Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 170, Decatur, Adams County, 18 July 1934 — Page 3

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II Kies aid 1 H nt Dale Ladies Aid KK. V the home of Ml NK U , c-i.ul" Liby Thurs-lay M’ meeting. A potluck l|K.t.T enjoyed. po'.omt were the MesMK , ~ sum .'. Kosa Hollinger. ' H mer Arnold I W', Baumgartner ami ■Mj I '' |.. Ho> l.angel an.l eon igK,' K i;. ! n 'li lloni-hen. Dale \-lm.i. Clowser. Lucile r ... .rn Miller. Attle Le1m...1 I Misses Mildred HenKi’ lie-,ha ShankH and June k . I, hard Shanks. Roy LanK|,! Shanks. Mr. and Mrs. ■M, ~ > . eon John and daughJane. x KoCHLE club I Kos MEETING CK ,i halgeil was hostess to K„ lH nl l .-m of the Tuesday Night her home Tuesday club prizes were won by K Itri.- Mrs. »“*•«> Mel ’ Kes Kdgell wllile Mrs B, ' r ' ■H,. K-llcr received the guest n-v meeting will lie held in weeks with Mrs. Roop. The K members will also entertain H, im-bards next week at the H,.-: Mrs Clarence Weber. K,.. a; 'lm games a luncheon I by the hostess. ■ .-ant meeting of the Woof the Moose will be held -lay night at eight o’clock at M Mouse Home. K " of th.- Union Chapel Ki C Class which was to have u( with Mr. and Mrs. Thurman DJ, T : -day night, has been pa '■ i >

I Rich in Protein l E ( RE A M , Good Housekeeping ■ j£. Cooled by Washed Air the Auspices of Decatur ■ Improvement 4 H Club llB’TIli: SHOW-OFF’’ With Spencer Tracy I and Madsje Evans ClMnu'll Love Him. Oiugli at . tnjov every moment his romantic misadvenEroni the Play that a veir and a half on l"®dded- •THE Bit; IDEA” a iHusical Revue, and ‘NIPITPS’ 1 Oddity, with Pete Smith. J 10c-15c Monday and Tuesday—- ! MARGARST SULLAVAN in {■'-'■'■TLE MAN. WHAT NOW?" I I with Douglas Montgomery.

L CORT THEATRE !■ TONIGHT--T 0 MORROW ‘I THE NEW GOLD RUSH IS ON! f ghost town's streets M nnging with the cries cf I ' fernale treasure seekers |v x ma ' e pleasure I |4 k/7»^La See^ers ,n f h’ s '■l C stampede! A FOX PICTURE with I JOHN BOLES WWW ■sgJ ■ CLAIRE TREVOR ' ■.HARRY GREEN j > Added - - Ben BIue—“FOILED AGAIN” 1 unr. and a Merri e Melody. TO HEAVEN ON A MULE” 10c-15c SUNDAY—Lew Ayres ■ Alice Faye “SHE LEARNED ABOUT SAILORS”

