Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 229, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1963 — Page 3
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1963
SJ& .. - ..fM; 1 :. Mrs. Gene D. Kalthoff — Photo by Cole
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Miss Linda Lou Kruetzman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Kruetzman, and Gene David Kalthoff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kalthoff were joined in ' holy wedlock this morning in a private ceremony at the Freidheim Zion Lutheran church. The Rev. A. A. Fenner read the vows for the double ring rites. The bride selected a streetlength white sheath dress of silk organza over taffeta. The fitted bodice featured a scoop neckline. A gathered tapered overskirt of organza highlighted the dress and was -acc&fted with a bow at the waistline. She carried a white Bible topped with a lavendar orchid. Her circular veil was held to’ a crown accented with tear drop pearls. Mrs. John Fuhrman, matron of honor, chose a blue jersey streetlength dress. A fitted bodice that featured an Italian neckline and short sleeves topped a skirt of unpressed pleats. A corsage of - pink roses accented her ensemble. John Fuhrman stood as best man. A reception will be held Octo-
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ber 13, in the basement of the Salem United Church of Christ, Magley. Serving at the reception where a pink and white color theme will be carried out will be Mrs. Mike Raimer, Mrs. John Fuhrman, Miss Ruth Beery, Miss Pat Kalthoff and Miss Ann Kruetzman. For a wedding trip of unannounced destination the new Mrs. Kalthoff will be wearing a pink mohair sheath dress with black accessories and the orchid from ' her bridal bouquet. The bride is a graduate of Moni mouth high school, Bobbi Ray i Finishing school, M. Paul Institute of Hair Design, and Fort Wayne Commercial college. She will be employed ,at the office of International Harvester and parttime at the Lil-Lin Beauty Salon. The groom is also a monmouth graduate, attended Purdue University Extension and is employed in the office of International Harvester. The couple will make their home at 707 Paulding Road, Fort Wayne. LADIES FELLOWSHIP MEETS THURSDAY The Ladies Fellowship of the Decatur Missionary church met Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Leonard Johnson. The president, Mrs. Eugene Beam, opened the meeting with an interesting reading. Roll call was answered by eleven members and four guests, the Mesdames Chester Simon, Gaylord Weaver, Bert Ralsston, and Robert Light. Mrs. Mervin Rupp and Mrs. Myron Hart were elected delegates to the Ladies Missionary Conference to be held at Fort Wayne October 3. Each member is to bring to the next meeting a article to be put in a missionary box. Mrs. Hart gave the devotions entitled, “Thanks Be to God.” She closed with prayer. The work session was spent rolling bandages, sorting Sunday School materials, and cutting carpet rags. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Doris Garboden. Mrs. John Hirschy offered the closing prayer.
SOCIETY
Club Schedule Telephone 3-2121 Mbs Kay Shaffer Society Editor Calendar items for each day's publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday $?30) SATURDAY Peony Promenaders square dance, K. of C. Hall, Delphos, O. Delta Theta Tau sorority rummage sale, 9 a.m. —1 p.m. C. L. of C. Hall Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Madeline Blackburn and Marvene Buuck. Pleasant Mills Community Organization, Pleasant Mills school 8 p.m. MONDAY Flo-Kan Sunshine Girls, 4 p.m. Methodist church basement. Executive Committee of Decatur Women’s club, Villa Lanes, 8 p.m. Kirkland W. C. T. U., Mrs. Blanche Landis, 7:30 p.m. St. Ambrose Study club, Mrs. Leonard Schwaller, 7:30 p.m. Honorary Psi lotes, Mrs. James Burk, 6:30 p.m. TUESDAY Miriam Circle of Decatur E. U. B. church, Mrs. Martha Rawley, 7:30 p.m. Happy Homemakers Home Demonstration club, Mrs. John Genth, 7:30 p.m. Dutiful Daughters class of Bethany E. U. B. church, Mrs. Howard Eley, 7:30 p.m. Sacred Heart Study Club, Mrs. Lewis Rumschlag, 8 p.m. Pocahontas Lodge, Red Men’s Hall, 7:30 p.m. 39’ers