Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 181, Decatur, Adams County, 31 July 1936 — Page 3
fcIN SOCIETY -— 1 -—'■="
■hating B atted ed B? .lun.l «" ,ni ; ',7'l .ii.i-riu' w#* attended by ■ "’L.rs anil ><Kl" visitors ■ r , ~.,,.„ny Mrs. Helen y lv ,' i > leader and .Ml*. among the visit-1 B , ~,,.. i,,.-i,m Oil bedding ■ u j up. painting of vases ’ ■ I by Mrs. William, ■ , jr . d w. Ib'iner Arnold. Lan club ■L a r meeting V cluh met re-1 ■ Kin t'liv'■• v,hla " hon ”‘ ,)urinK ! B"' ~.... .neotinK plans were ■ J pirn., io be held In But-: BL, V .. August is. ■ the business re-, B . r> am. cake and . B^ 1 *- ,'.d in tiie dining l B ..... h'«-'.’-sea Mrs. Lloyd I Bn- 11 “ ,i<l Walt ■ ■bon. BnORS daughter Etm giRHTDAY PARTY L T.,’:: l.'i'r entertained with a . L, ..lav atieinoon honoring! Lf'ih birthday anniversary of, . Slighter Jackie, (lames w«re Led and refreshments of ice L_ and rake were served. The! L r : .|>t r< reived many pretty lime present were Phyllis and ba ()»ens. Charlene and Mary, ShacK ey. Dolores Walters i jjr Jean Roop. Jaqueline War-| U .; y.rni.i .lean Wilson.
Juniors! Bolero Jacket Buttons “Or"
'4 Young Favorite Sun-Fack Dress Has Smart Contrast By Ellen W orth 5 A sophisticated bolero dress fc: dues for spectator or for [The clever way the bolero kce: buttons "on" completely IPiks the sun-back dress. p)r sports or sunning, you’ve Marling sleeveless sun-back ft". pide arm bands give you opportunity to work out tent contrast in trim' so imfa't this season. stten print with plain white ! ’tm and jacket, is a perfect “ Ct and so inexpensive. CtsA, shantung, Indian cotton linen and tub pastel silks t other nice mediums. « u J-" 19 is des *B nc( I for 11. 13. h and 17 years. Site ‘V yards of -W-inch K' 1 .* 1 tor dress with If yard F*' lnf h contrasting for jacket. Illustrated Home DressE”* Book contains the latest p»ns together with dressmakIlt'sors and the fundamental ■np.ts of sewing. Whether ,»<■ an experienced sewer or bepnner. yon will find this * helpful indeed in making er clothes. It is j ust F ideas to enhance your own Ton simply can’t afford Send for your copy or BOOK 10 cents, of PATTERN 15 cents fair P 7 ferre< ’’ Wrap coin
NE * YORK PATTERN BUREAU, Decatur Daily Democrat. 220 East 42nd Street. Suite. 1110. NEW YORK. N. V.
R G Used Cars the best your money can buy 1935 Ford 1 </ 2 Ton 1936 ! 2 Ton Pickup 157" wheelbase stock rack ’ 6 P? tires genuine Ford hot air Al! New Tires. heater S2OO-00 OFF $l4O-00 orr — I 1934 Deluxe Plymouth New Paint and Tires $465-00 1935 Ford DeLuxe 1935 Truck 1 */ 2 Ton Coupe - 157” wheelbase Like New, All New Rubber. < 6,000 miles. Paint like new. Alo. Schmitt Motor Salos I Your Local Ford and Lincoln Dealer / LOWEST FINANCE RATES IN ADAMS COUNTY.
CXUT. CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phone* 1000 —lOOl Friday Pocahontas Lodge, Red Men's I Hall. 7:30 p. m. St. Maryu Twp, Home Kc Club, ; Bolib School, 7 p. m. Saturday Glr's’ Group King’s Heralds, .Mary Pollock. 2 p. m. Markets At A Glance Stocks, lower and fairly active. Bonds, mixed, U. S. governments i irregularly higher, corporation isI sues, irregular. Curb stocks, mixed. j Chicago stocks, irregularly high- . er and active. Call money, 1 per cent. Foreign exchange, easier against 'dollar; French francs only Vi point i above gold import point. Cotton up 5 to 7 points. | Grains at new season's highs; ; September corn crosses $1 level i first time in six years. I Chicago livestock, hogs and : sheep steady to strong. Cattle, easy, i Rubber off Ito 3 points. o Opportunity Knocks Twice Toledo, O.—(U.K —Marie Kusan wasn’t present the first time her I name was called at a local thei ater's bank night. A few weeks I later she won *325 at the same th :ater.
m / I ' 6 JjlL > 1719
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, .11’LY 31, 1936.
