Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 109, Decatur, Adams County, 8 May 1933 — Page 3

ETY

I; n 1 a rY knight Staff Correspondent _____ — ~H (UP)— Everything now-a-dapted to the individual, hia. having had its short gat a to the do- ■’ ~L | . commonplace and duiied as a matter KyM' oes ® - ~«>,■■>) "build towers to ff'LJ. 1,. , ,ns'-. unlike ManhatB 3 •< 01 Delation is made of t, rife Sii ' 1 can ’ however, and Ilg „n effect of height EaXmiu V’lk, by nature rattiigWjsh. This is the general Un. which lias been perfor rural seasons. Tho line with its bizarre felies - , vc a,ltl shoulder, and <nd up-pointing hat - height of any fee feigilieiied skirt also is a and co-operates with K w). -i shoulder. Imagine Ktahide .-.boulder effect with a fe Sfir: would do to you—then Ea high hat! fee Ladies Aid Society of the fcchlof Lod will meet Thursday at two o'clock with Mrs. I pie. and cookie sale by Foreign Missionary JBi of the Methodist church postiKmed indefinitely. I interesting program lias In I for the Better Homes Ke Economics Club meeting afternoon at the home Ml.'. W. Busclie. A combined lit!) and mothers program will Kwturo of the afternoon and geiißtalks and musical numbers I ■ given. Tlie complete proBn appeared in Saturday's pathe piano selection by Mrs. Ker Winteregg was omitted. lical League of Chriawill meet at the Berniece Hajmi on Mercer Tuesday evening at seven■S 'clock. Madeline Spahr will hostess. ■ Missionary Society of the Church will meet at of Mrs. Paul Schultz afternoon at two ■ Herb Kern will be hostess ■members of the- Alpha Zeta Club at her home Wednes■glit at seven-thirty o’clock. ■ Tuesday Afternoon Bridge ■ill meet with Mrs. Clyde ■^ Tuesday afternoon at two I • I \ at no them high in \ I QUALITY \ / I. H. Zwick & Son I r»- Zwick, Lady Attendant Phones 61 and 303. I J- M. Doan, Phone 1041 1 9 2, ’T Decatur, Ind.

MW&sSSr IA jMff n m |Y j JUST APPLIED IT THIS 7 / ¥ I MORNING —NOW IT'S V/U A DRY. ISN'T IT A BEAUTIFUL / A)> / \ I SMOOTH FINISH J/ / f rEWWxAI] KOHNE CHIMSE GREEN CALLOW & ’

CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Monday Pythian Needle Club, K. of P. Homie, following Temple. Tuesday Tuesday Afternoon Bridge Cluib Mrs. Clyde Butler, 2 p. m. ' E. L. of C. E. Berniece Hanoi, • 7:30 p. m. Rebekah Lodge, I. O. O. F. Hall, 7:30 p. m. Psi lota Xi called meeting, Mrs. Gerald Smith, at Homer Lower residence, 7:30 p. nt. Delta Theta Tau business meet- > ing, Miss Jeanette Clark, 7:30 p. m. Adams County Choral Society, above Brock Store, 7:30 p. m. Tri Kappa, Miriam Parrish, 8 pm. Harry W. Thompson, first public reading of poetry D. C. H. S. auditorium, 8 p. m. Wednesday i Frivolity Club, Mrs. Adrian Dak- . | er, 7:30 p. in. Mt. Pleasant Bible class, Mr. and Mrs. Jess Singleton, 8 p. nu Zion Lutheran Missionary Soc1 iety, Mrs. Paul Schultz, 2 p. m. Alpha Zeta Bridge Club, Mrs. | Herb Keim, 7:30 p. m. Better Homes Economics Club Mrs. E. W. Busche, 2 p. m. Thursday Mt. Pleasant Ladies Aid Society, Mrs. Wm. Jones, 2 p. m. i Church of God Ladies Aid Society Mrs. John Chilcote, 2 p. m. Eastern Stars 40th. Anniversary party, Masonic Hall, 6:30 p. m. '; W. C. T. U., First Evangelical ' Church, 2:30 p. m. CALVARY LADIES HOLD MEETING i The Calvary Ladies Aid Soiety ; met at the church for the regular ■ I meeting recently. Devotionals were , led by Mrs. Fannie Jackson and a , i short business session was conduct- ! ed. The afternoon was spent in knotting comforts. . | conducthitedTAO ET ET ET EAI Those present were tho Mes- ■ dames Berniece Darr, Fanny Jack- ■ son, lona Shifferly, Etta Miller, I and the Missus Jenny Smith, Doris and Mildred Shifferly, Fayme Miller. 3 Ire Ladies Aid Society of the : United Brethren. Church will hold • a cafeteria supper Saturday night, May 20 from five to seven o'clock I at the church. i j The name of Mrs. Art Meyer . was omitted from the list of mem- . I bers of the committee in charge, of the arrangements for the Catholic ■, Ladies Social Club party Wednes- • day, May 17. >; The Mt. Pleasiant Bible class will ! meet Wednesday night at eight o'clock with Mr. and Mrs. Jess Singleton. The Mt. Pleasant Ladies Aid Society will meet Thursday afternoon at two o’clock with Mrs. William Jones. Mrs. Adrian Baker will entertain the m mbers of the Frivolity Club at her home Wednesday night at seven-thirty o’clock. o — Regular stated meeting of Decatur lodge number 571 Tuesday night. Bob Helm. W. M. Get the n»blt—Trane at Horn*

