Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1933 — Page 3
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ffItTTrLEBRATE C " A SN!VEHSAHY , ! , -'i^B' ' ■ §B*. ; . '"i ‘W?!'.' .. ' .-K ■ - ■ v v-. e . ——- K. WE'NER ROAST W — , , ;>!.() e ‘ I. SM. Z" •■' : ' l "''• ,| '“' :ir B lakhs nq [cold? >:•.-. \ xw j ■ rrw
Bow IS THE TIME TO ( HOOSE YOUR INew Fall Im Coat 'A nd what a wonderfu 1 B^W 1 selection you will find MI W waiting for you here. Wanted New Fall ML - A materials and shades, 8011,0 "bh fur an d some without fur; a ■SJJgtoGBw# wide selection as to I sizes and price. I lf* Wise shoppers are 1/ ' '"/fa buying their coats ite: 1 early and we suggest vou do likewise. LW $19.50 yPk $29.50 pls COATS” ® Little Miss will not be lighted this year. Charmln£ new coats, all colors an d sizes 7to 14 years. 15.50 to $7.75 S.’ Niblick & Co.
CLUB CALENDAR Mln Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Thursday Women of Moose, Moose homo, 8 p. in. '' Evangdiral Loyal Daughters 1 class, Mrs. Francis Eady 7:30 p. m. Evangelical Ladles Aid Society . church parlors, 2 p. tn. 1 V. B. Progressive Workers ; welner bake, Ixdnnan Park, Berne, ■ meet at church at 5 p. m • I Presbyterian Indies Aid Society, i Mrs. Earl B. Adams, 2:30 p. m. Friendship Village Home EconoII mica Club, Mrs. Omer Merryman . 11:30 p. m. Methodist it. F. M. S„ Mrs. Joe . 1 Hunter, 2:30 p. m 11 Union Twp. Economica Club, . I Mrs. Thurman Drew, 1 p. m. . i Zion Reformed Ladles Aid Au- ■ | tumn party, church basement, 6 11 p. tn. ■ St. Mary's Twp. Home Economics | Chili. Mrs. Ed Koos. 1:30 p. tn. . Frivolity Club opening, Mrs. I Frank Crist, 6 p. m. Friday ■ N. and T. Club welner and marsh- ; mallow roast, Butler View Farm. • p. tn. , Decatur Home Economics Club, ■ Mrs. George Squier, 1:30 p. m. Methodist W. H. M. S. luncheon. i Mrs. J. W. Tyndall. 1 p. m. ■ Carpe Diem Club. M . Bob Aug- ■ lust, 7:30 p. m. Monday I Literature D partment opening. ■ | Mrs. W. E. Smith. 6:30 p. m. li Dramatic Department opening i meeting. Elk's Home, 6:30 p. m. Art Department opening. Mrs. ' Homer Lower. 6:30 p. m. Research Club opening meeting. : Mrs. C. D. Lewton, 2:30 p. m. Tuesday Root Twp. Home Economics Club i picnic for children, Monmouth. 4:30 I p. m. | Lankenau, had charge of the arI rangements for the affair. • The Walther League received an I invitation to attend the annual rally I of the Inter River Zone to be held | at Bull Rapids, n -xt Sunday. ENTERTAINS CLUB AND SEVERAL GUESTS Mrs. George Ivaurent was hostess to the members of the Alpha Zeta
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1933.
