Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 191, Decatur, Adams County, 11 August 1934 — Page 3

""kiTwedding Ceremony Seized At Fort Wayne Today . ~ .idinir ceremony for Mian Helen Thompson, daughter T l, ( .double " Thompson o f Fort Wayne and Edward Alber,y. and ” ” ()!| 1)f Mr an ,| Mix. John Albedlng of Decatur, Lot F" rl „,, ’ h( . r daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lasher and jdM l ' 1 ’ f< ‘’' 11 of Mr' and Mrs. Andrew Studens, all of Fort Wayne, tM^'Td"at Fort Wayne thia morning. '■ service was per

"venthirty o’clock in Patrick's Catholic church; * S L K ev. Msttr. » K Delaney , W’,* The single ring cereused. W M.or Beider played the | 7.'; in Wedding March as the | Krty entered the church, P*,L. the ceremony played] •"L*sweet Mystery of Life”, 1 "tve Maria Thompson wore a sown of, * mnusseline de sole over white il ' ,W The gown was fashioned I P* effect with large wheel F* it was fitted to the hips * in a flare to the floor. A "i satin sash marked the waist- I £ and white footwear, gloves *J frP pe turbin with veil complet- ; j th® costunic. usher wore sky blue mous- , JL Je sole over Iblue satin. Her , Em was fashioned floor length ,h three flared ruffles extending ; L, the knees to the floor. Large ■rfed -leeves and a blue satin , L were features of the gown. * .| BO wore white footwear.: and turbin with veil. Both ;; tides carried shower bouquets of Les roses and snapdragons. , Miss Thompson was graduated from the Fort Wayne high school ; nd has been employed at the jngna-Vox company. Mr. Alberd- , u. jas graduated from the comnercial department of the Decatur Catholic high school and is employ- . . at the Schlatter's Hardware . atntpsnv- in Fort Wayne. They ' trill reside at 622 West Creighton < street. Miss Usher was graduated from i the Fort Wayne high school and Ms been employed at the General Fjlectric plant in that city. Mr. Studens is a painter. a A meeting of the Ladies Aid Soelety of the Methodist church will , be held Wednesday at Lehman jsrt in Berne, in connection with | the Sunday School picnic. I SPECIAL PROGRAM ( ARRANGED FOR W. C. T. U--1 a pest day program will be pre- ( Kited at the meeting of the Wo-; , sen s Christian Temperance Union , to be held Tuesday afternoon at Wo-thirty o’ - lock at the home of Mm. Ben Schroyer on North Third ] greet Bev. H. R. Carson will be the ' principal speaker at the meeting. ICECREAM ICECREAM ICE CR For Your Own Satisfaction Insist on STALEY’S Products Every Time You Order. Staley Dairy Products Company UTTER . BUTTER ■ BUTTER <

That First Fall Frock

By ELLEN WORTH 'TOWARD the last days of summer, it’s time to begin thinking of that first fall frock that every woman craves. A frock entirely different from the soft, frilly feminine things you’ve been wearing for the last few months, something trim and tailored and demurely sophisticated . . . something lay and young and utterlv charming. Such a frock as this straight slim model with Its cunn.ng little-boy-collar of crisp white pique beneath which » pert bow nestles. The very new normal shoulders are as important feature, as is the 311 m skirt which does not break its svelte slenderness until it reaches the knees, whore two groups of pleats revolt into subtly active fulness. The new Fashion Book will “Sip you plan your wardrobe. Send 10 cents for book. Pattern No. 5640 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 years; 30. 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 bust. She 16 requires 2>4 yards 54'"ch material, 14 yard 36-lnch contrast for collar. Width 1% rerd.) Send 15 cents in coin or ’tamps. Mail your order to “Is paper, care Fashion Cen*‘v. P. O. Box 170, Times ’Quare, New York. Print your name and address clearly and Print pattern number, size or bust. (Copyright, 1934. United feature Syndicate, Inc.>