PERSONALS Vincent Borman, who had nls right knee Injured in an auto accident several weeks ago, is able to be around on crutches. The leg U mending nicely. Mr. and Mrs. Harve Hil/arrf of Akron, Ohio are here for the CenI tennlal. Fifteen ladies representing the Homstead home economics club, ac- ’ ccmpanled by Miss Marion Nuprud. Hom stead supervisor, enjoyed a * tour through the Holeurn baking company In Fort Wayne yesterday. Mr. and .Mrs. Harry H. Hull and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hayworth of , North Webster will be the guests of i lie former'u son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. George Bond this' evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. King and sons will leave tomorrow for Hattie Creek for a week's visit? The Wooster, Ohio. Daily Record carries an item and picture of Rev. R. Paul Miller of Berne, who will open evangelistic services at the t Fair Haven Brethren church, in , Wooster next Sunday. Music will be furnished by the Ashland Theological Seminary male quartet. Herbert Fullenkamp of Chicago I will arrive In Decatur Saturday for a visit with his mother. Mrs. M. I FuUenkam-p. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Weissling and family of Findlay, Ohio, will come to Decatur Saturday to spend Centennial week. Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Reed of Ind- , ianapolis will visit here Centennial week arriving Saturday. Ray Edwards of Indianapolis ar- ( rived in Decatur yesterday for a' , week-end visit. Miss Ruth 11 lagland and Bob ■ Gass of Fort Wayne visited in Decatur last evening. The employes of the Newberry store enjoyed a hayride Wednesday evening. About thirty, people Includl ing guests of the employees rode over the. country and at the close . f the ride enjoyed hambuigers and dancing. Vincent Borman who has been confined to his home for the ipast several weeks was able to be down town yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. William Bell and family will return home Saturday horn Wawasee Lake where they t-pent the month of July. Mrs. Roy Will of Evanston is the guest of her sister Mrs. William Bowers of this city and other relatives and friends in Fort Wayne for several weeks. Mrs. Arthur Lutz and daughters Virginia and Mary Ann of Louisville. Ky.. arrived in the city Wednesday for a visit with the former’s father, A. C Kohne. Mrs. Richard Engle was a Fort Wayne visitor Thursday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Daniels and children Eugene. Josephine and Phi’ip. have returned from a three weeks’ motor trip along the Pacific coast and through the Rocky mountains. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Koontz of South Whitley and Mrs. C. B. Smith of Detroit, will arrive Saturday to spend Centennial week at the A. R. Holthouse home. E. Dekker of Naarden, Holland, was a visitor In Decatur yesterday. He visited with officials ot the Central sugar company and was a guest of J. Ward Calland and Harold Me Millen at the Rotary meeting last evening. Mr. Dekker represents the Kuhn beet sugar seed company of Holland. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gentle will have as their guest this week-end the latter’s sister Mrs. Charles Moser of Los Angeles. Cal. Mrs. C. M. Prugh yesterday received a round robin letter from eight couples with whom Rev. and Mrs. Prugh were associated in Berlin, Germany for six months. These couples are now scattered in various places In Europe, Australia and Canada and the letter was a most interesting one. o Convicted Kidnaper Commits Suicide St. Paul, July 31—(UP)—John PPeiffer, St. Paul night club manager sentenced today to serve 30 years , in prison for conspiracy in the William Hamm kidnaping, committed suicide in the Ramsey county Jail today. Two doctors tentatively diagnosed his death as the result of poison. o Recover Bodies Os Disaster Victims Chicago, July 31.—<U.R)Two divers crawled into the hull of the sunken sand barge Material Service today on a douTne mission—to bring out bodies of the 15 victims of Wednesday’s disaster, and to learn if possible what caused her to sink with less than a minCash S WE HAVE NO SOLICITORS. YOU GET FULL VALUE. PUMPHREY JEWELRY STORE 1 *
