Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 259, Decatur, Adams County, 2 November 1933 — Page 3
BoCIETY
<■ i '. PARTY ■' 4HKfl^W v 'i wHV- ■ i."'".l <:• l; ' ■ KH, Mi-< ■ "" QO, od. M,.n ithm >, Liiotta RelTcy, ' ,ll “ Z "’" fIMVt . «n: ni' ri ,H Hil^^F k v OlKy* \ . :nl l( >r !'. iii the Elks be made. ■rdkTAiN GUESTS \!’< A. Cook and *^^Ki : .,:.> Oirtained w ilininT recently for .Mr. [.,.wis Faust Griffith; Ht< Mi- Wilbur Barton ami E e Mrs. Peter Pearson of Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mr and Mrs. Walter Eliott Wayne. callers were Mr. and Eox and family of and Homer Barton of DeKEING OF CLUB Bur! .Johnson was hostess numbers of the Frivolity i 'day evening. Prizes Mesdames William Aug—W Wa!! : F.ckrote and Frank the games a deii’ ious of Halloween appointserved by Mrs. .Johnson by her daughter, Jean. lAu-
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I STOCKS AND BONDS I BOUGHT SOLD QUOTED I ri'TAVD w C United States Government Bonds, g * UDiSKAIjo Federal Land Bank Bonds. I General obligations ot Cities and Counh MUNICH* \l S ** es * oun^v Boad Bonds, School Bonds, H * etc. I UTILITIES ( Bonds and Stocks of Public Utilities, II INDUSTRIALS Industrials and Railroads in the |j RAILROADS United States. II North American Secured by a selected list of high grade || Bond Trust ‘ bonds of 200 corporations. || Certificates Il Nnrth Amnripan Secured by the common stock of 34 outII INOrtn .American Standing corporations. Diversified as to || Trust Shares industry and geographical location. I Approximately $1,875,000,000.00 of U. S. Fourth 4'/<' . Liberty | Bonds, Series A, J and K, have been called as of April la, 1931. We I offer our facilities to anyone interested in buying, selling or exchang- ! ing United States Government Securities. £ We specialize in the collection of interest coupons. 1I ur nish | relating to practically all types of securities. We also execute market I orders for listed stocks upon request. I CENTRAL SECURITIES CORPORATION ‘I , . Fort Wayne, (Investments) I Telephone A-1435 A-1436.
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. f Miss Mary Macy Phone* 1009—100] e Thursday I W. O. T. M., Moose Home. Bp. m. 0 Civic Section called meeting, j R Chamber of Commerce room, 7p. m. y Antioch Missionary Sewing Cir- 1 . cle. Mrs. Willjam Weldy. allday. | e Girl Scouts Troop 1 regular' meeting. Central School, 4 p. m. ( Telephone Bridge parties. Psi I , lota Xi members’ homes, 8 pm. ' Calvary Evangelical Ladles Aid Society, church parlors, 1:30 p. ni. j IT. B. Ladle* Aid Sample Party church basement. t ’ Monroe M. E. Ladle* Aid Society, Mrs Charles Bahner, 2 p. m. Evangelical W. M. S., church parlors, 2 p. m. . M. E. Ever Ready vlase, Mrs.. ' C. L. Walters, 7:30 p. m. Mt. Pleasant Ladies Aid Society J Mrs. Charles Barnhouse, 2 p. m. I Presbyterian Missionary Society, . Mrs. L. A. Graham, 2:30 p. m. , Bridge Club. Mrs. Herman Ehlnger, postponed. , Eta Tau Sigma business meeting, t Miss Katheryn Archbold, 7:30 p. m. I hrietian Missionary Society. Miss Florence Liehtensteiger, 7:30 p. m. Baptist Missionary Society, Mrs. ' C. E. Peterson. 2:30 p. m. I Friday L Girl Scouts Troop 1 hike, Ceti . tral School, 4 p. m. ; U. B. Work and Win class 1 Thanksgiving supper, Mr. and f Mrs. Homer Arnold, meet at . . church at 6p. m. I Reformed adult choir, church, t 7:30 p. m. Saturday I Christian Church dinner, postt poned. j Monday Woman’s Club meeting. Liter- i ature department in charge. Decatur Library Auditorium. 7:30 p. m.. I prompt. ’ Research Club. Mrs. Daniel' f Sprang, 2:30 p. m. s _ Tuesday M. E. Ladies Aid mince meat t i I sale. Tri Kappa business meeting, Mrs. ' I Paul Saurer, 8 p. m. Psi lota Xi business meeting, 1 Zwick Furniture Store, 7:30 p. m. • tumn flowere were arranged about . the entertaining rooms The next meeting of the club will be held with Mrs. Charles Keller.' The Women of the Moose will | hold the regular meeting of the organization tonight at eight o’clock in the Moose Home. LADIES AID PLANS FALL EVENTS The Ladies Aid Society of the United Brethren Church met Wed- ■ nesday afternoon at the home of: Mrs. Charles Robinaid. Mrs. Will 1 Pennington and Mrs. Orlen Brown I were the assisting hostesses. Mrs. Clarence Merryman conducted the devotional services as- : ter which Mrs. O. P. Mills had j charge of the business session. Mrs. Gaylie Bittner extended an invita-1 tion to the Ladies Aid to attend d> corn husking party at her home I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1933.
