Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 172, Decatur, Adams County, 22 July 1930 — Page 5
■I vCa’jW ■I HvAx I — ■/# /{/ A | lyy Jr M1 “ Mary Mbc * * ■Bh<*!'LjJj Miss Margaret Haley HT« Phonaa 1000 —1001 E. •, . ■—— ■ rhPfkered Materials To Predominate | ( In Fall Sports Wear ■ ■ YORK July 22—(UJD—A checkered and spotted career Is y , gw/rtswear thia fall. Its fabrics may be of woven or knit- ■ cte ' 1 '"tioi! and If it does not favor a small lndcflnlte tweed pat- ■ nr solid color treatment, it is very likely to cast in its lot ■a stripe or r ■the checks or the flecks. ■ are much more prevalent in knitwear than in woven cosKchanel having started the vogue rather late last season, but in
catch the taiicy. small, solid, contrasting "is her advice, that has K all sorts of variations in ■V aII ,l shading as well as the Os and .spacing of the • ' Quite often the stitch afd.r.tfii monotone. On i hand, woven fabrics often , f. with small "jH bar patterns. One notes mH-'tlr riding haband suit- In the latter, are often broken. |H...rts of flecM-d types appear tweeds, in addition to D e tbeir inipctatice felt again in knitwear. The char■vtic of them all. the Irreguof effect, is cited as the chief K n for their popularity, as they vetl to be becoming to a number of women than alany other pattering. Flecked prodined by nubs of white k. sometimes 'mown on a ground, are especial fath" tyP l with white nubs far apart, but often K ored by style experts. guests PARTY SATURDAY un i Mrs. ,1. B. AndTson enwith a party at their Su'iirday • veiling honoring ilaiubtiT. Velma ScriveJr . and son Ramon, Mr. and Vv;t: Bai! and daughters I ,hme. and Miss Vera all of In twit, Michigan. «.,< sp-nt in play- - and dancing. Refreshiv i to those pres- . w.i'i Mt. and Mrs. Harry K,.:<a::d latnHy. Mr. and Mrs. Ball. Mr. ind Mrs. Urnst family. Mr. and I. "ier Brian and family, Mr. Mrs. Walt > Fratlhiger, Mr. ■ J'Floyd Arnold and son, M ;t •: Mrs I.osier Eckrote, Mrs. |Mu Si litii km.in. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson. Mabel and Helen li.iz. 1 Mackey. Margaret Mari Kraetzman, Methe Amanda Bielmrick, Cleo WerlI ■ Helen Re d. Mary Hettinger, I " Schlickman, Juanita SulliJfan Houck. Doris Johnson. M> : ' .< berry, tit: , H.-lmrick. Har|B Herd. Marini, McKane, Oscar Ri.il,,!d Arnold. Jesse ■^B n: 'H'i|di Stole irnrner. Harold J JHr ni "Q || aii. v i.'i Baumgartner, Foreman. Ed Busick. Reed. Dorphus and Jesse Bob Beery, Milton ■> lln ger, I,••(. and Harold Mcßride Mr. and Mis. J. p. Anderson family. ■tertain LAWN PARTY Janu s V. H' ndricks and I-tdienstcin of Monroe enterwith a picnic dinner and *" the Hendricks home, Suncomplimentary to a number of from out-of-town. At the ■“hour a picnic dinner was enun th „ |. IWI , us thu Hcnd| , jck3 at Monroe. were laid tor Mr. and Mrs. ' u ' ss ler so „ ixn wan of l^Kdr'\ a>n " : Mr ' and Mrs - Ora of L.ma, Ohio; Mr. ami L ' ,b, ' llste ’n and son I ■ - ; M Lobenstein, Mr. and' ■" W'vard Lobenstein, Mr. and M -"orris, and family, Mr. 1 Mrs. Copeland and son Joe:! ■ „ aati Mrs ' ( ’laud Flick, Mr. and | ( HL Bub nstein, Mrs. Julie! Ks m' aH of Pi( iua, Ohio; Mr.l ' n ° tho L<,bei >stein, L. F Rndri i !n ' Mr - and Mrs - Jamcs V. '■““nete of Monroe. ■■cimomT,.' rys Towns nip Homo of m C Ul ’ WiU I,leet at the HhiiK,o„ M , rs ' 110,1 Teei’ie. Frida,- ■ leill, W‘ at one o'clock. ■ERNE COUPLE ■ '‘lr EB l n7 ES ANN| VERSARY ■cone n MIS ' Peter Liechty, liv- ■ e mile north of Berne, celeKivori t's tWont - v - ,lfth * Pdd ing •echtvT Sunday ' Mr - a "'i Mrs. ■tetlv tw e ?. married July 20 - 1905 - K } . • - en.y-five years ago Sun ■vnl'i,', hour a dinner ■«chtv , 10111 f ° rty quests at the B Xam :■ .‘ n lfte aftol ' ,l< ‘” 11 B rv ftl ana and watern >elon was ■<>i<i , a B hort program was B e conn? 1 lauser ’ who married B’Pres nt T y ' fiVe yea,S “8° g a “i delivered a short ■*“tieth ‘ J ” J day was also the ■ wedding anniversary for
