Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 22 October 1962 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

•WW•> ’ > ' M7 r* u BISHOP REUBEN H. MUELLER, of the Evangelical United Brethren church, was main speaker at a congregational dinner for the Decatur EUB church Thursday night at the Decatur Community Center. Speaking on the theme, “First They Gave Themselves,” the bishop spoke about the numbers of U. S. servicemen, including President Kennedy, who were befriended by Christian natives in remote places during rescues in World War 11.

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N,«aa»Ri,MU>*«Jß b fa. ..awi a * <Vjhy ■ w jBBiV-’xj. *■»-*-• MORE THAN 300 members of the Decatur Evangelical United Brethren church gathered at the Decatur Community Center last Thursday evening for the first congregational dinner that included both the former Bethany and Trinity congregations. The proposed church program for 1963 was presented, and guest speaker was Bishop Reuben ~H. Mueller, of Indianapolis.

i * i f/ <1 ■*» 1‘ 0 ITFF 1 ' l CHURCH LEADERS Rev. F. P. Miller, of Bethany EUB church, left, Ray Eichenauer, master of ceremonies, Chalmer Barkley, who gave the scripture reading, and Rev. J. O. Penrod, of Trinity EUB church, are showin talking with Bishop Reuben H. Mueller, of the Indiana EUB church. The congregational dinner Thursday night included a discussion of the church budget for the coming year, and the purpose of the Christian, under the theme, “First They Gave Themselves.” — Photos by Anspaugh

Ike Opposed To Foreign Policy As Vote Issue WASHINGTON (UPD— Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower said Sunday that this was not the time to be “badgering President Kennedy about the Cuban situation. Eisenhower said he found on his campaign trips for GOP candidates that most people wanted to talk about Cuba, “and this I just refuse to talk about.” Eisenhower said he has never expressed an opinion about the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba last year. He noted that it had happened when the new administration had been in office only for three months. “I think at this point no matter how bad a mistake of the past might be gauged by someone else, I think it is not the time to be badgering the administration on what it is going to do next,” Eisenhower said on a television interview. Eisenhower did express irritation at Kennedy, however, for criticizing his foreign policy record. ® Eisenhower said he recently attacked President Kennedy’s foreign policy record in a Boston speech because he felt earlier comments about his record in the White House had been “unfair.” The former president said that when Kennedy said foreign policy during the Eisenhower administration drifted aimlessly, “I just thought that was a very bad statement and I did not think it was completely true.” Eisenhower said that in spite of an agreement to keep foreign policy out of the campaign, he struck back at Kennedy in Boston. But he did not mean his remarks to be interpreted as saying that Kennedy should not have allowed the Berlin wall to be built or a Communist military base set up in Cuba. , He said any administration once in a while will be confronted by circumstances to which it cannot react strongly. He said Kennedy claimed he gave the nation a

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

“solid, well understood policy” and he only intended to point to Berlin and Cuba and say “Now look at these things just for one second and then make your own minds up.” New Dairy Program Proposed By NFO WASHINGTON (UPD—The Na- ' tional Farmers Union has pro- ' posed a dairy program which it said would increase producer income by $1 billion a year and provide low prices to consumers. The program calls for direct payments to producers somewhat similar to those now in effect for the 1963 wheat and feed grain programs. The proposed payment would cover the gap between actual market prices for milk and 100 per cent of the parity price of milk. James G. Patton, NFU president, said Sunday his organization would push for enactment of the program in Congress next year. Patton called on other farm groups to support the plan. The proposal would provide 100 per cent of parity ($4.15 per 100 pounds) for producers who sell no more than they did in the 1961-62 marketing year. Producers who decide to sell more would receive only the market price which the government would not permit to go below $2.49 per 100 pounds. Patton said the price support floor would be maintained through government purchases for food for peace programs, domestic welfare programs, and consumption by the armed forces. He said the direct payment feature would allow retail prices of processed dairy products to remain at low levels because the market price would drop. Cub Pack 3062 To Hold Party Thursday Cub Pack 3062 of the Southeast elementary school, will hold a Halloween party at the Boy Scout cabin in Hanna-Nuttman park Thursday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. All Cubs and* their parents are invited, along with prospective new Cubs and their parents. There will be games for all ages, and refreshments wijl be served.

