Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 216, Decatur, Adams County, 13 September 1963 — Page 3
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1966
SOCIETY
METHODIST W. S. C. S. HOLDS FIRST MEETING The W. S. C. S. of the First Methodist church held their first meeting of the 63-64 year Thursday. The various circles held their devotions, lessons and business meetings at 11 a.m. in the different rooms of the church. Circle II served a delicious lunch at noon in the dining room. Following the meal, three guests, Mrs. Jane Booth, Mrs. Charles Drake, and Mrs. Russell Owens, were introduced. Mrs. D. C. Shady, president, asked the to make a special effort to interest the other women of the church in joining the W.S.C.S. The group then sang “Happy Birthday” to the ladies seated at the birthday, table. They were the Mesdames Dan Tyndall, Frank Crist, and Harold Gay'. Minutes of the May meeting the Rose tea, and the executive meeting were read and the necssary action taken. Mrs. Shady reported on the four church signs that are being erected on roads leading to Decatur. Important dates announced were, October 8,
Large s2.°o Size I*"'' I IfFH 8 OT - 1 ® now ■’■j ‘l 00 \ >1 plus tax .-Y~- | • Softens • Smooths • Protects Take home a houseful at half price ... for the bedroom, bathroom, kitchen and guest, room. Exclusive ‘heart’ of lanolin formula softens, tones and restores moisture to your skin ... protects from by SHULTON SMITH DRUG GO.
/ ( igad End dry skin woes with a double feature Now only $1 50 New Improved < oz. re j. is oo MOISTURE CREAM More beneficial than ever r . A Now with polyunsaturates lF;! NbW KOh PRICE JtV Give your skin a new fresh lookl \ -j>l Let Vitamin A whisk away dry : flaky spots. Let polyunsaturates . | benefit diet dry skin. Let this light textured, quickly absorbed cream keep your skin flowery ‘ nHaWw i ’ soft, dewy fresh. JF Use Moisture Cream by night, . Moisture Lotion by day. Both moisture lotion i products Sale priced today. 4 „ r ,_ . 500 Now only $2.50 I Smith Drug Co. | I S f r< '. .. . • • •*•<* ~>.w •**i»«* '-■■■yy . •’JwWwMv.i.• > a •'....... ..1.AW.^5iW......LA-.. .OA'Vf..
meeting at Christ Methodist church in Fort Wayne, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Wesleyan Service Guild at 7:30 p.m.; and November 20, annual New England dinner and bazaar. The afternoon session opened at 1 p.m. with special music provided by Mrs. Harry Dailey. Mrs. Lloyd Cowens was in charge of the lesson and used as her topic “Ttye role of the Christian Women in family and community.” She quoted Jielen Keller, John Marking and John Ruskin to illustrate this role. Mrs. Cowens pointed out that the role of the Christian women has three phases — the call to accept and follow Christ, the call to service in personal relations, and the call to wider service in community, national, and world relations. Mrs. Lloyd Ahr read the scripture that went along- with the lesson and led in reading the litany. Mrs. Clyde Butler sang the beautiful hymn entitled “I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say.” The meeting closed with the benediction from sians.SPECIAL INSTALLATION SERVICES TO BE HELD The American Legion Auxiliary will hold special installation services at the Leeion home beginning at 8 p.m. tonight. The president of the fourth district. Pet't’v McKeeman. will be the installing officer. Special entertainment will also be a part of the program and will feature the “El’s” barbershop ouarW and Mrs. Violet Sheets. Mrs. Walter Walchle has asked that all new chairmen make a special effort, to attend as there will be some important announcements made. RACHAEL CIRCLE MEETS THURSDAY Hie Racheal Circle of the Decatur E. U. B. church met Thursday ewming at the home of Mrs. Leo Seltenright. Mrs. Edith Kling was program leader using a Bible study entitled “Each a Part of His Plan.” A ooem opened the meeting and a hvmn was sung by Mrs. Kling and Mrs. Liz Koons. The hvmn was entitled “Sweet Hour of Prayer.” A praver period followed at which time the entire group sang “Dead Lord and Father of Mankind” and “Have Thine Own Way.” Mrs. Joan Koos led in a praver of confession, Mrs. Helen Hutker spoke a prayer of forglvenness and Mrs. Liz Koons offered a prayer of dedication. The leader then conducted the Bible study period, using the book of Ephesians. At the business meeting the chairman, Mrs. Koons presided and Joan Koons, social relations secretary, reminded the group of this quarter’s project to collect mens clothing and send it to the East Harlem Protestant parrish. Mrs. Seltenright then served refreshments to the eight members and one guest present. Mrs. Norma Roop will be hostess in October. The V. F. W. Auxiliary met recently with nine members present. There were two new members voted on and accepted into the organization. The next meeting will be a social meeting September 16. Refreshments were served by Goldie Shaw.