7n a l? r fta"? Democrat, “Fashion Center”, Times Square, P. O. Box Mtanaj York, N. Y. (Editor’s note —Do not mall orders to Decatur,

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M, Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Saturday Hoagland M. E. Ladiee Aid supper, Hoagland fire station, 5 to 7. Sunday United Brethren V. I. S. Class picnic, Butler Grove. Tuesday Tuesday Afternoon Club, Mrs. Al'bert Mutschler, 2 P in. W. T. U., Mrs. Ben (Schroyer, 2:30 ,p. tn. Pinochle Club, Mrs. Carl 'Hammond, fl :30 p. m. Friendship Village Home ®conomf e Club picnic, Lehman Patflt, Berne. 6 tp. m. American .Legion .Auxiliary, Legion Hall, 7:30 p. m. Friendship Village Home Economics Club, 6:30- p. m. Wednesday M. E. Ladies Aid. Lehman Park, Berne. Zion Walther league weiner roast meet at school, 6:30 p. in. Zion Reformed Ladies Aid Society. church parlors. 2:30 p. m. M. E. Sunday School picnic, Lehman Park at Berne. Union Tw-p. Woman's Club social meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Stults, 8 p. in. The following program has Ibeen outlined. Saxophone solo —Patsy |M<fon« nell. .Devotions —IMrs. C. E. Hocker. Vocal solo—l Mrs. Ben Schroyer. Address —Rev. H. R. Carson. Duet —the Misses Katiheryn Murphy and Evelyn Kohls. Current events Mrs. S. D. Beavers. LOCAL WOMEN GOLFERS RECEIVE TOURNEY INVITATION The women golfers of the Decatur Country Club have received an invitation from the Fort Wayne Country Club to an invitational tourney to be held at Fort Wayne, Tuesday, August 21. The women will tee oflf at nine o’clock, daylight saving time. Reservations are to be made with Mrs. ( .C. O. Porter not later than Saturday, .August 18. The Friendship Village Home •Economics Club will have a picnic at .Lehman Park in Berne, Tuesday evening at six o’clock for members and their families. Following the pot-luck supper, entertainment will be given. HOME DEPARTMENT HELPERS BAND MEETS The Home Department Helpers Band of the Baptist Church met at the home of Mrs. Oren Brunner Friday evening to sew for the needy. | Two quilt tops weer completed. ■Devotions were led by Mrs. Em-

