Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 209, Decatur, Adams County, 5 September 1933 — Page 3

FOCIETY

■ssoc' ety uRS0 AY (Wmee- ' Tli:ir-“l; | . v u( "‘ r at th' 1 M . 'ii*' i ,r °- M" M " willbJ 9 W Th, ‘ ’ >a i ’^■ Rrll r r<>- paying ■ W- ’"'""‘‘i '^A: Mr. ;... , ■ •:• is also ’ -B W -ißldbrtii " Mhaßles eeasel ON BIRTHDAY B, ■ ■■" | " l,| ‘ K -a'..!. -■ U ' K,.»" < -k.-tsloj B. ... - ' ■..’'■rsnry. | ■■ 'p ■" Ii1 M,s - ; 8L..1 an.! '■■ <'!»♦-»“ r|K ~„... mid. Hobby ! K. Mr I'J Mr-- Hober | fan ■- v ' ■ "• |:il:v J "' I; ,| ("■ Monmouth; j K 11-.’ .-' *lll'l SOU | Mr ami Mrs. Do) joT©” - ■to ■[CAPTURE ■ BEAUTY B;4' are ■ '■'■•y a matter of Spark!;: ey> - anti a xi<'• are outward abundant vitality. c’-.a’rr.rconserve your stipation. |Kft,- • .-, sallow ■jul! eyes, pimples, ".■•■real way" to f- c nstipation. U» tos provi-d that Kellogg’s provides “bulk" to ex■Bthe ir.te'tu ■ . ami vitamin I irt> ’.-.al tract. At.LBlbo f-rr:” iron, which up the blood. in this delicious like that of lettuce. sift r abusing your with piib . d drugs —so ■tat-. daily will eorM rect most types of

constipation. If not j relieved this way, see your doctor. Get the red-and-green package £t your grocer’s. Made by Kellogg in Bat- I Ue Creek.

■PS KEEP YOU FIT

(AVENUE FASHIONS WORTH ._ - nms Up if A Woo/ Jur on wool frocks .shion note for quent lightness ISa&Ji Jf sakes this chic t for town wear BE Here’s a frock int for such a i-shoulder yoke 1 ’ collar are of iw “fin” sleeves frock are black z>-\ Notice the slim >/} ' skirt, the slen- < IHBlill 1 and the smart I, M 'w|jj|a|aila •’s as Easy-to- | I! —not a single ' BgjlyMty detail. You'll gWflSp|||B ' easily those rl It requires "Wly little material, too. »om\ Fa!l Fashion Book out—contains many other 5 smart suggestions for the f ‘wo fabrics. Send for it H M No. 5350 is designed for //W/ I 18. 20 years, 30. 32, \ 1W $ '■ 38 ‘ «. 42 bust. V; I '*'*• —£2 pyrlghti 193 3, by United Feature Synd 1 cate, Inc. Si2e price for Pattern 15 Cents> i street address Our m state 1 check h W F^ hlon Book is out! Send for it—put —2 ere O and enclose 10 cents extra for book. I*®. 220* p > -^ e 'Y y°rk Pattern Bureau the Decatur Dally Democrat tl o ‘ ~ snd St- New York City. (EUltor's note—<lo not w Decatur, Indiana.)