Club Schedule Telephone 3-2121 Miss Kay Shaffer Society Editor Calendar items for each day's publication must be phoned in by U a.m. (Saturday $730). FRIDAY American Legion Auxiliary, installation service, Legion Home, 8 p.m. Rummage Sale, First Christian church basement, 6-9 p.m. Mt. Pleasant W.S.C.S. Rummage Sale, corner Second and Monroe Streets. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Barbara Osterman and Helen Rydell; 6-9, Barbara Steiner and Annette Tuttle. SATURDAY Square Dance, Peony Promenaders, Junior fair bldg. Van Wert fair grounds, 8-11 p.m. Rummage Sale, First Christian church basement, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Decatur Catholic high school class of ’47 reunion, Preble Gardens, 8 p.m. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Marcia Stevens and Mary Ann Meyer. Mt. Peasant W.S.C.S. Rummage Sale, corner Second and Monroe Streets. MONDAY V. F. W. Ladies Auxiliary, V. F. W. Post Home, 8 p.m. Academy of Friendship, Moose Home, 7:30 p.m. Rosary Society, K. of C. Hall, 8 p.m. TUESDAY Pocahontas Lodge, Red Men’s Hall, 7:30 p.m. Sunbeam Garden culb, Mrs. Robert Beery, 8 p.m. Merry Matrons Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Carl Thieme, 8 pm. 2 39’ers club carry-in supper, community center, 6:30 p.m. Church Mather’s Study club, Bethany E. U. B. church, 6:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY Emmaus Guild, Zion Lutheran parish hall, 8 p.m. Phoebe Bible Class, Zion United Church of Christ, church parlor, 7:30 p.m. THURSDAY Women of the Moose, Moose Home, 8 p.m. Order of Rainbow for Girls, Masonic Hall, 6:45 p.m. Decatur Home Demonstration club. C. L. of C. HaU, 1:30 p.m. The Olive Rebakah Lodge met at the Red Men hall Tuesday evening. The next meeting is scheduled for Semtepber 24 at which time they win have a white elephant sale. The Three Link club will also meet. The Women of the Moose will meet at the Moose Home Thursday at 8 p.m. The Masonic hah win be the scene of a meeting of the Order of Rainbow for Girls, Thursday at 6:45 p.m. The Decatur Home .Demonstration club win meet at the C. L. of C. HaU Thursday at 1:30 p.m. The hostesses win be the Mesdames Frank Butler, Robert Garard, O. K. Baker, Wilham Kohls and Daise Rhodes. The Emmaus Guild will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the parish haU. This will be get-acquaint-ed night. The Phoebe Bible class of the Zion United Church of Christ will meet in the church parlor at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. The V. F. W. Ladies Auxiliary will meet Monday at 8 p.m. at the V. F. W. post home. Locals Mrs. Donald Marshall and son, of Geneva, have been dismissed from Jay county hospital, Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Steele, Jonesboro, Ark., are spending a few days in the city visiting friends and relatives. Miss Karen Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Hrs. Karl Johnson, 751 Parkview Drive, celebrated her 11th birthday, today, Friday the 13th. A Friday the 13th birthday was observed today by Kippy Massoth, son of Mrs. Maxine Massoth, 959 Highland*. It is his fourth birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garard of this city and Mrs. Burton Louth of Fort Wayne, attended the funeral of Charles E. Mumma in Warren, Ohio, Thursday afternoon. Mi. and Mrs. Earl Sheets and daughters, Lyynn and Marsha, left this morning for a four-day trip to Nassau with 159 other guests of Gibson Appliances by jet from Fort Wayne. Hospital Dismissed Jaff Liechty, Berne A. P. Boardman, Mrs. Mary Jones, Mrs. Howard Raber, Decatur.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA ——— 11 ■
Births At the Adams county memorial hospital: J.- Robert and Chloe Kauffman Myers, Berne, are the parents of an 8 lb., 11 oz. baby girl born today at 3:50 a.m. A 7 1b.,, 7 oz. baby girl was born today at 6:24 a.m; to Dan and Kay Quackenbush Woodward, Yoder. Harrison and Grace McGeorge Hakes, 294 Elm street, Decatur, are the parents of an 8 lb., 11%. baby girl, born at 8:27 a.m. today. Ellis Shaw Second In Railroad Contest Ellis H. Shaw, 245 W. Monroe, was a second place winner in a slogan contest recently conducted among employes of the Nickel Plate railroad. The contest was conducted as part of a nation wide campaign to induce ship pers to route freight on rails. Shaw, a yard clerk, won the second place award for the Clover Leaf district of the Nickel Plate. I. U. Will Expand - Kokomo Extension INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The Indiana Budget Committee gave Indiana University a green light to proceed with plans for expanding its Kokomo extension