Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 89, Decatur, Adams County, 14 April 1939 — Page 3
1 SOCIETY
O'NNF H s ■ u> SOCIETY I I _ -i |B|M ■■-••• ■'
9L ihk 15?' S""*' ■ VONVIAC nxE DEMONSTRATION will prove it'* the engineering atandoul of the year! ■ •«••••. sew- w>< •» ••• •» m *«► .Jt I us - ■’•'•••"* •« ip- Mskt, ■ diwillß *uM e on su»ggUgglgSr SPtB F K aBBaSy «»••<« r'e»»p»rte»i®«. I ■ gKf '«■< >o’n i't ttrtiit'ni -•ttrt "* M- - ■ - .... . ■ WHITE & ZESER MOTOR S ALES J MONROE ST. DECATUR. IND L — -- K A i lEWAtiLU *Zcli dMi S -'y y- • “ v I 4 st e » -- *4 -dts -A *b -r<- JM I LONG DISTANCE remove. ■ the restriction, ot time and ’ Jt message and reply become 5 zt I" only a matter of second*.* Got the answer. dUcuee detail*, make deci'z£ «tS» * •ions-by telephone — and bo fro* -‘ < for other affair*. • See how little Lons / Distance coat*-how much It save* j II ~ al todar'* low rate.. '"" B / i | ' ../8> pH jj K Bsk\.
i. reading mt. "The A* Mary, of th« I New Testament''. Mrs Cvili ixtn t»*ed aa the thmne «»C her address. "Things t«» Know." DelteimM refreahments were nerved by the hos. •eeees. Mrs Henry Schrenks and Mrs. Paul llusmWOMAN'S CLUB TO HAVE CLOSING MEETING The Decatur Woman's club will I have It. 'losing meeting tor me I Hub year Hext Monday evening at i I 'he Zion Reformed Churcii, beg lan-1 ‘ ng at 7:45 p Oi This will be a gen | crai meeting in charge of the Music i department which will present a spring concert. Members a.-e urged I to use their guest tickets for this program. Following Is the program '« be presented Prologue —James H. Rogers. Miss lailu tieriver. Or.in To Spring— Edvard Greig
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. APRIL 14, 19 39.
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 a. M. daan.tt* Wlbsm •hmso* 1000 — 1001 Friday PocahontA. Lodge. Red Men's Hull. 7:io p m, American legion Auxiliary, Legion Home 30 p. m. W. M A. of Vnlon Chapel, Mrs. Robert Workmger. 130 p. m. Evangelical Rummage Kale, Graham Hu tiding. Madison Ht.. Afternoon. Ate Marfa Study Club. K. of f. | Hall. 7 30 p m, I'nlted Rrrthren Work and Win < lass. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Raker, 7'30 p, ti,, i Saturday Evangelical Mission Rand. ChurchParlors. s p. m. Zion Reformed Cafeterti Supper. Church Rasement. 5 to 7 p tn. Rvangelicai Rummage and Bake Sal*. Graham Itullding. All D*y. Monday Adorns County Women's Chorus, Moo** Home. 1:30 f m. Kum Join Cs Class. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hooten. 7:30 p. m. Womens Club General Meeting. Reformed Church. 7:45 p m. Tuesday Delta Theta Tau Business Meet- , Ing. Miss Mary Martha Terveer. I 7:30 p. m. Psi lota Xi Social Meeting. .Mrs. Jesse Rice, 7:30 p. tn. Tri Kappa Social Meeting, Elka Home, 8 p. m. Adams County Nnrsea Party, lux North Fourth Street. 8 p. m Methodist Mary And Martha Class. Mrs. John Amspaugb, 7:30 p m Wednesday Shakespeare Guest Day Lunch-1 eon. Methodist Church. 1 p. m. I Historical Club. Mrs. Giles Porter 2:30 p. m. Business And f*rofe«alonal Women's Club. Rice Hotel. 0.30 p. m. Thursday Friendship Village Club. Mrs. Bill . Patterson. Methodist W. F M. Society. Mrs. R. A. Stuckey. 2 p. ra. Mias Sylvia Ruhl, piano Julia's Garden—James H. Rogers i.uxemborg Gardens—Manning , Morning—Oley Speaks Mrs. Jbin H. Tyndall, soprano | Miaa Helen Haubold. contralto To A Wild Rose — MacDowell Spring Song Mendelssohn Mrs. Fred Smith, organ Mrs. Edgar Gerber, piano. Mrs R W. Graham, violin In Springtime—Daniels, tai The ((wakening tb> Apple-Blossoms (e) The West Wind and the Way id) Spring Heralds Wonra'a Chorus Fantalcle— Demarest Mrs. Avon Burk, organ Miss Louise Haubold. piano Mrs. Carrie Haubold will accom party the vocal num tiers. The Friendship Village club will ' meet next Thursday at tha home ot I Mrs. Bill Patterson. All members i .ire urged to be present as this I la a flower seed and bulb ex- hange.' The roil call is to be answered with . each mm tier's favorite flower. WOMEN'S SOCIETY HAS MEETING THURSDAY The Women's Home Missionary