Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 4 January 1963 — Page 3

FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1963

,j£:. "■ ' •'” UActf’ -- Ji '." H i ' ® I ■ ■■ Job wjSi MB-r Bi WgS»flr iMtL Hi B f V jfl ■I < -i?: i? : fI3M Bate, tel Hi f ■£&&<• M r* ■ 1 HP Jfc- • : » ill? MUSIC MAN TRYOUTS started Thursday night in the Decatur high school music room, with Mr. and Mrs. Reid Erekson, left and center, directors, and Mrs. Ferris Bower, right, accompanist, for the affair. A total of 28 persons tried out for the cast, which includes about two dozen speaking parts. The play will be held this spring & the high school auditorium. Tryouts will continue tonight and Monday night.—<Photo by Mac Lean) -.— f \ ___

SOCIETY

SOUTHEAST SCHOOL PTA HAS MUSICAL PROGRAM The regular meeting of the Southeast PTA was held Thursday in the school auditorium. The Rev. Charles Hill of the First Christian church gave the devotions. President Karl Kolter presided and Mrs. Spencer Andrews, secretary, read the minutes of the previous meeting. There are now 152 members of the Southeast PTA. Theater tickets will go on sale January 91 After the brief business meeting, Lauren Arnold, program chairman, introduced the Adams county barber shop chorus who presented a musical program. Among the numbers were “The Old Songs,” and “Bill Grogan’s Goat.” Winston Seitz, soloist, sang “Now the Day is Over,” and a quartet, consisting of Lauren Arnold, Charles Kester, Larry Merriman and Winston Seitz, sang ‘'Honey Little Liza.” The group concluded with “Keep America Singing.” Refreshments were served by Mrs. Edwin Hagan, Mrs. Guy Koos and Mrs. Ned Knape at the close of the program. ' The Mt. Pleasant W. S. C. S. will meet Thursday, at 7 p .mi . a t the home of Mrs. William Fifer. Mrs. Frank Singleton is in charge of the lesson. A white elephant sale will be held. Mt. Zion WMA will meet Monday evening at 7 o’clock with Mrs. Edna Harden. The Women’s Guild of the Zion SUPER ■ ANAPAC W SINUS CONGESTION, NAY FEVEW, COLD! 24'1 89< an. ..im f effem Colds, Sleet Atm CongastiM Fights colds at any stage. Helps reduce fever...re* geve headache, eche-alk over tr.ls6.-y, nasal drip, sneezing, clogged breath* 1ng...a1l seem to die* appear as never before. Contains Vitamin C. SUPER ANAPAC JUNIOR. Ito* on ftnaula tar cMldru. M’« .03 Ntw! SUPER ANAPAC THROAT LOZENGES, UUtMtIC, MtibUtM. SMITH Drug Co.

United Church of Christ will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the church. — ■ ‘ r I The American Legion auxiliary, fourth district, will meet Thursday at Fort Wayne in the Turner chapel, 801 East Wayne St. Any members of Unit 43 wishing reservations, call Mrs. Robert Lengerich Friday between 5 and 7 p.m. or Saturday by 12 noon. The Kirkland WCTU will meet with Mrs. Frank Arnold Tuesday, 1:30 p.m. The St Anne’s study club will meet in the home erf Mrs. Ralph J. Roop, Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. Hie Sarah circle erf the Decatur EUB c h dY ch will meet Tuesday with Mrs. Charles Kent at 1 p.m. Mrs. Harmon Gillig will be hostj ess to the St. Dominic study club Wednesday evening, instead of Tuesday, at 7:30 o’clock. The Beta Sigma Phi council will meet 1 Thursday evening at 8 9’clock t with Mrs. Irene Gattshall. The Women of the Moose will meet Thursday in the Moose home. Executive meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. and the regular meeting at 8 p.m. There will be enrollment. Tri Kappa sorority will have a business meeting, Tuesday at 7:45 p.m., in the heme of Mrs. Kenneth Gaunt, 503 Llmberlost Trail. The Rose Garden club will meet Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock in the I & M building. Mrs. Ralph B. Henry of Bluffton, northeast district director, will be the guest. Hostesses will be Mrs. Grover Levy and Mrs. Bert Haley, The Eta Tau Sigma sorority will J meet Tuesday, 6:30 p.m., at the home of Mrs. Ray Heller. The Junior Women will meet Monday with Mrs. Robert Sittier, 7:45 p.m. Dick Heller, Jr., will be

