Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 61, Decatur, Adams County, 11 March 1936 — Page 3
» SOCIETY
W. Xn -a ■ IBB 1 * ■Aiii> v • ' ‘ • |B .Mr.™' 1 - CLASS £ ' *: ■ X'i...... jlv —' — SCOUTS meeting . x Mr ■ ■ ■'- " B£ -■'•' : - 1 ....... »as IB- ■ • ■'"‘" ; ».(,»» th- Women <>f B, Aib.-rt Mlii.T Of the affair. Bov"' S ' C ‘ FTV MEETS M p 5 /c-’ENSTF.IGER .■■ • •I’.' home "f H |B--_ :■■ - Eu-’- ■ iiiiiu :■-. |B v East. H ■ homes. ■ _\ I tman led |B .. • w in. h :he . on Riol" Mi-- Florence ■ -w e | B■h —'° — ~ • BH Roki Grow At Zero IB < . L c. ;■ \ T.,v. :■ wu>.i> hoitii-ulturist. is Bt roses ill his garden in weather. He said the 'liilst-nas , 1 T.. . , |M*" ' and HI * — Boy Sets Broken Arm ' 'U.R> i T.-m- = srii.uis boy. who learns to jB&» by wati hitig others do Erst Twice Louis broke his Re-ntly he nd! down and | eui again This time he B* arm him., i ,\ physician Lrsis did a remarkably fine
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CLTTB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mre. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Wednesday Frivolity altib, Mrs. Florent T. Leonard. 7:30 ip. in. St. Ann’s study club, Mi*. Roy Lehman, 7:30©. nt. Zion Lutheran Missionary, Mr*. Ed 'Boknecht, 2 p. m. Zion Reformed I.adim’ aid, church, 2:30 p. n. Shakespeare, Mrs. 0. O. Walton, 2:30 p. m. Historical club. Mrs. Sant Shamip, 2:30 p. m. Thursday Pleasant Dale Ladies’ aid, MrsHarold Heim, all day meeting. P. B. W. M. A.. Mrs. Marie DeBolt. 7 p. m. Union Chapel ladies’ aid, Mrs. Ami Miller, 1:30 p. m. Zion Junior Walther league, school 7:30 p. m. Zion Reformed G. M. G., church 7:30 p. m. Mount Pleasant Ladies’ aid. Mrs. Archie Susbar, 2 p. m. Eastern Star, business and social I meeting, Masonic hall. 7:So p. m. Eta Tati Sigma. Mlm Pat Egley, 7:30 p. m. 'Better Homes club, Monroe high school, 7 p- mPinochle and bunco party, Women of Moose, Moose home, 7:30 p. m. Friday G. E- Pinochle club, club rooms, S p- m. Union Chapel C. I. C., Mrs. Harvey Koos, pot look supper, 7:30 ' p. m. American Legion Auxiliary, Legion hall, 7:45 p. m. Pocahontas lodge, Red Men's hall, ! 7:30 p. m. Saturday Cafeteria supper and parcel post sale, Methodist Episcopal church 5 to 7 p. «n. Death Made Triply Certain Sudbury, Ont. — (U.K) —William Minkinen, 55. made triply sure he would die. Standing on a rock be- | side the Vermillion river, he lit the fuse of a stick of dynamite he | held in his left hand, slashed his i throat with a razor and leaped into the river. o Baby's Cries Save 11 Ottawa. Ont.— (U.K) —A crying baby saved 11 persons from asphyxiation by coal gas in a home here. All occhpants of the house l were sleeping when the baby. Ronald Karam. 11 months old. awoke with a piercing scream, waking its father, who spread the alarm. Hitch-Hiking Traps Fugitive Riverside. Cal. — (U.R) —George Waller, wanted by authorities on three different charges, successfully “thumbed" a passing automobile for a hitch hike home. Undersheriff Stephen Lynch who was driving the car promptly conducted his I guest to the county jail. o Gas Found in Water Well | Bellingham, Wash., •— (UP) — While drilling for water on the shore of Lake Samieh. near here, Prank Sugeler was surprised when he struck natural ga».
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1936.
