Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 167, Decatur, Adams County, 16 July 1937 — Page 3
M SOCIETY
■* J ° yS .°im T 'Z r< <> r ,h< ' Pl,lUof il"' Bapt’ut Sunday ' m<l i* l ’ K"*' s,s - ■ ' , |wui.l of Jacksonville. FloH ■, ilo"''I 1,1 Tl,urß ' in-' ° f |.- || to at her cottage on ■Z,- n in <li»n.-r «ns enjoyml nt M ’ fo .|„w. .1 by a routine bu-i---y ~■<■. Veiling and awlmm- ■, »,.m tin: iiii'l'.-.ii ns of the afterTin' August mooting will be ~,',1,,. home of Mm. Curtis ■ w ,.r. wrst of the city. ■ or£ ign MISSIONARY ■ CTS NEW OFFICERS a. -0.. n ‘ f-r. inn m’esionary ■ 'Methodist Epicopal V‘ not a' I'"' of Mrs - EI- Tim: -day aft< mon am! the’following officers: ■ v .■ 11. A. Stuckey, president; E,. Han Ti ndall, vice president; Frank Criet. secretary; Mrs I'amli' l -- treasurer; Mrs. Friedt, superintendent of E Ib-ialtit-; Mrs. Delton PassEater. Standard Bearers; Mrs. J. E Myers .Bittle Light Bearers. ■ j, ;.,. xiblick was in < liarg ' wuram and tile d-'votiona's.
[ b .-Wu'&r Atj 00 4TAPPING TREES 1 31K' '< si*® ■ ON FIRESTONE f IOS MnANUTIONSINLIBERia I fw ’Wi, C' . Ku ■ h n fb. •• fUnuiidni Z .OS3c/938k * WM ■ come an oer increasing ffiMKSk 'Z ■ lupp y hrcM«»ne Rye-; - Hi in prixlucing nw fra Z ■ nu.ertai'- ' turm-j E SS'Z .’ ■an J (0 ur.C ’ Hf ■Y OU more hnoaf m. >ney f , ’ ? ■ - v ‘ * Reason Why INLAW 3\ FIRESTONE GIVES \\ > YOU SO OCH \ \ ■ Extra Value at a N° Extra Cost dßyl| mV h< MinuiUuiti aIWfcWIE YOU GET EXTRA ■ PROTECTION A GAINST nr pr ' -jB3l blowouts — < ight IASLO WAS >WwiSSSs ex ‘ra Poitndi of rubber f ® aiLajg^jggare added to ev cry 100 I B K3fclS3B3? F ,;UIR -' et cori ' > ' v ‘.ie I r . O S BlM Firestone patented t inmVEH Dipping process. Bv this a|frg3ffi£/yfSWr process everv fiber in ••»«»-.■<• every cord in everv plv is ■■■ saturated with liquid rubber, firestone counteracts dangerous STANDARD internal friction and heat that FOR PISSENGER CMS Ordinarily destroy tire life. 45021 S 9 05 YOU GET EXTRA PROTECTION ™ ’-55 AGAINST PUNCTURES — because 19 10.30 under the tread are two extra layers ?; 548 11.40 o f Gum-Dipped edrds. 5-50-17 12.50 MM6 13.05 YOU GET EXTRA PROTECTION AGAINST SKIDDING — because the I•• » I One tread is scientifically designed. SENTINEL sFZZ YOU GET LONGER NON-SKID 4-50-20. Z” 6*05 MILEAGE because ofthe extra tough, — long-wearing tread. COU ri r p Before leaving on your vacation trip, oc i° in the Firestone SAVE A LIFE Zu*™' " *72X Campaign by equipping your car ~i —- 4»87 with a set of new Firestone Standard Tires—today’s top tire value. DON’T RISK YOUR LIFE ON THIN WORN TIRES DO YOU KNOW THAT last year highway wcidents cost the lives of more l £ 1 n 2R/000 men, women «nd tMY children? fiH Os .-'''WD THAT a million more were L injured? Jur VjffigaN THAT more than 40,000 of mete deaths and injuries i *‘re caused directly by Srrt*. »/»»"«** / Sf r mfelM Clothe Voice of Firestone, Monday evenings over Nationwide N. B. C Red Ncntori &• N. RUNYON (GARAGE South First St. Phone 772