ute's warning. By noon (city time) seven bodies had been brought to a dock where sorrowing rtflatives and friends waited to identify them. Six bodies were taken to Nicholas Emtperllng, Hammond, Ind , undertaker. One was taken to a Chicago undertaker. o Tokyo To Be Host To 194(1 Olympics Berlin, July 31 — ((J.R) —- The international Olympic committee today awarded the 1940 Olympics to Tokyo. Mass Poison Plot By “Black Legion” , Detroit, July 31—(UP)—A Black Legion pl ,t to spread typhoid germe . throughout the city by placing them in mi'k and cheese was revealed today in, a statement made by Fred A. Guthrie, printer and member of the cult, to prosecutor Duncan (’. McCrea. The plot. McCrea said, was dlrect<d against enemb-s of the Black Legion in general and not against
To Try Hop to Portugal /' B j *8 W ■ I /\ ! f ■I Joseph Costa and his Lockheed plane First transatlantic attempt in 1936 is expected to get under way shortly when Joseph Costa, of Corning N. Y., takes off on a nonstop flight from Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, to Portugal. Costa will make the attempt in a Lockheed plane, powered with a Pratt and Whitney wasp motor. The aviator is shown above with the plane at Roosevelt Field, L. L
/ \ . - , - fA \ ' I / tj \ /i X VV\' ■ ' ' \vk \ ' J X wins \ ' ■ /H 1 —M ’ . . the cigarette paper is as Si lH pure as the food you eat ■RBBWW;'U w| 1 j j m- If you could see the Chesterfield Qij|jMggjflr & X paper when it’s being made A you’d know why it’s pure and '■ z ' clean. It looks just about like rich cream. \ When Chesterfield paper comes -e) °ff s h e ro^s **’ s teste d again and J - again to make sure it will burn r without taste or odor. Twice a Week \ /hfe X 4 e now f rom ex p er *ence 45-Piece Dance Orchestra w. '♦ k x . » • .... ANDRE KOSTEUtNETZ-CONDUCTOR **♦ z' that gOOtl Clgai cttC papl't W>TH KAY THOMPSON AND RAY HEATHERTON % Vis V CZ / belpS make rs ROod Charette WED..7P M (C.S.TI-FRI..BP M(C S.T.J ' jZ — ’/f know it'S One TeaSOH COLUMBIA NETWORK, \ hesterfield wins. C 1956. LisaATTAt Mvn» Tobacco Co.
any specific person. The legion i bussed all Jews, Catholics, and cominunUtH and anarchists as Ils enemlew. Me('rea announced this waa the first evidence of any plans for a mass by the hooded society. o Report Thousand Ethiopians Killed Rome, July 31 —(UP) — More than 1,9 o Ethiopians were killed In un attack on Addle Ababa on Wedne.--day. authorlz< zd mMoages from the Ethlop'an capital said today. ■—o - • - - Latest News Os 4-H Activities In Adams County ♦ —♦ Limberlost 4-H The Limberlost 4-H Club held a meeting on July 2'! at »l>e home of Loretta and Berni' Bom her. The meeting was called to order by the representatives for the various contests to be held in connection with th? Decatur Centennial Refreshmente were served by
| | Little Walnut Street House ' >' i "IB It’ll 1 i *. 4* ’aJI i fl: |;v* \ I Mim -aWIMI k Sa* I*!*’ ’lf«st«i t s -t'WjMkwfe rw Bl 1 ftt ■ Si ■—> * i"-’ A- II „ - ||j- I ITS ’X'-f IM T| gjS-ft S H feLL; NI rqli IU stoxk V Lr .i - /. I ~ ’Fikst Floos- Plah svcouo bueoß, BuAt/ This model home was built at 1619 Walnut Street, in the heart of Philadelphia, under the sponsorship of the residential planning division of the American homes’ Exhibitors, with the cooperation of the Federal Housing Administration. The plans for the F ‘ re approved by the architectural division of the Housing Administration before the building It is estimated by the builders that the house would cost approximately $6,000, exclus.v< d. The houss is of concrete and is said to be 100 per cent fireproof. The roof and downspov.tr, copper. Beside the rooms shown in the plans sketched here, there is a full basement with a rcer room, laundry, and utility room.
: Loretta and Bonnie Booher. Dorothy I i and Agnee Fravel. i The Preble Junior 4-H Club met I jon July 23 at the Preble School. Dur-j i ng the work period, finishing I ‘ouches were put on th: dresses
land record books were completed, i During the business meeting the i club decided to visit the Kirkland I 4-H Club at their achievement day I program on July 28. I Miss Anita Stolp gave a talk on Posture and Selma and Leona Koe-
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nernan gave a vocal selection- ( A duet was sung by Leona Peck and Harriet Miller. Following the games, refreshments were served by Selma and Leona Koeneman. afternoon wa» spent in filling out president. Beatrice Matnys.
