Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 149, Decatur, Adams County, 24 June 1937 — Page 5

I ROOSEVELT |T FORT WAYNE fl t Lady To Speak In flr o rt Wayne On Nofl veniber 17 r t Wuy*'**- ‘I" 11 *' '•'* Mm. U k l in Delano Roosevell. first fl** f ||p. kind, will speak in this fl, IVnln. sd.iy night. Nowmliei fl 7 , the Shrine auditorium, lloosevell. wife of the Pres BBLi'tlie rnitnil Sillies, will be hen- under the auspices flpl'l.l Painnia chapter of J» B i xi sorority. flueiationsliil' of the individual eotniniinily" is the subject by Mrs- Roosevelt tor her lieie Every individual has ■gpliasis to his existence, one Ij |„ rsolial phase tile re to himself. to his his surroundings and fain sound, ids relationship to tlie W, the relationship as a mem whole human family It Bin this capacity as a member coniinunity that Mrs RooseBit discusses his responsibility

3ununz/t IsANDALS rjoSI / / \ A KkZTz---I of STYLES I ALLSIZES hILLER-JOnES SHOES |»HU ■ ■ Tiff ■■■■■! bfciw W M 2 N. Second St. Decatur, Indiana Holthouse-Schulte & Co ’ I a Arrow I nWuF' W' youRE LUCKy ww k WO IF WE HAVE Ojj»i S-ZZ DESIGNS ON Fx yOU! A fi\« § W' flt \AS S ' W"® 8 Wflp X V Next time you get a patterned shirt - get an Arrow. S S For everyone of our Arrows is comet inSk V>| correct in color — correct in Sty •• • , k » the manner that has made Arrow America s No. I « Sk masculine style authority. W And all of our Arre»s are cur in ike h»» MiW igl S) form-fil design. All are SanfoSaed-Shrunk .. • ■ V new shirt free if one ever shrinks. | Holihouse Schulte &Co |

1 to society. Noted as a new.pap or columnist ■ and magazine writer. Mra. Roose. i volt makes but few lectures each I here by the Psi lota Xis The money from her writings and her talks Is Immediately turned over to charitable organizations. Her dally column appears hi newspapers throughout the country and this work is done by Mrs. Roosevelt in addition to her many dutieA as wife of the President and , mother of a faintly. — oPREBLE NEWS I Mrs. John K-lrchner and daugh'I J ers, Irene, Lorine, Erma, and Mrs. J June Schackley ana eon Darrell, ~ spent Sunday at Klingei Lake. } i Mt. and Mrs. Delma Elzey and , ■ daughter Glenuys of Decatur were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Doug- , ias Elzey, Thursday. Little Jackie 'Arthur of Fort . Wayne visited with Lowell, Ronald . and John Allen Smith, Saturday. Mrs. Martha Homeler, Mrs- Mari tha Longmeier, and Miss Clara Linnemeier of Fort Wayne were the gnesUi of Mrs. Catherine Linnemeier. Mrs. Minnie Liunemeier, and ' Mr, and Miw. Herman Linuemeier,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1937.

Al Smith Takes Stroll in Paris ■* \W y Jib IK# s i fflgß » Wilt HBjfl mIIm tMt I ■I w .M... "" ‘ IAI Smith with a friend | ——._ , Continuing his tour of European capitals, former Gov Alfred E. Smith of New York. left, takes a stroll in Pans with a friend.

Friday. Susie Dilling of Cincinnati, Ohio,’ is spending a week with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Dillfag and family. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bultemeier of Bingen visited Mrs. George Buitemeier and daughters, Monday. Dr- and Mrs. Floyd Grandstaif and daughters of Decatur, Mr. Cumminas of Indianapolis, and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Grandstaff and family spent Father's Day as the guests of Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Grandetaff Mrs. Joe Drum aud Mrs. Hugh Hauers of Bluffton spent Friday with Mrs. Milton Hoffman and family. Mrs. Samuel Smith and sons were the guests of Mrs. Arthur and children for several days. Little Delane Welling of Pleasant

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Mills is spending the week with Ws graudparenbs, Mr. and Mrs. Albert I Werling. zjg. Susie Dilling and Casper Dilling ■ of Decatur were Sunday dinner • gueste of Mr. and 'Mrs. Otto Dilling and family. - ——_— q 1 Berne Post Office Contract Awarded I—— The contract for the construction 1 of the new Berne post office was ' today awards dto James I. Barnes ■ of Logansport. The winning bid, submitted several days ago, was t $38,861. Mr. Barnes will arrive la I Berne next week to open plans for | the work. Construction is scheduled i te start about the middle of July.