Bridge Club and several additional 1 guests at h r home Wednesday * ev-ning. Guests other than the club members Included the Miwdames Ray Poole of Chicago, John Moore. Harold Shoaf, and Paul Hriede and ' the Misses Florence Holthouae and J Cecelia Appleman. Th- high score prize In bridge for the members was presented to j Miss Margaret Schumacher and Miss Genevieve Kitson received the ' second prize. Miss Appleman was awarded the guest prize. Following the games, Mrs. Lau-j rent e- rved a lunheon in one course 1 Tile next meeting will be held with Mrs. Hubert Omlor. ART DEPARTMENT TO OPEN WITH DINNER The formal opening of the Art j Department of the Woman's Club! for the fall and winter season will ! bo held at the home of Mrs. Homer ■ Lower on North Second street,' Monday night at which time the offiiers of the organization will entertain with a six thirty o’clock dinner. Mrs. Lower is chairman of the departm nt this year and the remaining officers anil hostesses are Mrs. L. A. Cow ns, Mrs. R. A Stuckey, Miss Mary Macy, Mm. i J. T. Myers and Mrs. Raymond! Keller. Members planning to attend th opening meeting are asked to be prepared to pay for their reservations for the Woman's Club opening meeting to be held Octob r 2 at the Methodist Church. LOCAL MAN'S BROTHER MARRIED AT BLUFFTON The marriage of Miss Alma Tarr of Liberty Center, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tarr of Fort Wayne and Roy Ehler, son of Mrs. Julia Ehler of Bluffton and a brother of J. L. Ehler of D-catur, were married at eight o'clock Wednesday] morning at the St. Joseph Catho-1 lice Church in Bluffton. Rev. John Bapst officiated at the marriage ceremony. Miss Margaret Ehler and Robert Ehler, sister and brother of the groom, attended the couple. For the occasion the bride wore a l frock of dark blue velvet, fashioned ankle length. A blue hat and shoes completed the costume. Following a wedding breakfast served at the home of the groom's mother. Mr. and Mrs. Ehler left for Chicago where they will spend their honeymoon. On their return they will make their home at Bluffton where Mr. Ehler is a painter and decorator. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ehler of this city attended the wedding. Th- opening meeting of the Research Club will meet Monday afternoon at two-thirty o'clock at the home of Mrs. C. D. Lewton. : I HELEN SCOTT i HONORED WITH PARTY The Misses Mary Lenwell and J-rry Diehl united in entertaining at the John Baker home on Third street Tuesday night in honor of Helen Scott who will become the bride of Charles Weber on September 30. The home was beautifully decorated in a colo rscheme of pink and green. Music and contests formed itertainment and j INSURE YOUR STOMACH Eat and drink the things yon like BB but protect your stomach bv taking K| a harmleeb Epicure right after. Bg Prevents gas, heartburn and other distress due to acidity. Gives quick relief in caie of distiesa. Most effective due to triple balanced ar- M tion. Corrects acidity, soothes stomath tissues, promotes normal elimination. 1? for 35c or 3 for a dime. At all druggists. K • EPICURE I Whitens Teeth Without Scrubbing STOP the acid coating that I makes teeth dingy. Rexall Milk I of Magnesia Tooth Paste counteracts this acid coating. Teeth whiten amazingly—your mouth | fee’s fresher. Gum tissues become stronger. Try this offer [auJFOb] SPECIAL! g Q>7| Rexall Milk v •" ut rw of Magnesia Tooth Paste and Klenzo A ~ Brush and V Holder. Bl .JyrxJ B. J. SMITH DRUG CO.
FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS By ELLEN WORTH. The Sky’s the Limit For Chic Shoulders ' • "More like ingeb every day"— fe’C* \ j'zif that's what the fashion experts ft .i&w ” say we’re getting to be. Wherever f smart women gather this fall / I k you’ll see dresses with shoulders , t/r-\ pointing up—up—to new altitude ' «... \ jL—records. And on evening clothes this upward movement leans * backward, over the shoulder t,, l > n blades, like true angel’s wings. | Os course you’ll want to wear i \ 1 this new fashion, but In a modi- r"~*’ I v fled version at first. So we've / I. V I sketched a frock with clipped 'filj wings that are scarcely any big- ; , , CE-pi tl ger than Napoleon's epaulets. r z ’I \ - 11 They point your shoulders upward in a very dignified way—and the 1 ( I T||!l b;! dress is an Easy-to-Make model! I| l I if ji In either sheer or printed crepe ■ J i ■{] | 5 j I this frock will win you new laur- | I IU I • 1 els at smart, informal affairs. Size , < / • tBA • I I 16 or 34 requires 4' B yards 39- / p 1 I J 1 inch fabric, % yards contrasting f j, , fl I for the tab ends. Width about 2 3 4 > yards. Our new Fashion Book , ~*f / contains many other smart styles | \l for home or business, school or y. , Vv..«> town wear: also interesting art- t ; a icles on dressmaking. \ / VL L Pattern No. 5342 is designed for sizes 12. 14. 16. 18. 20 years, 30. 32. BT 34, 36. 38. 40. 42 bust. Cnpjrljbt. 1833. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc. No. 5342 Size Price for Pattern 15 Cents. I name street address city state Our New Fashion Book is out! Send for It—put check here and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Vl.irese <n-ders to New York Pattern Bureau the Decatur Dally Democrat Suite 110, 220 East 4snJ St. New York City. (Editor’s note—-do not mail orders to Decatur, Indiana.)
