Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 74, Decatur, Adams County, 27 March 1964 — Page 3
FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1964
SOCIETY
KIRKLAND W. C. T. U. IN RECENT MEETING The Kirkland W. C. T. U. met recently at the home of Mrs. Esta Ginter. The meeting opened with the group sing ip g, “At the Cross,” ■’'fhe Way of the Cross Leads Home," and “T h e Old Rugged Cross.” Mrs. Frank Arnold gave the devotions, reading the 20th chapter of John, and leading in prayer. Each member answered roll call Easy-Sew Trio O Printed Pattern / / f |r : i' I Z/V /M - C \\ * li 1 XSX 1 I Ml J \\ rI X Jf 9045WBMHa( 12%-22% Inj Fashion loves the blouse-and-skirt look — so' fresh for spring! Sew this pretty bouquet in linen, pique, cotton. Printed Pattern 9045: Half Sizes 12%, 1414, 1614. 1814, 20%, 22%. Size I£% top style 2% yards 35inch; middle 1% yards; lower 1% yards 39-inch. 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 W. 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. YOUR 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.
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by reading a Bible verse. Plans were made for the spring county institute to be April 14 at the Antioch Missionary church. The state institute director, Mary Bly, will be the speaker. Die meeting was closed by the group singing, “Blest Be the Tie.” Mrs. John Gage dismissed with prayer, Refreshments were served by the hostess. FAMILY DINNER ON 25TH ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sommer, route 2, entertained with a family dinner at the Preble Gardens March 25 in honor of their 25th wedding anniversary. The white covered table was centered with a floral arrangement of pink carnations and white mums, flanked on either end with crystal candelabras and pink candles. The couple are the parents of five children, Barbara (Mrs. James M. Cleveland) who resides at Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina; John with the Army at Fort Knox, Ky.; Paul, recently released from the Navy, after serving two years on the USS Lake Champlain at Quonset Point, Rhode Island; and Roger and Becky, at home. They also have two grandchildren, Mary Dawn and Roger Neal Cleveland of South Carolina. Mr. and Mrs. Sommer were married at the Methodist parsonage in Decatur by Rev. Robert Yonker, who was minister at the Beulah Chapel.,church at that time. Mrs. Sommer was the former Ruth Mcßarnes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wade Mcßarnes of 340 N. 10th street. Other guests attending the dinner were their attendants and their families; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hildebrand, Steven, Carolyn, and Tom, route 2, and Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Sommer, Janice and Mike, route 2, Berne. — ( Study Probe Os Petitions For Gov. Wallace INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The Indiana State Boayd of Elections met today to decide how far it should go in an investigation of presidential primary petitions filed on behalf of segregationist Gov. George Wallace of Alabama and former Minnesota Gov. Harold Stassen. Die board met in the Stalehouse office of Governor Welsh, its chairman who is also a “favorite son” stand-in candidate for President Johnson in the Indiana Democratic pri-
MONROE W. C. T. U. MEETS RECENTLY The Monroe W. C. T. U. met at the home of Mrs. John Gage. The meeting opened with the group singing, “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross.” Devotions taken from the “Upper Room” were given by Mrs. Mary Jane Fosnaugh. Business was conducted by the president, Mrs. Jack Mcßride. The spring institute will be held April 14 at the Antioch church. This will be an all day meeting with a sack lunch at noon time. “Inspiring Institute Meetings,” was given by Mrs. Mcßride. A skit, “Come Let Us Reason Together,” will be given by the Monroe ladies at the institute meeting. A leaflet entitled “Total Abstinence,” was given by Mrs. Robert Gage. An item from the message by former governor Handley of Indiana was given by Mrs. Otto Longenberger. “Blest be the De,” was sung by the group after which Mrs. Lawrence Michel dismissed with prayer. Tanker Is Enroute To Port Under Tow NORFOLK, Va. (UPD—The'* stern half of the explosion-split tanker San Jacinto headed toward port under tow today with her captain and 34 crewmen sticking with the “mass of twisted steel.” The tug pulling the broken tanker was making only about three knots in the rolling seas and was not expected to arrive mary. Welsh originally entered the primary to prevent Wallace from grabbing by default the 51 first ballot Indiana votes at the Democratic national convention. Under Indiana law, delegates must vote on the first ballot for the winner of their party’s presidential preference primary. Wallace’s petition, bearing some 600 signatures, was filed Thursday by R. W. Lawley Jr., assistant news secretary to the Alabama governor. Welsh filed earlier in the week. Jack L. New, Welsh’s executive secretary, confirmed Thursday night that the Wallace petition was under investigation. He said there would be an investigation of “reported irregularities” in the Wallace petition and those of other candidates in’ the two presidential primaries? Others who filed were Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., and Indianapolis Negro attorney Frank Beckwith among the Republicans and Democrats Hugh Latham, Rockville, Lar Daly, Chicago, and Faye Carpenter Swain, Greenhill, Ohio. New said an examination of , the Wallace petition showed signatures of residents of Kentucky and Illinois, batches of from two to four names written by the same person and the signatures of such persons as “Willie the Polack” and “Sam Sandwich.” The Stassen probe stemmed from reports that the candidate offered to pay the DePauw University Young Republican Club SSOO to obtain the necessary 500 signatures for his petition. It also was reported that Latham, a Democrat, had signed Stassen’s petition. New noted that in 1948, Dixiecrat presidential Candida te Strom Thurmond was removed from the Indiana ballot when it developed that most of the signatures on the petition to put his name on the ballot came from registered Republicans. Interrupted Painting When painting around your home in the evenings and on weekends, you can avoid the arduous job of cleaning your brush each time by wrapping it in paper and storing it in a tin of linseed oil.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
■Kb w FIVE GENERATIONS of Hawkins family are shown here, an unusual family occurance. Little Lori Rose Hawkins, month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Hawkins, of Berne, is pictured above, lower left, on her great-great grandfather’s knee. Behind her is her father, who is beside his father, Ralph E. Hawkins, of Decatur. In front of Mr. Hawkins is his mother, Mrs. Flossie Hawkins, of Decatur, the daughter of ™r. James A. Smith, left, of Kirklin, Ind., Clinton Co. Little Lori Rose was a month old Wednesday.