CLUB CALENDAR Tuesday Rebekah lodge, Odd Fellows Hall 7:30 p.m. Tri Kappa sorority, Miss Harriet Wallace, 8 p. nt. Thursday Baptist Women's Missionary Society, Mrs. L. H. Lake, 2:30 p. m. Root Twp. Home Economics Club picnic, Legion Memorial Park. Friday St. Marys Township Home Ecoi nomics Club, Mrs. Ben Teeple, 1 p. tn. Mr. and Mrs. Hojner Stout of Bluffton, who were also present at the celebration. LOCAL PEOPLE ATTEND REUNION The seventh annual Von Gunten reunion was held in Lehman's i Park, all day Sunday. More than two hundred people attended the reunion, including sixty-tive families. At the noon hour a basket dinner was featured and in the afternoon ice. cream and lemonade was served. A short program consisting of instrumental and vocal music was enjoyed while Franklin Von Gunten of Fort Wayne gave a talk on “Opportunity.” During the business session, Mrs. Levi Egley of this city was elected president, Osia Von Gunten of near Berne, vice-president, and Franklin Von Gunten of Fort Wayne, secre-tary-treasurer. HONORS SON ON FIRST BIRTHDAY Mr. and Mts. L. B. Smith of Berne will entertain with a birthday party at their home tonight honoring their son John Leslie who celebrates his first birthday anniversary today. Guests from this city will include Mr/ Clara Anderson and S. W. Hale, grandmother and great grandfather of the honored guest respectively, and Mrs. Mollie Rutter of Detroit, Michigan and nephew Harry Jordan, Jr., of Toledo, Ohio, house guests of Mrs. Anderson. The Baptist Women’s Missionary Society will meet at the home of Mrs. L. H. Lake on North Third street, Thursday afternoon at two thirty o'clock. INVITATIONS ISSUED FOR LADIES GOLF EVENT The lady golfers of the Decatur Country Club have issued invitations to the ladies of the Orchard Ridge Country Club at Fort Wayne and country clubs at Huntington, Bluffton, Tippecanoe, Portland and Kendallville, and Van Wert, Ohio to attend the opening invitational golf event which will take place at the Decatur Country Club house, Tuesday, August 5. Golf will be the feature of the day's program and the ladies will tee off at 10 o’clock Tuesday morning. A luncheon of pretty appointments will be served from twelve o’clock to two-thirty o’clock. Mrs. Herman Ehinger, chairman of the lady golfers of Decatur, will also act as general chairman in charge of arrangements for the party next month. She will be assisted by a large number of the members of the Club serving on various committees. o — — DEATH CALLS LOCAL WOMAN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ty of Fort Wayne; Mrs. Fred Fogle of this city; Mrs. William Hoffman of this city; Mrs. Joe Cline of Geneva; Mrs. Elmer Hanni of Wapakoneta, Ohio, Mrs. John A. Linton of Muncie; Mrs. Theodore Hirshey of Wapakoneta, Ohio, Miss Florence Peel at home In Jefferson township, William Peel of Detroit, Michigan. and Sterling Peel of Portland. Funeral service will be held Thursday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock (D. S. T.) at the home on North Second street, and at 2 o’clock <D. S. T.) at the Evangelical church of this city. Rev. M. W. Sunderman will of-j filiate and burial will be made in the M. R. E. Cemetery at Berne. Thej members of the W. O. M. L. will attend the services in a body. 0 — Cockfighting Resumed Bilbao, Spain —(UP)— Cockfights, prohibited five years ago by the Die tatorship, recently were resumed at the Salon Terra,
DECATUR DAILY. DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1930.
