Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 251, Decatur, Adams County, 24 October 1963 — Page 3
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1963
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I— — FOUR BIG DAYS! Fri. Sat Sun. Mon. Prices This Show Only! Adults 75o—Children 35c Continuous Sun. from 1:15 GRAND RE-OPENING PROGRAM—NEW FALL SEASON STARTS! HiP-HEP-HAPRy T Y nATY YIMZf AND WHAT A SEASON OF HAYIjly ■ * ENTERTAINMENT IT WILL BE—- . Everybody's Coming Back to The Movies To See — . w/ZviJ * John Wayne, "Donovan's Reef"; 3 Stooges "Around the World W* -.1 £Jk jF' irtZ- in a Daze"; "P. T. 109"; Doris ...J Day " Thrill of h Al, " ; " lrma La "*"*/* Douce"; "L-Shaped Room"; X "World of the Brothers Grimm"; t IAIQI4- ntOMfA/ \ "Twilight of Honor" with Rich- / WOLv L/IOIMvT % ard (Dr. Kildare) Chamberlain; I presents | "Come Blow Your Horn"; "V. I. IMUmOF I Wl "The Wheeler Dealers"; I <oWlllllWl l "Take Her She's Mine"; "Toys B* * n f h® Attic"; Presley's "Fun in nNflflYW ? Ateapulco"; "The Longest Day"; "iJ n^er The Yum Yum Tree" anc * Many, Many More! t3pLV ** - ~ ‘i-' the movies always were TOCHNiooipr AND AIWAYS W | LL BE your HAYLEY BURL DOROTHY DEBORAH MILS WES M'GURE WAUEY ,EST ENTERIAINMENII Snemd» MU «iSU MMon Co. K-e 1363 «f« o™, ftofccw. Sat. Kid Matinee — “First Man Into Space’’ — Shows 1:20; 3:15 NOTE — Watch “Dr. Kildare’’ Tonight And See a Preview of Richard Chamberlain’s First Movie, “Twilight of Honor.”
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ROSARY SOCIETY MEETS RECENTLY The Rosary society met at the K. of C. hall for their October meeting Monday evening with president Mrs. Elmo Miller presiding. Two new members, Mrs. Dave Schultz and Mrs. James Baker, were present. Final plans for the bazaar and style show were discussed. Mrs. Charles Buckley, chairman, reported that the stores showing fashions in the style show are Niblick and company, E. F. Gass, Kiddie Shop, Jani Lyn, and Teen Togs. Articles for the "bazaar are to be brought to the St. Joseph school on the afternoons of November 12, 13, and 14. The bazaar will begin at 6:30 p.m., followed by the style show at 8:15 p.m. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Simeon Schmitt urged all members to attend thej Eucharistic hour to be held at the coliseum in Fort Wayne, Sunday. Elizabeth Kohne gave a display of rosaries for the mission and home use. An article entitled “Rosary Reflections” was read, giving the origin and meditation of the rosary. Alice Gage, accompanied at the piano by Rita Girard, sang “Ave Maria” and “My Rosary.” Refreshments were served by the Mesdames Joe Murphy, Hugh Holthouse, Richard Walters, Bernard Clark and Miss Agnes Nesswald. I ; i CORRECTION The name of Mrs. Arthur Miller was uninteintionally omitted from the list of those attending the 25th anniuversaYy celebrating of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Small, as given in Tuesday’s Decatur Daily Democrat. WILLIAM SMITH ELECTED TO HONOR CLUB William Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Smith, 515 Jefferson St., was recently elected for membership into the Reamer club at Purdue University, where he is a junior in mechanical engineering. The Reamer club is an honorary club for junior and senior independent men who are recognized for their achievement in service to the university. Smith was also elected senator for Cary hall where he resides. He will represent approximately 1,100 men in campus activities. He visited with his parents this past weekend and with them went to Ball State Teachers college for homecoming and to visit his sister, Kathleen, who is a there. The Peony Promenaders are sponsoring a square dance Saturday from 8 until 11 p.m. at the junior fair building on the fair grounds at Van Wert, O. The caller will be George Klausing. The Research club will meet at the home of Mrs. E. H. Cook, Monday at 2 p.m. Mrs. Lewis Smith is in charge of the program. RUMMAGE SALE—Friday, Oct. 25 and Saturday, Oct. 26, 9 to 5. Former Klenk's Store, Madison across from Court HouseSponsored by Valpo Guild. 249 3t T
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