CLUB CALENDAR Mill Mary Macy Phone* 1000—1001 Tuesday Zion Reformed Girls Missionary' Guild. Reformed Church, 7:30 p. m. Tri Kappu sorority, Miss Mary Madeline Coverdale. 8 p. m. : Adams County _ Choral Society, above Brock Store. 7:30 p. m. C. L. of C. regular meeting, K. of | C. Hall, J:3O p. m. Christian Corinthian class. Miss Grace Llchtenstelg-r, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday : Zion Reformed Phoebe Bible class • postponed one week. Woman's Chib Dramatic departI ment. Mrs. Bryce Thomas, 7 p. m. Thursday Art department called meeting. Mrs. Homer Lower, 7:30 p. m. Five Hundred Club. Mrs. (A. R. j Ashliaui her. 7:30 p. m. i The Indies Aid Society of the I Monroe Methodist Episcopal church . I will meet with Mrs. Z. Q. Lewellen. Thursday afternoon at two o'clock, I I Evangelical W. M. 8., church par- i i lors. 2 p. m. FRIDAY | (American Legion auxiliary meet , I ing, Decatur Country Club, 7:30j I Feasel and son Jimmy. Mr. and Mrs. j Vilas Easel and daughter Barbara I ■ Ix>n of Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. I Charles Feasel., son Marion ami , granddaughter Anais May Merry-; man. The Women's Missionary Society of the Evangelical Church will me. t ' in the church parlors Thursday asI temoon at two o’clock. The Sep- . tember section with Mrs. Esta Llddy chairman will have charge of I the program and three musical | numbers will be played. Mrs. C. 'E. I Hocker will have the lesion topic ; and Mrs. Arthur Baker will have I -charge of the devotionals Plans will j be made for the church Institute to be held in Fort Wayne during this month and a good attendance is desired. I The Corintian class of the First j Christian Sunday School will meet . with Miss Grace Lichtensteiger I Tuesday evening at seven-thirty | o'clock. The Girls Missionary Guild of the Zion R formed Church will meet at j tbe church tonight at Seven-thirty I o'clock. The meeting of the American Le- ! gion women s auxiliary will l»e held i Friday evening at seven-thirty I o'clock at the Decatur Country club. I A district meeting of the auxiliary j will be held at Bluffton. Thursday . morning. September 7 at eleven elm k (D.S.T. i. (All members who Catching Cold ? VICKS NOSE NEW AID IN PREVENTING COLDS

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1933.

i plan to attend the meeting are ask- ■ ed to call Mm. V. J. Bormann. LOCAL COUPLE MARRIED AT OSSIAN Mrs. Muriel .Meyers of Decatur I and Clinton A. Bell, local grocer, were married Friday. September 1, ! at the home of Rev. LAbner 8. Elzey in Ossian. The marriage was witnessed by Mrs. Eliey. I Mr. Bell is owner of the Bell ] Cash grocery in this city. The meeting of the Phoebe Bible ! class of the Zion Reformed Sunday School which was to have met W.-d-I nesday evening has been postponed . one week. An important called meeting of j the Art department will be held i Thursday night at seven-thirty o'clock with Mrs. Homer Lower. The Five Hundred Club will meet Thursday night at seven-thirty o'clock with Mrs. A. R. Ashbaucher ion North Third street. Lee Anna Vance Goes To New York Miss Lee Anna Vance, teacher of history in the Decatur high school, has been granted a leave of absence by the Dexatur school board, to accept a position with ths New i York Tim- s. Miss Vance left this city for New > York Monday and assumed her I duties immediately. She will be en- | gaged in placing the Times in the high schools of New York to be ' used as current history text books For several years the New York ! Times has published a current his- • tory department in the paper which was used as textbooks by Eastern colleges, ilt was later studied in prep schools and this year was introduced in the high schools. o Gospel Temple Services continue in the tent this • weeik, with services each night at i 7:3®, All ar- invited to attend. J Come and bring your offerings to this gospel work. COUNCIL OPENS STUDY OF 1934 COUNTY BUDGET (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) : 49 cents higher than the rate pay- | able this year. The assessed valuI al ion in the county is <21,973,133, a decrease of more than <2.225.I 000, a year ago. I New items, such as appropriI ations for old age pensions, pri- > mary and general elections and for | voters' registration, add more than . ; <19.000 to the budget for next year. ! The fact that less than <60.000 was ! raised this year through the counl ty's 23-cent tax late and that it cost i more than <IOO,OOO to operate the , county government and maintain j the public institutions, is another i reason given by officials for in- ! creasing the levy. The county's general fund has ! been depleted to about <43.000. ’ About <83,000 of county funds are tied up in closed banks and officials claim that if the county is expected to pay bills, maintain insti- | tutions and pay bonds funds must I be forthcoming. Pruning Expected Estimates in the budget may be | pruned a little, sufficient to make a cut of several cents in the proposed rate, members of the coun- ' cil stated. The estimates are always higher than the actual amount 1 required and the officials in making up their budgets generally ini elude the maximum, leaving the reductions up to the council. The matter of fixing salaries of deputies. as fixed by the legislature last spring was nbt determined this afternoon. The law fixes deputy salaries from <75 to <125 a month. If the council meets tomorrow ' final adoption of the ordinance will I be taken before the members ad- • journ. Due to the fact that one of the members cannot meet Wednesday, the session may be adjourned until the last of the week. o ENROLLMENT IS 12 HIGHER THAN LAST YEAR ! (CONTINUED FROM PAUK ONE) started to school this morning. The music department of the ! Catholic school also opened today ‘under the direction of Sister M < Edwardfne. Pupils are asked to get ‘ in touch with Sister Edwardine as !to hours. Piano and violin lessons I are given. The enrollment in the Public high school on the opening day last year was 301, Mr. Worthman announced. The total this year exceeds that by four. All the teachers reported for duty this morning and by the end 'of the week regular classes will have been organized and pupils and high school students will be at work. Berne Schools A total of 447 pupils were enrolled in the Berne schools on the first day of the fall term of school, a dei crease of four over the enrollment of last year, which was 451. Three hundred fourteen pupils • are enrolled in the grade school compared with 300 last year. The high school enrollment Is 133 this , year, and that of last year was 151. i The complete first day enroll- 1