center campus, using non-tax funds. Earnings and fees paid by students are to be used to finance work totaling $3.2 million which will enlarge the center’s capacity to 1,500 compared* to the present 900, some of whom are in classes on the Bunker Hill air base. Part of the plan also involves an auditorium to be paid for in part with a $200,000 bequest left for civic use. I.U. also gained approval for $2.3 million to be spent for a student health center, again using earnings and fees of the center to repay a bond issue. I.U.’s request for $1.3 million from postwar tax funds to expand the power plant at Bloomington also was approved. The committee authorized transfer of $70,000 for architectural and engineering work on the second phase of the Indiana Youth Center, an intermediate penal institute, to be located near Plainfield. Work on the first phase—consisting of an administration building, dormitory and security building—is slated to begin in about two weeks. Construction work on the second phase is tentatively set for early next year. Altogether, $4 million was earmarked by two legislatures for the center, which eventually will include the state’s first central admissions and assignment center for male felons.
Extra-Easy! Printed Pattern VST 11 j i : | 1 lO' M |\ I I Bl 2-10 ,
I Extra-easy! Surprise daughter, delight Dad — sew this very simple (and princess-pretty) jumper and blouse in little time, for little money. Printed Pattern 9053: Children's Sizes 2,4, 6,8, 10. Size 6 jumper 1 yard 54-inch; blouse % yard 39inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11. N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Siz< and Style Number. CLIP CQJJPON FOR 50c FREE PATTERN in big, new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog, just out! 354 design ideas. Send 50c for Catalog.
■ ■ 4,SK »h«k« '■xtst r'.- <: „ WfP x\ •* J . .-,/ o .. v^-JtMga^.'wHkj' tLjiil to.'”^** r ' ij^lr'■■ ‘sKESBbf ■■: •SrßHr'. ■ • - ' 'WH Mr. and Mrs. Charles Circle, Sr. — Photo by Johnson
Jo Observe (joblen
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Circle, Sr., of 452 East Leith street, Fort Wayne, will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary with an open house, Sunday, Sept. 22. The reception will be held at the Lincolnshire Church of the Brethren fellowship hall, 6404 South Calhoun street, Fort Wayne. Their children, Mrs. Maurice (Esther) Mettler, Columbia City, Mrs. Lloyd (Avyce) Roth, Poe, and Charles Circle, Jr., will be the hostesses and host for the affair. The Circles haxe six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. They were married Sept. 20, 1913. Circle is retired from the International Harvester company after 27 years of service.
Charges Pilot Carried Arms During Flight NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI) — The pilot in a mystery-shrouded airliner crash, caused by an explosion. frequently carried arms and ammunition on his flights between Miami and New York, it was charged in federal court today. . Some of the arms were sold to Cuban .exiles, according to charges made by an attorney involved in insurance litigation. The plane crashed on Jan. 6. 1960, in North Carolina, killing 34 persons, including Julian Frank, 32, Westport, Conn., businessmanwhose life had been insured a few months earlier for $1 million, and pilot Dale H. Southard, Miami, of National Airlines. The plane, a DC6B, was ripped apart in Ute air by the explosion and plunged into a marshy area near the town of Bolivia, N.C. Three days later Frank's mutilated body was found in the surf of Kure Beach on the Atlantic Ocean, about 16 miles from the crash site. The Occidental Insurance Company of California, which held $500,000 of Frank’s policies, claimed that Frank committed suicide by blowing up the plane. In opposition to this; the charge filed today said: ■ “. . There are indications that gunpowder was being carried aboard the National Airlines DC6B,
totally new! Extra Shaping as natural as you! $ twill Figurine contour hra S , / J • new Formfit shape-making lining (patent pending). ( II 1 * spr ' n ®^ / res 'Uent spun Dacron looks and \ l| I Feels just like people. 1 lILI I Jl • virtua,, y weightless; cooler, more comfortable; p 4 | 1 it breathes with your body I I ] . stays white; no yellow or pink look after laundering. | I * washes and dries as fast as sheer nylon lace. I • Formfit Figurine style 286 in silky Zephaire I I . cotton blend. mhll'X • White; sizes A32 to C 36. $3.95 —A n?| RM f* T FIB | ER FA S TS ‘ Excl “»i*« of ornamentation, rigid material it of ' I . / | polyester, nylon and cotton. - ™<wi ur ' ' Niblick & Co.
