Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 208, Decatur, Adams County, 1 September 1932 — Page 5
®\.. r Peerless House *' good service fcXtion- 51.69 Per —-
I !? ■u are always sure of Kggg's Corn Flakes. For Knrs Kellogg'*; have been ■ standard of quality. Kuogg's Corn Flakes are ■. v i'l l--.• ■ always open to inspection Kisners. Kc'l'-gg's have the ■k materials, expert work-la-fl w. ••. machinery ■as taken years to perfect. K a patented sealed WAXfcbagthat brings the flakes ■-fresh to your table! guaranteed by W. K. Kel- I ■: “If you do not consider Ku the finest and freshest ■ flakes you ever ate, reK the red-and-green packband we will refund your Key." Made by Kellogg in ■file Creek
I c?R e n s | | FLAKE’ I ■ • •■J.--' gl I I JI I
I Decatur I Golf Course I with Buildings I Also - - Two Farms. I Apply ('. H. Waddell, I Phone 20 I
BACK TO SCHOOL ‘ ina Bradley Thc boys likc thc,Tl ’ the T mothers’ know they wear, f '^P r and that's nine tenths o’ the story. The other tenth is ‘hat the new Fall pat ’ terns and styles are now /'I In stock in sleeveless and #/< X” ■'* / ' sleeve styles. $1.95 to $4.50 Holthouse Schulte & Co I ■IIMIIW II
Society
Paris Styles Uy Mary Knight United Pres* Staff Correspondent Paris —(UP)—©westers that consist only of fronts are am tig the novelties of the hour here. They slip on. over the head by means of ■ a loo*, like an< i-kia... and either ' tie on around the waist or fasten on at the sides with buttons or clips to the belt of the dress over which they are worn. Thus the frock of some very simple design is completely changed with the addition of the liaifsweater. Perhaps with this as an inspiration, Schiaparelli conceived the idea of adding a little front skirt to such a sweater (only making it a half blouse of fabric instead of wool), and the apron transformation evolved. Anyway, be that as it I' may, the apron dress is progressing with due popularity and two or three silk aprons may now be designed t disguise the same frock. Huge, bell-haped sleeves (either elbow or wrist length)), are now ' made to fi>H up around the arm exictly like an umbrella. A little detachable band buttons or snaps on at the outer side of the wide sleeve runs around the arm or the wrist and gathers up all the fullness of the sleeve, brings it close to the hand and snaps it d -wn seI curely. Ttie band is therefore a cuff and on 3 second’s notice, all the fullness may be released. ANNUAL REUNION I OF HARTMAN FAMILY The eighth annual Hartman re-| ! union was held Sunday at the farm home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. 1 Hartman on the M lybsvfHe R ad,, . Port Wayne. Dinner at noon was followed by ' a business meeting during which I 1 the officers for next year were * chosen as folk ws: Herman Roden-! i beck, president; Gottlieb Hartman i vice-president; Dorothy Bongs,* secI retary and treasurer. 1 A program of games furnished en- : tert (foment for the afternoon. TOWNSHIP CLUB HOLDS SOCIAL MEETING The members of the Union Town -1 ship Woman's Club entertained ; their families and a few guests at I the annual social meeting held at | the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. I ! O.nerod, Wednesday evening. One hundred fifteen persons attended the meeting. A mock wedd- ' ing was performed for the enteri tainmnt of the guests. Later the guests were divided into three ' groups. Irish, Scotch, and Jews. A ’ number ci contests were held and when the scores were counted the j 1 judges decided that the Irish had won. A prize was awarded to the ' Jew group for consolation, j Refreshments of icu-sTeam and 1 home made cake were servd during the social hour which followed the I ! entertainment. The Phoebe Pible class of the i Zion Reformed Sunday School will! meet Wednesday night at seven -1 (thirty o'clock at the home of Mrs ] M. F. Worthman. The assisting I i hostesses will be Mrs. O. L. Kirsch 'and Mrs. Chris Lehman. BIBLE CLASS STUDIES LIFE OF ISAIAH Th*' members of the Mt. Pleasant FUi'.t. I ss met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jess Singlet. n Wednesday ; night, for the regular business and I social meeting of the organization. Eighteen memliters and guests attended the meeting. During the evening the life of Isaiah was studied. 1 William J-rnes, the president, had ■ charge of the business meeting, and ‘Miss Lois Fuhrmrn conducted the
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1932.
| CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Thursday i U. B. Work and Winn class, Mr. '! >nd Mrs. Arthur Garner, postponed ■ f I one week. • W. O. T. M.. Moose Home, 7:SO| ilp. m. Evangelical Missionary Society, • Evangelical church, 2 p. m. Christian Missionary Society, , Mrs. Henry Leichtensteiger 7:30. M. E. Ever Ready Class, Miss' . Effie Patton. 7:30 p. m. Calvary laidies’ Aid Society, I church parlors, 1:30 p.tn. Methodist W. H.M.S., Mrs. John' Tyndall, 2:30 p.m. Phi Delta Kappa Dance, Country I Club at 9:00 P. M. U, B. L idles Aid Society, church . 1 i>arlors, 2 p. m. I Friday ; Mt. Pleasant 10c supper, postponed indefinitely. Better Homes H >me Economic duh, pot-luck supper, Lehman’s Park. Berne, 6:30 P. M. ' ‘ j lesson study. Following the session. 1 refreshments of ice cream and waf- > ers were served. TO PRESENT PUPILS IN RECITAL Mrs. Sue Zimmerman Waggoner ■ will present her piano pupils in a recital at the Evangelical church auditorium. Friday night at eight o’clock. Following is tht program: ’ Spring Time Waltz” —Donna Zimmerman I “Sailing” Williams Marie Engle 1 "Evening Prayer.” Pressor — Merilyn Bonitas “Cedar Brook Waltz," Perdy — Hilda Williams I "Lullaby,” Presser — Roberta Coffelt ’ "Close of School," Michael, duet — Virginia and Donna Zimmerman "Morning Prayer" Streabog — Berneta Lytle I "Tag Waltz" Swift—Elenore Johnson • Duet Marie Engle and Sue Waggoner I "Flower Song”—lrene Fosnog : Clog dance, duet —Milda Williams and Sue Waggoner "Valse IMr Nymphes", Williams — Donna Kraft Song, selected Evelyn Arnold 1 "Auld latng Syne,” Williams — Donna Belle Arnold . "Wavelets." Nordman — Virginia Zimmerman Duet — Roberta Coffelt and Sue Waggoner I "Butterfly,” Merkel — Dorothy Adler | “Juanita," Williams — Irene Fosnog i "Twilight Reverie,” Guy—Thomas Adler ’ Song, selected—Evelyn Arnold , "Prelude in C Minor,” Rachmaninoff—Gilbert Blomenberg. ROOSEVELT WILL SPEAK IN STATE IN SEPTEMBER i CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE pellate courts. Mayor Curley will speak in South Bond next Saturday night under the auspices of the South Bend Young Democrats. More than 100 attended the state committee meeting with candidates, district chairman and vice chairmen present to hear campaign plans discussed. Every congressional district was represented. The district speeches will be given by Pau' McNutt, gubernatorial nominee, and Frederick VanNuys, candidate for U. S. senator, the state committee announced. Their program follows: Sept. 28 —McNutt Eighth Dist. VanNuys . Second 29 — McNutt Ninth VanNuys Sixth 30 — McNutt Tenth VanNuyss Seventh Oct. 3—McNutt Eleventh VanNuys Eighth 4— McNutt Fifth j VanNuys Ninth 5— McNutt Fourth I VanNuys Tenth 6— McNutt Third VanNuys Fourth 7— McNutt First VanNuys Third 10— McNutt Seventh VanNuys Twelfth 11— McNutt Sixth VanNuys Eleventh 12 McNutt Second VanNuys - Fisth 1 13— McNutt Twelfth | VanNuys First: 14— VanNuys Second 18—McNutt Eighth VanNuys Sixth 19 McNutt Ninth VanNuys Second 20— McNutt Tenth VanNuys Seventh 21— McNutt Fifth VanNuys Eighth 22— McNutt Fourth VanNuys Ninth 24— McNutt Third j VanNuys Tenth 25— McNutt First | VanNuys Fifth
