Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 185, Decatur, Adams County, 6 August 1935 — Page 3
■ *> - "^KoN^* MILy J®l()U)$ Kt trillion was i 'Y ’£„„’<•• of Mr- «WI MwluEß&V' X.n Sunday. Dan Kil ’ 'iM’X ■ lb ‘■narh-s Klt;mn, " v ( , Joe Harold '\ (i . Mr.' Frank Kit Floyd. Patri |u and .nd .I.'J liarha Gage, -,. ii.hol I Ow.riri and " M . ~h d Mis. William A ' l ",' r „„, ...i Mr. and Mrs. . r , ~ x,.ima Ji'an and ,| d .. Thomas John--1 y\|. . 8 Johnson. Y1 It, . r; Mr. and Mrs. . -Hl Lois of I.<‘fp-, I^v'l , ■ ''• K - (orn ‘ uS| . ji, n and EmmaKu. Kilian. Mis. j|, lia'ph -MonMELTING PEOPLE . .Jjlv '•■ ting of !>' di'i 'ion of the u I 'LI :1 l: "" t an<l t. at Cll.ll'.d ■HI ~ ,! d over th- ... aiional hymns of .j y - luisr of Union rv. Bailer. .pastor of i 1 <>f . .. . tin* -peak-r . on mh rlii- recitation .1' followed by n-' . M Pl.-a-ant. Fol - r,no of business gM . ,- 1 ’ .J' I .' d Forty |X-. I REMEMBER. ■ WHEN MOVIES ■(OST A NICKEL? -i-renter the flick-t-Ajree'rrs that thrilled |H|i r.•:> p ' It was about :,-e .’9 years aqo — anctnr,- thrill came to Ke.egg's Corn Flakes! crisp, delicious cereal tnat I have to be cooked! ■ Ur tii,’ fir-t movies Kellogg’s n.nie j l.oiy u.i\ since then. inipr... • <1 and perfected. Corn I lakes have grown bribe l.irce-t-elling ready-to-eat in the world. Car tour family ,i treat inniormorning. >ene Kellogg’s--sol.!-1.1..wn. Compare H.io.r villi »in other cereal ever eaten 1 null be ani.iz..J at the big value 1 package of Kellogg's. No to prepare. And above all. ?rt appetizing quality that urie-. Kept oven-fresh and j^^p'w-prrtt io a patented heatinner wrapper. ■B.LL tour grocer for Kellogg’s—tj^Beerisinu/1 urn I lakes and don’t with ail y substitute. I j ■corn flakes B the finest made
I PAY I City Light Bills NOW IB City Light bills for the month of .July > w are ready and can be paid now. ; > H We earnestly ask you to cooperate in paying K *bfht bills as early in the month as possible i* R as it will relieve both yourself and city hall ' • K employees of inconvenience and delay at the ] , R time bills are due. ] i ■ PAY BILLS AT [City Hall
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesday I Evangelical Dutiful Donghters clan, pospotied one week. i C. L. of businet)■: meeting, K. , of C. Hall, 7:30 p. on. Thursday Pythian Slaters dinner and eupper , | K. of P. Home. inrsnbsrs and one guest were preu-f ent. The next reguhir tn . ting will i >»■ hid Augu t 27 at. Union Chapel.! The annual Weldy reunion will be held Sunday, Augit.it 18 at Elton Kupright's home. MOTHERS GROUP ENJOYS PICNIC The Hai. py Home Club for Moth-; era met at the Legion Memorial! ' Park Monday night for a picnic ettp-; ■per. A short busin s>s meeting was pr .sided ver by the president Mrs. Clarence Drak, aft r which games w. re play, d by the hildren and a. 'social time enjoyed. i All niem'a rs are urged to attend. th> next miv ting to be held at the! home of Mrs. Edward Deitseh, Sep- : t mber 6. Th • theme of the study w iil b» “Th ■ Mother ■—Diplomat." I Mrs. H. W. Franklin will be the assisting hostess. LOCAL PEOPLE VISIT AT HUNTINGTON Mr. and Mrs. Peter VV. Vitz vlotted near Huntington Sunday and, a dsted in c lebrating the golden . w. dding anniversary of Mr. Vitz's par nt.s. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Vitz. , The three children of the hon.r.d ‘ | counple, and their families w re pr>. nt at ths obs rvair e. A deli-, cions dinn r was rved at th ? noon 1 hour to Mr. and Mrs. P ter W. Vitz, 1 j Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Vitz and (hildren Herman and Mildred, Mr.' and Mrs. William Pleanitz and I daught r Mad#:* Alma and th., honI ored couple. Mr. and Mrs. C. iA. I Vitz. The meeting of the Girlo Missionary Guild jf th- Zi n Reformed) ) chur.a scheduled for this week has, | been postponed one week. ANNOUNCEMENT MADE OF RECENT MARRIAGE Mrs. J. E. Gaffer of tills city an- ) notini s the marriage f her daugli-j ' (er, Elaine to Carl McConnell, son 1 I of Mr. and Mrs. Dawrence McCon-i I nell of Fort Wayne. | The marriag l took place February , '2B at F rt Wayne. Mr. nnd Mrs.' McConnell will make their home in that city wltere the groom Is emi ployed at S. ars Roebuck. 1 OETTINGER FAMILY HOLDS ANNUAL REUNION Tib- annual reunion of the Dett- | inger family was held Sunday at I - Sunset park, east of Decatur. Gaines >,nd contestu were enjoyed after ' which a business meeting was con- | ducted. Frank Linig ’r of this city was i ■ lected president and Mrs. Virginia ; Brogan of Lima, Ohro, was named) e.cretary-treusurer and historian.! i lee cream was served late in the 1 afternoon. Thos? present wens Mr. and Mrs. Chester Howard of Griffith; Mrs. ' Ed Conway, Paul Ernst, Mrs. Alice Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. George Liniger,
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1935.
