Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 189, Decatur, Adams County, 11 August 1931 — Page 3
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W® a Pest Insect Spray You Can Use — Super-Strength FLYJOX Surest, Quickest Death to Roaches.* Bed Bugs. Ants. Moths. Fleas H °I*UIAR THROUGHOUT THI WORLD
CLUB CALENDAR T uesday Decatur Country Club women, Mrs. Herman Khtnger, 9 p. m. Mardi Bridge Club, Miss Marcella 1 Oerber, 8 p. m. Rebekah lodge I. O. O. F. Hall I 7:30 p. m W. C. T. U. Election of officers, j Library Hall, 2: ISO p. m ML Tabor Ladles Aid Society Mrs. Gladys Rauch 8 p. nt. Better Homes Home Economics \ Club, Mrs. E. W. Busche, 1 p. m. Wednesday Mr. Pleasant Bible Class, Mrs. IDrueUla Fuhrman. 8 p. m. Zion Reformed laidies Aid Sojcie‘v. church parlors, 2:30 p. m. Decatur Improvement 4 H Club, Deeatur high school. *- • Zion Lutheran Missionary Society. Mrs. Henry Kruckeberg, 2 p.ni.! , Frivolity Club, Mrs. Waldo Eekrote, postponed one week. Religious Study Club, Sun Set : Park, Wednesday evening at six ! o'clot k. Thursday M. E. Ever Ready Class, Mrs. \V. • F. Rcery. 7:30 p. m. Baptist Women's Missionary So-1 , rifty, Mrs. James Strickler, 2:30 , p. m. U. B. Ladles Aid Society, Mrs. R. E- Vance. 2: IS p. m. Riley Harmonica Band picnic. Legion Memorial Park#2 p. m Saturday Auction Sale by M. E. Ladies ; Aid Society, court house corner, B‘ternoon and evening. i election of officers resulted in the I following: president. Karl Roehm j | ,-f Ohio City', Ohio; vice-president, j I'd ward Roehm of Fort Wayne, i secretary, Robert Schott of Fort i Wayne; and treasurer. John Sauer of near Ossian. Mrs. Alma Roehm and Martha 1 N'ofer were chosen to comprise the J entertainment committee. A committee to have charge of the a:rangements for the reunion next , year was also chosen -and included j Fred Altheon of Willshire. Ohio; Edwin Roehm of Convoy; and Louis Nofer of Ohio City, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. William Fisler and daughter Virginia of Pittsburgh were special guests of honor at the family gathering. YAGER REUNION HELD AT BERNE The annual Yager reunion was licit! Sunday at the Berne park with approximately one hundred irelatives from Bridgeport. Illinois; Wichita, Kansas; New Jersey, Del-’ aware, and West Unity, Ohio; De<atur. Fort Wayne, Muncie, Vira Crux and Berne attending. A basket dinner was served at the noon hour. During the afternoon an interesting program took place with Mrs. Charles Houck in charge. A prize was awarded to the family having tlie largest delegation present, and the family of Malena Yager Sea 1 bold received the prize. There wer<* twenty-one members of that family present, some of whom had jconie a distance of nine-hundred , miles to attend the reunion. A business meeting wes held, ; and L. L. Yager of Berne was j chosen president: Marcus Yager lof West L’uityj Ohio, vice-presi-dent; and Miss Florence Yater of 1 West Unity, Ohio, secretary ami I treasurer. DAILEY REUNION HELD AT BERNE SUNDAY Ong hundred seventy six relatives attended the twenty-sixth annual reunion of the Dailey families at Lehman's Park, Berne, Sunday. At the noon hour a basket dinner i was served and a program and election of officers was held in the afternoon. A feature of the dinner was a centerpiece of cut flowers sent by R. O. Jones of Cltronelle, Ala., a relative who was unable to be present. The afternoon’s program included the following numbers: Miss Bai 7Ura Burk of Decatur played a piano solo; Robert Jones sang a solo; readings were given by Virginia, Julia and Patsy Cowen of New Haven; Bob Moses of Fort
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1931.
