Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 21 May 1934 — Page 3
Society,
| ■ si* ■' iIK Ea*ioi 1 B K i : i rhrkrten , e (hß of \ :•; * •Minty. L b 4P \ d"’ n- .ii on*t«> ■ I i.il. ( Loyali lorcas class of the jc< i s.'i.'.ii 'a.;, •k at ti 1 '”• ll,r " j s »ni i< 11. i. ■!'. 1 Coy Mai M - *l* ii! > Ad ',IB p ' '!'■ niJl: ' fht ft'cl '•! ■ \ ' 1:111 9 aJH I ■ W(B| b \)rmk i L 1 'OK iary Omlor, MargarI i S. 11'*11 1 ii 1 !"-r i ■ irjorfc ail.l Ml- H'll I •"■*• I. Dee* Improvement 4-H ram it the Decatur high ■tlWcdfi ay afternoon at oneI o'lloi. All girls who enrollKs nießt for thia year are ■d ' at this meeting. **BLST*Ie alumni |honob dr. pittenger ■umul of Hall Stuie TeichI Muncie. will enterI with ft 1 Rice I!" ■ this Suing at five-thirty o’VaSt of Dr. L. A. l’itten--1 presidio t of the college. K: Pit* r will deliver the 1 ■ school light. Guests at the ■er willli . i pi-rsons of this I ■hers e litld Slfi I II Heller. Mr. Helli- prel; lent of the board of ■tee* >fl college. •fins T.B> - win us general chairI ■use ;Sti will attend the hanI are P lent and Mrs. L. A. Muncie; ■l. He!' Superintendent and E M. S’ We t liman. I’rincipal I Mrs. \ Brown. i’rincipal I Mr*. I If Thomas. Mr. and I A. K Ketchnni, Misses < Jeanette EL He- ,s Slsuard .Anderson I "0 F” W*l di township 4 H Club I a rJbc. mizatlon meeting May it thalt; n. va sclioolhotise. The liber* v • given an outline of ■ work f.i the coming year. The I H».t- spent in i> i link-
TFTH AVENUE FASHIONS By ELLEN WORTH K The Sailor Frock Adopts a Yoke E wry unior will like this new j—Kv/'l' ]| ' I !I st ffchion has given to the jz i\ jO)\\\Jyy ~v isdSf.ilor frock. First of all, ] W ']/ Sr f j 'tie’s fc pointed yoke in place of 1 |tt c „ | J j * oast, mary square collar. In ' 1? seefcnd place, the fabric is v —L—SizLji-i lllE ® ditted linen, which is very n ’ V I ■w, int l ■l'd. But the dearly be- / " •> 1 / !** sailor tie remains the same! If /. A Hatch! pockets top pleats that ft// ' e stltflied down a good part of I / r E and a wide belt circles j "I I fiize I 2 requires 2% yards 36- /■ <■ / „ j W®tted fabric, V 2 yard 36- / •» " P° r other children’s I 0 n «*-'4jp!'.rs. Easy to Make sash- H " « 1 " I v.aw 2 *f the new Fashion Book jl °” j " o\\ Pattehi No. 5535 is designed for I I \ “~1 j J , \ *•*B. 10, 12, 14 years. \ u *~4 A-^ 1834, United Feature Syndicate. Inc. , I X 5S 3 5 Size 1 / A Me lor Pattern 15 Cents. L - \ %iiziz h n 11\ m state V ' SWl^s3s F t _, Book is out! for it. r ? 4 *P r ® Q **nd enclose 10c extra lor book Democrat, “Fashion Center”, Times Square, P. O. Box [ |“ N<jw York, N. Y. (Editor’s note—Do not mail orders to Decatur, | I .