■ next Thursday. The members are j to meet at the church at seven o'clock Thursday morning. An anniversary supper will be : served November 18 in the church, I mid the plate supper will be thirty five cents. The anniversary dinner : will be served one week later and | will be in the form of a basket dinner. Mrs. Dirk Schafer and Mr*. Clarenco Drake made a report of their | neighborhood teas and a total amount of eight dollars and sixty rents was reported. Mrs. Schafer read their report which was In the form of a poem. Twenty one members and three visitors were pre- ! sent at the meeting. INTERESTING PAPER READ AT HISTORICAL CLUB The members of the Historical club and one guest, Mrs. Kenneth Runyon met at the home of Mrs. Roy Runyon on Rugg street, Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Runyon was also the leader for the afternoon and she read an i interesting paper on "Glimpses of Some of Our Charitable institutions." She also gave some of her personal experiences in visiting the various charitable homes. The regular routine of business , was followed. The Progressive class of the Presbyterian Sunday School will be entertained at the home of Mrs. E. E. France Friday night at sevenI thirty o’clock. A good attendance is desired. The Psi lota Xi sorority will 1 meet at the Zwick Furniture Store ion North Second street, Tuesday night at seven-thirty o'clock for a ' business meeting. ' o —— DEATH CLAIMS RICHARD MYERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ager of the Hickey Machine Shops I In Ontario, Canada and at Lawrenceville, Illinois. In November 1899, he married Miss Mayme T. Long of this city. I To this union two children were I born. They are. Miss Josephine I Myers of New York City and I Richard Myers of this city. Surviving besides the wife and two children are three sisters, Mrs. Andrew Harting, Dallas, Texas: Mrs. A. E. Elston. Angola and Mrs. William Lantz. Tulsa, Okla. Four brothers are deceased. Returning to Decatur, Mr. Myers became a partner in the Gay. Zwick and Myers Furniture store in 1910. He remained in business until 1929. retiring because of ill health. Mr. Myers was prominent in I local Masonic circles and took an I active part in lodge affairs, being , honored with all the important elective offices in the Decatur chapter. He was a memlver of the Blue lodge. Knights Templar. Scottish Rite consistory and Mizpah Shrine, Fort 'Wayne. ■ Known in nearly every state encampment of Spanish-American war veterans. • Mr. Myers was | elected a state delegate to the 1 national convention of the veter- ] ans held in Havana, Cuba, six j years ago. Several years ago the I district meeting of' the veterans i was held in this city at the invi- | tation extended by Mr. Myers. Mr. Myers served as a member of the Decatur school board from 1913 to 1922, being a member of I the board when the new high
EASY-TO-MAKE FASHIONS By ELLEN WORTH In® |F ii I; i 1 wjr 5365/j\ C W j 5345'V 1,/ SMS. Dnltned for sites 34 to 50 bust. *. 5358. Designed for sites 14 to 20 years, 32 to 42 bust. V ‘A 5345. Designed for sites 12 to 20 years. 30 tn 40 bust. 5871. Designed for sites 18 to 20 years. 34 bust. 1 1 | 5381. Designed for sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. |’ ( | Copyright, 1033, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. 5*3 6 I No. Size Enclose 15 cents for each pattern ordered. name street address city state Put cross here for Fashion Book and enclose 10 cents extra. Address orders to New York Pattern Bureau the Decatur Dally Democrat Suite 110, 220 Hast 4snd St. New York City. (Editor's note—do not mail orders to Decatur, Indiana.)