Personals Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Vance visited ‘ In Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon. •Mrs. Ruth llolllngßWorth and daughter Betty Jean, Mrs. Miles Roop and Mrs. Harve Baker attended the funeral services of Mrs. Laura Beerbauer in Geneva Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Agnex Andrews returned to her home in this city Tuesday evening from Bluffton. She was accompanied by her son-in law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Swaim. Rev. Father Vincent Ehinger visited friends and relatives In Decatur Tuesday afternoon. He was enroute from Holy Hill, Wisconsin, to Detroit. While here, he baptised his niece, Anne Catherine, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Ehinger. Charles ißrodbeok, W. Guy Brown and Pete Reynolds attended the meeting of the Bluffton Rotary club Tuesday evening. C. C. Baxter and daughter, Mrs. jJ. L. Elam of Fort Wayne, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Delma Elzey Tuesday. Mre. Laura Dykeman o’ route 5, shopped in Decatur today. Oscar Ehrsam of Monroe attended to (business in Decatur today and renewed his Daily Democrat subscription. Mrs. Stella Coverdale and daughter Mary Madeline of Fort Wayne I were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kalver Tuesday evening. Mrs. Catherine Hergenroether. mother of Mrs. W. A. Klepper of 320 Mercer Avenue, wax admitted to the Adams County Memorial hospital last Saturday for medical care. James Sprague who was operated on at the hospital Tuesday is reported as being some better today. o— GREAT BRITAIN ntTNt ’KD FI!OMUPAGE ON ed a favorable settlement of the Ethiopian dispute. If Britain opposes sanctions against Germany, it was indicated, Italy intends to seize the occasion to persuade the French and other members of the league that they should no longer apply sanction against Italy. Cross Frontiers Paris, Mar.. 11. —(U.R) —Six times in the past two days German j planes have crossed the French frontier, it was learned today. In each instance, French aircraft have ascended to intercept the German planes and chase them across the border. AuLi-aircraXt guus not, brought into action. Most recent incidents were reported from Veckring. where a German plane was sighted at an altitude of 6,000 feet at a point approximately four miles inside French territory, at Montmey, two miles on the French side of the border, and at Kanfen. near the frontier. Monday German planes crossed the Luxembourg frontier and also the French frontier from the Saar. Sixth army corps headquarters lat Nancy said a German plane flew over the French village of Waldwisse in the department of Moselle and a second German plane had been seen to the south of Waldwisse but it was not certain if it had crossed the boundary. The newspaper Excelsior said that “it is not impossible that Germany is peeking to provoke an incident which would facilitate conversations with utter signatories to the Locarno treaty.” o G. A. R. Post Fades Fast Findlay. O-. t - J (UP) —Last year four Civil War veterans attended an annual dinner in their honor. This year, only John Hart remained to attend. o— ——<—< Plane Seeders Incorporated Salem, Ore. •—t(UP)—A company has been incorporated here to eeed and fertilize agricultural land by eirplane on a commercll basis. o >—. Dog Returns Lost Purse Boonville. Mo. — (UP) — Police Officer C. Dyer's German .police dog found a purse on a downtown street and returned it to his mistress — who had lost it the day before- — o Clock 18 Feet Tall Lima. 0.. —(UP) — William F. Neuman believes that his 18-foot grandfather clock is the talleat hand-made clock in the world It waa made in 1827 in ermany by J. H. Knoet. GLEE CLUB TO (CONTINUED .FROM Hanano—Lewis Smith. Yatsubusa. a Japanese priest— James Darkless.
HELPS AVOID MANY COLDS Especially designed A aid f° r nose and H cMU I upper throat, where Ml most colds start. Used in time, helps \ prevent many colds. Vicks Va tro Not
' a s or centuries the world has gone ' z -’ ’ ■ z to the Near E.ast for its flavors and // aromas and spices. yS&r J/ . f// k t. // //f ... and today Chesterfield imports thou- // //J sands of hales of tobacco from Turkey and Greece to add flavor and fragrance to Chesterfield Cigarettes. Turkish tobacco is expensive. The import duty alone is 35 cents a pound. „ But no other place except Turkey and v Greece can raise tobacco of this particular aroma and flavor. This Turkish tobacco, blended IHr with our own American tobaccos in / /6e correct proportions to bring out / J the finer qualities of each tobacco, helps to make Chesterfields outstand- I I ing for mildness and for better taste. *l^s-../ | V ' tdF •• ‘ or madness .. lor better taste t> 1956. Licgitt & Mvtzs Tobacco Co.
Guards—Ralph Peterson. Russell Butler. Court attendants — Alice Baker. I Jeanette Christen, Luella Frohn- j 1 apfel. Harriet Fruechte. Rosemond i Hart, Gladys Harvey. Rosella 1 Heare, Dorcas Hoagland, Eileen j Jackson. Kathryn Kohls. Melba j Kraft, Jane Krick, Phyllis Krick. Margaret McGill, Maxine Martin, Wilma Miller, Catherine Murphy. Ruth Porter. Zulu Porter. Gertrude Schultz, Janet Schrock, Peggy Staley, Lena Teeter, Jeanette Winnes, Gladys Wynn, Elma June Wynn, Jeanette Gard, Francis Andrews, Bob Ashbaucher, Bob Aeschliman. Junior Barker. Don Bixler, Ed Eichhorn. Doyle Gay, Bud Hurst. David Macklin. Dale Myers, William Schrock. Ellis Squier, Harold Zimmerman. PUBLIC WELFARE {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONEY ministration of the $14.000,000 annual program be placed with county commissioners. The original bill provided that a bi-parti-san county board of five, including two women, be appointed by circuit court judges. Win Concession Indianapolis, Mar. 11 — (U.R) — Indiana retailers, their proposed march on the state house routed by rain, won an important concession today when Gov, Paul V. McNutt promised to give them a public hearing on the Jernegan Mil to repeal the gross income tax law. A special committee of the retailers representing between 1,000 and 5,000 delegates discussed procedure at a downtown, hotel. The retailers committee was scheduled to meet with the governor at 2:30 p. m. and advise him that their business will be ruined if the tax is continued. DAVID ADAMS TO Dogs “Held For Questioning” Toledo. — (U.R) —Two dogs were i “held for investigation” by police after the slaying of S 3 chickens at the farm property of David Walker, poultryman. Officers said burrows had been dug under the coop housing the fowls. Paw marks were found on the premises. Ib ■ NutahaTl There are three ways of getting out of a scrape—push out, back out and keep out.