Father Died to Feed Them ■’ - Mi w* p 'J 4 jr iW JEM ‘A V WX < X.w W ‘ «■ ? W Victims of a poignant tragedy of the economic depression, the family of i Wallace F. Mitchell, jobless machinist of Philadelphia, is shown above. | The mother and five children were hungry and the father, desperate, was attempting to steal milk to feed them when he was shot to death. Bernard Beese (inset), grocery store owner is held in connection with the shooting. |
26 — McNutt Second VanNuys Fourth; 27— McNutt ( Sixth | VanNuys Third' 28 — McNutt Eleventh 1 VanNuys First: 29 McNutt Twelfth 31—McNutt Seventh; VanNuys Twelfth i The campaign handbook will be. ready for distribution in a'l conn- 1 ties next week, Wray Fleming.: Shelbyville, announced. Defends Stand Peru. Ind.. Sept. I.—(U.P) —United States Senator James E. Wat son defended his vote on the Pat man soldiers' bonus measure, laud ■ id the Reconstruction Finance Cor-1 poration and refuted a Democratic charge that Republican relief measures are designed for the ahi] of large banks and corporations in his address before nearly 1,000 per •sons at a Fifth district rally here yesterday. Interrupted in his speech by re-1
r" sr- — • • ■ - 1 ~ • ‘kJ ■ cißm ■... y/ 9 g j CUSTER’S LAST STAND @ g . "Nature in the Raw”—as portrayed r m K K K U by the great painter of the American g K Indian,N.C.Wyeth...inspiredbythe g j] J massacre of Custer’s dauntless band d „ at Little Big Horn, Montana, by the savageSiouxlndians, June 25,1876. qi yx*. —and raw tobaccos have no place in cigarettes ‘ .;■****‘^ They are not present in Luckies * n the Raw is Seldom Mild”—so - the mildest cigarette thesc fine tobaccos ’ aftcr P ro P cr a £ in g idSrS' Z «\ and mellowing, arc then given the 1 c ' < - r <-* benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying it iW process, described by the words — H am W7 E buy the finest ’ the very finest <lt s toasted ”- That ’ s wh y folks in W\\jSbß a/ ** tobaccos in all the world — but every city, town and hamlet say that that does not explain why folks Luckies are such mild cigarettes. - ’ everywhere regard Lucky Strike as • -a -f *+ the mildest cigarette. The fact is, wc O LC vX never overlook the truth that "Nature That package of mild Luckies V y’ "If a man write a better bonk, preach a better sermon, or make a better mouse-trap than his neighbor, tho he torr. IMS build his house tn the woods, the world will make a beaten path to his door. ’’—RALPH WALDO EMERSON. Tobacco Co. Does not this explain the world-wide acceptance and approval of Lucky Strike?