SENATE PASSES RAILROAD BILL Measure Providing Railroad Pensions Goes To : W hite House Washington, Juue 24. (U.R) The i senate late yesterday passed and sent to the White House the railroad retirement bill establishing u new pension system for the nation's 1,200,000 railroad employees. Tho measure, approved by both railroad management aud labor, was passed without debate. The bill provides for annuities us high as $l2O per month after i workers reach the age of 65. The entire system would be ad--1 ministered by the federal governI meat but the cost would be borne I equally by rail employers and work- ! ers through taxes provided in a I measure now pending before the | house. i Treasury department actuaries i estimate the measure will require benefit disbursements of $58,280,000 for the 1938 fiscal year, this amount gradually increasing to $231,390,000 in 1975. The act is the third of its type since 1934. The first was declared unconstitutional by the supreme court and the second was kept I from full operation by litigation in- | stlgated by the carriers. o Says Speedway Guard Slugged Him, Sues Indianapolis, Ind., June 24 —(UP) —Leslie W. Chastain of (Bedford charged that he was slugged by a guard at the motor speedway here last May 31 and asks $25,000 damI ages in a suit on file today in the ' j Marion circuit court. The Indianapolis motor speedway i ’ corporation is named defendant. { The case probably will come to trial ' in the September term of the circuit court. Q Chicken Thieves Active Fort Worth, Tex.— (U.R) -ResiI i dents on the eastern edge of Fort Worth believe chicken thieves II have a monopoly on the poultry i: business. During the past month i ■ more than 70 chickens have been . stolen in au area of only a few i blocks. , o Intruder Takes Nap I Uhrichsville, O.— (U.R) —Police . answering a call to the residence

Tourist Army Invading Europe Lllf ■ I Mv * ffllv W t9l < 1-9 * '■! W Mill ?r i Brz- 3811 Jl-' 1 (Wli* t* il e\|M'si;i..n Ut I2f 11 I (tVestininster A lilicy [TT; ‘ j iHiiffM"-••••••: «•«•« e ragffirCTTTFi Iff Bon voyage iwHPzyJz Not since before the depression has there been such an exodus of Americans to foreign shores as this summer in May alone more than 33.000 United States citizens were Issued passports for foreign travel, many of them attracted by the coronation at Westminster Abbey Another 30,000 are expected to cross the Atlantic tn June, j drawn abroad by the Pans exposition and other special events. Analysis of the tourist army which annually visits Europe from United States reveals that housewives are the most traveled class, compnsing 14 per cent of the voyagers. Students and teachers, takI tng advantage of summer vacations, make up another 20 per cent ot those who keep the ocean liners busy.

of Mrs. Alice Schear found her alarmed at the presence of an intruder who had entered during her absence and curled up in a chair to sleep. The man was later charged with intoxication. o Bull's Eva Made harder Kent, O.—(U.R)—Kent State university students think Robin Hood was a piker. Student archers are becoming so proficient that they use two-inch metal rings suspended five feet short of the target as a path for arrows sent winging ■ toward the bull’s eye.

Woman, 71, Dances Jig ■I Willoughby, O. -(U.R) Mrs. Min • nie Armstrong danced a jig at an • anniversary birthday party given • her by the Daughters of Union I Veterans. She is 71. 0 Navajos Fearful of Drowning , Grants, N. M. (U.R) —When a 21- ’ year-old Navajo Indian, Salvador ■ Toledo, was drowned in an arroyo ■ his fellow tribesmen refused to touch his body or his horse due 1 to a tribal superstition that touch- ; ing either the man or horse would bring evil upon them.

PAGE FIVE

More Consolidations Planned In State WPA ludlanupolls, Ind, June 24-(UP) —Additional reductions in Administrative coats of the -Indiana works progress administration will be effected by consolidation of the state headquarters, sixth district office and certain divisions of the five other dtdricts, it was announced today. John K. Jennnge, state WPA administrator, said tne units would ■be moved into one building here and estimated the saving in administrative costs would amount to sev, eral thousand dollare. Tentative plans call for moving the divisions of statistics and finance of the WPA district offices here so they may lie operated more econonical’.y and under closer supervision of the state headqquarters. o Big values in footwear during our remodeling sale. Winj nes Shoe Store. K. ' 'ipj mDI There’s far more real paint in a 1 ' gallon can of LOWF. BROTH1J ERS HIGH STANDARD House Paint than there is in a galloa can of cheap paint. HIGH STANDARD covers more surface—is easier to apply—cuts down painters'time—and wears longer. See us before you do ■ny painting—it will pay you! Holthouse Drug Co. i