Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 8, Decatur, Adams County, 10 January 1964 — Page 3

FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1964

SOCIETY

WOMEN OF THE MOOSE MEET THURSDAY NIGHT The Women of the Moose met at the Moose home, Thursday evening, with .senior regent Mrs. Charles Haney in charge. Following class enrollment, refreshments were served by Mrs. Glen Rambo, child care chairman. It was announced that there would be a mid-winter session, Sunday, January 26, beginning at 1:30 p.m., followed with a pot luck dinner. The next regular meeting will be held January 23 at the Moose home at 8 p.m. LEGION AUXILIARY MET THURSDAY The 4th district of the American Legion Auxiliary met at the New Haven Legion post home Thursday for an all day session. Dinner was served by the hosttess unit 330, to 75 district members present. Tht>se attending from local unit 43 were Frances Bohnke, Lilliam Burdg, Alta Brown, Clara Bauer, Mildred Smith, Amanda Dierkes and Frieda ColcHin. The past presidents parley of the American Legion Auxiliary — will meet at the Legion home Monday at 8 p.m. Mrs. John Meyers will be host- . ess to the Dutiful Daughters Sunday school class Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The Gals and Pals Square Dance club will hold a square dance at the community center Thursday beginning at 8 p.m. A beginners class will start at 7 p.m. The Decatur Camera Club will meet at the home of Robert Workinger, Monday at 7:30 p.m. Daffodil-Fresh Printed Pattern s. -or O L / /r t (L— UI ’" VlO 111 * -1 I 9022 \ mi 14%—24% ™"W Inf Fresh as the first daffodils — this backwrap beauty with vivid contrast at neckline, pockets. Wear it as a dress or over a dress. Printed Pattern 9022: Half Sizes 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%. 22%. 24%. Size 16% Requires 4% yards 35inch 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, Size and Style Number. YOURo FREE PATTERN IS READY — choose it from 250 design ideas in new SPRING-SUM-MER Pattern Catalog, just out! Dresses, sportswear, coats, more! Send 50c now.

ADAMS THEATER

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The Flo-Kan Sunshine Girls will meet Monday at the Moose home at 6:15 p.m. All members are urged to attend. The Trinity Bible. class of the Decatur E. U. B. church will meet in the church fellowship hall January 17 rather than the 16th as originally scheduled. Mr. and Mrs. Hirman Wittwer and Mr. and Mrs. William Strahm are the host couples, while Mr. and Mrs. Homer Arnold are in charge of the program. The Order of Rainbow for Girls will meet at 6:45 p.m. Thursday at the Masonic Hall. Mrs. Harvey Landis will be hostess to the Kirkland W. C. T. U. Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. The home of Mrs. Lyle ’Franz will be the scene of a meeting of the St. Paul Missionary Ladies Aid, Thursday at 7 p.m. O. N. O. CLUB MEETS AT JF.mM HOME The O. N. O. Home Demonstration club met January 8 at the home of Mrs. Don Jeffery. The new president, Mrs. Roy Bieberich, opened the meeting by leading the group in repeating the club creed. Devotions entitled “Never Alone,” were given by Mrs. Carl Menter. The history of the song of the month, “Home On the Range,” was given by Mrs. Fred Bieberich, who then led the group in singing it. Roll call, showing 12 members present, was answered by telling something each member planned to do this year. The citizenship leader, Mrs. Don Jeffery, gave a lesson on general information of Indiana. Indiana ranks 11th in population in the nation and the name “Indiana” means Indian land. The colors of the state flag are blue and gold and the motto is “Crossroads of America.” “On the Banks of the Wabash” is the state song and the average temperature is 53 degrees. A very interesting health and safety lesson was presented by Mrs. Herman Durr, entitled “Safe Use and Storage of Medicines.” She pointed out that mothers sometimes forget how fast a small child can move and stated 11 good rules to remember when it comes to handling and storing medicines. Some of them were: keep medicines in a locked cabinet; keep medicine out of the reach of children; never call pills candy to induce children to take them; and never take medicine in the dark. A very interesting discussion followed. The group then filled in their program books for the year. Mrs. Roy Bieberich reported on a recent council meeting she had attended where special emphasis was placed oh the forthcoming county foodless bake sale. She stated that money derived from this sale stays in the county and is used to defray expenses of sending lesSon leaders to Purdue. Each member is urged to put forth a special effort to fill and return the* envelope given- them. She also stated that the winning score sheets at the end of the year would be posted in the county extension office and anyone wishing to check them may do so. Several dates for club members to remember: Feb. 25, vice presidents meeting where vice president or representative should be present; March 10, special all day meeting at community center. lesson entitled “New Trends In Laundry.” $ The meeting was adjourned with the club collect. The next meeting will be held at the James Merriman residence in Preble. .<?> ■ The Missionary Circle of the Church of God will meet in the fellowship hall, Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Harvey Landis will be hqstess to th,e Kirkland W.C.T.U., Tuesday at 1:30 p. m. If you nave something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results SUN. & MON. Continuous 'Sun. from 1:15 ONLY 25c -65 c

