Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 171, Decatur, Adams County, 21 July 1931 — Page 3

■ feW iyJiffiftnaSsX/£^« «-*..«■, x, a S-.„£i ■ r h# >4// II X U Miss Mary Mncy IB jC /,{/ 11 ' !\y Jf Miss Margaret Haley JJ| 4.. < g^ >r Phones 1000—1001

|g Paris Styles knight S:.,li In! respond, lit. I s ,| l: |, 21 dJ.P) Old sash-; u l , 'I about thei.li IBlunrr. They never have. )111H .0.-s .ming such in-;' ■» all I novel things. Sim-j ,'otton were i ~, io fashionable s BFW ,rt Illidge lun<li-| p ate j EZf ,„. Il I.idiatos a pride-, K about. Old jnsilv. is made I M». i.o : . ami English emESE \ !H , k •~f the embroid-i Fl, frock, which . rimdine braid is: EM r ~ and droopy , bla; k I „ ioe jefiait' contrast. I ( organdie with |, kgjjbi"'. : ' instead of batiste, o oidered mate-1 L s | , olid m.-d in diagonal sectin- tolor is either all |. yellow, or two j,mi. - A cluster of nasfrom pale yellow almost J t orange, rests on the left‘‘ IJW, an I another cluster under the lifted straw, edged horsehair. Brown tlovel three-quarter length, purse tad Ann- leave nothing to be dethe realm of accessories. |, Mi guests Archie Hendricks of , of Monroe entertained I Irttß ii’iiie Sunday lor Mr. and C'lu'ihis Yoos and daughters!, Nina of Markle, Mr. and Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. and Russell PeabodyHI ■Knit Wayne. The afternoon', in a special way. WORKERS meeting ■11..:. Workers Class of the., Brethren church met i aad Mrs. Albert Chronister ~ A program was givin astir which a luncheon was serv-> hostesses. Mrs. Chronister i Will Kelley. Sixty mem-' he class and their families tteflk-d the meeting. The l-adies Aid Society of the church will meet Thursday ' at two-thirty o’clock at M> ■untry home of Mrs. William its® All members are requested TEACHER jMIRRIED SUNDAY F tm-is l.uginhill of Howe Pan! Beaty were united in Sunday, ai cording to an . lit received by friends ■'- bride is the daughter Mrs Adam Luginbill of j ■>< and for the past two . teacher in the Berne couple ■led Monday Evelyn Mock of Ossian, a of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Sy acuse and John H. MurOssian, a son of Mr. and ■"'"' Murphy of Fort Wayne ' d in marriage at two o’- !■. M unlay afternoon at the manse with Rev. W. "" "IHeiating. The groom is d as a barber at Ossian, ®IERS REUNION Bt IN FORT WAYNE number of members of in's family attended the HL ' illlil>n which was held in

NOTICE ■Our Beauty Shop is I now in charge of s LOUISE GAGE B experienced operator of this city. ®e cordially invite all our ■ customers, as well as ■ a’ aKe ’ 8 customers to S ’-is shop for Beauty I K. BARBER and ■BEAUTY SHOP