school building was erected. Funeral services will be held i Saturday morning at 10 o'clock at ■ the Myers home with the Rev. Dr. i C. P. Gibbs, pastor of the Metho-! dist church in charge. Burial will I be made in the Decatur cemetery, ! military services being conducted I at the grave by members of Adams Post of the American Legion and the Spanish-American was veterans. Active pall hearers will include members of Arthur Miller Post of the Spanish-American war veter-! ans Honorary pall bearers will, be former grand masters of the' local Masonic lodge and will in-1 chide. O. L. A’ance. Henry Heller, j Dan Tyndall. C. E. Peterson, Floyd Acker, i. Bernstein. A. D. SutTles.' C. A. Dugan. G. V. Porter and E. B. Adams. The body was moved from the j Zwick funeral home to the Myers i home this afternoon and may be viewed bv friends. BUSINESS MEN MAY RULE CODES • - — (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) 1 was “much dissatisfaction" with the NRA’s activities. The plan quickly won the endorsement of Administrator Hugh I S. Johnson, if it provided for corresponding organization for labor. I "all the way through" and Swope ; I accepted that in toto. Harriman also endorsed the plan in principle l as a desirable alternative to possi-‘ ble failure of the NRA through its becoming “just a government bu- ’ reaucracy." The Swope plan provided that! 'the national governing council be' made up of regional trade association representatives. It also would include representatives of government departments, and maintain extensive research and statistical i staffs. Johnson said the government would exercise "very direct I and intimate supervision" over the council. This shift of emphasis to self-; regulation of business, rather than! government direction and supervision coincides with an impending: barnstorming tour by General Johnson to seek greater public support for the NRA. The reaction which follows his trip may have a bearing on whether there is to be any major shift of tactics ih the recovery drive. " The resolution of the powerful Manufacturers' Association said that recent rulings and instructions relating to administration of codes imperiled industrial self-govern-ment. It declared that “sound employment relationships must be established in the light of local plant and community conditions.” Jlarriman said that the permanent value of the NRA would be enhanced if the program was carried out by business under government supervision to see (hat the interests of the people tfre protected. “The government can’t get anywhere policing industry any more than it could police the 18th amendment," he said. "Business must police itself.’’ There will be a big job for such
! a council if it comes into being ; ' Less than 20 per cent of the codes I that have been drawn up have been I approved finally by the President, I NRA figures show. GUARD AGAINST NAZI ACTIVITY (CONTINUED FROM I'Anlt ONE) strictest neutrality under pain of prison sentences. 4 —The commission will control ' solicitation of funds for political j groups. ■ s—Exposures—Exposure of government sec- ! rets or terrorist activities designi ed to control the 1935 plebiscite vote will be punished by prison ' sentences at hard labor. 