Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 136, Decatur, Adams County, 7 June 1934 — Page 3

Society

Logo* lon on EiRTHDA ANNIVERSARY ■ iK v. II'" '■ l.iiroiinl.iin ~, t 'tion fti ■' ’■''' ■' ’ 1 lH " 11 1,1 r Twenty young men lIOUIH to ’■• sndßi ''' " itaipii L‘ I John. oil. I >w,elit ''E'hWPP “ !ill |, " :,il!l * ' ,w <> ,^K, n> in tho ot I .'uiucw 1 '"■" 3 w,,i ' ; "' , '" l ' MX '•' " 1,1 1 ■ •-tn ■ ■'■ •• I ■ I IwS ll ''' li ' i! 1 " r ,l " I’ ar,v *" . .. iii ■ 11,111 "■'' , " l l -''" ’E left. 1 u 1,1 1 "‘ 1 ’ l!s 11 Ml WudMb 1 ’ ’■■ ’ ■ : "" 1 Koliort is Ellswcirlh. Alvin F,j Vjfc \ii.ln v. -. Bernard. '.Vi! ini' • .'.fi'iiii. Wood’. ■> Mid I ’io Iv' Jolm.-.m. l;u .11. «'.•<■:! Schafer. Richard and Dorothy \b tiimtafc. t!!, ‘ Misses Florence Lon AaoieS aid ■plansjune tea I The June section of the Ladies ' Bid'Soc ■'y will entertain with a the h ■ ■lursd-- afternoon. June 21. One the tea be a pageant Xt tkeXeJding gowns. A large at is desired. Reset vation.s inade for twenty five cents. ied that all women of the; ill bring at least one guest I TABOR AID MEETS aunt Tabor Ladies Aid Soc- ■ Tuesaay evening with Mr. . Clarence Chronister of i tio. The meeting was open-' e president. Mrs. Beatrice | with a song by the class, j the devotionals the busthi was conducted and a *n waa given. Mrs. Bertha kaels, program leader, had i jot the affair. : contests were enjoyed, { ing won by Mrs. lona Shlf JQL'IVERING WERVES I you are just on edge . > < E*he*ou can't stand the children's ■noise . . when everything you do 1 lit a harden . . . when you are irri--Bable#r. 1 blue ... try Lydia E. Pinkv Bbun>Vegetable Compound. 98 out ■of 100 women report benefit. I ft will give you just the extra en■qno.. need. Life will seem worth |lmoßagatn. I Da't endure another day without ■the hap this medicine can give. Get M boAe from your druggist today. £(&&«* COMPOUNE i 1-4- ..L.

Iyelet Fabrics Are Chic Again 1.1, ■ ~ /■ \ ' By XEN WORTH fWB&x "open season” tor fabrics v! Eyelet embroideries >ing their best to combat ’ er heat waves, and these VvXtSZ'fVv lacy fabrics have special . In batistes, lawn? and \ organdies. Eyelet work Sc £gr'*> / les so much decoration in ‘ / / '■ that a frock of this type \ / A-’ < ■""• 'es little In the way of I ./ y Hng. i/ s feminine model with —) V\~ '- square neckline and dou- '■ :» / ,(/ iiVfl ffle shoulders is charming ItK'-l "CM' ' '*.■<, ,;P • elet embroidered batiste. • 1 ; [■/yy, er you choose white or / h I / ■opular pastels, such as 5 f 'A: JlprvJ 1 il P ‘ yellow, aqua blue or t _. /, -/./?(Cj ’1 I I. or light coral. Note how If / f 1 • ' y«. ’ ! th e ruffles form.? a fluffy //., ,J Note, too, the diagonal M , f f’ cof the front and the big- v . If LfiJ .W’*’ sash In back. The frock ■ f~ ■‘ r i''s7 ■ extremely easy to make. d -j ■ The New Fashion Book will v/jT / Zu ' ■ el P you plan your wardrobe. / 7 •T.S-.'t io cents for book. IS • 'Citf ■ Pattern No. 5587 is designed . K VifcC •*■ »"• sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years; JH ’ // | -I ■?■ 34. 36, 38. 40, 42 bust. (Size . ML W requires SM, vards 39-inch I Yf. rv?>‘?K Mjpaterlal. Width about 1% /I JI '•/•VAIUA 1 I •* |yards.) A 1 J |1 s ''nd IS cents in coin or /f ■ A I 11 " Mail your order to M-.-T? \S‘d ' i It SE"* York Fashion Bureau, 222 \ 11 1 39th St.. New York. 'X \ \ b. Wrlnt your name and address - I \ V ■learly and print pattern num J \ ■ ' \\ size or bust. / m t\ a I. I / 71 II ’ U V M (Copyright. 1934. United jf-y VI. - ' I •••aturo Syndicate. Inc.) c Q _, *" •'v.f- 1 : \~ s*>a/i- ■ w 1 —- M Qnuare P. O. Box Daily Democrat, "Fashion Center". Times ‘ ' ’ t I 1 New York, N. Y. (Editor’s note-Do not mail oidtis HV aQ M