club, carry-ip supper, community center, 6:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY Shakespeare club, Mrs. Carl Gerber 2 p.m. THURSDAY Women of the Moose, Moose Home. 8 p.m. formal enrollment. Order of Rainbow for Girls, Masonic Hall, 6:45 p.m. Ruth Circle of Decatur E.U.B. church, Mrs. Chalmer Bollenbacher, 8 p.m. Monroe Methodist W.S.C.S., Fellowship Hall, 7:25 p.m. REBEKAH LODGE DISTRICT MEETING TUESDAY Sylvia Rebekah Lodge of Geneva will be the hostess for the fall meeting of district 31 composed of Adams, Wells and Blackford counties. The meeting will begin at 2 p.m. Tuesday. All district officers and committees are to be present at 1:30 p.m. in formal dress. The district deputy president, Mrs. Edith Hammeriharse, Liberty Center, will preside at the afternoon session. The school of instruction will be given by Mrs. Mary Helen Decker of the Rebekah Assembly at Elkhart. Trophies will be awarded to the lodges which have the largest attendance and the highest gain in membership. A banquet will be served at the Cozy Inn. The degree staff of Liberty Center will confer with the Rebekah degree for a class of candidates at this time. Evelyn Plasterer, Bee Black, and Nancy Lengerich of Decatur, are on the committee. The executive committee of the Decatur Women’s club will hold a meeting Monday at 8 p.m. at Four Season’s Restaurant. The Women of the Moose will meet at the Moose Home Thursday at 8 p.m. Formal enrollment will be observed. The Order of Rainbow for Girls will meet Thursday at the Masonic Hall at 6:45 p.m. The home of Mrs. Chalmer Bollenbacher will be the scene of a meeting of the Ruth Circle of the Decatur E.U.B. church, Thursday at 8 p.m. The Monroe Methodist W.S.C.S. vzill meet at 7 25 p.m. at the Fellowship Hall Thursday. All Flo-Kan Sunshine Girls who wish to attend the reception of the Grand Royal Guide to be held at the K.P. Hall in Fort Wayne Sunday, are asked to call Vera Barber at 3-3728. The members are also asked to meet Monday at 4 p.m. in the basement of the Methodist church to practice for the inspection to be held October 14.
Attention! All Moose Members GUEST NIGHT SATURDAY - SEPT. 28 Swiss Steak Dinner served by the Women of the Moose 5 P.M. to 7 P.M. Donation — $1.25 n A M r E with RAY GIANT and His M A H v E Trio - 9 HIT 12 o'clock. BRING A FRIEND OR NEIGHBOR
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Miss Shirley Ann White Engaged Zdo l/lded Mr. and Mrs. Harold White, Willshire, 0.. announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Shirley Ann, to Roger F. Roth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Roth, Monroe. The bride-to-be is a 1963 graduate of Parkway high school and is attending Western Ohio College at Celina, 0. Roth is a graduate of Adams Central high school and is employed by the Peterson Elevator. The wedding will take place at the Willshire Methodist church Nov. 2 with the Rev. James R. Maxwell officiating. The custom of open church will be observed. Births At the Adams county memorial hospital: Charles and Linda Couch McKinnon, 603 West Adams street, are the parents of a 7 lb. 3 oz., baby girl born at 10:09 a.m. Friday. A 9 lb. 1% oz. baby boy was born at 12:32 p.m. Friday to Marcus and 110 Grote Schueller, route 1, Decatur. Richard and Ruth Mainer Miller, Willshire, 0., are the parents of a 7 lb. 1% oz. baby boy* born Friday at 9:40 p.m. Girl Scouts Thursday’s opening meeting marked the third year for troop 118. We elected Patty Gross, Sandy Andrews, and Mary Ann Reynolds for the leaders of our three patrols. We discussed and planned a picnic for Saturday if the | weather permitted. After singing! a few songs we closed the meeting with taps. Scribe Georgia Gase Hospital Admitted Mrs. John Stucky, Willshire, O.; William Williams, Master Lynn Cress, James M. Borders, Decatur. ■r2 ' ’ ' -Jr BLntk ■ ■’>* fl I h Natalie Wood and George Chakiris head the large cast in “West Side Story” Technicolor musical romance siwing Saturday and Sunday nights at the Decatur Drive-in theater. Hie picture is one of the most honored productions ever to come out of Hollywood, having received 10 Academy Awards. Others in the cast are Russ Tamblyn, Rita Moreno and Richard Beymer.