Husband Os Former Berne Lady Suicide CHARLESTON, Mo. (UPD-Au-thorities have ruled as a suicide the death of a Linton, Ind., dentist whose body was found at the Mitchell Hotel here Saturday after a three-day search. I Sheriff W. J. Simmons said a plastic bag was found tied over 4 the head of Dr. William M. Foust, I 48. and he had been dead 8 to 10 I hours. I The search for the dentist, deI scribed as despondent in tecent 4 days and under a doctor’s <are, j began soon after he left his home, . Wednesday night without telliijg his wife or children he jwas ? away. ' ''Hsp Nothing was heard from him until Friday when his station wagon was found abandoned in a small park at the edge of Ben- ’ ton, Mo. The same day Mrs. Foust received an envelope in his handwriting. In it was S6OO in cash but no note. It was postmarked Charleston. After his disappearance, friends believed at first that he had gone fishing and had suffered an illB ness. However, a search of the area turned up nothing. . The Fousts came here about I two years ago from Gibson City, I 111. Foust formerly lived at Huntington, Ind., his wife at Berne, Ind. World's Fair Closed Sunday At Seattle SEATTLE, Wash. (UPD—Midnight marked the end of the Cinderella Seattle World’s Fair, but the city did not turn into a pumpkin. She still has her fairground castles, spires and royal coaches in the form of the civic center, space needle and science pavilion. The 74-acre “jewel box” that was the fair until midnight has become a lavish civic center. This includes the SIIO,OOO U.S. science pavilion, which Sunday was officially turned over to the Pacific Science Center Foundation. More than 10 million persons bought tickets to the six-month * fair, including about 400,000 un- • used advance sale tickets. As a j result of the attendance, which r even surprassed the predictions of , fair officials, the exposition bej came the first one-season World’s Fair in history to realize a profit. Fair President Joseph Gandy in closing ceremonies said, “I now officially commit the Seattle World’s Fair to history.” The fair may now be history, but it has left a legacy to the Northwest that will not be soon forgotten. Besides the civic center, science center, and space needle, there . remains the monorail, a coliseum ' for sports events and conventions, j and performing arts facilities that would put Seattle on the schedule ; of top touring entertainment ' groups. The fair bowed out with aspect tacular closing program, featur- ! ing fireworks depicting the history [ of the fair, 17 bands and the ’ Seattle Chorale, parades and drill , team performances. Scores Politics In Handling Os Cuba i NEW CASTLE, Ind. wlupi)— i Neither party can be blamed for I , the Communist dictatorship in ; Cuba, and no one should use the I problem for political profit, Dem- I ocratic senatorial nominee Birch I E. Bayh Jr. said Sunday. “Blame does not attach to any I party,” Bayh said at a Demo- I cratic picnic here. “The problem I involves al the American people. I No one should attempt to use it I for cheap political profit.” “There are many opportunities I to find fault. That time is past. I We must now decide how best to I get rid of the Castro regime and I the Soviet-Communist influence in I Cuba,” he said. Bayh criticized “some armchair I generals who have called for im- I mediate military invasion of Cuba I . . . and others less bold but more I sly who have suggested a block- I ade.” He quoted military experts as I saying Castro presents no military I threat to the United States or to I any other neighboring country. I "He has no missiles that can I reach the U.S., and no landing I craft or ships that would allow I him to invade anybody. The arms I he received from Russia will not I delay our forces 12 hours should I military action become neces- I ary,” said Bayh. I In a speech Saturday night, I Bayh criticized his opponent’s ab- I sence at 132 of 227 roll call votes I in the Senate during the last ses- I sion of Congress. I Bayh said that Sen. Homer E. I Capehart, R-Ind., had missed 98 I out of 148 roll call votes during I the past four months. | Hi-Fi Improvement I Where two seperate speakers are I used in a hi-fi system to reproduce I the high and the low frequencies, I apply one or two coats of lacquer I to the cone of the large speaker. I This will stiffen the conq and im- I prove its response to the lower J frequencies.

Former Decatur Girl ~ In Feature Article

The former Ruth Holthouse, daughter of the late Arthur R. Holthouse and Mrs. Faye Holthouse, of 222 Marshall street, is ' the author of a feature story in last week's “Our Sunday Visitor,” 1 answering the questions, "How does the husband’s career influ- ' ence the life of his wife and chil- ■ dren? How does the wife, herself, contribute to the success of ;-pthe husband’s work?” i > Now Mrs. Jerome J. O'Dowd, Bfewife of the city attorney of Fort > Wayne, she is a graduate of De- ' catur high school. The O’Dowds 1 have four children: Tom, 6; Amy ‘ Ruth, 5; David, 3, and Kevin, 2. The following is the complete , text of the story, which was ac- ’ companied by a two-column picture of Mrs. O’Dowd with her children. i - (Second in a series of articles about wives of Catholic men who • serve their communities in their f chosen careers. We are asking: How does the husband’s career in» ■ fluence the life of his wife and children? How does the wife, herself, contribute to the success of I the husband's work?) The first responsibility of a lawyer’s wife is not so much to understand the legal technicalities of her husband’s work as to sense his frame of mind when he leaves that work behind and comes home to his family. This is the belief of Mrs. Jerome O’Dowd, petite, dark-haired wife of a practicing attorney who also is Fort Wayne's city attorney. She explained that a lawyer usually only talks of his cases in general terms with his wife. The details may be too technical to interest her and they also may be too confidential to be mentioned outside the office. “Sometimes at a party where other lawyers are present, I’ll overhear them talking about some case and realize what my husband has been working on for the past few weeks," she added. Yet even if he’s not talking each case over in detail with his wife, a lawyer does not have the kind cf a job that he can forget completely when he walks in the front door at homo, Ruth O’Dowd believes. Because of this, she thinks a lawyer’s wife needs to be understanding and sympathetic. She also must try to keep the household running as smoothly as possible, so that after a day of wrestling i with legal problems he does not : have to immediately tackle a list : of domestic problems. Must Keep Trying ] “It’s a wonderful ideal, anyway. < Just like those articles you read I in the women’s magazines about i how you should always look well- i groomed and relaxed when you greet your husband every even- j ing,” she added with a laugh. 1 “You know how impossible it is i to live up to all these ideals, but that doesn’t mean you can’t keep < trying!” ; Right now .we’d say Mrs. 1

