Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 80, Decatur, Adams County, 4 April 1963 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
TEEN TOGS dft 121 N. Second St. *} PRESENTS \ick\\iiuiflin -i L ' I I Howh>Gradua,ewi,h * g • UUjrtflju// fashion honors without really JUJ » i trying. Simply help yourself V \ V I i to Vicky Vaughn's dreamy \ bouffant in wonderful, \ i carefree Dacron polyester l I *and cotton garnished Jr- f) At topside with dyed-to-match Schiffli I>J 1 \ &w, \ embroidery. See it featured in w> Y. \W, \ * SEVENTEEN. The very full skirt a || VM. flk \ ' | has a 5-inch hem. White, b X W ll Si,cs 5 ' 15 e’ ' W ! I :; W- \.\ IHLI * I WA w s_ W1 only the IOOK B > Vl' / 11w 1 |is expensive $9.98 I « WW W (. Vl 5 | I 1 ‘ '% I I V'f — I* ■ Jrj! l-■ » . |J y I
shop at HAMMOND'S - U.S. No. 1 Extra Fancy BANANAS The Very f /V Best |(| LB. '■" ■ * '■■ * SEED POTATO HEADQUARTERS All Kinds! / - s,ze “®*mmlers EARLY OHIO - KENNEBACS 100 lb. RED PONTIACS - KATAHDIN bag CertifiedL, . ONION Yei low 2 bun 29C ONION SETS 2 39c J u ’ ce * Seedless L'X GRAPEFRUIT V 10... 49< ; — n -1.—...1,. — GRASS SEED jg£23Bk l °”*' c, ' sp Heodi All Purpose / . wt\ HEAD 5 99c VM|j! - Satisfaction Guaranteed ’■flHjE/ ' ry some at ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■•■■ Red Delicious - Jonathan Everyday Low Price! APPLES MILK “89 jks; 69< «■ MIX or MATCH GREEN ONIONS - CARROTS Z RADISHES - GREEN PEPPERS 3 ,#r 29 i HAMMOND “ 240 N. 13th St. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK — z 8:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. NNHNNB* *- ■BRR' « w*
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
■■ ■■" . .. '■ Hi-Way Trailer Court News Mrs. Jerral Blair, 67 Bella Casa, spent Saturday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Max Milholland and Cynthia in Ossian. Charles Wallace, who is a senior student at Ball State Teachers College in Muncie, spent Monday and Tuesday with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Wallace, 38 Star Lane. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eversole, 62 Bella Casa, spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Eversole in Middle Point, Ohio, and Sunday night with Mr. and Mrs. Reed Linton in Ohio City, Ohio. Kimberley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Fuelling, 55 Vindale Trail, observed her 4th birthday on Tuesday of last week at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Fuelling, RFD 3, Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Brad Blair of Fort Wayne were overnight guests Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Jerral Blair, 67 Bella Casa. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bell, Jr., and daughter Lisa, 59 Bella Casa, spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. Vera Petrie in Avilla. Anthony Eugene, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Henkies, 10 Detroiter Ave., will be baptized at the EUB Church in Wren, Ohio, next Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jerral Blair, 67 Bella Casa, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marc Blair of Ossian. Jeff and Theresa Eyanson of Monroe spent Tuesday with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Fuelling and family, 55 Vindale Trail. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wallace and daughter of Wabash were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. William . Moulton and family at 73 West St. Ext. and also with Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Wallace, 38 Star Lane. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barnes of Fort Wayne were Sunday guests of his cousin, Mr. and Mrs. William Barnes, 33 Star Lane. Mrs. Jerral Blair, 67 Bella Casa, attended a style show with her mother and sister, Mrs. Max Milholland and Cynthia of Ossian Monday evening. Larry L. Timmon%>of the U.S. Navy stationed at New London, Conn., has been visiting his sister, Mrs. Ivan Davis, 28 Star Lane. Miss Kay Quackenbush and Danny Woodward, Miss Joyee James and Donn HUsmier, all of Ossian, and Mr. and Mrs. Brad ■Blair and Brain of Fort Wayne Were Sunday evening guests‘of Mr; and Mrs. Jerral Blair, 67 Bella Casa. Miss Sylvia Miller of route 1, Monroe, spent Saturday evening and night with Mr. and Mrs; James Herman, 71 Bella Casa, and also accompanied them Sunday on a trip to South Haven and Holland, Mich. Three Planning To Attend Conference Three young ladies from Decatur are among the 700 youth from midwestern 'and eastern states who have registered for the youth conference at Taylor university April 19-21. Attending from Decatur will be Miss Judy Courtney, of 326 N. Btlf street. Miss Patricia Nidlinger, of route 2, and Miss Pamela Strahm, of 704 Walnut. In addition to six mass meetings there will be two discussion periods when the participants will divide into approximately 50 small groups to discuss practical problems common to high school and college-age young people.
Unusual Styling in matching wedding rings Look for the name Keepsake in the ring and on the tag. MASON ' Man's $39.75 Lady's 35.00 Rings enlarged to show detail r»toM indo* F«M Tab John Brecht Jewelry ™ 226 N. 2nd St.
