Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 199, Decatur, Adams County, 21 August 1934 — Page 3
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Sv ATTEND REUNION Zone hundred cnembero of l* k > met at the home Mr* Elton Ruprfeht for their fourth union *' ,he noon h * )l,ra dinner waa served ’^ dl !n/the dinner a busineaa ’ held on the lawn. The £ « of flcer ’ ,Were ele< \° * w ’ th e ensuing year: A. J. president; Seth Snyder. * iXnt' Mrs. Mafoel M«r) E? Mcretary-t reomrer; 'Mm. '*••• suits. assistant aecretaryB,rr! The adult memitera -were *'* Ure make short talks and resin *n interesting and Bnt * r members pre2?",re Mr- •«* Mrs. W. B. Weif .’peterson. Mrs. Mary Weldy jianaM'san B. Drum d cr»lK vllle ' n,her tnemibers present were L Wanda Sherer and son of Mrs. P. Q. Alien J children of Gary. Mrs. Sarah 2Lo( Martinsville; Mr. and Mrs. and family of filk[L yr and Mrs. Charles Weldy 1-ten .ily of Bedburg; Mm. aA. ttUan of Plymouth; Mro. Mlnu Dine and daughter of Angola; „„ Carlßeller and daughter, Mrs. fltfh Souder. 'Mr. and Mrs. Seth iXr and family of Bluffton; Mr. ’j Mrs. Ralph McWhirter and fa--llv Mr and Mrs. Theodore W itte. Mr and Mrs. Walter Brake and son yin Pauline Curry. Mr. and Mrs. 0 p. WeHy and Mr. and Mrs. A. v Cable and family of Fort Wayne Mr and Mrs Fred Zimmerman and ftln i’v and J. B. Brum of Craigville Hr. and Mrs. J. B. Stoneburner, In. Rachel Bu kmaster and daughter J Monroe; James Beery. Mr. tnd Mre.lt. J. Beavers and eon. (Mr. ind Mrs. John Beal. Mrs Noah Ingold, Mrs. E. W. Johnson. (Mr. and Mrs. (Middleton Beavens and W n Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Sheets and WB . Mr and Mrs. Frank Aurand, Ire. Delota Engle. Mrs. R. E. Mardull and son. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Jtauand family, Mrs. Mary Gault lire. Harry Stults, and Mr. and Mrs. E E. Ruprlght and family of Decant The Krtigh family reunion will be held Sunday, August 26 at the Van Wert Ohio fair grounds. • XM» M n OUT OF TOWN GUESTS honored with picnic A basket dinner was served at the Legion Mex' rial Park on Winchester street. Sunday, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse McGriff, Mr. and Mrs Lester McGriff and Mias Senna Jane Andrews of Marion. During the astern .on Mias Elizabeth Cramer, Alice Jean Roop and Norm ajean Andrews entertained with readings. Those present were the honored
Cash £ WE HAVE NO SOLICITORS. YOU GET FLLL VALUE. PUMPHREY JEWELRY STORE
Busy Mornings at Home
By ELLEN WORTH UIfADAME Is at home"— I*l b >i’y. with the mornings countless duties, but tetdy to receive with charm •nd chic the unexpected caller. For this season, fashion is Winn its bit in smartening up the housefrock. Part of the •eeret Is a colorful cotton, and P*rt lies in slim, trim styling end details that are all-ways practical. Wrap-around lines are particularly important, for they •peed up dressing when min- *'*• count. Sleeves that are wide enough to let you reach rot things without bearing the •Pllt of a seam—that’s a trick ♦rery housewife should learn And a handy patch pocket will jure you no end of steps. So—••re's the frock you'll want. Its Easy to Make. The new Fashion Book will help you plan your wardrobe. Send 10 cents for hook. Pattern No. 5410 is designed « sizes 34, 36. 38, 40, 42, 44, ”• 60, 52 bust. (Size 34 requires 4(4 yards 36-inch material, 3 yards binding. Width yard.) Send 15 cents j n co i n or ~* !nw Mall y° ur order to nil Paper, care Fashion Cen“r; P- O. Box 170, Times Ware, New York. Print your _J?* an d Address clearly and hu,/ wttera number, size or •Copyright. 1934. United rea.ure Syndicate, Inc.) -
p. w , lh , «■ ...I, 170 » r lly Den >ocn-t, “Fashion Center”, Times Square, P. O. Bex N. Y. (Editor's note—Do not mail orders to Decatur,
! CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Tuesday U. B. Intermediate choir pot-luck j supper, church, 5 p. m. Pei lota XI program meeting, Mrs. Puul Edwards, 7:30 p. in. C. L. of C. picnic, Legion Memo- | rial Park, 6:30 p. m. Wednesday Union Chapel w men’s iea, Mrs. I Earl Chase. iM. E. Indies Aid Society, Lehman Park, Berne. Decatur Indprovement 4-H Club swimming and picnic party. City Park, 3 p. m. Thursday Evangelical Loya! Daughters class picnic, Butler grove. 6:30 p. m. Rot Twp. Happy Hotnecnakera | Cluib picnic, (Hanna-Nuttman park, 10:30 a. m. Aaron Fox fire department auxilolary ice cream social, fire hall, 7:30 p. or. Friday iDecatur Biome Economics club potluck dinner, Hanna-Nuttman park. 10:30 a. m. guests and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Roop and son George, Mr. and Mrs. Gecrge Cramer and children David and Elisabeth. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Linn |and (Children Martha Jane and Dick. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Roop and children Billy. Alice Jean and Jimmy. The Inteiinrediate choir of the United Brethren church will have a pct-luck supper at the church Tuesday evening at five o’clook. The Aaron (Fox auxiliary of the Decatur Fire Department will give an ice cream social at the fire department Thursday night. The Decatur Home Ecotx mica club will hold a potluck dinner Friday at the Hanna-Nuttman park. The chib will meet at the park at 10:30 o'clock. All members are urged to attend. STUDY MEETING OF CATHOLIC CLUB The members of unit nine of the Catholi ■ Action Clubs of which Mrs. Ralph J. Roop is the leader, met recently with Mrs. Thomas Leonard. A chapter of ‘‘Sacrifice the Mass" was read by Mrs. Leonard and Mrs. Lehman read the story. "Assumption of the Blessed Virjgin.” Mre. Rioop gave a sketch of the life cf St. Etheldreda. The question box was opened. The next meeting will be held September 12 with Mrs. Lehman. ANNOUNCEMENT MADE OF APPROACHING MARRIAGE At a (party (given Saturday evening at the home of Mrs. Sam Fuhrman, announcement was made of the approaching marriage of her daughter. Miss Lois Fuhrman to the Rev. M. K. Ccfbible of Greeneville, Tennessee. During the contests which furnished entertainment during the evening, Lydia Sawyer was directed to the canary’s cage where she found the following message: “Birdie says, (Dan Cupid says. When
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the birds go south early this fall to rest, so will lazls and Ken go south to build their love neat." The guests, college friends, who enjoyed the party were the iMiwee Ruth and Bertie Williamson of Muncie; Frances and Gertrude Burkhalter of Berne; ixirothy and Jeanette Sprunger of Geneva, and Lydia Sawyer of 'Decatur. ■Mrs. Fuhnai'an, ass Is ted by Mrs. Milton Fuhrman an I Mrs. Rolland Sprunger served a dainty luncheon, FAMILY REUNION HELD AT SUN SET Tile 25th annual reunion if the* Jesse Butler faiplly was held at Sun Set park, Sunday with 51 present. A basket dinner was served at noon. A short (business session was held In the afternoon and the fallowing officers elected: president. Frank Butler, vice president Sam Butler; secretary Mrs Giles Porter treasurer. Mrs. Francis Eady. o ——• Many Reunions Scheduled For Summer Months ♦ ♦ Sunday, August 26 Krugh family reunion, Van Wert, Ohio, fair grounds. Standiford and Faulkner reunion Wren, Ohio. Tindall annual reunion, fairgrounds at Van Werft, Oil bo. Fifteenth annual Davison reunion, Clem Glbaou home, 1 mile west of Kingsland. Seventh annual Johnson family reunion, Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. Hakes reunion, Sunset Park, east of Decatur. Droll family reunion. Sunset Park. Sunday, September 2 Hart family reunion, Emmanuel Hart residence. Union township. Schneipp and Manley reunion, Sunset Park, near Decatur. Hart reunion. Emmanuel Hart farm, siouthwest of Dlxcti. Roop family reunion, Lehman Park, Berne. Ehinger family reunion, Sunset Park, east of Decatur. Urick reunion. Sunset Park. Sunset Park, rain or shine. Kelly reunion. Laird grove, south of