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mlee Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Thursday Band practice, American Legion ball. •Eta Tau Sigma sorority, Miss' Clara Egley at Herb Kern home ' 7:30 p. m. U. B. Work an I Win class, post-1 poned one week. Baptist Women's Missionary Soc-; lety. Mrs. Ira Bodie, 2:30 p. ni. Girl Scouts Troop 1 and 2, Cen-' tral school, 2:30 p. m. Calvary Evangelical Ladies Aid,! church, 1:30 p. m. Pinochle Club, Mrs. Russell Mel-1 chi, 7:30 p. tn. Evangelical W. M. S„ church, 2 . p. m. M. E. Ever Ready class, Mrs.! Jess Niblick, 7:30 p. ni. Mt. Pleasant Ladies Aid Society,' Mrs. David Cook, 2 p. in. Presbyterian W. M. S., Mrs. J. | L. Kocher, 2:30 p. ni. Methodist W. H. M. S„ Miss Mary Suttles, 2:30 p. tn Christian Ladies Aid Society,' church, 2 p. m. Union Chapel C. I. C. Class, Mr. 1 and Mrs. Hugh Nidlinger, 7:30 P. m. Friday Zion Reformed G. M. G. play! practice, church, 7:30 —prompt. I Evangelical Children’s Day prac- ' tlce, church 2 p. ni. Ben Hur Tirzah Club, Ben Hur | Hall, following lodge. Wednesday Delta Theta Tau Alumni, Mrs. : ,Jack Brunton. : ferly and Miss Rosanna Rauch. Re- ■ freshments were served to the following: Mr. and Mrs. Artie Jadki son, Mr. and Mrs. Grtr e Tope. Mr. land Mrs Austin McMichael, Mr. and | Mrs. Cloyce Rau h. Mr. and Mrs. | Lloyd Daniels, Mr. and Mrs. Ed' i Koos. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Chron-, l ister, the Mesdames Carl Daniels, Ben Colter, William Johnson, Otis | Shlfferly, Roy Clifton, Erwin Ge-, litres, the Misses Leina Daily. Rach- j I el and Mabie Suringer, Doris Shif-' i fenly, Mildred Helm, Victoria SprinI ger, Mary Koos, Eileen Kreischer,' Gertrude Tumbleson, Irene and Ida; May Cottrell. Rosanna and Glenda | Rauch. Thelma Daniels, Mildred! Shifferly, Paul Daniels, Eugene | Chronister. Elwyn Rauch, Junior i Anderson, Robert Tope. Donald Col-1 i ter and Orlando Springer. The next meeting will be held | I with Mr. and Mrs.'Artie Jackson on July 3. FOURTH ANNUAL REUNION HELD The fourth Eberhard Jacob Boer-1 ger reunion was held in the pavil-’ lion in Lakeside pauk in Fort j Wayne Sunday when a pot-luck, dinner was enjoyed by one hundred i seventeen guests. : Those who attended the family I affair were Mrs. Elizabeth Harding. • ; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Seelig, Mr. and i Mrs. Otto Kirsch, son Frederick, I Mr. and Mrs. Walter Robinson. • j daughter Marjorie, and sons Bob, [ Don and David, Mrs E. F. Gieser. daughter Eleanor Jane, Mr. and i Mrs. Arthur Boerger, daughters Marjorie and Barbara, sons Arthur. I 1 Jr., George and James, Mr. and Mrs,

Ed Cla.se, Miss Sarah Boerger, Mr. umi Mrs. Orman Garrison. Mr. and Mrs, S. Loraine Boerger. daughters Kathleen and Elaine, son del! Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Blakey, daughter Monema, Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Blakey Mr. and Mrs. Otto Scaer, Fred Boerger. daughter Bertha, Mr. and Mrs. ''ail Boerger, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Fuelling, daughter Irene, sons Hubert, Richard and Carlos, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fathauer, daughters Dorothy and Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fuelling, daughters Ellen, Ruth and Dorothy, sons Edgar and Frederick, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Boerger, daughter Louise and son Louis. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sherer daughter Eileen and sons Raymond, Lloyd, and Robert, Mr. and Mrs. [Carl Passe, daughters Marcile and Maxine, Rev. and Mrs. Louis Dorn-

