Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 185, Decatur, Adams County, 6 August 1960 — Page 3

SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1860

• :sotw; r 3K*SSHj I HM I - I I ■ UU U -7-.. ■ I ■ : ? J" ■ HHHBBBSB|fe’ -«■» 'W •*’ ~ liffi ’’ /*B& ■ i Fv ; V B Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Hakes twites performed

Miss Joyce Ann Tinnel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ttnnel of Payne, Ohio, and Ronald E. Hakes, son of MTr«nd'Mrs. Harold Hakes of Albion, were wed June 25 in the Union Chapel church of Decatur. The Rev. Kenneth Engie officiated at the double ring ceremony before an altar setting of white gladioli. Musical selections were presented by Susan Trentadue. organist, and Richard Hakes, vocalist. Escorted to the altar oy her brother, James Tinnel, the bride appeared in a gown of chantilly lace and silk organza over taffeta. The sculptured bodice of lace was styled with a scalloped scoop neckline and long tapering sleeves, and was embroidered with iridescent sequins and pearls. The billowing skirt of organza appliqued wtth jeweled lace fkrweretts swept to a circular chapel length train. A crown of iridescent sequins and pearls held her waist length veil of imported illusion and she carried a white orchid mounted on a white Bible. Kathryn Brower of Monroeville served as maid of honor in a gown of azure blue chiffon. The bodice rising from a fitted midriff was styled with a bateau neckline and cap sleeves. A polonnaise side drape highlighted the waltz length skirt. She also wore a picture hat of transparent brailte and taffeta petals. The bridesmaids, Sadie Baker and Wilma Eibling, wore gowns identical to that of the maid of honor. Betty Tinnel. sister of tile bride, who served as junior bridesmaid, wore a dress of white chiffon. The bodice was styled with a rounded neckline and embroidered with blue flow-ers-and cap sleeves. Blue flowers gave accent to the skirt. A half hat of matching lace adorned her

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head and she carried a basket of blushed blue carnations. Mrs. Tinnel, mother of the bride, wore a blue flowered chiffon dress with white accessories. The groom’s mother chose a pink dress also with white accessories. Ronald Lautzenhiser and David Hakes were best men and the guests were seated by Dave Myers and Clyde Tinnel. A reception was held at the Moose lodge at which the Dixie Drifters of Fort Wayne provided the music. For their wedding trip the new Mrs. Hakes changed to a blue sheath with white accessories. Mrs. Hakes is a graduate of Monroeville high school and is employed at Jim and Ray’s TV & Appliance store in Convoy. Her husband is a graduate of Wren ■ high school and is employed at ■ Rea Magnet Wire in Fort Wayne. COUSINS CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY TOGETHER ” Cousins Michael Mies and David Andrews, born just hours apart, celebrated their first birthday anniversary Thursday at the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Hilyard. Parents of the children are Mr. and Mrs. Richard. C Mies and Mrs. Barbara Andrews. Also present in addition to the Children, their parents and grandparents, were Michael’s sister, Jennifer, David’s sister Stephania and brother, Bryan, and Mrs. Goldie Hilyard, great-grand-mother bf the children. GIRLS OF FLEABaNT MILLS CLASS OF ’47 MEET The girls of the Pleasant Mills , high school graduating class of 1947 held a get-together at the

home Os Mrs, Earl Shelton recently. The main purpose of the occasion was to renew* acquaintances and to see Mrs. Ernest Hindelang, (Mildred LeickerJ of Phoenix, Ariz.i whom they hadn’t seen in 14 years.'; - <•> - A letter was written and signed by aH present and sent to Mary Jones, who 4s .a registered nurse serving with the Al? Force. Refreshments were served to the following: Mrs. Audrey Reinhart, Mrs. Marge Rich, Mrs. Pat Sipe, Mrs. Betty Fegley, Mrs. Phyllis Arnold, Mrs. Kathleen Johnson, Mrs. Mary Lou Haggatd, Mrs. Mildred Hindenlang, Miss Frieda Williamson and the hostess, Mrs. Norma Sheltop. Jean Foreman of Fort Wayne was unable to attend. The Washington Township Farm Bureau will meet at the Co-op building in Monroe Monday at 8 o’clock; There will be Pet and Hobby club for the children. Refreshments will be served. LOCALS Mr. and Mrs. Milton Swearingen and Mrs. Ruth Durkin returned Friday from Fort Worth, Texas, after a two weeks visit. Mr. and Mrs. Swearingen’s daughter, Mrs. William Frick and three children accompanied them home for a visit. Mrs. Durkin left today for her home in Niles, Mich. Miss Karen Lough, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lough of 723 S. Second street, is celebrating her 16th birthday. Miss Lough is a junior at Decatur high school. Miss Linda Aeschliman, a junior at Decatur high school, is celebrating her 16th birthday today. Mss Aeschliman is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Aeschliman. Mr. and Mras. Otho Suman of 1209 W. Adams street received word from their daughter, Dorcus, of Detroit, Mich., recently, of the arrival of their first grandchildThe baby weighed six pounds and ten ounces and has been named Stewart Alen Van Dine. Mr. and Mrs. Otho Suman and sons Tom and Mic have returned from a vacation in California where they visited Mrs. Suman’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Diehl of San Francisco, and her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Hammons of Martinez, Calif.

