Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 31, Decatur, Adams County, 6 February 1962 — Page 3

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6,1962

SOCIETY

MISS BLACK AND J. W. HURST EXCHANGE VOWS Miss Carmen R Black, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Black of route two, Convoy, 0., became the bride of Jerry W. Hurst Saturday evening, January 27, in the rectory of the St. Mary’s Catholic church Decatur. The Rt Rev. Msgr. Simeon Schmitt officiated at the double ring ceremony. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs Arthur Hurst of this citv. Betty Hurst, sister-in-law of the groom, attended th? bride, and . Arthur Hurst, Jr., brother of the groom, was best man. The bride is a graduate of Wren high school and is employed by C. T. S. in Berne. The groom attended Adams Central high school and is employed by the Decatur Industr'es. A dinner was served in the Halfwav Inn at Middlebury, 0.,| followed with a reception at the home of the brtde’s parents. The couple will reside in DecaturT. C. SMITH IS DELEGATE TO NATIONAL MEETING IN WASHINGTON -Mrsv— Tt —C, Smith, — American Legion national executive committeewome’j of the department of Indiana, left for Washington, D. C., i Sunday to attend a meeting of the ‘ auxiliary national committee, | which is being held February 5 and 6. February 8,9, and 10 of this week Mrs Smith will attend ■ the annual women's forum on ! national security. Sixteen women’s organizations will participate under the chairmanship o' Mrs. Joh i J. Baxter, national president of the American gold star mothers. The American Legion auxiliary will be represented by delegations from all departments- Mrs. J. Howard McKay, national president, will serve as forum vice chairman. The forum will be proceeded by a pilgrimage to the tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National cemetary. DECATUT BELLMONT CLUB HAS HAIR STYLING LESSON Miss Diehl of the Fort Wayne Beauty College spoke to the members of the Decatur Bellmont home demonstration club recently on the present trends in hair styling. She illustrated her lecture with demonstrations on some of the members at the home ■of Mrs. Anthony Teeole, where the meeting was held; 1 Mrs. Dan Strickler was also present to conduct the installation .-service for the new officer'- of the club. During the business meeting,

'MEMOS'X? By: Cassandra (Cassie) Strickler To some extent the shape of the face can be changed by shaping the eyebrows. Many” women are inclined to treat the chore of brow-plucking quite carelessly; this should be done with care. - First, use a commercial preparation, hot towels alcohol to open the poses. Stretch the skin with the fingers and pluck firmly, one at a time, in the direction the brows grow. .« ift Finish off by applying pads dampened with witch hazel to the plucked area. Let’s forget eyebrows for the moment and speak of woman's crowning glory, her hair. Any and all hair problems can be beautifully solved where beauty is by design and not by accident - at CASSANDRA S HOUSE OF STYLE. 215 So. 3rd St. Phone 3-3714. THIS WEEK’S HELPFUL HINT: Bothered with eyebrow pencils breaking? Try chilling them in the refrigerator before -use;--- — • <