VETERINARIANS OF 20 NATIONS WILL CONVENE
London Will Be Host To More Than 600 Delegates to Convention London, July 22 —(UP)— More than 600 delegates have enrolled for the International Veterinary Congress which will open here on August 3th. The United States with 76 delegates and Egypt with 72 le<l the other 18 nations certain of repre- ' sentation at the congress. While only 20 nations have announced official delegates to date, jit is expected that the total number |of countries represented when th? congress sits for its opening session will exceed 30. National committees for the promotion of the congress havp been formed in 24 counties. It has been 16 years since the last veterinary congress was held. The last parley was abandoned after the opening session of the jubilee meeting when thif'World War threw nations at each other's throats. The first congress devoted to veterinary problems was called more than 60 years ago by an English vet ! terinarian, Professor John Gamgee. Prior to the session there had been raging in Europe for many years epidemics of rinderpest an dpluiopneumonia. The tyro congress discussed the incidences of these and other plagues and the best methods of combating them. Preventive veterniary medicine has been one of the chief subjects of discussion at the congress held since then. o * REUNION CALENDAR ♦ ♦ (Sunday July 27) Stevens Reunion, Memorial Park at Fort Wayne, Glasgow Avenue. Eighteenth Annual Summers reunion, Mr. and Mrs. Girt Summers, 1 1-4 miles south of Poe. (Sunday, August 3) Twenty-first reunion of Magley families, Lakeside, Park, Fort Wayne. o—£ akKIVALS Rex Eugene is the name of the 10 pound boy baby born to Mr. an.l Mrs. Clarence Roop at their home on North Eleventh street, Friday, July 18. poth mother and babe are getting along tine. Mrs. Roop was formerly Miss Dorothy Hakes. o RECALL VOTE IS CAST TODAY (CONTINUED PAGE ONE) houses during the mayor's absence. With the removal of Emmons recall headquarters were established and the securing of the necessary 90,000 recall petitions went forward. With the needed petitions secured, however, the recall committee found itself in for a hard court fight. Bowles’ faction, under the leadership of John Gillespie, his chief lieutenant, went to court. They lost two battles to block the recall in circuit court and were beaten twice in the supreme court. In the event Bowles is recalled today, he automatically will become a candidate in the special election, which will be the latter part of August. Today’s is Detroit's first mayoralty recall. o Inmate Fires Building Crawfordsville, Ind., July 22. — (U.R) —George Brown, 70-year-old Montgomery county poorhouse inmate for twenty-five years, will appear in Circuit court Friday when it will be determined whether he shall be committed to a hospital for the insane. The aged man admitted setting tire to buildings at the poorhouse, including a poultry house which was destroyed a few weeks ago with a loss of SI,OOO. He also confessed setting fire to a $6,000 barn several months ago and had expressed to other inmates a wish that the dormitory would burn as “there are too many people there” Bert Dunbar, poorhouse superintendent, said he had considered Brown feeble-minded for several years. o Drops Baby Off Balcony Osaka, Japan —(UP) —Excited by the acting of Ganjiro, noted classical actor, in the Naka Theater, a niother sitting in an upper balcony dropped her child on the heads of people below. The actor, unmoved, continued his lines despite a near panic in the theater. o Seek Greek City in Sea Sebastopole, Crimea, USSR. — (UP) An expedition has been organized here to search under water near here for an ancient Greek town believed to have been submerged by the shifting of earth strata. Obpects washed up by the Biack Sea at tills point seem to support the theory which led to the organization of such an expedition. O— : Get the Haert —f r»oe at Home.
