Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 232, Decatur, Adams County, 3 October 1961 — Page 3
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1961
SOCIETY
ROSEMARY SPANGLER BPW WOMAN OF THE YEAR To open the annual observance of national business weman’s week, October 1-7, a breakfast was held Monday at the Fairway restaurant for members of the Decatur Business and Professional 'Women’s club. Highlighting the occasion was the presentation of a banner to Rosemary Spangler, proclaiming her the “BPW Career Woman of the year.” The white satin banner with the title, “Career Woman,” and a white mum corsage were presented by Mrs. Janice ■. Mishler, Toastmistress. Mayor Donald Gage was special guest at. the breakfast and addressed the group briefly on the bright future of women in the business world and in the political field in particular. In congratulating Miss Spangler on being selected as career woman, he spoke of her success in seeking her first public office, of her business capabilities and of her service to the community. On behalf of the club, president Betty Rosier presented the guest of honor with a silver charm bracelet engraved with the words, “BPW Career Woman 1961.” Miss Spangler won the title over two other candidates. Miss Glennys Roop, teacher at Northwest elementary school, and Mrs. Mary Howard, Adams county ASCS office manager. Nominations were made by fellow club members at the September meeting. Voting was bassed upon the following qualifications: contributing to the betterment of BPW; successfulness of career; and service to community. In charge of the week’s observance is the public relations committee of which Mrs. Mishler is a member. Serving with her are Mrs. Beverly Trout, chairman, Mrs. Nina Miller, Miss Mary Catherine Spangler, Mrs. Annabelle Smith and l ' Mfs7*Nora Bieberich. An autumn theme was used in table decorations. Leaf napkins and a favor consisting of an apple were placed at each plate along with a leaf emblem imprinted with the words, “National Business Woman's Week.” The emblems will be worn all week by members of the club. A beautiful basket of fruit was awarded to Mrs. Betty Singleton, winner of the door prize. Guests present were Mrs. Joanna Smitley, Mrs. Goldie Roop, Mrs. Dan Bieberich, Miss Carol Bieberich, Miss Jackie Hurst and Miss ( Florence - Lichtensteiger. . j, MONROE VOLUNTEER FIREMEN LADIES MET A pot luck supper featured the September meeting of the Monroe volunteer firemen ladies auxiliary as they met at the fire station recently. Seven members, their husbands and families making a total of 32 persons were present to enjoy the delicious food. All members and wives of fireman who wish to join the auxiliary are reminded that all meetings will
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Clubs Calendar items for each day’s publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30). Colleen Heller TUESDAY City council of Beta Sigma PhiMrs. John Beery, 8 p. m. Lucky 12 Pinochle club, Mrs. Kenneth Erhart, 7:30 p.m. Nu-U club, 1140 W. Madison, 1:30 p.m. Happy Homemakers, Mrs. Herbert Hawkins, 7:30 p. m. Catholic Ladies of Columbia, K. of C. haH. Dutiful Daughters class, Mrs. Amos Ketchum, 7:30 p. m. Sacred Heart study club, Mrs. Richard Shell, 8 p.m. 39’ers carry in at 12 noon, Community center WEDNESDAY St. Gerard study club, Mrs. James B. Roop, 8:15 p. m. Women’s guild of Zion E and R, church social rooms, 7:30 p. m. Our Lady of Good Counsel study club, Mrs. Herman Alberding, 8 p. m. World War I veterans, V.F.W. home, 8 p.m. Shakespeare club, Mrs. Roy Kalver 2:30 p.m. THURSDAY Northwest PTA, Northwest school, 7:30 p.m.; executive board meeting, 7 p.m. Wesley class of First Methodist church, at the church, 7:30 p.m. W. M. A. of Nuttman avenue UB church, at the parsonage, 7:30 p.m. Town and Country home ec club, Mrs. Peter C. Miller, 1:30 p.m. Monroe Methodist WSCS rally, church, 7:30 p. m. Union Chapel ladies Aid, all day, church basement. St. Joseph study club, Mrs. Joe Murphy, 8:15 p. m. St. Cecelia study club, Mrs. Ed Noonan, 8 p. m. So Cha Rae, Miss Virginia Laurent, 7:30 p. m. Unit 1, Bethany E. U. B. W.S.W.S.. Mrs. James Staley, 7:30 p. m. Women of the Moose, regular meeting, 8 o’clock, executive meeting, 7:30 p.m., formal enrollment ceremonies. FRIDAY Monroe Methodist WSCS rummage sale. Habegger building, Monroe street, 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Work and Win class of Trinity E. U. 8., Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Drake, 7:30 p. m. S A TURDAY Monroe Methodist WSCS rummage sale, Habegger building, Monroe street, 9 a. m. to closing. Delta Theta Tau rummage sale, C. L. of C. Hall, 9 a. m. - be held the last Thursday of each month at the fire station unless otherwise specified. NEW MEMBER WELCOMED BY FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE The Friendship circle of the Missionary church welcomed a new member, Mrs. John Fuhrman, at a recent meeting held at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Gallogly. Nineteen members and one guest answered the roll call by answering the question; “What I have to be thankful for.”
