Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 37, Decatur, Adams County, 13 February 1933 — Page 3
KOCI ETY.
Paris Styles South Africa came compliment when Lbnaon Mollisou wa. here She ordered an eventag f ont the Maison Chanel, and '‘L was a black velvet one ‘ multi colored ostrich ■ she wore a, ‘ ononnous feather boa with the cosLajv hiving endeared her self # in the Dominion by Lni and magnificent courage ■hoiee of feathers—which play , a important part in the ecolite of South Africa—was delicate ami diplomatic touch. p „ the Countess Caraman- « attended the Case de Paris o v a S a guest of the Princess uerite de Broglie, she wore a chenille velvet evening coat huge leg o' mutton sleeves and W ll roll collar. Everybody d and • Ahed'’ over it, and it i especially chic with the t e gray jerserelli evening which she wore under it. gram announced temperance meeting t Women ' Christian Teniperpuiou will meet Tuesday afterst two-thirty o'clock at the of Mrs. ('. E. Hocker, 231 First street. f program for the meeting will I follows: nu. ripture by .Mrs. S. E. Shamp, non of prayer. Pill i (bate to the Lite of Frances E. I mi- Mrs. C L. Walters. tai solo—Mrs. E. C. Sharrow. Ik- Rev. 0. O. Walton. ■n siness session and ottering, ipau benediction. HOLIC LADIES SPONSOR CARD PARTY card party v ill lie given by the iters of the Catholic Eadies L Club, Thursday night, FebF 33, in the hall of the Catholic H. files of bridge, five hundred, pile and bruin will be played, ins forming foursomes will I at the various tables and ■ will be awarded at each table, supper will be served at five tk after which games of bingo be played until time for the party. fHOAYS CELEBRATED FAMILY GATHERING atd Mrs. Archie Hendricks ar Monroe and Mrs. Ora Hendi and daughter Maxine ot Fort
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CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Monday Pythian Needle Club, K. of P. Homo, after lodge. 1 Junior Arts Club, 5 Research Club guest day, Mrs. C. D. Lewton, 1 p. in. Tuesday 1 Tuesday Afternoon Club, Mrs. Albert Mutschler. ! W. C. T. U„ Mrs. C. E. Hocker ' 2:30 p. m. Rebecca Lodge, Odd Fellows Hall ' 7:30 p. tn. Adams County Choral Society ’ party, Mrs. Dick Burdge, 7:30 p. m. ’ "'Oht, Kay!” senior class play, ’ D. 11. S. Auditorium, 8 p. m. 1 Psi lota Xi dinner bridge, E. W. ■ Lahkeiiau home, 6.30 p. m. 1 Carpe Diem Club guest night, Grant Fry, 6:30 p. m. Wednesday Zion Walther League, Lutheran ; School, 8 p. m. Historical Club, Mrs. Fred Alir, 2:30 p. m. Zion Reformed Ladies Aid Society church parlors, 430 p. m. Thursday Evangelical Loyal Daughters i class, Mrs. Carl Hammond, 7:30 p. m. Evangelical Ladies Aid Society, I church parlors, 2 p. m. prompt. Presbyterian Ladies iAid Society, Mrs. Ira Fuhrman. 2:30 p. m. Dinner Bridge Club, Mrs. A. R. j Holthouse. postponed one week. I I'. B. Progressive Workers class. ■ I Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Merryman 7:30 p. m. . I FRIDAY U. B. Little Evangels class, Maxine Hilton, after school. Wiyne celebrated their birthday anniversaries Sunday at the Archie Hendricks home, one and one half mile southeast of Monroe. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. “ Ora Hendricks and children, Max- ' ine, Virginia, Ruby, Betty and Bobiby. Russel Peabody of Fort Wayne; i Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Hendricks and son Lewis. Mr. and Mrs. Otho Lob- ■ enstine of Monroe, Mr. and Mrs. ■ I Archie Hendricks, son ‘Virgil and ! daughter Ruby. L Afternoon callers were Mrs. Carl •jCarlston and son Arvard. —. —.— WEDDING ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED HERE SUMDA.v Mr. and Mrs. Martin Miller wue ■pleasantly surprised Sunday when | they returned to their home from i! church to find i number of their ■relatives gathered at the home to : assist t.ien: in celebialiiig tlieii
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1933. T^r ~
