Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 192, Decatur, Adams County, 14 August 1964 — Page 3
FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1964
GROUP MEETS AT PLEASANT MILLS SCHOOL The Gals and Pals home demonstration club met Monday evening at the Pleasant Mills school. The president, Mrs. Lowell Noll, led the members in repeating the club creed and gave the devotions, “History Repeats.” The secretary’s report was given by Mrs. Bill Workinger. Roll call was answered by “Your favorite magazine.” During the business session, plans were made to go to the Dutch Mill next month for a supper. The nominating committee was chosen for the - election of next year’s officers. The committee consists of Mrs. Tom Noll, Mrs. Gene Hindenlang and airs, Emmitt Hawkins. Rita King gave a demonstration on “cheese diamonds.” Patsy Leaders gave the lesson on “Looking Your Best—Fashion for All." The citizenship lesson was given by Mrs. Jack Bebout on the “history of Indiana.” Mrs. John Johnson received the hostess gift. Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Tom Noll and Mrs. Bill Workinger. BIRTHDAY DINNER HELD RECENTLY A birthday dinner was held at the Cecil Harvey woods in honor of Harold Harvey and Cleo Landis. A basket dinner was enjoyed by the following: Mr. and Mrs. Dean Arven of Logansport; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Carpenter and Judy, Bluffton; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Raudenbush and Gloria Harvey; Mr. and Mrs. Don Harvey, Elaine, Patty, Jack, Carolyn, Jimmie, Jerry, and Gregg; Casually Yours! Printed Pattern - I K .<? I 1 J / i \\ K « I ■ :+*; > ■ wfi < i ‘ r.s* •• I®* I hl 1 I Il| ® I 9421 jMI sizes IMMBI 12-20 inj "TnktffM Career and college girls’ favorite — the casual with a plain top and outswinging skirt. Deep pleats, button trim point up crisp shaping. Printed Pattern 9421; Misses’ Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 requires 3 yards 39inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this yard 39-inch fabric. patterns — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West ISlh St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. • FREE PATTERN FTRE<~T TO YOUR DOOR—choose it Lom 300 design ideas in new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog! School, casual, career, dressy styles — all sizes! Send 50c.
■ TODAYS PRESCRIPTION . . AT TODAY’S PRICES Delivers to you what a millionaire 25 years ago couldn't buy at any price. No cure for these in 1935. Diphtheria Scariet Fever Mastoiditis ' Pneumonia Children Dying from Whooping Cough 1939 7,000 1958 310 Have your prescription filled at KOHNE DRUGSTORE
SOCIETY
Leonard Schug; Harold Burger:* Ruth Suman; Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Landis; Cecil Harvey, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harvey. Unable to attend were Mr. and Mrs. Gary Harvey, Angela, Michael and Brian. The afternoon was spent playing’ ball and visiting. MRS. GALLOGLY IS HOSTESS The Decatur Missionary church Friendship circle met recently at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Gallogly. Devotions were given by Mrs. Norris Blocker and prayer was given by Mrs. Peggy Bellela. Mrs. Pat Caudle led roll call and each member answered by giving her husband’s middle name. Mrs. Robert Reynolds read a poem about Mrs. Gerig, the pastor’s wife. Following the poem, Mrs. Gerig was presented with a lovely going away gift by Mrs. Myers, representing the circle. The work committee asked all members to bring to the meeting alll discarded clothes to be given to needy families. There were 12 members and four guests, Mrs. Carolyn Millington, Mrs. Zearl McClure, Jr., Mrs. Peggy Bellela and Miss Dawn Gerig, present. They were served by Mrs. Pat Caudle and Mrs. May Myers following prayer given by Lawrence Gallogly. The next meeting will be August 28 at the parsonage. It will be “paint night.” , The Decatur home demonstration club will meet at the C. L. of C. hall at 1:30 p.m. Thursday The hostesses will be the Mesdames Robert Keiss, William Kohls, Orval Baughman and Daise Rhoades. ' .' r 1 : Mabel Striker On Platform Committee WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep. Ray Madden, D-Ind., and Mns. Mabel Striker, Indianapolis, Indiana Democratic vice' chairman, will "represent the state on the resolutions and platform committee at *he Democratic national convention. Rep. Carl Albert, D-Okla., House majority leader and chairman of the committe'e, announced the appointments of committee membefs Thursday. % i ■ < '■’aw’‘MßLW If ■'" -Mfr : > SUSAN ELIZABETH LOSHE ia the name of the seven bound, nine ounce daughter of Donald and Bernadette Lootens Loshe, 1015 Russell . street, born at the Adams county memorial hospital at 1:28 p. m., August 9, 1964. — (Photo by Cole) ■Pw*-* CHRISTINA SUE LEHRMAN is the name of the seven pound, five and one-half ounce daughter of Glen and Betty Anderson Lehrman, route 5, bom at the Adams county memorial hospital at 5:15 p. m., August 9, 1964. — (Photo by Cole). »