Wavne sang a song; Winfield Moses gave a reading; Miss Eleanor Voltz and Miss Betty Vollz of Ohio ( tty sang vocal solos; the Misses Helen and Amy Schenck played a piano duet; Miss Mary Etta Dailey of Paulding, Ohio played a piano solo and Miss Betty Frisinger of this city played a piano selection. 'The History of the Dailey family." was given by Orville Dailey | Albany, Ohio and a humorous ! Poem about the Itailey family was read ly Mrs. Orville Dailey. The history revealed that the relatives are descendants of Thomas and Mary Major-Dailey. The first reunion was held at Albany, Ohio, in 1908. Thomas Dailey was the father of five boys and three girls, of which Exams and Jane came to Indiana, and were the ancestors of the Indiana Daileys.' Tlie o'dest member present was Joseph -f. Dailey of Deeatur, aged 83. The election of officers was held and Mrs. M. A. Frisinger of Deca'ur was elected president A. I). ( line of Albany, Ohio, vice-presi-dent. Miss Esther Dailey of Albany. Ohio was named secretary and Maud Knowlton of Albany, Ohio, treasurer. Relatives from a distance who attended the all day affair were: Mr. and Mrs. Orville Dailey of Al l baity, Ohio; Mr. ami Mrs. Frank ! Strahm of Dexter. Ohio; Mr. and i Mrs. Lester Fought and Mr. and! ; Mrs. Floyd Fought of Albany, O.; j Ney Carpenter and children Mar- j Ilia and Roberta. Miss Elizabeth ! Rutherford of Carpenter, Ohio; i Mrs. Minnie Rutherford Lloyd of j Washington. D. f ; Mrs. Dale Far* | ing and children of Angola; Mrs. | William Carnall and sons of Andrson; Dale thites of Milroy, Mr. I oid Mrs Charles McGonagle and '*r end Mrs. C. Cowan and family of Fort Wayne, and Mr. and Mrs. J. I>. Dailey of Paulding, Ohio. The Zion Lutheran Missionary Society w-ill meet at the home of! Mrs. Henry Kruckeberg. Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock. The lady members of the Deca■,llr Country Club are asked to meet at the home of Mrs. Herman Ehinger, tonight at nine o'clock. Mrs. John Nelson and Mrs. E. N. Wick’s sections of the Ladies' Aid society of the Methodist Episcopal church will sponsor an Auction Sale at the court house corner, Saturday afternoon and evening. This sale will be the regular ! weekly sale that the Reppert Auci t ion holds every Saturday. 1 The public, is invited to attend j this sale. Pie, cake and cooki°s together with a large number of other articles will he sold. The Riley Harmonica Band will I hold a picnic in the Legion Memor-j ial Park. Thursday afternoon at two o’clock. 7NTERTAINS TINNER GUESTS Mrs. Charles Johnson and family of north of this city entertained at noon dinner today honoring a number of relatives from out-of-town. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Corn'hwaite and children Dorothy, Bill. Emma and Helen of j Snringfield 111., Mrs. Dan Kitson I of this city and Mrs. Johnson and family. The Ladies Aid Society of the Zion Reformed church will meet in i the church parlors, Wednesday after, noon at two-thirty o’clock. Every member is requested to be present. The Dellinger family reunion will he held Sunday. August 16 at SunSet Park, rain or shine. The members of the Mt. Pleas ant Bible Class will meet with Mrs. Drncilla Fuhrman, Wednesday night at eight o'clock. Th<> Indies Aid Society of tlie United Brethren church will meet at the home of Mrs. R. E. Vance, Thursday afternoon at two-fifteen j a’clock. The assisting hostesses will I be Mrs. Bertha Haley and Mis. Gaylie Hoagland. A good attendance is 1 desired as elect lon of officers will I lie held. The Baptist Women’s Missionary I Society will meet at tlie home of! Mrs James Strickler, Thursday as- j ernoon a: two-thirty o'clock. Mrs. C. E. osiPeeinwl i E. Peterson will have charge of the afternoon's program. All ladies of the chu.ch are Invited to attend. The Ever Ready Class of the Me- 1 thodist Episcopal Sunday School will meet at the home of Mrs. W. F. Beery, Thursday evening at seventhirty o'clock. The assisting hos‘esses wil be the Mesdames Giles Porter. M. E. Hower, Asa Pollock and Walter Eicker. o Statue to Honor Pulaski Milwaukee, —(UP) —A statute of Count Casimlr Pulaski, Polish genera) who was killed In the American | Revolution, will be dedicated at Pu-' 'askl Park hete Oct. 18. Titus Fill-: oowloz, Polish Ambassador to the i United Slates ami Gov. Philip F. I La Eollette of Wisconsin have been ! asked 'o speak. o Get the rtanit — Trade at Home.
