Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 62, Decatur, Adams County, 13 March 1964 — Page 3

• FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1984

SOCIETY

MONROE BETTER HOMES CLUB HOLDS AUCTION The Monroe Better Homes home demonstration club met Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Charles Elam with sixteen members answering roll call with a pet housecleaning peeve. The president, Mrs. Richard Reinhart, opened the meeting by leading the club in repeating the club collect. Devotions were given by Mrs. Elam who used the article, “Our Burdens are Blessings to Lift us Spiritually,” followed with the secretary's report. The song of the month, “Flow Gently, Sweet Afton,” was sung by the group. The lesson of the month on, “Meats,” was given by Mrs. Carl Rash. Mrs. Ervin Stucky gave the health and safety lesson on the heart, and the citizenship lesson on “Indiana,” was given by Mrs. Otto Longenberger. During the social hour, a birthday auction was enjoyed with enthusiastic bidding. Mrs. Elam was assisted by Mrs. Lillie Rich and Mrs. Herbert Fruchte in serving refreshments in keeping with St. Patrick’s day. FAITH CIRCLE MEETS WITH MRS. ANGLE The Faith circle of Union Chapel church met recently at the home of Mrs. Kenneth Angle. The lesson was, “Jesus Christ Renews His Church,” led by Mrs. Golden Renner. Each member was given a flower to put in her hair. A record of a hymn was played, followed by prayer. Messages from Puerto Rico and Dominician Republic churches were given by Mrs. Myron Frank, Mrs. Earl Mounsey, Mrs. Kenneth Angle, Mrs. Homer Tschannen and Mrs. Thomas Harrell. “What a Friend We have in Jesus,” was sung by the group, after which scripture was read by Mrs. Lawrence Williamson. In closing, all joined hands in a circle prayer which was followed by a record of, “The Lord’s Prayer.” Mrs. Thomas Harrell was in charge of the business meeting. , Refreshments were served to six members and one guest. The Decatur home demonstration club will meet at the C. L. of C. hall Thursday at 1:30 p.m. The chairman for the meeting will be Mrs. Frank Fisher. The hostesses will be the Mesdames Manley Foreman, Clarence Drake, and Charles Beineke. The American Cancer Society will sponsor a film showing, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the I and M building. The meeting is open to the public. They will also sponsor film showings at the I&M building, March 25 at 7:30 p.m. and March 28 at 1:30 p.m. These meetings will also be open to the public. The Trinity Bible class of the Decatur E. U. B. Church will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the fellowship hall. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Garner, Mrs. Nellie Krummen and Mrs. Roy Taylor will be host and hostesses. ’The general meeting of the Pecatur Woman’s club will be held at 8 p.m. Monday at the Decatur Youth and Community Center. The Junior Women will be in charge of the meeting. The program, “Portraits in Home Decoration,” will be given by Lawrence Anspaugh. Members are reminded to bring guests to this meeting. The Decatur Garden cl’b will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. William Schncpf. Olive Rebekah lodge met Tuesday evening at the ’.e ’ Mens hall. Mrs. Wilford Pl; stercr received the cover gift. Th- > will be team practice next meeting.

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EMMAUS GUILD MEETS AT PARISH HALL The Emmaus Guild of Zion Lutheran church met Tuesday evening at the parish hall. Opening devotions were read by Mrs. Richard Archer. ‘Tell the World!” was the title of the evangelism topic study led by the Rev. Richard Ludwig. The business meeting was called to order by Mrs. Orville Reed, presideht. Roll call was answered by fifteen members, and Mrs. Walter Fink was present as a guest. Mrs. Sherman Arnold reported having sent about sixty Easter cards to missionaries in foreign fields. The society uses this method to show their interest and support of their missionaries. The group again voted in favor of sponsoring the congregation’s Brownie and Junior Girl Scout troops for the coming year. Several games of “Indoor Goli” were enjoyed with prizes going to Mrs. Richard Reimer and Mrs. Robert DeLong. Refreshments were served with the serving tables festively decorated with green crepe paper hats. Shamrock nut cups marked each place. The attendance prize was won by Mrs. Leland Bienz. Mrs. Richard Archer was chairman of the committee for the evening. Assisting her was Mrs. Nelson Doty, Mrs. Paul Hammond, and Mrs. Louis F. Webert.