forty fifth wedding anniversary. As the couple entered the home Robert Deitsch, accompanied at the piano by Marjorie Miller, sang a song in keeping of the occasion. The large dining table was centered with a wedding cake and a delicious dinner was served. Mr. and Mrs. Miller wore the flowers' which they hnd worn on their world ing day, forty five years ago. The honored guests were presented with a beautiful bouquet ot roses. Following the dinner, the party motored to the Magley Reformed; Church where Mr. and Mrs. Miller had been married, and kodak pictures were taken. in connection with the wedding anniversary, the birthday anniversaries of Ed. Miller and Miss Madgeii.,l. Miller Were also celebrated. Guests at the dinner included Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Miller of Marion; Mr. and Mrs. David Adams and daughter Marjorie Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Miller and daughters the ; Misses Madgeline and Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Deitsch and son Robert, Guests during the evening were Miss Betty Sissel ot St. Marys (Ohio; and Ralph Deitsch of Celina. . Ohio. OHIO COUPLE married here Miss Edna McMillen of Lake View Ohio and Malin Glick of Jackson Center, Ohio, were united in marriage Saturday evening at the parsonage of the Firpt United Brethren Church. The pastor. Dr. Charles J Roberts officiated at the single ring ceremony. The Little Evangels class of the . United Brethren Sunday School will have a pirty Friday afternoon, following school, at the home of Maxine Hilton. Ihe Progressive Workers class lof the United Brethren church will meet with Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Mer- , ryman Thursday night at seven■thirty o’clock. HONOR DAUGHTER WITH BIRTHDAY PART/ Mr. and Mrs. Albert Miller enter-' tallied Sunday afternoon from twothirty to four-thirty o’clock in honor of their daughter, Ruth Joan's fifth birthday anniversary. Appointments for the party were ;iu keeping with Valentino day. I Games and contests were enjoyed and prizes were won by Joyce Koop, Ruth Joan Miller and Joyce Smith. The long dining table was centered with a large birthday cake bearing lighted candles. Places were m irked with Valentine place cards and Valentine hats and whistles were given as favors. Refreshments of ice cream and cake, candy hearts and kayo were served. The honored gm st was the recip- ' ient of se. t.i. lovely gifts. The guest list included Ruth Joan Miller. Bobby Koop, Dpnnahelle Hoop. J L '-set Goldtiet, Arline and Joyce , Roop. Barbara Kohls, Jimmy Roop, i Hit hard Gehrig*. Carl Miller, all of I Decatur, and Joyce Smith of Berne. The meeting of the Dinner Bridge , Club with Mrs. A. A. Holthouse, I scheduled for Thursday bis been ! postponed one week. The Lillies Aid Society of the I Presbyterian Church will meet ' Thursday 'jtfernoon at two-thirty i o clock with Mrs. Ira B. Fuhrman. The Loyal Daughters class of the STAINLESS Same formula . . same price. In \ original form, too, if you prefer i fcra fiVERM?/ MILLION JAWS USED YEARLY THE CORT Tonight - Tomorrow “BLESSED EVENT” It’s the showdown on the Guy who gives you the lowdown. Packed with thrills. Don’t dare miss it. Cast includes Lee Ti ticv - Mary Brian and LOOO others. ADDED A Special Comedy anr* Movietone News. Hie • 25c - THE ADAMS Tonight and Tuesday “THE SON-DAUGHTER” with Helen Hayes. Hamon Novarro, Lewis Stone, Warner (Hund. ADDED - - An “Our Ganje” Com c<l y anil Organlogue with lessc ( raw ford. • Hie -25 c WED. & THURS.—“THE SPUR’ I PARADE" with Joel McCrea, I Marian Marsh, Robert Benchley, I “SkesU" Gallacher.
Evangelical Sunday School will meet Thursday night at seven-thirty o’clock with Mrs. Carl Hammond at her home, 621 Nuttman avenue. Mrs. Henry Stauffer will be the assisting hostess. The Ladies Aid Society of the i Evangelical Church will meet in ‘the church parlors, Tlnirsitny afternoon at two o'clock, prompt, 0 Personals Rev. and Mrs. George Walton returned Saturday from a weeks visit in Cincinnati. Mrs. Charles Holthouse and the Ml«se» lr»ne and Margaret Holthouse visited in Port Wayne Saturday evening. Miss Della Sellemeyer called on Fort Wayne friends. T. C. Smith of Berne was a caller here. Cal Yost who is worklug at Brook ville was looking after business here today. Patricia Atm is the name of the girl baby born to Mr. and Mrs. Orville Khoues of Portland, Saturday February 4. Mrs. Rhodes was formerly Miss Margaret Haley of this city. J. J. Hofer of Monroe is visiting at the E. B. Macy residence in this city. Miss Helen Gerber, beauty operator at the O. K. Beauty shop returned ttf work this morning following an absence of two weeks on account of illness. Mr. and Mrs. Elnter Miller of Marion visited in this city with relatives Sunday. Dick Graber has returned from a several diy's visit with friends in Elyria. Ohio. Charles E. Tiernan of near Monroeville was a business visitor in this city today. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Long are moving to Berne and will dispose of their property at the public sale. Friday.
