Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 286, Decatur, Adams County, 5 December 1938 — Page 3
vs SOCIETY THURSDAY v i ■ '*>•' i'utholt--b.nldillK Thursday ■ ’"'i I" R’ 1 *,,, whu wishes to the u: ,,! be P’ uU ■ ■hJL ■ " •’" "" >„. meeting. Methodist Ladies' Aid w.Hncsdav afternoon .ii Mis. Floyd Meyer at I,P £d | attend. ■ Tbe| v,: lt ’ :,,,v ( ' lass ° r !hp up ’ ■ lav £" h j I 1 h parlors for the regu- £ meeting. R . K. Graham led The Evedbf '' ! ' A short business was conducted by Mrs. r, ’ . iOS'- Os the Weetißd- 1,1 ' ••' I efreshmont - hitMrs. Dan Tyndall. Mrs. H «n .Mrs. Virgil j- ami Mrs. Anderson. BBKj'XE PROGRAM ■ ■ £tM Z Reformed church has i lie program for Tnes-two-thirty in The program will Kj S > ftl) ■-. iinlia and < !iri-t- * ■ nKiaii.ils Rev. (’. M. Frugli ■ j »ld i•■inference" — Rev. ('. Christmas Carols — Ste Mer Deitsch. music. Singing. ■ Cits: " prayer. s arc reminded to bridg ■AThree Days’ Cough liitour Danger Signal how many medicines E£t have tried for your common ■ cotlgß chest cold, or bronchial irri■lmE you may get relief now with ■jCsgnulsion. Serious trouble may and you cannot afford a chance with anv remedy ’.t than Creomulsion, which MMinght to the seat of the trouble Knd aids nature to soothe and heal lUniflamed mucous membranes loosen and expel germ* ■Md phlegm. if other remedies have failed, discouraged, try Creomuldruggist is authorized to ■itftnd your money if you are not ■ thoroughly satisfied with the bene- ■ fits obtained. Creomulsion is one ■•ord ask for ft plainly, see that the ■MM on the bottle is Creomulsion, ■ud fou’ll get the genuine product ■•■ the relief you want. (Adv.)
If GIFT VALUE SUPREME! & ENSEMBLEI $h ss®° f i TXt II P" c ’* ■ ■ •,' t£ .Sllff l| iW JW)I adorn Milady. Dr..«r Th. j perfect gift for h.r! I IN BEAUTIFUL J t' i &r I SILK-LINED I | C4S£// II BIRTHSTONE RING I Your favorite stone set «j* I with 2 lovelv Diamonds %F * I Ladies' Wrist Watch now $12.75 I f JfflßSl Mans Tiger Eye Cameo -14 K G SI4OO I ! 48-Piece Silver Service _. i 10-Diamond Ensemble ! An exquisite set! 10 brilj liant diamonds! Both for *• t - $ 3725 ! Engagement Rmg $1250 s JißiW'A Wedding Rmg QQ Ladies’ Dinner Ring. 7 D'«*‘ - * 2s °° t SW [ STORE OI’EX EVENINGS! USE I . A OUR ■ PUMPHREY b K t i| Jewelry Store —
SOCIETY'
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A, M. Jeanette Winnes Phones 1000 — 1001 Monday Woman’s Club General Meeting! Old High School Auditorium, 7:45 p. m. Firemen’s Auxiliary, Mrs. 'Hattie Steele, 7:30 p. m. Women's Chorus, Moose Home, ! 1:30 p. m. Research Club, Mrs. P. A. Kuhn, 2:30 p. in. Tri Kappa Girl Scout Troop One, Central School, 4 p. m. Tuesday Ladies of Columbia, K. of C. Hall, I 7:30 p. m. I Zion Reformed W. M. S Church j Social Rooms 2:30 P. M. Psi lota Xi Business Meeting, Mrs. Leo Kirsch, 7:30 p. tn. Tri Kappa Business Meeting, Elks Home, 8 p. nt. Delta Theta Tau. Miss Mary Margaret Voglewede, 7:30 p. m. Young Matrons Club, Mrs. Ferd O’Brien, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Historical Club. Mrs. W. P. Robinson, 2:30 P. M. Shakespeare Club, Mrs. Jesse Rice. 2:30 p. m. Salem Methodist Ladies’ Aid, ' Mrs. Floyd Meyer, 1:30 P. M. j St. Mary’s Township Home Economics Club, Bobo School, 1:30 p. m. i Thursday Methodist Home Missionary Socciety, Church Parlors, 2:30 p. m. Eastern Star Meeting, Masonic Hall, 7:30 p. m. St. Mary’s Society, 'School Build-, ing. 7:30 p. m. Eastern Star, Masonic Hall, 7:30 p. m. Eastern Star and Mdsons 8:30 p. m. So Cha Rea Christmas Party, Ma- ! rie and Ann Murtaugh. 6:30 p. m. I Friday Monroe Better Homes Club, Monroe School House 7:30 p. m. ' their orphan and Indian gifts to I 'his meeting. GRAND GUARDIANS TO ATTEND MEETING The Eastern Stars will have a ' meeting Thursday evening at the ■ Masonic Hall at seven-thirty. About thirty members of the Job’s Daughi ters of Hartford City are expected to attend. Mrs. Marie Voke of Anderson grand guardian, and Dr. O. I. Crawford of Marion, associate grand guardian, will be .present. At eight-thirty there will be ai meeting open for all Masons and I Eastern Star members. Job’s Daughters will exemplify their work at this time. All members are asked to attend. I t — o— Tenile In 4 Good Town — Decatur
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. DECEMBER 5, 1938.