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FAREWELL SUPPER HELD SATURDAY The Kum-Join-Us class of the Monroe Methodist church held a farewell pot luck supper on the church lawn Saturday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Souder and family and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Baxter and family. Both families are leaving the Monroe community and church. Mr. and Mrs. Souder are moving to Warren, where they will be associated with the Warren Methodist Home; Mr. and Mrs. Baxter are moving to Portland. Souder has been teacher and assistant teacher for the class during the past years. Gifts from the class were presented to each honor family. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Roger Moser and family, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rich and family, Mr. and Mrs. Herb Fruchte and family, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Steiner aand family, Mr. and Mrs. James Nussr baum and family, Mr. and Mrs. Darold Borne and family, Mr. and Mr*. John Bruriso and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Isch and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nussbaum and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Enos Schrock and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Everett and family, Homer Winteregg, present teacher of the class, Rev. and Mrs. Charles Elam and family, and the honored families. Closes Down Restaurant In Losing Fight ATLANTA (UPI) — Segregationist Lester Maddox, who lost the first court test of the new civil rights law, Thursday shut down a restaurant he spent about one third of his life building up rather than open its doors to Negro customers. “I’ve been a long time getting what I’ve got, but it took only a short time to lose it,” Maddox said in a tearful farewell speech to a crowd in front of the Pickrick restaurant. Under federal court order to desegregate the Pickripk, which Maddox said bo, and . his wife started with $4 and built into a $450,000 business by working 17 years - without a vacation, the fiery restaurateur closed “for good” when two Negro students sought service. Calls Negroes Communists "You no good dirty devil. You’ve just put 66 persons out of a job. You dirty Communists/’ Maddox -yelled at the Negroes. Forty-four of the Pickrick employes are Negroes. "The President and the government and the Communists closed the Pickrick, not me,” Maddox said. “They’ve ruined everything we’ve worked for all our lives,” Maddox’s wife cried, throwing her arms around her husband. The Negroes, Gary Thomas Robinson, 18, and Calvin Jones, 20, walked away and got back in’o their car. A crowd of whites surged forward and began beating on the top of the vehicle with their hands. Police moved in and cleared a path for the car to leave. Ordered To Appear Maddox has been ordered to appear in federal court Thursday to show cause why he should not be held in civil contempt for allegedly violating the desegregation order. Five Negroes were turned away from the Pickrick, which specialized in fried chicken, Tuesday by Maddox and his employes. A crowd of about 500 whites, many carrying pick ax handles, which Maddox sells for $2 each as “Pickrick drumsticks,” milled around, Maddox’s attorneys filed a response to the show cause order Thursday, asking for its dismissal on the* ground the restaurateur had not violated the desegregation order. Maddox contended he did not keep the five Negroes out of the Pickrick, but they left on their own accord when they learned Maddox would close if they entered and throw 44 Negroes out of work. The contempt hearing may have been made moot by the closure of the Pickrick since civil contempt proceedings generally are aimed at gaining compliance with a court order rather than at meting out pun-, ishment for failure, to comply.