Club Schedule Telephone 3-2121 Mbs Kay Shaffer Society Editor - Calendar itema for each day's 1 publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday fl? 30) FRIDAY W. S. C. S. of Mt. Tabor Methodist church. 7:30 p.m. church American Legion Auxiliary, unit 43, Legion Home business meeting, 8 p.m. SUNDAY Zion Lutheran P. T. L. Parish Hall, 7 p.m. MONDAY Decatur Camera Club, Robert Workinger, 7:30 p.m. Flo-Kan Sunshine Girls, Moose Home, 6:15 p.m. Past Presidents Parley, American Legion Auxiliary post 43 Legion Home, 8 p.m. Our Lady of Fatima Study club, Mrs. Ed Bosse, 8 p.m. Pythian Sister Needle Club, Moose Home, following Temple, 7:30 p.m. Gals and Pals Home Demonstration Club, Pleasant Mills school, 7:30 p.m. Research Club, Mrs. W. Guy Brown, 2 p.m. D. A. V. Auxiliary, D. A. V. Hall, business meeting, 7:30 p.m. Eagles Auxiliary, Eagles Hall, 8 p.m. Music Department, Decatur Woman’s club, called rehearsal, Mrs. Lobsiger, 416 S. Ist street, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Our Lady of Good Counsel Study Club, Mrs. Herman Alberding, 8 p.m. Dutiful Daughters class, Mrs. John Meyers, 7:30 p.m. Missionary Circle, Church of God, Fellowship Hall, 7:30 p.m. Kirkland W. C. T. U„ Mrs. Harvey Landis, 1:30 p.m. Profit and Pleasure HDC, Mrs. Roy Stucky, 7:30 p.m. Xi Alpha Xi Sorority, Business meeting, I & M building, 8 p. m. Eagles Auxiliary, Eagles Hall, 8 p. m. Rose Garden Club, Mrs. Alvin Lawson, 2 p. m. Delta Theta Tau Sorority, Mrs. Lyle Mallonee, 316 Stratton Way, 8 p. m. Associate Tri Kappa, Mrs. Dan Tyndall, 7:30 p. m. Kirkland W.C.T.U., Mrs. Harvey Landis, 1:30 p.m. Decatur chanter, Vaplo Guild, Bethlehem, Ossian, 8 p.m. Sarah Circle, Decatur E. U. B. church, Mrs. Frank Bohnke, 1 p.m. Olive Rebekah Lodge, Red Men’s Hall, 7:30 p.m. St. Dominic Study Club, Mrs. Harmon Gillig, .7:30 ti.m. WEDNESDAY Shakespeare Club, Mrs. Milo Black, 2 p.m. Emmaus Guild, Parish Hall Pleasant Mills Methodist W. S. C. S., Mrs. Bernard Johnson, 1 p.m. THURSDAY Order of Rainbow for Girls, Masonic Hall, 6:45 p.-m. St. Paul Missionary society, Mrs. Lyle Franz, 7 p.m. Lincoln P: T. A. t Lincoln school Gals and Pals Square Dance, Community Center, 8 p.m. beginners class, 7 p.m. Girl Scouts Troop 170 • Wednesday after school, troop 170 met in Miss Bieberich*? room. We elected officers. The president is Deddie Sprunger, secretary, Susie Feasel; treasurer, Kimela Stucky; scribe, Kathie Sliger. After that we played the initial game. We clpsed with the song “Good Night Brownies.” - Scribe, Kathy Sliger. Troop 118 We open the meeting with the Girl Scout promise. Attendance was taken and, dues collected. Four girls working on their Marian award decided to interview The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Simoen Schmitt next Tuesday. Some seventh grade girls began work on their Marian award and started a badge. We than closed the meeting. 1 Scribe, Georgia Gase Hospital Admitted ... Dore Brewster, Geneva! Robert Liman, Bernard Shoaf, Mrs. Alice Short, C. B. Harden, Decatur; Mrs. Albert Rich, Berne. Dismissed . Mrs. Richard Amstutz and baby boy, Mrs. Rrusella Rawley, Berne; Richard Rumple, Decatur.