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Mrs. Fred Steiner and Mrs. Joseph Call were welcomed into the club as new members. A delicious lunch was then served by the hostess during the social hour. RESEARCH CLUB HEARS PAPEii 0 4 LINCOLN Mrs. Ned Johnson was hostess to 17 members of the Research club at her home Monday afternoon. For the program, Mrs. Earl Cass presented a paper of unusual interest on the “Last days of Lincoln’s Life” based on the boo t “Abraham Lincoln” by Lord Cham wood. Much of the book dealt with the President’s plans tor the reconstruction of the south and had he been adowed to live, much of th? havoc which followed the Civil War might have been ave ted because of Lincoln’s views on democracy. I It was anounced that the club will meet at the home of Mrs. Reid Erekson, February 19, with Mrs. C. S. Martindill presenting the program. Following a brief bush -.bs inert ing. candies were serve'* bv the hostess during the social hour. The Northwest PTA will hold its regular meeting Thursday at ! 7:30 p.m. There wi'l be an execuj tive meeting at 7 p.m. The Women’s Missionary Society , will meet Thursday a 7;jj p.m. ; at the Nuttman avenue U. B. parsonage. The American Legion auxiliary will meet Friday at the post home at 8 pm. Mrs. Mary Braun will be hostI ess in her home to the members of the Our Lady of Lourdes study club, Friday at 8 p.m. LOW LS Miss Grace Lichtenstiger fell at her home this weekend, and sprained an ankle, but was able to be at work Mondav at the Reppert auction school office. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Arnold entertained Sunday for the following guests: Vernon L. Arnold of Benson. Ariz.. Kenneth Arnold, Mr. and Mrs. True Andrews, Mr. and Mrs. Ornell Schindler, Larry and Bob Andrews and Tom Arnold Afternoon and evening guests were Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Arnold, Connie, Phil and Rhonda Arnold, Jack Wulliman and Judy Arnold, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Arnold and Twila Arnold. Mrs. Albert Uhrick was re-ad-mitted to the Bluftfon Clinic Monday after being dismissed last week. Cant, and Mrs. Brooks Tickle and daughters left today for Bangkok. Thailand, where Capt- Tickle will serve for 30 months. Mrs. Tickle was th? former Donna Kraft, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Kraft of this city. BIR TH At the Adams county memorial hospital: Robert and Betty Smith Hildebrand of route one. Decatur, are the parents of a baby girl born Monday at 3:40 p.m. The infant weighed eight pounds and 12 ounces. Hospital Admitted Louis Steffen, Monroe; Mrs. Otto Fickert, Celina, O.; Miss Myra Darlene Moser, Decatur; Chester Barker, Decatur. • Dismissed Edward Gase, Decatur. When some of your fingernail polish has become rather aged and seems too thick and gummy for efficient use, you can thin it out to a better consistency by adding some fingernail polish remover.

Clubs Calendar items for each day’s publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30); Colleen Heller TUESDAY Catholic Ladies of* Columbia, C. L. of C. hall, 6:30 p.m. Dutiful Daughters class. Mrs. Naomi Baker, 7:30 p.m. Scared Heart study club, Mrs. Kenneth Schwaller, 8 p.m. Happy Homemakers club, Mrs. Earl Harmon, 6:30 p.m. 39’efs club, Community Center, 12 noon. WEDNESDAY Lady of Good Counsel study club Mrs. Otto Baker, 8 p.m. Women’s Guild, Zion United Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m. Executive board, 7 p.m. St. Gerard study club, Mrs. Ei Linder, 8 pmi THURSDAY Northwest PTA, Northwest school. 7:30 p.m. W. M. A., Nuttman Avenue U. B pasonage, 7:30 pm. , Psi Ote Tiding Post: 1 t 4. T ' d” Kable, Donna Routh, Colleen Linn; 6 to 9, Cloe Parrish Doe Macke. Guardian Angel study club, Mrs. Carl Braun, 8 p.m. So Cha Rae, Mrs. Clyde Butler. 7:30 p.m. Salem Methodist WSCS, churchbasement, 1:30 p m. Queen -f th a Rosary study club, M-« Wilbu” Reynolds. 8 p.m. PhO'-be B ble class, Zion United Church of Christ, 6:30 p.m. Women of the Moose home, executive meeting, 7:30 p.m enrollment, 8 p.m. Past Pr?s dent’s Parley, Legion home, 12 noon. Mary-Martha circle, Mrs. M. A Frisinger, 2:30 p.m. Order of Eastern Ste: - , Masoni hall, 7:30 p.m. V FRIDAY American Legion auxiliary, Legion home, 8 p.m. , Our Lady nf Lourdes study club, Mrs. Mary Braun, 8 p.m. Psi Ote Trading Post: 1 to 4, Betty Zerkel. Sara Lu Collier: 6 tn 6, Karen Galbreath, Norma Moore. SATURDAY Psi Ote Trading Post: 1 to 4, Nola Isch, Betty Fager Jobless Pay Claims Unchanged In Week Unemployment claims totaled the same last week as the preceding week, Richard P. App, manager of the Fort Wayne office of the Indiana employment security division, announced this morning. There were ten new claims for the week ending February 2, compared with 11 for the preceding week. Continued claims were 80 both weeks, for a total of 90 regular claims last week, and 91 the preceding week. There were four new extended coverage claims, for more than six months’ unemployment, and nine continued, compared with two and ten the previous week. This made extended coverage totals of 13 for the past week, and 12 for the week before.