Personals Anton Tholmo attended a meeting of the board of trustees of the Lutheran Old Folk’s Homo at Fort Wayne Saturday. Glen Workinger and Anton Thieme of Union township will go to Bedford, Ky., Wednesflay on a business trip. They made the same trip last Friday to deliver 400 bushel of oats. Robert Kelley of the state fire marshall's office was attending to business here Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Byron of Peru visited at the Dr. Archbold home over Sunday. A message from Indianapolis says Mrs. Dick Heller, who was operated on early Sautrday morning, is recovering nicely. Mrs. G. H. Shosenberg ami daughter, Miss Dora were callers at Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon. Mrs. M. A. Frisinger and daughter, Miss Betty visited in Fort Wayne Saturday. The Peterson clothing store is attractively decorated for the Christmas season, with snow and everything. Numerous downtown business houses have windows in season and are worth your time. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Augenbaugh and sons John and Phillip, visited Mrs. John C. Magley, who is a patient at the hospital Sunday. Mrs. Frederick Schafer .operated on for the removal of her tonsils three weeks ago and who suffered a relapse, is again able to be out and is constantly improving. This Indian summer is fine but really it's a little unseasonable for Christmas time. Leo J. Miller arrived home last Friday from Terre Haute, where he has been employed for the past tnree months with the U. S. Geological Survey. Mrs. Rose Morgan, who has been visiting here for the past two weeks returned home Saturday. Mrs. Morgan was accompanied to Warren ,by Mr. and Mrs. Joel Reynolds who were the guests of Mrs. Rufus Crandel and Miss Elizabeth Chopson over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds also called on Mrs. Mary Merryman Steel and Mrs Sadie Scherer at thp Methodist Memorial Home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fritzinger, Mrs. Nora Classon, and Mrs. Tom Kitson and son Danny spent Sunday in Fort Wayne visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Davison. Mrs. Gene McCann. Mrs. Donald Smith and Mrs. Hugh Holthouse were shoppers in Fort Wayne today. Mr. and Mrs C. M. Mumma of Haviland. Ohio, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garard Sunday afternoon.
ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Ed Christen have received word of the birth of a son. , Saturday night at the St. Joseph ! hospital in Fort Wayne, to their I son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and j Mrs. Ferd Christen. The baby has been named John Edward. The fathI er was formerly Adams county agriI cultural agent. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Townsend, 332 Mercer. Ave., are the parents of a ! baby girl born 'Saturday afternoon I at one-thirty at the Adams county memorial hospital. The baby weighed six pounds, seven ounces and 1 has been named Ruth Allison. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Meßride, route i six. Decatur, are the parents of a I baby girl, born Saturday afternoon : at one-fifty-five at the Adams counity memorial hospital. The baby I weighed six .pounds fifteen ounces and has been named George Anna. Mr. and Mrs. Wilford M. Plaster- ' er of Fornax Street are the parents of a baby boy, born Sunday morning at five-seven at the Adams county memorial hospital. The baby weighed eight pounds five and onefourth ounces and has been named James Lyle. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rumple, No. I 27. Homesteads, are the parents of I a baby boy born Sunday afternoon ' at two thirty-seven at the Adams I county memorial hospital. The baby | weighed seven pounds eight and ; three-fourths ounces and has been J named Gerald Eugene. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Gerterding, 713 Mercer Ave., are the parents of a ba,by girl, born Sunday afternoon at three-fifty at the Adams county memorial hospital. The baby weighed seven pounds six and onefourth ounces and has been named Charlotte. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Bassett of Closs Street are the parents of a baby girl born November twenty-
ffl TIES W SCARFS Renewed by Clean Dowclene Sheets Bros. Cleaners - Hatters
