Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 127, Decatur, Adams County, 29 May 1933 — Page 3
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' IJOCALENDAR - Mary Macy ’bare 1000—1001 the is Monoay I, _ Auxiliary meet rks ■ ■” P- »’• - Nigh> < Jub, Mrs. Clem inks 7:30 p. n>Tutsaay , v ■- Ml Club. Bobo Ws. 1). l ounl' choral Society, r> k 7:30 p m. Utj Wednesday nd T . cla.-s. Jlrs. Paul KirLab: s Club. K. 11. S. ■ Thursday lb adv class, Mrs. N 1 3 Aid Society. “M Fuhrman, 2 p. m. ' ittr |. a ,i ,>s Aid Society, ‘°o W. H. M. S., Mrs. Paul a 2: Lidl'S Aid Soviet) g „t i Lurch Thursday jt .rethirty o’clock. ■ land T. Club will meet at <>> Mrs. Paul Kirchentbau- ' street Wednesday at two o'clock. "■e ■orth Si Mary's 4 H Club ING at 'it Boho School TuesUlf ..no-thirty o'clock. ■) Ihiklin i> the Evangelical 0 asked to met at the Wed , afternoon i practice for Childsociety eKft ’ THURSDAY v . ni' ii ■ Home Missionary ~ I'Motiiodist Episcopal novt at the home of Eduards on Adams afternoon, Jut,.. 1. ■a-'hirty o'clock. sses will be the Mes-I . Gerald Smith 1 t* and the Misses ■' vlaiy Suttl -. Elms, and Victoria Mills. will bare charge of '■■ attendance |Ha» th.' annual election of “ a Id. Refreshments d by the committee. OF PROGRAM BUREAU salmi program of the .it the Hoosier Pm i ■ Was held ill the L S. hMSI" I '. \ idftorium in IndianI ■^■ r '*r:mi opened at ten-thirty and continued until one luncheon in the Ayres K he ADACHES gone y n REMEDY DOES IT - caused by constipagone after one dose i.f (^■ a his cleans all poisons ■■BOTH upper and lower bow- ' l.nlter sleep, ends nervB J. Smith Drug Co.
I FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS ■-By ELLEN WORTH
ioaf/iin4rms Copied ■rom Grandmother ■b-debs are up in arms—■u up in arms, to be precise, ■aps you've noticed that sash- ■ nave a hard time keeping ■> of the younger set. No ■f is a new idea launched ■ the youngsters »are all agog. ■ want it!” they cry, while ■ mothers are still hesitating, ■ats the history of some of ■ Pnt fashions, the jumper ■ style, the raglan sleeve, the ■Ped shoulder yoke and doz■w others. And that’s what ■happened to these big puffed graceful puffed-sleeve ■ will be a great favorite for ■ r girls in the long length and ■ graduates in the shorter ■Ji. And no girl who owns |WUI ever run the risk of be■a wallflower at parties. To the broad shoulders even ■n'Xi " ere are the little epau- ■ ninles. The high, squarish » » wry smart, and the whole ■ is of our famous Easy-to-variety. For fabric require- ■ •’See pattern envelope. Irx n . n ? w . four color 32-page fJ 1 r style book is out. Send for pay. Price 10 cents. k .fJ 0 ' 5253 18 designed for F ’■ ». 10, 12, 14, 16 years.
L_Copyright. t»33, by United Festure Syndkstalrt. b- 5253 Size price for Pattern 15 Cents. r e street address state New Summer Fashion Book Is out! Send for it—put check here and enclose 10 cento extra for boo* &*“ ? r <. ers to New York Pattern Bureau, the .Rt' 1 -, HouS a *’ Sulte 1110 ’ 220 East 4 2nd St. New vlty. (Editor do not mall orders to Decatur, Indiana.)