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ma Smith and circle prayers were offered. The next meeting will be held with Mrs. R A. McDutfeo, corner of Ninth and Monroe streets, Friday. August 17. The annual reunion of the Ehinger family will be held at Sunset Park ea«t of Decatur, Sunday, September 2. The Zion Walther league will hold a weiner roast at the Lehman park in Berne Wednesday evening, Augst 16. All members are asked to ■ meet at tihe school at five thirty j o’clock Wednesday evening. — ENTERTAIN AT DINNER IMr. and .Mrs. ,Ed WhMrlght enter-] tained at dinner Thursday evening 1 in honor of their eons-in-law, Ray-' mond Johnson and Francis Howell. Covers were laid for (Mr. and Mrs. ! Howell and son Billy. Mr. and Mrs. I Johnson and son Jin.imy, Mr. and Mrs. Whitright and Marion Whitright. The Pinochle Club will meet Tuesday night at seven-thirty o’clock with Mrs. Carl Hammond. The Elzey family reunion will be held in the Legion Memorial Park, Sunday. August 12. The Tuesday Afternoon Club will meet with Mrs. Albert Mutsr-hler Tuesday afternoon at two o'clock. LARGE CROWD ATTENDS SHOW (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ing contest were:: Children’s new garments — Ist, Mrs. E. M. Webb: 2nd. Mrs. Alvin Kennel, Berne; 3rd, Mrs. Kistler, Hartford. Best dresses, women's —Ist. Mrs. Lewis Yake; 2nd, Margaret Schenck; 3rd, Mrs. Delma Elzey. Madeover ladies’ dresses — Ist, Mrs. Ervin Dro. Swiss Village; 2nd. Mrs. Nellie Syphers. St. Mary’s twp; 3rd, Mrs. Hunter, Decatur Home Economic. Madeover children's dresses — Ist. Mrs. Olive Reynolds. Swiss Village: 2nd. Mrs. Noah Neuenschwander. Swiss Village; 3rd, Mrs. 11. L. Sipe, Friendship Village. House dresses —Ist. Mrs. Maynard Hetrick. Swiss Village: 2nd, Mrs. Oswin Sprunger. Swiss Village; 3rd. Mrs. Elva Barkley, Union twp. Soap—lst, Inez Zeigler, Hartford; 2nd. Mrs. H. L. Sipe. Friendship Village. The winners in the flower contest were: Class 1, Single Entries Mrs. Oswin Springer won all three Class 2, All-One Color Bouquet 1st —Mrs. Edwin Nyffeier 2nd—Orten Wulliman 3rd—Orten Wulliman. Sweep-Stake Class 1st —Mrs. Ernest Dro 2nd —Mrs. Emil Nagel. Sr. 3rd—Mrs. G. W. Sprunger. Raze Six-Gun Days Landmark Kernville, Cal—<U.R)—Kernville’s oldest landmark, dating back to the roaring six-gun days of the gold rush, has been torn down to make room for a new summer home. The four-room cabin, built by some miner from boards of varying lengths and flattened tin cans and powder kegs, passed through several hands. Its last tenant was Vic Gonzales, a prospector. Before that, it was owned by Chinese, and at one time was the cornerstone of Kernville’s Chinatown after white prospectors abandoned the gold fields to the Chinese. o “Water Witch” Worked EDWARDSVILLfe, 111. <U.R>—An elm "water witch” located water at two points on a farm near here during the drought. When the wells were completed to a depth of 14 feet each had a stand of five feet of water. .—o —— Meet After 35 Years NORWALK, Conn. <U.R) —Albert Deliee and Charles Butler were close acquaintances 35 years ago and although both lived within a few miles of each other, they did not meet again since 1899 until they passed on the street recently. — o—23’s His Jinx Cleveland — (U.R) —Arthur Haas has no use for the expression, ”23 skidoo,” any more. Thieves broke into a warehouse of a downtown automobile agency of which he is president, stole his truck No. 23, with 23 tires, 23 tubes, 23 wheels and 23 tire covers. The place is 23 rods from central police station. o , British M.P. May Enter Films London.— (U.R) — Hollywood has been outdone by a British film producer, who, it is said, is trying to coach John. McGovern, a Clydeside M.P., to take the part of a workingman M.P. in a stirring film drama having for its centerpiece the turmoil of British politics.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, AUGUST 11,1934.