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HOI DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, IRDIAWA

SINGING AND NOVELTY group, taught by Mrs. Delmore Wechter, of Blue Creek township, entertained at the Jefferson club meeting Monday night at the American Legion home. More than 150 attendedto hear Birch Bayh, Democratic candidate for the U. S. senate, speak. Pictured above, from left to right, are: Gale Riley, of Pleasant Mills; Sharalyn Bollenbacher, of Pleasant Mills; Barbara Wechter, of Adams Central; and Danny Koch, of Parkway, Rockford, O.

Plan Stats Section On Urban Planning INDIANAPOLIS <UPD — The I -diana Sto te Highway Com m ission announced today it would create a section ot urbar plan-! ring, e's c’ive Feb. 15 . George M. Foster, executive di- 1 -orto" exnlained that for toe past two yea's, th" 1 department had t viog to do urban planning. ! n cooperation with municipal! le—'ng commiss ons. “P f we have b n en too busy,” I h> add’d. “The only way to actvs is to take a good man and set h'm asid? full-time ♦o head such a section.” Foster said Frank Ester, now director of th? planning departin'’ t will head the new section and a’so serve as assistant to his I own successor, Walter Frick. I Newman told Foster this ap-l _r*sred to be a demotion for Ester b’'t Foster sa’d Ester was *-Mfed for the job because of his abilitv t handle the iew section’s sp'c’ai duties. E tor a native of Austin, and F’i-k, Indianapolis, will get the salary in the new jobs,! SI 1,400 a year. Both are Purdue University graduates. Foster said with creation of the new urban section, he hoied the highway department will be able to provide the same help in future planning now available only to Indianapolis. * , ..j ’ Enters Guilty Plea To Fatal Shooting INDIANAPOLIS (UPI — Tom Quong, 56, Indianapolis, pleaded guilty Monday to manslaughter charges in the fatal shooting of an Indianapolis restaurant owner | last April. Quong, charged with first-de-! gree murder in the shooting of! Dick Chan, 65, owner of the Hong Lee Restaurant, changed his plea only moments before he was scheduled to be tried in Marion county criminal court. He faces a possible 2-21 year prison term. Judge Richard M. Saib set sentencing for Feb. 16. j

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DRIVINe j i j : FROM THE CHICAGO • • ••MOTOR CLUB -*•• QSSSs, (A) WITHIN TOO FKT (8) WITHIN 500 FEET (C) WITHIN 350 FEET

ANSWERS TO DRIVING QUIZ: ’MMWIIUWd3S/K)3tAW JV/H3A -4

Parked Car Damaged By Hit-Run Driver It has been reported to the city police department that a car owned by Harry Hebble, Jr., 1209 Monroe Str, was damaged by a hit and skip vehicle Sunday. Hebble reported that the car was I parked in front of his home and 1 facing east when struck, with the ’damage to the left rear. The city police are investigating the incident. 7CC Chinchillas ~ ' Destroyed In Fire I EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UPI) —Sev-en-hundred chinchillas valued at $20,000 were destroyed in a $60,000 I fire before dawn near here today. The chinchilla farm owned by I Joe Moutoux was considered a total loss. Cause of the blaze was not determined. The loss included a bam housing the animals and equipped with expensive climate control equipment.' Retired Coal Miner Is Killed By Blast BRAZIL, Ind. (UPl)—James E. Burns, 69, a retired coal miner, was killed Monday afternoon when dynamite exploded prematurely at a stone quarry where he was visiting his son, a co-owner of the quarry. The accident occurred at the Burwin Quarry northwest of Coalmont. Death was due to skull and neck fractures, a coroner’s report said. I James Woods Awarded ' Honor Scholarship UPLAND, Ira. James H. Woods, of Decatur, Ind., a freshman at; Taylor University, has been award-1 ed the selective honor scholarship for 1962. These scholarships are given to students of superior academic attainment on the basis of character and promise of future usefulness.