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 8, 1933.

LOCAL PASTOR I REAPPOINTED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Dayton, was appointed to the Elkhart First Church. The assignment of ministers for the Indianapolis district follows: District superintendent, D. A. Kaley; Atlanta, Frances Willard; Avilla, C. R. Bitzer; Berne, M. O. Herman; Bippus, E. 0. Habbagei, Celina, B. E. Koenig; Celina circuit, E. C. Kunce; Columbia City, D. R. Heil; Dayton, A. H. Doescher; Decatur, M. W. Sundermann; Defiance, Lloyd Maurer; Fort Wayne, First, C. P. Maas; Fort Wayne, Crescent, J. H. ArndL Huntingburg, R. A. Stauss; I. G. Roederer; Indianapolis, First, R. H. Mueller; Indianapolis, Second, F. C. Wachnitz; Indianapolis, Beverly, Ambrose Aegerter; Indianapolis, Broadway, L. E. Smith; Kendallville, W J. Dauner; Kokomo, First, George H. Boyce; Kokomo, Zion, F. J. Stedcke; Linn Grove, F. D. Stemen; Louisville, i Zion, G. J. Long; Louisville Trinity, Ralph Holdeman. Markle, W. I. Wyant; Phillipsburg, C. W. Spangler; PortlandRidgeville, C. E. Geist; Portland circuit, C. W. Walrner; Pershing, M. L. Scheidler; Rockport, supplied by O. 11. Fritz; Syracuse, Samuel Pritchard; Van Wert, F. I. Wilmert; Van Wert circuit, L. K. McKinley; Wapakoneta, O. A. Overholser; Waterloo, D. D. Spangler; Wolcottville, P. F. Young. FULL PROGRAM IS ANNOUNCED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) incss College in Fort Wayne Friday morning and the response was very fine. He was invited by Jonas Tritch, head of the institution to give a program there again at a later date. Young peoples groups in the following churches are cooperating: Methodist, Presbyterian, Baptist, Zion Reformed, and Catholic. They will receive half of the net profits on the tickets they sell. David Heller is chhirman of the committee on arrangements and Gerald Smitley is treasurer. BROTHERS ARE HELD ON BAIL OF $200,000 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Cyril. McMath and the Cape Cod folk generally felt, entered the negotiations only because he desired to protect 26-year-old Kenneth. Kenneth admitted full respnsibility.for the plot and its execution, state police said. It was he who, disguised witli burnt cork and a chauffeur’s uniform, abducted Peffy from her school; it was he who drove her to a cabin in a cranberry bog, and then transferred her to a dismal, black hole beneath a cottage across the street from the Buck home; it was he who fed her through the days of her imprisonment and finally returned to her father in exchange for tho $66,000 provided by her grandparents. :—o 33 CHILDREN ARE ENROLLED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) John Voglewede, Anthony Faurote, Joseph Kortenber, Robert McClenahan, Charles Shell, Edward Raudebush, Ralph Ulman, Joseph Wolpert, Elizabeth Graliker, Margaret Shell. Q Robbers Get SI,OOO Peru, Ind., May B—(UP)—A series of holdups and burglaries in Miami county over the week-end netted more than SI.OOO in cash and other loot W. B. Perry, a filling station proprietor, was robbed of SIOO after 'being tied up with wire. M. G. Scott, a taxi-driver, was kidnaped, driven into the country and robbed of his taxl-cib. He was released. 0 Final Consideration Os Farm Bill Blocked Washington May B—(UP)8 —(UP) Final consideration of tho administration's farm bill was blocked today in the house when speaker Rainey proved that the senate-house conferees in adjusting differences in the two drafts had “exceeded their authority." 0 CONVENTION AT PORTLAND MAY 9 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE QNE) ion. Roll call of district officers and committees. Minutes of last convention. Greetings. Report of Temples by delegates. Miscellaneous. Placing of convention. Orphan’s maintenance fund. • Opening in ritualistic form—Portland. Exemplification of ballots — District officers. Lunch.