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Wednesday Zion Lutheran Voters meeting, churdh, 8 p tn. Catholic Auction Clubs unit 9, Mrs. Thomas -Leonard, postponed one week. Union Township Woman’s Club, Mrs. Glen Jackson, 1 p. m. Mt. Pleasant Bible class, Mr. and Mrs. Jese Singleton, 8 p. m. North St. Marys Willing Workers 4-H Club, Mary Tope, 1:30 p. m. Root Twp. Happy Home Makers club, Monmouth school, 1 p. m. Zion Reformed Phoebe Bible class, picnic, Lehman's Park, Berne 6 p. m. Thursday Methodist W. F. M. S., Mrs. C. K. Champlin. 2:30 p. m. U.B. Young Peoples Choir, church 7:30 p. m. Union Chapel C. I. C. Class, postponed. W. O. T. M. regular meeting, Moose Home, 8 p. m. Catholic Action Clubs Unit 15, Mrs. Sylvester Staub 8 p. m. United Brethren D. Y. B. Class picnic, Legion Park, 6:30 p. m. Tlion Reformed G. M G. pot-luck eupper, church, 6 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Daughters clans, Mrs. (Milton Brown. 7:30 p. m. Evangelical mission band picnic, church, 2 p. m. Baptist Women's Missionary Society, Mrs. Brice Butler, 2:30 p. m. U. B. Progressive Workers class, Edward Deitsch home, 7:30 p. m. M.E.Ladies Aid Society cafeteria supper, church basement, 5 to 7 p. m. Methodist W- F. M. S., Mis. C. K. Champlin, 2:30 p. m. Friday Methodist Y. M. C. class picnic Lehman park, Berne, 6:30 p. m. MENU ANNOUNCED FOR CAFETERIA SUPPER The Ladies Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church will serve a cafeteria supper In the | church basement, Thursday night I from five to seven o’clock. The pubI lie is invited to attend. The menu will consist of fried chicken, creamed chicken, gravy, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, noodles, dressing, baked ibeans, maccaroni and cheese, cold slaw, C ombination salad, fruit salad, potato salad, deviled eggs, jelly, pickles pie. cake coffee, rolls bread and butter. ENTERTAINS ; CHRISTIAN CHOIR The Intermediate Christian Choir 1 of the United Brethren church was entertained at the hottie of Mrs. Frank Hurst. During the afternoon Dan Drake, Eloise Millieor. Onna-

|| PERMANENTS I E SPECIAL ft I SI.OO I H Croquignole or Spiral n Shampoo or Finger Wave •»>)( I O. K. H BEAI TY SHOPPE H Phone 55 127 N. 2nd st. ■

lee MlUlsor, Frances Smith and Dorothy Wertzberger prepared the Ice cream and at five o'clock a delicious luncheon was served. Out of door games were played I by the members. A business meeting was held and the following committee was appointed to arrange the next party, Dan Bohnke, Pauline Light, Eloise MlUlsor and Dorothy Wertzberger, Those present were Maiy Johnston. Eldora Bajver, Irene Light, Ruth Hurst, Dorothy Wertzberger Frances Smith, Onnalee Milllsor, I Eloise Milllsor, Donald Drake, Donald Bohnke, Kenneth Shell, Robert Sheets, Raymond Sheets. Guests included Doyle Sheets, Dale Okaly, David Wynn, Katheryn Hill and Julia Paaswater from Willshire, Ohio. The next meeting will be held | the thir I Tuesday of Augunt at the United Brethren church and will be In the form of a -pot-luck supper. BAPTIST CHURCH HOLDS PRAYER MEETING The cottage prayer meeting of the Baptist Church was held at the | home of Mrs. Cal F. Peterson Tues- ' day evening. Choruses were sung i by the Junior church and Alice Brown and Ella Fay Ogg sang i "What a Friend.” Woodson Ogg conducted the devotions aud an interesting talk was ! given by Rev. A. B. Brown. The next meeting will be held with Mrs. I lavke on Third street, July 24 The Zion Lutheran Voters meet- ' ing will be held at the church at eight o'clock tonight. — ENTERTAINS AFTERNOON CLUB Mrs. Mark Braden waa hostess J to the members of the Tuesday As-1 ternoon Club and one additional! guest, at her home, Tuesday after-. noon. Mrs. Ed Boknecht and Mrs. ' Carl Smith received the club prizes. Miss Patricia Teeple, a guest other than the regular club members, was presented the guest prize. Following the games, Mrs. Braden served a delicoous two course ’ luncheon. The next meeting will be held with Mrs. Albert Mutschler. The Young Peoples Choir of the . United Brethren church will meet at seven thirty o'clock Thursday evening, at the church. | The Women's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist ■ Church will meet with Mrs. C. K. Champlin. 313 West Adams street. Thursday afternoon at two-thirty o'clock. Miss Lois -Fuhrman will have charge of the devotions and Mrs. C. O. Porter will have charge of the program. The Extension , members will be present as guests, j The assisting hostesses will be Mrs. Porter and Mrs. Joe Hunter. ’ Mrs. Charlotte Ladd entertained for Sunday dinner, Mr. and Mrs.’ Jim Gause, of Delphos. Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gause, of Lima. Ohio, Mr. Clarence Stevens Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eyanson and daughters, Virginia, Agne.s, Naomi, and Charlene, and Miss Naomi Ladd.' The afternoon was spent in sight-, seeing in Decatur and in taking pictures. — ; 0Tavern Owners Find Too Many In Business Milwaukee, Wte., —(UP)— Milwaukee, the city made famous by beer, has too many taverns, their owners have discovered. With about 2,500 taverns, operating in the city, none of them have made money during the past year. EdwarJ A. Smukowski, president of the Tavern Keepers’ Association. reported. Nearly 800 will go out of business at the end of- - when their licenses expire, he said. Beer wars, raging in several sections of the city, have added to the