SINCERITY OF SOVIET POLICY IS DOUBTFUL Russians Wary of Offer to Return to Homeland and Be Forgiven Paris, — (UP) —As a result of the changed policy of the Soviet government, as manifest in Stalin’s speech. Russian Socialists emigres in Europe expect an invitation to return to their homeland after 14 years of exile. M. Alexander Kerensky provisional president of Russia after the first revolution, doubts the sincerity of reports from Moscow suggesting the invitation is impending, but says that if the Soviet government does act the emigres will insist upon a changed policy in Russia. Included among the emigres are thousands of trained engineers, doctors, educators, mechanics, skilled workers and farmers. They have found work elsewhere and v most of them have improved their know- ! ledge of their trade or profession ! by contact with the outside world. Long Time "I am convinced that it will be i a Ion? time before the frontiers of ■ Russia will be opened to our exiles" I M. Kerensky said, j "Our return would certainly be I conditional upon the restoration o. humane treatment. Political prisoiP ers would have to be released and brought back from Siberia. The repression of peasantry would have to cease. We would upon tlie freedom of the press, freedom of religion, reopening of the churches and liberty of speech. "It is doubtful, howevey. If the present government would grant us those conditions and guarantees, for that would mean thq end of the Soviet regime. I am convinced that Stalin's speech was not so much to mark a change in Soviet policy as to faiilitate the obtaining of foieign credits." M. 0- Minor, chief of the Russian Socialist party, now exiled in Paris doubts whether many Russian exiles would care to return to Russia. Most of them have bettered themselves and would be wary of Soviet promises. Jails Filled "All the Russian jails and the prison camps of Siberia and Solovky | Island are filled with our comrades" he said. “If the Soviet factories need wo.hers they should first liberate the political prisoners, among whom are many excellent technicians, professional men and men capable to j direct the factories being built unj der the Five-year Plan." The aged chief of the group of I Russian Social-Democrats, M. A. Potresoff, a friend of Lenin in his youth, often imprisoned by the Czars, doubts whether Communism has really changed. “I wil never believe in the evolution of communism, nor in a cooperation of Bolshevists and their political victims.” M. Potresoff said, i "The Socialist emigres will re- j | turn only upon condition that the J Idictature be suppressed. That would ; mean the suicide of communism. Otherwise, 1 doubt if one man would return to Russia, fearing a pretext to masacre us there.” HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Charles Kiser Geneva Route ;3 underwent a minor operation at the Adams County Memorial Hospitul this morning. John Kruse, Decatur, Route 7 was admitted to the local hospital Monday for medical treatment. Jimmy Wemhoft', 416 Marshall street, was admitted to the Attains County Memorial Hospital this morning foi medical treatment. Women Heed Warning Boston—(U.R) —A word of warn- 1 ; ing to women motorists seems to I have more effect than oil men. Os! more than 150 automobilists "tag-, ! ged” for second offenses in the I Massachusetts highway safety cam.paign. only three were women. “ o Sett:r Uses Elevator Ar.gusta, Me.—(U.R) “Skipper", a I black and white English setter, al- , I ways waits for tlie elevator when i he wants to go up or down stairs at ithe State House. He is u frequent visitor at the capitol, being owned iby Governor William Tudor Gardiner. - — o Peculiar Asiatic Animal Tlie pundii is uii Asiatic animal one of tlie rarest of mammals, with the fr.ee of a raccoon, feet like ►. rut ami body similar to that »f tlie hear. There H‘e two specimens nt the Field museum In Chicago. These were captured by Theodore and Kermlt Roise-ett near tlie hoi der -if ‘Tibet. o Millions Awaiting Salvage The largest known hulk ot | "drowned gold" Is that of the Vigo 1 Buy plate fleet tielonging to Spain. I In 1703 the flntillu took refuge In Vigo hay, northwest of s'lmin, guarded hy French warships, hut j was sunk hy British raiders. The gold and sliver ingots are reputed to have represented $100,000,000.