THE DBCATUH DAILT DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Schedule Telephone MUI Judy Hiraehy - ‘ i Calendar Reau far eaeh day’* publication must be phoned ia by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:39) FRIDAY American Legion auxiliary, Legion home, business meeting, 8 p.m. Psi lota Xi trading post, 1-4, Jane Reed and Gwen Doan„ 6-9, Jeanne Knape and C. Brown. Delta Theta Tau sponsored record hop, Youth and Community center, starts at 8 p.m. SATURDAY ' Psi lota Xi trading post, 1-4, Judy Brodbeck and Sandy Liby. D. H. S. class of 1939, open house at Decatur Youth and Community Center, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. SUNDAY Heath reunion, Hanna-Nutttnan park, basket dinner, 12 o’clock noon. MONDAY Adams county home demonstration chorus, Farm Bureau building, 7:30 p.m. VEW auxiliary, post home, social meeting. 8 p.m. TUESDAY Pochontas lodge, Red Men hall, 7:30 p.m. 39’ers carry-in dinner, Youth and Community center, 6:30 p.m. Rose garden club, Mrs. Niland Oschenrider, family picnic, 6 p.m. Decatur Garden club, M & M restaurant, North Webster, 12 o’clock noon, luncheon. Sarah and Lois circle, all day sew-a-pad day session, Decatur EUB church. 9 a. m. Pleasant Mills Methodist WSCS, Mrs. Bill Feasel, 7:30 p.m. St. Paul’s Missionary society, Mrs. William Thornton, 7 p.m. THURSDAY Decatur home demonstration club, C. L. of C. hall, 1:30 p.m. Caliente home demonstration club, 7:30 p.m. Women of the Moose, Moose home, 8 p.m. Locals Miss Nora Rawlinson is spending some time in Grand Haven, Mich., as the guest of her aunt and uncle, Dr. and Mrs. William Creason and family, „ and her grandmother, Mrs. William Rawlinson. Nora wil lalso visit her other grandmother, Mrs. James Kinney, Wagland, Mich. Refueling Plane Crash Kills Seven WASHINGTON (UPD —.The Air Force today identified the seven American airmen killed Thursday when a U. S; refueling plane crashed into the side of a mountain 170 miles northeast of Tokyo. Four passengers aboard the plane parachuted to safety. Disaster workers recovered the bodies of the victims today. The victims were: Maj. Glen M. Haynes, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Haynes Knoxville, Tenn. Capt. Gerald D. Granger, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Granger, Shrewsbury, Mass. Capt. Russell F. Lund, son of Morris M. Lund, Karlstad, Minn. Staff Sgt. Jack L. Callahan, son of Mrs. Alma Callahan, Buffalo, S.C. First. Lt. Elgie C. Rath Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Elgie C. • Rath Sr., Eagle Bay, Bridgeport, N.Y. Staff Sgt. Walter B. Hickman Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Hickman Sr., Hollister, Mo. Staff Sgt. Carey A. Livingston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Livingston, Petty, Tex. The survivors were Capt. George F. Ullmann Jr., Marietta, Okla.; Capt. Richard E. Snyder, Greencastle, Pa.; 2nd Lt. Harold R. Freeman, Checotah, Okla., and M. Sgt. Reuben W. Baer, Fleetwood, Pa. | T jf /-.I KAREN MARIE UCHTLE is the name of the nine pound, four ounce daughter of Kenneth and Nancy Holthouse Lichtle’, Box 16. New Waverly, born at the Adams county memorial hospital at 2:43 p. m., August 7, 1964. — (Photo by Cole.)
Barry Hedges On Criticism Os LBJ Order WASHINGTON (UPD—Republican presidential nominee Barry M. Goldwater said today he has not meant to imply that President Johnson authorized use of nuclear weapons in retaliation against Communist attacks on American warships.« Goldwater said the object of his criticism Wednesday of Johnson's orders to Viet Nam area military leaders was the fuzzy language. The Arizona senator said he was not implying that Johnson was giving authorization for use of nuclear as well as conventional weapons. The White House said flatly • Thursday that Johnson’s orders during the g«of of Tonkin crisis did not authorize use of nuclear weapons. The GOP vice presidential nominee, Rep. William E. Miller, R-N.Y. took the same position as Goldwater concerning the senator’s remarks. They were made at a GOP unity meeting in Hershey, Pa. Goldwater said the orders to Viet Nam commanders apparently contained authorization for use of the “whole inventory” of weapons.. Asked today whether he intended to imply this included okeh for nuclear devices, Goldwater replied. “No, no.” He added that if Johnson and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara wanted to charge him with imprecise statements, “they have go' to be more precise in their "language.” “When you say all weapons to the average reader, that can mean a lot of things,” Goldwater said. This apparently was a reference to news accounts of orders given by the administration to military commanders in the Tonkin Gulf area after the destroyers Maddox and C. Turner Joy were a’tacked by PT boats from North Viet Nam. Miller and Goldwater talked briefly with reporters in a corridor of a Senate office building. Miller said published statements attributed to Johnson indicated he ordered full retaliation for the PT attacks. “If read literally,” they suggested that a commander “if attacked with tactical nuclear weapons could reply in kind,” Miller said. “They say not,” said Miller, referring to administration denials that any such authorization was made or intended. White House Press Secretary George Reedy said Thursday that he had been unable to find any documentary support for the statements made by Goldwater. Goldwater and Miller were questioned by newsmen after posing for campaign portraits. Two Plead Guilty To Store Rpbbery FORE WAYNE, Ind. (UPD — Robert Dofford, 49, and Robert Parnett, 37, of Chicago, and Bernard Wilson, 26, Peoria, 111., will be sentenced Sept. 14 in Allen Circuit Court on their plea of guilty to a liquor store robbery. Salinger Installed To Seat In Senate WASHINGTON (UPD — The Sena‘e, wth only a murmur of dissent, Thursday formally installed former presidential Press Secretary Pierre Salinger as the successor to the late Sen. Clair Engle, D-Calif. Salinger was seated “without prejudice” last week, pending a determination 4 by the Senate Rules Committee on his qualifications. The committee reported a favorable resolution on which the Senate acted. Births Mr. and Mrs. Virgil A. Wolfe became the parents of a 6 lb , 10 oz., baby boy, Michael Steven, August 13 at the Reed memorial hospital, Richmond. At the Adams county memorial hospital: * Fredrick and Patricia Henry Lichtensteiger, route 2, Ohio City, 0., are the parents of a 9 lb., 8 oz., baby girl born at 7:50 p. in., Thursday. ‘ t Anthony and Ruth Ann BanVergara, 1044 Krick street, are the parents of a 7 lb., 1 oz., baby boy born at 8:55 a. m. today. - - - lb- .
