Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 73, Decatur, Adams County, 26 March 1964 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
DANCE . Saturday, March 28th 9:30 ’til ? ? ? ? WILLSHIRE AMERICAN LEGION WILLSHIRE, OHIO Music by Kenny Wolfe & Orchestra SPRING PAINT SALE! Lacite Wall Paint ™‘-now 6“... Chief Latex Paint 5.95— n0w 4 Gai. All Star Latex Paint 3.79- now 2 Gai. Chief Hat Wall Paint now 2? al . Paint Roller Covers 2 for 59 c Roller and Pan Sets .. SP ecial9S c Caulking 4for $ l M 2” Nylon Paint Brush EL now 99 c 4” Nylon Paint Brash now 2 49 %” x 90’ Masking Tape £7 now 45 c DECATUR - KOCHER LUMBER, INC. 11l W. Jefferson St. Phone 3-3131 5 . ■ >
Buy REFRIGERATORS & FREEZERS Now! L- S I . / 5-YEAr| » y Il ■ : s2s ° F °OD I I ■ SPO,t AGE I -J Warranty I iff & | . I ST °RES 530 1 \ —- | LBS. OF FOOD* I I **• ■ CORONADO 15.15 Cu. Ft. H CHEST FOOD FRKZER America's most wanted »ize, _ x with 2 dividers, basket, lid ..me FroST-ERK! « # re. CORONADO ’’Patrician” Month 13.03 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator-Freezer 1 ,jT frost free 2-door combination! /eoeereo \ ’ WIliBIIIIIBR" - ; ‘ ~W Refrigerator 9.61 cu. ft.,- 2 3)1 J I FR ““ R V _T< crispers. True-zero freezer. | Magnetic door seals. 30%"W. I Per \ 'J Month X. S I II"" 1 " Il’-H—MfflW.". jf -x;.. I 1 ÜBgWMBg /autctX I MATIC I j \ defrost J jQILIXL, i — JUIMI J—x Hi» • / \ KMBIB II / SAFETY \ AMa. DOOR ) , \ LATCH ]\ I Jh- M CORONADO "Duchess” k 13 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator-Freezer Four shelf areas, 2 crispers, M ■fell dairy bar door in 9.53 cu. ft. ■ H «w V refrigerator. Separate freezer ■ H has ice chest. Trim 30% 'W. ■ ■ Per «•»« / Month CORONADO 15.19 Co. Ft., UPRIGHT FOOD FREEZER Thinwall cabinet 32’wide has tl ( X 15.95 sq. ft. shelf «F II V V K- • E 4V il can Door lock; II \ $250 food warranty. ■ ■ Per Month
The Story Os Easter The Resurrection: Final Easter Glory
By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International More than 700,000.000 people around the world will celebrate this Easter. In stately Latin and melodious Polynesian, and in virtually every other known tongue, they will repeat the news that sped through the demoralized company of Christian disciples on the first Easter morning. “He is risen!” Easter is the oldest and most sacred of Christian holy days for very good reason. Unlike the Oriental religions which are based on mystical experiences and metaphysical speculation, Christianity is anchored in history to an event — the resurrection of Jesus Christ. From its earliest days to t h e present, the Christian church has never hestitated to stake its whole case on the claim that this event really happened. “If Christ be not risen,” the apostle Paul told the Corinthians, “then is your faith in vain.” What is the evidence for the resurrection? Many Christians probably would answer that question by citing the Biblical stories about the finding of the empty tomb. These stories dramatize the fact of the resurrection as nothing else can, and their devotional value has earned them the central place at most Easter worshin services. But to the rigorously objective modern scholars who have exposed the New Testament to the most searching scrutiny ever given to any book, the empty tomb is secondary evidence. There scholars point out that there are a number of discrepancies in the various gospel narratives about the awesofne discovery that greeted the devoted women who went to t h e tomb “early in the morning o n the first dav of the week.” These discrepancies do not mean that the story is untrue. On the contrary, even a news-
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA > : r : .