Cyprus Rejects Ultimatum As Sent By Turks NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPD—The Cyprus government will reject Turkey’s ultimatum that Turkish forces will invade Cyprus unless fighting on the island stops, an official spokesman said today. The spokesman, quoted by the official Nicosia Radio, said the Turkish warning—contained in a note delivered here today —was “unacceotable.” The radio said the Cyprus government of President Archbishop Makarios also has told its United Nations representative to ask Secretary General . Thant for a special meeting of the Security Council. It said this request follows the “new Turkish threat of aggression.” ' , New Fighting The diplomatic moves were made as new fighting broke out in Nicosia and its suburbs. The British accused the Greek Cypriots of sporadic firing on its positions along the strategic Kyrenia Road shortly after dawn. Later, U.N. officials confirmed that Turkish Cypriots shot at Greek Cypriots within the city itself and the Greek Cypritts fired back in self-defense. The Cyprus crisis seemed moving toward a showdown in four capitals. . “Last Chance” The Turkish note, first issued in Ankara Thursday night, warned the Cyprus government that unless the “murder, pillage, robbery, arson, rape, torture, etcetera, are halted immediately ~. the Turkish government declares it will use its right to take unilateral action.” A Turkish spokesman said the note was Makar io s’ “last chance” to halt the fighting. Greek officials retorted they would “react promptly” if Turkey invades Cyprus. A top-level government meeting in Athens ended with a Greek decision to “react immediately and with all available means to any Turkish action in Cyprus,” a government source there said. —

Club Schedule Telephone 3-2121 Mrs. Connie Mitchel Society Editor Calendar items for each day** publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30) FRIDAY Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Alvera Eady and Marcia Freeby; 8-9, Jane Heller and Jeanne Knape. American Legion auxiliary, Legion home, 8 p.m. business meeting. Academy of Friendship, record hop, youth center, 8:30-11:30 p.m. Decatur high school Band Parents, chili supper school cafeteria, 5 to 7 p.m. SATURDAY St. Ann’s study club, 30th anniversary mass, St. Mary’s church, 8 a.m. Breakfast following, Mrs. Ben Eiting. Adams Central Music Loyalty club, smorgasbord - 4:30 — 8 p.m. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Marcia Stevens and Barbara Osterman. MONDAY General meeting, Decatur Woman’s club, Community Center, 8 p.m. - ■ - Academy of Friendship, Moose home, 7:30 p.m. Adams county home demonstration chorus, Monroe Farm Bureau building, 7:30 p.m. V. F. W. auxiliary, post home, 8 p.m. Rosary society potluck supper and regular meeting, K. of C. hall, 6:30 p.m. Adams Central PTA, cafeteria, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Decatur Garden club, Mrs. William Schnepf, 2 p.m. 39ers carry in dinner, Decatur Youth and Community Center, 6:30 p.m. Loyal Daughters class of Bethany church, Mrs. George Hammond,, 7:30 p.m. Kum-Join-Us class, Bethany church basement, birthday supper, 6:30 p.m. . Church Mothers study club, Zion United Church of Christ, 8 p.m., guest night. Merry Matrons home demonstration club, Mrs. Otto Thieme, 7:30 p.m. Pocahontas Lodge, Red Men hall, 7:30 p.m. Xi Alpha Xi sorority, business meeting, Mrs. Robert Blaney, 8 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma, Mrs. Ray Heller, 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY American Cancer Society, open film showing, 7:30 p.m., I&M bldg. ? Historical club, Mrs. Roger Kelly, 2 p.m. Naomi Circle, First Presbyterian church, 9 a.m. THURSDAY Women of the Moose, Moose home, 8 p.m. Decatur Horae Demonstration club, C. L. of C. hall, 1:30 p.m. Caliente home demonstration club, I&M bldg., 7:30 p.m. DYB Ladies of the Trinity church, Mrs. John Gage, 2 p.m. Trinity Bible Class, Decatur E. U. B. church, fellowship hall, 7:30 p.m. Suffers Hand Injury In Plant Accident Carl Hirschy, a resident of route 6, Decatur, underwent an operation at the Parkview memorial hospital in Fort Wayne Thursday evening, after his left hand was injured in a cutoff saw accident in the afternoon. The local man lost the index "finger and thumb of his left hand and the tips of the other three fingers, when the hand got pulled into the saw while he was at work at the Decatur Industries. He was taken to the local hospital and then transferred to Parkview, where the operation was performed last night. He will remain in the hospital and will undergo skin grafting in the next few days.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Locals Mr. and Mrs. Clem Kortenber and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ehinger returned Thursday from a five weeks’ trip to Florida and New Orleans. Enroute home they visited with the Kortenbers’ daughter and family, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Underwood and children of St. Louis. * Hospital Admitted Ervin Metzner, Bryant: Mrs. Daniel M. J. Schwartz, Berne; George Myers, Decatur. , Dismissed Mrs. Max Hilyard and baby boy, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Earl Richman and baby boy, Hoagland; Mrs. Vernon Luginbill and baby boy, Deborah Litchfield, Mrs. Bill Mansfield and baby boy, Mrs. Paul Kohne and baby girl, Mrs. Harry King, Forest Deitsch, Mrs. George Litchfield, Decatur.

