Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 186, Decatur, Adams County, 8 August 1960 — Page 3

MONDAY, AUGUST t, 1969.

SOCIETY

MRS. JACK AURAND HONORED WITH SHOWER A surprise stork shower was given Thursday evening for Mrs. Jack Aurand at the home of her mother, Mrs. Cartlon Taylor, in Monroeville. The gifts were placed on a table beautifully decorated with a stork carrying a baby. Games were played with Mrs. Kenneth dhrisman directing. Prizes were won by Mrs. Paul Adams', Mrs. Tom Aurand, Mrs. Waler Van Wald, Mrs. Roy Taylor, and Mrs. James Rutherford, who in turn presented them to Mrs. Aurand. The honored guest then opened her many lovely gifts with the help of her nephew, Ricky. The hostesses, Mrs. Carlton Taylor and Mrs. Kenneth Chrisman, with the help of Mrs. James Rutherford and her daughter Suzanne, served delicious refreshments to the following guests: Mrs. Tom Aurand, Mrs. Charles Fuhrman, Mrs. Charlie Chrisman, Mrs. Kenneth Chrisman, Mrs. James Rutherford and children, Suzanne' and Garrett of Decatur; Mrs. Paul Adams and daughter Karen, Mrs. Dale Clem, Mrs. William Taylor, Mrs. Paul Taylor and children, Ricky and Kim, Mrs. Ray Taylor,’ Mrs. Blackfe Rhymer and daughters, Miss Beverly Rothgeb, Miss Margaret Taylor and Miss Lucille Taylor of Monroeville; Mrs. Clifford Van Wald, Mrs. Jerry Getty of Fort Wayne; Mrs. Van Wakl of Churubusco; Mrs. Lawrence Kissell and children of Markle, Miss Mary Case of Wren, Ohio, and the honored guest. Unable to attend but sending gifts were Mrs. Elizabeth Aurand and Ruth Mcßeynolds. In the article published August 2 concerning the reunion of the Decatur high school graduating class of 1959 the names of two of the guests were printed as Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Rabo. The names should have appeared as Eva Mae Plumley and Phillip Rambo. BIR TH Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bogner of Muncie are the parents of a nine pound three ounce baby boy, named John Eric. The paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Dick Bogner, and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Brunnegraff are the maternal grandparents. At the Adams County Memorial , Hospital: Joe L. and Maryann Wickey baby wYlgtOng * si* pounds, fifteen ounces, and born at 4:os p.m. Saturday. A seven pound, three and one half ounce baby boy was born at 11:08 a.m. Saturday to Gorden C, and Eileen Lois Miller Suman of route 6, Decatur.

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LOCALS The Jay county hospital has been named a poison control center by the state board of health. The Rev. Don Cutts, of Portland, has been named Jay county chairman for the CROP program, Just organized in that county. A new 7,500 kilowatt turbogenerator, a 7,500 square foot condensor, and a 78,200 pound steam boiler have been installed at Celina, 0., at a cost of $1,800,000, and should be ready to operate about Sept. 1. The new equipment will produce one kilowatt for every pound of coal used, instead of the present 1.4 pounds’ of coal needed to produce a kilowatt in Celina. Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Bormann returned recently from West Lafayette where they attended the commissioning exercises at Purdue University of their son-in-law, Henry S. Miller as second lieutenant in the Air Force through the R.O.T.C. program. Lt. and Mrs. Miller and their two children, Geof and Gwen, will spend a few days here before reporting to Wright Patterson base at Dayton, Ohio, Sept. 12. Mrs. Maude Mahen will leave soon for a visit with her son. Judge Lloyd J. Mahan and family in Parkston, South Dakota. Mr. and Mrs. James Brunnegraff left Saturday for their home in McComb, 111., after a visit with their friends .and relatives in Decatur- Brunnegraff was transferred to McComb from Houston, Texas in the spring of this year. - t >. 1 Hospital Admitted Leoitard Fox, Decatur; Harold Shoemaker, Geneva; Forrest Diehl. Craigville; Richard DesJean, Decatur; AMbnn DeKomnck, Hoagland; Mapcellus Steiner, Geneva; Mrs. Ray C. Hamrick, Decatur; David Schultz, Decatur; Willard Baumgartner, Berne. Dismissed Mrs. Essie Duff. Geneva; Mrs. David Byer and baby girl, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Ed Allen Blume and baby girl, Decatur; Master William J. Miller, Monroe; Miss Hierese Miller, Monroe; Mrs: David E. Moore and baby girl, Decatur; Mrs. Leroy Gaskill and baby boy, Berne; Mrs. Grover WoHe, Decatur* William Roy AsPy, Bryant; Mrs. Lawrence Beal, CMgville; Mrs. Joe L. Hilly and baby girl. Berne; Mrs. Phillip Allen Schafer and baby boy. Hoagland; Mrs.' Carl Johnson and .baby girl, Waynedale; Mrs. Peter Neuseld and baby girl, Berne; Mrs. Marcus Schue'/r and baby boy, Decatur.