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O’Dowd’s ideals of the composed and sympathetic lawyer’s wife are standing her in good stead "on the firing line." There’s obviously nothing very quiet or calm about the day she puts in with two-year-old Kevin and three-year-old Amy Ruth. The afternoon she was interviewed for Our Sunday Visitor, fir St-grader Tom had brought his new reader home to show off. Obviously his Mother’s comments on the life of a lawyer’s wife were of very minor interest to him comspared to important things like the new reader and other breathtaking events at St. Jude’s. He finally was steered outside to play, but reappeared at three-minute intervals with important bulletins he’d just remembered to announce. The first - grader was followed very shortly by a young lady arriving home from kindergarten. Her afternoon apparently has been a grueling one, as she announced that she ’wasn’t feeling very well.’ However, her health improved remarkably when she found out that she did not have to pose for our photographers picture that afternoon . . an ordeal that had worried her all day. Down the big stairway next crept David and Kevin. They woke slowly from their naps while climbing sleepily all over the living room furniture and their mother. They warmed to the prospect of entertaining a caller, especially when cookies were brought out to go with the ladies’ coffee. The kitchen was out-of-bounds temporarily to them, as a repairman was busy in there checking over a dishwasher that had started smoking alarmingly earlier in the day. “By 5:30, they’re ready to climb I a wall if I don’t serve dinner, so I often have to feed them first if their Daddy is late at the office,” Mrs. O’Dowd explained. She added that a lawyer’s schedule is a fairly steady one, but subject to upheaval at frequent intervals. He often rushes home to a late dinner and next has to hurry off to an early meeting. He travels out of the city sometimes, both to represent the city as attorney and in his private practice. Keeps Interests Mrs. O’Dowd believes that a mother needs to spend the greater part of her time at home when her children are as young as hers. However, she believes just as strongly that “’it’s imperative to keep her interests in the outside world and especially in her husband’s activities and friends. “You owe it to yourself and your husband to keep some interests outside the home that will increase when your children are older. “The few hours I spend on some interest outside the home now leave me physically tired but mentally refreshed.” Right now she is limiting her own activities to the Legal Wives, an organization of women whose husbands are lawyers, and the

MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1962

Junior League. Her half day of volunteer work each week, a requirement of Junior League membership, is spent at the Catholic Social Service office. *'l’ve so little time right now, I wanted to spend it working with some Catholic organization," she explained. She’s also a Matron of the Marians and a “quite inactive" mem--11 ber of Tri Kappa service sorority > and Delta Gamma sorority alumi nae. ' The former Ruth Holthouse of Decatur, Mrs. O'Dowd is the ' daughter of a newspaper editor. She (developed her interest in the world outside her family circle as a child, when the day’s events ’ weri discussed nightly around the 1 family dinner table. She attended ; the College of New Rochelle in 1 New York and graduated from ' Indiana Ufiiversity with a BA de- ( gree in Speech and English. [ Career Girl ’ For several years she worked ■ as a secretary for a large national i firm with headquarters in Fort t Wayne. Next, she taught second grade in Decatur for a year prel vious to her marriage. “I found teaching far more sat- ! isfying and gratifying than a busi- [ ness office and am only sorry I ’ didn’t turn to it sooner,” she said. . “I feel that it’s very difficult to ■ find the right kind of creative, • womanly satisfaction in the busi- . ness world. Service professions, . like teaching and nursing, seem to me more satisfying to a woman ; and certainly better preparation , for marriage. In marriage, a wife . must complement her husband, not . be competitive with him. So many . business jobs require you to be competitive with men.” In looking bSck to her business ' career, the busy mother of four does not find it all wasted effort by any means. “You learn some things in the business world that you don’t appreciate until you’re out of it. Things like self-control, composure, and a practical understanding of your husband’s everyday business routine.” All of which is some pretty deep thinking for a career-girl turned housewife-and-mother. Especially when it’s done with two lively little boys literally standing on their heads to bring Mommie’s attention right back where they know it is most of the time: with the four little O’Dowd’s.

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