prizes were won by Miss Rose Coffee and Miss Margaret Kitson, who in turn presented them to the honored guest. At the close of the evening a delicious luncheon was served at one large table and two small ones, arranged in the dining room. The following guests wre present: the Misses Pauline Schenkel. Helen Schenkel. Ruth Kauffman, Jewel Dolby, Emma Rickert. Josephine Casper, all of Huntington; and the Misses Rose and Mary Coffee, Kathryn Hebble, Mary Ginley, Frances Braun, Phylis Bonifas, Mary Andrews, Beulah Richards. Henrietta Spangler, Alite Isch, Mary Straub, the Mesdames Miriam ■ Shoaf. Pearl Reed, Cecil Kirchner, I Brtce Roop. Dora Edgell and John Baker. Miss Coffee and Mise Kit-1 son. the honored guest and the hostesses. The guest of honor was the recipient of man b autiful gifts. REED FAMILY HOLDS REUNION Tlie first annual reunion of the Reed family was held recently at the Legion Memorial Park in Decatur. Dinner was served at the noon hour. During the business meeting it was decided to make the family gathering an annual affair. Carl Landoun of Lima. Ohio, preI sided over the meeting as president I Tlie next reunion will be held at the! I Legion Memorial Park the second l Sunday in September. Those present at the meeting ; were Mr. and Mrs. Carl Landoun, j ' Mr. and Mrs. Mead Doalt of Lima,: Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth Stop-] her and amity, Mrs. U. Stopher, O. Stopher of Delphos, Ohio; Mr. land Mrs. Clyde McClure and daughI ters Ruth Emmert and Mylo MeI Clure of Mish. lAldine Walters and i Wilson Hart of Fort Wayne; Mr. i and Mrs. Wilson Reed. Mr. and ] j Mrs. John Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Miller, Janies and Donald I Hart, Edith Ri-rd. Melvina Williams Helen Hoffman, Deloris .Miller, I Mary and Elizabeth Reed, Orval Reed, Virgil McClure, Charles. Richard and Wendell Miller and I Mr. Andrews all of Decatur. — The Root Township Home EcoI nomics Club will entertain with a picnic supper for their children, Tuesday evening at four-thirty o’clock at Monmouth. LITERATURE DEPARTMENT TO ENJOY DINNER MEETING The members of the Literature Department of the Woman's Club will enjoy a dinner at the home of Mrs. W. E. Smith, chairman of the department. Monday evening at sixthirty o'clock. The dinner will mark the opening of the activities of the department for the present year. Following the dinner a business meeting will be held. o HOSPITAL NOTES A. A. Stove of Willshire, Ohio, Route 2, underwent a major opera I tion at the Adams County Hospital this morning. Mrs. Thurman Gottschalk, wife of Senator Gottschalk, Berne, underwent a major emergency operation at the Adams County Memorial Hospital this morning. o Do We Eat Fi.h? The United States consume* ap proximately 2,062,000.000 pounds of fish each year.