Mm. Stuckey prenlded over the busIneHH. Retiwhments wore served by the Mosdumes Little, Friedt, Ilnrry Crownover and Lawrence Archbold. There will be a business meeting of the Tri Kappa sorority Tuesday evening at eight o’clock at the Elk ■, home. The Catholic Lading of Columbia will have a picnic eirpper at Memorial Park Tuesday evening at six o’clock. Those In charge of the affair-Include Mrs. Haymond Kohne Mrs. Charles Miller, Mrs. WlUiam Schumacher and Miss Clara Miller Each one is to bring her own table service. , REFORMED LAQIES PATRIOTIC PROGRAM The ladies' aid society of the Zion Reformed church met in the ent Ttaining rooms Thursday afternoon and enjoyed a patriotic iprogratn under the leadership of Mrs. Ralph Yager, who also was in charge of the devollonals. Miss Kathryn Louiae Yager placed a piano solo followed with a Hawaiian guitar selection by Miso Ruth Yost. Miss Kathryn Schroyer sang a solo and then Miss Schroyer
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1937.
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 • , Friday E. L. C. i:. i( 0 Cream Social, M«I tnorlal Park, s -p. in , V M. C. Class Pot Luck Stkpper, , Hanna Nuttman Park, fi p. ml Mt. Pleasant Bible Class, Mr. and Mrs. Chalmer Sheet*, 8 p. m, Jo'ly Boosters Club Social, Township Hall, Mlddleburry, Ohio. Sunday Immanuel Walther League Ice < ream Social, Bleeke Church t Grounds, 8:80 p. nr. CST, ■wesaay t Psi lota XI Jlcnic Supper, Hanna- . I’uttman Park, 6 p. m. , Tri Kappa Business Meeting , E'ks Home, 8 p. m. . f. L. of c. picnic Supper, Mentor- , ial Park, 6 p. mThursday Zion Reformed Ladies’ Annual Garden Party, Mrs. Ben Schroyer, 7. p m. . and her mother. Mrs. Ben Schroy- , er sang a vocal duet. Group singing was also enjoyed. Final plans were made for the annual garden party, to be held at the home of Mrs. Schroyer Thursday evening at seven o’clock. The public is invited to attend. Further announcements will be made later concerning the affair. Refreshments weie served by the Mesdames Charles Miller, Charles Brodbeck. So' Lord, Tillman Gehrig and Jennie Gehrig. Mis* Frances Dugan of Boston, Maes., has arrived in Decatur for a several months visit with her mother, Mrs. C. A. Dugan. F. V. Mills lias returned from Lake Jamee where he had driven Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Franc, Miss Roee Christen and Mrs. Doll Dudkins. They will spend the summer Mr. France’s cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Saylors and son Richard are spending several weeks at Lake James, Indiana. The Misses Jeanine and Joan Engle of Fowler, Indiana are spending thits week visiting their uncle and aunt. Mr. an ( i Mrs Frank Braun of 315 Jackson street. H. W. McMillen left this noon for Indianapor! s where he will remain for a week. Miss Laurine Teeple has returned from a several week’s visit on the western coast. She was accompanied home by her brother-in-’aw and sister, Mr. and Mrs- Norman White, who will visit here for several wee'ks before returning to Hollywood. Cal. E- E. Sunier, Fred Swisher and Frank Thompson of Bluffton and W. D. Redrup of Huntington attended the Rotary meeting here last -even-lng. Mr. Sunier is secretary and and Mr. Swisher is vice president
Phone SO* ISIS W. Adam
Death Takes No Holiday! r wsi§& W»K r 1 v?v WSiiL & | * < *u-75< EaMK ■ JT£tA_j BH' . ■ ■ >' ■ ‘ t ' ■■ i v ” &z ■’X ’ R®fe]R63srfSißP * *»£ w!F ’ wmwgf - ® . ’ >'*&’ •«B’ y %; :r : W wt e ■ — Tragic tableau ■ It was a holiday for Mrs. Martha Griffith of Chicago when she went to the beach for a swim, but death takes no holiday, and the Griffith family excursion ended In tragedy when life guards recovered her body from Lake Michigan, above, after she had been caught in the undertow. This dramatic and unusual photo serves as graphic warning against the heavy toll of life taken annually by drowning.