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The group sang, “Give of Your Best," led by Mrs. Charles Tumbleson, and devotions entitled, “The Incomplete Task,” were given by Mrs. George Miller. Prayer was offered by Mrs. Donald Sprunger. A short business meeting followed, after which the group sewed tea towels and painted tablecloths. Refreshments were served by the hostesses, Mrs. Norman Hart and Mrs. Charles Tumbleson. The closing prayer was given by Mrs. Robert Reynolds. The Northwest elementary PTA will meet Thursday at the school at 7:30 p.m. Hubert Zerkel, Jr., school principal will introduce the teachers and Gail Grabill, superintendent, will give a short talk for the evening. The executive board will meet at 7 p.m. before the meeting. The Wesley class of the First Methodist church will have their first class party in the recreation room of the church, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The W. M. A. of the Nuttman avenue United Brethren church will meet at the parsonage, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The Town and Country home economics club will meet at the home of Mrs. Peter C. Miller, 433 Stratton Way, Thursday at 1:30 p.m. The Monroe Methodist WSCS rally will be held at the church Thursday at 7:30 p. m. The Rev. L. G. Sapp, of Bluffton, will be the guest speaker. The Monroe Methodist WSCS will hold a rummage sale Friday from 9 a. m. until 9 p. m. and Saturday from 9 a. m. until closing at the Habegger hardware building on Monroe street. LOCALS Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hagan will leave Wednesday for French Lick to attend an annual three day meeting of the Indiana Electric Association. Daniel Kitson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kitson, left New York Monday by jet for Lillebonne, France, where he will be for the next three years. Dan is a chemical engineer for the Firestone company. Miss Deanna Small left September 29 for New Windsor, Md., where she will be in Brethren volunteer service training for two months. From New Windsor she will be sent to another part of the United States to car r y on ten months of social work. Deanna motored to New Windsor and was accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Small, Mrs. Arthur B. >Miller, Wendell Capes, and Mrs. Ada Roeder. r Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bluhm of near Monroe entertained a number of guests with dinner Sunday. Those attending included, Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Stucky and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bluhm and sons, Gary and Ben Lee of Monroe, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bluhm, Mr. and Mrs. Duane Bluhm and daughter, Debbie, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bluhm and children, Jane and Jan, Mr. and Mrs. Don Bluhm an d daughter, Trina Carol, all of Berne. Vagrant Escorted Out Monday Night James Custer, a known vagrant from Ohio, was escorted out of town about 10 o’clock Monday evening after creating a boisterous disturbance on 13th street. He was reported to the city police who picked him up and took him out of town.
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Princess' Husband Named To Earldom LONDON (UPI) — Queen Elizabeth tonight gave Antony Arm-strong-Jones, commoner husband of Princess Margaret, the title of Viscount Linley and Earl of Snowdon. The announcement by Buckingham Palace came weeks before the expected birth of the couple's first child, which now will be called Viscount Linley if a boy. and Lady Armstrong-Jones if a girl. Without the title bestowed on Tony the child would have been plain “mister” or “miss” since titles are handed down through the father and not through the mother in Britain. The palace announcement said: “The Queen has been pleased to confer on Mr. Antony Arm-strong-Jones the dignity of an earldom of the United Kingdom. His styles and titles will be Viscount Linley and Earl of Snowdown.” Princess Margaret henceforth wiU be called, "Her Royal Highness, the Princess Margaret Countess of Snowdon.” It was understood Snowdon was chosen by the Queen because of Armstrong-Jones’ famUy association with Wales. Linley is a family name on his mother’s side. His mother, remarried after ton’s birth, is the Countess of Rosse. Angola High School Is Damaged By Fire ANGOLA, Ind. (UPD - Fire starting in a ventilator shaft caused considerable damage to the Angola High School building today and brought an unexpected holiday to about 400 pupils. An Indiana State Police trooper discovered smoke pouring out of the three-story brick structure a few minutes after 6 a.m. Trooper Floyd Ehlerding turned in the alarm and units of the Angola, Fremont and Pleasant Lake fire departments responded. At first the flames appeared to have got out of control and firemen had difficulty entering the building. But about an hour after their arrival, they had the blaze contained and damage was confined largely to the basement and the first and second floors of the structure. Firemen said the fire started In a basement shaft and spread upward. , The school gymnasium located adjacent to the structure was saved from the flames. Classes were cancelled at the building, but the fire had no effect on the city’s elementary schol located about two blocks away. The high school building is two blocks south of the city square. There was no immediate estimate of the loss. Hospital ADMITTED Master Michael Johnson, Decatur; Mrs. Fred Fox, Berne; Amos J. Lewton, Decatur; Arthur Scheumann, Hoagland. DISMISSED Mrs. Bernerd Lehman and baby boy, Decatur; Mrs. Wilmer Biehold and baby girl, Decatur; Mrs. David Sprunger, Berne; Mrs. Donald Harle and baby girl, Hoagland.