A YOU ARE DRIVING YOUR CAR. YOU MUSTTURN ON YOUR DRIVING LIGHTS (B) AT SUNSET (C) ft HOUR AFTER SUNSET EHKtvDUARE DRIVING NIGHT ON EXPRESSWAY A DIVIDER. "STRIP 20 FEET OR MORE IN WIDTH SEPARATING LANS FORTRAVEL IN EACH DIRECTION. MUST YOU LOWER OR DIM YOUR HEADLIGHTS WHEN A CAR APPROACHES CLOSELY, GOING IN THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE DIVIDER STRIP? (A) YES (B) NO

$ Il B I v . . g. hi J I - 7 jO J’ .. |J Ir* ire I • II | IfT rekiSk II Rffn Xr ' - ?z " 1 I^-'1 I jfil I -, ,J I fl ' Sw ■■--—»»»»» -*■■■■. ''-’f'iiS reii2^L± <j nr ■ ■■HHBBBHBflflßflr*?/, .- ~..».■&;♦#•■’ • ■ .-- - < KENNEDY MEETS ASTRONAUT—In an unscheduled get-together at the White House, President Kennedy meets with Marine Lt. Col. John H. Glenn Jr., selected to be the first American to orbit the earth.

CAPEHART (Continued from page one) will return to Cuba - while Kennedy is president, without a war, if the people support President Kennedy by giving him a Democrati • co gress. and replace Cape-1 hart with a loyal Democrat. Bayh spent the entire day in' Decatur, and said that it was his good fortune to speak with a number of Adams county people from Linn Grove and Geneva and Berne on north, but that it was his bad fortune to run out of time, and miss seeing a good many others he would have liked < to have visited. Bayh stated that in his travels; up and down the state, the scent l of a Democratic victory is in the j air, and that hundreds are at | each meeting. “A rousing Hart-ke-Welsh-type victory is ours for ( the taking, if a strong, loyal Democrat is nominated by the I delegates to the Indiana Demo- [ cratic state convention this year.” President Needs Help President Kennedy was oraised as a great president, looking toward the future rather than toward the past. Larry O’Brien, the president's assistant in charge of con-' gressional liason, told Bayh a year ago that a strong campaign is vital this year to reverse the normal trend and elect a much stronger Democratic congress to back up the president. While the congress is nominally Democratic, the president's actual majority is less than five, because the southern wing votes with the Republicans on most important Issues. Water Use Bayh renewed his pledge to fight for better water resources planning and flood control if elected, and to see that, every Hoosier knows what water planning will mean to him in the future, in terms of a job, recreation, and adequate water supply. Bayh closed by pointing out that Capehart, who has junketed about the world for five years out of every six-year term, and then tried to “dig in” during election years, has had one year’s experience 18 times, rather than 18 years' experience. “The next ten years will decide whether America will remain free or become enslaved to Communism — let’s give our forward-look-ing president a congress that will back him 100%, so that we can move toward the future, and over-

Blsuper p ■ ANAPAC ■liiiTiT* hijji •IHuVcOMOtaTICM, wav ravaw, t*u>i wi 89 < ffefiever Corti, Slung Area CoagestlM Fights colds at any stage. Helps reduce fever...relieve headache, ache-all-over misery, nasal drip, sneering, clogged breathing... all seem to disappear as never before. Contains Vitamin C. surai*NAr*e wares. m* an Hnwta tar talMrae. *»’• .09 SMITH Drug Co.

re 7 B;iD*rewre '' Hk'-- ' wRW -B i slams 4*l SKI Bbtrfil -' BM| / • ■■ ■ . <. f < TRICKY UTENSILS—Mrs. Robert Kennedy tries eating with chopsticks at a Tokyo restaurant while her husband, U.S. attorney general confers with Japanese leaders on trade policies.

come the Communist threat a- ( broad,” Bayh concluded. , Former State Farm Head Dies Monday : LAPORTE, mo. (UPI) — Walter J C. Hock, 53, superintendent of the! , Indiana State Farm during the ad- j ministration of former Gov. Harold Handley, died at his home of a heart attack late Monday night. Hock was a law enforcement and ' penal officer for ready three decades. At the time of his death he was a LaPorte County parole offi- . cer.

Haflich & Morrissey's <’:■ V-’ -:-$•& X:> ' Z TT >; T'■ y -&> -5® k\ x- a Ma > wTiA''* mW IBEfe.ab CONTINUED ALL THIS WEEK OPEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY Ml 9 P. M. — ■ - - ■"*

PAGE THREE

Cub Scout Pack 3062 Will Meet Wednesday Cub Scout pack 3082 of the Southeast elementary school, will hold its committee and pack registration meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. in the school gymnasium. ' ' ■’ t** Al’ boys who fare going into Cub scouting. 01 are now in, and those planning tc go into Boy Scouts, are urged to attend the meeting with their parents. The parents are urged to accompany their sons.