paper reporter can discern, in the different accounts, just that variation in detail but agreement on essential fact, which is the hallmark of authentic eyewitnesses accounts of any momentous event. But the discrepancies do indicate to Biblical researchers that the first Christians did not attach primary importance to the empty tomb. If they had, a greater attempt probably would have been made to pin down the precise facts, to harmonize the disparate versions that circulated freely in 4he oral traditions until they eventually were set down in the gospels. What pushed the empty tomb into the background of the early apostles’ thoughts? The answer is abundantly clear in all of the gospels, in the book of Acts and in Paul’s letters. The apostles saw Jesus himself, not once but on many occasions after his death. They knew him to be living, and their supreme certainty of this fact made all “corroborating evidence” seem unimportant. The earliest account of Jesus’ resurrection appearances is given in Paul’s first letter to the church at Corinth: “For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received. that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the scriptures, and that he appeared to Peter, then to the twelve “Then he aopeared to more than 500 brethren at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have fallen asleep. Then he aopeared to James, then to all the apostles. Last of •-all ... he aoneared also to me.” It is sometimes said that the resurrection bf Jesus is “the best-attested fact In historvX because the whole Christian church bears witness to it. Those who make this statement usually have two ideas in mind.
First, they mean that the existence of the church can hardly r . •/* I I be explained except in terms of \Allfhp3cl ( like In the resurrection. As one scholar VUMJ 111 has written, “it is easier, even for a non-believer in miracles, Maallnfl TllOCnaV to accept the fact of the resur- rlvvllliy lUvjUCiy rection than to find any other adequate explanation of the The Southeast Cub Scout pack charge that came over the dis- met Tuesday evening at the ciples within three days after Southeast school. The meeting they had fled Jerusalem in ter- was in charge of Cubmaster ror.” Frank Lybarger. The second meaning is that The opening ceremonies were the church, from the time of the « iven by the newly formed Webapostles until now, has consist- 1° de P* teasel is in charge ed at its core of men and worn- °* den. The ceremony was en who are convinced — not by a short history of the flag, anything they had read or have The theme for the meeeting was been told, but by the irrefutable “Mardi Gras time. All the evidence of their own experi- dens participated in this event ence — that Christ is living still. Easter Cantata Al Fainting Wire Fence , iif.ii ■ • Al I To paint a wire fence neatly and u/||lchira I mirrh easily, wire a piece of %-inch VVIIUIIIIv VIIUIVII hardboard on one side, then paint , . . ~T , the wire fence with a wide brush. t Easter <h f aatata - . 1 He That Liveth, by Kevin Clark Davis, will be presented at the Luxury Lounger Church of God in Willshire, 0., Sunday at 7.30 p.m. Printed Pattern The Rev. T. E. Hogue will be // the narrator, Mary Raudenbush, // 11 organist, and Helen BaumgartU ner, director. I I The program follows: ■ I Prologue — Don Raudenbush, X U, , —1 baritone solo. / “Now is Christ Risen”—choir. V “Remember, O My Heart” — \ Ina Raudenbush, solo. is. “Memories of the Master” — choir, soprano and alto duet, baritone solo, Maxine Caffee, Norma Luginbill, Don Rauden- | bush. “All Through the Night” — CM women’s trio, Nancy Lehman, /It I ; '■ 1 Becky Riley, Linda Lehman. /JI *-qLj Mi I * “Forth He Comes” — choir, I YlA**a>MP Wl men’s chorus. V * £<l “The Dawn of Hope” — alto \ HI solo, soprano solo, choir. F I W 45®W 1 “I Know that My Redeemer KI. » I 1 Lives” — soprano solo, bariPkl : ;: "O I tone solo, alto duet, choir. r I “Bells of Eastertide”—women’s L» IW* *1 ftwll f chorus, men’s chorus, choir. ply-pi- •■■L... I* *■ I “Master, Thou Art Merciful”— fl, $? Il x, bass solo, Dale Caffee. |stil <■ “Crown Him Lord of AU” — M\ ) choir. Epilogue — baritone solo, I - : lrw' I#,:-: - -s- B women’s chorus, choir. 