Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 160, Decatur, Adams County, 8 July 1935 — Page 3

FSOCIETY.

made APPROACHING marriage vW\. i.Minccmelit bi made of the npmarriage of Mias Deloria jM7i, daughter of Mrs. C. J. Roth U Xhniroevllle. and Argo Sudduth. Mr- and Mr®. Walter Sudduth ■ 1 South Fifth Street. Th® mar-j will be an event of Sunday,, jaLy _% and will take pkt we in this v Mr Sudduth is employed as a Jgjßi-j. it the (’. A. Douglas store. is.,; ust Women’s Society will Thursday afternoon at twoMUctv o'clock with Mrs. Harry E. IdlHKl' l ' ,!1 North Second street. An inand instructive program planned for the afternoon. M.A Markley of Bluffton will .11 the aubjct of "Mexico." SOCIETY entertain AT TEA Watnen’e Missionary Society Zion Reformed church will t. a at the church Wednesday ~ from two thirty to four int reeling program will in the churc h auditorial which the guests will be H'KKp ,| t , the dining room where w j; ... rved. Unusual decorawill I>, need for the affair. b“r is naked to report - .hairman th® number of tickhas .- .id. us soon at possible. _ invited to attend the :•» rvations may be made any rm mber of the society. elivc Y People® Missionary t the Evangelical church rz. a picnic Tuesday night at k at the Legion Memorial _ '.,'.<l fri-nd.s of the Pr*en church wil Ihold a picnic Wednesday evening at six k at >!ie Legion Memorial l The woman’s missionary soc•Kf.ii ring the picnic and a attendance is expected. Iced ■p 1! :; ■ci ■ w ill be furnished I Do you Bre easily? IV— • overworked blood Bmakes you feel weak — - dull. ■s. Tonic brings vitality Ead tone to the whole body. WE AKNESS is only one Wl of the many symptoms of a low count. I.ies of appetite, vo'tnz^^^J nl . e ight l nervousness and like i ills are often due to this to underlying cause. IS WSF IIC red-blood-cells must be up to and vigorous to keep the tis- ,. pure and to help supply the body „ fresh oxygen-energy in its cirthe entire body of over 200 ' t p fljllT r rp Tonic, in the absence of any disease, should help you get vital red-blood-cells back up to ' 1 and help your digestion, too. It - — medicine. 108 years of Just try it and you, too, may Ybsitl^H“ ,f el like yourself again.” Insist Tonic in the blood red celMapped package. The larger sufficient for two weeks’ treatb more economical, too. B Drug Stores, © s.s.s. Co .

■me-Piece Dress! Detachable Cape!

s Active, Spec- ■ talar Sports or K io Wear to Town H By Ellen Worth ■L wo “ Wn ' t suspect ,his charm- ■ Lt S was 3 one -Piece affair to sew! 9* line is softened by a “ casin 8 at the s Pf er *did dress for your varobc> as originally " 'T' y c ? ,ton rrc P c in 1 s,, ade with white coin SB 13 plain coral crepc. *2 t|u ’ ck a! 'd inexpensive to tonZ? 1 11 t ’r° bab, - v want t° t a ln one ntaterial. the r a \' aay mis,ake if you Wno f ? ly and Ottering cool )fßpti nts s or q " a a nt ''d-fashioned in ', s ,designed for sizes d HlSite 16?' 36, 38 anJ dO-inches ■ «f 3•of"s U dre ” wi,h >’4 Ck material for cape contains ma,t ’ cool vacation Ly° tE ooK 10 cents. or' 15 cents !n jr W" ia arefully' n 15 prcferred )- S E "teau &l (n' !<ireSß: N ’ Y - Pat ’ H 23r <i s .? i ,r DaUy nem °- at Fifth Avenue.