CLUB CALENDAR T uesday Evangelical Dorcas class, MrsAda Ma t n 8 p. in. C. L. C. Benefit Card Party, Catholic school hall, 8 p in. Psi lota XI, Miss Helen Shroll 8 p. m. Tri Kappa sorority, Miss Dorothy Durkins, 8 p m. Wednesday Root township 411 Girls (Tub, Mrs. Dale Moses. 1:30 p. in. Thursday Christian Ladies Aid Society. Mrs. William Engle 2:30 p m. Tri Kappa Summer Dance, Decatur Country (Tub, 9 p. m. M E. Ladies Aid Society, chur. h pa, lors, 2 p m. F riday Momoe M. E. Missionary Society . Ice Cream Sotial, uarsonage lawiij :30 p. m. (CSTI Lakeside Park at Fort Wayne, Sun | day. At the noon howr a delicious picnic dinner was served in the I pavilion at the park, after which a short bus.ness session took place An interesting program was given in the pavilion, at the (Hose of t..e business meeting. ANNUAL REUNION OF HOWARD F AMILY The sixth annual reunion of the I Howard famil ywas held at Peterson, Sunday, at the home of Mr. and M.s, James Ernst. Seventy five I members of the family were present, and two visitors. At the noon hour a basket dinner was served after which the meeting was called to order by the president John Howard. The following officers were chosen for the coming year: Elias Howard, president; John Howard, vice-president; Mrs. Connie Evans, secretary and trea- ' surer. After the meeting ice cream was served. Those present were Mr and Mrs. Jqmes E.nst, M . and Mrs. Henry Breiner of Peterson; Mr. I and Mrs. Samuel Howard. Mr and ' I Mrs. rancis Howard and children of Decatur; Mr. and Mrs. E. S. How- ? ard. Mr and Mrs. Merrett Howard ' en Robert, and Catherine, I Mr. and Mrs. John Howard and I daughter Ramona May, Miss Jew-’ ; ell Howard. Mrs. Lonora Laisare i and son Bobby all of Fort Wayne: Mrs. Martin Houser and children Donald and Barbara. Miss Catherine Ernst of Huntington; Elias’ ! Howard. Mr. and Mrs. Evert Evans, ' Mr and Mrs. Fl»yd Mericle. Mr. ami | Mrs. Howard Patton and son, S. B. Palton and friend of Ohio; Miss Devona Howard, Mr. and Mrs. Char- 1 les Lobsiger and son Doi; lid of Monroe; Mr. and Mis. Merlin Ernst' and son Paul of Craigville; Mr. and ! Mrs. J. I. Moore and children of i Tioy, Ohio; M. G. Moore, Mr. and I Mrs. Howard Moore and family, Mr. ' and Mrs. Carl Moore and family, ' Simon Moore of Decatur; Mr. ami J | Mrs. Frank Baker and family of I l Elkhart. Tlie oldest person at the reunion ! was John Moore of Elkhart who I was eighty years old last April, and ; the youngest was little Miss Ramona May Howard, three months ' old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John I Howard of Fort Waynb. The Missionary Society of the Monroe Methodist Episcopal church ' will sponsor an Ice Cream social on | the parsonage lawn at Monroe, Fri-| day evening, beginning at seven-1 hirty ifelock (Cental Standard time). Home made ice cream and home made cake will be offered for sale The public is invited. TRI KAPPA SORORITY TO SPONSOR SUMMER DANCE Ths, informal summer dance, to' e sponsored by the local Tri Kappa sofority at the Decatur Country; Club will take place Thursday evening, July 23, beginning at nine o’clock, (D. S. T). Dancing will continue to one o’clock, the Carl Brunner’s orchestra of Fort Wayne will furnish the music. Tickets a.e being sold by the sorority members for one dollar a ouple. A large number of out of own persons are planning to attend the informal sunirfier affair, the arrangements for which aie In the charge of Miss Mary Katherine Schug. PICNIC DINNER HONORS BIRTHDAY Children and grandchildren of Mrs. Josephine Ehresman of Fort Wayne delightfully surprised her with a picnic dinner at Legion Memorial Park, the occasion honoring her seventy-sixth birthday anniversary. John Smltley, Jr., aged eleven, was also an honcred guest at th' dinner, the occasion being his birthday. After the dinner which was served on the long tables at the noon

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1931.