WURCHEg “'mugmi iwmuiuiuF United Brethern Chas J. Roberts, Pastor Sunday School at 9:15 A. M. N. W. Abbott, superintendent. The Junior C. E. will present the following program at 10:30 A. H. Song Audience Scripture Prayer i Music Mrs. Hilton and daughter i Trio Girls i Reading Don Williams ; Song Choir I Rainbow Exercise Eight j Solo Rae Myers i I Harmonica duet ... Anna I .Brandyberry, Irene Light Solo Ruth Myers I Reading Ruth Hurst | Solo Richard Hakey I ."A Cheerful Giver" Mrs. Cochran. Jimmy Cochran and Ornable Crider. Bened Iction The five C. E. Societies will meet at 6:30 P. M. The Juniors f will have a leaderless meeting. Every Junior is asked to be pre- 1 sent. The pastor being absent there will be no public service in the evening. o St. Marys Church First (Mass 7:00 Children’s IMass 8:90 High .Mass 9:45 Prayer Hour Friday evening 7:30 o Zion Lutheran Church Paul W. Schultz, pastor Divine services in English, 10:15 a. m. Divine services in German. 8:30 a. m. Sunday School and Bible class, 9:30 a. m. o Zion Reformed ChCurch Re». Charles M Prugh, Pastor ■Sunday School — 9:15 A. IM. Worship services — 10:30 A. M. 'Sermon subject, “Down to the Sea in Ships." Psalm 107:23 U. 8.. Mission Church Rev. J. Clair Peters, Pastor Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Gospel Message at 10:30 A. M. Christian Endeavor at 7:00 P. M. Evangelistic Sermon at 7:45 P. M. Cottage Pray Meeting, Tuesday evening. Mid Week prayer service, Thursday evening at 7:30 P. M. Come. o First Evangelical Church M. W. Sundermann, Minister The Sunday Morning services will open at 9:15 with a worship service in every department of the Sunday School. There will be classes in Bible Study for all ages. After the lesson study, the Rev. D. A. Kaley. of Indianapolis will conduct Holy Communion. E. L. C. E. at 6:45. Evening service at 7:30 with sermon by the pastor. Prayer Meeting on Wednesday Night 7:30. o First Methodist Hermon R. Carson, Pastor 9:30 A. M. Church School in charge of W. Guy Brown, Gen. Stipt. Our constant aim is a well graded school, a prepared teacher, and a live class that always extend a warm welcome to regular attendant and newcomer alike. 10:30 A. M. Services of divine worship in charge of the pastor. His theme will be "The Road To , God”. Special music will be furnishby the Choir. 6:00 P. M. All Epworth Leaguers , and all who went to Epworth Forest Institute this year are asked go be present on time without fail to put the finishing touches of the , Epworth League Playlet, "The . Institute of 1934.” , 7:30 P. M. The evening service , will be in charge of the young , people. They will enact some of . the happenings at Epworth Forest this year. Humor, description and spiritual visions will be woven together in an interesting program. . Do not miss this! , ‘Come with us and we will do , thee good!’ i o I Gospel Tabernacle 1 (Service tonight at the Tabernacle 7:80. Sister Walsh will bring the m i:eage. Sunday services, children mass s meeting for all children, 5 o’clock j prortupt. Preadhing at 7:30. Special 3 music and message by (Miss Walsh. ! Don’t fail to hear ths message to- } night. Meeting next week except Mon lay. Welcome. i o • J Patrol Fights ‘‘Shot Borers" East St. Louis, Ill—(UP)—The state highway maintenance patrol ai this district recently has been s called off of its regular duties to - fight the "shot borer” which has a infected the newly planted trees e along the state highways. The trees - furnished by the state consist mosti ly of Chinese elm variety and are e considered very sweet wood tor the borer to work in.

Newest Note In Problem Time Sounded By Ancient Peasant Message That Shows The Way Out For These Perplexed Days Was Clearly Uttered By The Shepherd I’rophet, Amos — Daring To Face Ultimate Truth.