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mies Mary Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Monday Pinochle Club at 7:30 at home of Mrs. Tillman Gehrig, Mns. Sol Lord an hostess, Tuesday Delhi Theta Tau business meeting. Mine Katheryn Hyland 7:30 p. m. Zion Reformed G- M. O. party, Mrs. M. F. Worthman. 7:30 p. m. North St. Mary’s 4-H Club, Bobo school, 1:30 p. m. C. I. C. Class Union Chapel Sunday School 7:30 at home of M r and Mrs. Forrest Walters. Evangelical Y. P. M. C. Picnic Legion Memorial Park, 6 p. m. W. C. T. U. — Mrs. Ed Macy, Winchester st., 2:15 p. m. Business Meeting-Tri Kaptpa Sorority. Mayor’s court room 7:30. Root township 4-H Club play cast practice, Monmouth school, 2 p. m. Wednesday Tri Kappa Girl Scout Troop one business meeting, Mrs. Bryce Thomas, 3:30 p. m. Presbyterian Picnic - Legion Memorial Park 6:00 o’clock. Zion Lutheran Missionary Society Mrs. Paul Schultz Monroe St, 2:00. Zion Junior Walther League 7:30 at Lutheran School. United Brethren W. M. A., meet at the iparwcnage, 1 p. m. Pnsbyterlan church picnic. Legion park, « p. m. Thursday Baptist Women’s Society, Mrs. Marry E- Dodd, 2:30 ip. m. Friday Zion Reformed Mission Band, church iparlons. 2 p. m. Sunday Immanuel Walther League. Ice Cream Social at the Blecke School in Union Township.

by the committee. Members are asked to bring lunch and table service. The W. M. A. of the United Brethren church will meet at the country home of Mrs. William Arnold Wednesday afternoon. All those wishing to attend are asked to meet at the church parsonage ut one o’clock. The iC. I. C. Class of the Union Chapel Sunday School will meet Tuesday evening at seven thirty o'clock with Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Walters. The North St. Mary’s 4-H Club will meet at the Bobo school Tuesday afternoon at one-thirty o’clock The play cast of the Root township 4-H Club will meet for (practice Tuesday afternoon at two o'clock at the Monmouth school. The Girls Missionary Guild of the Zion Reformed church will hold a kid party at the home of Mrs. M. F. Worthman on Sixth street, Tuesday night at seven-thirty o’clock. The hostesses for the party will be the Misses Bernadine Kolter and Lucinda Borne. There will be a business meeting of the Delta Theta Tau sorority

B7S nr |7frr A.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JULY 8, 1935.

Tuesday night at (seven-thirty o'clock with Miss Katheryn Hyland. A business meeting of Tri Kappa Girl Scout Troop one will be held Wednesday afternoon at four-thirty o’clock at the horn® of Mrs. Bryce Thomas on Third street. A picnic was previously scheduled for this meeting but has been charged All members are asked to take notice and attend the me<ti uj. LOCAL COUPLE MARRIED SATURDAY Miss Ruth Ixiugh, daughter of Mr. and Mns. Frank Lough and Chester Deßolt. son of Mr. and Mrs. Doni Deßolt, all of Decatur, were united In marriage at eight o’clock Saturday evening at the home of Rev. Glen E. Marshall, pastor of the Church of God. The single ring ceremony was used. The bride was dressed in blue crepe with which she wore white accessories. The couple were attended by Mrs. Coro Lough and Miss Idora Lough. Mr. and Mrs. Deßolt will reside in Decatur. The Mission Band of the Zion Reformed church will meet Friday afternoon at two o’clock in the chur< h parlors. —. 0 MASONIC Regular meeting of the Masonic lodge. Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. 2t

