Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 70, Decatur, Adams County, 23 March 1962 — Page 3
FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1962
SOCIETY
EVANGELINE CIRCLE HAS MARCH MEETING There were thirteen members present at the March meeting of the Evangeline circle of the Zion United Church of Christ, which met at the church recently. Mr. John Eichenberger presented the 'lesson from, the book, “Land of Eldorado,” followed with a reading and prayer. The members voted to buy clothes for a little girl, which had been requested by the Women’s Guild for their mission work. Care of the nursery aid also the egg sale were discussed by the circle. The remainder of the evening was spent rearranging the nursery and the discussion of possible improvements that could be made. Delicious refreshments were then served by the hostesses, Mrs. George Shelton and Mrs. Donald Slusher. HEIDELBERG CLASS MET RECENTLY The Heidelberg class of the Zion United Church of Christ met recently in the social rooms of the church The meeting was opened with prayer by the Rev. William Keller. A devotional poem, “Jesus Christ and Me," was given by Kenneth Nyffeler, and the scripture, Psalms 86, was read by Mrs Wiliam Tutewiler, The group then joined to sing two hymns entitled “Beneath the Cross of Jesus” and “This is My Father’s World.” The class discussed the project of adding to the nativity set that was purchased last Christmas. An article taken from the Prairie Farmer magazine, “Do It Yourself Church Windows,” was read, prior to closing with the Lord’s Prayer. During the social hour, a traveling game was played by the 23 members in attendance and prizes were awarded to the winners. Hostesses for the occasion included Mr. and Mrs. Gottlieb Stauffer, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stucky Mr. and Mrs. Fred Corah, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Adler, Mr. and Mrs. Laures Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Dorris Heath, and Mr. and Mrs Richard Schafer. The American Cancer society will have a board meeting at the Med-Dent building Monday at 8 p.m. Mrs. Lawrehce Braun will be hostess to the St. Ambrose study club Monday at 7:30 p.m. Xi Alpha Xi and Delta Lambda chapters will meet Tuesday at 8 pm. at the Fairway restaurant. Later, they will meet at the I&M social room. The Ruth and Naomi circle of the Zion United Church of Christ
The Greatest Gey In The World is the man who takes his family OUT TO DINE and what better place to go than the FAIRWAY RESTAURANT
I I Surprise the Duchess with her favorite flowers... take some home from work today. MYERS FLORIST 903 N. 13th St.
Clubs Calendar items for each day’s publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30). FRID.'.Y American Legion auxiliary, Legion home, 8 p.m. Psi Ote Trading Post: 1 to 4, Marcia Freeby, Ruth Gehrig: 6 to 9, Cloe Parrish, Marilyn Smith. Flo-Kan Sunshine Girls “Spring Swing” dance. Community Center, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. SATURDAY Psi Ote Trading Post: 1 to 4, Nola Isch, Virginia Elder Story Hour, Decatur public library, 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. MONDAY American Caneer society, MedDent building, 8 p.m. St. Ambrose study club, Mrs. Lawrence Braun, 7:30 p m. Queen of Peace discussion club, Mrs. Cyril Becker, 8 p.m. M.O.C. auxiliary, VFW post home, 8 p.m Pleasant Mills PTA, school, 7:30 p.m. Flo-Kan Sunshine