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Monday Pinochle Club, Mrs. Francis Kady : 7: HO p. m. St. Agnes Sodality Mother’s party Catholic school, s p. m. T uesday • Tri Kappa meeting. Miss Vivian I’urk. 3 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Dorcas class, church, 7:30 p. m. ’ Hona Terns Club, Mrs. Tom Eh- ■ inger, 7:30 p. m. ’ Tuesday Afternoon Club, Mrs. Clyde llutler, 2 p. m. Root Twp. Home Economic* Club Mrs. Charles Gage, l:3o p. ni. | D. C. H. S. Alumni, school hall, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday • Delta Theta Tau business meet* lug, Mis* Salome Schmitz, 3:15 p.m. Decatur Improvement 4-H Club, D. H. S. domestic science room, ’ 1:30 p.m. North St. Mary's Twp. 4 H Club, 1 | Bobo School, 1 p. m. Union Twp. Woman’s Club, Mrs. Forest Walters, 1 p. m. Beulah Chapel Ladles Aid Society, church, all-day. Thursday M. E. Ladies Aid Society, Mrs, llarry Butler, 2:30 p. in. I I ■ I ing. The next meeting will he May ; | 24. Those present .it the meeting i | were Beatrice Mathys. Pauline Yobs i Leah Stanley, Pauline Leichty, I' Mary Cline, Laurene Fenstermaker ■ * Dorothea Kramer, Marilyn Glassburn, Helen Aspy, Aveline Kohin- ■ son Leah Sprunger, Jackie Teeter, • Flossie Lvbarger, and 'Anna Farrar. A business meeting of the Delta Theta Tau sorority will he held Wednesday evening at eight fifteen ■ o’clock at the home of Miss Salome i Schmeitz. Members are askpd ■ to take note of the change in time of meeting. i o LOCOL MAN’S MOTHER DIES | (CONTINUED FROM PAW! ONE) ' her over the week-end. She was not ' I only interested in their family af- '' fairs, hut took am active part in ’ j churclf and community affairs. She | was one of the organizers of the ’ i Wabash township Home Economics ' I club and served as its first presiI I dent. t Mrs. Macklin lived her entire life ‘ in the vicinity of Geneva. Born in I Jay county, March 4. 131)2, the family moved to Adams county whom t she was a small girl. Her maiden name was Mary Siberry. Her hus- ■' band, P. A. Macklin, died in Octo- . | her. 1903. •! Seven children survive. They are . Phil L. of this city; Mrs. Bertha - j Fifer, Bryant: Mrs. Hazel Graham, I Bourbon; Mrs. Rena Zehr, postI! mistress at Berne; A. T. Macklin I! of La Grange; Haskel Macklin, J. I | Mark Macklin. Three children are i j deceased. One brother, 11. N. Siberry • Bryant; three half-brothers, David ' Whitman, Hryairt; Wilson Whitj man. Michigan; Harney Whitman |of Muncie also survive. Twenty ) 1 grandchildren and one great grand- • j daughter, Joyce Ann Tyndall ot' ■ j Bluffton, survive. [ | The deceased was a member of i! the Eastern Star chapter of Geneva ■' and of the Geneva Methodist
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. MAY 21. 1934.
• « tliat Chesterfields are Milder that Chesterlields Taste Better (} i<frt au> Chesterfield quality—and hence of bet. ter taste—than in any other cigarette at the price. Ligcktt & Mr mi Tobacco Co. © 1954, Liggett & Mybks Tobacco Co.
church. Funeral services will he held Wednesday afternoon at two o’clock at the Methodist Ge-1 neva. Burial will be made Irrfhef Gravel Hill cemetery. Bryant. Question Suspects In Robles Kidnaping Tucson. Ariz., May 21 —(U.R>Search for the kidnapers of June Robles, G, included two new suspects today after an informant told police he had been threatened. Details of the story were withheld but it was said the man was warned not to supply information that might lead to arrest. The suspects were said to be strangers here. Further questioning was in store for a "dude rancher” who disappeared the day June was kidnaped and who returned home after the girl was liberated 19 days later from an iron cage sunk in the desert sands. The rancher has been caught in several contradictions. questioners said. He is now under arrest. Crowd Expected At Annual Convention A large number of Pythian Sist-] ers are expected to gather in Decatur Tuesday for the twenty-fourth annual convention of the Pythian j Sisters of District No. 4. The | meeting will be held in the Eureka, Temple on Third street. Representatives from the lodges i in Huntington, Wabash, Miami, Jay j Grant, Blackford, Wells and Adams county, will attend the one-day | session which will open Tuesday j morning with registration at 9 j o’clock. Morning and afternoon sessions will he held, the afternoon meeting opening at 1:30 o’cjock. Doctor Testifies In St. Paul Trial St. Paul May 21 —(UP)-Terror filled days and nights of hiding after he had treated John Dilllnger for a leg wound were described today by Dr. Clayton E. May, at his trial on federal charges of harboring the outlaw. He cut short his office hours, shunned his home and family and advised his nurse, Mrs. Augusta Salt, to move, the physician testified as he completed his story. The trial, in which Mrs. Salt and Evelyn Frecliete, Dillinger's sweetheart are co-defendants, entered its second week today. —o Drew Bed Sentence for Assault Hamilton, Ont—(U.Rl— Albert Irwin, 23, has been sentenced to go j . to bed at 10 o’clock every night for I three months for slapping a policeI man’s face.
