Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 176, Decatur, Adams County, 27 July 1933 — Page 3
©SOCIETY.
XI.AR MELTING , (MPROV'EMENT club I 1 11 Improvement ?ret fl’t th ■ DveiCl.r high EL Wtwli*' ■ afternoon lor •♦"■• f''K A a pewented fill ing the afternoon. Ymttcy HWftln 11 PliyiHl u selec <• 08 an< ’ 111,4 topi' are of th« Sil in" wm given by (drey JohUMU. A sewing period m held. Tne Ben Hui lodge wi'l meet May night at oeven-lhiri > o'< look the Bea Hur hall. A a■! lienBce Is des:r<d An important tne ting c: the ria Choir of the Zion Reformed unh will be .held in the church > ligCii « eerMirthirty o’clock. rb,- Women, of The Moose will id the regular inerting Thursday juIVERING NERVES eld to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound When you are just on edge ... , ten you can’t stand the child’s noiae . . . when everything i burden . . . when you are irri>le and blue ... try this niedie. 98 out of 100 women report lefit. 11 t will give you just the extra ■rgy you need. Life will seem ( rtn living again
Mtllit*- Jones 4cmi*dniuial wL This sai< is different! Because', smart substantial shoes are drastically reduced while they are up-to-date and are living worn now! WHILE THEY LAST Not many pairs in thin ' group of blonde- and ■ JRflKfl ■ whites but thep Mire arr i exceptional for—- | ». «L «■ mKi pC /A* ■ r’HEn’ "" 1 ' » . T.U \ /■ \ f / : Ultra-smart styles in this group ‘ jSSihoes suitable for any orca-ion ijpyL ’ jS&re here! Don't mu* seeing "li 1 ggnhem — iVv re seldom found, jgiricwiat— Fit? |_ Our Smartest t Summer Shoes F 5U Uacatiim - meat ■MciiMt it — this year’s white and sport y'/ boett for $1.95! Perforated Myles galore. // J~*. '••• I ligh and Cuban heels. 1 —A/ Tu < i 95 .It?"*. ,?s- -- Ji _ < CZI ** ar * gs ;■ ... jfJ ' itfXff/ZI ffZtHWZJzi' Jr /t ■ SfltfrU&J d 142 North Second St.
CLUB CALENDAR i Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Thursday W. O. T. M , Moose Home, S p m. Decatur Country Club women i golf nu mbers party, clubhouse 9:30 A. M. Pleasant Grove Mission try Society, Mrs. J. C. Darkless, 1 p. m. Zion Reformed Girls Choir, church, 7:30 p. ni. FRIDAY Decatur Home E onomics Club, Mrs. George Myers, 1:30 p. m. St. Mary’s Township Home Economics Club annual picnic, Bobo School. U. B. Ladies Aid ice cream and W:term, lion social, church lawn. I Union U. B. ice cream social and,] program, church. Ben Hur lodge. Bon Hur Hall, 7:30 p. m Tuesday Evangelical Dutiful Daughters class, Mrs. Fred Chronister, 7:30 p. m. night at eight o'clock in the Moose Home. MEETING OF HAPPY HOMEMAKERS The Happy Homemakers 4-H Club met at the Monmouth school building Wednesday afternoon at i which time a demonstration on al- I tering patterns was given by Elma i June Wynn and Ix-in Sait' rs. A 1 demonstration on food prcpaiation ' was also given by Vera Bienold and I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JULY 27. 1933.