nient Is ax follows: flrat grade. 41; | second. 42; third. 38; fourth, 43. fifth. 41; sixth, 38; seventh, 38; I eighth, 33; freshmen. 35; aopho-i mores, 38; juniors, 27; seniors, S 3. o— f Nine Persons Hurt In Three-Car Crash Etna Green, Ind.. Sept. 5. —(U.R) Nine persons were injured, one I critically. In an accident involving' three automobiles near here. Denver Coleman, Columbia City, sutlered severe scalp wounds and a fractured and lacerated arm when his car collided with another machine driven by J. A. Joppa, Berwyn, 111. Joppa, his wife, and two small children were ent and bruised when their machine overturned. Coleman's car next struck the auto of E. A. Smith. Washington. D. C. The Smith machine also overturned, slightly injuring Mr. and Mrs. Smith and their two children. All three cars were badly damaged. o Pig Goes Chameleon Mt. Pleasant, la. —(VP) —Phil Zink, farmer living near here, owns a Duroc Jersey pig that Is ( hanging color. Ijrst fall the pig was a typical red. This June tts-color started to fade until it now resembles a Chester White. " 11 i i ■ i—

9 " Coorrlsht 1933. R J. HeyouhU Tobxooo Cumpanx IJr IT TAKES HEALTHY NERVES - TO RACTT32 MH.ES ...AT RECORD SPEED ’ v” • • • Ab*-' YTiruy a. (■fa. » ilkl WHIM' »IF ~ jm ® JI FLzWLiBBMHC* . ' z ■ / r '' z . -T • ABOVE—CHARGING DOWN THE MIGHTY HUDSON to a thrilling finish in the long \ 11 race from Albany to New York, Mrs. Florence Bumham, brilliant woman driver, set a gruel- v ': -'•> xSrn ling pace! Mrs. Burnham drove her hydroplane superbly over the 1 32-mile course ... to flash by the finish line the winner...in the record time of 3 hours, 37 minutes, 53 seconds! 7'l > Cl Il V y 1 •RIGHT- SHE TAKES NO '..->1 \ \ \ CHANCES with her nerves. “ I’ve tried 1 \\ \ most of the cigarette brands,” says Mrs. 'v . '.jjy \\ \\ \- Burnham, “but for a long time 1 have W ... 1 \ \\ X. been an enthusiastic Camel fan. Camels, ' Wlkk \ \ \N. N, being so much milder, never ruffle or i ' As disturb my nerves, so 1 smoke them all '' kwlb x\N Iwant ’” I !!! yy I STEADY SMOKERS ' ra EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other >V>| | ■ I AAA F* I popular brand. Isn't this the most im- Ia E 111 I L I W. W 9 portant statement ever made bya ciga- | IB I W I I¥l ■■ InWr W rette manufacturer! Consider what it 3 means. Change to Camels and learn M “J never wou ld have been able to hold my boat w 9| l ' iat **’• to b acco ‘bat counts! |g recor( ] speed for hours,” says Mrs. Florence Burnham, “if I didn’t take every precaution to ' HI 9 keep my nerves healthy. As a steady smoker, I IBLmmiwii have tried most of the cigarette brands. But for ,9 a ' onß < ’ ,ne ’ h ave * ,et>n an enthusiastic Camel T Mtnntn »c u . . Ilk. f fan. Camels, being so much milder, never ruffle Or • “I’LL NEVER BE a racing champion, but ... . —i Ts ... ... I love the water. When I’m out on a boat 1 V 11 disturb my nerves, so I smoke them all I want, have a keen zest for smoking. To avoid get- K—- - Vii.% A ting my nerves upset and fidgety i smoke &. 4 dfj You are missing a new delight in smoking... an Camels. They keep right on tasting good even F added safeguard of healthy nerves... if you when Igo in for smoking in a big way.” f/j haven’t yet switched to Camels. Begin today. - Your taste will quickly appreciate the natural 'if 1/ mildness of Camels... and your nerves will conM. firm your taste “ brin & ing overwhelming proof r * that Camel’s costlier tobaccosdo make a difference! '..>y -