Fair Beauty Queen Inspects Her Realm

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Hail the Queen! And not only the Queen, but nine other beauties In her Court of Honor. Here is the beauty queen of the Chicago World’s Fair with her court during an official inspection of her kingdom. Patricia Marquam, third from the right n the back row. is the queen; the girls In the front row, left to

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JULY 18. 1934.

Crisp and Gay for Summer

By ELLEN WORTH NO MATTER how trim and tailored the mode during the clear, cool days, as soon as the mercury begins to soar Paris decrees fragile femininity and breezy sheerness. You must look cool whether or not you feel that way! Soft capes, gay bows, skirts that cling subtly to the knees before rippling Into flattering fulness lire star performers in the summer fashion scene. A dress that boasts all of these stellar qualities Is this vivacious sheer model with smartly fitted waistline and mobile bias cut through the hips. The V yoke of the skirt is calculated to make a slim girl dimmer and cause a miraculous disappearance of superfluous pounds tor her who Is not so svelte. The New Fashion Book will help you plan your wardrobe. Send 10 cents for book. Pattern No. 5621 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 32, 34. 36. 38, 40, 42, 44. 46 bust. (Size 16 requires 3% yards 36-inch material, % yard contrast. Width about 2yards). Send 15 cents in coin or stamps. Mail your order to this paper, care Fashion Center, P. O. Box 170, Times Square, New York, Print your name and address clearly and print pattern number, size or bust. (Copyright. 1934. United Feature Syndicate, tne.)

Decatur Daily Democrat, "Fashion Center”, Times Square, P. O. Box 170, New York, N. Y. (Editors note —Do not mail orders to Decatur, Indiana )

tavern keepers’ won. A number of taverns sell an 18 ounce glans of beer for five cents and 36 ounces for 10 cents. A downtown resort sells bottle beer at five cents a bottle. — o “Whatanian" Shires Pays Kogers Hornsby Tribute Fort Worth, Tex., —(UP) —The smartest manager in the major leagues is Rogers Hornsby of the St. Louis Browns, believes Arthur (Whataman) Shires, now first basing for the Fort Worth Texas League club. "That includes Connie Mack and all the rest," Shires said. "If Hornsby ever gets his Browns to talking and dreaming baseball as he does, they'll be a great club.” Buff Opington Hen Now Crows Like Rooster El Paso, Tex.. —(UP) —A large Buff Opington hen that laid eggs regularly for two years, then stopped and began to crow like a rooster is ownel by Dewey Mlutli, 12, of El Paso. Dewey i-aid the hen now is three years old. The fowl has developed a double comb and other characterises of a rooster. Promptly at 4 a. m. and 4 p. m. the hen jumps on the fence and crows lustily. — o Robins Bitter Enemy Os Ohio Fruit Grower Dumontsville, O., —(UP) —Cherry robine, believed by most ornithologists to be man’s friends, are the bitter enemies of D. L. Swarts, who believes he has the only federal permit to kill them. Swarts' home is a bird haven.! Doves, starlings, wrens and cardinals flock there. But robins- that’s different. "The robin is one of the fruit growers’ most destructive pests.