Regular stated meeting of Blue Lodge, Tuesday night at 7:30 after which Entered (Apprentice degree will be given. BOH HELM, W. M. 0 PRESIDENT TO SPEAK TONIGHT CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE make his New York appearance a national political event. Mr. Hoover was scheduled to leave Washington at 2:15 p. m. He is due in New York at 6:45 p. n>. He planned to go immediately to the Wal-dorf-Astoria hotel where the dinner is set for Sp m Mr Hoover's speech is to begin at 10 p. m. It will be broadcast by both leading radio chains. Accompanying him will be, Mrs. Hoover: Postmaster General Wai [ter E. Brown, who directed his preicon'ention renominatlon camipaign; Everett Sanders, chairman iif the Republican national comimittee, and Lawrence Richey, the ! White House secretary c'osest in the president's confidence who will [establish himself in Washington after Mr. Hoover ietires to keep his chief advised of developments. Dr. .1. T. Boone. White House physician. also will cecvmiany the party. o ’GOVERNOR WILL PREPARE ORDER MAKING CHANGE — CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE t>f Elkhmt and Will Brown. It., o! Hebron. Both are members of the committee on public policy which lia.i had the bill under consideration for sonic, time. Before a vole could be taken on the motion for indefinite postponement the senate adjourned until this afternoon. * ■'Repeal of the Wright law* would leave only the federal law to con trol the vicious liquor traffic in Indiana,'' Swiliart said. BANKERS FIGHT NEW’ CODE BILL i CONTINUED FROM PAUB ONE the new form of banks' public statements required by the bill. The committee seeks to make the provision conform to that follow ed by National banks in, adv< rtis ing financial condition statements. [ Since the bill is about to go to the senate, the committee urged bankers to commuiiiciite with their senators. Originally drafted by the Indiana bank study commission created by Hu: 1931 legislature, the hill has been amended somewhat since it was started through the lower house. —e lq.. . Amailnf Figi>ra» A Hgbt ypar equal? 5 SSb.'cn.OOn miles. —o— — . “Oh, Kay!” Let us all £o io see the senior class play Tuesday, Feb. 11, at O. 11. S. auditorium. 2t
OUTLINES PLAN FOR RECOVERY OF THE NATION CONTINUED FROM PAG F ONE gages or for title to foreclosed farms but not to exceed 60 percent of the par value of the previous indebtedness The mortgages thus taken over would be revised on the basis of 3‘A per cent interest with the objective of reducing die principal by 50 per cent and the interest rate by about 66 2< per cent. TWO PROVINCES ARE THREATENED CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE complete, reports from the Kansu province earthquake to the headquarters of the China international famine relief, brought by foreigners travelling by camel, said 800 houses had been destroyed in mountain villages and towns. The first list of casualties was 280 dead and 300 injured, many seriously but this did not begin to show the lull extent of the quake. The earthquake was reported to have rocked the entire Kansu plateau for a radius of 100 miles. Kansu’s population is estimated at 6,000,000 (ML Foreigners who brought first news of the disaster said the earthquake destroyed scores of towns and villages. While the famine relief endeavored to get more extensive reports from Kansu, which is bordered by the mountains of Tibet and of inner Mongolia, officials of Shantung province mobilized coolies to reinforce the weakening dykes. Ixirge areas were already inundated near Yungkow and Huang Husa-Su. Chinese authorities familiar with the region believed that warm weather, loosening additional ice floes would result in a floor of major proportions. o Mrs. C. 1). Lewton and daughter Miss Eloise were Fort Wayne visitors Saturday.
jv*' - iBSr Spicy leaves of ***o Turkish tobacco A. Im ? i 'w are B,rung 10 r y >’. 4* ■’’at WIL A ' and cure in the sun. w' ab ilk' tr ’.aWWI. w . y\Sl,tkats something’ about cigarettes I never knew before W. I’d nevcr thought much about what’s inside a 7 Chesterfield cigarette. But I have just been reading / something that made me think about it. Z / Just thiuk of this, some of the tobacco in Chcst> "A+to.Z?*-'-.. * ' / crficld—the Turkish—comes from 4000 wiles away! V-Aud before it is shipped every siugle leaf is packed ■' by haud. All because Turkish tobacco is so small % ail( ] delicate. of course I don’t know much about making z . / / •Ji f'/f cigarettes, but Ido know this—that Chesterfields arc f/u ciyat’cat ~uta/.\ vJilarr milder aud have a very phasing aroma and taste. cigarette '/.fuel- /aslcs They satisfy—aud that’s what counts with uic! © 1933. Uacrrr A Mv»ls TomuoGo.