Jobless Pay Claims Decreased In Area Unemployment claims for Adams county are back under 100 for the first week since August 14, Richard P. App, manager of the Fort Wayne office of the Indiana employment security division, said this morning. New claims were nine this past week, with 87 continued claims, for a total of 96. This compares with 15 and 94 the previous week, for a total of 109. Extended claims, for those out of employment for six months, totaled 54, up slightly from 51 the week before. There were six new extended claims, and 48 continued claims. ° Stranded Tourists Offered Trip Home SHANNON AIRPORT, Ireland (UPl)—Ninety-eight tourists from Chicago, stranded in Ireland for six days, learned today they may be flown home free—if they’re still here on Friday. The 98 were part of a group of 103 members of Erin's Own Club in Chicago. Although -their passage aboard a chartered President Airlines flight had been paid for in advance, mechanical failures and a financial snafu teamed up to block their flight home. The 98 were broke, hungry and getting angrier by the minute. First their plane—a DC6B—was delayed by a mechanical defect and arrived here late Monday. Then the airport said President Airlines owed it $6,000 for fuel and services, effectively blocking the charter plane’s departure. Five of the original group received money from home Monday and immediately caught another flight. The others were thrown on their own resources. Many booked rooms at nearby hotels and planned to stay until their funds ran out. Fourteen have been sleeping at the airport terminal. Cables to President Kennedy and telephone calls to the U.S. embassy in Dublin produced an offer of a SSO loan to every American in the group. But an embassy spokesman said 39 Irish citizens among the tourists were ineligible for the loan. Irish tempers flared when the spokesman said there was no guarantee the airline would reimburse them for money spent on food and lodging here. Some blamed President Kennedy, saying he had neglected them. Then Pan American World Airways offered to fly the Chicagoans home free on Friday. A Pan-Am official said the airline would like to help the stranded vacationers sooner, but that no plane was available before then. Production Records By Three Holsteins The Holstein-Friesian association of America has announced completion of outstanding official production records by three registered Holstein cows in this area. They are: Woodroad Fobes Madcap 4404637, owned by Chris Stahly, Geneva, produced 13,555 lbs. of milk and 561 lbs. of butterfat in 323 days on twice daily milking as a 4-year-old; Silver Rock Fobes Echo 4322404 produced 16,770 lbs. milk and 672 lbs. butterfat in 305 days on twice daily milking as a 3-year-old, and BHF Emmet Vrouka 3788375, produced 18,710 lbs. milk and 680 lbs butterfat in 305 days on twice daily milking as a 6-year-old. The last two are owned by Harry Wulliam & Son, Berne. Doris Bluhm Named As Social Chairman UPLAND, Ind. — Doris A. Bluhm, of Monroe, a senior at Taylor University, has b e err named social chairman of the Gamma Delta Beta organization. This club provides for the development of cultural interest by the women of the campus, providing study groups, lectures, and other interesting activities. In addition to this position, Doris is program chairman —of the student education association. She is majoring in elementary education and plans to become a teacher. She is the daughter of Ralph Bluhm, R. R. 1, Monroe. Holdup Suspect Is Taken In Custody INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) —A man suspected of participating in the $5,00 holdup Friday of the Ten-High-Brooks Tavern here was arrested Monday, and preliminary charges of vehicle taking and robbery were lodged against him. Police who arrested James Wesley Maish, 35, Indianapolis, said they found in his apartment two sawed-off shotguns, a sack of shells and five license plates from the same lot wrom which the car used in the holdup was taken.