Tea Room. The artists who take part in the Hoosier Bureau programs may be secured for club entertainments. Following is the complete program given this morning: Jasonville Chapter of Triad Choral Ensemble Neal Director Mary Armstrong Shouse - “When Ladies Meet" Lynn K. Rumell Original poems Marion Thomas Dramatic Soprano Mrs. C. M. Fawns "Heirlooms” John Robert Moore “The Professor's Animal Stories” Eugenia Hubbard Nixon Piano Mrs. Hamet D. Hinkle Annual report of executive chairman. ‘Mary Sue Wigley Ensemble (in costume) ‘ Folk Songs of Old Vincennes” Cecelia Ray Berry, director. The Ever Ready class of the Methodist Episcopal Sunday School will meet Thursday night at seventhirty o'clock with Mrs. Riley Christman. The assisting hostesses will be the Mesdanies Giles Porter, John Nelson and Fred Handier. The ML Pleasant Ladies Aid Society will meet Thursday afternoon at two o'clock with Mrs. Francis Fuhrman. BERNE YOUNG MAN WEDS BLUFFTON GIRL The marriage of Miss Irene Me Curdy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer McCurdy of Bluffton and Robert Braun, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Braun of Berne took place at the Evangelical parsonage in Fort Wayne Sunday afternoon at four o'clock. The Rev. J. H. Arndt officiated. The groom just completed his junior year in the Berne high school and the bride was graduated from the Bluffton high school last year, The couple will make their home with the bride's parents. JEHU RAUCH WEDS MISS MABLE GROH Miss Mabie Groh, of Bluffton and I Jehu Rautiii of Berne were married J Sunday afternoon, at two o’clock at I the Christian Apostolic Church, west of Berne. Rev. Godfrey Rauch officiated at the marriage service. Mr. and Jlrs. Rauch will reside in Berne where the groom is employed at the Berne Grain and Hay company. DECATUR PEOPLE ENJOY DINNER AT ANGOLA Mr. and Mrs. Walter Koos of Ans gola entertained at dinner Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mutschler and son Bobby, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn, jJackson, Mr. and Mrs. Artie JackI son. Mrs. E. W. Jackson and grand ' daughter Janice,, Don and Helen Koos. ENTERTAIN MISSIONARY GUILD The Misses Edna and Ida Borne entertain d the members of the Girls Missionary Guild of the Magley Reformed Church at their borne, Friday night. The business meeting was con-
z' • ? U j It I ’ /Mr W V lUJj ' r ' ewi 5253
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 29, 1933'
ducted by Edna Borne after a> social hour was enjoyed. Those present were the Misses Mabie, Magdalene and Ruth Borne, Radel Andrews Louise Kiese, Helen Marie hidebrand, Marie Scherry, Amanda Fruchte, Irene and Leona Peck Marie Grether, Edna, Ida and Eula- ’ ha Borne. - HONOR DAUGHTER ■ ON ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Miller delightfully entertained at dinner Sunday in honor of their daughter, Marjorie Ann, out her second birthday anni- ! versary. Tire table was centered with a large white birthday cake, on which were two lighted tapers with pink bonders. 5 ~C overs Wele laid f(>r Mr -‘ au d ) Mrs. John Miler and family, Miss < lara Miller and Marjorie Annis great grandmothers, Mrs. Andrew Miller and Mrs. Margaret Kurver. > ENTERTAIN AT - SUNDAY DINNER Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Bormaim entertained at Sunday dinner for Miss Rose Fullenkamp, Mrs. Addie Gass, son Bob and daughter Bea of this c ity Mrs. Margaret Bormann ot iClintoni lowa. Dinner guests at the Bormann > horn today were Mrs. Addie Gass. I Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Weisnnntel of St. Charles, Illinois; and Mrs. r Margaret Bormann of Clinton i lowa. ■ ' WOODIN READY TO RESIGN JOB i IF NECESSARY FKOM PauE ONE) buyer of bargain Morgan stocks* The White House joined with Woodin in denying reports that • the treasury secretary already I had submitted his resignation to • the president. » “I have not resigned—that’s all i I can say,” Woodin told newspapermen following his return from the week-end yachting trip with the president. > Indications were that Woodin's i decision would be determined by I developments. A casual inquiry among senators showed that many ’ believed he would resign sooner or later. Senator Glass, spry little Virginian who has consistently objected to Pecora's methods in flip I Morgan inqtdry, told the United I Press lie had “received about half a dozen death threats and several . blackguard communications,” He said there might be more. He hasn't had time to read <cll his i mail. But whether halt a dozen or - half a hundred. Glass assured all ■ comers he would persist in interrupting Pecora’s questions to uphold "the dignity of the senate committee.” Attacks Pecora Pecora is a bull's eye for attack. An unidentified member of the Roosevelt administration and an unidentified correspondent in New York promised Ito give Senator Couzens details of alleged irregularities in Pecora's record a..< an assistant district attorney in New York. In that office Pecora was in charge of investigation and prosecution of some of Manhattan's most notable criminal cases. Oik of them was the murder of Dot King, Broadway show girl. That mystery never was solved. Senators closest (o the investigation are emphatic in asserting ' that ' nothing can stop this inquiry." If Pecora were disqualified, tlie committee would hire other counsel and continue the searching examination of investment and banking methods which accompanied the boom period and continued beyond it, these senators say. Operations of Kuhn, Loeb & I Co., Dillon Read & Co., the securiI ties affiliates of the Chase NaI tional Bank and perhaps those of the Guaranty Trust Co., are down for investigation which will continue well into the summer. Chairman Byrnes of the senate committee which must approve expenditures for investigations and other purposes told the United Press I: ■pidd be willing lo vote all tli/Wiids necessary to carry the program to the end. Other senators on the investigating committee say President Roosevelt has approved going through willi the plan "even if it hits some of our fellows.” Woodin and Davis already have been hit, along witli other statesmen and politicians such as the late Calvin Coolidge, John J. liaskob, Joseph R. Nutt and Senator McAdoo, Dem., Calif. All were favored by Morgan & Co., in 1929 witli the opportunity ( o buy stocks at less than market prices. —o Fire Causes SIO,OOO Damage At Boonville Boonville. Ind., May 29. — (U.R) — Damage estimated at SIO,OOO was caused last night by a fire that swept through offices and stores in the Thornburgh building. The entire west side of the aourthouse square was threatened for a time as the flames were fanned by a stiff breeze. — Mr. and Mrs. John S. Petarson I visited in Fort W»yn» Sunday with I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Keii»r and | son Hale.