ANNOUNCING PHOTOGRAPHY ■ Dave and Edith Cole v has moved 1409 W. Monroe St. Decatur, Ind. ZE PHONE 3-3861 We hope to be able to serve you better in our • W. new location. We thank our custom- *W%31l -'vl V ers who have made this > move possible. 3-, **■, I Sincerely, Dave and Edith Cole | , ’

the speaker for the evening and a good attendance is desired. Locals Mr. and Mrs. David Owens, who are both teachers in the Miami schools, have returned to their I home in Miami, Fla. With their son, they have been spending a vacation with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Owens and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ahr. Thursday, Fred Adler of route 4, stopped in the Democrat office to renew his subscription to the Decatur Daily Democrat for the 51st year. He said he still enjoys reading the daily paper. Mrs. Geraldine Morrin and son Jay of Fort Wayne spent Thursday with her mother, Mrs, Pearl Shaw. Girl Scouts Troop 118 Troop 118 met after school Thursday. Our leader askgd us questions about scouting and ! ‘ the flag. We talked about the Scout banquet at the center. We then had separate meetings with our patrols. Scribe, Mary Gase. Hospital Admitted Mrs. Charles Morgan, Decatur; Miss Arlene Jane Bailer, Decatur; Mrs. Charles Johnloz, Craigville; Mrs. Wilbert Nussbaum, Berne. Dismissed . William Sautbine, Decatur; Mrs. Debra Loshe, Decatur; Master Thomas Korte, Decatur. Gene Stratton Porter Days Set In August The Geneva civic progress association announced today that Gene Stratton Porter days for 1963 will be held in Geneva Aug. 10 and 11, and possibly Aug. 12. Originally set ! six months ago for Aug. 17 and 18, the dates have been changed to avoid conflict with Geneva days Aug. 15, 16 and 17. Trade in a good town — Decatur.

TH® DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

Club Schedule Ruth Rawlinson, Society Editor Telephone 3-2121 Calendar Items for each days publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday" 9.-30) FRIDAY Psi lote Trading post: 1 to 4, Betty Zerkel, Janine Ausburger; 6 to 9, Jane Heller, Alice Roth. SATURDAY Peony Promenaders dance, Junior Fair building .Van Wert, O. Psi lote Trading post: 1 to 4, Doris Schlotterback, Annabelle Heller. .... — MONDAY Junior Women, Mrs. Robert Sittler, 7:45 p.m. Mt. Zion WMA, Mrs. Edna Harden. 7 p.m. Adams county home demonstration chorus, Farm Bureau building, Monroe, 7:30 p.m. Ladies auxiliary, Decatur Firemen, Mrs. Mary 8 p.m. American Legion junior auxiliary, Legion home, 4 p.m. Civic section, Woman’s cub, Mrs. Adolph Kolter. 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Tri Kappa sorority, Mrs. Kenneth Gaunt, 503 Limerlost Trail, 7:45 p.m. Rose Garden club, I & M building, 2 p.m. , - ~ Eta Tau Sigma, Mrs. Ray Heller, 6:30 p.m. Kirkland WCTU, Mrs. Frank Arnold, 1:30 p.m. St. Anne’s study club, Mrs. Ralph J. Roop, 1:30 p.m. Sarah circle, Decatur EUB church, Mrs. Charles Kent, 1 p.m. Sacred Heart study club, Mrs. John Braun, 8 p.m. Associate Tri Kappas, Mrs. Roy Kalver, 7:30 p.m. Delta Theta Tau, Mrs. John Baumann, 8 p.m. Profit and Pleasure club, Mrs. Delota Engle, 7:30 p.m. St. Catherne study club, Mrs. WEDNESDAY St. Dominic study club, Mrs. Herman Gillig, 7:30 p.m. Women’s Guild of the Zion United Church of Christ, in the church, 7:30 p.m. THURSDAY Beta Sigma Phi council, Mrs. Irene Gattshall, 8 p.m. Women of the Moose, Moose home, executive 7:30 p.m., regu- ~ lar, 8 p.m. . — -v - Mt. Pleasant WSCS, Mrs. William Fifer, 7 p.m, .: James Kortenber, 8 p.m. Births At 4:31 a.m. today, a baby boy was bom to Benjamin and Katherine Wickey Girod, route 1, Monroe. The baby weighed 6 pounds and 12 ounces. Garner Is Named As Head Produce Clerk The appointment of Alan Richard Gamer as head produce clerk at Kroger in Decatur was announced today by A. W. Smith, vice president of the Fort Wayne division ot the Kroger company. Garner comes to Decatur from the Northcrest Kroger in Fort Wayne, where -he-received his-training<- A veteran of four years with Kroger, Gamer is married and has one child. He plans to move to Decatur as soon as suitable housing can be obtained. 1 Evansville Man Is Killed By Truck EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UPI) — Lenzie L. Bain, 61, manager of the Evansville municipal sanitary landfill, was crushed to death Thursday beneath the rear wheels of a refuse truck atthe fill as he directed the driver in backing up.