. of the Bluffton club. , | The Misses Zula Porter, Maxine I Martin and Evelyn Adams motored -to Muncie thie morning. They will be accompanied home by Miss Vera Porter of Ball State Teachers’ college, who will spend the summer vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Giles V. Porter. Mrs. John Schug, son Richard ' and Miss Feral Fennimore left thia afternoon for Ocean City, Maryland, where they Join Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Ambler and daughter, Effie, of Waahington, D. C- and spend a mont's vacation there. , 0 ! I Sweethearts Are Accident Victims Bloomington, Ind , July 16 —(UP) —Only a few hours before they i - were to have been married, Lester Pfaff and Catherine Sater, both 21 ■ on near here, were killed last night when an automobile rammed a fallen tree on a highway during a I storm. . | Three others riding in the car with the young coup'e escaped with ' ’only minor injuries. They are Floyd ! ’ 1 and Francis Pfaff, IS year-old twin ’ . brothers of the victim, and Ira i Brosman, 18. ’I o —_ Prominent Physician Is Fatally Wounded Providence, R. 1., July 16 —(UP) , —Dr. George W. Webster, 39, chief ■ obstetrician at Homeopathic hospi- - i tai, was wounded fatally by gun fire r at his fashionable home early today. | i-He died at a hospital without namj ing his assailant. i The shooting occurred, police , said, when Dr. Webster entered the | vestibule of his home after garag--1 ing hie automobile. i Police theorized the assailant had ; . entered the home previously by an-1 .'other door. . I o Over 200 Killed As Rebels Shell Madrid , Madrid, July 16 —,(UP) — More \ than 20 persons were ki'led or injured today in a rebel shelling of the outskirts of Madrid. The shelling lasted from 8 to 9 A. M. thereafter firing was deeul- | tory. Many insurgents were killed or wounded when the loyalists blew a nationalist front line trench facing the medical school in University City in western Madrid. The loyalist simultaneously exploded a mine and a counter-mine after a heavy artillery barage. Two Youths Drowned In Madison County Indianapolis,lnd., July 16 —(UP) Two youths were drowned and several persons injured by lightning yesterday during a brief heat wave which was followed by heavy wind and ra ' n storms. Lyndall illites, 17, and Phillip Haitt, 13, were drowned In a gravel pit near Rigdon, Madison county, while seeking relief from the heat A heavy wind storm accompanied by lightning tore across Fulton county levelling utility poles an! causing considerable damage to fruit and shade trees. o College Gets Fossils Alliance, O. (U.R) — F. Sidney Dart, of Oberlin, 0., has presented , , Mount Union College here with a collection of nearly 2.000 mineral.