Mr. und Mrs. Clifford Jessup and son, Mr. and Mns. Harve Liniger and children D nuld and Delores, Roger Liniger and daughter June of Fort Wayne; Miu. Mary Brock, Miss Edith Brock. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Liniger und son Dick of Marion; I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Liniger and son Bobby of Hartford City; Mr. I and Mrs. B. W. B tisun and of I Kokomo. Mrs, Rosa Wolf, Walter Brock and son of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Thompson mid daughters Carmen. Mary, Lorraine, Kathryn and : J .an, Barney Creveeton, Virginia ' Brogan and eon Jack. P. J. Austin, Mr ;. 1’ mi Golden, Art lb nnnw-iy , of Lima, Ohio; It v. und Mrs. MattIh w Worthman and Franclle, <i raldin- and Richard, Jacob Dettinger ; Mrs. Del Fniuhlger of Bluffton; Mr. j and Mru. Charles Dettinger of De- ' catur; Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Keil and | children Phyllis and Jos, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Bender, Charley Bender, i Mr. and Mrs. G -rge Kell of Van Wert. Ohl ; Mr. and Mrs. Wilson I) tting r und son Milton, Mrs. Al Hower. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Liniger. Ruth and Esther. Mrs. Uinuiert, Mr. I and Mrs. Frank Liniger and sons I Vaughn and Wallace and daughters ('Io- and Max Ellen and Mr. and j Mrs. 18. n Linig r, Decatur. ) ENTERTAINS FOR MRS. CAMILLUS MOSER Mrs. Bernard T rveer entertained ! with a bridge tarty Monday night I at her hole in honor of Mrs. Cami illun Mower of Fort Mitchell, KenI tu ky. who is visiting in this city Th? guests' formed three tables of bridg and high score prizes were w n by Mrs. Raymond Kohne und Mrs. Paul Briede. Mra. Terveer present d Mrs. Moser with a gift. A d licious lunch -on was eerv d following the gamt.s. PYTHIAN SISTERS TO SERVE MEALS T Pythian Sisters will nerve I dinner and supper at the K. of P. Hom on Third street, Thursday. | Til. in-al will h? served for thirty five cents a p!>ite„ Following is the menu: Swiss , eteak, mashed potatoes and gravy, ■corn n colj cold slaw,• pickled ' beets, i It, rry pie. rolls and coffee. — 0 * AUCTION SCHOOL * NEWS I A session was held Monday m rning and physical ex rcises were held directed by VV. Garlson I and Col Reppert. z Col. Reppert gave a talk on the fine sheep sale he conducted in Wisconsin. Harry Thompson gave a valuable lecture. I Col Earl Gartin arrived at 11 ; o’clock and the school song was ) spng. He gave a lecture on "Sale ; Bill Writing.” Col Gartin continued in the after-1 noon with the wime study. Each I i student must make a sale bill and j ! this work will he graded. Col Reppert came out at 2:30 P. M. and the class was divided. Gartin taught half the class inside house and Col Reppert’s class was oytside. Each student read a Hereford cattle .pedigree and sold this animal. Harry Thompson gave another lecture which closed the days activities at school. The stud, nt body marched in the ) parade at night and a fine sale was • held after the parade. o Tri-State College Student Is Killed Angola. Ind., Aug. 6 —(UP) —Leslie .Boyd. 24, Kennedy, N. Y., a student at Tri State college here, was killed instantly when a motorcyclj he was riding crashed into an autonrcbile driven by Harry Norwitz, i Chicago, on a curve four miles j west of here late yesterday. i
DWIN KEEPS MV HOUSE FREE J V EjrWSTJITITI , Adv. 60-8 1 col. x 70 line*. •! Copyright 1935, Baldwin ‘ Laboratories, Inc, Saegertown, Pa.