| I ... —-7-, Fifth Avenue Fashions B y ELLEN WORTH eason s zAx Blouse Has a Victorian Date I when mother asks daughter for . ij fashion advice, that’s not news. U < I Bu t when daughter takes mother's /I h fashion advice that's news. At /g J S QY’,../A last a rule of dress that was alia t 1 Itet ' Y ' most law for mother way back in 1 V i 1 Z) the 'nineties has been revived “ W1 (t with enthusiasm by the younger U T generation. What's the rule? You 59 in 0 I have guessed it —to emphasize jzou gy ? your s h ou id ei . s makes your waist- ‘ line twice as slender by compari- ” son. Pattern No. 5230 is designed That’s why smart modems, for sizes 14 16 18 20 years 32 young and old, can't gel too many L of the new-fashioned, old-sash-34, 36, 38, 40, 42 oust. ioned sleeves with leg-o’-mutton fulness at the shoulders. That’s —o— why blouses like this with its tailored collar.-lapped closing and New Summer Fashion Book is tiny waistline belong in every e, j « -4 ™,4 wardrobe. You 11 find other out. Send for it put check Wouses m the new Summer Fashhere and enclose 10 cents ex- ion Book> j ust out- size 16 re q U ires tra for book, 214 yards 36-inch material. No. 5 2 3 0 Size Price for Pattern 15 Cents. name street address city state Acklress orders to New York Pattern Bureau, the Decatur Daily Democrat, Suite 1110, 220 East 4 2nd St. New York City. (Editor's note—do not mail orders to Decatur, Indiana.)

Afternoon Session, 1:30 P. M. Call to order by the District Deputy Grand Chief. Piano duet — Bessie Coffel and Burl Whiteacre. Original poem—Jennie Iholts. Love and Tribute to Grand officers. Address —“My Pot of Gold” — Ocie D. Jellison, senior. Exemplification of Installation — Marion Temple, No. 182. Knight Installation — Tocsin officers and Portland staff.

— TO £V£i? BEEN INTEREST-] T-HE FAMOUS -I——- l 1 "" 0 ED IN MAGIC? TRICK > YOU NOIV |' •FV / IVA'I Y FUNNy YOU olt ( ° K I j V W. jK W ' SHOULD MEN- thfropf LtfW ' CUL T -iU Fl DON IT. I SAW Z \ x \ i M TWn ( magic stunt yJ? In 4 H LAST NIGHT. . 4 ‘ you SEE J JK fact IS,I ■"] ’ '■ W W RATU'S B TOOK PAV il f/ - ■*■■ ii* ■ lcngt-h is U MI!1I ™ £ l ■ be- I. Wu—_i IBBWHE jSU I NEVER DID \ BJ ike ciMWP W X / -J -UOW ABOUT A MOT ONE OF ] F VOU I g| SMOKE,T>OC ? THOSE. I Vnovj / // I w/r /r THE loop ___ like mz ilfcJ -O Wp. MAG/C/AM SHOtVE v riVjNi w Ty. •< BnESI w / ' A> P ' j ) rY&L 1/ I HAG S.lt'A/L LOOPOE S .y XN’I'W \( —N/ POPE CONCEALED SEH/A/D BKfIbiWKSL/Ml \A T-vJL _ J / W / Ka*‘ E;psr aap seco.vo e/hgeps 'v > ' W OE LEET HAVE)v I-**- BBSMIIIHI I Jj_ROM NuvV ON. I WlltflH ‘ ’ / %£■ —;Y" \ « S /r y g ' ila y SKmRI’M Be-. ar 11 t* SSWWV.eYjiB P Camels arc made from f m »> g finer, MORL EXPENSIVE A' p-/ z I to^accos i^an an y S other popular brand, i. \ \ w B They arc milder, easy I on thc throat •* • a ? / 1 ''t / B better smoke. It’s the , ‘' z - - Y HER TOBACCOS MOkE ' • , - ~ Mui;t timc j yBSSIWI »b-

Ladies initiation — District officers. degree staff of Purity Temple No. 11 of North Manchester. Address, “Let’s Get Togther”— Grand Chief. Offering, Orphan's fund. Remarks on work by the Grand Chief. Questions and answers. Good of the Order. Report of district treasurer and committee. Closing ritualistic form Dy temple at Pennville.