| hour the honored guests, Mrs . Ehresman and Master Smltley were' I the recipients of many birthday gifts. - j Those present were Mr. and Mrs. i Sephus Melchi and son Harold, Mr. 1 and Mrs. William Rahner and children Delora, Florlne, Ethel, and William; Mr. and Mrs. ,J. r. smit-i ley and children Keith and John; I Mi. and Mrs Hubert Cochran and children Sephus, Catherine and Jimmy; Mr. and Mrs. Russel Melchi 1 and children Billy and Betty; Miami Mrs. C cil Melchi. Mrs’ (Tml-j tner Sheets and daughter Dolores; 1 Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bebout and cliil- 1 dren Jean, Dick, and Bonnie, Miss' Dorothy Young, Miss Violet Wood-1 rug, William Ehresman, and Mrs. I Josephine Ehresman. Werl Lcej in V. j The cv:rd ”, Iccir.cNy-* wus dn-t □red by (li||>(>rt in iris treatise De Magnc te." l:’:ri. T|u> acljectiir electric Tn ti ls sen e was used US (..lily as 17’.).”, by Colerid re in his Songs of the Pixies," j n uli’cli lie sn.'s. I lie electric lla-Ti Hmt from th(‘ melting eye darls'tbe fond question or the soft reply." H ts;tl Carlyle In "Sartor Itesnrtiis." said, Lai( n l:Hle until the entire nation is in an electric state.” ' > Dam. ge D ne b> R its A few years the b;o|o-ival • siirwi ma<|p an rsiiinjrp rat> lestro;,ed S2(W-.O.<W worth of crops and stored prodm ts in tip | I lilted States. Tills amount doe•oi take into account tlie large 1 amount expemled In mi effort to ! comliat them. Food mid grain In ' dustries sutlei most from rodents It Is not possible to say which one of tlie food and grain Industries su.’lers tlie most, since the same i lirecd of gray rats differ In theli I food habits. In,the same loculit’ 1 they may be carnivorous or vege 1 tarian. o— New York’s Infancy An article [midished In me Christian Acivocnte says: “At the he ginning of die Nineteenth century tlie ‘comnterciaJ metropolis of tlie United State,’’ oceutiied only the lower end of Manhattan Island what is now ‘up town’ being still made up of spacious f«rms and ! country estates. Including the little j village of Harlem. Tlie actual ; measurements of tlie city proper are given as three miles In length i (from tlm Battery to Fourteenth , street), one and a ludf miles In width mid eight miles in clrcumfer ence.” O ■I. ■ , .... Industrial Museums The American Association of scums says that the Deutselies mu seum In Munich Is tlie largest in dustrial museum In tlie world, and tlie second museum in tills class is probably tlie Science museum In London. There a:e many Indus | trial museums In Europe, but few jin this country. Our largest Is the ; Miisetioi of Science and Industry, - Chicago, although we have n 4arge ; c-ominercinl museum at ridladel J phla. — <)- “Monarchi..n” and ‘ Despotism” A monarchy is a form of govern ; meld in wliieli tlie executive pow er is vested in a hereditary rulei If a rulers powei Is limited by n i constitution or by a leglslatme I' 1 is called a limited or constitutional monarchy; it there is no such i limit <m the ruler’s power, it Is l called an absolute or despotic nton | archy. Practically all monarchies I today are limited and in every i country provision Is made for a i salary or annual grant to the I monarch. African Rainfall The rainfall of Africa varies con siuerably In the different loculi ’ties, (tn the Egyptian desert there ■ are niipreeiiilde falls only once in ;a number of years, while In the i r'anieroons the average I* 3(X) Incites ! n year, tin either side of the eqtei i tor there is a belt of heavy ra’n i fall, diminishing north mid south ‘ ward The estimated population ot I Africa in i'.i.'ki was 1'>.()(Mt.OOO. — Beautiful European City Tlie great charm of Hiin 'tiry lies j in its Itappy blending of European i culture and eastern romance. Buda i pest, its superb ciipltal. glories In a tradition of more than t.OUOyears. I hut Is a modern, imposing, gay and beautiful city with a population ot more than IJKMI.OfiO. A frw hours away picture book scenes of villas 1 ers in traditional native costumes and relies of the Mohammedan l» I vasion from the East, centuries ago. | appear on “very hand Sugar From Maple Sap The amount of maple sap required to make one gallon of maple syrup varies with the trees, the Io cation and the season, according I to a bulletin of the United States Department of Agriculture. ’But in n normal year a barrel of sap—- | 82 gallons—should produce a gallon I of syrup or seven mid n half pounds I of sugar. Tn many camps, and for many years. It takes ns much ns ”0 1 gallons of sap to make a gallon of syrup. Eligibility The -Arise professor wgi correct ing examination papers. He came to one that had “William Jones English 4” In the upper left hand corner and Just below. “I’m captain of the football team.” The rest of the paper was blank. The wise professor marked It A plus nr.:' ‘•mt on with hlf> Fork Earned Cognomen Edward Hen, who before 1880 wns almost, the only Importer of note of the more expensive jiipes. j wits known t;s the "pine num of the , United States." William Demuth begun the making of pipes In this i country In 1881.

i Hot Weather Pants L K ho A * * I I -OT l K I W' J f * > f X W F J There’s nothing like torrid weather to drive even dignified males to Su l mmpr\hv^T d fl J r workln K consort during the scorching hot days, _0 employes of a Chicago concern appeared readv for work tn shorts, or "sensible” pants, the other day Here’s Gordon Shaw Parading his abbreviated trousers before the curious eyes of Celia Ctcha (left) and Anna Mikosz. Like ’em, girls?