■ WfBF Tl>—Mkjtttt7TfTtrfMHT* < iftlir* T a-U .... ~, ,v/. . 'itlaMnlnßirr ~.lTrTlßlilwlfr • * NEVER A DULL MOMENT • I n TH- WWI ftlLMboL M CARES?IT WONT BE A DULL fl II WAIT. WEVE PLENTY OF LUCKUS.J ” ~ cULckxL SImLRA i U IB X a >■ V w-' ! H . V Y ", I I , A 1 . I I .-‘y X, Xc NEVER A DULL MOMENT- ■ f IM YOUR BEST FRIEND, ■■ I IW' fIHBF.■ ’ ™ IAM YOUR LUCKY STRIKE. ■ IT’S THE TOBACCO THAT COUNTS There are no finer tobaccos than those used in Luckies FRED ASTAIRE, RKO.star, introduces new songs and dances from'TOP HAT-in the LUCKY STRIKE Hit Parade, Saturdays, N.B.C. 5
HPERSQNALS Abram Simons and Ora Baker, district road superintendent of Bluffton, were among the fair vteitrs last evening. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schultz of Akron, Ohio visited here last evening a short' time, leaving for Fort Wayne and returning home today. They visited Mrs. Schultz father, C. W. Boknecht, while here. Dave Miller, of Omaha, formerly known as the greatest contortionist in the world and who learned how to tumble on the saw dust pile at the old Vail factory, is looking up friends here this week. The E. L. Carroll home, Winchester and Adams str. t*s, is receiving a new coat of paint. The opening .parade last evening was a dandy but “you ’aint seen nothin' yet," the Dairy Day parade is to be five miles long. Judge H M DeV ss and County | Chairman N. C. Nelson will go to French Lick Saturday to attend the mid-summer meeting of the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association. Mr. and Mrs. Oren Vore of Delphos motored over last evening bo take in the fair. Mr. and Mrs. William Amstutz, Ruth Amstutz, Kenneth Amstutz and Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Hall of Fort Wayne were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Wagner and family of Piqua. Ohio. Feliz Levy of N.?w York City and Decatur, writes us a card from Berlin, where be has been visiting and attending to business after a trip through .taly and Switzerland. Mos. J. J. Vega, of Chicago is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thomas. Her hueband. Dr. Vega, will arrive Thursday to attend the fair the rest of the week. J. Ward Calland returned today from a business trip to Omaha, Neb. Mrs. Charite Meyers of Niles, Michigan is the guest of her sister, | Mrs. French Quinn. Mrs. Bess Erwin has gon<e to Martinsville to be with her sister, Mrs. Bert Owen who will remain there for some time on account of illness. Mr. and Mrs. Jam.cs Sasser, son Neal and daughter Carol, who havel ibeen visiting Mrs. Sasser’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Kocher of West Adams street, left yesterday for Greensburg. Ind., for a. visit with Mr. Sasser's -parents before return-' Ing to their home in Mt. Vernon, i
N. w York. Mrs. J. D. Bolender and daughter. Jean Ann, and Mrs. B. Claude Case of Connersville were gtusta yesterj day of Mr. and Mrs. Carol Burk holder. Miss B. lender will remain here for a several days' visit. John W. Richwine of Muncie was a visit r in Decatur today. Mrs. C. P. Gibbs, dauhter, Vesper and son. Jack, of Indianapolis are spending several days in Decatur with friends. This evening they will be dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrcj, C. D. Lewton on North Second street. Col. Fred Reppert left today for Chicago where .he will take an airplane to Gr at Falls, Montana. Col. Reppert will arrive in Great Falls tomorrow morning where he will conduct a sale Wednesday and Thursday for the National Hereford show and sale association and return here Friday. Mrs. Camillus Moser and two sons left this afternoon for their home at Fort Mitchell. Kentucky after spending the last few days I visiting with Mrs. Margaret Lose and friends. Junior Warnock. Bruce McAfee and Max Smith of Bluffton attended the street fair last evening. Charles Teeple, daughter. Mrs. T. T. McClintock and granddaughter Joan, of Rome City, spent the day in Decatur. Mrs. Ralph Wilson of Kendallville is a guest at the Bowers home. Misses Margaret Uhl and Gertrude Springer returned to their homes in Toledo today after a visit with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Draper and sons Kenneth, and Robert and daughter Dorothyea of Sidney. Ohio spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Draper and family. Mr. and Mrs. C. C.-Gause and daugh-] ter Pattie were afternoon visit-one. I —o Receive Highway Bids August 27 Indianapolis. Aug. 6 —<U.R>~ Bids ‘ on approximately one-fourth of I Indiana’s $6,000,000 highway improvement program will be re- ■ ceived by the highway commission Aug. 27. James D. Adams, chairman, announced today. The work will be located in Vanderburgh. Wabash, Johnson, Boone, Tippecanoe, Orange. Mar , ion and Clark counties and will I have a total estimated cost of| $1,593,000. i The letting will be the first