COURTHOUSE Marriage License Lester t’owens, farmer, Monroe township and Marie Josephine ' Scherry, Kirkland township. Adams County. Milo Habegger, trimming furni- 1 ture. Berne, and Inez Luginbill, ; book keeper, Berne. General Prather, school teacher, route 4, Kokomo, and Ruth Ellen Rayl, 249 Walnut street, Decatur. Real Estate Transfers Clarence Conrad, administrator, to Luella Ellsworth, part of inlot 21 in Decatur for SI.OO. Clarence Conrad et ux to Luella Ellsworth, part of inlot 21 in Decatur for SI.OO. Runaway After Pig's Death Aberdeen, Wash — (U.R) —Saddened because John Gartner, mill engineer. killed and ate his bosom friend, a little pig, Gartner’s dog disappeared. The dog and pig had been raised together from babyhood and when Gartner killed the pig the pup sniffed the porker’s body, howled and ran away. License For School Busses Boise. Ida. — (U.R) —School busses in Idaho must carry stage licenses ! when operated by private operat- 1 tors. Attorney General Bert Miller ' ruled. Where school districts own! the blisses, exempt licenses will be j given but private operators must pay $5 for every seat in the rated i capacity of the bus. |_ ~° * COUNTY AGENT’S * COLUMN { » • Story of Trip Six members of tlie Adams County 4-H Clubs were awarded trips to the Purdue Round-Up, May 2-5, on the achievement basis. Three ot' the members belonged to tlie | calf club division and three to the. Home Economics division. On Wednesday morning. May 2, we left tor Purdue. We made the trip with County Agent Archbold and Mrs. Helen E. Mann, county club leader. When we arrived at Purdue, we immediately went to the Memorial Union building and registered. The club members re* i ceived tickets to the Purdue-Indiana < baseball game. The evening of May 2 we went j i to the engineering and pharmacy j buildings. Everything was in oper-1 ation and guides explained the f workmanship to us for educational | purposes. On May 3 we vißited the j Tippecanoe battle grounds and the. Soldiers Home, after which we j went to the dairy and horse barns. We spent the rest of the morning . ing visiting the egg and chick t show. In the afternoon we attended a ! club program ai the Eliza Fowler!
Hall. In the evening we attended j the live stock revue at the judging | pavilion. Here we saw the hog, sheep, dairy, and horse show, be-1 sides many stunts. This show was put on entirely by the student body of the university. The morning of May 4th we visited the Lafayette Zoo and went sight-seeing in Lafayette. In the afternoon we left for home, and we all had a wonderful and educational visit. Hugh Richard Beitler. Firemen Rescued Robin Omaha, Neb. — (U.R) —When Mrs. John A. Soil working in tier garden saw a robin entangled in a radio aerial with its leg broken, she turned in a tire alarm. A fireman, using a ladder, rescued the bird. Aided by the firemen Mrs. Soil dressed the wound and fashioned a splint. Following which Mr. Robin joined his mate in the treetops, apparently in line fettle except for a sag to one side. o ——— Petrified Logs in Monument Ellensburg, Wash. — (U.R) — The j proposed Ginkgo national tnonu- j ment near here contains approxi- j i mutely 2,000 petrified logs, valued j at SI,OOO each. Among the logs is lu petrified ginkgo tree, which grows! I today only in China and Japan,! evidence that Washington once had ; a tropical climate. Squirrel Was Ungrateful Rockland, Mass. — (U.R) — Here’s ingratitude for you — Police Chief j George Popp rescued a squirrel i that had been cornered by a cat, | picking the squirrel up and driving the cat away. The squirrel hit j through one of Popp’s fingers. 'Coon Dog Adopts Pigs Goff, Kans— (U.R) —Two orphaned ; pigs have been adopted by a 'coon i dog whose pups were drowned near j here. The strange family is said to be happy and the pigs have thrived ! for a month under the dog’s care. | ; o Heard Wedding Over Phone Omaha, Neb.— (U.R) —At the last minute plans of Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Herrold to attend the wedding of their daughter, Dorothy Louise, in Cincinnati, went awry. So they made arrangements to hear the ceremony over long distance telephone, Charles E. Beck Jr„ the| bridegroom, and other principals ]' spoke the lines into the transmitter. 1 Cheyenne Wars on Lotteries Cheyenne, Wyo.— (U.R) — I Cheyenne has decided to take a cut of the j profits from lotteries operating! here. The city council voted a levy j of five per cent on the proceeds] from two baseball pools being run I here this season. The money will • go to the city treasury.