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Wlllitna (Bill) Erwin, manager, of the Newberry store at Newcastle I jilndiana visited here over Labor! I Duy with the Bert Townsend faJ mlly. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Teeple are attending the Worlds Fair. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Heller are In Indianapolis for a day or two. Robert Zwick visited in Geneva over the week-end. Don Ward of Union f'lty and his brother from North Dakota called on friends here Sunday. Mrs. Olive Peterson visited her . son J. Dwight Peterson and family i in Indianapolis yesterday mid today. Mr. and Mrs. Thetus Hocker and daubsters Mary Elizabeth and Gene ; of Ausiin. Minnesota, are visiting | at the C. E. Hocker residence in i this city. j Mr. and Mrs. Harry 8. Miller have I returned from a several days visit i with friends in Chicago. They also attended the world's fair. Mrs. O. L. Vance and daughter i Miss Lee Anna and Miss Della Sell-1 emeyer have returned from the Maine woods at Naples. Maine. I where they have spent the last five '

weeks. They visited many sights of interest and spent three days in ! New York City enroute to their homes. Mr. and Mrs, Milo McKinney of Cincinnati. Ohio, spent the weekend. with Mrs. McKinney’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. V. Mills. Miss Victoria O. Mills has left for Rochester, where she will resume her position as Latin and English Instructor in t’j high school. Miss Ruth Roberts, da A'iter of i Rev. and Mrs. Chas .1. Roi erts left 'for New York city Monday where I ! she will resume her work as in-1 I structor of English in High School, i | The length of the schools in the , Stat > of New York is ten months. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Howell and j son Billy and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Johnson attended the fair at Van ! Wert. Ohio, Monday. Mrs. Alb*rt Mutschler and son | Bobby have returned from a weeks ! I visit with the Walter Koos family j , at Angola. Mrs. W. L. Stanley of Dwatur i and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Crist i and sons Kermit and Quentin of I Monroe, returned home this morn-

ing from a four day visit at the | world's fair In Chicago. The Misses Marian Schofield and | Myrtle McDaniels of lehlghtoti, 0.. ! spent Labor Day with Robert Fritz Inger family enroute to their home < from the world’s fair at Chicago ! where they had spent the past I week. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Beery and • daughter spent Monday evening in I Fort Wayne. Miss Louise Haubold and Harold i Strickler attended the theatre In , Fort Wayne Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Conrad and ' Herbert Bentz left Monday for Chi | cago to att-nd the world's fair. Mrs. S. N. Young and daughter Meredith of Toledo, Ohio returned 1 to their home after visiting over i Labor Day with Mrs. Young's broth-er-In-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. i O. T. Johnson. Rev. M. J. Frosch of Union town- ' ! ship today displayed a large stock | j from a tomato plant bearing six ! large tomatoes, grown at his home. [ The compact group ot tomatoes I weighed five ponnds. Miss Juanita Evans of Pleasant Mills is visiting with her grand parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Evans in I I this city. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Wigham and , 1 son John of Atlanta, Georgia, visit-, ! ed in this city with Mr. and Mrs. ( , John Evans before going to Chicai go to attend the world's fair. They ! ' will return this week.

Page Three

HOSPITAL NOTES John Everhart of Monroe is a medical patient at the Adams I County Memorial Hospital Blaine Navel of Geneva, had his ! tonsils removed at the local hospl- , tul this morning. Get the Habit — Trade at Home ""— "’ ******** WIT we oo oua rxjrr Gladly we cooperate with President Roosevelt and pledge ourselves to live up to the spirit and the letter of the National Rmwery Act. We have reduced working hours In all departments at no loss or pay to any employee. As a matter of fart, ail through the depression we have maintained wages at the I*2*» level, (hit employees have not suffered from cuts, layoffs or shut downs. Neither have we reduced our advertising During IV.B we plan to use approximately *.000.000 lines of newspaper space. At. 000,000 booklets will be distributed from house to house, covering every state in the Union. I-atest sales reports show that the year to date Is 14% ahead of last year. We do appreciate this evidence of the confidence of the American people in the Pinkham products. LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE COMPANY . """