PERSONALS Tom Allwfin, a freshman at DeI Pauw University, has been pledged to the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, it has been learned here. Th° Misses Inez and Erna Frauhiger of near Bluffton spent Wednesday shopping in Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blissner and I Mrs. Neva Laurer of Sante Fe, California, visited with Miss Eva lAcker and her mother, Mrs. Jane TAcker in this city, enroute to Chicago to attend the world's fair. The Misses Herrtta Elzey and! I Katheryn Archbold, Messrs. Don Stump and George Helm visited in i 1 Fort Wayne Wednesday evening. | RED CROSS SET FOR HURRICANE — Washington.— (U.R) — American Red Cross workers were more extensively and more efficiently pre-, pared for disasters during the recently passed storm season than they ever have been before, ac- i cording to James L. Fieser, vice l chairman in charge of domestic 1 operations. He particularly pointed out that ! two days before the recent disastrous hurricane hit Florida a Red I Cross leader was in the state rnak i fng preparations for the storm which the weather bureau had warned was going to hit the region. “The hurricane season, ushered in by the storms along the Atlantic seaboard and quickly followed by the destructive winds that swept several states bordering the ! Gulf of Mexico," his statement said, “found the Red Cross everywhere organized tor the meeting ' of emergencies. “last year the Red Cross gave relief in 117 disasters, it was a year to test the organization and methods developed through 52 ! years of coping with catastrophe. We are satisfied that National Headquarters, branch offices and chapters were never at a higher state of efficiency in this imporI tant fie'd of Red Cross activities • than now." Caesarian Operation Saved Tiny Chow Puppy Columbus, O. — (U.R) Five days I before Lady Blue-Jack, thoroughbred blue chow dog, was expected to give birth to a litter of puppies, she died on a veterinarian's operating table from injuries received 1 when struck by an automobile. However, one of her three unj born puppies was saved when Dr. j Carl V. McKenzie, just eight weeks i graduated from Ohio State Univer- ' sity’s College of Veterinary Medi- j ' cine, performed a caesarian sec- ! tion operation. Os the other two | puppies, one was already dead , when Dr. McKenzie operated, and the other one was too badly injured to be saved. The doctor’s wife, a graduate nurse, although veterinary books don’t tell much about what one should do for premature pups, nursed the uninjured tiny chow through a cold which developed soon after the operation and • threatened to prove fatal to him. |
GUNS FOUND AT I STATE PRISON Three Automatic Pistols And Bullets Found Within Walls Michigan City, Ind., Sept. 21. — (U.R) Finding of three automatic pistols and several bullets within tlie wails of the state prison was reported here today. Three men serving 26-year terms on charges of robbing the State Exchange Bank at Culver were reported to have been plac ed in solitary confinement In be- I lief that Hie weapons were des-1 tlned for them. The guns and 18 cartridges, i oiled to.prevent rusting and rolled i separately in cotton and wrapped in a Chicago newspaper, were found by prisoners In the yard near a wall while 2,500 inmates were in the enclosure. Presence of the weapons was attribu'ed to the Culver bandits by Harry I). Claudy, deputy ward en, who recalled that the three | were known to have underworld ] connections in Chic-age. Prison authorities were unable! to explain how any outside agent • could get near enough to tlie walls ] to throw over the package because powerful lights are flashed along the area both inside and | outside the- prison and guards pa rol the territory. o Wiley Post Escapes Serious Injuries — Quincy. 111., Sept. 21—(U.R)— 1 Wiley Post, round the world flier crashed shortly after he took off ■ here today for Davenport. la. His plane, the Winnie Mae, fell in a ] tree. Post was found sitting in the i plane, blood streaming down his ! face. He was taken to St. Mary's hospital here where it was said ■ his Injuries were not serious. He is expected to be able to leave the hospital in a few days. I His plane was so badly damaged JU' ... QUIVERING NERVES Vield to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable (Compound When you are just on edge . . . when you can’t stand the children’s noise . . . when everything is a burden . . . when you are irritable and blue . . . try this medicine. 98 out of 100 women report ; benefit, It will give you Just the extra energy you need. Life will seem • worth living again.