being piloted by Mr. Southard that crashed at Bolivia, N.C." Some time ago, the insurance company started civil action against Frank’s widow seeking a judgment that it would not have to pay the $500,000. The policy contained a provision that if the insured died by suicide, the company's liability would be limited to the amount of the premiums paid, in this case $2,757.60. Frank’s widow, former blonde model Janet Frank, who now is Mrs. Joseph F. Rafferty of San Francisco, has taken court action to collect the money. The charge that Southard carried arms between New York and Miami was made in papers filed in Mrs. Rafferty’s name in U.S. District Court by her lawyer, Morgan P. Ames, of Stamford, Conn. Southard allegedly held a controlling interest in the Gunn Shop, Inc,, Miami Sjhores, Fla. Ames stated., that Southard ‘tysed to purchase the merchandise for The Gunn Shop when he was in New York City on National Airlines flights.” In Miami, the charge said. Southard would take the arms and ammunition to the Gunn Shop, "where it was sold to the general public, including Cubans residing in the Miami area who required arms and ammunition for certain purposes.” National Airlines refused any comment, pointing out it was not a party to the litigation. Felt Hate To clean black or colored felt hats, just rub over them with a . piece of stale rye bread.
Fort Wayne Man Is Killed In Accident By United Press International A Fort Wayne man was killed today in a Friday the 13th accident when he was thrown from his car into the path of a truck and the 1963 Indiana traffic fatality count rose to at least 884 compared with 797 a year ago. Charles D. Maxwell, 52, Fort Wayne, died on the way to St. Joseph Hospital after the car collided with a car driven by Joseph R. LeFever, 33, Fort Wayne, and
Keep Strangers Out | of a Close Corporation. For inf ormotion on how to buy the key Oe executive's stock through life in- JU, sura nee. 3 " See CARL A. BRAUN 211 N. 2nd Decatur 3-3005 Office- PHONES - Home 3-4366 NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Life Insurance • Group Insurance • Annuities Health Insurance • Pension Plans
Vinyl Linoleum Sale! / I X. /X. . 7 J., Armstrong Heavy Weight Vinyl surface quality linoleum, that much longer than ordinary linoleum. In 9 ft. and 12 ft. widths that covers most rooms in one piece without seams. All first quality. Requires little or no waxing—no hard scrubbing. We made a good buy and you can save tool Buy nowl and save 34c per yard. Choose from 12 ft. widths or 9 ft. widths. Cut offtjie roll any length you need. Reg. $1.59 yard £ Now on Sale sq. Yd. Now is the time to Buy! £ X «. MPLE: Re «- Price SALE PRICE 2 X J? 1908 15.00 J'* 1 ?' 23.85 ... 18.75 12x12’ 25.44 20.00 12’xl5’ 31.80 25.00 12’xl8’ 38.16 31.00 Also In stock 9 foot wide Armstrong Budgetone Light Weight Vinyl Linoleum Reg. $1.19 Quality AA Now On Sale Sq. Yd. JL
Values Ready-Made Draperies They have pleated top. Ready to hang. Machine washable. Good weight. White or beige shades. Solid colors. Fibreglas Draperies. SW x 45" .4 .98 SW x 90" m. 98 pair “ pair * WIDER WIDTH WHITE OR BEIGE DRAPERIES for windows up to 60" wide -Washable Quality. Small design. 75" width per pair. 36" length J. 98 63" length 84" length (*.9B
NIBLICK & CO. FLOOR COVERING ON SECOND FLOOR
PAGE THREE
skidded into a utility pole throwing him into the street in downtown Fort Wayne. A triftk, driven by Richard E. Good, 37, Fort Wayne, traveling in the opposite lane, struck Maxwell as he fell. Lewis Reading, 78, Eaton, was killed and his son and three other persons were injured Thursday night when two cars collided at a Blackford County road intersection near Hartford City. Harold J. McCurdy,. 35, Indianapolis, died in an Anderson hospital Thursday night from injuries suffered Sept. 6 in Pendleton when his truck went out of control and hit a tree.