t f|Town Talk
The Misses Pat Holthouse and Mildred Akey, and the Messrs. Lyle Mallonee and Bob Acker motored to Fort Wayne Sunday evening. The Misses Marie Zeser and Nola Ranter of this city, Gerald Crum of Uniondale and Walter Meyers of Fort Wayne spent Sunday at Gordon State Park, St. Marys, Ohio. „ Miss Betty Frisinger spent the weekend visiting with Miss Gwendolyn Stucky at Berne. Miss Josephine Archbold of this city has as her guest for the week, Miss Hillis Harris of Fort Wayne. The rain Monday evening brought smiles out and made every one take hope that the crops may yet be saved. Grant Owens of Washington township was in early today to do some shopping. J. G. Niblick at the Old Adams County bank has several good farms for sale at bargains and will arrange to finance them easily for buyers. If you want to own an Adams county farm and buy it so you can sure make a good profit, see him this week. W. A. Klepper attended to business in Fort Wayne. Phi) Macklin made a business trip to Chattanooga, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Deitsch and son Robert attended the Deitsch reunion which was held at the fairgrounds in Celina, Ohio, Sunday. They also visited with other relatives in Celina. Mr. and Mrs. Omer J. Niblick and daughter Dolores and Mrs. Marie Kelliher of Cherokee, lowa, lett for their home yesterday after visiting since last Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Niblick. They were accompanied home by Miss Mildred Niblick who will spend several weeks visiting in lowa. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Bechdolt and children Mary Louise and Roger of Detroit, Michigan arrived in this city today to be the guests of Mr and Mrs. Walter Deitsch and son Robert for several days. zW. S. Smith, former cashier of the Monroe State Bank has been assisting at the First National Bank in this city on Saturdays and Mondays. Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Deitsch and Ralph Deitsch of Celina, Ohio, visited today with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Deitsch and son Robert. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Harkless, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hollman and the Misses Naomi Harkless and Madonna Clements spent the week-end visiting at Lake James. “I never noticed the weather ter I wue busy the blessed day makin' watermelon preserves an’ acknowledgin’ candlesticks,” said Mrs. Em Moots' niece, who wuz married last month. The 156-year-ole Turk who’s in this country to git a set o’ teeth, is very enthusiastic about America, but wait till he pays fer his teeth. —Abe Martin, Indianapolis News Miss Dorothy Spuller, who has been attending the summer term ot Ball State Teacher’s college at Muncie has returned to this city where she will spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Spuller. Mrs. Mollie Rutter of Detroit, Michigan and her nephew Harry Jordon, Jr., of Toledo, Ohio arrived in this city last evening where they will be the guests of Mrs. Clara Anderson for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. William Hendrick.’ and daughter Grace of Mott. North Dakota, who have been visiting with relatives and friends in southern Indiana since the first of July, visited in this city last evening. Miss Grace Hendricks remained to spend the week with Miss Erma Gage of near this city. Arthur Voglewede of Georgetown university. Washington, D. C. is here spending a few days with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Vogleede. Mr. Voglewede is studying laV The window frames in the Decatur Catholic school building are being repainted and the windows repaired. Other minor repairs are being made at the building, prepara tory to the opening of school next September. Dr. Harry Jones of Berne was greeting friends here this morning. One of the popular places these days is the Cline gravel pit northwest of town where hundreds are enjoying bathing in the clear, spring water. Miss Cleora Baker of Fort Wayne spent the week-end in this city visiting with Miss Mary Grace Zimmerman is spending a few days visiting at Lake George and with Mr. and Mrs. Max Fielitz of Fort Wayne. Simon Schwartz of the Berne Review was looking after business in this city today. Miss Myrtle Akey of Muncie, arrived in' this city last evening to spend a few days with her mother Mrs. Dora Akey and sister. Miss Mildred Akey. Miss Myrtle Akey is recovering from an eye operation which she underwent recently. Miss Dixie Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lew Miller of this city left Sunday evening with her aunt and uncle for Omaha, Nebraska where she will visit for sometime. Miss Dora Shosenbetg. who is the house guest of Miss Kathryn Moon of Akron, Ohio has recently been honored with a number of parties in Akron. She will leave Thursday for Cleveland, Ohio where she will
