Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 29 June 1933 — Page 3
PSQCIETY tpdtaKappa Fraternity I To Hold Special Summer Dance L.borate decorations will be need in th,. Urge dam,, hall at the K Country Club, Friday night. when the local Phi Delta Kappa Et, will entertain with the Special Summer dam e E/autmal interest will be the Boh Delkman meh,.atm. well know n tertaH 11 * 1 ' 8, w,l ° W, U furnish music for the dance. The orcin s La isea eleven piece. not i.,eluding ,1m |,.a„.. r ; „,d . ! .elections, numbers tn
E s and comedy will be a part Edance program. larchestra was booked for n E engagement following the E Spring I”' *e of the fraternEd several mon His ago. The Ere has unusual talent and Epular with all who heard it Efirst apperance in this city. Ember of out of toWu gueats l l( end the dance and Phi bells ■ surrounding towns and cities ■to in attendance. The special L, being held In honor of the E student, and summer vis!E the city who were tumble to L the spring dance. Einr will start at nine o'clock ■continue until one o'clock. Ls for the subscription dance ■be procured from members L fraternity for one dollar and
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B silver SALAD v®3Mß| ONLY n.oo Imagine!! Eight silver Vjff’/' plated salad forks in a ? , lovely new design at this exceptionally low price. Packed in a gorgeous black, orange and silver gift box, they make a most delightful and appropriate gift . . . And salad forks have so many uses ... for salads and pastry; for luncheon, bridge parties, picnics, outings, etc. Os course, they will go quickly and our stock is limited. Come in today while the selection is at its best Pumphrey’s Jewelry Store L>yir A- "' "^P S | S |B / I BETWEEN YOUR BARN -i ... and the weather farmers everywhere have found that LOW E BR< Tb * STANDARD BARN PAINT, a parnt cially for farm buildings, covers far more su .. .. gallon, and wears years longer than paints o < •old for barns and other outbuildings. And of course, to choose and use a really good pm fe the most economical way to protect outbuildings from the ravages of sun, snow, sleet an r^* n ‘ . jjj It will pay you to learn more about t .i farm paint. So stop in the next time you.a e m town • • let us show you how little it rea y your farm buildings looking brig ’ PAINT. Lowe Brothers standard BARN paini. Holthouse Drug Co
CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Thursday 1 W. O. T. M., Mixise Home, Bp.in i Christian Ladles iAl<j Society • church parlors, 2:30 p. ni. i Five Hundred Club, Mrs. William | i Keller, 6:30 p. tn. i St. Mary's Twp. Home Economics I Club. Mrs. Glen Mann, 1:30 p. n i. ' Handy Needle Club. Mary Katin ■ leen Fry back, 1:30 p. m. i Invitation Golf luncheon, Decatur Country Club, 8:30 a. tn. Decatur Daily Vacation Bible School graduation exercises. Deca- i tur high school gyihnasium, 7:30| i p. m. FRIDAY ! V I. S. class, U. B. church, church, S p. m. Evangelical C. L. W. Class, Miss Melvene Newhard, 7:30 p. m. United Brethren V. ■!. S. Class, : Mabel Hurst, 7:30 p. m. Busy Bee 4-H Club, Monroe school 1:30 p. nt. Phi Delhi Kappa Special Summer I Dance Decatur Country Club 9:00. Sunday Little Evangels class, U. B„ picnic at Rosanio Harvey home. fifty cents, and may also be secured at the door of the dance hali. I The ballroom will be elaborately decorated for the occasion with festoons of black and white crepe paper arra: ged aliout the panels of the large room, and suspended I from the ceiling will be large gold and silver stars. Scores of electric fans will be placed about the hall, in the orchestra pit, and in the
CATI’R DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 29.1933.
