Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 180, Decatur, Adams County, 1 August 1963 — Page 3
THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1963
■■ 111 11 111 ■—iw" ll SOCIETY
HOME DEMONSTRATION CLUB MEETS AT MOSES HOME The Root township Home Demonstration club met at the home of Mrs. James Moses. Mrs. Fred Kunkel, president, called the meeting to order by repeating the club prayer. Devotions were given by Mrs. Ralph Rice, who also gave the history of the song of the month, “America” Fo urt ee n members answered roll call by telling of a most treasured souvenir. The lesson on freezing foods was given by Mrs. Leo King, Sr. Guests at the meeting were the Mesdames Qtto Baker, Glen Roughia and Rex King. Refreshments were served by the hostesses, Mrs. James Moses, Mrs. Fred Kunkel, and! Mrs. Stella Schnepf. The date of the pot-luck supper planned by the C. L. of C. has been changed from August 6 to August 20. The Agler reunion will be held at McMillen Park in Fort Wayne, Sunday. PATHFINDERS CLASS ENJOYS PICNIC The Pathfinders Sunday school class of the Church of God met at noon Sunday, July 14, at the homej of Mr. and Mrs. Ken Martin. Grilled hamburgers and various covered dishes were enjoyed by the group for the noon picnic. Outdoor games were later played. • At the business meeting the group voted to put a sign in front of the church stating the name. ’ Those attending were Mr. and' Mrs. Ken Martin and Kim, Mr. I and Mrs. Bill Kershner and Bryan, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Mitchel and Debbie, Mrs. Don Bailey and Thresa and Sheryl, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Strickler, Rodney and Sherry, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Strickler, Rex Strickler, Miss Joyce Riff, Miss Bernice Yager, and Miss Phyllis Singleton. The 39’ers Club will meet at the Community Center, Tuesday, at RUMMAGE SALE, Saturday, August 3rd, Corner 2nd & Monroe Streets, New and Used Articles. (Boston Store building)— Sponsored by Women's Missionary Association, Nuttman Avenue U. B. Church. It
New Fall Dresses Arriving Daily
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Club Schedule . Telephone 3-2121 Miss Kay Shaffer Society Editor Calendar items for each day's publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday iJTRO) Thursday Ruth Circle of Decatur E.U.B. church, Mrs. Lester Sautbine, 6:30 p.m. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Helen Rydell and Barbara Fuelling; 6-9, Rosemary Gase and Carolyn Brown. Order of Rainbow for Girls, Masonic Hall 6:45 p.m. Dorcas Circle of Decatur E U. B. church, Mrs. Wendell Seaman, 7:30 p.m. Hope Circle’ of Union Chapel, carry-in supper, Hanna-Nuttman Park shelter house, 6 p.m. FRIDAY Psi lota Xi Trading Post 1-4, Janey Allison and Leona Gentis; 6 9, Nola Isch and Marcia Freeby. SATURDAY Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Jane Reed and Claudia Caston. Poe Volunteer Firemen’s round and square dance. Hoagland Hayloft, 9 p.m. SUNDAY Merry Matrons Home Demonstration Club, Mrs. Art Krueckeberg, pot-luck picnic, noon. Agler reunion, McMillen Park, Fort Wayne. MONDAY Adams county Home Demonstration club chorus, Farm Bureau Building, Monroe, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY 39’ers Club, Community Center, 6:30 p.m. carry-in dinner. Pocahontas Lodge, Red Men’s Hall, 7:30 p.m. i Mary and Miriam Circles, joint meeting, Mrs. Thurman Haggerty, 7:30 p.m. 6:30 p. m. for a carry-in dinner. The Adorns County Home Demonstration club chorus will meet at the Farm Bureau building in Monroe at 7:30 p. m. Monday.
•■’ • ; ' Alice Jean Lautaenbeiser £ng,ag,ecl 24 Mr. and Mrs. John Lautzenheiser of route 2, Decatur, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Alice Jean, to Larry Wayne Chrisman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chrisman, Decatur. The wedding date has been set for August 24 at 6:30 p.m. at the Union Chapel E. U. B. church. The custom of open church will be observed. The reception is to follow in the church social room. Winners Are Listed In Flowers Project Winners for the 4-H fair flowers project were annuonced Wednesday at the fairground in Monroe. This was the first year for the flowers project and there were a substantial number of entries. The winners were: first, Stephen Doty, Washington City Slickers; second, Kathy Christman, Blue Creek Up and At It; third, Larry Lee Riegel, Root Roving Rangers; fourth, Anita Girod, Blue Creek Up and At It; fifth. Deli Lou Barger, Kirkland Kut-Ups. Births At the Adams county memorial hospital: Alan and Virginia Vetter Miller of route 4, Decatur, became the parents of a 5 lb., 14% oz. baby boy at 8:54 p.m. Wednesday. A 6 lb., 8 oz. baby boy was born at 6:07 a.m. today to Paul and Mary Fisher Barker, 104 North 11th street.