FAMILIES AT SCENE OF INDIANA MINE EXPLOSION — Sj£s 11 ■ 1 Z‘" i daULL ’‘'l K - O -w * ** ■ > I "a 4 ■ 3 . ’ /wT WKWSk * Twenty mon were killed when a terrific explosion turned the Glen dora Coal Company’s Baker mine near Sullivan. Ind., into a inferno, hurling the miners to death against the rough walls of the shaft in which they were working. Nine were injured and one hundred and seven-ty-four escaped. Faiifilies of the entombed miners are shown at the mine tipple waiting for word of rescue.
gem, fossil and shell specimens i ■ gathered from the four corners of 1 the earth. The collection was I made by his father, the late Francis Henry Dart, artist, scientist 1 1 and world traveler. 1 < o Formal Complaint Issued By Board Washington. July 16 —(UP)’—The 1 National labor relations board today issued a formal complaint | against the Republic steel corporation charging violations of the Wagner labor relations act on eight counts. The board ordered the company to appear for formal hearing here next Wednesday. Republic steel was one of four: steel firms against which the steel | workers’ organizing committee called a strike last May 26. The S. W. O C. is a subsidiary of John L. Lewis’s committee for industrial organization. Planes Continue Earhart Search Honolulu. July 16 —(VP) —Navy ’ Airmen, flying In the intense equatorial heat, continued their search 1 today for Miss Amelia Earhart and I Frederick J. Noonam, her naviga-: tor, who have been lost since July 2. | The air search, with from 40 to 60 planes participating, has covered
Fwesr FVN I IflV WWWaPGffc MAZ/Mr" —iji IMS Al Bi 41 IB I 11 —y I !■ II BSRyT .-dfi / jKI I /j ■ ‘ W 7■/ CRS AND GET A PONTIAC WITH . .. A miles per EXTRA Knee Action to give you tmoothneM, to let you k economy. rest as you ride. WHITE & ZESERQMOTOR SALES 248 MONROE STREET DECATUR, INDIANA
40,000 square miles of the Pacific ocean around Howland Island in three days. Yesterday the fliers in 42 planes, zoomed off the deck of the Giant carrier Lexington and criss-crossed the international dateline for hours in a futile hunt. o —— City Fathers Waive Pay Urbana. O. (U.R) Because a sl. 300 interest payment on the mu nicipal waterworks, recently pur ] chased by the city from private in terests, fell due July 1. village of flcials of Mechanicsburg liav« ' agreed to waive their salaries un ! til some future date. —— o— Lost Constitution Found ; Cleveland. —(U.R) Officials of the Ripon Club, an organization <>l j young Republicans, had searched for six years for the«<lub’s lost constitution. Several former otfi I cers had been accused of hiding i the document. Then Fred Warak | former city employe, found it I among his political souvenirs. 0 - —. Judge Raises Umbrella Sydney.—(U.R)Sydney’s law-courts ’ are famed for their age, their dis- | comfort and their bad roof. Recently rain, finding an entrance to a court where Judge Swift was
hearing a complicated property case, forced the judge to say: “Well, there’s nothing for it, gentlemen, hut to put up an umbrella.” He promptly did so. o India to Can Famous Fruit Bombay.-(U.R) India’s most famous fruit, the mango, is to be can ned in a suburb of Bombay. Machinery is being installed and orders for 1,500,000 tins have been placed in England. Half a million lof the tins have arrived at the factory. Plans are being made to market the product in the United Kingdom. o Don't Fail: Change of Orchestras Sunday, Sunset.
CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers are requested to give old and new address when ordering paper changed from one address to another. For example: If you change your address from Decatur R. R. 1 to Decatur R. R. 2. instruct us to change the paper from route one to route
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\ I ALWAYS SAY "KELLOGG'S" BEFORE 1 SAy "CORN FLAKES*'^ < W “I’ve discovered that I never gain anything by shopping for corn flakes. I just say ‘Kellogg's.' Then I’m sure that I’m getting the best." No imitation has ever equaled the flavor and quality of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. They’re made better. Taste better. Packed better. Ready to serve. Always oven-fresh in the patented waxtite inner wrapper. At all grocers, -ars Served in ho- [ — tels and res- $ taurantsevery- CORN where. Made FLAKES by Kellogg in I—~J>| Battle Creek. 7 SAY " BEFORE YOU SAY "CORN FLAKES" \ J