held under the new federal regulations establishing minimum wage scales for skilled, unskilled and intermediate labor on a basis of population. o Fort Wayne Man Commits Suicide Fort Wayne, end.. Aug. 6—(UP) —D. E. Cowell, 54, died in a hospital here last night as the reoult <jf a self inflicted bullet wound in his I head. He ehot himself on the front I porch at the .home of Mr. and Mrs. Casper Holcher yesterday afternoon. Dr. Raymond J. Berhoff, Allen county -coroner, returned a verdict BOWEL TROUBLE NEVER RETURNED Indiana Man Says He NEVER Needs Physics or Laxatives Any More MR. ANDREW RESLER. of 1129 E. 9th St., Indianapolis, Ind., found that the new, scientific medicine, called Indo-Vin
gives lasting relief. “1 took IndoVin eleven months ago,” sa-id Mr. Resler, “and my bowels have been regulated eve r since that time. Previously m y bowels were always constipated, in fact, this bowel trouble ha,l gotten to be CHRONIC with me and II had become a
i f a MR.RESLER
CONSTANT USI FIR of laxatives and physics, end I had to -take something for my r bow-els nearly EVERY NIGHT. I I tried ALL KINDS of medicines, but , Indo-Vin was the only thing I ever - found that turned out to be WHAT I NEEDED. And it gave my -bowels a wonderful cleansing and regulating and I never need physics any more. Yes, it has been nearly a year since I took IndoVin and this bowel trouble has never come back on me." The I Holthouse drug store, here in DeI catur is selling great quantities of | Indo-Vin; also being sold by every | good druggist throughout this section.
• ! f suicide. He said Cowell had been 1 ■ despondent because of ill health. o Coal Bill Deadlock Threatens Measure Washington. Aug. 6 — (UP) —! , House ways and means committee! Detnocraas failed today to break a deadlock jeopardizing chances otj csngressional action this session on the Guffey coal bill. It was re orted Denio rats voted ; | nine to seven in favor of reporting: ; favorable the bill but that the sev-! en opponents refused to be bound | by the unit rule. Unless further conferences (break the d adlock, committee leaders) , predicted the bill—a "Must” moss-
‘‘Wrap Me Up” Home Frock Or "Cover All" Becoming to Slender and Mature Figures I By Ellen Worth A* » / \ \ * s * p f\ Here's a new type of wrap-around / XK *kz 1 apron home frock, that is quite smart // ’ ■ -nnugh to run to market in. / V\*L * * ftf/ It has a paneled bodice that carries N. x-y m *bJ / j down into the skirt, that would flat- / »er anv figure The flared sleeves are f nVA cool and prettv. V'l =7 r \ i / » «J \* r\ Calico or percale print is especially tn" y J « l< *\*\A nice for its development »Jsj\ /vG R' JK* Lt J hip/A Til \*»x i.i As a “Cover-All” to wear over I 7? 1 I « one’s “h"st” frock to prepare din I / m j » j • ner. it is nice made of a dimitv I I * / l-te **l nrint. I / I ♦ *J It’s unbelievably simple and in- I ' I '»I *’l expensive to make it. / I * t L- • 1 I I it I* * I Kfvle XTn ,310 is destined for sir»s I I * • r 1 1 14. 16. ’9 vears 36 38. 40 and 4’- I „ S * *1 inches bust Size 36 requires 4’4 iTu I'4' f | vards of 36 inch material. MIA I st *l**l ' v k *i f* * I j Summer Fashion Rook contains ** I j e-onv more smart, enol vocation O . L L < *1 clothes. Order Vonr C opv Todayl I tft *1 ** I Price of ROOK 10 cents. **' <l [* * A Price of PATTERN 13 cents. ||/ | M*'» A fcoin preferred). Wrap coin care- / F'hWl I * * Vw * I Pattern Mail Address: N. Y. Pat- I' 310 ern Bureau (Decatur Daily Demo- 'll I /L\ crat) 23rd St. at Fifth Avenue, / D / New York City. / 1
PAGE THREE
1 ure~is dad for the session. Only one of seven republicans on the committee is expected to vote for the measure. Trapeze Performer Injured By Fall • Findlay, 0.. Aug. 6 — (UP) — j Louis Kin.k, 30, J ffersonville, Ind., i flying trapeze perf rmer with the I Lewis Circus, was in Findlay lios- ' pital today with injuries received in a 15-foot fall during a (performance. !An X-ray examination was to be ' mad today. King had a broken arm j and was believed to have internal injuries. Dante Wednesday Sunset.