XaNffif Lessons Beginning 2nd Week in February Afternoons and Wednesday Eve. Supplies Available. CALL 3-9655 / . D. EASH

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

LINCOLN PTA TO MEET NEXT THURSDAY The Lincoln PTA will meet at the school Thursday evening. The guest speaker will be Miss Louise Brumbaugh, head of the bureau of research for the Fort Wayne community schools. Miss Brumbaugh will speak on “What Is Success in School.” A coffee hour will follow the meeting. Baby sitting service will be provided during the meeting. Births At the Adams county memorial hospital: Julian and Diane Kiess Kramer, Van Wert, 0., are the parents of a 6 lb., 5% oz. baby boy bom today at 12:05 p.m. Three Girls Escape Under Berlin Wall BERLIN 1 (UPD—Three girls escaped under the Berlin wall through a tunnel completed while the Communists were permitting West Berliners to make Christmas-time visits, Western police disclosed Thursday. The West Berlin builders of the tunnel were able to warn other would-be escapees in time to prevent their arrests when the Communists found the tunnel. It was the first- news of a tunnel this year. Western police revealed its existence only after the Communists discovered its mouth, flooded it with tear gas, and blasted it shut with dynamite to prevent further escapes. , The girls fled the Communist sector on Tuesday. Officials said a large group! of East Berliners had planned to follow, them, but some coal yard workers in East Berlin stumbled across the opening and informed Communist authorities. The tunnel itself was deelaborate, running• 480 fee(t from the coal yard and about 25-~f4et beneath a blockedup border street into the cellar of a bakery in West Berlin.

Officials said the West Berliners who built it burrowed under the ground for weeks.

Ruby Attorneys To Seek Venue Change DALLAS (UPD—Jack Ruby’s lawyers ’ said Thursday they wanted his murder trial moved away from the “harsh and unreal” climate which they said was created by Dallas news media. J. H. Tonahill of Jasper, Tex., said the defense would petition criminal Dist. Judge Joe B. Brown Jan. 20, for a change of venue. _ “There is a lot of feeling in Dallas,” Tonahill said, “that Dallas is on trial and that might spill over into Mr. Ruby’s situation. “The climate they (news media) have created has been harsh and unreal,” he said. “We’d like to get 200 to 300 miles away from Dallas.” Ruby, a 52-year-old dapper strip tease club owner, dashed in front of national television cameras Nov. 24 and shot to death Lee Harvey Oswald, accused assassin of President Kennedy. Ruby was charged under Texas murder with malice laws which means the trial must be staged in Texas. Melvin Belli of San Francisco, chief defense attorney, singled out the Dallas Morning News for a story about him being accompanied by a bodyguard upon a recent arrival in Dallas. He said the man was a private investigator working on the Ruby investigation. Belli verbally protested the use of “flamboyant” before his name. ‘‘Colorful, I am,” Belli wrote while autographing a book for a news reporter. Tonahill did not outline his criticisms of “Dallas news media” when he issued Thursday’s statement. He said the change of venue requiest would be coupled with the defense's plea to have Ruby freed on bond. Overheated Oven An overheated oven can be cooled more quickly if you’ll place place one or two pans of cold water in it. • Trade In a good town — Decatur

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HEAVY FIGHTING (Continued front Page One) termed American “aggression" and suspended diplomatic relations with Washington. Chiari called on the Security Council of the United Nations and the Organization erf American States (OAS) to meet to hear Panamanian complaints. The OAS council was to meet later today to consider the Panamanian charges. The U.S. Army Panama Command took over the Canal Zone and imposed martial law. Zone borders were sealed and zone residents ordered to remain in their homes. Outsiders were cleared from the zone. Students Removed Flag Thursday night’s rioting climaxed long-smouldering Panamanian resentment over U.S. sovereignty in the Canal Zone. The specific cause of the blowHIGHWAY (Continued from Page One) other states are paying hugh sums for bonded indebtedness,” the speaker said. He promised edge lines on every state road in Indiana next year. Neither a new Monroe street bridge, a rerouting of route 224, nor new construction on route 27 is planned for the next five years. He emphasized that people interested in road construction in this area must be more vigorous in their demands. Walter Butcher, superintendent of the Bluffton sub-division, and Lawrence Noll, Adams county highway' superintendent, were guests at the meeting. Dan Davis, personnel manager for Central Soya company, was, introduced as a new Rotarian. Dean Boltz, representing the Decatur Optomists club, spoke briefly on behalf of the travel and adventure series which that group is sponsoring. The entire series of six outstanding color movies with narration by the professional photographer who had taken the pictures, may be seen for a $5 season ticket. The programs, scheduled on Saturday or Tuesday evenings, begin at 8 p. m. and last for about 80 minutes.