I \ * V Wrwy. I -&JT | Tin* / ’ • li 5621

One day I counted 50 robins at may place and every one was averaging a berry every five seconds,” Swarts said. “I get mad at them, but I can’t shoot them until the fruit begins to ripen. Then I’m going to protect j my property.” Swarm. who said robins cost him several hundred dollars’ loss every year, applied this spring for a permit to kill the birds. The government granted it and the State Conservation Department approved. 0 German Air Officials Pleased With U.S. Planes Chicago — (UP) — Officials of ■ Germany’s Lust Hansa air line expressed satisfaction with the performance of their first high speed, multi-motored United States made airplanes, according to R. L. Doble, . United Air Lines pilot, who is acquainting German pilots with the , operation of the three-mile-a minute , multi-motored Boeings, similar to those used bv United Air Lines on . I its coast-to-coast route. On one flight, eight Dust Hansa ! officials were taken from Traven,l munde to Berlin, 180 miles, in 60 minutes. > ICE COLD LAKE HOLDS FORTUNE IN GOLD TONOPAH. Nev. (U.R) —Unusual recovery of gold ore from mine tailings at the bottom of May Lundy Lake in Mono County, Cal., is contemplated by local men. C. L. Cooper and O. H. Kirki wood reported that to get to the tailings — from which they expected to extract $5 a ton in gold —they will have to dredge the ore from the ice-cold waters from a ' depth of 20 feet. There are 165,000 tons of tailings in the lake, | it was estimated. The May Lundy mine, from which the tailings were extracted, has not been worked since 1912. The mine buildings cling precariously to the face of a precipitous mountain.

! right, arc- Ge: trude Bain, Esther Fehrm, and Elena : San Martin. In the back row, from left to right, are ■ Myrtlce Crory, Bernice Loyria, Luella Kaehler, Dorothy LeFold, Patricia Marquam, Kay Griffith, and Wil- : low Youngsma. The Queen survived a field of 800 • contestants—all employed at the World’* Fair.

THREE KILLED IN AUTO WRECK Fourth Injured Seriously When Train Strikes Auto Truck Mishawaka, Ind., July 18 (U.R) Three persons were killed and a fourth injured seriously when a truck In which they were riding was struck by a northbound Big Four relght train here last night. The dead: Peter Van Bell. Beatrice Van Bell, 11, his daughter. Sarah Allen, 11. a neighbor. Mary Allen. 8, sister of Sarah, was taken to the hospital. Van Bell was returning the children home from a medicine show. The truck was demolished by the ershe, and the children's pet dog was killed. —x o WHAT FAMILIAR NAMES MEAN WATCH THIS COLUMN DAILY Copyrighted by DR. HARRY A. DEFERRARI FRANZ. The personal and family name "Franz” is of German origin. Its source is the personal name "Franciscus" meaning "free.” Although "Franciscus" is a Latin name its ultimate source is Germanic. FREDERICK. The personal name “Federick” is of Teutonic origin, ami means "peace-ruler.” FREDERICK. The family name "Friedenich" (also spelled “Frielrich,”, “Friedrichs”, etc.) is very common in Germany. Its source is the Old Germanic "Frithareiks” (English "Frederick") which means "peace-ruler." Some German families which originally bore this name have adopted the Latinzed form ' Friederici.” - ■■ ■ ■— ■ —o Purdue Professor Drops Dead Tuesday Lafayette, Ind., July 18.—(U.RH Prof. Harry Creighton Peffer, 60, head of the Purdue University School of Chemical Engineering for 23 years, died late yesterday of a heart attack while walking on the campus. He was a native of Enon Valley, Pa., and graduated from Pennsylvania State College in 1895. He joined the Purdue staff in 1911 to organize the School of Chemical