| EASY-TO-MAKE FASHIONS |_ By ELLEN WORTH / /x'-Sw jJ**T \ .vF'. - Jr /1 MJFJsA I LJ\ ’■ ft L 5226 5,67 ■ - 5218,J Slot Designed tor sites 14 18. 18. 20 yean. 32, V ’T. Jf.l ' a 30. Cl, ....... * : »SIS D -hi f>r Or 14. 16. 18. 20 years. 32, I % . 1 34, 36. 38. 40. 42 bum. 4*53 52Tt D* signed for slues 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 32, * /. 34. 36, 38, 40. 42 bust. 1 “ 7. ; / < £ ’ v?!6 Designed for sizes 6. 8, 10, 12. 14 years. L /W’- JpS* ./SX- ’ 281 Perforated Pomegranate design for patch- \ •- S' »u.k quilt. V'.W* - 280 Perforated Square and Swallow design for W'*. " k r.e,‘ e —/ patchwork quilt. Ql Enclose 15 cents for each pattern ordered. name street address city state Put cross here for Fashion Book and enclose 10 cents extra. « fl— Aihlress orders to New York Pattern Bureau the Decatur Daily Democrat Suite 110. 22u Hast 4snd St. New York City. < FMitor’s note—do not mail orders to Decatur, Indiana.)
Berneta Lytle gave a demonstra-! tion on sewing. Plans were made for the club ■ picnic. lAll members of the organization with the exception of one ' were present and two visitors. | Florence McConnell and Jean Bright, also attended the meeting. The Durbin reunion will be held in the Legion M morial Park in Decatur Sunday. August 13. The annual Fnn hte reuiuon will be held al the Henry Fruchte firm re.-.idenc?. Sunday. August 13. WALTHER LEAGUE PLANS TO ATTEND PICNIC The Walther League met Wednesday night in the Lutheran school on North Eleventh street. The meeting was opened with the Walther League song after which the regular routine of business was followed. Plans were made to attend the annual Inter-River Zone picnic to l>e held at Fl >track, Sunday. The Decatur league will have charge of the entertainment for the affair. Following the business session g"mes wer played and a luncheon was served. Mrs. Os ar Lankenau and Miss E.na Lankenau had < dirge of the entertainment for the
iii BRI """" Z w ® r/ta ■ even with CHILI) R E N CHILDREN like Rexall Orderlies for their candy flavor. You’ll like them fortheir gentleness—their natural, non - griping, corrective action. And they are safer for every one at any time. Try them today. REXALL Tin of 60 ORDERLIES The B. J. Smith Drug Co.
I evening and the luncheon committee -included Walter and Aronld l Conrad and Lewelyn Frohnapfel. Leaguers Turn Pacifist Dayton Beach. Fla.— (U.R) —ln state convention here, 300 Epworth ' League members resolved “that looking forward to the coming of univers ry peace, we refuse to bear arms in warfare, prefering to live for our country, rather than die tr a nameless cause.'’ o Reddest Hair to Get Prize Delake, Ore. — (U.R) —Something new in community celebrations—a Redheads' Roundup—will be held here August 13. A prize will be given to the person with the reddest hair. —— —o Claims Hot Dog Record Pendleton, Ore —(U.R) Claimant for the haambnrger-eating championship is a Pennsylvania youth, member of the Civilian Conservation Corps. The boy spent $4.10 of his $5 monthly check on hamburg ers. consuming<4l sandwiches durfug the day. o - Golfer Got Real Birdie Hilly Springs. Miss. (U.R) Harris Gho son, president of the Holly Springs Golf Club, shot a birdie the other day. It was a sparrow that dropped dead wiien hit by Gholson's drive as it flew along about 25 feet above the golf course. Claims Smallest Rose Bush Portland. Ore. — (U.R) •—Contender for the prize for the sma'lest blooming rose bush in America is Mrs. Ruby Nichols of Portland. She boasts of two bushes, four inches and four and one-half inches high, having eleven buds between them. o Dynamite Killed Cow Kelso. Wash —(U.R) A diet of dynamite proved too much for the valuable cow beionginj to S. W. Findley. She found a box of dynamite hidden in a stump and ate almost all of the contents. She was dead when Findley looked for her at milking time. Ancient HUigiou* Belief* Beth the G.eek and the Roman conception of the aftei life was ex ce-dingl.t hazy bul both included states of fnturt blessedness ot wee according to the uleuslng or offend Ing of the gods whl’e on earth Hebrew Money The monetary system of the He brews was based upon the Babylonian system of weights. The ratio of the value or’ gold to silver was 113 and prevailed over all western Asia. o Sound'* Long Journey Sound travels at the rate ot 1.12 ft feet per second ft Is about 132JM10,(MM> feet around the world It would therefore take 32 hums for sound to travel around the world.