mm- lety of the Methodist church met la the church parlors Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Amos Yoder gave UH devotionals and Mrs. R. W. Grshssn presented an interesting Ulk on Christian Cltiienship. Members i were urged to attend the district missionary convention Thursday. April twenty-seventh at the Wayne i Ftreet Methodist church at Fort Wayne, instead of serving refreshments at this meeting the hostesses' money was tlven ss aa sacrificial lenten offering. The society will serve a plate supper Saturday. May | >be thirteenth. ENTERTAINS WITH CHILI SUPPER-PARTY The men ot the B. Y- B. U. ot the 1 Baptist church entertained the InIdina of the organisation st the home jot Mr. and Mr*. Darrell Bedwell otl I the Homesteads. A chili supper was served to fifteen members preaent,' ester which a so< ial hour was enjoyed. The Kum Join Vs Class will meet Monday evening at the home of Mr. * i and Mr*. Arthur Hooten *t seventhirty o'clock. Mr. and Mis. Garth ' Journey will assist in serving. MRS. L. A. COWENS HOSTESS TO SOCIETY Mrs. L. A. Cowens was hostes* Thursday afternoon to the Presbyterian Home and Foreign Missionary society nt her home on Adams Street. Mrs. George Walton opened the meeting with devotlonnls which | she dedicated in honor or installation of the new ofneers. She then led In prayer. Mrs. Fred Pattarson. the new president, presided. Mrs. F. D. Engeler was the lesson leader for the afternoon and ahe chose as her subject. "The American Indian." She reviewed the ibook. "In The Red Men's Land." Mrs Dan Tyndall then sang three Indian songs; By the Waters of the Minnetonka.
Where Drowsy Waters Steal and From the Und ot the Sky Jtlua' Waters. Mrs. L. a. (irahnm gsve the yearly report aud Ike programi closed With the Mespah benediction.l Mrs. Dau Tyndall and Mr* Cowens j were guems *t the Pi-Ming, in* hostess, assisted by Mrs. ftokcoe tllendenlng and Mrs. Chrlea Foe.l served delicious refresh tar-tit 4. The Women's Foreign Missionary society of the Methodist church will meet Thursday afternoon at the tmme of Mrs. R. A. Stuckey. Mrd. le-lton Paswster will be the leader wlih Mrs. Harry Maddos. Mrd, (•surge Harding and Mrs. ft. A. Adams as assisting hostesses. The Womens Foreign Mission*, ary society will sponsor a rumsnag-•' sale April twenty-secoM and th* twenty-ninth in the Graham bunding on Madison Street. Any m*mher having arthlen forth- sal* is n«*d to call Mrs. R. A. Stuckey or Mrs. C. L. Walters. The C. L. C. social meeting, which was to have been held at tbs Kulghts of Columbus lodg- Tuesday evening, has b*eu postponed so.-l one week to April twenty Bfth. SO CHA REA CLUB HAS MEETING THURSDAY Mrs. Clem Kortenber entertained' , members of the So Cha R*a club and one guest. Mrs Mark Braden. I at her home Thursday evening. Five names of bridge were played and I prises were awarded to M’s. T. J. Mettler. Mlns Virginia Laurent and I Mrs. George Laurent. The bsstess served a lovely luncheon at ths close of the evening. The next meetI mg will be in two weeks at th* home of Mrs. Russell Byer of Will* I shire. * I * PERSONALS I Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Barber and daughters had as their dinn.r I guests yesterday Mr. and Mrs. Dab I la? Hunaicker of Butler. Glenna Lea Brown of Bourbon Is spending the week-end with Mrs. IH. W. Thompson They will attend ■ the Jeanette Donald concert In (Tort Wayne tonight. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Frybnck, former owners of the Green Kettle here, plan to move hack to Bluffton the first of next week and establish their residence there. Mr. FrybaiK will again be connected with tn* Fryback ke cream and dairy bustnesa in that city. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Kiepper, daughters Dolores and Alta Kutii w II hear Jeanette McDonald at the Shrine theater. Fort Wa/ue, this evening. Mrs. Josephine Rodd of Toledo is visiting here with relatives. o ■ — BRITAIN TURNS 'CONTINUED FROM PAOB ONKI , 2. commemorsting the end of the ! civil war. | The British government was re- 1 ported to have suggested that j , Mussolini should stsrt withdrawals of trdops. war planes and materials by Msy 9 or 10. Foiling that, it was said, the government would be compelled 1o reconsider Its attitude toward the. friendship agreement - which it de- . elded not to denounce when Italy i occupied Albania — and to annul the entire treaty. This report came an British ! newspapers csrrisd dispatches asserting that Germany planned a new diplomatic drive against ’ Lithuania, following up ite tenure of the Metnel area, and as the gov- ' ernment prepared to bring Turkey and perhaps Russia Into a gigantic "peace front” against German and Italian expansionism 1 Press reports from Warsaw asserted: • : 1. That Germany had not tiled Lithuania that the *Mem«l agreement needed a ’’new revision " 2. That the Lithuanian govern ment had uncovered a conspiracy aimed at putting the country under German "bondage." I ;i R*w4b4» Res < C>An<i ***»••• M
■ ■ ■ HI ■■ ■■■ I ■ Ml „ !!,.— ■ I ■ .■ . ' A Public] Auction ■ ■ ft *B 4 H H • I pl l l4 d M ■ Car load of Fine Nurwery Stock SATURDAY, 1 P.M., April 15 Corner 4th and Monroe Sla. This sale will consist of about 90% Evergreens, the latest word In landscaping, and th* balance will be: Fruit Trees, Flowering .Shrub*. Grape* and Strawberries. This stock I* all A-1 grade. 'Government Inspected. Northern Grown and gauranteed to be dug fresh and will be on display Saturday morning. A representative from th* Nursery will be present. Don't mis* thl* opportunity. Coms, you sre Invited and yvsleom*. PLEASANT VIEW NURSERIES . TROY, OHIO Jack Brunton, Auct. T. Schleferstoin, Clerk
AID SOUGHT BV DAIRY GROUPS Recommend Protfram* To Ward Off "Economic Criais’’ Chicago. April 14.~ <UJU-Repre sentativea of <2 dairy organisations recommended lo th<- federal I government today emergency and kmg range program" which they believed would Ward "If an "eciaiI «mlc erisla" facing an citlmateu three million Tamlllea dependent on dary products fieiagates from 41 states to a lonference of tbe Nations! Milk Producers Federation drafted and endorsed tbe programs last night. The federation's board of direc tors contend dairymen are faced with decreased income. Incressed coats I of produetiem. and mounting sur- ; pluses In face' of price fluctuations The emergency program call* for increaaed federal appropriations to buy surpluses and subsidise ex- | ports while tbe long range plau recommends regulation of the gold content of tbe dollar to lift commodity prices. The emergency progra m 1. Reaumptkm by the secretary of agriculture of tbe program stabilising butter prices, with add end fund* from the budget bureiu If neceaaarf. 2. New surplus butter purchases by the dairy products marketing association with expansion of the association's program to supple ment distribution through relief agencies. 3. Hubsiditatkin of butter exports 4. Passage of the pending ai mendment to the agricultural bill ■ providing an additional (iso.ooo. 000 for the removal of surpluses through borne relief and foreign channel*. The permanent program: 1. Preservation of domestic markets and domestic producers by returning to a program of adequate duties on all Imported products. 2. Raising basic commodity prices by managing the currency through a non-political monetary authority with power to manage the gold content of the dollar to maintain the price relationship which existed between commodities from 1822 to 1829 2. Scientific management of surpluses and a rational system of production under tbe direction of a giant corporation financed by excise and processing taxes. ROOSEVELT PLEDGES ' ICOWTtxt?BD FROM PAGE ONK> he that of economic pressure, I • pledge that my own country will i also give economic support, so | that no American nation need sur- , render any fraction of its sover I sign freedom to maintain its economic welfare. Thia la the spirit 1 and intent of the declaration of , Lima: tha solidarity of a con tinI ent " He made no mention of Reichsfuehrer Hitler or of Premier Mussolini