BIRTH ; _ /* ■ •' At the Adams county memorial hospital: A baby girl weighing seven pounds, six ounces, wgs born at 12:50 p.m. Friday to Carl and Geraldine Johnson Johnson of Waynedale. Keith and Aldine Slagell Sprunger of 318 W. Main street, Berne, are the parents of a seven pound, fifteen and one half ounce baby boy, bom at 9:38 p.m. Friday. An eight pound baby boy was born to Phillip Alien and Sharon Rose Knefelkamp Schaefer, of Hoagland, at 12:53 p.m. Friday. Three-Year-Old Girl Dies From Injuries EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UPD-Jlll Baker, 3, Shoals, died in St. Mary’s hospital here late Friday of injuries received in a head-on car crash near Shoals which injured five other persons, two of them critically! Hurt critically were Marjorie Arvin, 29, Shoals, and George Baker Jr., 14, Shoals. Also injured were Carrei Lynn Arvin, ’B, Marjorie’s daughter; Clydea Baker, 13, Shoals, and Raymond Davis, 21, Shoals. Churubusco Is Killed Early Today COLUMBIA CITY, Ind. (UPD— Gary Wade, 23, R. R. 1, Churubusco, was killed at 2:30 a.m. today when he Was struck by a car as he stood beside his auto parked on a county road without lights. State police said the car which struck Wade, driven by Morris Manth, 21, R. R. 1. Churubusco, Either had no lights or only one light burning. Miahth’s car sideswiped Wade’s.

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Clubs Calendar items for each day’s publication must be phoned In by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30). Carol Bebont * Phone 3-2121 SATURDAY Monroe Boy Scouts, paper pick, up, 8:30 a.m. Psi Ote Trading Post, 9-12 noon, Ruth Rawlinson, Betty Zerkel; 1-4 p.m., Alice Roth, Donna Roth. SUNDAY Catholic Young Adults, K. of C. Hall. 9 a.m. Ice Cream Social, sponsored by St. Peter’s Walther League, 8 p.m. -* MONDAY Washington Township Farm Bureau, Co-op building in Monroe, 8 p.m. Merrier Mondays Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Roger Ripley, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Rose Garden Club, Mrs. Richard Mailand, 6 p.m. Happy Homemakers Home Demonstration Club, Mrs. Jolen Genth. Olive Rebekah Lodge, Fellows hall, 7:30 p.m. Gals and Pals Horn • Demonstration club, Pleasant Mills school. THURSDAY St. Paul Ladies Aid, day-long meeting, Mrs. Sarah Martin.

Hospital Admitted James Lovellette, Decatur; Miss Cherese Miller, Monroe; Master William J. Miller, Monroe. Dismissed Mrs. Herbert Cook, Decatur. Scattered Showers Forecast In State • United Press International A pittance of precipitation fell in Indiana today as part of a shower pattern expected to dominate the weather at least through Monday. Showers were predicted on a scattered basis for today, tonight. Sunday and Monday, with partly cloudy conditions prevailing* throughout the period. It was raining at South Bend, Chicago and Lafayette this morning. Precipitation during the 24 hours ending at 7 a. m. today included only .03 of an inch at Evansville and a trace at Indianapo-, lis and Chicago, but Cincinnati on the southeastern edge of the state recorded 1.05 indies. Temperatures remained warm but not abnormally so. Highs Friday ranged from 81 at Lafayette to 90 at Louisville, and overnight lows ranged from 62 at Fort Wayne to 72 at Evansville. Highs today will range from 80 to 89, lows tonight from 64 to 69 and highs Sunday from 80 to 87. UE, GE To Resume Meetings On Monday NEW YORK — The United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) today announced it would "continue the fight for jobs by pressing for the shorter work week” in renewed meetings with the General Electric Company and the Westinghouse Corp., biggest manufacturers in the electrical industry. Joseph Dermody, .head of the union’s General Electric-Westing-house conference boards, which are entrusted with bargaining for more than 54,000 UE members employed by the two electrical corporations in the United States and Canada, said that the union’s meetings with GE would be resumed Monday, at New York City and Tuesday in Pittsburgh, with the Westinghouse Corp.