ROOSEVELT IN BRIEF MESSAGE TO CONFERENCE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) he expreaned tniHt that other n i lions better understiaxl American policies which were "aimed to | overcome our unprecedented econ omlc situation at home." "Such interchange," he said, "es- 1 peclully if it results in full discussion of all problems, and not a few only, makes progress more and not less possible in future." Because of that, the President , said, he did not regard Ihe conference as a failure. New adjustments, i i he said, were necessary to meet i new conditions that had no precedent in hkt j.'V. I i "You can coup) en our continued ■ efforts toward world rehabilitation ] because J am convinced continuation of the world economic con- : ference will result in practical 1 good in many fields of Joint en- ■ deavor." ' ( The meeting adjourned, to reconvene late tills afternoon. o I ’ EMPLOYERS ARE GIVEN COPIES OF AGREEMENT I ’ (CONTINUED EKOM PAGE ONE) sa.’.ds of speakers at every type 1 of meeting, even down to church i picnics and Boy Scout gatherings. Toward the end of the campaign, probebly about, the last week in ■ j August, there will be a door-to- ( door canvass. It will be a sort of i “mopping up” operation, to detect , slackers and direct housewives to the shopkeepers who are keeping faith witli the blue eagle. Committees will be set up in each state to have general super- ; vision over the campaign. Then executive committees will be formed in each city, members lieing chosen from such groups as chambers of commerce. Rotary < and Kiwanis clubs, labor unions, ■ < women’s clubs and welfare organizations. At the head of each local com-. mittee will be a general and a ; lieutenant-general, the latter a l woman. Under them will be l
■ TNf / \ ! . a m strong for sunshine — so I’m strong for Toasting I’ve always found that really good exacting. You see, I’m always / reasons are the simplest reasons. aware of the fact that my cigarette frf / For instance, I know that sunshine comes in such intimate contact '7rs T * *IF i mellows and heat purifies. "Toast- with my lips. Quite naturally, it’s / ing” is therefore very easy for me the purity of "Toasting” that I : to understand. And very easy for single out for special praise. It’s t J me to appreciate — because —my just my own personal feminine sense of the fastidious is so very reason for saying "Luckies Please!” hecauie "/ti. toasted 1
three, colonels, having charge of publicity, speaker*, and "manpower." The "man-power” division. organized witli majors, captains and compuiiles of privates, will carry on the door-to-door canvass. "Cooperation of the press will be enlisted largely by local committees," the N.R.A. said, “oper at Ing under u general plan whtah will go forward Io them within a week. A press book containing 4U advertisements to be underwritten locally, prepared Interviews and news suggestions which will lie usable In any community, will be supplied to all local committees. Mats for newspaper advertisements will be available at 34 distriliuting stations throughout the country." o— —————— Railway Express Ajient Is Killed Spen ervllle. Jud., July 27 —(UP) —Georg- R. Barney, 60. agent for the American Railway xpre.su compiny al Hicksville, Ohio, was killed Instantly today when a B. and O. Train struck his truck 2 "! es ea t of St. Joe. Dampy’s body was m”iß‘.Pd alnxwt lieyond recognition. The truck wax d rnolished. - o Spanish Cabinet Recognizes Russia Madrid. July 27 —(UP)— The, Spanish government, at a meeting of the c bin. t presided over by President Alcala Zamora, recogniz < d soviet Russia today. ——o : Ping-Pong Game Was Rough Kansas City, Mo., —(UP)—Pingpong is a parlor game, but Eddie Schultz, leaving a hospital aft r four stitr i:es had been required to patch his forehead, said ping-pong was a rough sport. Eddie's injuries occurred when his opponent slipped and hurled his paddle as lie tried to catch himself. 0 R. D. Myers who has been ill the p .st several weeks continuis.to improve and expects to soon be back to normal.
i(@IQCALS.