1962 Ford Falcon 4-DOOR 7T- V , 6-cylinder engine. Standard transmission. This Week Onlyl ‘9S3 ZlntsmMter NMon
Wrr P/ Si I ■ I “HI” PLANE’S NO SPY PLANE— “U 2’4," perhaps the ultimate in sub-subsonic planes, is assigned to greet the VIP visitors at Paine, Field, Wash., in place of a “follow-me” jeep. The snappy, more-or-less-scale rear engine biplane works itself into a tizzy reaching 35 m.p.h., and has the same flying ability as a penguin—none. At the controls: Air Marshal C. Roy Slemon, deputy commander in chief. North American Air Defense Command. Togged out in a World War I ensign’s uniform to add a little atmosphere: Capt Beniamin Nysteun I ‘ 8 i IM y JMPRmirr-, OttC*4l 1 HI x .SeraaiS ■ A A • ■ JSmfcwF I ' 'amt ' -s '■y, ff „ » NEW RIFLE FOR THE GROUND FORCES?-Although the Army’s M-14 rifle (top) has been used by the troops for only four years, the Army is searching for a newer, n b .iter, ! ! more powerful weapon. High on its list of possible replacements is the AR-15 (bottom) j 1 manufactured by Colt’s Patent Firearms Manufacturing Co. The AR-15, now in very p ' limited use in Viet Nam, fires a high-velocity .223 caliber slug, not much larger than a : ; .22 caliber bullet. The M-14 uses the larger .30 caliber slug. Tests indicate that the : '• , AR-15 is remarkably accurate and lethal. Also under test are the AR-18, Stoner 63 and ’ 1 the Special Purpose Individual Weapon (which shoots darts and rifle grenades).
Distributes Funds To Cities, Towns Distribution of motor vehicle funds by the state to cities and towns includes the following: Decatur, $13,722; Albion, $2,123; Auburn, $10,464; Bluffton, $lO,280; Columbia City, $7,915; Fort Wayne, $266,604; Hartford City, $13,271; Kendallville, $11,148; LaHospital Admitted Miss June Lammers, Decatur. Dismissed Mrs. Orvel Bailey, Vern Uhrick, Miss Linda Hale, Berne; Mrs. Peter G. Schwartz, Geneva; Mrs. Lanny Ross and baby boy, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Dean Lepper, Hoagland; Mrs. Roger Eichenauer, Mrs. Daniel Cowans arid baby girl, Mrs. Ronald Baker and baby girl, Mrs. Robert Williamson and baby ,boy, O. K. Baker, Mrs. Edward Borne, Decatur.
r _ "'sEßW®<M I® miuiQ FULL RESPONSIBILITY •«■ We accept without hesitation full responsibility that every service will be beautiful and dignified in all respects. ! /' - \ ‘ Winteregg - Linn Funeral Home Adams at Third Street PHONE 3-2503 Decatur, Ind. 24-HOUR AMBULANCE-OXYGEN EQUIPPED
Grange, $3,279; Montpelier, $3,220; Portland, $11,534; Warsaw, sll,- - 921; Winchester, $9,462. Distrifiution of alcoholic beverage gallonage tax funds to cities and towns included: Decatur, $2,683; Albion, $426; Auburn, $2,946; Bluffton, $2,010; Columbia City, $1,547; Fort Wayne, $52,130; Hartford City, $2,595; Kendallville $2,179; LaGrange, $641; Montpelier, $629; Portland. $2,255; Warsaw, $2,331; Wichester, 850.
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IV Seasons RESTAURANT at VILLA LANES U. S. 224— West SATURDAYS REGULAR MENU SUNDAYS DINNER 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. SMORGASBORD 4 to 8 p. m. PHONE 3-3660 For Reservations