PERSONAL Word has been received here that Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kalver of Chicago, who are vacationing in New York City, happened to meet Mr. anj Mrs. O. L. Vance of this city at a movie recently. The meeting was very unexpected as neither family knew that the other wae in New York at the time. Lawrence Linn and A. M. Anker returned home Sunday night from Cleveland, Ohio, where they visited with Mrs. Linn, who recently underwent an operation at the Cleveland Clinic Hospital. The operation was a success and Mrs. Linn is reported to he recovering nicely. It is thought that she may be removed to her home here the latter part of the week. Miss ilreta Fisher returned to Fort Wayne this morning after spending the last two weeks here. Miss Fisher had her tonsils removed here a week ago Thursday. W. A. Kunkle, Jr., of Bluffton was ■ a caller here Saturday evening. J. H. Heller has returned from a j business trip to Washington, D. C. j Mrs. Joe Lose has returned from Indianapolis where she visited her; ! daughter, Miss Mary Helen Lose! | who has been ill the past ten days. , The condition of Mrs. John Falk j ! 54(6 East Sixth street, Peru, who i is critically ill, remains about the same, it was reported today. Mrs. Falk formerly resided in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Murray and I son Billy of Fort Wayne were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Lose j Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Luce and I Wesley Nicholson of Blissfield, Michigan were ove r Sunday guests | of Mr. and Mrs. George Harding. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Moynihan | and daughter and Tom Welch, vie- ! ited Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gaffer at Monmouth Sunday. All then motori ed to Van Wert for a visit with Mr. ; and Mrs. Frank Craig. Mrs . Agnes i.Andrews is visiting at Bluffton with her daughter, Mrs. Roger Swaim and will attend a mother’s banquet given by the Tri Kappa sorority of that city this evening. Mrs. Jennie Ranier is visiting friends and relatives in Monroe, j Sheriff Burl Johnson took Henry Kohne to the Easthaven sanitarium at Richmond Saturday. Miss Naomi Butler of Cincinnati, Ohio, visited Sunday with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Butler. TRUCK DRIV ERS BATTLE POLICE AT MINNEAPOLIS • CONTINUED FKOM CAQR ON EI * .......... Prices of produce soared a* the week end further depleted the city's j food stocks. Eggs jumped 4 cents j
a dozen, head lettuce rose from 10 to 15 cents a head and canned goods moved rapidly off grocery shelves because of the scarcity of fresli vegetables and fruits. Merchants turned to unprecedented use of parcel post and express to obtain supplies. Two tons of baiter were sent to one dealer by parcel post from Lakeville. Fifty strikers were arrested Sat j urday night and yesterday during j outbreaks of violence throughout the city. More than 200 arrests have been made since the strike started. Kidnap Suspects Ordered Removed Chicago May 21 — (UP) John J (Boss) McLaughlin, his 17 year old | son, Jack, and two other men to- j day were ordered removed to St. j Paul for trial in connection with | the E lward G. Bremer kidnaping, j Tlie removal order was entered ] i by Judge Philip L. Sullivan in fed ! leral court, who denied the writ of | habaes corpus filed in behalf of the j I the McLaughlins and William E. ! Vidler and Phil Delaney. The decision came after a two! ] hour argument by defense and govj eminent counsel. |Senate Votes Down Norris Amendment Washington, May 21 (UP) - The I senate today rejec ted the Norris
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Page Three
constitutional amendment providing for popular election of the president of file United States and abolition of the electoral college. The vote was 42 for amendment to 24 against ,a two thirds majority being necessary for approval of a constitutional amendment. Get the Habit — Trade at Home
Cash! For Your OLD JEWELRY Broken Rings, Gold Dental Crowns and Bridges, Watch Cases and Chains, Pins, Cuff Links, Spectacle Frames, etc. — or any form of gold jewelry regardless of condition. CASH PAID IMMEDIATELY. IT.l T . S. Government Licensed Buyer at BREWSTER'S WATCH & CLOCK HOSPITAL 157 South Second St. Ist door so. of Western Union.
