilma Jacobs; 1-4, Susie Holthouse and Rosemary Gase. Friendship class of Mt. Victory U.B. church, ice cream social, 5 p.m. MONDAY St. Mary's township Farm Bureau, ice cream social, St. Mary’sBlue Creek Conservation club house, 8 p.m. St. Ambrose study club, Mrs' Lawrence Braun, 7;30 p.m. TUESDAY Sunny Circle Home Demonstration club, Preble township comrv*ii>ir>fi m ilttiiiity UUllUlllg, O p. Hl. Kirkland Future Farmers, Pleasant Dale parish hall, 7:30 p.m. Root Township Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Robert Johnson, 1 p.m. LOCALS Mr. and Mrs. Earl Reppert and daughters Sharon and Carla of Eau Claire, Wis., and Alma Elizabeth Reppert of Lakeland hospital, Wis., are visiting with their mother, Mrs. Alma Reppert of Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Brentlinger and Marion Hoagland wiU leave Saturday for Washougal, Wash., to visit Urith the Rev. and Mrs. Bill Brentlinger and son. Miss Debie and Sandy Brentlinger of Martinsville have returned to their home after spending the past ten days with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Brentlinger. Mrs. Ernest Fnox and Robert Kuhnle of Indianapolis visited ovemight with their son and brother, Wm. Kuhnle and family of Decatur. Mrs. Arthur B. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth SmaU, Miss Deanna Small and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Marbach and daughters Leisa and Kathy, drove to Dayton early Sunday morning. Their car was met by Miss Ruby Miller and they then traveled to the Dayton Muncipal airport where they boarded an American Airlines plane and flew to Cincinnati. From there they drove into Kentucky and then back to Decatur, arriving Sunday evening. Miss Patricia Loshe, daughter bf Mrs. John Loshe of 109 S. Ninth street, celebrated her 18th birthday. Miss Loshe is a student of Decatur Catholic high school. Mrs. Flossie Lenhart is confined to the Clinic hospital in Bluffton. SeeingßedT ' SAN ANTONIO, Tex.- (UPI) - If babies had their way they’d be wearing red instead of the traditional blue and pink, according to Lt. Col. Vincent I. Hack of Brook# Army Medical Center.
court-
Hack said he based his findings on recent tests with babies of up I to six months that show the in-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Sister-Brother Set Printed Pattern 9338 SIZES fe W W 1,2,3 yr« M My\ / -1 1 / /y\ i t /T / W L i l : '?I ■mm * ‘ 1 r 11 k j /] \ ’ (n< UlMUee Kldtflfee Pretty pop-top ’n’ rompers tor sister—gay palysuit for brother! So fresh, so cool, so ULTRAEasy to sew, whip these up in gay carefree cottons. Printed Pattern 9388: Toddler Sizes 1,2, 3, years. Size 2 boys’ suit Ilk yards 35-inch; girls’ top ’n’ rompers 1% yards. Send FIFTY CENTS (coins) for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. JUST OUT! Big, new 1960 Spring and Summer Pattern Catalog in vivid, full-color. Over 100 smart styles . . all sizes . .
HELD OVER!!! 2 MORE BIG DAYS! FRIDAY and SATURDAY! Haflich & Morrissey ANNUAL J* Shoe Sale
BIRTH Kimberly Kae is the name which has been given to the seven pound, fourteen and one half ounce baby girl born July 10 to Sgt. Robert B. and Kay Johnson Turner of Oceanside, Calif. At the Adams county memorial hospital: David and Betty Bultemier Doctor, of Woodbum, became the parents of a baby girt weighing seven pounds, five ounces at 4:48 p. m. Wednesday. Hospital Admitted Mrs. Raymond Walters, Decatur; Mrs. Eldon Lehman, Berne; -Master Daniel Strickler, Decatur; Phillip A. Deßolt, Decatur; Mrs. Joseph W. Schindler, Berne; Clyde Beery, Decatur. Dismissed Mrs. Stanley Gallogly, Decatur; Master David Neuenschwander, Berne; Allen F. Marijaugh, Rockford, 0. Neighbor Is Held In Fatal Stabbing INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Archie Crump, 57, Indianapolis, was stabbed fatally today and police held his next-door neighbor on charges of James Moormon, 52, said he and Crump were playing cards Crump's apartment. He said he went home, Crump followed him and hit him three times with a soft drink bottle. Then, Moormon said, he stabbed Crump. Top Crops , COLLEGE STATION, Tex. UPD—Texas led the nation last year in cash receipts from farm marketing of cotton, rice and grain sorghum, according to John G. McHaney of the Texas Agriculture Extension Service. j McHaney said cotton was the leading source of income for Texas farmers. Texas was fourth m sheep and lambs, fourth in peanuts and fifth