MISSIONARY IS UNDER ARREST | CONTINUED ’’ROM PAGE ONE) The Chinese press at once be-; 1 gan a campaign against the medi-i ; cal missionary, a member of the American mission board. Feeling in Tehchow became tense. The Kuomintang, or people's party, organization in Shantung ; province demanded Dr. Tucker’s arrest last week; that the United 1 States minister. Nelson Johnson. | 1 apologize, and that an indemnity! ! be 'paid. Subsequently an official report l of the shooting said the Chinese' was shot while attempting to rob! the hospital site. The arrest and imprisonment of an American citizen by Chinese police is a breach ot the extra- | territoriality treaty which AmeriI ca. in line with similar action by i Great Britain and other powers, j has insisted be maintained until I China has evolved a legal code I and can enforce it. The treaty provides for trial of accused foreign ' ers in courts of their native land, t The national government at Nankingj in recent months has' pushed the traditional effort of i the revolutionary regime to abolish extra-errltoriality. Dr. C. T.! Wang, foreign minister, last spring ! issued a proclamation that the government considered the old; i treaties no longer in force, but was > i willing to negardate for ways and | I means on how best to establish the ; I new order. Episcopal Church in America ; The yenertil convention, assern | bled In l‘hlhtdel|ililn In 1785. gave ■ the first expression of its existence 1 in this country of the Protestant ! Episcopal chiirch as a single snd - united body At that time there were eight dioceses, while at pres I ent there ar° 7’l nnd 32 niisshinnn I dlstrb’s I ° : Grass Plants Itself The seeds of the Russian steepe i grass are thrust into the ground by 1 the plant Itself. The plant forms -a coil of fiber and on wet days the i fiber twists and -Mirks Its way Into the ground. (In hot days Hie i fiber untwists, hut remains tn a j fixed position by mecns of a barb at the end holding it flrmly undei the soil. —■ O’ — Changing Color of Gold The color of gold ran be changed by alloying It with various other metals. The old method was to al loy It with about five times ns much silver, but as su<-b articles readily tarnished, a «ew process was Uitroduced which does away with the use of elver. ('erlain base metals are a<b >d to give thcwhite aptiearance, I te amount of gold and of alloy lx ing the s.itot as In Hie case of o I'-'arv gold <n various --ats. — o Cricks Never Imported VTllstach says It Is a pleasing hut im;>robnble tradition that bricks were brought from England for building In Virginia. There wns an abundance of excellent brick clay acre and no reason for Importing bricks I'he tradition probably hnd Its origin not In the fact of the place where the bricks were made hut In the trade phrase "Dutch xrlcs” and "English brick." These rerms referred to sizes. Dutch brick were sm k (| and English brick iar-,e. Definitive Poetry Is ‘'lmaginative metrical | discourse; or, more explicitly , . . I the art of representing human experiences. In so far as they nre of ' lasting or universal Interest. In metrical hingmtge. usunlly with , chief reference to Ihe emotions and I by means of the imagination.”—A. I M Alden, in "Introduction to Po 1 etry"