Girls, Moose home, 6:15 p.m. Monmouth educational group, Monmouth school, 7:30 p.m. Pythian Sisters Needle club, Moose home, after Temple TUESDAY TUESDAY K. of C. auxiliary, K of C. hall, 8 p.m. Xi Alpha Xi and Delta Lambda, Fairway restaurant, 8 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma, Mrs. Ray Heller, 6:30 p.m. Jolly Housewives club, Pleasant Mills school, 7:30 p.m. Root Twp. club, Mrs. William Susdorf, 1 p.m . Psi lota Xi, Mrs. Dick Heller, Jr., 7:30 p.m Kirkland Ladies club, Adams Central school, 7:30 p.m. Sunny Circle club, Preble recreation center, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY Town and Country club, Mrs. Herman Heimann, 6:30 p.m. Shakespeare club, Mrs. Carl Gerber 2:30 p m. Ruth and Naomi circle, Zion United Church of Christ, 2 p.m. Live and Learn club, Mrs. Jerry Springer, 1:30 p.m. Ave Maria study club, Mrs. Anna Voglewede, 8 p m. St. Vincent de Paul society, C. L. of C. hall, 2 p.m. Presbyterian Women’s association, at church, 8 p.m THURSDAY Monroe Methodist WCTU, Mrs. Homer Winteregg, 1:30 p.m. will meet ir. the church soc’al rooms Wednesday at 2 p.m. Wednesday at 1:30 p.m., the Live and Learn home demonstration club will meet at the home of Mrs. Jerry Springer. The assistant hostess will be Mrs. Louie Drake. Mrs. Anna Voglewede will be hostess to the Ave Maria study club at 8 pm. Wednesday. The St. Vincent depaul society will meet at the C. L. of C. hall Wednesday at 2 p.m. Mrs Carl Gerber will be hostess to the members of the Shakespeare club Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. The Monroe Methodist WCTU will meet at the home of Mrs. Homer Winteregg Thursday at 1:30 p.m. The Town and Country home demonstration club will have a dinner meeting beginning at 6:30| p.m. Wednesday at the home of. Mrs. Herman Heimann. ! The K. of C auxiliary will meet; at the K. of C. hall Tuesday at 8 p.m, for their regular monthly! meeting. M ■. Ralph Kreigei and her committee will be in charge of the entertainment. Hospital \ Admitted Glen Rupert, Monroe; Rufus Meshberger, Linn Grove; Harold Sapp, Decatur; Mrs. Joseph' Schindler, Berne; Master Dennis Smith, Hoagland. Dismissed Mrs. Earl Yoder and baby boy, Berne; Mrs. Howard Affolder and baby boy. Berne; Carla Sue Mitchel; rmtuF; ■MKSter DeanXM* Ossian. BIRTH At the Adams county memorial hospital: 1 Richard and Beverly Jacobs j Johnson, 421 Bollman street, are! the parents of a baby boy bom Thursday at 1:26 p.m. The infant weighed seven pounds and 13*4 ounces. A baby boy weighing eight pounds was born today at 5:03 a m. i to Thomas and Gretchen Lankenau Ehler of 414 North Third street. Robert and Sandra Marbaugh Hileman of Ohio City. O„ are the parents of a baby girl born today at 7:13 a.m. The baby weighed seven pounds and five ounces.
I I ■F wHr -a. • HF m ■a. ; I Bl * ■■■ML-.> <('’•' > . >4 ..... . .1 Miss Sandra Lou Sanders
Sanders Plan September and Mrs. Kenneth Sanders of Monroe announce the recent engagement of their daughter, Sanda Lou, to William Lee Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hoffman, also of Monroe. Miss Sanders, a graduate of Adams Central high school, is employed in the accounting department of Lincoln National Life Insurance Co. at Fort Wayne. Her fiance, also a graduate of Adams Central high school, is attending Purdue University at Lafayette, where he is majoring in mechanical engineering. The wedding date has been set for September 2.