by name but challenged I recent statements of esch and naked: "Do we really have to assume that nations can find no better * methods of realising their destinies than those which were used by the Huns snd vandals 1.500 years ago?" Repeatedly Mr. Roosevelt emphssixed that what hits the old world jars the new and he con- 1 trasted the peaceful, cooperative and consultative basis ut western hemisphere living with conditions ' prevailing beyond tbe seas. "Only a few days ago." he said. "the bead of a great nation re- . terred to bia country (Italyl as a prisoner' of the Mediterranean. A little later, another chief of state (Hitler), on learning that a neighbor country had agreed to defend the Independence of another neighbor, characterised thst agreement as a 'threat.' and an 'encirclement.' Yet there Is no such thing as encircling or threat- . entng or imprisoning any nation I by other peaceful nations W»>
tall , s r^ ? 'SS'A A 1 HP in climate may make, I'hillip" • u\tom-lailon \ S ' turv m your locality. And Mientiftc laboratory ’ and field surveys prove that no other gasoline W lt*S fl ml thrill to feti that Aigcttnct be- I , * ■ hind the wheel when the tank is tilled with this I " -w Poly Gas costs noshing extra... at the Orange jfe' 1 and Black 66 Shield. ~ JP 4 ' f * EEnMEEsaEifesikifea
have reason to know this in our I own experiencr-.” Mr Roosevelt cited last sum- j mer's pledge to defend Canada and last winter's agreement at i Lima among 21 American republics that they would coordinate their effort* to defend their insti tut ions from direct or indirect attack. He recalled the IPS* ’ Pan-Amarican conference agreement to "consult together" in event of the threat of arar. "Yet in no case.” he said, "did 1 any Am-rican nation regard any | ot these understandings as mak- ( ing aiiy one of them a 'prisoner.'' I or as 'encircling' any American country, or as a threat of any! sort or kind I "Measures of this kind.” be | continued, "taken in this bemis- | phere are taken aa guarantees.
tNow! • • WHEN YOU WANT THEM The Season’s Lovliest New SPRING COATS k . Never before such an array of beauty and color. Every Coat correctly styled and in a wide range of sizes. Coats for everyone who prefers the utmost in beauty and style. $9.98 to $15.00 CHILDRENS COATS. Amt rt mg» •> Wonderful Selection DRESSES # A _ a a l- 'X What a thrill you'll get from Sw I '* v ’tl this showing! You'll want tiV several • - everyone is so 8 ?.» *v \ beautiful. Complete size CJtS' / '22 $7-m fljsE// 4L • GAGE HATS v J W — ,o ** > l D your Spring apparel. Wide selection of the newest / ( T„ TfUrop’o <*>•*• \ £' ofHi sl-59 sl-98 - JT 1 SPECIAL — Large selection BLOUSES. «a grt Clever New Styles \ / NIBLICK & CO /
| not of war but of peace, for the [ simple reason that no nation on thia hemisphere has any will to ' aggression, or any desire to establish dominance or mastery “Equally, because we are interdependent. and because we know It. no American nation seeks to deny any neighbor aiivu to the economic and other resources which it must have to live In prosperity." — * CONFEREES IN • CONTINUED FROM t*AOE ONE) expires. The operators reiterated thenreadiness to end the Appalactii»n shutdown by renewing for two years the old <tmtract under which miners worked 35 hours a week
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for imaic pay tales of *«; in the north and In the south. Th<- miners repeated their demands for an amendment to the 1*37-39 agreement eliminating strike penalty provisions. Lewis charged the penalty clauses, descrilted by operators aa necessary to contract enforcement, were ' “arbitrary, unjust, unilateral and 1 discriminatory." The negotiators offered little aid or comfort to Mayor F H Laguard la and other public offtcuils who have reported the imn>in--nc-' of dangerous coal shortages lie- * cause of the couuacl iiupaase —-■ o — i Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J. Metg and i family have moved Into their new i home, which they recently bough’ i on North Fifth Street.