a a ■■ e SUN. &MON - IB <■ All Vi Continuous Sun. from 1:30 *■ " *■ ■"■ ONLY 25c -60 c THEATER First Adams Theater Showing! THAT SENSATIONAL PICTURE YOU'VE BEEN HEARING ABOUTI The Best-Seller Comes to Life! The Wildest New Year's Eve Party Ever Filmedl The Birth of a Baby! Their Nights Are As Fast and Frantic As Their Days! K ■ 2 </IHMP • J ■ a v/''*vt-V A j • m ■ I* y - STARRING AS THE INTERNS MIM CM I CUFROBEffISONI JAMES MacARIHUR I NICK ADAMS AS THEIR GIRLS SffiYPMimillYillMniMlltHaMlMEfMS BOOOWIWMVSUISIiaYSmSIffirai&mN-Mvio swift q o TONIGHT & SAT.—(Continuous All Day Saturday from 1:30) Two Excitement-crammed Pictures—Both in TECHNICOLOR! WALT DISNEY'S 'legend of LOBO" King of the Wolf Packl & "NIGHT - No One Was Safe From the Phsfttoms!

jgi BBi 5 Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. Amos M. Schwartz, loute 1, Berne, announce the en- . gagement of their only daughter, Pauline Louise, to Steven Brent . Riley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Merle u j Riley, route 1, Monroe. Miss | Schwartzis a graduate of Adams . Central high school and is a bookkeeper ..with the Adams county . Farm Bureau Co-op in Monroe. Riley was graduated from Pleasant Mills high school and is employed with Home Dairy Products, Inc. of Berne. The wedding is t planned for April 14 in the Evaii- , gelical Mennonite church. = 73“ Jacqueline Kennedy ' Tops Fashion World By GAY PAULEY t- UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPI) — The ■ United States’ first lady is the world’s first lady of fashion. ' Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, wife of the President, mother of two, 1 headed the annual list of best dressed women of the world in • 1962—a list announced today by Eleanor Lambert, a public rela- ■ tions consultant. Miss Lambert said the list was ■ compiled from “an international; poll of 2,000 style observers...” 1 This appearance marked the • third consecutive year for Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy on the list which currently cited her “as a • symbol of fashion leadership to the average woman everywhere.” ! Also on the list was Mrs. Loel - Guinness, the Mexican-born brunette beauty married to a British ' ■ financier, who made her fourth, consecutive appearance. Mrs. Kennedy’s sister, Princess Lee Radziwill, of London, was on the list for the second consecutive time. —- . . ... was a longtime friend of. the Kennedy family, Mrs. Charles , Wrightsman, of New York and , Palm Beach, wife of the oil millionaire. The listing elevated two women ; to permanent status in a fashion hall of fame, which means that they’re so permanently ensconced as chic that there is no point in their being put in the annual competition. i—t —! The two hall of famers are ; Vicomtesse Jacqueline de Ribes, of Paris, and the American-born Countess Aline Quintanilla, of Ma- • drid. f ’ .L Two women appeared on the . list for the first time. They were Mrs. Frederick Eberstadt, a New York socialite and daughter of !“ ’ Ogderr "Nash, - and the Bar- . onbss Ernst Thyssen-Bornemisa, , - BUILD Up Your Resistance 11 To Colds with.. GERITOL f Tablets and Liquid KOHNE DRUGSTORE

' of Lugano, Switzerland. Others on the latest list of those celebrated for their clothes know-how were: Mrs. Gianni Agnelli, of Turin, Italy, wife of the head of the Fiat Co.; Mme. Herve Alphand, wife of the French ambassador to the ) United States; Mrs. David Bruce, i wife of the United States Ambassador to Great Britain; Mrs. ’’ Gloria Vanderbilt Lumet,’ actress I and socially prominent New Yorker; Mrs. Walther Moreira-Salles, a Brazilian living in Paris; and Mrs. John BarTy Ryan 111, of New York. WELSH PROPOSES (Continued from Page One) sion Jan. 10, would be necessary to establish the proposed fund and , raise the tax. The amount designated in the fund for the Monroe Reservoir near Bloomington represented approximately the differece between the amount needed for present state contributions to the cost of the project and the smaller amount Welsh put in his so-called “balanced” budget for that project. Welsh recently outlined a proposed 1963-65 biennial budget he called “balanced” because it took into consideration only the revenues anticipated under present tax levies. He actually recommended many