Cubs Wear Blue The small chaps, whom you sometimes see alwut the streets in their navy blue uniforms of shorts, their stockings and caps piped with yellow, are Cubs and they are wearing the official uniform of their group. Boys of 9, 10 and 11 years, too young to become Boy Scouts, have been provided with an attractive program of things Io do in and around their homes and in I their natural neighborhood play groupings. It has been developed for them after long research by a great groun of experts working under the auspices of the Boy Scouts of America. But Cubbing is a program separate from Scouting though allied with it in administration details and in main objectives —Character building and citizenship training. The interest of young boys has been distinctly aroused by this program as is evidenced by figures furnished by the Boy Scouts of Scouts of America which show that though only 5,102 Cubs were registered at the beginning of 1931, the year 1932 ended with nearly 30,000 on the rolls in almost 1,200 units. These units are known as ■ Dens and comprise a natural, local neighborhood play group. A boy enters as a Wolf Cub at nine, may graduate into the higher Bear rank at ten and at the age of eleven into the highest Cub rank —the Lion I —from which he is prepared to eniter Scouting at twelve. Each Den has a Den Mother — tile mother of one of the Cubs. There is also a Den Chief who is an older Boy Sqout, selected for outstanding qualities of leadership. One of the Cubs in a particular Den is the leader of the Den with the especial title of Denner. The boys undertake activities such as collections, kite-making and flying, handicrafts, skills, hobbies and •songs, games and stunts of various
types. Backyard camping rather than overnight or distance camping is encouraged for Cubs. In the forthcoming twenty-third anniversary of the Boy Scout movement February Bth to 14th, 1933 Cubbing will have prominent place because of the community of interest existing between the two programs. Outdoor Movement The Boy Scout movement is primarily a motement to the out of doors. The Boy Scouts of America is a leader, and to a certain exitent, a pioneer, in such activities, jit sees to it that groups of boys 'get a chance to go camping each !summer—and also in the winter if (they want to do so. Each year Its efforts result in larger numbers land fully 320.090 Scouts were in .camp last year. It goes further and sees boys are so directed by the counsel of friendly advisers that the boys get a lot more out of their holiday in the open than they otherwise possibly could. But even this is not the end and the Boy Scouts and other organizations working with youth go still further, planning with constructive effort to give the boys who go to camp and on overnight and weekend hikes something that shall be of lasting benefit to them and to the community of which they are igrowing citizens. Boy Scouts at .camp, just to name three of many things they are taught, learn how to prevent a.ccidents on water and on land, how to render first aid and the technique of swimming. Every year hundreds of lives are saved by Boy Scouts who are good swimmers and experts in life saving. Boy Scout and other outdoor leaders have but lately developed a technique for life saving in winter and prevention of skating and other ice accidents. Winter camping in spite of school duties and other controlling conditions is a popular activity, and ’many hikes and short term camps | during the celebration of the 23rd ; anniversary of the organization which is to be celebrated February |B-14th, 1933 will testify to the camp-
Page Three
ing activities of Boy Scouts. -— , , , Mrs. Barr Dead" - - -t • Bluffton, Feb. 13—Mrs. Margaret Barr, wife of William R. Bfifr. prominent local business man, died at her home here early Sunday morning after an, illness of five months Funeral services will be held at the First Baptist church here al 3 p. m. Tuesday. W. R. Barr is well known in Decatur, having served as governor of Indiana Rotary and also -having spoken here on many occasions. o r»Miners Injured Boonville, Ind., Feb. 13—(U.R>— Three miners were injured yesterday when slate fell on the cage in which seven men were coming to the top ot the mine. ■William Shaw, 45, and Felix Granor, 55, were said to be ir critical condition. Paul Wire, 30. received a fractured arm. o Increase Salary Indianapolis Feb. 13 —(UP)—lncrease of the lieutenant governor's salary from SI,OOO to $6,000 annually is provided in an administration bill to be introduced in the Indiana senate it was announced today. URULSJZFII f or (zs< S ■AUTOStS 1 Aal I MOUTH WASH , , on )y lur ■ gakgle . W all druggists ■