| seif, daughters Leona and Kitty, son Ixmls. Rev. L. W. Dornseif. Mr. and Mrs, Otto Boerger, daughters i Della and Lydia, sons William, Otto | Jr, an I Herbert, Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Boerger, daughter Marilyn Jane, Mr. and .Mrs. Carl Schlanker, son George. Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Gas- ; dorf, son Edgar, Jacob Boerger, Mr. | and Mrs. T. M. Ott, daughter laira, ' Mrs. Annie Hare. Mrs. Ben H. Mag- ; ley and daughter Kathryn, Miss •Cora Ray, Mr. and Mrs. Ross and son Chester, Carlos Seymour. Hari old Seymour, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ott. daughter Marjorie, Haivey Ott Isons Harold, Calvin. Eugene and {Kenneth and Miss Alice Hoile. I GIRLS GUILD HOLDS MEETING The Girls Guild of the Beulah | Chapel church met at the home of Mrs. Willard Mcßride Tuesday I evening. The first part of the | evening was spent in Bible study after which a social time was enjoyed and refreshments were ( served. Those present were Doris John- ; son, Elizabeth Fuhrman, Edna Shady. Catherine Ehrman, Geri trude and Berneta Hoffman. Wilma Andrews. Frances Abbot. Mil- ' dred Leimenstoll, Ruth Mcßarnes, Marjorie Dilling. Velma Spade. Donald and Billy Shady and the hostess. The next meeting will be held July 3 at the home of Edna Shady. — The Beulah Chapel Children's day program has been postponed from June 10 to June 24. W’ERSONALS Miss Velma Ervin has arrived home from Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin to spend the summer with her |sisters, the Misses Ethel. Blanch | and Edith Ervin. Dr. C. C. Rayl will attend the annual meeting of the American Medical Association in Cleveland the week of June 11 to 15. Mrs. A. R. Holthouse visited with friends in Fort Wayne today. Roy Kalver has returned from ' Chicago. Mr. Kalver is manager of ' the Roosevelt theater there and I was given a leave of absence so he ' could be in charge of the New Adams during the illness of his fathler, 1. A. Kalver. | The front of the Reed-Mac Feed and Supply Company, North second street is being redecorated. , A large crowd attended the instaJ- | lation of officers at the Elk's home last evening. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Haerle and daughter Nancy Goodrich of IndiaI napolis visited Wednesday at the I C. A. Dugan home in this city. They , were enroute East to attend the ! fifteenth class reunion of their respective colleges, Dartmouth and ■ Vassar. They will also visit at BosIton, Philadelphia and New Yoflk. i Nancy will enter the Farwell Camp I for Girls in the Green Mountains of I Vermont for a two month's vacation, C. J. Voglewede and Mrs. Minnie Holthouse motored to Toledo, ! Ohio this morning for a few days i Visit with the C. R. Uhl family I and other relatives. Miss Cora May Lakey of Chicago, I returned to her home Wednesday I evening after visiting here since I Sunday with her grandmother, Mrs. Martha L. Oswalt, uncle, Ira OsIwalt, and uncle and aunt, Mr. and 1 Mrs. George Oswalt. Miss Lakey ' has been employed for a number of years in Chicago and this is the first time she ■ has visited in this city in the last 25 years. Miss Pauline Tumbleson has returned from Geneva where she visited with Mr. and Mrs. Chester IWerst. 1 Eugene Richards is visiting with Sore, Inflamed Swollen Feet This Powerful, Penetrating, Antiseptic Oil Must Give Results or Money Back Go to IFolthouße Drug Co., or any other good druggist today and get • an original bottle of Moone s Emeral The ll, very first application will .rive you relief and a few short treatments will thoroughly convince vou that by Sticking faithfully to it for a short while your foot troubles will be a thing of the past and best of all. free from all offensive odors. And one bott'le we ku° jstTfA W i|| show you bey nd all tL ■2'questions that vou have at 'fc-.dlr least discovered the way to keep your feet in a normal <. healthy condition free from a |i pain and sorenoea.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 7,1934.

So ROUNDand FIRM and FULLY PACKED that's why you’ll find Luckies do not dry out * J I lUCKlESusethemildesttobaccos— for cut into long, silky, full-bodied strands % ' ' j Luckies use only the clean center and fully packed into every Lucky —so leaves-and these are the mildest leaves. round, so firm, free from loose ends. a Theycostmore—they taste better. Then That’s why Luckies “keep in con- f /** science plays its part in making these dition” — why you’ll find that Luckies | choice tobaccos truly kind to your throat. do not dry out, an important point to W / “It’s toasted’’—for throat protection. every smoker. You see, always in all-ways F These mellow, fine-tasting tobaccos are — Luckies are kind to your throat. W “It’s toasted” J f VLuckies are all-ways kind to your throat Only the Center Leaves—these are the Mildest Leaves ofiheCrop '/hey faHt, peaeb American Tuteccu Cun>u«ny _