Adams County Man Fined In Court William E. Breauchy, 22-year-old resident of route 2, Berne, . was jailed this morning when unable to pay two ffoes levied against him in city, court, Breauchy pleaded guilty to charges of public intoxication and disorderly conduct. He was fined the minimum $1 and costs on one count, and fined $1 on the other, for a total of $23.75. When Unable to pay, he wps remanded to the Adams county jail by Judge John B. Stults to “lay out” the fines. Breauchy was arrested about 6:30 p.m. Thursday at a farm house east of Berne on county road 20, where he was causing a disturbance. Sheriff Roger Singleton and deputy Harold August made the arrest. Youth For Christ To Show Film Sunday The Adams county Youth for Christ will present a film entitled “In His Steps,” at the Decatur Methodist church Sunday. The film win begin at 6:30 p.m., and a holiday teen report win also be given that evening. Based on the inspiring message of the book by the same name, “In His Steps” tells the story of Rachel Oaige .aspiring young act--ress, and Ed Norman, publisher of a small newspaper. Confused by the hypocrisy of her socialite mother, Rachel might never have discovered the saving power of Jesus Christ, had it not been for what happened that Sunday morning during the worship hour. And Ed Norman, prominent citizen and churchman, would have gone on in his self-righteous comTrtacency, Maxwell confronted him with the reality that most church members have yet to experience the sheer dynamic of a living faith. Typewriter Roller To renew the surface of a rubber typewriter roller which has been dented by the continual pounding of the keys, remove the roller from the machine, sand it with fine sandpaper, then wipe clean with a cloth dampened with cleaning, solvent. . .

up was the action of American students in the zone in tearing down a Panamanian flag put up in front of the Balboa high school. President Chiari told an American broadcaster in a radio interview this morning that he wanted the U.S. Army to “retire” from the zone. Chiari decried the bloodshed and attributed the rioting to "unfulfilled promises'* made Panama by the United States. “All the rioting is from the other. side—the Army of the U. 5.,” Chiari said. He said there “might be a few’’ Panamanians involved. He said he had been doing all he could to halt the rioting since Thursday night. He said he was getting no cooperation from the Americans. Attack American Embassy About 3:30 this morning, a mob of about 250 Panamanian students attacked the American Embassy in Panama City with stones and broke most of the windows. Die rioters also carried so-called Molotov cocktails but Panamanian guardsmen kept them out of the building. Other riots were reported elsewhere in Panama. American business houses destroyed by the rampaging mobs included Goodyear, Braniff Airlines, the U.S.-Panama Association and the four-story U.S. Information Service Building. Four of six floors of the Pan American World Airways building were burned. U.S. Army sources said three American soldiers were killed at the border and 34 wounded in exchanges of gunfire and subsequent sniping by Panamanians. Ship traffic through the Panama Canal, one of the

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B v J UsT E BA E ■ EK* /■ ■| " 0 * Jk * I, FIVE GALLON PIN, first to be awarded to an Adams county blood donor, was awarded this week to Mrs. Arnold Ostermeyer, left. Mrs. Hugh Holthouse, right, admires the pin, which required at least 40 trips to the blood center, with a maximum of five allowed a year, meaning that Mrs. Ostermeyer has been a regular donor for more than eight years.—(Photo by Mac Lean)

world’s major waterways, was not affected, however. (In Washington, President Johnson and other top U.S. officials huddled in a series of emergency conferences on the Panama violence, first major hemispheric crisis to confront the new administration.

(U.S. officials said Chiari had

PAGE THREE

sought to meet with American Embassy officials on the crisis " Thursday night, but that U.S. Counselor Wallace Stuart was not able to safely leave the embassy for the appointment. Washington continued to maintain official silence on Chiari’s ’action in suspending relations.