Convoy. Ohio. Monday, Labor Day, Sept. 3 Sluseer-Gause reunion, J.E. Gause grove, near Willshire, Ohio, rain or shine. Sixteenth annual Stalter reunion Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. Lenhart reunion. Sunset park, Decatur. Harper family reunion. Sunset Park. Sunday, September 9 Shifferly reunion. Ivan D. Shlfferly home near .Monroeville. Bowman family reunion, Sunset Park, Decatur. Churches To Hold Picnic Thursday An old fashioned Sunday School picnic sponsored by the three churches cf north St. Mary’s township, will be held at Hllpert’s grove four and one half miles southeast of Decatur, or one half mile south and a mile west of B Do on Piqua road, Thursday, |Aul:ust 23. An all-day meeting will be held and a social program will be presented during the evening. A band and special music will be features of the day. A basket dinner will be served at noon and other refreshments will be sold on the ground. All Sunday schools are invited to attend and the public is Invited. St. Louis Gangster Is Held In Illinois Belleville, 111., Aug. 21—<U.R>— Sheriff Jerome Munie of St. Clair County, 111., announced today that a two-gun suspect thought possibly to be Charles (Pretty Boy) Floyd, notorious outlaw, was a St. Louis, Mo., gangster. The man gave the name of “Morgan.’’ the sheriff said, identification tests, the sheriff said, failed to bear out the suspicion that “Morgan" was Floyd. “Morgan” was picked np today in East St. Louis by St. Louis deO. K. Beauty Shoppe PERMANENTS VACATION days special SI.OO 2* Natural Waves U and y Ringlet Ends S OIL STEAM WAVE $2.50 Phone 55 129 N. 2nd St. I Serve the Best at Every Meal STALEY’S BUTTER In the convenient package. Staley Dairy Products
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1934
Dr. Goebbels, Nazi “Big Brain”, 1 Slated to Go for “Radicalism” Of* r-x v a? IhoL-. W 1| Dr. Joseph Paul Goebbeli, dynamic Nazi Little Dr. Joseph Paul Goebbels, Germany’s all powerful minister for public enlightenment and propaganda, who helped lift Adolf Hitler into his dictator’s throne, is said to be on the way out. One of the Nazi leftists, he fought the powerful industrialists now dominant in the Hitler regime, to demand earrying out of the pledges that brought the brown shirts to the top. Most of the influential radical Nazi leaders along with their principal Capt. Ernst Roehm, -'were executed during the bloody June 30 purge. Dr. Goebbels piped down shortly after, but his dormant “bolshevist” tendencies are to shunt him into an important ambassadorship—far Crotn the scenes of "big business” activity.
tectives and East St. Ixiuis deputies connected with the St. Clair county sheriff’s office. Battle To Save Girl’s Life Fails New Albany, Ind., Aug. 21 —<U.R). —A six hour tattle of firemen { and i, hysicians to save the life of I Clara Brown, 12. met witli failure I last night when she died on the I dance floor of the New Albany Country Club The girl collapsed at the cltb pool after having been swimming nearly all day. Physicians found that her heart action was barely perceptible and firemen were summoned to administer oxygen. After two hours the oxygen was exhausted so Louisville, Ky., provided an additional supply. ■ 1 o ■ • Richmond Hospital Asks Beauty Parlor Indianapolis, Aug. 21. —<U.R>—Of-! fleials of the Richmond state hospital, have discovered a new way to improve the morale of their patients. They have asked the jtate budget committee to include funds for
Otto Waits, Hopes for Throne . 1 Wi 'ffiS-x, SK55£• *' .♦*' >-v,'st .*ls *■’ <« «wW** ‘ ‘ ■ ! .X^ : ■ X w4|h&§*'' f ’ Imp ' I|| • * jßf ’ it W W p T JSImS ‘ * With hopes of Hapsburg restoration higher than at any time since the World war, young Archduke Otto, pretender to the throne of agitated Austria, is shown in Copenhagen in company with Count Heinrich von Degenfelt. His mother, the former Empress Zita, has been trying to arrange for his triumphant return.
