Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 201, Decatur, Adams County, 23 August 1934 — Page 3

SOCIETY

*• — J‘ l l i«"“" T “ CGIET¥ "‘ , ... iierne. Wednesday at*MnXetlng was held in l *’ f ” urtth the annua) Metho- '*•*" j av School Picnic. * , “ hn veleon had charge of r meeting in the ab- * "f"be president, Mrs. W. FThe regular routine of bu»lr ’.J. transude 1 and thirty-six •* „ re reported. !? .7. and entertainment were in "■ «■ .nd ,h. * tlf supper wasjnjoyed. ■_ h Ice cream social by the TS p i auxiliary of the local Ktaent which was to have J .“id tonight, has been postW* 1 ' Root township Home Econo -la Club »iH n,ee ' Tue ** d,y aft ® r ’ K »t one-thirty o’clock at the Slcsn Myers home. MAItELVN OPPERMAN W EOS CHARLES H- MILLER ' The marriage of Miss Madelyn German of Monroe and Charlee t Miller of F ndlay. Ohio, took L at the parsonage of the First (Md Brethren church. Wednesan- afternoon. The past r. Dr. C. J. Roberts. M d the single ring ceremony. Mr Miller is ass elated with his after in the real estate and insur- " e business at Findlay. The first gJanuary he will enter the county office at Findlay as deputy

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DackdaSpwm SoQaA - ' BOYS J* 4 boys DRESS SHIRTS * i f'p * OVERALL PANTS Boys fast color Dre s s Bovs fancv overall pants Shirts in fancy stripes SHOP HERE sizes 6 to 16, with bib or S*??!. 29c FRIDAY and styl,. tn.. ii. ...Oat- SATURDAY BOYS • BOYS BOYS BOYS KNICKERS WORK SHIRTS TENNIS SHOES DRESS CAPS Boys Wool KnickI Boy* blue cham- Boys Tennis Shoes „ . „ ers, fully lined in bray work shirts, with -Hygeen- insoles Boys dress caps, brown oxall sizes. Good ventilated uppers, in adjustable head size k r e : y. Drown, ox : wearing quality. JfJ'’ br ° Wn ’ * iZe * ncw fail patterns ’ f 39c and 49c 59c 39c 98c ms longies school'oxfords qrH ™{: D o ß xfords Boys Wool Long Pants Boys leather school oxfords, St HOOL OX O indark blue good wear- sizes 2 to 6. hard wearing Childrens school oxfords ine nimlitv shoe. and straps in brown, patent, squahty. Special 0»i FA gunmetal, all sizes. $1.39 w J,y, 9 98c i. $1.95 Will Wear Well." GIRLS Chambray Boys Slip* PRINT shirting ° ver Sweate w rs , . V %■' IWUQQrC 36 inch fine quality Boys Slip-over Wool n/ UKKBbIiO chambray shirting Sweaters, sizes 26 . in blue, 0 r «y and to 36. \ / Glr ’ fast C ° ° r fancy stripes and ck '“- «• n a surs.-rfs dF . n IIA re9ular slo ° value- jj aLst fi wB I I DC wM Uub i V GIRLS PRINCESS slips £?**?** Gir| s Princess Slips made of good quality V*’' / 7 \ - Broadcloth, hemstitched tops QQp \ Cl FAST I Bizes 4 to 14 Ot/V % \ W COLOR PRINTS ‘ — I IM 36 inch fast color XjZ I prints'in new fall — ■ \ W patterns, heavy jjqyS GOLT’ HOSE VW quality, yard Boys p anC y Golf Hose with ribbed or s -J p elastic tops, attractive patterns Q DC to choose from - 1 «’C • Kr I wf W? f, |sS aR ORIGINAL

i CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mies Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 i —— Thursday U. B. Young Peoples Choir, f church, 7:30 p. m. Aar n F x auxiliary of fire department Ice cream social, post- . p.ned. . U. B. Progressive Workers class I picnic, church. i| Evangelical Loyal Daughters >' class picnic, Butler grove, 6:30 p. m. Rqot Twp. Happy Homamakere I Chib picnic, Hanna-Nuttman park, > I10:30 a. m. I IV. O. T. M„ Moose Home. Bp. ni. » Friday Pocab ntas lodge. Red Mens Hall 7:30 p. m. United Brethren V. I. 8. class, . Miss Josephine Hill, 7:30 p. m. Decatur (Home Economics club . potluck dinner, Hanna-Nuttman park, 10:30 a. tn. Literature department meeting, Mrs. Frank Downs, 7 p. in. T uesday R ot Twp. H me Economics Club 1 Mrs, Sloan Myers, 1:30 ip. m. 1 i Tri Kappa business meeting, Miss 1 ’ Eileen Hunk, 8 p. in. J clerk. Mr. ami Mrs. Miller will reI side in Findlay. I ’ The Hakes reunion will be held i: at the Legion Memorial Park on •, Winchester street, Sunday. August : | 26, instead of at Sunset park as was announced. r ’ - ’ A business meeting of the Tri Kappa sorerkty will be held Tues!ay night at eight o’clock with Miss Eileen Burk. ENTERTAIN GUESTS AT PICNIC SUPPER Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H. Worthman Jr., and family entertained with a potluck supper recently, for the following 'pers ns: Rev. and Mrs. Ed Wcrthman and son Edmund of Kiel. Widtonsin; Rev. ar,d Mrs. I David Grether and children Jacob. I Frank. Marie. Ruth and Grace of Magley: Mr. and Mrs M. F Werth-

man an I children Mildred. Lillian and Hubert of Decatur; Mr. and Mrs. Milton Seherry and children Cera. Jane ami Roland of Magley. Mr. and Mrs. John Hllgeman an 1 children Lucile, Margaret Eleanor Worthman, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Ernand Mudgellne of Magley; Louis eat W rthmamn and children Ida belle Ethel. Florence, Irvin and Lois, Amundu Worthman, Walter Hllgeman and Bernadine Kolter. MEETING OF ECONOMICS CLUB The Friendship Village Home Economics Clulb met recently at Lehman park for a picnic t.r mem- . bers i t the chub and their families. . Approximately eighty persona were present. i A potluck supper was served and muskmelon furnished by Leland i Ripley was enjoyed. Mrs E. W. , Busche, county chairman, was prei sent at the meeting. i Games and s-tunte were features of the pr gram. ANNUAL MCGILL REUNION HELD The eleventh reunion was held at ' Sunset Park Sunday. At the noon hour a basket dinner was served to 1 the more than one hundred twenty I five relatives present. The oldest person present was James F ley and th? youngest was Grant I-iutzenh user. Perry S. , Mr-Gill was named president for next year; Chauncey Sproul, vice , president, and Gertrude Tumibleson secretary and treasurer. The Youtlg Peoples choir of the United Brethren church will prac- [ ties Thursday night at seven-thirty II o’clock at the church. The Pocahontas lodge will meet i in the Red Men’s Hall Friday night at seven-thirty o’clock. ■ o I 4 » Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE ♦ ♦ Q. At a bridge party should one put hutsbandti and wives at the same table? i A. Not if it can be avoided. II Q. -is it good etiquette to bring ■ a newspaper to the dinner table? . | A. It is very poor form to do so. ti Q. Is it correct to say, "three . jspo nsful cf su>-ar"? .i A. No; say. "Three sp.onfuls of 'I sugar." This same rule applies to “Cupfuls" "han .fuls,” armfuls.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1934.