By WILLIAM T. ELLIS Nobody can be called a Bolshevik for quoting, as the truth for the times, the radical utterances which I are the present assigned Sunday i School Ixjsson. They are straight; ' Bible truth, designed to make oppressors and exploiters squl'm and repent. Ln the rough, direct opeech of a plain man of the soil, a shepherd peasant, they say all that the reformers of our own day are trying to express. This man Amos has waited long for his vindication. Still, the teller] of truth can always be patient; for of truth the poet wrote “the eternal years of God are hers.” It is only, error that needs to be in a hurry. False propaganda must get in ILs, work quickly; it is afraid of the] clock and the 'calendar. The man I who is right can afford to wait for j vindication. It has been a long wait for Amos. His brief prophecy was for dark ages the overlooked teaching of the Bible. Churchmen, and even the Church herself, went on denying justice to the poor, and showing favor to the rich and powerful. Even in Great Britain’s worst reigns, the corrupt king could always find a; court preacher to condone his im-, moralities. In our own day, the ■ Chnnch has dealt tenderly with off-, endere against the public rights; if i they were rich and generous she la- ] belled them “leading laymen.” Amos Comes To His Own Now, after more than twenty five hundred years, Amos has been discovered, by preachers, professors and social reformers. His passion for justice has infected all advocates of the New Day. The utterances born of his lonely medita-' tions, as he tended his flock on the ( sterile, hills around Tekoa, a dozen | miles below Jerusalem, or as he laboriously climbed the sycomore trees to pinch the tiny figs that were the fare of the poor, are now ■ resounding in legislative halls, in ] classrooms, from pulpits and from countless platfoirms and presses.] The eternal justice of Jehovah, who i demands that all who would please Him shall conduct themselves righteously, is the keynote of Amos' prophecies. There is a field for solid thinking in the awesome truth that simple right is right in all ages and in all lands. The stern utterances of Amos were discussed as sensational news in the city gates of all Israel and Judah; and the common sense of the common people assented to them. Today, without having gone stale or lost a single sparkle of their local color, the old prophet's teachings are still the most important news of the day. “Let justice roll down as waters, and righteousness as an ever-flowing stream” is still the last word concerning evil social conditions. In the hekrt of man—the untutored black man of Africa's jungles; the remote migrant in interior Asia the toil-sodden peasant of central Europe —there abides clear and distinct, the eternal sense of justice. They need no missionaries to tell them that exploitation is exploitation, that oppression is oppression, that unfairness is unfairness. No lesson has come to me more clearly from my far tarings in Asia and Africa than this tremendous truth that no people are too benighted to have a clear sense of justice. Right At The Root As Amos, an uncouth countryman visiting the towns, looked about him in Samaria and Bethel and Jerusalem, he saw that there existed a wide gulf between the personal character and private practices of the prosperous, and their public religious professions. Ceremonially scrupulous, and jealous of their highstanding in the community, they were yet real robibers of the poor. By all the devices known to the rich, they exacted such a toll from the common people that the latter were ground down into bitter poverty. Conditions are not very different in the United States, where it is commonly said, four per cent, of the population own eighty per cent of the wealth. “Special privi- ' lege” Is no mere agitators phrase, it is a glaring actuality, that was Drue in the days of the prophet of *»»**♦*** «»»»»«»♦* »The International Sunday School .Lessonl for August 12 is -'•Am?! Pleads For Justice.” —Amos, Chapters 5 & 7. ,»»#******