James Hoffa To Keep Up Fight On Conviction CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (UPD — James R. Hoffa’s defense forces turned to appeals battles today in their effort to prevent the 51-year-old Teamsters president from serving eight years in a federal prison. Hoffa, convicted on two counts of tempering with jurors, was sentenced to four consecutive years on each count Thursday, and fined SIO,OOO by U.S. District Court Judge Frank Wilson. ! Hoffa immediately asked for a new trial, contending that U.S. marshals gave gifts to the eight - man, four - woman jury which convicted him after -a marathon trial here ended last week. Wilson, who gave defense attorneys 10 days to prepare appeals motions, took the new trial requests under advisement. Will Continue Fight Hoffa flew to Miami immediately after sentencing. He said on arrival, “I have been in fights all my life . . > I’m going to win this one and I’m going to show the world I’m .right.” The Teamsters president and three codefendants were convicted of attempting to fix jurors during Hoffa’s 1962’ conspiracy trial at Nashville, which ended in a mistrial with a deadlocked jury.

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Anspaugh Speaks To Photographers Lawrence E. Anspaugh, local professional photographer, appeared before members of the professional photographers association of Northern Illinois this week. Anspaugh lectured the group, stressing the responsibilities of the portrait photographer to his community whether it be large or small. He pointed out the importance of extensive technical schooling and broad educational background involving the arts, business, psychology and other factors necessary for success not only in modern-day professional photography, but even more so in the future. Anspaugh explained that young people choosing this field as a career should be made aware of these demands. The remainder of Anspaugh’s two-hour program concerned wedding and child photography. The PPANI has a membership of 150 studio owners, camera operators and equipment manufacturers from the Chicago metropolitan area and northern half of die state of Illinois. Anspaugh appeared last year as a guest speaker on portraiture before the professional photographers of greater Louisville, Ky. B. P. W. CLUB HEARS EXCHANGE STUDENT The Decatur B. P. W. club met Wednesday evening at the Legion home. Colorful Easter Bunnies, paper baskets, and candles decorated the tables. Dinner music was provided by Wayne Geiger, who played several selections on his accordion. Leo Gavilli, exchange student from Italy, gave a very interesting and informative talk on the educational and governmental systems of his country and pointed out the religious and historical background. Guests for the evening were the Misses Florence Holthouse and Rose and Anna Nesswald, Mrs. Severin Schurger, and Mrs. Rose Gase. Mrs. Ray Kauffman, president, conducted the business meeting. The hostesses for the evening were: Miss Rosemary Spangler, Mrs. Byron Smith, Mrs. Walter Augsburger, Mrs. Luella Ellsworth, and Mrs. Chester Mclntosh. Monthly Sing Bee Sunday Afternoon The monthly sing bee will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Greenbrier Brethren in Christ church. John Poorman will be the leader and the Berne Gospel Crusaders will sing. The church may be reached by following the signs four miles west of Ohio City, 0., or one mile south of Glenmore, O.

’64 Chevy n Super Sport with VS power ,-l-. v k 1 llaawa i ■ _ ■■ ~ ' 3jggfSr ' T '.- >•,"%/>* ‘ ?~*~> -ag£gQjg[ y‘£^* ,i .'-** , »' mm- J*! wffjSiSi ...and just the place to enjoy it . . .., ~ . * l t ■BBK ■ g i v ; -->«A>a J “" :,, * Zi **”•"- ■ .•,>..«*.•> — Chevy II Nova Super Sport with Bucket Seats Find out for yourself what this Chevy II can really do. If transmission. Both are optional at extra cost, along with there are hills nearby, let it give them a good going-over, a Positraction rear axle, AM-FM radio and many other Then see it give slow-moving trucks the run-around, accessories. And for all its new power, Chevy II rides so With its new extra-cost V 8 you need but give the acceler- softly it seems to glide along the highway. I hat s ator an inch, and this Super Sport will take a mile. because it has high-mounted independent coil springs m And this great highway performer looks the part it the front and Mono-Plate single-leaf springs m the rear, plays so well. A glance at its all-vinyl interior —— . With everything Chevy 11 Super Sport has goand door-to-door carpeting will tell you that. g-JBBLf-mg mg for it, it’s no surprise your Chevrolet dea er There’s your choice of either the floor-mounted gjStijijjUfAff b anxious to show you its price Powergiide or Four-Speed Synchro-Mesh that’s the only thing about it that isn t super. THE GREAT HIGHWAY PERFORMERS Chevrolet*Chevette-Chevyn*Confair»Corvette Sit thtm at your Chevrolet Showroom . . BILL ZOSS Chevrolet - Buick, Inc. 305 N. 13th Street DECATUR, INDIANA Phone 3-31« ' ■■ . ' - -■•-•• -' -■- - - -- .-.’ ■ -. zr-r-v