Predict Rejection Os Cuba's Demand UNITED NATIONS N.Y. (UPD —Diplomats predicted an overwhelming rejection by the Security Council today of Cuba’s demand for an international court review of its expulsion from the Organization of American States (OAS). The council scheduled a windup of the 10-day dej>at e with statements ly Soviet Ambassador Platon D. Morozov and U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson. The crux of Cuba’s action was in a request to havve the council set aside the OAS expulsion decision pending the world court's advisory opinion. It was not certain that a vote would be taken. Cuba which is not a member of the 11-nation council submitted a formal reso-' lution earlier this week. But the rules require that proposals may be put to a vote only at the request of a council member. The United Arab Republic offered to request a vote if Cuba insisted but it had not done so up to the start of this morning’s meeting. The OAS voted at Punta del Este Uruguay earlier this year to exclude Cuba from hemisphere affairs on the ground that Premier Fidel Castro’s Marxist- j Leninist regime is incompatible with the American system. Cuba i contends the action was contrary to the U.N. charter. Cuba could count on firm support in the council from only Russia and Romania. The U.A.R. and Ghana, which supported Castro’s government when the council rejected its demand last month
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
for a new debate on charges of !U.S. aggression, appear to have wavered in their position in the ! current debate. ; Five Children Die In Baltimore Fire I BALTIMORE Md. (UPD—Two 1 1 multiple alarm fires raging at the ■ same time Thursday night - j claimed the lives of five children i and destroyed more than a half*. • million dollars worth of railroad • equipment. The children all of the same 1 family died when flames swept 1 through a four-story apartment home. At least twelve other persons escaped but four were hospitalized one in critical condition. The railroad equipment was destroyed when fire gutted the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad’s giant Mt. Clare locomotive erecting shop. Authorities identified the apartment fire victims as Larry Hicks 10 Gwendolyn 8 Brenda 6 Leon 3 and Evangeline 2. All were burned to death. In critical condition is Cornelius Presley 6 who was badly burned. His father and six other children and another man escaped. Insurance Company Office Is Robbed INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Police today sought a young gunman who robbed an insurance company office here of $Bl7 and a cash box containing an undetermined amount of money. Trade in r. fcooC town — Dec’
Kennedy Flies To California To Speak WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Kennedy flies west today for an important speech in California and possibly his first close-up view of a major missile launching. The Chief Executive was scheduled to takeoff by jet from Andrews Air Force Base at 8:45 a.m. EST for the Alameda Naval Air Station on San Francisco Bay. He was due there after a flight of five hours and 15 minutes. His speech, before an expected audience of 85,000 persons in the University of California Stadium at Berkeley, was set for shortly after 5 p.m. EST. The text of Kennedy’s address was being revised until a late hour Thursday night, indicating a possibility his remarks might reflect last-minute reports from the deadlocked nuclear test ban talks and disarmament conference at Geneva. From Berkeley, the President will continue southward by jet to the huge Vandenberg Air Force Base, where if ..weather and equipment conditions are right, he may witness firing of an Atlas intercontinental ballistics missile (TCBM) late today. No U.S. president has ever been on the cene of an ICBM launch. Kennedy’s terminal point so r the day was Palm Springs, Calif., where he will have a two-day holiday on the edge of the desert at a secluded home borrowed from singer Bing Crosby. Sometime over the weekend, it was highly probabl ethat KenneI dy would meet with his predecessor, Dwight, D. Eisenhower. Eisenhower and his wife have spent the winter at the Eldorado Country Club in Palm Desert, a little more than 20 miles south of Palm Springs where the White I House staff will be based during Kennedy’s visit.
Girl Scouts Girl Scout troop 118 met after school. We collected dues, had roll call and then some of the girls presented a play. We talked about the cookie sale which starts March 23. We played a game and then closed the meeting with taps. Scribe: Mary Gase RUSK (Continued from Page One) • .. . V' issue. The East-West deadlock on the perilous Berlin issue, the subject of Big Three discussions outside the conference, was equally tight. U.S. and British sources reported Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Lord Home had made absolutely no headway in 12 days of offstage talks here with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Reviewing the three years of big three discussions on the need for an adequate test ben inspection system, during which the Russians at one time accepted the idea of international controls, Rusk said: “My government ... is at a loss to understand the (present) Soviet position unless it be that the U.S.S.R. has decided that it is still overwhelming important for it to be free to continue its nuclear weapons tests. This was what the Soviet government said last September, when it referred! to the tense international situation as a justification for its test resumption, and it may be that the U.S.S.R. feels a military need for another test series.”