Rev. Father Ambrose Kohne of Goodland is here for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Amos Ketchum and son Jerry, Mr. and Mns. Stuckey and eons Ronnie and Marvin, and Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Backer and daughter Arline visited in Anderson Sunday with Miss Helen Becker. Mrs. Chester Mclntosh, and Mrs. Dick Myers visited with Mrs. Frank Jones in Fort Wayne. Mrs. Jones was formerly Elizabeth Crist. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Engle and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Engle returned to this city Saturday night from bake Wawasee where they spent the Fourth of July. Di-k Engle states that he caught a four pound "bass while fishing at the lake. Romaine and Rowena Raudenbush of Decatur t?u'e 6 are spending a few days wiin Deioree and Marcella Miller near the state line. Robert S. Shoemaker of Geneva has recently enrolled for a summer course at Butler University in Indianapolis. He is one of 550 persons who are working on undergraduate and graduate degrees at the (Indianapolis school this summer. Mr. Shoemaker is enrolled in the Butler college of education. Summer work at the university will close on August 10 when preparations will begin for the regular winter session which opens ‘Sept. 16. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Adame and Miss Ruth Adame. Mrs. Harve Baker, daughter Miss Alice Katheryn Baker and Muss Evelyn Adams spent Sunday at the Methodist cottrige at Lak> Webester. The Mieses Alice Katheryn Baker and Evelyn ■Adams remained at the lake for the Methodist Assembly. Miss Marcella Brandyberry hce returned to Indianapolis where she is a student nurse at the (Indiana University Hospital. She spent a three week’s vacation here with her parents. James Cowan came home from Orville. Ohio, to spend the weekend with his family.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Deitsch and son Robert, Mrs. Tony Holthouse and Mi. sb Rose Fullenkamp spent Sunday at Findlay, Ohio, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Weissling and family. Jimmy Weissling of Findlay, O. is visiting his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Fullenkamp. Walter Goll, general manager of the Fort Wayne Works of the General Eleo’ric company and Fred S. Hunting, president of the Fort Wayne National Rank visited in Decatur Saturday evening. They made a trip to the Homestead site. Mrs. Ruth Hiatt and sons, William and Jack, of West Palm Beach, Florida, are visiting here with Mrs. J. S. Bowers and family. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Metzler left today for a motor trip through the east.

Club To Sponsor Benefit Movie The Improvement 4-II Club in which the Decatur Woman’s Club is especially interested, will sponsor a benefit movie Wednesday and Thursday nights at the Adams theater. The picture to be shown will be “The Scoundrel” featuring Noel Coward. This picture ranked as one of the six best plays of the month of June. The club will appreciate the ipatrotxige of the public. Tickets .may ibe procured from M rs. Charles Knapp or Miss Grace Coffee or any of the club members. ■ —o— — — « In a Nutshell There are three ways of getting out of a serape—push out, back out and keep out.

VX M 1 — g° cs there ? j z Chesterfields for the Captain, Sir * advance—and \y give the counter-sign hH ■K MBhkC “•wVk © 1935, Liccett & Myees Tobacco Co.

KENTUCKY GIRL WAIVES PAY TO BECOME PARIS MANNIKIN AS AID TO FASHION CAREER

Weary of Parties, She Finds Happiness In Difficult Work Ry Mary Fentress, (UP. Staff Correspondent) Paris, July 8.-(U.R) A tall, slim, blonde American girl is working without a salary as a mannikin in Paris because she loves beautiful clothes, loves to work and wants to learn fashion art. She is Retsy Nelson, of a solidly prominent Louisville. Ky., family, who grew bored with a continual round of debutante paj-ties and determined to make a name for herself in the business w’orld. She has shown signs of independence ever since she was a tiny girl when she was quite obstinate as to what she would and would not wear. Since the age of 13 she has designed all her own clothes. She has always shown a decided talent for drawing, and while she was receiving her education at Miss Wright's school in Bryn Mawr, Pa., and at the Villa Duchesne in St. Louis, she developed a hobby of designing unusual doll clothes. She got her first job when she found that there was a sale for these designs in Germany. Studied in New York Upon her return to Louisville, she decided that she could never be happy without a career and persuaded her mother to allow her to come to New York to study fashion art. She worked for a while as apprentice at the knit house of Anny Blatt, then came abroad 18 months ago to the Paris shop of the same house, where she could be in the real fashion center of the world. She went into the workrooms to watch and learn fashion designing. She submitted some original sketches for clothes which showed ingenuity, and to her delight the designs were accepted. One day when a new collection was being shown, one of the manKkins became ill. In the flurry of excitement which always accompanies a dress showing, Betsy wa,s asked if she could substitute as mannikin. She had modeled as an amateur in Louiville in fashion shows, so she hastily slipped into a costume, ran a comb through her short, blonde hair and stepped

cl PI I Jl if tew "3 $ / 1 ... -iW , A v'w' fc ©3a feww- r *. iiuPo t ’"W'rW yiX-f tL Z Wk 6 -" ■'*»» lfe‘ 'ft' t meU ir KF -W T-B?-' F- V v * Betsy Nelson, Paris mannikin, who began designing her own clothes in Louisville, Ky., when she was only 13.