6 —Police, and gendarmes who I refuse to enforce the above de- ! crees will be punished by impris- ; onment for from two to five years at hard labor. I The decrees were aimed directi ly»at curtailing Nazi activities and ; preventing an armed outbreak, j Nazi speakers have exhorted the i population to revolt, and even ■ children give the Nazi salute. The Nazi situation has been a i source of international worry for many months. In withdrawing from the league of nations, Chancellor Adolf Hitler said bluntly: “After the return of the Saar to the Reich, Germany will have no i reason for war against Frarfce.” There is sober doubt whether I the Saar population will wait for 1 the 1935 plebiscite, fourteen 1 months away. It is unsafe for French officials of the mines to move about freely. Many have been beaten. o STATE LEADERS IN CONFERENCE AT WASHINGTON j (CONTINUED FROM PAOE “’NE) . desired. Wallace and Peek stressed their belief that their aims were the ! same as those of the farmers. They i said they had been watching the ! Des Moines conference with “close •attention" and would welcome a ; delegation of the governors. o Finances to Be Probed MONTREAL (U.R) — An inquiry into the financial position of the city of Montreal and the expenditures of the administration will be made this winter by a special committee appointed by the Canadian Manufacturers' Association. Varicose Ulcers —Old Sores Healed At Home No enforced rest. No operations nor injections. The simple Emerald Oil home treatment permits yon to Ko about your daily routine as usual —while those old sores and ulcers quickly heal up and your legs become as good as new iEmerald Oil acts instantly to end a Pitln. reduce swelling, stimulate circulation. Just follow the easy directions — you are sure to be helped * or money back. Holthouse mLmTmt Drug Co., and druggists everywhere.
Personals Mr. and Mr*. E. S. Chri*t»n have returned from Chicago where they spent a week visiting a-Century of Progress and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. V. 8. (Allen and sons, John Robert' and Ferd Ellis. LOCALS » F. V. Mills has received a letter from some fellow who claims to biin prison In Spain, asking him to help him get out. He says he is in possession of $360,000 and that if Fred will help him lo get free he will give him $120,000, but Fred is skeptical of 'such a Santa Claus giving him so great preference and Is not considering a trip to that country where Claude Bowers presides as American Amliassador. Dick Heller, secretary to Lieuten-ant-Governor Clifford Townsend Is scheduled to make a political speech at a district rally In Fort Wayne this evening. Dick Townsend Is ill at the home of his parents on Mercer Avenue. Miss Madge Hite will go to Chicago next week to visit her sister, Mrs. Oscar Hoffman who is ill. The Indies Missionary Society of the Presbyterian church held a social meeting at the home of Mrs. L. A. Graham this afternoon. o Laredo, Tex., Hums As Border Imports Mount Laredo, Tex. —(U.R)—lnternational commerce at this Mexican border town has been humming on a rising scale in recent months. In September lead imports from Mexican mines totalled 115 carloads, an increase of three over August. Exports of American goods to Mexico through Laredo amounted to 249 carloads for the month, a drop of 40 from August. Mexican export commodities, according to El Boletin Fronterizo Commercial, official publication of the Mexican customs house at Nuevo Laredo, included: Antimony, refined arsenic, beer, bones, bananas, cadmio, copper metal, hides, ixtie, palm ixtle, lumber, ilmes, lead and straw hats. American commodities exported to Mexico through Laredo were included about three times as many different items, from automobiles, through machines and materials of all kinds to water meters. o Not Machine Made Machines .seem able to produce every essential thing except consumers —San Francisco Chronicle.