New York City Hall Picketed By Over 15,000 By United Press International More than 15,000 parents, mostly white, picketed the New York City Hall Thursday in protest against a school integratiori plan. Parading in unbroken lines of eight abreast around the building, the demonstrators waved placards and shotted, “np forced transfers.” They were unsuccessful in attempts to talk with councilmen. Earlier, a parents’ delegation had met with education officials to oppose a proposal to send children out of their neighborhoods to other schools by bus in order to end racial imbalance in classrooms. Hie board said it would not change its plans. The . demonstrators, largely mothers, marched from education headquarters across the Brooklyn Bridge to City Hall in one of the largest demonstrations ever - seen in the nation’s largest city. Also in New York Thursday, Malcolm Little, deposed top lieutenant of the Black Muslims who calls himself Malcolm X, called upon America’s 22 millicm Negroes to learn how to use shotguns and rifles. Malcolm, who has formed a new Black Nationalist Pakty, said there would be “more violence cm the racial scene in 1964 than ever before . . . (and) Negroes must be taught how to defend themselves under attack.” Malcolm said it was “dangerous and criminal for Negro leaders to stress the nonviolent approach.” Elsewhere in the nation: Jacksonville, Fla.’ The FBI said five Ku Klux Klansmen were arrested Thursday night in connection with the bombing on Feb. 16 of the home of a Negro boy who integrated a whtie school. San Francisco: The Bank of America Thursday announced it would seek the arrest of any racial demonstrators creating a disturbance at the bank. Frankfort, Ky.: Gov. Edward Breathitt admitted defeat Thursday in his fight to get a civil rights bill passed in the SUNDAY MENU at Country Charm Restaurant: Young Roasted Turkey with Dressing; Virginia Baked Ham with candied yams. Old Fashion Cream Pie, Banana Cream Pie, Coconut Cream Pie, etc. A complete meal. 62 2t

Eight Hoosiers Vote Against Pay Increase WASHINGTON (UPIh — Eight of the 1 Indiana members of the House voted with the majority Thursday to defeat a federal pay raise bill which in eluded an increase of SIO,OOO a year for congressmen. Democrat J. Edward Roush and all seven Hoosier Republicans voted against the measure. Democrat Ray J. Madden was the only Hoosier who actually voted for it although Democrats Winifred Denton and John Brademas, who were not present, were paired for it. current legislature.

Atlanta: Civil rights demonstrators asked a federal court Thursday to take jurisdiction over their sit-in cases, now before a Georgia Superior Court. Milwaukee, Wis.: Backers of Gov. George Wallace of Alabama Thursday reported an outpouring of grass roots support for Wallace’s candidacy in the Wisconsin presidential primary. Washington: Southern senators accused backers of the civil rights bill Thursday with using the facilities of the Democratic Policy Committee to advance their case. Sen. Wayne Morse. D-Ore., said he hopes the Senate will agree to a showdown vote Wednesday on his motion to send the bill to a committee for a 10-day study.

ADAMS SUN. & MON. ■ KkJ Continuous Sun. from 1:15 THEATER ONLY 25c ’ 6sc One of the Season's Most Honored and BEST Pictures! Nominated for Four Academy Awards Including Miss Wood, As the Year's Best Actress For Her Role In This Production! There is a moment-a long moment-when everything is risked with the proper stranger. WITH THB t wneaa«MM»UlM ! . - ~° — ’ TONITE & SAT. - Uproarious Comedy With Bob Hope As The f Father of a Foundling & a Bevy of Beauties Who Want to "MothI er" It! "A GLOBAL AFFAIR" 808 HOPE and GLOBAL GIRLS! ; & "HOOTNANNY HOOF Brothers 4, Johnny Cash, Sheb Wooley , Sat. Kid. -Mat—“CAPTAIN SINBAD” Technicolor—Shows 1:15; 3:15 ■ o O I Soon—“ Mail Order Bride”; “7 Days in May”; “Move Over Darßng’’ t f_JI

PAGE THREE

Tuesday Is Deadline For K. C. Tickets Reservations for the K. of C. rabbit supper must be in no later thafct Tuesday evening of next ,week. The rabbit supper, for members and guests, will begin at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, March 19, at the K. of C. hall. Reservations may be made until Tuesday night by calling 3-2002. Leonard, Resigns Bar Membership INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — The Indiana State Bar Association-an-nounced today that the resignation of Robert E. Leonard, former Allen County Superior Court judge at Fort Wayne, as a member of the bar has been accepted by the State Supreme Court and Leonard is no longer licensed to practice law in this state. Leonard submitted his resignation after the grievance committee of the Allen County Bar Association filed a report recommending disbarment. A grand jury at Fort Wayne indicted Leonard last Feb. 26 on two counts of embezzling funds. SPECIAL! SATURDAY at the Country Charm Restaurant - - Fried Chicken, a complete meal SI.OO. 38 T