“ufjf llJilh# Sale of Springmaid Sheets MKT Now bedmakinr is so simple, while Percale Sheets! neat and easy — thanks to Springmaid’s new Spring-On XsKMiglL; corner—on all four corners! 72 x 108", twin 2.29 They’re elastic! Springmaid’s fitted sheet is the only sheet 81 x » ‘ ull 2.49 w| with all four comers nude Twin FiMed Bottom 229 SjP F 7 with Launderlpstic. Mb MM' 63 x W" .... 1.67 C"~>. . 72 x 108" 1.87 P r ’ 139 81 x 108" 1.97 81x120" extra long 3.69 Buy HOW Jw' n Fitted Bottom 1.87' g X f ra Long Double Fitted 3.69 and MV6 ! Full Fitted 80tt0m1.97) ” . ana ■ 42x36" Pillow Cases, pr. 1.001 108x122" King Size — 5.69 , ■■■ Our Finest Quality Mattress Pads On Sale "" /■ Completely sanforized. Pure white cotton filled. Double box quilted. ’ Buy now and savel Twin size flat pads, with anchor bands in corner 2.49 Full size flat pads, with anchor bands in corner 3.49 Twin Size fitted style. 3.49 Full Size fitted 5ty1e.4.49 C° VERS Bed Pillow, at Special Price, I 54" and 60" lengths. Special — 1.00 Foam latex pillows with white Heat reflecting ironing table covers, mus|j zi r cover 2 for 7 oq 1 silicone treated 1.49 Polyfoam cushioned pad and san- Soft celeanese filled pillows, forized cover set 2.69 floral cover 2 for 5.00 w mmvu utv Soft dacron filled pillows, "DuPont" 24 ONLY BATH MAT SETS label, floral cover 2 for 7.00 Assorted solid colors, Regular 2.49 Special Price 1.98 Restmore feather pillows, machine washable, stripe ticking 2 for 7.00 Chenille Bedspread Special* Goose pillows, 10% down, Solid colors with design. Good quality. goose fea}herj( best quality * White and all popular colors. Full bed 2 j or 9 qq size. Our regular s.99___sale price 5,00 . - -- — cf * . —Janaary Yard Good Values — Cotton Flannelette Sale, 500 Yards Hi-Style Dress Prints, dripfor gowns, pajamas, etc. — dry. Regular 89c to 99c yd. Assorted small or floral patterns. Quality dark patterns.__2 yds. 1.00 were 39c Now 3 yds. 1.00 98c Pampered Cotton Prints, fine Plain Color Outing Flannel, 36" wide. quality. Good pattern selection. White, pink, blue, green or yellow. Crease resistant. Little or no ironSale price 3 yards 1.00 ing neededyd. 79c 36" Dark Stripe Outing Flannel Springknight Pillow Tubing, 42x36" for comforts, etc.yd. 39c width 2 yds. 1.00 1 New Deep Tones in Solid Color "Cloth of Gold" Bleached Muslin for Cotton Flannel, good weight, for £ quilting, etc.' Reg. 39c yd. gowns and pajamas. Red, rose, 3 yds. 1.00 roval blue, melon, green, blue, 49c Stevens All Linen Toweling, best 'gold. Sale priceyd. 44c made, bleached or unbleached, Bleached White Quilting Sheeting now Sale Price __4t=— yd. 39c on salel Finished soft for the Fine Quality Gingham on sate. Sevneedle. 81" wide yd. 79c eral size checks, in all popular 90" wideyd. 89c colors. Our regular 79c yd. Dacron Quilt Batts, finest quality In Sale Price yd. 69c 3 sizes, 72x90" 2.98 Cotton Suede Flannel for shirts, 81x96" 3.98 90x108"4.98 robes, lining, etc. Checks and Alan, infant auilt size dacron plaids. Good weight. Sale batts, 45x60" 1.98 price 2 yds. 1.00 Special Blanket Values I Large 80x95" White Cotton Sheet Large 80x90" Solid Color Winter-weight Blankets:2 for 5.00 Blankets Yellow or ,_. , . . , ,. A . . pink only. Close-out price each 4.00 Flowered Blankets, pink on white back- r ’ r ground, Medium weight (irregulars) Cotton Plaid Sheet Blankets, pink or of 4.99 quality. January special— 3.49 blue, size 72x90"2 for 3.75 Niblick & Co. FOR SMART FASHIONS ■*l

S r . s HOME DEMONSTRATION CLUB COUNTY OFFICERS—I 963 Home Demonstration club county officers who attended the county council meeting Thursday at the Farm Co-op building in Monroe, were, left to right: Mrs. Dan Striker, Jr., past president: Mrs. Kermit Yoder, treasurer; Miss Icel Shanks, second vice president; Mrs. Erwir. Fuelling, secretary; and Mrs. Merle Kuhn, president.

more millions as needed for . a ■ realistic budget but said it is up to the legislators to provide extra revenues to meet the higher proposed expenditures, mostly for increases in state aid to education. The announcement had been expected ever since Welsh called the lawmakers to a meeting, but the subject matter was kept secret. A source close to the administration said the subject was.

PAGE THREE

“ons .gs the best-kept secrets” of Welsh’s tenure in office. Welsh said when he outlined the proposal to the legislators, he did not ask for commitments as to whether they would support it. But he said there was “no violent objection.” Port Commission Secretary Clinton Green said if the state goes ahead it might be possible to open . a port in 1966.