Tekoa. It Is the distinction of this peas-ant-preacher that he laid bare, scathingly, the ewentlil Irrellglousnees and unrighteousness of this condition. His burning invectives were hurled against those who "trample upon the poor and take exactions from him of wheat". . that afflict the Just, that talke a bribe, and that turn aside the needy from their right.” To al! such, smug in their religious orthodoxy, ] Amos became the voice of Jehovah, I to declare, ‘1;: hate, I despise your i feasts, and I will take no delight in 1 your solemn assemlblies.” Thus the prophet stripped self-delusion away from the leading citizens of his day. Having failed in simple justice, they { bad failed in all. Back Os All Progress Os course, all the teaching of Am- ] os derived from his lofty conception ' of the nature of Jehovah. As is its . God, eo a nation will be. Too many of the old Jews looked upon Jehovah as a mere tribal Deity, little different from the gods of the surrounding nations, to be pleased with I ceremonies and propiated by gifts. Amos understood better the character of the living God. He perceived ; that the eternal qualities of justice, | righteousness and benevolence are ] implicit in the very nature of the I Supreme Being. So the Lord had rej vealed Himself to Moses. God is a l great God, ruling over the nations, and not to be mislaid by pious frauds. Because God is incarnate truth and justice and love, He cannot condone violations of these qua- ' lities among men. Suppose we try to get hold of this overmastering truth as applied to our troubles today. We want pros- ] perity and social stability and a I New day and world peace. Behind ' all these objectives, however lies I Che priority of simple righteousness. 1 There is no use in trying to deceive j ourselves into the belief that world ] peace or social tranquility can be "arranged,” so long as glaring in- ' justices exist. Too many men are I trying to .bolster up the unbrotherly status guo. They want peace—but ■ they also want to hold fast to their own privileges. Whereas, if Amos is right, there can be no peace until the clear will of God is done in maintaining righteousness among men. That is the price we must pay to be made with the farmer and the .be made with the farmer and the workingman of course; but there is a greater reckoning to be made with Him who sitteth albove the heavens. Unless we, as a nation and as a world, are willing to submit ourselves to the exactions and inspirations of the living Lord, we ] shall only blunder into worse and worse conditions. Antecedent to all else, if doom like unto that prophesied by Amos is to be averted, we must “let justice roll down as waters, and righteousness as an everflowing stream,” SEVEN SENTENCE SERMONS (Every man is an optimist who sees deep enough.—Edward Atkinson. « » » The truths a man carries about with him are the tools with which lie is to do his work. —Holmes. * ♦ * O Thou, by whom we t ome to God. The Life, the Truth, the Way, »Tlie path of prayer Thyself hast trod: Lord, teach us how to pray! —James Montgomery. When men come face to face, their differences vanish.—Chinese Proverb. * * * Ye are bought with a price: there fore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's. —d Cor. 6:20. ■ . * * ] To the dead He sayeth. Arise! . To the living. Follow Me! ] And that voice still soundeth on From the centuries that are gone, To the centuries that shall be. —Longfellow. ♦ ♦ ♦ Thank God every morning that ! you have something to do, whether J you like it or not; being forced to ■ i wonk and forced to do your best, , will breed In yb ur temperance and self-control, dilligence and strength of will, cheerfulness, contentment and a hundred other virtues the idle never know. -Chas. Kingsley. . o ’ Get the Habit — Trade at Home

| WHAT I AMII.I Ut ' | NAMES MEAN » I WATCH THIS COLUMN DAILY Copyrighted by | DR. HARRY A. DEFERRARI j FISHER. The family name f “Fisher" is of English origin. It J has the obvious meaning of "the fisherman,” and indicates the oc- » cupation of the persons who were | first so called. A certain Robert -,le Fyscer and a Margery le Fls- ■ | chcre are mentioned in the Hunidred Rolls ( 1273). A document of i | the following century Includes i j the names of Ibota Fischer an.l i : Alicia Fyssher. In Scotland i | "Fisher” has frequently been , adopted as the English equivalent :of the (Scottish Gaelic "Macan I lascalr” which means "the son of the fisherman.” This Scottish name has been introduced Into lieland in relatively recent times. Its Irish form Is "Mac an laseaire" but in Ireland likewise it has been regularly changed to "Fisher." Another interesting Irish source of "Fisher" is the original Celtic "O Bradain." “() Bradaln" means “the descendant of Bradan". The Personal name "Bradan" is a diminutive form of “Bradach” which means "spirited” | and "the salmon.” The common , modern forms of "O Bradaln” are “Bradan" and "Bradden,” but as early as the year 1555 some Irish families changed those names to 1 "Salmon” as their supposed Eng-, lish equivalent. Finally, it is ] known that in recent times a few families have made a further | change from “Salmon” to "Fisher" 1 the substitution being apparently the result of only a vague kind of suggestion. The common modern German equivalents of "Fisher”: are "Fischer,” “Vischer,” ‘‘Fiscnler” and "Fischers.” 4. 4 Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q. When a man and a woman pass on the street, who should bow first? A. The woman, unless they are intimate friends; in that case, it

| Prize Team in Action IBs - W ... - I ,:, ■ ' * ' - A well-trained pair ot draft horses from the Hale Farm, Versailles, Ohio, pulling against dynamometer in contest for state championship. Such teams will feature the horse-pulling contest at A Century of Prog, ress during Farm Week, August 11-18. Nations Best Draft Pairs to Compete at Big Chicago Fair