IfrTown Talk
Mr. ami Mrs. Ed. Whltright mo-j; tored to Blue Luke Sunday and were accompanied home by Mr. and Mrs. Francis Howell and son Billy and Miss Gladys Whltright. who had spent tlm week there. While at the lake they were visited by Mr. and Mrs. Casli Lutz ot this city who are enjoying their vacation at Adams Lake. Mrs. Frank J. Mills and son, Jack, of Minneapolis, Minn., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. F. V. Mills In this city. Mrs. Mills and her son arrived here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Fuhrman and son Monroe and daughter Evan- ■ geline returned to this city from a six weeks’ vacation at Reno, Nevada. The Fulirmans motored west and mad ' a number of stops enroute. i Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Collier, daugh- t ter Miss Mina and sons Melvin ]
I "TOASTING" expels I I SHEEP-DIP BASE natura/lv I PI (Black, biting, harsh irritant chemicals) I present in every tobacco leaf 1 t -o' 1 ,! '0:-- • o*o: .‘v- ’' V■- 199E911 ,s • s> * *•*.*. «•••» •■•***•%'.■>.. * # S rjfte&Sjsay. il of the finest tobacco leaves the world can offer —the finest from Turkey —the finest from Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, Georgia and the Carolinas —the Cream of many ' Crops throughout the world. But all tobacco ||||||B||S% leaves, regardless of price and kind, as nature produces them, contain harsh irritants. Process—a process that mellows, that purifies, that includes the use of the modem baceo quality Ultra \ r iolet Ray—expels certain harsh irri- plus throat tants naturally present in every tobacco leaf. . • We sell these expelled irritants to manu- / y — facturcrs of chemical compounds, who use them as a base in making sheep-dip*, as well | /J7 ['H*) as a powerful spraying solution for fruits, [ flowers and shrubs — enough to permit the daily dipping of over 50,000 sheep or the daily spraying of many thousands of trees. Thus, you are sure these irri- I*^oooo tants, naturally present in all tobacco leaves, \ ' are not in your LUCKY STRIKE. |j| f/ /# \ - ‘ out —so they can’t he in!” No wonder fH§ it / §[ ft \\ ''mEmf J LUCKIES are always kind to your throat. Jg *l7. S. Dept, of Agriculture, Bureau of Animal \ V «> Wf 8 Industry, Order No. 210 ® / J 3 “It's toasted'V^hsgigJ^ Including the use of Ultra Violet Rays ijumtorihvVtu^ imK Tuesday, • Sunshine Mellows—Heat Purifies y Thursday und Saturday eivning „ _ , . over N. fl. C. netTour Throat Protection— against irritation— against cough uorks. © Th# American Tobacco Co Mfi*.
land Bobby will leave Wednesday Inoon for Bloomington, Illinois, where they will attend the Miller reunion. Mr. and Mrs. Oren Lahr and j daughter, Pearl, of Monroeville I spent Monday visiting with friends in this city, Glen Beavers visited Sunday in | Fort Wayne with Miss Mary Beth! Munnson. Mr. and Mrs. U. K. Hawk of j Waynedale and D. L Bovine of I Bronson, Mich., attended the fun ! eral of Mrs. W. M. Michaels, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Kenneth of Odell, Illinois, are visiting with their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Will Michaels. Jr. Leonard J. Keeneth, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keeneth of Od 11, Illinois, George Vandekar of Pontiac, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kenneth, Mrs. L. .1. Keeneth. Mrs. Grace Beal and son
j of Odell, Illinois were among those 11 | from a distance what attended the j funeral of the late Mrs. W. M. I < Michaels, Sr. Miss Gwendolyn Parrish of Mon- J 1 mouth is spending the week In Fort ! Wayne visaing her sister and bro-1 ther-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Put Parrish. A. G. Briggs, T\d Stahly | Richard Briggs of Geneva visited , ■ irt this city today. Mrs. John E. Nelson and daugh- : Iters Bernice, Doris. Agnes and soil j 1 ! Leigh Edwaid are enjoying a weeks | | vacation at Lake Webster. Mr. ami Mrs. Charles Keller and ; ] children Mary Katherine, Eileen 1 ’ ! and Eloise and Miss Kathryn As-! | folder left today for Big Long Lake j where they will spend a few day’s I vacation. Miss Geraldine Teems of Servia is spending the week visiting with i Miss Evelyn Kohls and Miss Mir iam Haley. Robert and Harold Gay left today ( for Alma, Michigan jvhere they will spend the week visitng relatives. Henry Mayer left Sunday for San Diego Cal., where he will reside. He was accompanied as far as Chi-
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* clgo by his daghter Sue who* wilt • join Him in San Diego, leaving thi*-~ city sometime next week. Mrs. Adiian Lenliart of WilTSTiTre * Ohio was a business visitor here , today. « i Maintenance Is Le§s Indianapolis August IT —(UP) — The Indiana state police department, with eprsonnel increas 'from 44 to to 61 members July 1, has oil-' ~ era ted oil SIO,OOO less for the' first 10 months of the fiscal year Gian’’' 1 for the corresponding period* in 1930, according to chief Grover <’. * Gamut. ;77, Although there was a defigjt of $2,934.52 in the mo for theft fqjpl,"> the department had sufficient,,, money in the new motor police fund to leave a real balance of $32,801.74, the report showed. The 1931 legislature established.. > a special fund to care for the increased personnel. . , * o Rest Y o’self ■ e,| gets a lot of puldicity but not half enough |Taise. —Woman’s.,, Home Companion —