Kirkland Farmers Meet I I A farm meeting will be held in i the Kirkland Community Hall.! Thursday evening, July 23, at 8 o’-1 i clock. A program will be given dur-J ing which several short talks will be given during which ETATINN be featured. A motion picture, "True Love and Good Oil ’, an unbeatable combination will also lie shown, and violin ; and musical selections and readings | will also take place. Everybody is | welcome to attend fhis meetingg. London Women Forgetful London womeu lose or mislay 4(kt umbrellas a day. tiecordit’g to the i Inst |iro|>erty oflice. A spell of wet | weather. It is said, brings umbrellas ; in at a greater rate than dry went It er. They are left in omnibuses street ears, taxis and even on the streets, and they are forgotten Just when their owners need them mos*. It often hnppens Hint nt umbrella is cheeked in nt the office twice on the snme dtty, the owner having tnlslald II again shortly after re gaining [mssession of it. o Tesl of Music “There is only one critical Judgment I eno rely upon in music—- . the' verdict of the spine." Fritz 1 Krelsler told me. "If I feel a thrill I down my spine, from my own work or that of any other man, I know ! that it is good. Let the critics say I what they will. There Is no finer test. And If an artist never knows that thrill, or loses It. he ts in the wrong business.”—Beverly Smith In the American Magazine o Longc.t English Word What is the longest word in the - English language? Some say "Imn ’ orili'-itbiJltudii.ity” — perhaps be I cause Shakes|ieare used It. (ttlier.i antidisestaltJlshnientiirianism." Bui | Dr Frank 11. Vizetelly. well k town ; lexicographer -and he ought to ; know—gives the answer as: "Un i h,vpersymmetriocHnti[>aral!elei>ipe(l ' 'calistitliinalogrnphh-till.v.'’ a word of CO letters, that is used, but >nl.v rarely. In mat be’ ,, » , ies.—Kansas Cl’y S'ar. ■ ■■ —— " C ——- , , Horseshoe Superstition Silversmiths. goldsmiths, cop persmiths mid blacksmiths have nl wtgrs been held In a sort of niyate rlous renown Their work of weld Ing anil shaping lind a gi»>d deal ot mystenv in It which ministered to superstition. Some relics of tills RtipersHrion made much of smiths ami their work, espeelallj of their horseshoes 'n biter times Superstitions That Live In the Dark ages every custom wns end' wed with miraculous [tow I ers. and such beliefs die hard. The | people encountered on the way to church or the place of baptism are i sti]>|iosed to nave a superstitious , signiticar ’e. for exnmple. Thus s . beggar encountered means 111 luck, mid the bad luck may be checked hy handing the tie; gar a luckjienn.v. A black ent encountered Is I the htipp'csf of omens. - uSeries of Crise What, asks an tislter Is the crli leal point In n bridge game? Welt ft begins with tlie first bld —or even I before then If the dealer Is cltimsj ! —nnd continues till something elst ' conies up to divert the critics' al tention—Arkansas Gazette.

last . . . quick. plena | fullness, burning sourAI II I ness, belching, upset W » 11 kJ stomach, nausea, etc., which often follow meals. Antacid mint—relieves almost immediately. Eat threeor four TUMS j /44T Mt MF —often one is enough. YmmY the ! breath. At any drug store—only 10c. (ACID INDIGESTION

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Mrs. William Nix of Bay City, Michigan is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. ('. Miller and family of this city. Mrs Golda Gaunt returned to the J. M. Breiner home after spending the past week visiting relatives and ft lends fri Fort Wayne and Crooked Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Krick and family of tills city visited in Berne, Sunday. Miss Letha Karmer and Jeff Lake of For; Wayne spent tlie week end visiting Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Lake of" this city. Miss Katherine Kumps of Tuckerton, N. J. is the guest of Miss Lee Anna Vance of thia city. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kern attended the.Somer's family reunion in Lakeside Park at Fort Wayne, Sunday. Miss Florence Magley has returned from Indianapolis wliere she attended the summer course of the Indiana State teachers College. Miss Helen Fritzinger spent the week-end visiting relatives and frienas a. Fort Wayne. Avon Burk and son James left; this morning for Buffalo. N. Y„ I where they will attend the Nation-1 al Grain Dealer s Convention. Mrs. Dan Tyndall and daughter. I Mrs. Avon Burk and daughter and I Mrs. B. H. Franklin and daughter i are attending the Epworth conI vention at Lake Webster this week. Robert Meibers attended to busi-l j neSs in Fort Wayne this morning, i o Capone Aide Guilty Chicago July 2—(UP)—Jack MeGurn, Al Capone’s cnlef machine gunner, and his "Blond Alibi," Louise Rolfe, were found guilty todayin federal court of conspiracy to violate the man act. Judge Walter C. Lindley handed down the decision after having the case under advisement several weeks. The two-day trial, in which the dfendants waived a jury cost the government $4,000. Suspicions Are Resented Tetre Haute, July 21—(UP)—A statement resenting suspicion cast upon mine workers following the bombing of the Somerville mine No. I. near Princeton, was made today by Abe Vales, president of District 11, United Mine Workers of America. The Sommerville mine, which had not been in operation since 1927, was wrecked by six blasts of dynamite Sunday night. Vales denied that Union miners or the Union Mine Workers ot Ame-