DISTRICT MEET AT MONTPELIER K. Os P„ Pythian Sisters To Attend District Meeting March 23 Members of Kekionga Lodge No. 65 and Pythian Sisters temple cf this city have received an invitation to attend the district meeting of all Knights of Pythias lodges and Pythian sisters auxiliaries in Montipelier on Monday, Mauch 23rdThis meeting was originally, scheduled for last February 17. but was postponed (because of the subzero wheather and icy roads prevailing. Montpelier Lodge No. ISB and Zeona Temple No- 342 will ibe the hosts and hostesses for the meeting, with a short session in the afternoon and a basket supper from 5:30 to 7:00 at the conclusion of the session. The principa session will begin at 7:3« in the evening with Grand Chancellor Joe W. Todd, of Hammond and Grand Chief Fern Beber, of Fort Wayne as the main speakers. The program includes diversified music by several groups of children from the Pythian home at Lafayette. Members of lodges and temples in Blackford, Randolph, Jay. Adams. Delaware, Wells, Huntington. Wabash and Grant counties are among those to be represented at the meet, in addition to their invited guests. Harvey T. 'Walker of Montpelier, Grand Prelate, ie chairman of the district eveeutive committee, which will have charge. Plans will be made for the transliportation of the local members of the order and auxiliary to enable them to attend. . *_ o Arkansas City, Kan. — (U.R) —Arkansas City will pay $36,000 for a debt of $12,000 contracted in 1896. Services of three attorneys were paid for 40 years ago through an issue of 10-year, 6 per cent bonds. They were refunded twice, running the interest to twice the principal.
MONROE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. John Floyd and E. Il W. Bueche spent Sunday at Elkhart. the guests of relatives. Mrs- Bueche I accompanied them home after a > I few days’ visit with her daughter,, I Miss Louise BuecheMr. and Mrs. Roy Baker of Fort I i Wayne visited his aunt. Mrs. Sarah | Wagoner and othere relatives in I j Monroe Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Klopfenstein and Mr. and Mrs- Ransom Barkley of Decatur called on Mr. and Mrs. ’ Menno Roth and family Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J.r.Jhn Amstutz and family of Fort Wayne visited Mrs. ■Amstutz' parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Wagoner Sunday, Mrs. Wagoner ie very ill. Jason Essex of DeWitt. Arkansas, has been visiting his father, Jeese Essex, and other relatives for a few , days. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Noffsinger en- ' tertained at Sunday dinner for Mr. and Mrs. Sam Haggard and family 'and Miss Dorothy Haggard. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Meyers spent I Sunday at Fort WayneGeorge Rice remains seriously ill at the Memorial Hospital at Decatur. Max Bahner spent Monday in I I Fort Wayne. Mr and Mrs. Ferd Smith of Fort Wayne spent the week-end with Mrs. Smith’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. C- E. Bahner. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hahnert of . Hartford City spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Alferd Hahnert. They I were acconupanied home by their ! daughter, Carylon Sue after spend- | ing the week with her grand-par- , I ents. New Motor Racket Seen Stockton. Cal.-- (U.R) —Automobile registering autorities suspect the attempted registering of thousands 1 of non-existent cars by professional thieves who want a 1936 license tag for the next car they steal. ■ Numerous clerks are checking up . every applicant. I Fairfield. Cal. —(UP)—With the i spinach market being ovier-done, Solano County farmers have decid- . ed to develop a rival industry- They . will concentrate on raising and shipping mustard greens.
Mr. and Mrs. Forest Andrews and i Mrs- E. D. Crist s;ent Tuesday in i Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hendricks and daughters Mareem and Louise ;of Fort Wayne were the guests of
Eves of World Focus on Them! «i! i»i -I $ FJ ‘ a t // L-A ' AL Adolf Hitler q p - *[ Premier Sarraut | IIL " it > Ir a Premier Mu»«olini~| BB6H Sir Anthony Eden E|l|9 Four men hold a central position in tha international martial drama which may involve France and Germany in another war. When i Adolf Hitler, German reichsfuehrer, sent 25,000 troops into the demilitarized Rhine area, violating the Versailles treaty, France retaliated by garrisoning its famous Maginot line with 150,000 soldiers und protesting to the League of Nations, through Premier Albert Sarraut. Sir Anthony Eden, British foreign minister, held the key to Britain’s position, pledging his country’s aid in case of invasion of France or Belgium, while Premier Mussolini was believed to be a potential ally of France if French diplomats succeeded in easing sanctions imposed by the league against Italy because of the Italo--2- .Ethiopian hoatUiticft,,
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1 Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith Saturday, i Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Stucky of Marlon spent the week-end with Mr. s i and Mrs. William Stucky. ; ■ Earl Souders who has been ill, [ i is improving slowly.