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ridenaur at Wabash. The Miases Luella and Juanita Ridenaur of Wabash are visiting with Miss Doris Richards and Pauline Tumbleson here this week. Arthur “Pat” Hyland was reported to be resting easier today after a painful night. Mr. Hyland was burned Tuesday afternoon when an acetylene torch exploded, throwing burning gas over his body and setting fire to his clothing. During the terrific rainstorm in Berne Tuesday afternoon, 125 pullets on the Frank Habegger farm near Berne were drowned. o _. Gary Political Leader Murdered Gary, Ind., June 7—(UP) —Thomas Colosimo, 40, Italian political leader, was shot and killed today as he walked along the street near the Central business district. (Witnesses saiid a small sedan carrying Illinois license plates drew up to the cunb with two men in the front seat and another on the running board. The man on the running board opened fire with a pistol and Colosimo slumped to the sidewalk as the car sped away. o 1 Bombs Are Hurled In Havana Today Havana, June 7 -(UP)—Terrorist* were busy (bombing during the early hours of today. One large ibomb exploded in front of a drugstore across the street from the United Press correspondente home and, after penetrating an iron shutter, wounded two sleeping men. A passerby was killed late yesterday by a bomb that exploded 60 feet away In front of a hardware store.

Continue Probe Os Activities Os Nazis ! Washington, June 7 — (UP) Alarmed by disclosures of highly organized distribution systems for subversive propaganda in the United States, the house Nazi investigation committee today voted to ask congress for an additional $40,000 to carry on its inquiry this summer. The decision came after it was revealed that the silver shirts, an Anti-Semetic, anti-communistic organization, had attempted to join

All Riot on San Francisco Waterfront , ■ i i» gl «j Ji - j 'w* !■»§. \ iCSP z ' Al/lb ’ The law seems to be at the losing end of this fracas just getting up after he had been floored. The trouble between striking longshoremen and stevedores of the began when a mob of strikers attacked trucks bearing San Francisco waterfront and police. The cop on the strike-breakers to work. Rocks and planks were ground was seriously injured, and the one at right is wielded by strikers against police clubs.

hands with the United German societies to further the Hitler cause in America. Murder Trial Venued To Huntington County Huntington, ilnd., June 7 —(UP) —The murder trial of Zach Sweazy Wabash, charged with killing the lather of his sweetheart during a shotgun duel, will be held in Huntington county circuit court on a •hange of venue. No date has been set for the

trial. Swazey was wounded in the fight witli Charles Capes, Laketon, who was killed while defending his daughter from Sweazy’s attentions. The daughter. Ma'bel Capes, had repulsed Sweazy’s attentions. o Shot Wolf From Plane Macomb, 11l. —<U.R> Claim to being the first person to shoot a wolf from an airplane is made by Walter Zettle of Macomb. Zettle killed a large gray wolf recently with buckshot while shooting from a

Page Three

| plane piloted by Harry Clugston, i also of Macomb. Buttermilk Injured Man Wilder. Idaiio. (U.R>—James G. I Sevy was thrown to the ground, i sustained a deep cut on his upper lip and several painful bruises when a can of buttermilk exploded. Sevy was attempting to loosen the lid. The can of buttermilk had been standing in the sun. o U. S. Mint Made Profit j Washington.— (U.R) —The U. S. I Mint made a profit of a million and I a half dollars in the past fiscal year in its business of coining monley. the Treasury has reported. Total income realized in the fiscal year 1933 from the mint service amounted to $1,664,861, of which $867,570 was seigniorage. WAKE UP YOUR I LIVER BILE—WITHOUT CALOMEL And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin' to Go If you feel eour nnd sunk and the world looks punk, don’t swallow a lot of Balta, mineral water, oil, laxative candy or chewing gum and expect them to makt you suddenly sweet 1 and buoyant and full ol sunshine. For they can’t do it. They onlv move the bowels and a mere movement doesn’t jjet at ths cause. The reason (or your down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should Dour out two founds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. j( this bH“ i« not flowing freely, your food doesn't digest. It just decays in the boweia. Gas bloats up your stomach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath is foul, skin often breaks out in blemishes. Your head aches and you feel down and out. Your whole system is poisoned. It takes those good, old CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel "up and up." They contain wonderful, harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amusing when It comes to making the bile flow freely. But don’t ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter’s Uttle IJ ver Pills. Look for the name Carter's Little Liver Pills on the red label. Resent a substitute. Zbo at drug stores. QIWH C. M. Co>