here until Saturday morning. “The men seemed pretty impassive, just waiting,” said : Navy Lt. (j.g.) Tom F. Baker, who flew a helicopter over the ship Thursday. “Our executive officer lowered a note offering to take them off but they wanted to remain aboard.” The 554-foot tanker, en route from Portland, Maine, to Houston, Tex., was blown apart early Thursday morning by an explosion about 40 miles off the Virginia Capes. Chief Steward Martin Dotilia, one of two men who left the San Jacinto in a lifeboat to transport the ship’s papers to safety, apparently
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died of a heart attack after being picked up by a nearby merchant vessel. The 11,527-ton tanker had no cargo and the explosion happened while the crew was engaged in routine cleaning of the tanks prior to entering a shipyard. “We have no idea if this (tank cleaning) contributed to the explosion and will not know until we have had a chance to talk to the master and some of the crewmen,” said William Lyon, traffic supervisor in the marine department of the Trinidad Corp., in New York, owners of the vessel.
Club Schedule Telephone 3-2121 Mrs. Connie Mitchel Society Editor Calendar items for each day’s publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:39) FRIDAY Decatur Missionary Church Friendship Circle, Mrs. Edward Summer, 7:30 p.m. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, Good Friday, closed from 1-4; 6-9, Cloe Parrish and Kay Burke. SATURDAY Cooties and auxiliary installation of officers, V. F. W. Post, 7 p.m. Story Hour, public library, 1:302:30 p.m., ages 5-7. Pxi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Sandra Liby and Barbara Osterman. American Cancer Society, open film showing, 1:30 p.m. I and M building. Eastern Star, Masonic hall, installation of officers. 7:30 p.m. MONDAY Gray Ladies, I and M bldg., 7:30 p.m. Pleasant Mills Community Organization, P.M.H.S., gym 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY Kirkland Ladies home demonstration club, Mrs. Milton Huffman, 7:30 p.m. Root Twp. home demonstration club, Mrs. Paul Strickler, 1 p.m. Sunny Circle home demonstration club, Preble recreation center, 7:30 p.m. Eagles auxiliary, Eagles hall, 8 p.m. Jolly Housewives home demonstration club, Pleasant Mills school, 7:30 p.m. St. Ambrose study club, Mrs. Oscar Miller, 7:30 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma, Mrs. Louis Smitley, 8 p.m. Union Chapel Hope circle, W. S. W. S., Mrs. Robert Workinger, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY Shakespeare club, Mrs. Jack Knudsen, 2 p.m. Historical club, Zion United Church of Christ, 12:30 p.m. Woman's Guild, Zion United Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m. THURSDAY Union Chapel Charity Circle, church, 7:30 p.m. , Women of the Moose, Moose home, 8 p.m. Gals and Pals square dance, Community Center, 8 p.m., beginners class, 7 p.m. Births At the Adams county memorial hospital: Leroy and Ruth Gephart Walters, route 5, are the parents of a 6 lb., Bt4 oz., baby girl born at 1:23 p.m., Thursday.
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Nussbaum Promoted To Plant Auditor The promotion of Phillip J. Nussbaum to the position of plant auditor for McMillen Feed Mills, Inc., of Florida, Jacksonville, Fla., has been announced by the parent company, Central Soya. He succeeds Thomas S. Brockbank, who has been named manager. Nussbaum joined Central Soya in 1956 as plant accountant at De-
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catur. In 1959 he was transferred to the Fort Wayne headquarters and prior to his promotion held the position of assistant to the manager of pricing in the McMillen Feed Division. He is a graduate of International Business College, Fort Wayne, where he received a B.S.C. degree in accounting. If you nave something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want •ds — they get BIG results