WHAT FAMILIAR NAMES MEAN WATCH THIS COLUMN DAILY Copyrighted by DR. HARRY A. DEFERRARI SALLY. The personal name “Sally" Is a pet form of "Sarah." "Sarah” is ultimately of Hebrew origin, and means "princess.” SAMPSON. The personal and family name "Sampson" (also spell ed "Samson”) may be traced back to two Hebrew sources. It may be the modern English form of "Shimshon”, meaning "splendid sun”, or it may mean "the son of Samuel." "Samuel” (also spelled "Samuell”) is derived from the Hebrew "Shmuel” meaning "heard of God" or "asked of God.” "INEZ SCHAEFER” means "pure shepherd.” o Personals 'Dorie Marjorie and Ixils Johnson of Leipsic, Ohio, are visiting with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson of north of the city. Mrs. Ge rge Myers of Washington. D. who has been visiting here with her brother. Dyke FrisInger and family, left today for Indianapolis and Alexandria where she will visit Mr. and Mrs. J. Dwight Peterson and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gipe for a few days, before returning to the national capital. Miss Bertha Heller has returned to her home in Indianapolis after spending a few days visiting her mother, Mrs. D. D. Heller, and other friends and relatives in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Refber, daughter Mary and s ns Albert and Ripert returned Sunday from a several day's visit with Chalmer Reber Mr. and Mrs. Byron M. Reber and san Byron M., Jr., of near Reed City Michigan. Miss Frances Dugan and Mrs. Theodore McClintock are visiting; with Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Haerle at Indianapolis for a few days. 'Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Dugan and nighter Miss Frances were the guests of Van Wert, Ohio friends Tuesday. ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Harry Strode Robinson of St. Mary's township are the parents of a seven and three qpartei pound bay bby born August 18. The baby has Deen named Max James. He is the f urth child and the second son in the family. o Linton Municipal Plant Bears Burden 'Linton. Ind.. Aug. 23 —(UP) — Linton added ite name to the small list cf Indiana cities which will operate in 1935 without a civil tax levy by action of the city council last night. The municipal light plant, which has borne the burden of the city expenses for several years, again will be called upon to bear expenses for 1935, the council ruled. —oHog Prices Again Higher At Chicago Chicago, Aug. 23—(UP)— Hog prices on the Chicago livestock exchange continued their sensational advance today with best shipments selling at $7.35 per hundredweight. The top prices, highest since August 1931, showed a gain of from 10 to 15 cents over yesterday's sales 'Receipts at the Chicago stock yards were aibout 12,000. —o — Sues For Wrong Listing Tiffin. O.—tU.PJ—Daniel E. Quilter, mechanotherapist and chiropractor, was listed in a telephone book advertisement as a physician, Quilter charged in a suit here against the Ohio Bell Telephone Company. He charged that the alleged error led to withdrawal of his license in his own field because of asserted false advertising. Dodge Dotted Lines Cleveland, O-—<U.R>—Four Cuyahoga county officials traveled 140 miles to Pittsburgh to save themselves the trouble of signing their names 720 times. They went to sign 800 SI,OOO selective sales tax bonds for poor relief. A signature machine in Pittsburgh saved them the task of signing more than 80 times each. 0 City Nearer State Line La Junta, Col. — (U.R) —La Junta now is 15 miles nearer the Colo-rado-Kansas state line than it used to be, although neither has moved. Straightening of a highway eastward from La Junta shortened the distance.

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Advisors Are Split Over Reorganization Washington. Aug. 23 —(UP)— President Rocsevelt's Indu.nrial advis rs are split today In disagreement over reorganization of NRA 'but expect to drive their argument to conclusive dicialon at the White II us,- conferences tomorrow. General Hugh 8. Johnson, NRA administrator, Is confronted by Donald R. RlcWberg head ft the presilent's executive council, and secretary of laibor Frances Perkins in thia dispute within the udmlnla tratlon high command. Riclabeng sail merely that NR|\ was not the only problem awaiting Mr. Roosevelt's attention when he returns Imlay fr in speaker Henry T. Rainey’s funeral. ONE PRISONER PICKED UP AT INDIANAPOLIS (CONTINUED FHOM PAGE ONE) the other prisoners carrying benches to a window,” Driskell explained. "I saw blades of a saw sticking out of one of the men’s pockets and a few minutes later I was invited to Join the escape.” He refused to say which of the prisoners had the saws. Driskell, son of an Indianapolis druggist, was arrested August 5 in Rochester while stripping the car of a Hamilton county farmer. He was arrested once before in Rochester on charges of automobile theft and served a term on the state penal farm. The Jail delivery yesterday apparently was carefully planned. After sawing a hole through the bars of a rear window, the prisoners lowered themselves to the ground with a chain obtained from one of the cell cots. Search for Mason, most desperate of the escaped prisoners, centered today around his former haunts in Erlanger, Ky., and Cincinnati. Ohio. He was charged with the murd-