be the guest of Mr. and ivfts. Ernest Shosenberg. Mrs. E. G. Hessert and daughters Florence and Bertha from Fort Wayne were here visiting Mrs. Hessert's mother, Mrs. Herman Yake of near Magley over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Eady and daughter Etola Jane have returned home from Adams Lake where they enjoyed a several day’s outing. C. D. Macy made a business trip to South Bend yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Butler and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Eady and daughter Etola Jane attended the Kroger picnic at the Gordon State Park at St. Mary’s Ohio, Sunday. A. M. Fisher ha« returned from two weeks in Kansas where he superintended the harvesting of the wheat crop on his farms. He says the yield will be about 3,000 bushels and that he is satisfied with everything but the price. . p OGDEN CONFERS ON GAS TAXES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tax division in the auditor's office: the gasoline inspection department of the state health board, and the secretary ot state's office. Bruce Cooper, field auditor of the tax collection department, who resigned several days ago shortly after losses in tax collections were disclosed, was at the statehouse today *to aid in the investigation.” He conferred late yesterday with Agden and Archie Bobbitt, state auditor and in both conferences urged that “the situation be gone into thoroughly and the guilty persons brought to justice.” Cooper, a former first .district republican chairman and candidate for congress, told the United Press he was “absolutely innocent" of any dealing in the allegedly fraudulent scheme. He said his duties had kept him in the southern part of the state whereas the disclosures are connected with northern Indiana oil firms. He refused to say why he had resigned other than that "any man has a right to resign whenever he wishes.” Cooper denied he had been sent to northern Indiana to inyesfigate charges of illegal' gasoline shipments and that he had reported there was nothing illegal in transactions. He made one trip to Michigan City, he said, to investigate a shipment to the IHtnes Oil Company, but the matter was stiaightened out satisfactorily. He also said he had had no part in arranging settlements with oil companies found delinquent in taxes. o POULTRY TOUR STARTS TODAY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE, Louden farms near Portland; Kitselman Brothers plant, Muncie, manufacturers ot' poultry fencing; E. C. Hiatt farm, Yorktown; Turkey farm of Amos J. Sourbrine, Lewisville; Bert Souder farm. Spiecland; Morehead farm, Greenfield, and plans and farms at Indianapolis. Several Adams county farmers interested in poultry raising were numbered among those who started the state tour at Portland today. o Probe Plane Mishap Chatham, Kent. England, July 22 —(U.R) —The cause of the airplane crash in which six persons, including three members of the British nobility, were killed near here yesterday remained a mystery today when authorities found no evidences of the explosion which was said to have preceded the crackup. All of the six persons aboard the plane were dead when rescuers reached them, except the pilot, Lt. Col. G. L. T. Henderson, 42, a world war ace, who died within 10 minutes. The others were: Viscountess Ednam; Mrs. Henrick Loeffler, prominent society leader; the Marquess of Dufferin and Ava, 55; Ca.pt. Sir Edward Simons Ward. 48, and Charles D. Shearing, 28, assistant pilot. Natives of the vicinity said they heard an explosion and saw the plane go into a nose-dive immediately, but the gasoline tanks were found intact, and there was no sign of a fire. Governor Will Return Indianapolis, July 22. —'U.R)—Gov.! Harry G. Leslie will arrive in In-! dianapolis late today from h's summer cottage in Dunes State Park, and will be at the office for a short business stssion tomorrow, he informed his office force. Build New Station Osaka, Japan —(UP)—The Government Railways have started con struction of a new station and train' crews quarters at Minato-machi, near Namba. The building, of reinforced concrete and'steel, will cost about Yen 2,400,000 ($1,200,000 and will be ready by the end of 1932.
Escapes From Jail ♦ Peru, Ind., July 22 —(UP) —Warning of an impending jail break reached the Miami county sheriff too late. He arrived at the Jail lu answer to a scribbled note sent by a prisoner, to find that Roy Smith 27, arrested a week ago on charge ot robbery, had sawed his way to freedom. o Mandell Ref uses Comment on ‘Being Drugged’ Story Rockford, 111., July 22—(U.R)Sammy Mandell, former lightweight champion, declined to comment today on an article published | in the Rockford Register-Gazette. which eaid “circumstantial evidence indicates Mandell was drugged before his last fight, in which he lost the battle to Al Singer.” “I probably have some opinions | myself,” Mandell said at his home! here today, “but I do not wish to make a statement. 1 knew nothing) about the story being published an-1 til it appeared in the paper.” The story, written by Richard I Ramey, sports editor of the Rock-! ford paper, said Mandell was “in a) daze, as if from dope” in his dres-
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sing mom after the bout. Ramey wan with Mandell at hla training camp and accompanied him to New York for the fight. Ramey said he believed the "daze” was due to drugs, rather than to the knockout blow which he received from Singer. He said the former champion appeared ill after the bout and that his tongue was badly coated. ■ .Ml Q llieil ISHII Transport Founders Lisbon —(UP) The Danish transport “Dana" recently foundered In
THE ADAMS THEATRE Cool and Comfortable Last Time Tonight CLARA BOW —ln---“TRUE TO THE NAVY’’ With Frederic March and Harry Green. ALSO—Two ALL TALKING Comedies. 20c—40c Friday & Saturday—BOß STEELE in "WESTERN HONOR” (Silent Version) l<»i' 25c. Sun. Mon. * Tues - WINNIE LIGHTNER. JOE. E. BROWN, and SALLY O'NEIL in “HOLD EVERYTHING” — All NATURAL Colors!
PAGE FIVE
Lisbon harbor, after a two-year voyage of scientific explorations beginning at the Madeira Island and extending to the Caribbean Sea. til? Cook, Samoa, Fiji, and other islands The expedition was headed by the noted professors Johannes Schmid and Brunn. o— New Spanish Paper Albacete Spain, —(UP)—A now Republican publication, "lac Voz del Pueblo, ” the Voice of the People, recently was founded here. It is a weekly