Carl Sieets of Ohio (Itt, Ohio, ' vlslleit In this < lty Wedtnwday 1 evening. Mr. ami Mrs. C. A. Dugan and I daughter. Miss Fraim r. and grandi daughter Peggy Morton, and Dale McMillen of Chicago were among file giiosta eiil‘-rlaiiied ala dinner I party nt the home of Mrs. Charles j Beall in Fort Wuyne, Wednesday i evening Miss Matilda Sellemeyer and Mrs. Albert Mutschler are spending Hi ' week In Chicago attending u Century of Progress. i’. O. Kerr of Berne was calling on fi lends here this morning. Tom Ehinger transacted business in Fort W iyne. Mrs. J. S. Pet rson, Ml.se Carrie Craig ami Mrs. Charles Keller will i motor to Fort Wayne tomorrow for | a short stay. Miss Josephine Myers is enjoying I a we k at the World Fair in Chi--I’iago. She will-return here for a few |<l lys before going buck to New ■ York where alie is employ -d. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Teepk* who i have visited at Boston the past I month are now en rout- home, enjoying a trip through Can ida hy I motor. They are expected to arrive ; here tomorrow. Janies Kinney of Jeff ru in towui ship was a buainese visitor here. Mrs J. D. Peterson. 11l at hidij- | napolis, continues to improve and a i letter today from her husband says 1 it is bflieved she is out ot danger. I The new sou, John Dwight. Jr., is I getting along nicely. Nyle Redding and Niland Ochsenrider of Bluffton visited friends in ■ Decatur Wednesday evening. I French Quinn of this city will be j the prin i.pal speaker at a meeting i to be held in Geneva .tonight, for i the purpose of completing plans for i t-ie Limb rlost Lake. The Berne schools will open Sep- | tember 5, it was announced today. : The same teaching staff as last 1 year lias l>:en engaged for t lie com-
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ing s< hool term and the teachers will ii eepi Hi" minimum salaries, It was learned. Mrs. Viola Wood of Glendale, California, ami Willis Ever it ot Elsinore, California, visited Wedm sday evening with their uncle, John Everett, ami cousin. Mrs. Cal I’ terson, Mrs. Wood Is assistant pastor to James Whitcomb Barr, Jr., of tlie Biptlst Church at Glendale. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fullenkamp are vacatfoning al Rome city. They r port little luck at catching fish. Hurry Hattersley of Fort Wayne visited In this city today. — O' 1 — — Moon Cut Light Bill Fort Worth, Texas (UP)—Thmoon saved the city of Fort Worth 125.000 last year. The saving wis made by cutting off street lights In residential sections during moonlight periods. Here’s One Good Way To END AGONY OF NEURITIS Newark Man Knows How and Loses 10 Pounds “Gentlemen: 1 used Kruacluln Salts to try ami get rid of Neuritis from w-hleh I had suffered for one year In my left shoulder and arm. ... I took a little of the salts In the morning, Rcnnetlme,s in my coffee, '••ther times in water. I would alno occasionally take a dose in water at nig-ht before retiring - . For 3 months I used the salts and while** I lost 10 pound# in weight, the pain In my shoulder HAS ENTIKELY’ DISAPI EAKED. During; Hie time I mi* taking the mmllm I rerrKrd no other iiiedical treatiiient mo I am fully eont lured the K rumrhrii Saltm did the trick.** C. K. Murray, Newark. N. J. Take one half teaspoonful of Krusi hcn Salts in a glass •< f hot water evt*ry morning—a jar lasts 4 weeks — get it at Holthousr Drug Co. or any druggist in the world —costs but a trifle. t