YOU get more usable power in Standard Red Crown Superfuel without paying an extra penny for it. For this richer, thriftier motor fuel is priced the same as “regular” gasoline. -> But what a difference in the amount of live, driving energy this new-type gasoline delivers! You draw on a bigger store of Live Power—Live Power which makes your gasoline money take you farther, per penny and per dollar —and faster, when you want or need speed. ■'> From either angle — performance or econo my — Standard 1] Red Crown Superfuel today is the biggest value ' / Z Standard Oil has ever offered. A ou'll enjoy ‘ 7 the keener performance it gives your motor — and / you'll be getting the most gasoline power per gallon x. your money has ever bought. Test it for /%'s getaway, for hill climbing, for easy high speed—and for mileage. As a result, you’ll come back for more. f Vy W Contains Tetraethyl Lead Vvs « STANDARD RED CROWN Copr. 1934. Standard Oil Ce*. SUPERFUEL — more live power per gallon x STANDARD OIL . Make Your Next Standard Oil Products PRODUCTS at the Refill at Automobiles and Tractors On Sale At TVVIN BRIDGE \DFFI TFR’S Repair and Lubrication . Service Station IrLADbELIEKS AL I) SCHMITT Standard Oil Station (Ernst and Paul uhnck) service station MOTOR SALES (Company Owned) °" U> *. 224-1 EaS ‘ 203 So. Ist st. Winchester and Mercer Sts. * none 7873 North End Standard Oil Products A. G. Burke, Mgr. Ice Cream Ice Cold Drinks

er of Lester Jones, Indianapolis. police sergeant, dilring a bus gar-; age holdup here February, 1933. 1 His case was transferred to Hamilton county on u change of venue. His first trial resulted in a jury disagreement and he was awaiting a second trial scheduled for the full term of circuit court. Ernest (Red) Gibberson. anoth1 er of the Jones murder suspects I '•scaped from the Hamilton mun ty Juil last February put was cap- ' tured in Cincinnati. Two compuni lons are under life sentence in the 1 state prison. I . o Indianapolis Man Is Held For Extortion Indianapolis, Ind.. Au)z. 23 ‘(UP) I —Edward D. Nicholson, 59. amateur photogrpher. who aimitted plotting io extort $10,001) from directors of the Fletcher Trust company was turned over t,o federal authorities I i today ter prosecuti n under the ■ Lindenbergh extortion act. | A. (’. Garlgus, postal inspector, said Nicholson admitted writing I notes to the bank, threat'ning to blow up the institution am! kill the directors unless the money were laid. ‘ll would Just as aeon sr.iend the rest cf my life in prison as be a burden on my family,” Garlgus quoted the prisoner as saying. ’l. needed the money for my three I children." —-Q— —— — Prison Inmate Commits Suicide Mi higan City, Ind., Aug. 23 (UP) —iDrinking lye solution because "he was tired of living” Vincent Gomez, 32. life tenner at the ! state prison, committed suicide, it was announced today. die was sentenced from lalke o.unty in 1925 cn charges ot murder. o You can buy any of our .Mens Suits, values to $35 for •only $ll.OO. — Teeple & Peterson.

Winchester Boy Chokes To Death Winchester, dnd.. Aug. ”3—(UP) 'Chalies Durham, 9. choked to leath a few minutes after a grain ' of sweet corn .became lodged in his 11 hr at. o Nursing Committee Met Here Wednesday A meeting of the Adams county nursing committee was held Wednesday afternoon at Mrs. t’harles Knapp's office In the court house. Plans wero made f r a definite Ipr gra n t I>e carried out in > schools of the county under the ' supervision of Miss Florence Anderson, local FiERiA nurse. Fi'.ture a tivitles cf the nursing committee were discussed and the following committees appointed: ■p gram, Mrs. Don Lutes, Mrs. Charles Knapp. Dr. B. F. Duke and James EJberson; piTillclty. diss

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Page Three

Mury Macy, Mrs. ('Jayson Carroll nil W. L. Linn. The next meeting of the organization will be in the form of a lii k eupiier to be held Welnesday evening, Sep.t»mber 12 al Monrfie following which a business meeting will be held. Get the Habit — Trade at Home

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