Genuine Goodyear Bicycle || ' tB Hde | U £ S W U fSR PAY-HaWEEK Jpu««hn| P Motor*o?l' a and »P~ small SMrn down—tires, batteries, auto radios, heaters I OtL h, ’ h “'’ ri,,le Is your battery weak? Will it EX IDE CAM ’ Better have us clean off green stuff— Tk' JU A . r I apply a corrosion-preventive to tenni- Exch Hear inis wonaenui na!s chl . ck the cab ies-test the ceils. J 13-piate 6-Tube Super-Het Maybe we can save you trouble and I D E X ■■■■—fl p-y • -J the cost of a new battery this fall. ' $5.45 AUTu CIO?_OJ3 Makes Serviced —Repaired —Rentals Exch. " 7, ’ .1 Recharging —Road Service Ride „ Vou p„t $ 29 •95 IMBigjaßfe BMMm £ Ihere's been so much talk ■ ■■ ‘about prices going up that we’re Airplane Dial — All Electric printing the facts about our prices Latest Features—Licensed for Goodyear Pathfinders here. byR.C.A. Easy Payments 1 1 i_ (HMBWnTOExBTrajjMBH look them over and see for * JMISKSeS « • yourself — most] Pathfinder P each prices today are below the level Sparkplugs ■a* ofone year ago — and you’re getCleaned GOODz it All ting a better tire for your money! spark gaps adjusted tfjgagjA datu ri Nn r D Goodyear has actually increased TKaTiMiFU/ feHSSa ' wLc„~t vires the tread thickness 20% —built zs a o *'* r these tires so good they give 30 ’° GOODYEAR M «'« ftwSeptl932 longer average tread wear—3o% Spark Plugs 4?w ’ 21 S5 - 3 ® 55.55 greater mileage! 450-20 6.99 6.00 ~ , , "’•‘ ( ’o , r ted 58 rs 4.50.21 6.10 6.30 Better get yours now - and be singly 60 4.75-19 6.97 6.70 ready for slippery winter drivsoo n 738 720 ,n - iou 11 save worry—save Goodyear Car $« .25 50020 7 .4 8 7.45 money-by getFloor Mats *up 5.25.1 s 8.35 8.10 B. n £ r ’4 Goodyear Fan 7 Belts-all cars f w up YF|| Guaranteed Tire $4 .00 Vulcanizing *up iSSS The world’s favorite tire Prices start at X DON’T SKID! is a great buy for mile- 5720 We Regroove Smooth Tires | age. safety, and value. g GOODYEAR SERVICE “Call 262 and Count The Seconds” y|F. Weekdays 7 a m. to 9 p.m.—Sundays 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. I ■ Corner Madison and Third Sts.—Decatur. | II
] by the crash that it will require I several days to make tlie repairs. o Suicide Attempt Stopped By Boy Yoder, Ind . Sept. 21— (U.R) I Tin* ulteged suicide attempt of i Wayne Mason, 27, was frustrated here today when Ills two-year-bld son found him banging from a barn rafter. Neighbors, attracted by the child's screams, cut the rope which held Mason. Doctors administered first aid, for strangulation and said they believed the man would live. 11l health was blamed for Mason's act. —— -o— — — Yale Freshmen to Report For Football Sept. 25 | New Haven. Conn.—(U.R) -Fresh--1 men aspirants to the Yale football ! squad will report for the first time : Sept. 25, tlie day college l opens, aci cording to Mai Stevens, who is taking up the freshmen coaching Job tills fall after several years as
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t head varsity coach. A seven game ■cttedule has been arranged for the yearlings. They will open Oct. 7, playing Exeter away from home. The remainder of the schedule: Oct. 14. Andover; 21, Roxbury School; 28, Dartmouth freshmen; Nov. 4, Holy Cross 1 freshmen; 11, Princeton freshmen; 1 18, Harvard freshmen, at Cambridge. i o Youthful Santa Claus Sued School for $15,000 Visalia, Cal.—(U.R>—lt was an un- , i welcome Santa Claus who brought ■the Walnut Grove school district i and Edna Reed, principal, a $15,i 000 damage suit. The suit was filed by Albert • Davis, father of Theodore Davis, 10 i! year-old schoolboy, who, the t ornI plaint charged, was seriously burn- ] ed about the face and hands when I cotton whiskers and cuffs of a Santa Claus costume caught fire i in a candle flame. ! Tlie l»oy was enacting the role J of Santa Clause in a school entertainment.
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