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
State Institutions Short Os Physicians
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — TTie Indiana Board of Medical Registration and Examination had under study today a plan to issue temporary permits to alien doctors in an effort to ease a critical shortage of physicians at the various state institutions. Governor Welsh met with the board and with officers of the Indiana Medical Association Wednesday to discuss the problem. He said the state’s biggest penal institution doesn't even have a single physician. The only doctor on the staff at the Indiana State Prison, he said, left Wednesday night. Commissioner Arthur Campbell of the State Board of Corrections and Dr. Stewart Ginsberg, state mental health commissioner, also emphasized needs for more physicians at institutions under their departments. The board said it would hold a special meeting to see what could be done but would make no immediate comment on Welsh's suggestion that alien doctors be hired. Welsh said the doctors did indicate they would attempt to work out a plan under which some doctors licensed in 14 states which are not recognized by Indiana could practice under “recommendation by endorsement" But James Waggener, executive secretary of the IMA, said he believed the State Personnel Act prevents any alien from being a state employe. Some of the doctors suggested the time has come for Indiana to have a second medical school but has not set one up. Dr. John Van Nuys, dean of the Indiana University Medical School, said the school provides only half of the new doctors needed each year in the state. Campbell reported the state reformatory and the .state penal farm each has one doctor and more are needed at both. Dr. Ancfrew C. Offutt, state health commissioner, also told of chronic shortages in institutions under his. department. Welsh said Dr. Paul Lamey, Anderson, secretary of the medical registration board, who served as spokesman, said the board would check with Atty. Gen. Edwin K. Steers to see if it could issue temporary permits to alien doctors. The governor said he was advised that the ending of raclprptity with the 14 states which use a mechanically - graded multiple choice examination instead of the
hand-graded essay type used in Indiana was due to an attorney general’s opinion. Locals Paul Saurer, Homestead 31, is suffering from a lung blood clot, rather than a throat clot as first though. He is in room 423, St. Joseph’s hospital. Fort Wayne. James Trobridge of Geneva* has been admitted to the Jay county Mr. and Mrs. Meldren Kreps, Jr., and sons John and David of Williamsburg, Mass., and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Knox, Lafayette spent last week with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Weldren Kreps, Sr., and aunt Lou Kreps. Mr .and Mrs. Donald Aurand announce the adoption of a son, Scott Allan, born July 20, 1963. No One Injured In Accident At Berne One of two autos involued in an accident in Berne Tuesday was damaged, with no injuries resulting. A car driven by Elmer Winteregg. 71, of Berne, father of Elmer Winteregg, Jr., of Decatur, received $75 damage when hit by a car driven by Jean C. Spade) 22, of Geneva. The Geneva woman, whose car was not damaged, backed out of a parking space and struck the Winteregg car. Hospital Dismissed Mrs. Larry Daniels and baby girl. Master David Thatcher. Mrs. Ernest Webb, Decatur; Ed Hirschy, Bluffton. Official Record By Liechty Holstein A cow owned by Paul E. Liechty & Sons of Beme is among ten Indiana registered Holsteins which have completed official records that bring their lifetime production totals to more than 100,000 pounds of milk. Liechtyvale Burke Aggie Bea 3739832, has produced 106,261 pounds of milk and 3,804 pounds of butterfat in 2,625 days on official test.
Dig Summer Dress SALE! Starts Friday Morning-9 a.m. Several hundred dresses for your easy self-selection. Junior — Misses — Half Sizes Better Cottons, Dacrons, Voiles, etc. SLEEVELESS DRESSES (Broken Sizes) Values to 6.95 Juniors 9-15—Regular—Half Sizes 0^ TH,Y s 4 ,o°0 ° Famous Brand DRESSES Voiles, seersucker, hotter cottons SLEEVELESS and SHORT SLEEVE STYLES Wonderful Valuesl Buy several nowl VALUES to 12.95 $ M .00 Saw 00 $Q 00 REDUCED TO — ■> / '''j■ . ' *1 ALL BATHING SUITS on SALE! Bqy nowl Prices slashed for immediate clearance. Famous Lee brand with built-in bra. Good size range. Values to 14.95 "T“ *6 $ 7 ’8 *lO
. ; La PORKERS COME CLEAN FROM KANSAS— That they do, when Kip Kennedy, 6, raises ’em. The Kansas City youngster, summering in Pittsburg, Kan., keeps his seven pigs cool, clean and comfortable in 100-dcgree weather with trips to this discarded bathtub.