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Jack Paar Blasts Again At Critics NEW YORK (UPD—Jack Paar tore into critics of his recent visit to Berlin Monday night when he returned to his NBC-TV show after a four-week vacation. Among those criticized by the comedian during a one-hour, less commercials, counter-attack were: Jack Gould, TV critic for the New York Times. Irv Kupcinet, columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times. The New York Journal American. The New York Post. Sen. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont. Senators and congressmen who will appear in a motion picture version of “Advise and Consent.” Congressmen who toured an Italian motion picture studio and complained they were unable ,|o see Elizabeth Taylor. Charges News Slanting Paar's blasts came in connection with his Sept. 7 visit to the Friedrichstrasse checkpoint in Berlin, where he was given Army cooperation for the taping of a one-hour TV program. The Berlin program was aired Sept: 12. Paar, in charging that the American press gave the American public slanted news coverage, said the original incident was treated to page one headlines but that last week’s followup was "back with the want ads.” Last week, the Pentagon reversed itself and withdrew disciplinary actions against two Army officers who helped Paar meet Gl’s for his TV show. 4 Praises Columnist Lawrence Paar praised political columnist David Lawrence for defending the Berlin telecast and also praised columnist Paul Malloy of the Chicago Sun-Times for not “prejudging” the controversial i Berlin programs. He also cited in his attack upon newspapers erroneous dispatches out of the Congo which pertained to the movements of the late U.N. Secretary General, Dag Hammarskjold, He said he would discuss his visit to Moscow on his Tuesday night program. During his September vacation. Paar visited Switzerland and London in addition to Berlin and Moscow. Two other men arrested earlier are being held for questioning by police in connection with the holdup. Trade in a good town — Decatur.
Just To Keep The Record Straight the FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Reaffirms its position as * Definitely Conservative The Bible is taught and preached as the Word of God, our only infallible rule for faith and practice. •Unquestionably Evangelistic Believing man to be lost and condemned,without God we proclaim the gospet of Jesus Christ: repentance for sin, faith in the work of Christ, the miracle of the new birth. •Actively Missionary Minded Following the command of our Lord to go into all the world and preach the gospel we engage in a vigorous home and foreign mission program. •Truly Baptist In polity and practice we unapologhtically hold the > distinctives which have helped to make our country strong. - ■ • ■ ~ , •' ■ 1 ’ Sunday "school 10*30 AM. - JHW- • Worship MBI ‘'A 6:15 P.M. - b.y.f. b M 7:30 pM - ■ ir»lK Evening Service 7:00 P.M. (Wednesday) Prayer Service ROBERT E. McQUAIO, -Ji- > PASTOR 221 So. 4th Street If You Are Without A Church Home, You Are Urged To Attend!
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FACE OF SPACE—A scientist is mirrored in a spaceage invention called an atomic particle tracer. The tracer, at Hughes Aircraft laboratories in Malibu, Calif., was used to design an ion engine, said tn be the key to trips to distant planets. The tracer contains hundreds of needlelike ele<> trodes immersed in several inches of water. Electric fields are created exactly like the fields in an ion engine, which gets its thrust from accelerated atoms.
1,500 Electrical Workers On Strike NUTLEY, N. J. (UPD — Some 1,500 electrical workers went on strike today against International Telephone and Telegraph laboratories. The strike could affect overseas and domestic military installations guarding against surprise enemy attack. The members of Local 400, In-1 ternational Union of Electrical Workers, went on strike against the company shortly after midnight. The bulk of the membership workers at the main ITT laboratory here. However, the union said its members also went on strike at radar installations along the Distant Early Warning line in Alaska, Greenland, Johannesburg, South Africa and Holy Loch,’ Scotland, European home of the, U. S. Navy’s Polaris missile carrying atomic submarines. The strike affected ITT instal-i lations in New Jersey at Belle-1 ville, Paramus, Nutley, Telegraph Hill and Lincoln Park and at Great River, N. Y., Ft. Meade,! Md., Yuma, Ariz. and Streator, in.
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John Bartlett, president of the local, said the strike was called after contract negotiations with the company collapsed. The old contract expired Sept. 25 but the workers stayed on the job during day-to-dty extensions, Bartlett said. Bartlett said a key issue was a company demand for a free hand in sub-contracting work "even at the expense of existing jobs.” A subsidiary issue was a company request to do away with the seniority plan in layoffs, Bartlett said. Wages were not an issue. Company officials were not immediately available for comment.
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