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! Engineering. I He held numerous patents of i building materials, welding and i i chemical and engineering pro- | cesses and during the World War , I was superintendent of construction jof the United States war explosive plant. r ■ || "O Rules Act Applies To City Employes 11 Indianapolis, July 18. (U.R) The J state and municipal salary reducJ tlon act passed by the 1932 spec , | lai session of the legislature up- , I plies to employes of municipal I I utility plants, an attorney general's | opinion held today. The opinion was asked by L. I. | Klenker, superintendent of the i' Garrett municipal water plant. He -asked whether a 10 per cent cut j given his employes under the act I could be restored without legisla I tive authority. , | Joseph W. Hutchinson, assistant ,'attorney general ruled that the cut |can not be restored until the act . is repealed. . o Michigan U. Ollers , Course On “New Deal" Ann Arbor —(UP) — American colleger out of which arose the ' Rouseveltian "brain trust” have turned now to place an evaluation on these same "ibrain trusters.” The course here, believed to be , one of the first of ite kind in the country, has been inaugurated by t the University of Mithigan, under I the title “Lectures on the New . Deal.” Prof Charles L. Jamison ie ! In charge. Assisting him are Ernest I M. Fischer, Edgar H. Gault, Robert I (1. Rodkey and Olin W. Blackett. , The course will extend to such ■ specific angles of “new dealology” au "Business immorality and Con- , , ditions Which Led to the iDeclara- . I tion of the New Deal.” “The Orii gin and the Development of the Na- . tional Recovery Administration," ■ “The Consumer Under the NRA i Codes,” "Banking Reform,” "Bank .(Deposit Insurance,’ and ‘Statietii ci'an I>ooks at Industrial Planning." o Rattler Trio Picked W rong Wash Tub iDHlon, Mont., —(UP) —"lt’s all in the day’s work for a country housewife.” That'<s what Mrs. Joe Nolan said when she hung up her washing to' ; dry here. When Mrs. Nolan went to her : washtub she found three rattle-' snakes curled up in it. She methodi-1 , t ally dumped the tub, killed each! ■ rattler and went on with her i - laundry. o Get the HaDit — Trade at Home

Page Three

fMns. Jennie Todd and daughter, Mrs. John Newberry of Kansas City are visiting Mrs. Todd's sister. Mrs. French Quinn. Rollin S. place, branch auditor for the state bureau of motor ve- ' hl.les, was in the city yeeterday. He visited with J. L. Ehler, manager of the local license bureau and made his official inspection of the records. Mr. Place lives at Denver, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. A R. Morton and daughters Ann and Peggy of Waukesha, Wisconsin, are visiting at the Charles Dugan home. Miss Frances Dugan has arrived here from Boston, Massachusetts to spend her vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ('. A. Dugan. I. W. Archer, proprietor of the Central Lunch, Fort Wayne and daughter, visited here with relatives and friends today. Mr. and Mrs. Herman L. Confer of Gary, who arrived here to attend the funeral of Mrs. Mary Smith held yesterday at St. Marys Catho- . lie church, are spending a tew days visiting with relatives. -Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Eyanson and 1 children, Virginia. Agnes, Naomi and Charlene, and Mrs. Charlotte Laid and daughter Naomi, ihotored to Ada, Ohio, Monday. On the return they were guests at a supper given by Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gause of Delphos, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gause, of Lima, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gause of Delphos, Ohio, were Sunday visitors of Mrs. Charlotte Ladd. Miss Mary Madeline Coverdale ' has gone to Detroit, Michigan to i visit with the Dr. Christina Brask family. She will aLso visit with Miss Lynn Braek at Ann Anbor. o — Deaol«.t« Land About one fifth of Iceland Is habitable. Almost four-fifths of the island are unlnhablmd and alruoe' uninbabltahlw o $lO will now buy a $20.00 suit at Teeple & Peterson.

-STALEY’S < ICE CREAM 5 That’s Different ui y So Superior in Quality ■j You Can < m Taste the Difference (£ w Get Sta'ey’s at your Dealers i o 'ICECREAM ICECREAM ICE