| CHURCH REVIVALS | Gospel Temple The temple work is progressing fine. Many are being saved and sanctified also a number have been healed. Special music is being given at each service. Saturday night we had a string trio, guitar and ba>i) jo. If you play a wind instrument brifig it along. Sunday night services were held at the Fort Wayne temple and there w.-re 14 candidates for baptism from the local I temple. Saturday might Rev. Barker spoke an “Everlasting Righteousness”. o FIVE PERSONS KILLED SUNDAY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) riding with her son-in-law, Jess Quirk, was forced off state road 3 and overturned south of Muncie. Among the most seriously injuri ed in Sunday accidents was Mrs. I Henley T. Hottel, Indianapolis. I She was still unconscious at Good I Samaritan hospital, Kokomo, tins 1 morning, 24 hours after the car in I which she was riding collided with | another at Kokomo. Vitale was burned to death when his car caught on fire after Russell Meiz, 24, R.R. 2, Goshen, colliding with a machine driven by on U. 'S 1 . 31 north of South Bend, exploded. Meiz and a companion, Tlie gasoline tank of Vitale's car Miss Catherine I’ffcl, 21, NiLes, were injured. COURTHOUSE Cause Dismissed Peter Amspaugh vs. Peter Kjrsch and Leo Kirsch suit on account, I cause dismissed and costs paid. Ordered To Jail Lola Bohr vs. Coulson Bohr, dedendant adjudged in contempt of 1 court for failure to comply with 1 order of the court, defendant com- ’ ’ mitted to the Adams county jail for ten days.

[women to meet AT FORT WAYNE (CONTINUED FROM PACfcE ONE) Mrs. Brummitt will speak at the morning, afternoon and evening program. At 5:30 'the district banquet will be served A large number of women from tlie local church are planning to attend the all-day session. Q Barnard Wemhoff of this city son of Mr. and Mrs. George Wemhoff, has been named president of the Theta chapter of Delta Sigma Chi for 19(33 and 34. He was also chosen delegate to tlie grand chapter congress of the fraternity to be held September 13 to 17 at Chicago this year. Programs for the summer University Courses offered by' Indiana University at Fort Wayne, June 19 to August 12, have been distributed. Moody Brenneman purs>aryman of west of Berne donated for the Adams County Memorial Hospital grounds eight large evergeeens and two we?ping birch trees. The trees will be placed in a prominent place on the grounds. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Dugan spent several days ini 'lndianapolis visit- ■ I ing with their daughter, Mrs. Dor- . othy Goodrich. > Dr. E. H. Cosner and Miss Mar- ' tha Cosner of Dayton, Ohio, spent . the week-end in this city with Rev. and Mrs. Charles M. Prugh. Dr. Cosner is the father of Mrs. Prugh and Miss Cosner is a sister. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fuhrman, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Smith and Mrs. George Dutcher, Jr., attended the Evangelical Church confereaK-e at 1 Kendallville Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Macy of this . city and J. J. Hofer of Monroe visited with Ad Hofer at Bluffton Sun- ■ day afteiiiiooii. Among those from Decatur who 1 attended the closing day session of ■ th'?. Evangelical Church conference I at Kendallville Sunday were Mr. a:d Mrs. Frank Butler, Mr. and

Page Three

Mrs. Will Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Engle, Mr. and Mrs. Alva Buffenbarger, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hocker and Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Tricker. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Butler and daughter Miss Martha Erma amd Miss Helena Rayl motored tq Kendallville Sunday to attend the Evangelical Church conference. Q — Form Organization Tuesday Evening An organization meeting will ue held at tlie Monmouth high school . at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, for boys interested in gardening work. L. E. Archbold, county agent, will outline the work for the summer. Mervin C. Hostetler will act as leader of the Manmouth group and Rev. Frank Engle the Union Chapel group. Boys enrolled at the present time are: Miervin McCoy, Earl Sheets, Everett C. Singleton, Donald Hoile, Teddy Hobrock, Glen Merica, Edward Meriua, Fred Kunkel, Richard Moses, Junior Biehold, Robert Franz, Edison Beihold, William Frit zinger. Fire Causes Damage Os Over Million Dollars 1 Ellsworth, Me., May B—<U.R> — A call for state highway poljce to assist special officers in preventing looting was dispatched by . Mayor Harold V. Woore today as fires, probably of incendiary origin, swept through this eastern Maine trading center today. The fire destroyed 150 dwellings . and 100 business buildings, mostly frame. Combined, efforts of fire apparatus from Belfast, Bangor, Brewer, Bar Harbor, Northeast Harbor and Bucksport finally . brought it under control. Damage was estimated at more than $1,500,000, and at least 400 . persons were left homeless. WATER IN PLACE OF MEAL HELPS STOMACH , Stomach trouble is often helped , by skipping one meal. Drink lots lof water. Add a spoonful of Ad- ; , lerika each morning to clean out poisons in stomach and bowels. B. I : .1. Smith Drug Co.