Clubs Calendar items for each day** - publication must be phoned In by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:90). Carol Reheat Phone 3-2121 MONDAY Washington Township Farm Bureau, Coop building in Monroe, 8 p.m. Merrier Mondays Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Roger Ripley, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Eagles auxiliary. Eagles hall, 8 pan. Rose Garden Club, Mrs. Richard Mailand, 6 p.m. Happy Homemakers Home Demonstration Club, .Mrs. Jteen Genth. Olive Rebekah Lodge, Fellows hall, 7:30 p.m. Gals and Pals Horn* Demonstration club, Pleasant Mills school. THURBDAY Mt. Pleasant W.S.C.S., Mrs. William Fifer, 1:30 p.m. Ladies of Trinity EUB church, fellowship hall, 7:30 p.m. Queen of Peace Study club, Mrs. Cyril Becker, 8 p.m. Psi Ote Trading Post, 1 to 4 p.m., Virginia Elder and Carolyn Brown. •St. Paul Ladies Aid, day-long meeting, Mrs. Sarah Martin. FRIDAY Psi Ote Trading Post, 1 to 4 p.m., Joan Bohnke and Jean Knapp; 6 to 9 p.m.; Alvera Eady and Ruth Weigman. SATURDAY Psi Ote Trading Post. 9 to 12 noon, Marsha Freeby and Judy Kable; 1 to 4 p.m., Patty McCammon and Alice Roth. Attend Camp-Out Os Moorman Mfg. Co Leonard Soliday, of Decatur, and Martin Steiner, of Monroe, leave this week for Quincy, 111., to attend an old-fashioned camp-out, educational meeting on one of the Moorman research farms located 11 miles northeast of the city. More than 2,uuo men from 31 states will be housed in a huge tent city during. this 75th year affair. A circus size tent will double for an auditorium nad mess hall with smaller tents being used to house the men and to provide other services. During the evenings there will be campfires, singing and entertainment on the shores of Jug Lake. This lake has water from over 4,000 sources in it. From the auditorium stage, Moorman scientists will discuss the results of the latest animal research work. Other demonstrations, displays and exhibits will be an educatonal part of this meeting. New feeds and feeding methods will be reviewed. The men will also see the laboratories and factory in Quincy. ** Missing Infant Is £ound Sound Asleep BROOKVILLE, Ind. (UPl)—lrvfo Vonderheide. 18 months, Brookville, was found sleeping beside a Franklin County road Saturday night three hours after he was reported missing. Irvin, one of seven children of the Elmer Vonderheides, toddled off while playing with his brothers and sisters and was found by searchers One mile from his farm home.

PECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Five Under Arrest In Drowning Death SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) - Five Indiana National Guardsmen were held in the city jhil on preliminary manslaughter charges today in the drowning of Techncian 2-c Walter R. Van Vickie, 34, Sharpsville. Police said four erf the men signed statements admitting they threw Van Vickie into the St. Joseph River near the National Guard armory Saturday night They also admitted they knew Van Vickie could not swim, officers said. Van Vickie left a widow and four children, authorities said. were Harold E, Shuppard, 20, Tipton; Robert D. Vannice, 19. Danville; Arnpld G. Bell, 22, route 2, Indianapolis, and Robert E. Burt, 23, Tipton. A friend of the victm, William Dowdy, 20. North Salem, plunged into the river in a vain attempt to save Van Vickie. Dowdy was taken to St. Joseph Hospital here suffering from shock;, exposure and hysteria and was not arrested until Sunday night. Authorities said Van Vickel was thrown into the river during initiation horseplay with new officers. He shouted that he could not swim before he vanished beneath the surface, police said. All the guardsmen were members of the 2nd Battle Group of the 38th Infantry Division. The group was camped on the riverbank behind the armory while en route home from two weeks of summer training at Camp Crayling, Mich. Van Vickie’s body was recovered 20 feet from shore in about 12 feet of water by skin divers. Authorities ( said the matter would be investigated by the next grand jury in September unless the case was turned over to military authorities for trial by court martial. Declares Payola Is Pretty Well Ended WASHINGTON (UPI) — Chairman Earl W. Kintner of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) says payola “has been pretty well stamped out” as result of his agency s nine-month crackdown on record makers and distributors. Kintner told United Press International Sunday that the FTC now would sit back and see whether the record industry behaves itself. He said he believed the industry had “fallen into line” with government efforts to wipe qut the multi-million-dollar payola racket which came to light during the TV scandals last year. The agency began its investigation of payola last November after congressional investigators aired charges that some disc jockeys had accepted money and gifts from record companies to popularize certain records. The FTC has lodged complaints against 102 companies. Os these, 57 have signed consent agreements barring them from making under-the-table payments to get their recordings promoted. These agreements, however, carry no admission of wrongdoing. He said he 'expected the industry to police itself now, because “those who are under government order are apt to keep an eye on competitors. Misery loves company.” A firm which violates a consent order is subject to a possible finp of $5,000 a day per violation. Hie commission considers payola both deceptive advertising and unfair trade competition. Kintner added that the FTC “got directly at the source of the evil” by getting a record companies, rather than suing individual disc jockeys. “Our a:m was to stop payola.” he added, “with the minimum expenditure of the public’s money,” Spy Pilot's Parents Enroute To Moscow RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) — The father and mother of U-2 spy pilot Francis Gary Powers fly to Washington today on the second leg of their journey to the Soviet Union for their son’s espionage trial next week. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Powers, who left their Pound, Va., home Sunday, were expected to meet Norton businessmen Sol Cury and Dr. Lewis K. Ingram, Mrs. Powers’ personal physician, at Washington. and Ingram, who flew to Washington Sunday night, will accompany the Powers to Moscow. Ingram will look after the health of Mrs. Powers, who has a heart |

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Charge China Reds In Tint i 1 With Tortures GENEVA (UPI)— The Chinese i Communists have carried out ■ widespread killings, rape and tor- . tore in occupied Tibet and have [ Tried to wipe out the Buddhist religion there, the International , Commission erf Jurists charged today. The commission made the charge in a report on an investigation into conditions in Tibet made by a committee of lawyers ; senior advocate'of India's supreme ! court. The commission is a non-gov-ernmental non - political organiza--1 tion which has been given conI sultive status by the United Na--1 tions Economic and Social Couni cil. The report charged that the Red s Chinese authorities, in 10 years of occupation in Tibet, have violated human rights by murder, : rape, arbitrary imprisonment, tor- . ure and inhuman and degrading treatment. \ In New Delhi, Trikamdas told , newsmen at least 65,000 Tibetans had been killed by the Chinese . Communists up to June, 1959. He > said , his committee had collected , TSO statements for its report. “Chinese allegations that the , Tibetans enjoyed no human rights r before the entry of the Chinese were found to be based on distorted and exaggerated accounts of life in Tibet," the report de- ■ dared. t The committee found that acts genocide have been committed by * the Red Chinese in Tibet in an t attempt to destroy the Tibetans s as a religious group. It said evidence proved that: t —The Chinese will not permit adherence to * and practice of Buddhism in Tibet. —The Chinese have set out systematically to eradicate Buddhdsm as a religious belief in Tibet. —The Chinese have killed Buddhist religious leaders because their religious belief and practice encouraged others. —The Chinese have “forcibly - transferred large numbers of Tibetan children to a Chinese mate--1 rialist environment in order to 1 prevent them having a religious : upbringing.” i EISENHOWER (Continued from page 1) and sound while we carry forward our urgent work at home and in the world,” he said. | “This means that I shall not be ; a party to reckless spending ; schemes which would increase ! the burden of debt of our grandchildren by resuming, in prosperous times, the practice of deficit ' financing. “I shall not fall to resist inflationary pressures by whatever means are available to me.” He challenged the Democraticcontrolled Congress to vote “the additional taxes to pay toe bill” if it wants to set up a different list of priorities at greater cost to the Treasury. Compromise Farm Program Eisenhower again prodded Congress for action to deal with farm problems, particularly the wheat surplus. “The public will have every right to register its serious protest should the Congress adjourn without responsible action in this area,” he said. “Hie recent history of this problem has been deadlock,” he said. “The Congress has refused to accept my recommendations and insisted upon unrealistic programs which, of course, I have rejected.” He reiterated his offer to accept a compromise farm program if it fitted guidelines he has laid out even if it did not jibe with all his recommendations. The President also made a special appeal for area redevelopment legislation, an issue over which he has long been at loggerheads with the Democratic majorities in Congress who have advocated more liberal programs than the White House would accept. He said he had to veto toe bill passed earlier this year because it would have "frittered the taxpayers’ money away" in areas where it was not needed and on programs which would have given little help to those who needed it. Illinois Man Drowns In Bass Lake Sunday , KNOX, Ind. (U^l)—Charles Lippert, 57, LaGrange, 111., drowned Sunday while swimming or wading In Bass Lake six miles south of here. His body was recovered an about six feet of water. I