Call a halt on needless IVERV.E STRAIN f i ; f-- : HIS NERVES GREYHOUND ~ AND SO IS HE / * L-dt' > ' Swift, graceful, and remarkably wise. Ancient Egyp- '■*' tian and Greek royalty regarded him as a symbol of aristocracy. His distinguished lines and proud bear* ■, V. i ing appear on Egyptian carvings dating to :i.'»oo B. C. Racing has made lids breed popular in the U. S. -S: \ h IT S THRU.I.ING to vvat< h the flash- tinned nerves. We’re apt to carry on / j/ ing grevliouinl in full Hight. But despite ini reusing tension and strain. ' it's important to note that when the Be kind to your nerves if you want y race is over lie lets up and r«fr—as them to be kind to you. Pause a while the greyhound above is doing now. every now and then. LET IP— Though the dog's high-keyed tier- LIGHT IP A CAMEL! Let the frevous system closely resembles our quent enjoyment of Camel's mild, own, the dog i<lu.\<\instiiKtiiily! Life ripe toban os help you take life more '''sK ft us it is today leads to to ignore fa- calmlv. pleasantly, profitably! BmSIm A They knotv hoiv pleasant life can be when they "LET UP — LIGHT UP A CAMEL” WOMEN’S TRAP-SHOOTING CHAMPION of Hr « North America, Mrs. Leia Hall, says: "Holding a |ku . shooting title four years straight puts pressure on g '' W& >■' If ■ o W"~ ’■ 't'A the nerves. I give my nerves frequent rests. I let up WA-y ■( If > ’T* ’ A RE p O R TE R’S JOB is .toted for beating deadlines, rush duties, ex- " 1 11 t' citement, and nervous tension. Naturally, ' Let up — light u p a Gamel is iZA\hJ 9 \ » ■isl \ a smoking rule that’s greatly favored by newspaper men. They know! niP you 10,0 * ; f r iawray mmnHMH w * —that tobacco is remarkably | 4. atHuK, sensitive to moisture :'T hat at X 1 S ' y one stage, practically all the 4M Smoke 6 packs ||g \ moisture is removed from cig- ■, ■ <>f Game!* and HM 9 ''A arette tobacco, and then later ft/ a X*. ■■ ; fool ooi uliv f \V \\ just the proirer amount re- _ ''.w r r are the Th “ " A T,,ousANDT,, oF an z 4F llrLeot 4 “ i "?,« w 7 an ‘ •“ .7 1810 - selling W machines where Camels are work, says Charles Dietnch, s's | Vt. F made? Camel spends millions lens grinder. Ive got to con- V' J t L * “»insure all the m.Mnesr and N«urally, my nerves SH' _, Z % Os *" Amer,ca Z M ripe richness of Camel’s finer, would be on the spot if 1 |H mi ll — more expeuswe tobaccos. ■Si EDDIE CANTOR — America’s great comic personality— I BENNY GOODMAN— King of Swing, and the world’s greatest each Monday evening on the Columbia Network. 7:30 pm swing band-each Tuesday evening—Columbia Network 930 MESj/A'.’k'’ aESMI E.S.T., 9:30 pm C.S.T., 8:30 pm M.S.T., 7:30 pm P.S.T. | pm E.S.T., 8:30 pm C.S.T., 7:30 pm M.S.T., 6:30 pm P.S.T. LET UP- LIGHT UP A CAME lT¥ Smokers find Camel’s Costlier Tobaccos are SOOTHING TO THE NERVES
seventh. The baby has been named ! Caroline Sue. This Is the fourth 1 child and the first girl. ROOSEVELT SON TO HOLLYWOOD James Roosevelt VicePresident Os Goldwyn Interests Hollywood, Dec. 5 — ,(U.R)I James Roosevelt, son of the president, broke a White House precedent today by going into the movie business. He became vice- 1 president of Samuel Goldwyn, . Inc., Ltd. Never before has the son of a president been in the amusement field, though another Roosevelt son, Elliott, is a radio executive. First tas.t of the smiling, 31-year-old James Roosevelt was to hold a press conference to tell of his transition from SIO,OOO post in the White House secretariat to a reputed $51,000 job as the right-hand man of ‘‘the great Goldwyn," producer of million dollar films and subject of perhaps 75 per cent of the quips concerning Hollywood. Young Roosevelt’s second task was to learn the picture business, from censorship to sound booms, I under the tutelage of Goldwyn, : who, whatever hit reputation as i a speaker of the King's English, is acknowledged as the old master among his movie-making con-tcmpo-aries. Roosevelt has been a frequent house guest of Goldwyn, since recovering from a major operation, and his entrance into picture business has been rumored for the last month. After studying law at Harvard, selling insurance and serving as his father’s secretary in Washington, the new vice-president of Goldwyn s should find few dull moments at the studio. Goldwyn is the man who tried to rent the “ide of a pyramid from the Egyptian government for a billboard; who sought the sisters of King Zog as actresses; who even tried to get permission to use news reel
I shots of President Roosevelt in j his latest cowboy picture. , __o | Three Men Found Dead At Muncie Muncie, Ind., Dec. 5 — (UP) —| i Three men identified as Paul Reed,, Joe Conner and Walter Grady John- | son were found dead in a pass filli ed boarding house room here today. It was not determined whether ! death was accidental. I Reed and Conner are from Mun-’ i de, but Johnson’s residence was i unknown. | o , Indianapolis Plant Workers On Strike Indianapolis. Dec. S—(UP5 —(UP! —The Armour and Company meat packing plant here was closed today and 250 workers were affected. 4 Years for Spying /w Head bowed, Johanna Hofmann, convicted Nazi spy, leaves federal court, in New York City. She received four-year sentence. Found guilty in her native Germany, she would have been beheaded.