Chicago.—The largest total of 1 prize money ever offered for draft ' animals has been posted for the 1 world’s championship horse-pulling 1 contest scheduled for Farm Week- -• at-tlie-Falr. A Century of Progress ’ will award $1,500 in cash prizes 1 for pairs, either horses or mules 1 weighing more than 3,000 pounds. The event will be staged in the Court of States Friday, August 17, and Saturday, August 18. as the climax of a thrilling week’s celebration by American agriculture at the Chicago World’s Fair.The horse-pulling will be against dynamometers furnished by the University of Illinois and the University of Wisconsin, and under the rules published by the Horse and Mule Association of America,which controls all recognized pulling con--1 tests in this country. I Judges will be from the experimental stations of the universities of Illinois, Wisconsin and Michigan. More than 20,000 pairs of draft animals have been tested tn pulling contests using the Collins dynamometer since the Invention of this apparatus for testing the strength of teams, at the lowa Experiment Station in 1923. The event at A

Page Three

k doesn t matter. Q. Is It all right for the hoateus Ii to let her giieats plan their own II entertainment7 1 i A. Yes, If she (knows that they ' acquainted and congenial. Q, What should u man wear to a 1 public luncheon? ( \ \ i.a Une suit, unless lie la a ; speaker. t W3QNAH Dr. and Mrs. John Harmon of Indianapolis will sip nd the weeik end 1 In this city, the guests of Rev. and 1 Mrs. Harry Thompson. I Mlsh Glentielea Brown and Lew I Warring of il’.looinlngion will arrive i here this week end to spend several days with Rev. and Mrs. Harry 1 Thompson. I i iMr. and (Mrs. Charles Burdg anil 'I Mix Burdg left for the William '] Burdg home west us Ossian where Max will vieit over tli ■ week-end. i Mr. an.i (Mrs. Burdg and Mrs. WilI I 11am Burdg will continue to Cincin- ■ I natl, Ohio, to visit with relatives. 1 Chat lee Townsend and son Janiea 1 of Aurora. Illinois, visited over Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Dick Bur.lg. They continued to St. Marys and ; Lima, Ohio to visit witlli relatives and will be a companied home by Mr. an.i .Mrs, Tames Towt.eend. Theodore McClintock left Friday for hie home in Boston. Massachu- ' setts, after visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Toepie. Mrs. (Msflin- ’ to: k and daughters will remain for i a several week's visit. o — Judge, 9t>, Flew 1,500 Miles Jefferson, Mo. —(U.R)—Ninety-five . year-old John Ferguson, county . justice of the peace, covered more than 1,500 miles in an airplane while taking part in Miss mri's second annual air tour ot the state. o Get the Habit — Trade a. Hume High in Energy. Approved by Good Housekeeping

Century ot Progress will settle the world s championship for 1934. .vitli the leading teams for ail parts or the country entered. First prize is SSOO in cash, with an Additional SI,OOO for place winners, and with gold, silver and bronze medals tor the winning teams. Wayne Dinsmore, secretary of the Horse and Mule Association of America, Chicago. 111., will he in complete charge of the contest for A Century of Progress, lie is recognized ns the foremost authority in this most thrilling of farm competitions. The contests will open at 2:00 p. m. August 17, and the five top teams will fight it out In the finals commencing August 18. Entries may be made without charge, but tha management reserves the right o refuse entries of unknown or low record pulling power, to keep the contest within reasonable limits. To those who have never seen n horse pulling contest, the event will be a revelation ot the tremendous reserve strength, courage and determination of the great draft animals. Whips are barred, the drivers being confined to vocal encouragement for their team*.