in flaxseed in national agricultural statistics. Cotton Pickin' Rises COLLEGE STATION, Tex. <UPI) The cotton pickin' machines are taking over. The Texas A&M College Extension Service says machine stripping and picking of cottbn accounted for 44 per cent of the Mate’s upland harvest in 1959, up from 35 per cent in 1958. A Long Way FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI) — L. C. Elliott has come a long way from the day back in 1916 when he was and failed trying to build a homemade airplane. Today, Elliott is regional manager for the Federal Aviation Agency. Critical Comment EAST LANSING, Mich. (UPD—“Children in our culture are taught not to think for themselves but»to . seek and be content with rewards i and approval,” says Dr. Harold . H. Anderson. ! The nation’s system of rewards and punishments one of • our greatest natural resources, > the creative power of its youth, > the Michigan State University psychologist contends. 1 i; U The International Bureau of ‘ and Measures; in Paris has , selected a Japanese-made light , bulb as the world’s standard for measuring the brilliance of elec- ! trie light. The bulb (the Toshiba) ( was selected by the bureau's ad- . visory committee on photometry.
Big Families In Convention Style CHICAGO (UPD—Big families are in style at political conventions, and from a presidential candidate’s point of view, the biger the better. Democratic presidential nominee John F., Kennedy set ’the pace. He had his mother, and so many sisters, brothers, in-laws, nieces and nephews at the Los Angeles convention that reporters lost count. Vice President Richard M. Nixon and New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller cannot match Kennedy in this department, but they are going to try. Nixon’s Wife Along Nixon "wlirbaye his "photogenic red-haired wife Pat along when he puls into town for the GOP convention Monday morning. They are expected to be met by two excited daughters, Tricia, 14, and Juie, 12, who will be accompanied by Mrs. Hannah Milhous Nixon of Whittier, Calif., the vice president's mother. This will be the Nixon girls’ first political convention. They can’t wait. They have spent the past few weeks at a summer camp in California. Nixon aides said they are expected to arrive in Chicago with their grandmother” Sunday evening or early Monday. Brother and Wives Also in the Nixon entourage will be the vice president’s two brothers and their wives. They are Dor Nixon of Whittier and Lt Ed Nixon, a Navy flier who is stationed at Pensacola, Fla. Several members of Mrs. Nixon’s side of the family also will toe sharing the limelight. Their names will be announced later. In vying for the family spotlight Rockefeller wiU give Nixon some keen competition. The governor’s part will include his tall artistic wife Mary, who is called “Tod” by friends, and his sons Michael, Rodman and Steven and his daughters, Ann and Mary. The prominent Rockefeller family also will be represented by the governor’s brothers, John D. HL Winthrop, Laurence and David. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want Ads! They get J3ig results.
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Casual Lines Mark , Bulky Campus Sweater JI g: - iiuuMMmiaiiijj.r-- • ■*», . ill : ■ W' 11 - I 9 91 i M wPi I Mr' i■W H H fl ■ Jiiliiiß I™ IM r ■ » ■ - - -- ' RNu. iriir L . B The big, bulky sweater takes on new, easy lines for campus wear this fall. This one is tn a mixture of mohalr-and-nylon, is textured dull gold and charcoal gray. Big collar, front button panel and edging are rib-knit.—By GAILE DUGAS, Newspaper Enterprise women’s Editor. «
Flood Control Loan To City Os Wabash INDIANAPOLIS (UPII — The Indiana State Finance Board today approved a $97,500 loan to the City of Wabash for flood control purposes. ■ The money would be loaned from a two, million dollar Flood Control Revolving Fund established by the 1959 Legislature. It is repayable at per cent interest over a 10-year period. I
PAGE THREE
Valparaiso Youth Is Drowned Wednesday VALPARAISO, Ind. (DPl)—David Bach, 15, a Valparaiso High School sophomore, drowned Wednesday while swimming with three companions in Flint Lake north of here. Authorities said he dived from a platform near the middle of the lake and disappeared. Skindivers, who recovered the body, said Bach apparently drowned after becoming entangled in weeds growing just beneath the surface of the water. ~.■■ ~ , —