marks of workmen constructing a I i walk near th■> sp< akers’ platform ■ i to the effect that he had voted I i against the soldiers' bonus payment. Watson answered them with the -statement that the bonus was[ i not an issue in the election nor an i II Issue between the par.le®. 1 ; Outlining relief moves made by : 'the Reconstruction Finance Cor-; poration, Watson praised the lead- j ■ ‘ership of President Hoover in es-1 tablishment of the corporation and I refuted Democratic charges that ! the organization was furnishing aid ' i only for large banks and corpor-! •; ations. 'I o HOSPITAL NOTES ’ —'— 11 T. P. Gephart, 302 East Lewis I i street, Fort Wayne, is a medical ! patient at the Adams County Me-1 - Morial Hosiptil. o Get the Habit — Trade at Home
NEW ROAD LAW ‘ IS EFFECTIVE Five-Year Moratorium on New Road Building Begins In State Today Indianapolis, Sept. I.— <U.R) — Two laws passed by the recent special session of the legislature, providing for a five-year moratorium on Issuance of county road bonds and three-mile gravel road bonds, became effective today. Bonds now outstanding are not affected by the new statutes. When the measures were Introduced in the senate, It was said that they would result in widespread tax relief. It was pointed out that although the laws will not lighten the present burden, they will prevent increase in road bond indebtedness. When the hills were introduced they called for a three-year moratorium. Amendments by the house Increased the suspension period | to five years. ASSIGNATIONS OF IMPORTANT JOBS TENDERED i CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE I American Legion and later was assistant secretary of war. MacNlder’s home is in lowa. Pole Resigns Washington. Sept. I.— (U.P) — : Comptroller of the Currency John I W. Pole today announced he would ' present his resignation to President Hoover. “I hope the president will ac- ' cept it soon," Pole said, adding, “I have been trying to quit this I job for eight months.” Pole “declined to discuss his ! plans for the future but it was • understood that he has been offeri ed a position with a large south- ; ern financial institution. The comptroller said he did not I know who was being considered by President Hoover as his pos- ! sible successor. However, it was i learned that the name of Howard i W. Simms of Chicago, a former National bank examiner, has rei ceived considerable attention.
Mrs. Harry Fernthheil and family of New Richmond and Cincinnati, 0., arrived in this city today to visit with Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Lee and other friends. Mrs. Elmer Anspaugh and daughters hive returned from Van Wert, ’ 0., where they spent a few days i with Mrs. Anspaugh's sister, Mrs. Doyle Bebout. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Vanderlip of Elkhart will arrive in this city Saturday to visit over Labor Day with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Runyon. Mrs. C. J. Blackman, of Fllufft -n, visited friends in Decatur Wed* nesday afernoon. Mrs. Wm. C. Briggs and son, Bob who have spent the summer in this j city and Geneva visiting with relatives and friends, returned to Gary Wednesday. Mrs. Briggs will sing at 1 j the First Methodist Episcopal Church in Gary. Sunday. Miss Esther Sundermann and Arthur Sundermann are visiting with relatives in Charleston, West Virginia. Mrs. W. L. Plew of Des Plaines, 111., is spending the week here with i Mr and Mrs Eugene Runyon. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sellmeyer and dauhgter Suzanne, of Elkhart, J will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. . Eugene Runyon over the week-end. Mrs. Margaret Elzey left Thursday noon, for West Milford, 0., . where she will visit witlf relatives. : She will attend the Ohio State Fair at Columbus, 0.. Friday. Mrs. Ralph Yager and daughter, Kafheryn Louise, have returned from Hamilton Lake where they spent a few- days. Enroute home (hey stopped at the James I. Farley home at Auburn where they visited with Mrs. Frances Farley-Williams ' of Cleveland. Ohio, who is spend-: ing a few weeks at her home. Mrs. I Williams and Mrs. Yager were classmates at Indiana University, i Mr. and Mrs. George Ogg. and Mr. ' and Mrs. Potts and daughter Shirley are visiting with ! relatives in Greensburg, Ky. Miss Agnes Fuhrman, a student at the Notional Extension University at Chicago, 111., was on the I high honor roll for the month of
PAGE FIVE
July. Miss Fuhrman had an average of A. plus for the month. Mr. Frank Studer, Miss Veneta Stelnacker and Miss Mirle Eber of Fort Wayne will attend the Phi Delta Kappa liance at. the Country Clu'b this evening. o Long Wor»» Language in which entire rni>Mt:*a are combined In one word t» called hoiophrastfc. American In dlan tongues are examples of thia They often coxpress a whole sen tence Into a word, the length nt which Is often remarkable o Try our Peerless House Paini. Gives good service and satisfaction. $1.69 per gal. Callow & Kohne. 7t6
Seek U. S. Title g» IfH ' _r One of the doughty foreign invaders with an eye on the tennis crown worn by Ellsworth Vines, Georgio di Steffani, Italian racquet star, is ahown after his first practice session at Forest Hills, L. I. Gorgeous Georgio, as he is called in his own country, will make his U. S. tournament debut September 3rd, when play opens for the national title at Forest Hills.