ANOTHER WEEK OF GREAT VALUES IN SHOES, DRY GOODS AND OTHER NECESSITIES IN OUR LUCKY PURCHASE SALE Carefully Selected Values that mean Savings to Thrifty Shoppers. FOOTWEAR SAVINGS RaZn K l:! - 'waWHHMI or 2 pr. 25c Mens Heavy Work Shoes. $2.50 value Black or Brown, all sizes I V R R j b be d Ladies Enna Jettick Shoes, combination ‘ Winter Weight Union last, till widths and heels Suits 7Qp Mens Work Rubbers, Hood and MhP . ni .L * adjustable head sizes, Ladies Cloth Artics ,)(■>(* light and dark patterns sizes 3to.> 2 t o cbo ose from Ladies Noveltv Shoes values to $2.50 «P 1— ... . ... oi. • 36 inch Genuine Hope Childrens Brown Bilt and Peek-A-800 Shoes, sizes Muslin. I*> 2to 6; Oxfords. Straps. Patent. Gun Metal, AP- Bleached, yard.. IZC values to $2.00 ; 27 inch White Outing, *u^S resa : $1.93 JX'Z).... 8c inrh Cnlnr Prints Mens and Youn K Mens Fanc y Corduroy ob mtn ra. I L Sport Jackets, zipper or button style, in Beautiful patterns to choose 1 (ip grey, blue. red. wine, green and purple, from, heavy quality, yard -LVV HIBI ! I Ladies Pure Silk Full Fashioned Hose in all wanted shades ELCL* pair Mens 8 ounce Husking Gloves A , ut Mens Sport Style Coat Sweaters in brown and Mens Heavy Blue Chambray 4 Q ~ oxford grey, values to $2.00... i/OL Work Shirts. 75c value ti»7v PdecatuT'soriginalunTrsei-ling rTORE~||
-FORESEES NEW •! TYPE OF ENGINE r f f Chicago, — (U.R) — The day* of steam locomotive, with Its belching smokestack ami hissing cylinders, definitely are numbered, In the P opinion of Fred Sargent, president , of the Chicago and Northwestern , Railroad. 4 Single unit gas and electric toco-1 t motives of various designs gru-hi-1 , 'ally will supplant the Iron horse in. I . bot h suburban and long haul ser-; , j vice, Sargent believes. The single! 1 unit system is more practical, flex-' I I ible and economical than either , . steam, or a comprehensive, centri1 fugal electrified system. "Elaborate studies made by West- ( iinghonse and General Electric show I i that it would cost at least $60,000.t I 000 to electrify the three suburban j branches of the Northwestern with s ; a fixed power plant system,” said I Sargent. "I predict that within eight or | ten years, possibly sooner, the gas ' i unit, or oil-electric engine will be . .so far developed that it will take c • tlie place of steam on American railways." Tile present method of electrifying railroads with a stationery central plant and either third rail, or
husband to mfll admire my skin” flfcA WIFE never forgets that a clear skin is * rrc! » ist, blc and that some other woman might prove more attractive. H° w can 9^e have a clear skin, too? %|||w There is one way which many have found eflit ient . . . by restoring deficient red-cells and !)• ri.o .'.o nit skill h ii.l t j";riL- r •<>!'>•■ Ll>l The right amount of herno glo bin in the bl<‘<"i niaki'B a vast (jitfcrcUcc 1U the wa; Vuil feel and look. S.S.S. Tonic has the special property of increasing the re<l-< ells ami restoring deficient * ■ ~ hemo-glo-bin to the blood. Tens of thousands yearly take a course of J- ** S.S.S to pep up a lagging appetite, regain old-time j vigor, restore color to the skin and to build up resistance to infectious diseases, pimples and boils. Tr y SS S - yourself. You will be happy with I j \ the beneficial results obtained. At all drug stores. "The larger size is more economical. © The S.S.S. Co. ' r sturdyYhcalth
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trolley power tianamlseion, I* not flexible enough to be practicable. Sargent contend*. The single unit system, however, would permit flexibility of time and service which 1* necesHary for efficient suburban transportation. - o Chineshe Wall Draws Tourists Clintonville, Wls. — (U.R)—A section of the famous wall of China Is the blggeet attraction for tourists In Central Park here. It Is said to 1 be the only section of the wall in ; the world outside China and consists of about three'tons of assortled bricks and stones. A salesman for an auto truck company obtain, led permission from the Sun Yat Sen administration to transport the wall to Clintonville.
Cycfia E. Pinkham’® Tablet® Relieve and Control Periodic Pain® Clinical tests prove it. Take them today for welcome ease sod comfort. Take them regularly for permanent relief. No narcotics. No dizziness. No unpleasant effects. ( Sold by all druggists. Small boot 50i- Larger sue. if you prefer.