DECATUR GARDEN CLUB MEETS AT KOLTER HOME The Decatur Garden club met Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Adolph Kolter, with 24 members present. The meeting opened with the group repeating the club collect and the verse of the month. It was announced that the northeast district meeting will be held at South Whitley, Novernber 7. Mr. Mac Lean showed slides of Hawaii that were enjoyed greatly by the club. Lovely refreshments were sterved by the hostess. The Friendship Circle of the Zion United Church will meet Wednesday at the home of Mrs. John Rawlinson at 7:30 p.m. It will be a “Hobo Party.” Mrs. Herman Lose will be hostess to the St. Ambrose Study club, Monday at 7:30 p.m. Births At the Adams county memorial hospital: *• Frederick and Rosemary Fisher Schumm, Willshire, O; are the parents of a 5 lb., 12 oz. baby boy born today at 1:38 a.m. Hospital Admitted Gordon DeHart, Orlie Walters, Decatur; Walter Baker, Willshire, O.; Elizabeth Neuenschwander, Berne. Dismissed Master Grant Hurst, Anthony Vergara, Master Robert Shell, Decatur; Mrs. Raymond Lindsey and baby boy, Bryant; Lawrence Downum, El Paso, Tex. Nobel Literature Prize Awarded Greek STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI) —Greek poet and diplomat Giorgos Seferiades won the 1963 Nobel Prize for literature® 1 today. Seferiades is the first Greek ever to win a Nobel prize which this year carries a cash value of $51,158. The Swedish Academy of Letters gave the 63-year-old poetdiplomat the award for the "unique thought and style and beauty of his language, which has become a lasting symbol of all that is indestructible in the Hellenic acceptance of life.” Seferiades, who wrotes under the name of Seferis, recently retired as Greek ambassador to London after 30 years in the foreign service. Born in what is now Izmir, Turkey, in 1900, Seferiades fled to Athens as a refugee from Turkish persecution in Asia Minor. His first collection of poems, “The Turning Point,” was published in 1931. Widely admired among Greece’s intelligentsia, Seferiades was nSmed an honorary
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Approve Computer For Stale Auditor INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The old battle between State Auditor Dorothy Gardner and the "administration of Governor Welsh over a computer for the auditor’s office was a step nearer to an end today. The Indiana Budget Agency Wednesday approved an expenditure of $1,700 to prepare Mrs. Gardner’s office for in-' stallation of the computer of her choice. Much of the work will involve installation of air conditioning since the type of machine to be installed functions best in a controlled temperature. The work also involves construction of a false floor to permit installation of electric lines. Welsh at one time blocked Mrs. Gardner from proceeding plans to install the type of computer she wanted because it was made by a different manufacturer than the computer used by the state’s data processing center. The objection was dropped after the acquisition of equipment to permit interchange of tapes between the two machines. In other action Wednesday, the Budget Agency: —Approved an add it i onal $250,000 for work on Monroe Reservoir which is being constructed with both federal and state funds. — —Authorized Indiana University to spend a total of $1.3 million on a new power plant. —Authorized the State Highway Department to spend $85,000 of its own funds for alterations to a building recently acquired in Indianapolis for use as a warehouse for signs and signal materials. —Approved $45,032 for purchase of public hunting and fishing sites for the Winamac Fish and Game area. I _z_. # . doctor of literature by Cambridge University in 1960. The following year he won the William Foyle Prize in London for his translations of English poetry into Greek. His works include “Mythistorema,” “Gymnopedia.” “Essays,” “Poems 1924-1946,” “Cyprus,” and “The King of Asine and Other Poems.” No Americans were among the top contenders for the prize, according to sources close to the Swedish Academy of Letters, which selects the prize winners. Novelist John Steinbeck was last year’s winner and the prize is rarely awarded to writers from the same nation in consecutive years. Other candidates listed by the sources were British novelist Graham Greene, philosopher and playwright Jean-Paul Sartre of France, Irish playwright Samuel Beckett, novelist Alberto Moravia of Italy, and Pablo Neruda, a Chilean Communist poet
Club Schedule Telephone! 3-2121 Miss Kay Shaner Society Editor Calendar items tor each day's publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m 'Saturday THURSDAY Builders Class of Trinity E.U. B. church, 7:30 p.m. church. Women of Moose, Moose Home, 8 p.m. Order of Eastern Star, Masonic Hall, 7:30 p.m. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Alvera Eady and Dee Macke; 6-9, Shirley Liby and Joan Bohnke. Ladies Fellowship of Missionary church, Mrs. Mervin Rupp, 7 p.m. -.t— — FRIDAY Rummage Sale and Bazaar, building adjacent Decatur Bakery 6-9 p.m., sponsored by Root Township Home Demonstration club . Goodwill Industries truck in Decatur all day, call 3-2585, Friendship Circle, Decatur Missionary church, Mrs. Harold Myers, 7:30 p.m. American Legion Auxiliary, American Legion Home, social, 8 p.m. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Gwen Doan and Helen Rydell; 6-9. Doris Schlotterback and Barbara Rutter. Rummage Sale by Valpo Guild, former Klenk’s store, 9 <».m. — 5 p.m. Harvest Supper, Friendship Hall Monroe Methodist Church, by W.S.C.S., 5 to 8 p.m. SATURDAY Square Dance, junior fair building. Van Wert fair grounds, 8-11 p.m. Rummage Sale and Bazaar, building adjacent Decatur Bakery, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., sponsored by Root township Home Demonstration club. Story Hour, Public Library, 1:30 p.m. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Rosemary Gase and Betty Fager. Pleasant Mills Community Organization, Pleasant Mills school, 8 p.m. Rummage Sale by Valpo Guild at former Klenk’s store, 9 a.m. — 5 p.m. SUNDAY Monthly Talent Show, Adams county home, 7:30 p.m. MONDAY Research club, Mrs. E. H. Cook 2 p.m. St. Ambrose Study club, Mrs. Herman Lose, 7:30 p.m. Gray Ladies business meeting, I. & M. social room. TUESDAY ' Sunny Circle Home Demonstration club, Preble Recreation Center, 7:30 p.m. , # Eagles Auxiliary , Mrs. Delbert Augsburger, 8 p.m. Jolly Housewives Home Demonstration club, Hanna-Nuttman park shelter house, 7:30 p.m. come masked. WEDNESDAY Friendship Circle of Zion United Church of Christ, Mrs. John Rawlinson, 7:30 p.m. “Boarding House Reach,” sen■ior class play, Monmouth school 7:30 p.m. Locals James Teeple, of Monroe, has been admitted to the Van Wert county hospital. The new address of Steven C. Marbach, son of Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Marbach, 210 S. Eighth street, Decatur, is: A. B. Steven C. Marbach, A.F. 16773773, B--3452 C.M.R. No. 2, Sheppard A.F.8., Texas. Girl Scouts Troop 576 Brownie Troop 576 met after school in the gym of the Southeast school. Two Girl Scouts from the 6th grade took our troop exploring in the school yard. Debra Lough brought the refreshments. Scribe, Debra Sudduth
MONKEY around, going from car 10l to car lot, is a watte of time. Your best bet, on a trade is TO RUN on down to Schwartz Ford Co. Inc., 1410 Nuttman Ave., to be sure of getting a trade to suit you. FOR years, smart buyers in Decatur have found that the best deal, on a top used car, is always at Schwartz's OFFICE!
Pauper Attorney Is Appointed For DeLeon Local attorney Robert G. Smith was appointed pauper attorney for Alfredo M. DeLeon in the Adams circuit court this morning, as the arraignment of DeLeon continued. DeLeon was arraigned WednesHeat Records Are Broken In Slate By United Press International Temperatures broke all records existing nearly a century again in Indiana Wednesday and threatened a new assault on the statistics today as unprecedented autumn heat and drought continued. Although a little cooler weather was expected Saturday and scattered showers or thundershowers were indicated to put a crimp in the monotony of the most, unique fall in Hoosier history, two more days of drought and warmth loomed first. A high reading of 86 at Indianapolis Wednesday broke the record for Oct. 23. established in 1947, and marked the warmest temperature ever recorded so late in Uhe season. The previous high was 86 on Oct. 21 The mercury was due to hit the mid 80s in the capital city again this afternoon and was almost certain to break the record for the date of 78 set in 1886 and tied twice in 1899 and 1921. If it gets up to 84. it will set another new record high for sc late in the season. Other highs Wednesday included 88 at Evansville 85 at Fort Wayne. 83 at South Bend and Louisville.
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day but court reporter Romaine Young, recently injured in an huto accident, had not returned to work. She was back this morning and the arraignment was concluded. DeLeon faces charges of first degree burglary, second degree burglary and grand larceny.
’MEMOS" By: HENRY J. GREEN Ever since a wit once observed that, "gentlemen prefer blondes,” there has been sporadic effort on the part of darkhaired women to become blonde. When you come Tight down to cases, there are two basic types' of blondes—the natural-looking blonde and her high-fashion sister. Tlie natural blonde is often a tint, a process which deposits color on the hair, but does not strip it. The result: A flaxen blonde or topaz; The high-fashion tones favored by actresses are a more complicated technique which lightens the hair before coio. iapplied. The high-fashion tone may require two to four hours, a tint one-quarter the time. Whether you desire a tasteful tint, a pleasing permanent or hair styling of uncommon charm, your guarantee of coni; plete satisfaction is MI-LA-de STYLING SALON. Our operators take exceptional pride in their work at MI-LA-de STYLING SALON, U. S. Rte 27, and Jackson Phone 3-4478. THIS' WEEKS HELPFUL HINT: If you find yourself in a situation where toothpaste is not available, table salt will be a fair substitute