First Lady Os Harp Delights Audience
By Colleen Heller One of the most unusual and entertaining programs was presented as the fourth in the series of concerts by the Civic Music Association last night as Mildred Dilling, harpist, played the “sweetest | music this side of heaven” to aj capacity audience at the Decatur Community Center. - Miss Dilling’s charming personality was in evidence immediately as she stepped before the footlights proudly proclaiming that, "she was a Hoosier, too” and that! it been inadvertently ommitted i from her introduction! She began her studies in Indianapolis and continued in Paris under Henriette Renie, preceding her debut there in the Salle Erade. From this beginning came numerous engagements all over the world and outstanding success Miss Diling had set out to prove that the harp is. as exciting a solo conceri tostruments as the piano or violin and she has achieved her objective, much to the delight of the aduience here last evening. Not only is she acknowledged by critics to be Jhe greatest woman solo harpist, but also is owner of the largest private collection of harps in the world; at the last count it was 102! On stage with her last night she had displayed fifteen or more antique harps from different eras and countries and used them to illustrate a highly amusing short history of the harp. Os course, the actual recital was played on her Lyoh and Healy gold concert grand harp. The program consisted of selections written especially for the harp or arrangements for the harp made by the artist herself. Miss Dilling’s musical artistry was a sheer delight to those who saw and heard the concert last night as her interpretation and presentation of some beautiful lesser known works were as thrilling as the lovely strains of more familiar compositions, such as “Liebestraum” and “Clair de Lune.” The five part recital included composers such as Bach, Handel, Liszt. Debussy and others. A special selection entitled “Legende” concluded Miss Dilling’s performance, which had been written by her teacher, Henriette Renie. Expressing their appreciation, though, the audience brought her back for three encores to end a delightful concert with the “First Lady of the Harp.” Youth Service Sunday At Pleasant Valley The Rev. Amos Zehr, of Fort Wayne, will have charge of a special youth service Sunday night at the Pleasant Valley Wesleyan church. He will show pictures of his work in the northlands, and a mixed quartet will provide special music- The pastor of the church the Rev. H. D. Rich, invites the public to attend. Trade in a good town — Decatur i
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No New Candidates Filed Here Today There '"ere to new candidates to file in the county clerk's office since noon Thursday, apparently: fho “Quiet before the storm.” Can-! didates have only Saturday and four days next week to file their declarations of candidacy. Thursday, March 29, is the filing deadline. Rainy Weekend In Store For Hoosiers i By United Press International Hoosiers faced the prospect of a rainy weekend and further showers early next week. Following on the heels of heavy rain measuring up to more than two inches earlier this week which sent streams on the rise above flood stage again forecasters indicated one-half to one inch of rain will fall in the northern third of the state and three-fourths to one and one-half inches central and south d uring the five-day period ending next Wednesday. The rain will begin about Saturday night in the north and continue into next week. It will occur I over the weekend and again about Tuesday elsewhere. The Wabash and White Rivers were in flood condition at many points today but no damaging crests were considered likely at' least until the extent of the weekend rains is evaluated. High temperatures Thursday ranged from 39 at Fort Wayne to 53 at Evansville. Overnight lows this morning ranged from 32 at Evansville to 36 at Fort Wayne. Highs today will range from 40 to 58 lows tonight from 30 to 42 and highs Saturday from the lower 40s to 60. ARMY ENGINEERS (Conimuea from Page One) ton Green secretary-treasurer of the Indiana Port Commission on his return to Indianapolis from a conference here with White House officials regarding the proposed port at Burns Ditch. Green said statements by Douglas Wednesday “relative to the alleged approval of his Sava-the-Dunes bill by the Kennedy administration are typical of the senator’s past statements on this matter and are simply not true. “He is clearly misleading the public into thinking that his specific bill has been endorsed by the secretary of the interior the Bureau of the Budget and the President.” Green who is also administrative assistant to Indiana Governor Welsh said that “as late as Wednesday afternoon I again discussed the entire matter with Trade in r good town — Decatur
PAGE THREE
members of the White House staff and I was advised that the March 19 letter from the Bureau of the Budget did not endorse the Douglas bill nor is it to be construed as endorsing .the s pecific provisions of the Douglas bill. "I was further advised that the administration would look favorably upon any bill which would accomplish the aims of the President’s message on conservation—namely establish a lakeshore area in northern Indiana—and that the specific provisions of a bill which would do this could not yet be determined." A bill sponsored by Sen. Vance Hartke D-Ind. and Rep. J. Edward Roush D-Ind. would establish a smaller park and would leave room for the planned port.
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