EIGHTBANKERS TO FACE TRIAL Officers Os Defunct Winchester Company In Federal Court Indianaolis, Dec. 5. — (U.RI — i Eight officers of the defunct Continental Credit Corporation of Win- | Chester, charged with defrauding ] t 210 banks in Indiana, Ohio, Ulin- | ois and Kentucky of $1,200,000, j were to go on trial in federal court i . here this afternoon. The court room was filled with | approximately 150 witnesses who , have been subpoenaed to testify i in the case. Defendants in the case are: John W. Moore, Sr., president of ■ Continental Credit Corp., and own- j er of the controlling interest in ’ Kim-Murph Co.. Lansing, Mich. He ' also is under indictment in federal , court at Buffalo on charges of violating the national bankruptcy act. I John W. Moore, Jr, secretary’ and treasurer of the Credit Corporation and executive vice-president of the Indiana Warehouse Corporation at Winchester. Anna Louis Trent, daughter of John W. Moore, Sr., executive vice- ' president of Continental Corpor- ‘ ation. Hiram M. Browne, president of I Lange Industries, Inc., Muncie, di- I rector of the Mineral Felt Co., Toledo, 0., and financial advisor to the Credit Corporation. | Kenneth P. Kimball, Lansing, Mich., president of Kim-Murph Company. Ralph S. Phillips, Toledo, treas-j urer of Mineral Felt Co. W. Harry Eikenberry, Muncie, I treasurer of Lang Industries. Russell E. Wise, Union City at-' torney, general counsel for the Continental Corporation. The Continental Corporation was founded in 1933 by the Moores, i Soon it expanded into the other ■ companies. It had dealing with I many business firms and banks I
throughout the middlewest. In May, 1937, the company filed bankruptcy proceedings under section 778 of the federal bankruptcy assets of $1,011,549.05 and liabilities of $661,549.05. The federal investigation was started after many of the banks and customers of the Credit Corporation had filed complaints. p CORN SEALING (CONTINUED FROM FADE ONE) be adequate for sealing by those ] farmers who are able to obtain the benefit of the 57c loan price, ■as a result of having kept their i 1938 planting of corn within the | acreage allotments assigned as a part of the agricultural conservaI tion program. oHigh Court Verdict Is Victory For AFL — Washington, Dec. 5. —idl.R) —The I American Federation of Labor won ■ a major victory today when the ! supreme court set aside portions | of a national labor relations board I order directing the Consolidated Edison company of New York to abrogate contracts with AFL afi filiates. The decision, delivered by Chief ' Justice Hughes, affirmed all of the l labor board order except those por- ; tions calling for “dis-establish- | rnent” of the AFL unions. I The court rejected the company’s ; contention that the labor board ! does not have jurisdiction over utilities such as Consolidated Edi-
FREE Console, Mantle, and Auto Radios — Tires, Tubes. Batteries, Car Heaters—Bicycles, and Toys. Inquire at Fogle’s Service Sta. 334 No. Second St.
PAGE THREE
son which largely serve local interests. Two-State Meeting Is Held Saturday A two-state meeting of the Colambus Mutual Life Insurance representatives was held at the Moose Home here Saturday afternoon. A noon dinner was served by the Women of the Moose. J. A. Preston, of Columbus. Ohio, salesmanager of the company, and E. R. Cuck. of New Gnoxville, Ohio, of the Cuck Insurance company, were the speakers. Approximately 25 members atiended. The next meeting will be neld in three months at Dunkirk.
wW y.— The GIFT of Personality ... a bottle each of Helena Rubinstein’s Town and Country perfumes, each in a gay etched bottle, packed together in a clear cellophane cube on copper and wood. $2.00 BJ.Smith Drug Co