'l'A H uWIVt ■ Racing Triple Crown To Be On Television fl NEW YORK (UPD —The Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) will televise Thorough--9020 W \ M bred rating’s triple crown this season. The crown consists of SIZES the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes - LOUNGE IN LUXURY in a notice duster designed as beautifully as fo^winK IS uamJd per "on S ha ‘have a dress—note band neckline, rag- nied an appeal with the Board lan sleeve, softly flaring lines. Zoning Appeals of the City „ , of Decatur, Indiana, asking a too. variance from the Zoning OrdiPrinted Pattern 9020: Half Sizes nance of the City of Decatur, 14%, 16%, 18%, 20% 22%, 24%. Winteregg, Jr, Size 16% requires 3% yards 39- and Richard F. IJnn, deflinch fabric ciency in side yard lot line FTFTV CFVTS s„ r for construction of an addi ; rIrTY CENTS in coms for this tlon to Funeral Home, at 225 pattern — add 15 cents for each West Adams Street, Decatur, pattern for first-class mailing R. Hitchcock, Bio and special handling. Send to Line St.. Decatur. Indiana, to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily place a house trailer in back Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 W. ya £ d r the purp ose of hearing oh18th St., New York 11, N. Y. jections to or information perPrint plainly Name, Address with taining to granting of said - r.- j r.. , ■ variance, said Board will hold a Zone, Size and Style Number. public hearing on the 6th day Os YOUR FREE PATTERN IS April, 1964, at the hour of 7:30 READYchoosp it from dp- P.M, in the Council Room of the ntnur-cnoose n irom zoo tie- . •„ „ f the cjty of Decatur, sign ideas in new SPRING-SUM- in'uana ln tn y MER Pattern Catalog, just out! . w. lowell harper, Dresses, sportswear, coats, more! 1 , Send 50c now. ■ ' — ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE Real Estate and Household Goods The undersigned, Administratrix W. W. A. of the Estate of Olive E. Hoblet, deceased, will offer for sale the following described Real Estate and household goods, located on the corner of Riley and Sprague Streets in Willshire, Ohio, on Saturday, April 11,1964 Starting at 12:30 o’clock p.m. Real Estate— Being the north 1/% °f inlot number 19 in Village of Willshire, Willshire township. Van Wert County, State of Ohio. Located thereon is an 8 room 1 floor plan house on cement block foundations, stucco siding. Basement 12 x 24 with fuel oil furnace, running water and stool. Appraised for $4500.00. Terms—2o% down on the day of the sale, the balance in 30 days upon delivery of deed. Real Estate will sell at 2:00 o'clock p. m. Household Goods — Zenith TV set; 3 piece bedroom suite with matching box spring and innerspring mattress; two 2piece living room suites; f?hilco refrigerator; Philgas bottle gas range; 5-piece chrome breakfast set; Duo Therm fuel oil stove; kneehole writing desk and chair; tilt back chair; barrell back chair; 3-piece bedroom suite; 12x12 Axminster rug; Metal clothes closet; dropleaf extension table; combination bookcase and writing desk; dresser, vanity stool; 6 dining room chairs; tier stand; Florence drop head sewing machine; occasional chair; 2 rocking chairs; fable top cabinet; day bed; wall mirror, sewing cabinet; floor and table lights; some bedding; water pump; dishes; cooking utensils and other articles. Antiques— Stand; pitcher and bowl set; marble top wash stand; coal oil light; old trunk; several good pieces of antique dishes. TERMS—CASH Not responsible for accidents. ETHEL BEBOUT, Administratrix of the Estate of OLIVE E. HOBLET, deceasedCisco, Robbins and Bagley, Auctioneers Koch & Koch, Attorneys Schroyers, Clerks
by making masks and game/ in which everyone participated. The following boys were given awards for their achievements: Jay Arnold, wolf badge and gold arrow; Mark Arnold, silver arrow; John Babcock, lion badge; Scott Babcock, denner; Gary Burkhart, gold and silver arrow and denner; Ronald Ballard, denner; Jim Cowens, wolf badge and gold arrow; Michael Kolter, wolf badge, 1 gold and 2 silver arrows; Jimmy Lee, denner; Mark Lybarger, lion badge and gold arrow; Gary Mast, denner; Randy Roahrig, lion badge, gold and silver arrow, and 3-yr. pin; David Seitz, denner; Michael Stonestreet, lion badge and 3-yr. pin; Brad Tinkham, denner: Jack Trinoski, lion badge, gold arrow and 2-yr. pin; Keith Ward, gold and silver arrow; Gregg Everett, bobcat. The following den mothers were given certificates for attending