Citizens Favorable To Nuclear Treaty
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. George S. McGovern, D-S.D., said today he doesn’t want to say "I told you so” next year, but he's afraid that will be his unhappy privilege. His wheat bill, a voluntary version of the administrations rejected compulsory program of strict controls and high supports, produced about as much echo as a wheat stalk falling on a South Dakota field.—— It picked up bipartisan support when Sen. Quentin N. Burdick, D-N.D., Eugene J. McCarthy, DMinn., Gale McGee. D-Wyo., and Milton R. Young, R-N.D., joined as co-sponsors.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, DMinn., assistant majority leader, did not specifically endorse McGovern’s proposal, one of three now before the Senate Agriculture Committee. He did, however, commend McGovern for introducing the bill and directed pointed remarks to administration policy makers who so far have shown no inclination to —call for new wheat legislation. Wheat growers were warned in advance that nothing further would be done this year if the administration’s compulsory plan were defeated in the May referendum, according to these strategists, and that is how it will be. Price supports will fall from $2 to $1.25 or less on the 1964 crop unless Congress acts. When this certain prospect is closer at hand, next spring, for example, a second referendum on the administration-favored compulsory formula might carry the day, it is suggested. Humphrey obviously does not agree. "I say to the administration, as one of its loyal supporters, that we cannot content ourselves with doing nothing,” he said. “Let that be clear.” McGovern fears the Senate and Issues Injunction On Cold Beer Sale I INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)-A court order today kept beer off the ice in Indiana’s package liquor stores. Judge Frank A. Symmes Jr. issued a temporary restraining order in Marion Superior Court 4 Wednesday, within hours after a suit was filed seeking an injunction against the Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Commission. The injunction sought to prevent the commission from enforcing a new order permitting package stores to sell cold beer to carry out. The order was scheduled to become effective today. — ABC Commissioner Joe Harris said he would notify the package stores today about the court action which blocked the sale. Joseph Quill, Indianapolis attorney. filed the injunction suit on behalf of Frank King, a Seymour restaurant and tavern operator. Quill said the suit was a "friendly" action to test the order. A hearing on whether to make the restraining order permanent was set by Symmes for Sept. 3. South Bend Boy Is Drowning Victim MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) — John Henry Slavlck, 2, South Bend, Ind., drowned Wednesday in a swimming pool at his grandparents’ home where he and his parents were vacationing. — He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Slavick. The boy’s grandfather, Henry Slavick, is a vice president of Scripps - Howard Broadcasting Co. and general manager of radio station WMCT here. Trade in a good town — Decatur.
House agriculture committees will take no action on any wheat legislation “until they hear the drums I beating on the wheat fields." So far, they have heard virtually nothing, he said. His bill is endorsed by leaders of the varipus state wheat associations, toe National Grange, | Farmers Union, National Farm Organization, and the Grain Terminal Association, he said, and he is counting on them to stir up : their members.
at JANI LYN FINAL CLEARANCE ALL SUMMER DRESSES ’3 *5 $ 7 *8 Junior Petite 3 to 13, 5 to 15, 8 to 20, 12’Zj to 24’j VALUES TO $29.98 SPORTSWEAR SWIM SUITS CO-ORDINATES i/ 2 PRICE BLOUSES SKIRTS CLOSE OUT! V DDIAE 1 MAIDENFORM /2 riiiuE remold girdles UIRDLES Coats and Suits % fKICE 2 FAILLE COATS . . t were $» oo Acquainted ia.9B ® Special! 8 LAMINATED JERSEYS . M • values g oo maja ana 14 Maderas size $5 oo Perfumes and Soaps (3 BARS SOA ’’- 1 COLOGNE > PURE SILK COATS REG. 1.00 WERE ’iff OO SAMPLER J 39.98 >3 REG. 2.50 $« M g 3 WOOL SPRING COATS SAMPLER *• / 3 to 39.98 * SAMPLER 3 SUMMER HATS SPRAY MIST .... •2.R5 .»• *l-00 REG. 5.00 s«> WA ONLY * SPRAY MIST . . 3*5" — REG. 3.50 IEIA/EI DV 'BATH POWDER ... 4fce / > JtvVtLKT reg. 100 Va PRICE FALL FASHIONS: They’re beautiful! Wonderfully designed. Come In look them over. Be euro and take advantage of our layaway service. JANI LYN "TOMORROW'S FASHIONS TODAY" 119 N. Stand St. Decatur
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