INDIAN LEADER ENDS HIS FAST (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) from behind his gold-rimmed'spec-tacles, Gandhi turned his head weakly on Ids cot as the noon hour sounded, and thanked the half dozen doctors who watched him anxiously. In the beautifully decorated hall | of the marble villa of Lady Vith- i alda Thackersay, on a terrace of) which, facing the Yeroda gates of the city, Gandhi had lain during I his fast, more than 100 persons,) Moslems, Sikhs, Hindus and Christians, were waiting for the fast to end. o — — TWO ARE KILLED IN AUTO WRECKS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ! ship of the missing car to an Indianapolis man whom they had not been able to locate. Athlete Killed Alexandria,! May 29— (U.R) — George (Bunny) Landstorfer, Beloit, Wis., former Alexandria high school basketball star, was killed and three companions were injured seriously when their auto left) the highway near here Sunday. Kenneth Stoughton, Alexandria, driver of the car, suffered face lacerations. He said he swerved the mmachine into a ditch to avoid striking another automobile. Mrs. Zehna Landstorfer, wife of the victim, suffered a fractured pelvis, and Mrs. Elnora Stoughton, wife of the driver, a broken leg. o THOUSANDS AT WORLD’S FAIR (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) government, is valued at $500,000. Meanwhile, on a century ot progress grounds, another day of noises was being unfolded. In the vast Hall of Science, a projection machine cast against a screen a graphic picturization of man’s war against microbes. That was followed by motion pictures explaining why iron rusts and coal burns, showing the strange tiny creatures
r last might I saw/a ' HHR I -HfJ's TH£ I S€lW€ 100 CUPS OF COFFEE / 99’1 CUP and KNOW IT WASnYa TO THE AUPI€NC€ OUT OF A / BIRMb/ - STILL SOME < TRICK FI UG€ COFFEE POT THAT WE /, ) Z LEFT-ANYONE BAnJ/W B \ I PRODUCED FROM J J / fToTw A 1 /xU \ 1 f f/7 / •TV / FOOLED AGAIN, M} 'EI II S W M II Is— . eL JI ■ "" 1 ““—“ ~ __ ■■■"•' ll ■ 11 SojttAETwE I r n T)0N ’ T ENJOy THAT ICIGAK£Tl CIGAK£T J £? brand. THEY KZ3QQQQB to top of % taste so TABLE WHEN \ FLAT I L MAGICIAN Ll U / ' ,47-*’ Z H * LIFTS CLOTH. ( zp, ' L do thfy re ally taste (tztTaY ,/ .c, c MkT) FLAT? I THOUGHT THEV I uilTat UMwMmU W ® SUPPOS£D TO K mo f si L iw SAY: KZQR vJTSTWW : — s ■- . { "it's more fun to know"?) Y fIAILD ?TRy A 7 H / CAMEL AND YOU'LL )/ YES,IT'S THE •■ TILJW Camels are made from 1 ® AWT) \ I •RwysflJ M finer, MORE EXPENSIVE F | NaSTETtOQ: i 7lU€° U jjj tobaccos than any other W 14® SmffiSy 8 popular brand ’ Youll / x / .yZ £| Cy KB appreciate the mildness \ V V •••the flavor...the added \Ad x* J S <^ J pleasure of costlier to- J ' hH ■ ba “"
that live in water, invisible until it is explored through a microscope. Down on the midway, the carnival spirit ruled. Mingling with the beautiful tons of the Deagan carillon coming from the loud speakers were the grunts of chimpanzees, the scream of the cyclone speed cars, the spiel of ballyhoo speakers and the sustained laughter of the crowd. I A spectacle of solemn beauty had I been preluds to today's program. To the roll of drums and fanfare lof trumpets, the patlNon, World ■ War memorial, was dedicated. It |is a painting 402 feet long and 49 feet high depicting battlefield scenes of France and Belgium. In the foreground are 6,000 portraits of national heroes, men and women. | For years ago, 42S artists toiled Ito create the pantheon. Twelve Red Cross nurses, typify- | iug the part women played in the I war, stood at attention with troops from the United States army encampment while the dedicatory flag was raised. Col. Francis E. Drake, president of Pershing Hall in Paris, and C. Wayland Brooks irepresenting the American Legion, spoke and French Consul General i Rene Wallier and his aides were guests of honor. o ONE MEMBER OF GANG WOUNDED DURING HOLDUP (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ams and Stepheu Warner, assistant cashier, and used them as shields until they reached the edge of town where they let them out. Dr. Mackay started in pursuit of the bandit car and followed it for about two miles west. The robbers stopped, stole his car and left the wounded man with him. TThe time lost in changing cars enabled officers to lake up the trail quickly. Every uniformed man within a radius of more than bl) miles was asked to assist in the search. Ten officers from Culver Military Academy joined the posse. After surrounding the bandits in the underbrush leaders of the posse agreed to wait until exper-