into the salon before a crowd of critical clients. She loves clothes, wears them with an unmistakable air of distinction, and was successful o'n her first day as proses-

sional mannikin. Shyness Is Overcome She feels that she has a great deal to learn about clothes and fashion art and ia eagerly taking

advantage of the opportunity to study at first hand. She has conquered her shyness at appearing ■ before critical women who peer ! coldly and appraisingly at her as ■ she displays the latest fashion | creations. She gets a tremendous ; "thrill” out of oeing a bannikin. ”1 couldn't be happy if I didn’t i Itave something to keep me busy,” ! says- Belsy, "and I’m more conI tented than I've ever been in all 'my life. I don’t earn any money, ■ but I'm learning an Interesting I and complicated business from the bottom up, and I'm determined to have a career.” This young American girl has a tall slenderness combined with the gracious dignity of the South. She wears her ash-blonde hair, which never has been bleached, ■ brushed straight back from her high forehead into a group of soft curls at the back of the head. She has a clear, white skin which needs no altering, and she uses on> a touch of powder and a dash of lipstick. Her clear, gray eyes ■ are set wide apart and atre shadowed by light brown lashes beneath slenderly arched eyebrows. She has a healthy appetite as the result of working from morning to night. “I get so much exercise just walking and working that I don’t have to bother about my figure,” she said. "I'm always hungry and eat lots and always sneak in a chocolate bar between afternoon collections. I don’t drink, and I usually smoke only after meals.

My favorite sports are swimming and tennis, and on my holidays 1 try to get in as muCTI exercise as I can.” Urges Self-Study Asked to express her opinion as to the proper beauty formula for women to follow, Betsy declared: “Every woman should learn her own type, learn the sort of clothes and colors that suit her, then stick to that pattern.. I wear sport clothes a great deal because they) suit me. Being blonde, I have found that black and certain shades of pa'e blue are most becoming, and I work out my wardrobe accordingly. “As for beauty treatments, I have none. I’m convinced that a clear skin comes from within and that if you don’t keep yourself healthy, no amount of powder, paint or creams will correct a bad skin. I try to follow a balanced diet and find that aside from cleansing with soap and water, my I skin takes care of itself.” Betsy says she is not interested; in marriage for a long time. She Is too much absorbed in the world

PAGE THREE

• of fashion now to bother about future husbands, stage or screen careers. She is filled with determination to be a success and is devoting ail her time to furthering herself in that line. Tomorrow: Girl From India Be- • comes Famous Mannikin. Q • ♦ I Memorial Hospital I Adams County I • • Corl Daugherty. Monroeville, auto accident victim, dismissed Saturday Francis Andrews, route 4. Decatur, heat victim, dismissed Sunday. iCharlotte Butler, 103 Nprth Eighth street, dismissed Saturday. Pauline Derickson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Derickson of Geneva, dismissed Monday morning. . Mrs. O. H. High, Ohio City, Ohio, dismissed today. Lois Duec.hner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Duechner, Convoy, j Ohio dismissed Sunday. Ruthe Tumbleson, eight year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry | Tumbleson, route 2, Geneva, major operation, Sunday afternoon. Moody Brenneman. ißerne, .major operation Monday morning. Mrs. Helen Ray. Geneva, tonsil operation, Monday morning. Miss Lucille Spangler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spangler, New Corydon, tonsil operation, Munday morning. _o ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Paul Conrad. 320 Winchester street, are the parents l of a. seven pound boy baby born Sunday morning at eleven o'clock. I The baby his been named Paul, | Junior. This is the first child in the

| family. Mrs. Conrad was formerly Virginia Bentz of this city. Mother and baby are getting along fine. o CHURCH REVIVALS Gospel Tabernacle A large crowd attended revival i services at the tabernacle Sunday. Rev. Johnny Wells sipoke on Hell, the fire that never goes out. “Brother and sister,, where will you spend eternity. Heaven or Hell” We had with us the Deikel sisters, who sang during the services. The children will Bing each night. Come and hear "Rev. Wells and party. | o Get the Habit — Trade at Homs