Rail Dispute Board Named By Kennedy WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Kennedy has blocked a threatened nationwide railroad strike for at least 60 days by appointing a three-man emergency board to investigate the dispute over work rules. The President named the special fact-finding board Wednesday night in the final step available under the National Railway Labor Act to prevent a walkout. The action automatically bars a strike for 60 days. Judge Samuel I. Rosenman, special counsel to Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman, was named chairman of the board which will meet in Washington a week from today to begin discussionsThe two other members of the panel are veteran labor mediators. They are Prof. Nathan Feinsinger of the University of Wisconsin Law School and Dr. Clark Kerr, president of the University
I ®° formdl y elegant, 1 so graciously designed | it could only be NT - JMX E Kling Solid Cherry I •’?v Tr tear r - -1 ■'MBdH' Mrtfj b IMi f- °iSi -f uHrrr ■ 11 _ i 77, ■■ i*o i~ 4rSgaaa|LT'' El* *ll =* .4'J 1 1 J. /\ /i Z 62* Eleven-drawer Triple Dresser Z ■'Jr A(1 If II II r w -Framed Mirror SKWL’wr ■■“" K. V M I / I 11 I! 11 1. I Seven-drawer Cfcest-on-ChesE. - J* O* W > f I [I Y J > Night Table with drawer. ~ /Jk Wi W iK B f ’ y Full or Twin size Bed' M ti Y a t J W M I IHI I '* '■ ® ee k° w t l' e riel 1 * hand-rubbed finish lets the st J M*L I s- warm, distinctive grain of the cherry wood show jEF tT| l II | !,V through; look at the gracious lines. This is Kling (Rk "Oil IHI solid cherry... furniture fashioned by experts I'Wtwl! j Hi' ! U " famous for quality for over 50 years. It belongs MaplMl J| I IM < -•' - “ ’ in a home that wants elegance, beauty, charm, IH » ' utility... wherever it's used. It’s all in open UFF. tM stock, too .. . bedroom, living room and dining «' o ... so stop in to see it today .. . ur home tomorrow. -- j. I »>-. E B X ' X CM Riy ■■■ x h.L «- 1 mzVM'l 4- I I yg ® 2 Eight-drawer Double Dresser, ' Framed Mirror, Sheets Furniture OPEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS ’til 9 150 • 152 South Second Straet -•, ■■ Phone 3-2602
of California. The controversy over what the railroads call “featherbedding” reached the showdown stage when the Supreme Court ruled that the companies were free to abolish thousands of jobs which had been protected by long-standing union rules. Kennedy's appointment of the fact-finding board was precipitated by the railroads’ announcement that they planned to put the work rule changes into effect Monday. Five operating unions had threatend to go on strike to prevent the carriers from making the changes The National Mediation Board immediately notified the President that a transportation emergency existed and recommended creation of the board. The board has 30 days to study the problem and another 30 days to write a report. Its recommendations will not be binding on either party. Sentenced To Jail For Drunk Driving Mary Castle, 46, of Decatur, was fined $l5O and costs and sentenced to three days in jail at Van Wert, 0., on a charge of driving while under the influence of intoxicants. The court also suspended her Ohio driving privilege until she complies with the financial responsibility law.
Spending Spree By Boys Ends Abruptly SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — Not many 12-year-old boys know the wondrous feeling of sudden and boundless wealth. But then not many 12-year-old boys find $2,000 wrapped in a diaper in their basement. The bonanza lasted exactly five days and came to an end when the big spender was betrayed by a woman — his 15-year-old sister. Police said the story began last Thursday, when the boy’s, grandmother came to visit the family. The grandmother was worried about her money, and her son-in-law, the 12-y ear-old’s father, wrapped it in a diaper and tucked it away on a rafter in the mentEnter the boy and a 15-year-old friend, playing in the basement. “Look what I found,” cries one, and away they go. First they took SBO and hightailed it to playland-at-the-beach for a day of trying out all the rides and filling up on popcorn. Then they tapped the mine again and took a bunch of cronies for another spree at playland. Then some new clothes, and some gifts to the boys — S9O to
THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1963
one;-$67 to another, S4O to a third... Then came black Monday, and the boy’s sister found out. She found her brother and another boy sitting in a car, apparently divying up SIOBO. They offered her SIOO for her silence, but she could not be bought. She told her father and down came the curtain. “It was quite a spree while it lasted,” said officer Roger Hanes. “They were give-away artists.” The boy was held at Youth Guidance Center, along with five of his friends who admitted accepting money. Police said $1,400 of the money was recovered, but as for the other s6oo— well, it was fun. The grandmother, more worried than ever, is cooped up at the family home — on "Hu-ift Street. LKOAL VOTICH Notice is hereby given that on March 26, 1963 Cltlsans Telephone Company, Decatur, Indiana filed a petition with the Public Service Commission of Indiana for authority to borrow s3<lo,oon.M and to evidence such indebtedness by unsecured promissory notes. Public notice of the date and place of hearing upon said petition will be given by the Public Service Commission of Indiana. Dated April 2, 1963. CITIZENS TELEPHONE COM PA NY DECATUR, INDIANA CHARI.ES D, EHINGEIt, PRESIDENT. 4/4.