establishment of a beauty parlor in their appropriations for the next two years. Dr. Richard Schilltnger, superintendent, accompanied his budget with a result of a survey at the ■ hospital which showed that beauty treatments kept patients in a betI ter frame of mind and helped them i forget their ailments. o — Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q. Should an invitation be answered even if it does not specifically reuqest a reply? A. Yes, and immediately, acknowledged in the same form in which it is received. Q Is it permissible for young girls to go to tea given in a bochelor’s apartment? A. They may if there is an older woman acting as hostess. Q. What is the conventional period of mourning for a widow? A. Two years. o Beautiful Dress for Fall, fresh from the market ready for you at the E. F.Gass Store. —o Get the Habit — Trade a* Home
I*~WHAT FAMILIAR 4 NAMES MEAN WATCH THISCOLUMN DAILY Copyrighted by DR. HARRY A. DEFERRARI PACE. The English family name I “Pace" hast come down to us from two main sourcea. It Ih often a I variation of "Palsh" which. In turn, Ih another form of '’Pash." "Pash” | (also xpeliei] "Pask” and "Paslce”) I was once a common personal name derived from the Hebrew “pesakh" meaning a“a passing-over.” It was {frequently given to children who , were born during the Passover festival or Eastertide. Some families names "Pace" have received that name because of a former residence in one of the numberous French towns called “Le Pas" or “Fas". This French means “the pass" and "the track." ’’Pace’’ ialso occurs as an Italian name of Initin origin. In Italy it was first given as a personal name meaning (“peace.” Its Italian variations are most numerons. Some of the commonest are "Pacelli", "Pacini", | ’ Paciotti" and "Pase." PALMER. The family name “Palmer" is generally of English 'origin. It was frequently given as a nickname to pilgrims who returned from Palestine bearing palms. . There is evidence tliat in some cases this name is derived from the French “Paumier”, which means I “the keeper of tennis court", and indicates the occupation of the persons who were first so called. There were many “Palmers" (pilgrims 'bearing palms) in early England, 'so the name is entered frequently in the Hundred Rolls. An English document of the 13th century mentions a certain Alice de Palmer© of | Cambridgeshire. Sometimes "Palmer" is found as a German name. o Mr. and Mrs. .Ira Hurless < f Wren. | Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Eld a Troutner Mr. an i Mrs. Carol Tr. utner of Ohl j City, Ohio; Musses Flossie an J Bernice Troutner of Fort Wayne were in Chicag > ver the week-end visiting A Century of Progress. Orval Parent of Lea Angeles, California, left yesterday after visiting at the home of his father, William Parent, and hie sister, Mrs. i Ralph J. Roop an t family. Miss Donothy Weismantel of St. Charles, Illinois, Is visiting her ' aunt, Mrs. Adeliade Gass and fa- ! nrily. Mrs. John Peterson and Mrs. 1 J ha Newtberry of Kansas City, are spending the day in 'in iianapolis with friends. Mr. and Mrs. George Andrews { and daughters Georgia Helen and : Carol Sue spent the week-end in South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Milton damage and Michael Clamage have returned to Chicago after spending Saturday and Sunday with the 11. A. Kalver family. Mrs. Michael Andrews returned to her home in South Bend after a I month's visit with her son and 1 daughter-in-law, Mr. ana Mrs. ' George Andrews. Pete Cos:na of Al and Pete radio artists stopped for a short visit at the I. A. Kalver home today en-
~l iSSrWTVI pp I . J'l TO THE WORLDS FAIR" 400 s■■lo DECATUR Go any day-Retum in I 15 days. Coach service. OTHER WORLD’S FAIR BARGAIN TRIPS (All farts shown art for round trip) QE Go any Tues, or Sat.— I Return in 15 days Pull- ■ » man or Coaches— F’ullB> man (ares reduced. ★ IE Go any Tues or Sat.— R R 1 3 Return in 30 days. Pull M — man or Coaches. V ★ Auk about planned, carefree, I all-expense tours to the World's Fair, Reasonably I priced hotelaccomrnodations | arranged. I Consult Agent for details
route to Cincinnati, Ohio to broadcast a program over radio stat' >n wu-w. iMlss Etta (Andrews of South Bend Is visiting with Mr. and Mra. George L. Andrewi here. Dr. and'Mrs. J. W Vizard of Pleamu ii Mlllu left thia morning n a several days tiling to L.nti- James and Crooked Lake. Albert Selletneyer, t!l‘‘ ‘. , t<>r of the high school band has returns: from u seven weekc trip to California and the west. H> vi'lted wl.h ..Mr. and Mrs. Je s Sellemeyer In L s Itiig iles ai d saw .‘jverti! for trier Decatur people, Including me fibers of the Jerry Toffee fu ni'.y, Hatch Blackburn uti l other Horsfers. Tim Sellemeyeru at, e.ij >ing guo 1 health. Mr. ml Mrs. R ':< r’ Garard and daughter visited the w .rid e fair over the week-end. .Henry B. Heller is attendl g to
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biiHlnesa In InJianaipolla today. Lynn A. Phillip* of Uttlca, IJlew York, ha* reutrned to h|g horn© aftur spending the week end In Jhla city. th« gueats of Mr. und Mrs. H tnar L.wer and daughter, Ml.w Helen Lower. Miss (Helen .Lower entertained Sunday for Lvnn A. Phillips of Utica, New Yon., and Mr. and Mra. Lowell Hlldeflirand of Huntin', on. Elderly Woman Is Burned To Death Bourbon, Ind., Aug. 21 <U.R) Burna received when her clothing caught fire from a gasoline stove were fatal late yesterday to Mrs. Lester Disher, 77. Four tourists rushed to the woman's aid us she dashed from her home. One num extinguished the flames by wrapping her in his coat.