ienced police or sheriff’s deputies • could be gathered in sufficient numbers to beat through the area. It was feared that the bandits would make a desperate attempt i to shoot their way out. . The United Press correspondent 1 covered the manhunt from the top ■ of a telephone pole where he hooked in a phone and communicated directly with his office. I Cards in the wallet of the . wounded bandit indicated his ■ name was Shea and that he was a I member of the boilermakers union at South Chicago. i ——o—--1 A. I). SUTTLES MOTHER DIES ) (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) two o'clock from the Suttles hdme, - Rev. B. F. Franklin, former pastor j of tlie Methodist church officiati ing. Burial will be made in the - Decatur cemetery. r o ; Delaware, Nevada J Votes Favor Repeal l 1 Nenvo, Nev., May 29. -(U.R)—Ne- > vada was committed to prohibition repeal today after voters had elected 670 precinct delegates, pledged to elect wet representatives to the state convention, Sept. 5. Only one dry delegate was nominated in 241 • precincts. Wilmington, Del., May 29.—(U.R) ■ Delaware voted approximately 3% to one for delegates committed to ’ repeal of the ISth amendment, latest figures on Saturday's repeal 1 election showed today. The figures were 45,396 for re- ! peal, 13,236 against. o i Favor Nominations Os Flerhing, Nolan ’ Washington May 29 —(UP) —The I senate judiciary committee today > voted a favorable report to the seni ate oiil the nominations of James I R. Fleming and Vale Nolan to be - attorneys for file northern and southern districts of Indiana rest poctively. j o — Get the Habit — Trade at Home
OocALi;
C. K. Bell of Fort Wayne visited here today. Mr. antd Mrs. William Bell and Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Neptune motored to Indianapolis this afternoon and will attend the big 500 mile races Mr. and Mrs. Max Kid of Bicknell Indiana, left today for tfceir home after a several days visit with Mr. and Mrs. Herb Curtis. Mrs. Jacob Long and Mrs. Will Widows, of Geneva were callers here Saturday evening. iFerd Christen of Fort Waylne was here over the week-end. Miss Marguerite Peterson left Sunday morning for her home in Chicago after a several weeks visit here. David Heller and Tom Alwein will attend the races at Indianapolis. M. E. Hower of North Fourth street, is confined to his Ihome with illness. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Whitright spent the week-end at Monroeville visit- j ing with Mrs. Whitright’s parents ■ Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kelley. Mrs'. [ Kelley is quite seriously ill. W. H. Foughty and family spent the week end at Wiiaona Lake. Miss Ruth Foughty remained at the lake to spend the summer at Che Homestead. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Myers and son John visited relatives in Bluffton Sunday. Lloyd Cowems and family visited ■friends and relatives in Bluffton | Sunday. Mrs. Jennie Rainier and Mrs. i Agnes Andrews visited with Mr. and Mrs. Roger Swaim and family at Bluffton Sunday. Roger Swaim end daughters Janet and Doris visited friends and relatives in Decatur Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Weismantel of St. Charles, Illinois are visiting with Mrs. Addie Gass and family Im Chis city. Mr. and Mrs. Frattik Zeser of Denver, Colorado, are visiting at
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the Dan Zeser home. Mrs. Stella Coverdale is home from a several months visit with Hier sister, Mrs. Frank Burns and family ii> Los Angeles, California. Judge J. C. Sutton who is receiving treatment at the Battle Creek Sanitarium is reported to be improving. The family has received several letters from him the past few days and he says he is feeling much better and gaining each day. H. L. Merry, after 47 years of service as ticket and freight agent at the Pennsylvania railroad, has been granted an indefinite levae of absence. He will spend the summer at Rome City. Mrs. C. D. Teeple has gone to Boston, Massachusetts to visit with her son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore McCliuitock and daughters. Get the Habit — Trade at Home
i CEMETERY BOUQUETS 50c 75c SI.OO VAt’E INCLUDED Stop in on way to the cemetery. Decatur Floral Company Nuttman Ave.