J. I '*'",*’’ attend tho dance will be assur'd of' « ' '-mfurtuMe dan,ln K ia n. I Mm trlr lights win lw . plaw , 4 | atwut the grounds and tables win '«■ urraugrsl on the vra das for nose who wish to form forewomes 'or card guiiies, T, >n> Hailbold will net as general l thairniait In charge of the arrangeinenta for the dance in the alm nee , John Burnett, who was n ,n.. <l chairman of the special publicity' llmltw, vontprlaes Ev.-rett Sheets ••nd Harold Zwlck, Jo- Ekey is i chairman „f thli special publicity ! committee and the regular mempers of the social committee are! Pom Hauliold, Harry Sheets and' ■ John Burnett. — I family group ' enjoys DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Brice Daniels of ; I leisant Mills, Air. ami Mrs. Lloyd i Daniels and daughter Thelma lx>u- ' me of Decatur; and Mr. and Mrs. , Paul Lol siger of Convoy, Ohio en- ■ Joyed a six o’clock dinner Wednesday ev. ,lng with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Da.ieis and daughter Helen of Convoy. latter in the (veiling ice cream and cake was served. honor minister on anniversary A number of friends gathered at I i ho home of Rev. J. J. Laughr.y in I Monroe Tuesday evening w s spent I in a social manner and ice cream ami cake was served. Those pres nt were Mr. a d Mrs. P. L. Amstutz, Mr. nd Mrs. Pete Bixler, Mrs. Amos Liechty and daughter Helen. Mrs. M. Schindler and son. Mrs Opal Myers and faI niily, Ezra Habegger and family. Dee Tinkeni d family all of B rne It. C. Hawkins ami family of Monroeville, Mrs. Magers of Salem. I Vera Hawkins and Pauline Miller of Decatur, Mrs. F. A. Laughrey of I Monroe. Mrs. Anna Rupert a:i«l Rev. and the J. J. Iztiighr y family. MEETING OF girls GUILD The Girls Guild of the Beulah Church met at the home of the Misses Berneta, Dorothy and .Gertrude Hoffma.n, Tuesday night. Games were played and at the close of the meeting dai ty refreshments were served by the host esses.. Tlios- present were the Misses Veres Heller, Velma Spade. Frances Schlickman, Eliaibeth Fuhr man Mrs. William Ehrman and the hostesses. The next meeting will he h Id at the home of Miss Doris Jolt: son on July 25. Th? old time dancers who presented their cards and addresses last winter at the dances held in the Knights of Columbus hall :n Decatur u iter tlie management of Otto Sales, enjoyed a picnic at the Lehman Park at Berne Tuesday night. SIXTY PERSONS ATTEND PICNIC Sixty members of the Phocibe Bible class of the Zion Refrom d •Sunday School, children and guests attended the annual picnic of the class which was held at the Lehman Park iii B rue. Wednesday ■veiling. A delicious picnic dinner was served on the long tables in the park, after which various games were played. ECONOMICS CLUB HOLOS REGULAR MEETING IA meeting of the Kirkland Ladits Club was ’wld in the Kirkland high school Tuesdiy afternoon. The m'.-eting was opened by the president, Airs. J. C. Grandstaff and the members united in singing the chub song and repeating the club creed. Tlie roll call was responded to by the metnli rs raining their favorite dimr r plate suggestions. The lesson on perfect seams was given bj
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, Mrs. Jesse Byerly. The drer.a revue was dlucus:.cd and the m imliers de- : (Id d to attend the 4 H Club social 1 meeting, I he host sses, the Mesdanies Ed Arnold. William Ehrniwm and Luther Arnold served refreslnneuts of i.e ereim mid .(tike to tlie twenty members and four visitors present. The regular neellng of th- Womo of tlie Moose will be held In j the Moose Home tonight at eight o'clock. The installation of officers will he h Id. — -o Farm Bureau Meeting Held Wednesday Night | IA district Farm Bureau meeting was H(-I<l at tlie First < liristian Church in Decitur Wedn «lay evening. about 75 persons attending. Tlie ladle -of the clnir. h "-wved ji delicious din er. James Cummings of Portland, district director, had charge of the m ting. J. M. Briggs, Ind! mapolts, of the state farm bureau, was tlie principal speaker. Others who i spoke wore Harry Moltz, Joe Winteregg a 1 Mrs. Leland Ripley, who gat j i port on the farm bureau cooperative hool reiently held at Warstiw. This was the first district meeting ov r h Id for employes of the organization. o • — i Many Reunions Scheduled For Summer Months i i ♦ Sunday July 2 Swygart and Neferd reunion Sun-! set Park. It-e.itur. R(s>p Family Reuauon, Sunset Park. Sunday, July 9 Smith Family reunion, Sunset Park, east of D catur. Sunday, July 16 Moose Picnic. Sunset Park. Sunday, July 30 Borne Reunion, Sunset Park, Decatur. Meyer Family Reunion, Sunset Park, east of Decatur. Cowan Family Reunion, Sunset Park.