MOOSE 1311 SQUARE BAHCE FRIDAY, MARCH 27th NEW ORCHESTRA, EVERY SATURDAY NKaHT SUDDUTH’S MARKET 512 S. 13th St. , Phone 3-2706 PICNICS lb. 29c LARGE WHITE EGGS doz. 35c ECKRICH SMOKEES FRESH CASING SAUSAGE 1 18. pkg. 59c Ib. 49c “Thank You ’ PIE FILLING, Cherry and Apple 29c Lemon, 4 for $1 Blueberry, 3 for $1 HOME MADE SAUSAGE & GROUND BEEF, Ib. 29c HEAD MEAT & SOUSE, WIENERS, BACON Ib. 39c BOILED HAM Ib. 79c MINUTE STEAK, PORK PATTIESIb. 49c T-BONE STEAK, JOWL BACON, fl ROUND STEAK, 6<>C PORK LIVER Ib. SIRLOIN STEAK, Ib. Home Dairy Onion Chip Dip 2ic CORN, PEAS, GREEN BEANS, SWEET POTATOES, HOMINY, SPINACH; BEANS- RED, PORK, NAVY, CHILI, IOC GREAT NORTHERN, BUTTERcan PARROT SMOKED SAUSAGE and BOLOGNA Ib. 49c Wiegmann Will Sell at AUCTION HOUSE, 2-1/5 Acres Personal Property Located 6 miles West of Decatur, on U. S. 224 to Magley, Watch for Signs, on March 28,1964 - at 10:30 Real Estate sells at 2:00 P. M. Frame house with good roof, 4 rooms and bath down, 2 rooms up, 90 bbl. cistern, 4 in. drove well, well drained, 2 septic tanks, natural gas, 2 1/5 acre lot with 200 ft. frontage, 20 ft. x 15 ft. garage with cement floor and 8 x 10 lean-to tool shed. HOUSEHOLD GOODS 1962 Gibson 30" Electric Range fully automatic with visualite oven; 1962 Gibson Refrigerator double door with freezer across the top; 1962 Kenmore Wringer type Washer with pump; 5 pc. Maple Early American Bedroom Suite with 7 ft. bed and matching box springs and mattress; youth bed—the above furniture is all like new, Magnavox Radio-Phono comb.; Good 9'xl2' Rug and pad; 3 Baby Beds; 17 in. Table Model TV and stand; 2 pc. living room suite, brown davenport and chair; record cabinet; Bond player piano & bench; White Sewing Machine; Brass double bed; vanity; dressers; corner table; round table; coffee table; Green leather chair; rocking chairs; lounge chair; floor lamps; table lamps; dresser lamps; new medicine cabinet; 2 burner hot plate; Hotpoint Electric Baby buggy. Baby bottle sterilizer; Baby stroller; child's rocker; child's tractor; child's desk; doll cradle; Tropic-Air hair dryer; 120 bass Accordion; Electric sandwich grill; floor vase; Venetian blinds; dress form; magazine rack & stand; table cloths & dresser scarfs; dishes, goblets, pots & pans; Kitchen Kraft Aluminumware; 2 copper boilers. ANTIQUES 4 Ice Cream chairs; coffee table with claw legs; telescope & Cards; gone with the wind lamp bases; Walnut bed size; •%, size brass bed; 2 dinner bells; Iron kettle; Telephone; hand painted fruit dishes; compote; some reproduction milk glass vases; oil lamps & lanterns; SPACE HEATERS, LAWN MOWERS, MISC. Gas Space heater, 40,000 btu; Kenmore Space heater, 39,000 btu; Kenmore Oil burner; Globe wood & coal heating stove; 21" Lawnmaster Rotary mower; Imperial Lawn mower with Briggs & Stratton Motor; Aluminum storm windows 35x62; other windows & doors; some used lumber; new copper pipe from to 3 in.; fO ft. 1/2 in. plastic pipe; some spouting; 2 pieces plate glass; 2 fuse boxes; electric outside & inside wire,- tub & lavatory; 12 gauge shot gun; shot gun, 75 tb. lead. TERMS: CASH on Personal Property. REAL ESTATE: $1,000.00 day of sale, balance on final settlement. Possession on final settlement. Taxes: 1963 taxes due and payable in 1964 will be paid by the seller. Open House March 22—1 P. M. to 5 P. M. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Worthman Mrs. Ernest Worthman, owners Not responsible for accidents Lunch served. Auctioneers: Walter Wiegmann, Decatur, Ind., Phone Preble 7?4511. Orville Sturm, New Haven, IrtiH. Phone 749-1491. Clerk & Cashier—Bultemeier & Roemer.
THURSDAY, MARCH 2«, 1984
a training program for den mothers: Mrs. Karl Kolter, Mrs. Jim Cowens, Mrs. Leo Feasel, Mrs. Norman Steury, Mrs. Frank Lybarger. / There will be a round table held at Bluffton, April 1, at the Methodist church for Scout leaders. Any interested persons were urged to attend. There will be a kite flying contest, April 4, 9:30 a.m., at the Southeast school. In case of bad weather it will be held the following Saturday. Kites are to b£ homemade, not bought. Prizes will be given for the homemade kites. Other kites are permitted, but they will not be eligible for prizes. The attendance prize was won by den 2 . Lybarger announced that there would be no pack meeting in April. Games were then played, which had made by the different dens.