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rica were responsible for the explosion. He blamed "parties whose solo interest was to discredit Union mine ot gan.bfi ions" adding that there had been no recent labor trouble at Somerville No 2, which was bombed mote than a month ago. and which now is operating on a cooperative basis. o U. S. AIR MAIL PILOT KILLED (CONT’NL’ED FROM PAGE ONE) American Airways, was wrecked. Hamann’s body was wedged into the fuselage, and it was several hours before it could be lifted out. The mail bags were found intact. Man’* Earlie.it OccupationAgriculture Is believed 'i> be the earliest oi-ciipnllon of nitin. It can be traced hack to prehistoric t'mes. when primitive man begin* to select particular nlnnts as preferable to others fur itls use ns food Records on ancient monuments have enabled tts to truce tbv history of agriculture in Egypt hack to “t i least 3tH»> r p. ° ~ - Not Government Owned Tlie records of tlie Department ! of Commerce Indicate tlioi the govi eminent does not own Spectacle Is land in Its entirety, but acquired in 18!MI ap(>roxiin.itf’l.v 1.15 acres for a consitlenitlob of $4.12.7 and in ; 11*13 acquired .21 of an acre for a i< nslderatiun of $2.20(1 This parcel of hind is the north' nst corner of the northern part of Spectacle Is | land Boston harbor Miih-stu-biisetts. I — ° Use for Old Railroad Tie* Pencil manufacturers of the East buy up old railroad ties from the western slates. These logs are mostly of red cedar tn which tin hearts are st’ll sound o - ■„ — Arrangement Fictions in law, mostly abolished today, were invented by English lawyers ns a means of carrying eases from one court to another. Whereby the courts became checks ■ to eiH’h other.

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PAGE THREE

ATTACKER IS BEING SOUGHT ((.’(‘NTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) when a man suddenly appeared from some- bushes, and ordered them out of the machine. “He had a gun, and we got out of the car with our hands in the • air," she sobbed. "Th n without any warning he shot Buddy. As— Buddy dropped to the ground he told me ’you'll get the same tliin-g if you make one bum move’.” The man forced her into the - bushes a few feet from wh re the” body lay and attacked her, she said, then forced her to help hint toss the body of Palmer intb the rear seat of the car. “Then he told me to get in am), drive and said he would kill me if I tried any tricks,” the girl said. — o Ancient Seaside Retort The world's oldest settable ri’sort Nice, with (i history of more Ihtin twenty-five centuries, was fpqnd ed by Phoenicians. In 3"». B. <’. on tlie site of a much earlier colon* Its ellmiite has attracted In turn Phoenicians. Greeks. Romans, the nations of medieval and modern Eure re. O !-C' Prolific Author Horatio Alger was it gradiihte ot Harvard, nnd also of Harvard DI vlnlty school. He became a pas tor ot His Unitarian ehurcli at Brewster. Mass.. In ISG4; but two years later he went to New York. I where be labored for the implore ■ ment of the condition of street boys. He wrote much for news- | papers mid periodietils and pub; lished nbout 71l books, of wlticn : nearly SIHHHMI cojiles have been sold .. o When It Comes to Details “My storm mill stress.’ pens s Phllmldphinn to the Record, “i-gtlms that women n'-e keener observers than mon. This, 1 dispute. What would you say?" “We’d say.” chides the editor, “never dispute your wife -much. At any rate, here’s our experience: My wife can look at mint her woman's hut for tw<> split seconds soil then describe It for two solid (tours without re pealing herself." n Male Easier to Teach Male parrots respond to teach Ing somewhat better than female birds.