Sunday July 31 The 19th annual Fuhrman reunion will be held at pic. tic ground;', % mile north of Preble, Sunday. | July 31. 1933. Sunday, August 6 Betti ■ gr Family Reunion, Sunset Park, Decatur. Sunday, August 13 Rillig and Reohm reunion, Sunset Park, east of Dcatur. Dellinger Family Reunion, Sunset Park. Sunday, August 20. Kortenber w d Hackman, Sunset Park, Decatur. . Butler Family Reunion, Sunset Park. Sunday August 27 Ehinger Reunion, Sunset Park, east of Decatur. Zink-Kuhn reunion, Sunset Park Decatur. Krick Reunion, Sunset Park, Decatur. Labor Day, September 4 Lenhart Reunion, Sunset Park, Decatur. Sunday, September 10. Metzler Family Reunion, Sunset I Park east of Decatur. 0 ____ _ Holders Probably Get No Returns Indianapolis, June 29— (U.R) — Holders of stock and gold notes of the Trustees System Corporation of Indiana probably will receive no return from .their in- ; vestments, H. Nathan Swaim, rei ceiver, said today. The only assets are $924,469 in I notes of two sister companies and I several hundred dollars in cash, I he said, explaining that the notes are practically worthless because the sister companies also are in receivership. A committee of 11 stockholders will aid Swaim in a further survey. It will include Ray McAdams, Fort Wayne, and Homer M. Cart- | er. South Bend, who will represent stockholders in their home cities. I Committee members also will be i named from Evansville and Gary. o— — Disarmament Meet Adjourns To Oct. 16 Geneva. June 29 — (U.R) — The I general disarmament conference ■ today adjourned until October 16, its members discouraged over their failure to find any avenue i or approach to lessening of the ' world’s burden of militaristic acI tivities. Tlie conference adjourned del spite Germany's vote against it, j and Hungary's abstention. Before adjourning the conference paid -tribute to Sir Eric Drummond of Great Britain, who retires as secretary-general of the league of nations on Saturday. — o— — Editor Is “Just a Reporter" Amarillo, Tex. (U.Rl—Gene Howe, widely publicized editor and publisher here, insists he is “just a working reporter.” Howe, who dared to write critically of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and Mary Garden, often whites as much as live columns of news a day for his paper.
SCOUT GAMP TO OPEN ON JULY 9 Area Boy Scout Camp Is Located On Sylvan Lake, Rome City The Anthony Wayne Area Boy! Scout Camp will open its 1933 season on Sunday afternoon, July 9. i Tlie Area Scent Camp Is located on I Hie 200 acres of land that once I was the home of tlie famous novelist and naturalist, Gene Stratton-1 Porter. It is located on Sylvan Lake, Rome City, Indiana. The camp is open to all registered Scouts and Scoutera of the. area and is scheduled to run for three weeks; one two-week sec-1 tion. July 9 to 23; and one one week section, July 23 to 30. The camp fee has been reduced this J : year to $0 for one week or $6 per I week for two or more weeks. From I the advance registration, all indications point to t> large number of campers. Several troops will have practically their entire membership in camp. It is not necessary for tho troop ■ to come to camp as a group for ini dividual scouts coming to camp I will be placed in a camp group with an adult leader acting as camp scoutmaster in charge of the group. I Scouts of the same troop coming |to camp without one of their troop ' j leaders will become a part of a I "camp troop" with a camp staff I member in charge. Tlie camp staff this year is bej ing carefully selected and each man has been chosen for his ability to teach and instruct in his particular part of the program. The camp leaders selected to date are as follows: Leroy Lane, program director. Charles Gruenert, Eagle Scout, steward. J. R. Warner, field commission--1 er. Fort Wayne, handicraft director. James N. Davis, water front director. ' Maurice Glock, camp doctor.