At Least 11 Killed In Indiana Traffic . i United Press Internationa] ? At least 11 persons were killed in traffic accidents in Indiana during the weekend. Two crashes claimed a total of five victims. Four persons were killed Sunday: Mrs. Shirley Schlegel, 31, route 1. West Terre Haute, was injured fatally in a four-car accident on a Wabash River Bridge on US. 40 at Terre Haute. Mrs. Schlegel died of internal and head at St. Anthony’s Hospital at Terre Haute early today. She was injured fatally when one car in the four-car accident veered into the path of tile car which her husband. Lawrence Schlegel, 34, was driving. Judy Ann Brown, 15, Crawfordsville, met death when the car in which she was riding flipped over on a curve along a Montgomery County road. Donald Leeke, 19. Crawfordsville, the driver, was taken to Culver Hospital in Crawfordsville in fair condition. James Rodney Joseph, 4, Chicago, and Mary Ann Childress, 18. Terre Haute, were killed in a head-on crash four miles north of Terre Haute on U.S. 41. The Joseph boy’s father, Arthur, 35; two brothers, and a sister were among six persons injured and taken to Union Hospital, Terre Haute. The other seven victims died Saturday. Mrs. Carmella Ackley, 61, Auburndale, Fla., was hit by a car in downtown Muncie. Eugene R. Hopping, 46, Muncie, was held on a preliminary charge of reckless homicide. Wayne Milner, 45, Chicago, was killed at Hammond when police who had noticed his car weaving motioned him over to the curb. *His car crashed into a utility pole. Charles Troutman, 45, EH wood, was killed when his car left a Jay county road east of Pennville and struck a tree. Guy Raymond Summerlott, 42, LaPorte; his wife, Lavopne, 38, and their daughter, Betty, 14, were killed when their truck was hit broadside by a Grand Trunk Railroad passenger train traveling at nearly 80 miles an hour. The crash south of LaPorte wiped out the entire Summerlott family. Gary Wade, 25, Churubusco, was killed when he was hit by a car while standing next to his ayto along a county road near Columbia City. ,

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“ *' / . 1 i J /'—AA jut . t r MRS. MARGARET KUHN, left of Monroe, and Mrs. Ann Blaney, next to her, of Decatur, are pictured above listening to Dr. Eland of Ball State Teachers College in the "Psychology of school subjects” summer workshop, one of four held this summer on the Ball State campus. Teachers have gathered from all over the state to pool their knowledge and find solutions to the problems in education in today’s schools. Pictured above from left to right are Mrs. Kuhn, Mrs. Blaney, Curtis Osborn, Indianapolis; Jack Paar, Fort Wayne; and Ben Bowles, Peru.

Hoosier Confesses Missouri Slaying GREENFIELD, Ind. (UPD— A Richmond man has confessed he used a knife in a fight with a slain father of three children at Carthage, Mo., Friday night, Hancock County Sheriff Edwin Kirkpatrick said today. Powell Van Vinkle, 26, confessed Cunday, Kirkparick said, but insisted he used the knife in self defense. Van Winkle; Aaron Glenn Webb, 27, Webster, and Barbara Jean Nickols, 28, Knoxville, Tenn., were held here on second degree murder charges. They refused to sign extradition waivers and an extradition hearing was planned some time this week, authorities said. The trio was captured here late Saturday while they were driving back to Richmond from Carthage where they said they had worked on a greenhouse conduction job for two weeks. All three were employed by a greenhouse building firm at Lima, Ohio, authorities said. William Elliott. 27, Carthage, was stabbed fatally in a fight with the three suspects outside a Carthage bar. authorities said. Officers said all three signed statements admittng the fight but at first denied aijy knowledge of a stabbing. The three said they saw Elliott get up and walk away after the

PAGE THREE

fight and they did not know he was dead. Davidson suggested that the district hold such an election, and indicated that if the vote was “yes” he may order wholesale integration. He said the election would be a barometer of public feeling on the race Lssue.

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