jj A NEW FACE—Workmen from the Enterprise Glass company. Fort Wayne, this week installed new doors on the Decatur high school building. The aluminum frame entrances replace the wooden doors which were-installed when the school was first built.—(Photo by Mac Lean)
SECOND VATICAN (Continued from Page 1) the liturgical document retains Latin for the central portions of the mass—the offertory, consecration and communion—but grants wide latitude to national episcopal conferences to authorize use ol modern languages in other portions of the service, including the scripture lessons and many of the prayers and chants. There is no doubt that bishops will be quick to take advantage of this permission, and it is probably only a matter of months before American Catholics will be able to participate, in English, "in large portions of their Sunday worship. Os less immediate popular interest, but far greater potential significance, is a proposal to decentralize the administration of the church by vesting more discretionary powers in local bishops and national episcopal conferi ences, such as the National Catholic Welfare Conference in the United States. Pope Paul has said that this is the most important proposal ■ before the council, and has made plain his desire that his “fellow bishops” be accorded substantially greater authority and prestige. The result could be a sharp reduction in the vast powers exercised in thename of the pope by the ecclesiastical bureaucrats of the Curia, Another major document likely to receive early attention is schema No. 1. dealing with divine revelation. The original version of' this document was drafted by the Curia’s holy office, the “watchdog of orthodoxy,” headed by the leader of the council’s conservatives, Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani. It strongly reiterated tiie assertion—which is anathema to Protestants—that oral tradition is on a par with scripture as a source of Christian doctrine. It indirectly but unmistakably condemned the biblical scholarship movement which has burgeoned in the Catholic ehurch in recent years, and which has done more than any other one thing to bring Catholics and Protestants into a fruitful doctrinal dialogue. Progressive influence on the committee work done during the council recess is evident in the fact that one of the 17 schemata deals exclusively with “the lay apostolate”—that is, the rights and duties of laity in the over-all mission of the church. Also of particular concern to American Catholics is a declaration on religious liberty which will be placed before the council by Cardinal Bea. It will place the
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I Catholic church officially on recI ord, for the first time, as holding that every human being has an inviolable right to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience and that every government (including the governments of predominantly Catholic countries) should recognize and protect religious liberty. One of the 17 “schemata’’ which survived the boilding down process deals with "the sacrament of marriage.” Richard Cardinal Cushing, archbishop of Boston, has publicly voiced hope that the council will modify the canon law which requires the non-Catholic partner to a mixed marriage to sign a prenuptial pledge that all children will be reared as Catholics. The cardinal said this requirement has caused a great deal of friction and hasn't done much good, because it is often honored in the breach. The last of the 17 “schemata” is a catch-call document entitled: More Nations Snub l ' Dominican Junta SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (UPD—Mexico and Bolivia Friday joined 6dsta Rica and Venezuela in cutting diplomatic ties with the Dominican Republic because of the military coup which deposed President Juan Bosch. Provisional President Emilio De Los Santos promised Friday that Bosch’s situation would be "defined" no later than today. Bosch, elected last December, has been held prisoner in the presidential palace since he was overthrown Wednesday in a bloodless coup d’etat. He refused to i leave the country or sign a resignation. Mexico announced Friday the withdrawal of its diplomatic mission from Santo Domingo. This is tantamount to a break in relations. Mexico expresses its displeasure with regimes it disapproves by closing diplomatic missions. Bolivia formally broke relations with the Dominican Republic. Eduardo Sanchez Cabral, Dominican ambassador to the Organization of American States (OAS>, resigned Friday night to protest the military takeover. The three-man civilian junta installed by the military named a 13-man cabinet Friday, including former Defense Minister Maj. Gen. Victor O. Vinas Roman as armed forces secretary. Vinas was one of the leaders of the coup.
“presence and activity of the church in the modern world.” Its contents have not been made public, but the word Ts that it will cover a wide range of current topics, including such controversial ones as population control, nuclear disarmament, relations with Communist regimes, and racial justice. 'Killer' Elephant Was In Decatur A 3,000 pound performing elephant which ran amuk for 90 minutes Thursday in Lansing Michigan, trampling a man and rampaging through a crowded department store before she was killed by police, fortunately missed her i chance to do the same thing in Decatur. She was a “member” of the King Brothers circus which played here early this summer. More than two dozen rifle shots were required to fell the frighten-1 ed aimal in a residential neighborhood more than two miles from the store where she inflicted serious damage as she chased customers up and down, the aisles. Rajje, property of the King circus, was entertaining in the parking lot of a shopping center when i she balked at doing a trick, became confused and walked away. She charged through the aluminum ■ frame doors of the store. After rampaging through the store she charged two miles to a j residential district and injured one , man who wandered into her path, before police were able to stop her. Locals Mr. and Mrs. Clarence P. Ziner 416 Adams St., are in South Bend today attending the Notre | Dame - Wisconsin college footbail game. Each year. Ziner and oth-| er past district governors of dis-1 trict 654 of Rotary attend a foot-i ball game together,* |
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Class Favorite Printed Pattern \ A 'r> 9084 ■LLJJIJ sizes uh 6-14 Popular Vest - and - pleated skirt look —a DANDY one this school year! Choose wool checks for vest ’n skirt, cotton for demure blouse. Printed Pattern 9084: Girls’ Sizes 6. 8. 10, 12. 14. Size 10 vest, skirt take l :1 r yards 54-inch; blouse Itfc yards' 4 35-ineh. Thirty-five cents in coins for this 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, Size and Style Number. CLIP COUPON FOR 50c FREE PATTERN in big, new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog, just out! 354 design ideas. Send 50c for Catalog.
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