Z"') z, j A- - f f mßi L *JI A, W Bk / / zrtHBW ’ i I f / l "" : l y . - .. lb m y brothers... I owe the pleasure of smoking Luckies WT in / When I first had a desire to smoke, Luckies so fragrant, so mild—and flB: y / I knew exactly where to start. You (perhaps a man will smile at this) |H% I see, for years I had heard all the so pure to my lips! I can smoke "^' C T / men in the family saying "Luckies lots and lots of them and still ° .. .■ JW F / Please”. They said it wzw"Toasting” find them refreshing to the taste. / that made Luckies so good. I’ve Now I’m telling my brothers g never questioned the reason— Luckies Please , and each of 'W because I have always found them says, "You’re telling me? Copyright, 1933, The a* A / // m American Tobacco IJ ' / (// f a / / r c ° ,np,nr - because czw toasted
Earl Horn. Scoutmaster troop No. 6, Fort Wayne, nature study j director. 1 James Cox, pioneering director. James Work, Eagle Scout, office 1 clerk. • Hugh Stahl, Eagle Scout, quarter-■ i master and canteen. Walter Klinger, assistant scout-1 ; muster, troop No. 6, Fort Wayne, bugler and office clerk. Robert Rinehart, Scout.' I assistant nature director. Marcellus Miller, assistant scout-j inustei troop No. 4. Decatur, troop: ; leader. Nathaniel Hull, assistant scout-1 j master, troop No. 33. troop leader. 1 Harold Treesh Is to be the eamp: I chef with Eldon Glauh as assistant j ' chef. If camp enrollment warrants, additional scout leaders will be added to the camp staff. I Scouts may make reservations j for camp now and should make reservations early to insure a place in ' 'camp as the number of campers is j limited to 150 scouts each section, j O ’ I Order Electrocution Os Child’s Murderer I Indianapolis, June 29 — (U.R) — | Electrocution of Donald Glenn II Shustrom. Whiting steel worker. "I at the state pii.-,on July 28, was, i ordered by the state supreme! 1 court late yesterday. ' The court denied a rehearing of county criminal court where he: : Shustrom’s appeal from Lake I ' was convicted and sentenced toi death April 28 on a charge of slaying Alberta Knight, 12, WhitI ing. Shustrom was a roomer at tlie 1 Knight home when the girl was | killed during an attempted assault. | o Hit By Golf Ball—Sues ’ ! . El Paso, Texas.—(U.R) —Charging I that Leon Hosenfield, Jr., failed to ,'yell "fore" before making a drive, I Rebecca Kyriacopiilos, struck by tlie golf bail Rosonfield hit, has filed suit for fl 1 ) ."■*< damages. Her : left eye was permanently Injured, ■ she claimed. | —o— Get the Habit — Trade at Home
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Tim new 1934 Indiana auto 11( enae plates will have white let- | tens and figures on a black back-: ground. T ■ plates are being made 'up '.:ow. Tho Boy Scouts are busy gatlmr- | ing articles for the benefit silo to ! ! tie held Saturday evening on Madison street. The NxillNiez r wedding which' : took plate Wednesday noon at the 'Oathedrtl was o:ae of tile le (Ung I I social events in Fort Wayne. Miss Itos mary Lon Niez.er. daughter of Charles ,M. Nlczer became the bride ' lof William F. Noll, son of Mr end Mrs. William 11. Nidi. The cere ! mony was attended by members of the most prominent families In Fort Way :e. Dr. and Mrs. J. S..Boyers, of Tuc- 1 j son, Aris., are enjoying their visit I •liack home Immensely. It is their first visit her? since they moved! I west. Miss Ix'e Anna Vance returned: Wednesday evening from a three | week’s visit with friends in Pittsburgh a d Wasliingten, Pennsylva ! nia. Miss Theresa Schafer nd Bill i : Z ser visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ed E gelking in Fort Wayne Wedueaday. Ruth Reed ot Indianapolis Is 1 visiting In this city with relatives Miss Marguerite Engelking his i eturned to Fort Wayne after sp tiding several weeks here with tlie Dan Zeser family. Mrs. Tim <’orbett and daughter I Rita of /Huntington visited lliere I with the Fred Fullenk imp family. ■ They were accompanied bom .- by | Miks Rosemary Fullenkamp. o Divorced Woman Commits Suicide — Warsaw, Ind.. June 29 —(UP) — ( Apparently despondent because of her divorce two years ego, Mrs. Edna Sanders, 24. ended her lit >; today. She shot herself through the
Page Three
l insert at the home of Emma Swope, South of here. Mrs. Sa ,ders was th * daughter of Earl Kesaler, Mar- , lon. A daughter. 5. and u sou. 4, sur- ; vlve. HOSPITAL NOTES ; 'Enos Harrod, Hoagland, underwent a inijor operation at the Adams County Memorial Hospital : Wed esday night. 'A minor op-ratfon was performed lon Mrs. Ralph Freels Route 2, De--1 catnr, at the Ad l ms County Memorial Hospital Wednesday night. Mrs. Fred Fox, Berne. Route 1. subniitt d to a major operation Wednesday night at the Adims | Cou ty Memorial Hospital here. i o Pet Foxhound Turned Wild - The Forks. Me (U.R) — A Niorloughbred foxhound owned by Nert i Morris, old time Maine guide, has : turned wild and is running with packs of foxes near Marshall Mountain __ _ i f _ ,i.
SALE of entire stock of MILLINERY Our complete stock of Hats now on sale at drastic reductions, fine selections of new styles at wonderful savings. DEININGER’S H AT SHOP West Madison St.