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See Nixon Launch Campaign In Reno Kfr. and Mrs. Merle J. Foor, of Pleasant Mill’s, who are on a western vacation this year, drove from ■ San Francisco to Reno. Nev., last Tuesday to be present for the op- 1 ening of Richard Nixon's campaign for the presidency. The vice president, his wife Pat, and their two children arrived by plane at 1:50 p.m. The Foors got to meet both of them and secretary of the interior Fred Seaton; and the Adams county couple were present to get the campaign officially started. It was “welcome home, Pat Nixon Day" in Nevada, the place of Mrs. Nixon’s birth, the Foors explained. The governor and lieutenant governor were present to welcome them to Nevada. They spent an hour and half there. The Foors left Nevada for Portland, Ore., on another leg of their trip. • National Guardsmen Return From Camp Indiana national guardsmen, including many Adams county men. are ending a two-week summer encampment at Camp Grayling. Mich., and will be heading home over the week-end in six main convoys. Parts of the two convoys, about 250 military vehicles, left Camp Grayling Friday, and the remainder are scheduled to clear the camp by 1:15 p.m. today. Altogether, more than 1,300 vehicles, primarily jeeps, will take to Michigan and Indiana roads for the trek Dr. C. J. Blackman Dies At Bluffton Dr. Charles J. Blackman, 85, prominent Bluffton osteopath well known in Decatur, died Friday at a rest home in that city after an illness of nine years. Dr. Blackman was team physician for Bluffton high school athletic teams for 30 years. Funeral services will -be held at 3 p.m. today at the Goodwin funeral home in Blufftori, with burial in Elm Grove cemetery. Winifred Mankey To Attend Ball State Winifred M. Mankey, 1960 graduate of Monmouth high school, was recently on the Ball State Teachers College campus for two days of pre-entrance orientation and examination. * Miss Mankey is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R. Mankey, route 1, Decatur. She will attend school on a PTA scholarship and study elementary education. Her high school activities included treasurer of Pep Club, F.H.A., Editor of Yearbook and class play activity. Carnival Worker Is Electrocuted Friday RICHMOND, Ind: (UPI) — James W. Williams, 37, Carson City, Mich., died Friday while, helping dismantle a carnival amusement ride on U. S. 40 near here. i

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NOTES FROM AFTER THIRTY A PENNY SAVED JIM car Last week Miss Susan Dee Shraluka, 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Shraluka, spent about two hours “robbing" her piggy bank. She didn’t want to break it ; so she wiggled and jiggled for two hours until the last penny had fallen through the hole in the bottom. After she had counted the money, she found she had a little over $2 in change. When her mother told her it would be a good idea to take the-money to the bank and start a savings plan. Susan, a—very... ardent ...television fan. had this for an answer “Mommy,” she said, “With al) those outlaws you see on TV running around loose, the bank is sure to get held up and I’ll losy my money.” AGAIN It’s nice to go on a vacation. It’s nice to get back, but it sure is nice to go. I’m not going to belabor those who are uninterested in the Civil War with an account of air the battlefields, but if anyone is interested. I’m always ready to talk about them—just stop in and mention something. We ended up seeing 15 battlefields and traveling better than 3100 miles. Anyone interested in camping can do a lot worse than Tennessee. At least the camp sites .at the state parks where we stopped were really nice, and we were told they were all about the same. We took one interesting side-trip (about all we had time for) while we were camped in the Shenan-' doah valley in Virginia. We heard about an old iron furnace that was still in good shape, so we headed back into the boondocks. And it was really back in. We drove oh a good state road for about eight miles, then on a fair state road for ten miles, then on a not-so-good road up over a mountain for six miles, and then on a dead-end gravel road for two miles that had a ford instead of a bridge at a creek; If you’re interested in old iron furnaces, though, it was worth the trip. The smelting stack was still there. It had a lot of cracks in it, and there were trees growing out the sides, but at least you could get an idea of what one looked like. I took time out from the wars to climb a small_mountain near one of our camps. It was a steep slope,- liberally sprinkled with ! large rocks and thick underbrush. It took about three hours to get to the top (curse those cigarettes) and about a half hour to run. slide and fall down. The next day, I was talking with one of the rangers, and he told me of a nice path to the top. At an inquiry .about the possibility of any poisonous snakes in the area, he chsually replied nothing much except rattlesnakes and copperheads. My mountain climbing was done. School System Vote On In Dallas, Tex. DALLAS. Tex. (UPI)—A record 50,000 voters were expected to go to the polls today for an election which could- determine whether or

not the Dallas school system is to be partially or entirly integrated. Franklin E. Spafford, president of the school bogfd, made an election eve plea to voters to “put aside all other issues and vote your personal voncitions.” “The question is solely one for each voter to decide, and the board does not feel it would be appropriate to even indicate its preference in the matter,” the school board said in a prepared statement. The school district is under orders by Federal Judge T. Whitfield Davidson to begin a plan of "salt and pepper" integration in September, 1961. However, under state law, a school district must hold such a referendum. And if the voters reject integration, the district faces

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PAGE THREE

loss of state a kl,i accreditation and fines for school official? if it desegregates. - T -■ : -~- Over 2,600 Dally Democrats ate sold and delivered in Decatur each day.

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