Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 39, Number 213, Decatur, Adams County, 9 September 1941 — Page 3

IFSPA V, SEPTEMBER 9 I9AI.

b jCtIETY

B".. . , ■ - * ... ■ ‘, n-.i- ... jitogratn '■' !l (,< held a IM * ■iin UIIK •♦H Th* “ “ \ .u ~M l'' */ M XXt». - |W ’. i >■ -• |W ! ~ It c'i /ounhty ■'.J.;- *•• 1 I;.- • M.iX-m- Mam |M~ ' ! ■ m^L t) ,.>i Arnold ■ t ,, K. ■ . M • Itatrell B '' o r!*" i'hu«tian . w «i:l meet at ■ i,.- ' M M "" •’" l "" l,n K-lc af'--'tm-n H, . II n.uH.i. .lull - ti r.-' a* " f '*'* < ' lf K " '• l, ‘ . ,> M. r ♦ urged m. , i ■> ju "i. p p.ii for 'hr »‘"”h "f J|, 'X „n ... the First ■A '.| H-.-'i-n . 'moll »ill meet M . M ■• fin'll Foughty . . >• *••11 thirty o K. M - HI " ll.ik' wII I*- the ■ Mr... .... fi 'mo'' mt <>f the Eastern >'.i * I I* held at th* j u'< lock K| IC. TO OPEN Mil ANO WINTER SEASONS Mm-'iil-". all I'lir Hilles of A ' i,.r..|i<H .•■’>• of t'lirlstian . . • n their fall and win•

Eta GIRLS WHO SUFFER. IMHU ■E: r.-t.lvrrsmpe backM«r-> (!.•••»« <,! "IrrnuisriUra." M:.»- -1 .<• to f-metlonal Mb. c • .(.•»« - try Lydia Ml . : r..’,:. u (With Mwt>J ..-r.r. M.l* .■;>cri4//y fur |B> h .ild up 0.l (■ttoM Follow Ui»l dirrclluoa.

Il the Scenes *Srin HOLLYWOOD *V B „i,i, »'L»

I llr Rlßßiao* CARROLL i ■ kuj Fnlem »> ■Skate Writer |H li - I'ndergraduate g> <t No. I las been received Maxie Kixwnbloom starring for Colum■J bl * *" ’‘ Har " $k yard. Here 1 i ■ Come I S 1 A y° un < n, * n ' I u>i “ “*"* ,linl ' ft "'if ■_ ■&--'«» < Grant, Harvard BflE < rW oHbl : [ I r*' 11 *»> ! Sf iwHw| "•'■r to Harvsrd, !hen thto Mibrriiog ( a,r„ii meant war! You E Wl big jerk, 11l you can t even spell Harvard!" j I The screen debut of Lupe Voles’ Chihuahua dogs has been in|g' Jnitely postponed. Director David tried to use them in a resM»crar,t acene for "Hsymates.’’ K?u J °L. ,h * ,!o ** l um P*<l up and Kk” K * y Ky ** r *" ,Bce - ™ ' yt r ,urn,<l wer a glass of water ■" ' upr • gown. "I ought to make [ out of you," aha threatM“d dlrefully. <WWte beK* n ,j o w *yn • "Ball of Fire" and K * * "Snow White and the Ow ‘ rfr ’ **», thia time, are ■Tt n •* roteMot a ■tw«7*.' l .* v * n • aimilarity beh.* and the ■k< ii. of th * ,llry tale Oscar ■bX ,i S Rtch * rd H,yda <• Em-tLS t 8 *!?" *• !>w ' ■ M*th.r i. u H eepy ' Aub «y IfttaX Hppy LMnM KlM ky *• y U W,r "*" believe Iwu " The Great Lie." Maro'J* than I nfic new n * r * cor<l for the terI *2r w„ hMrd Pl ’? J h,t *** ■ Aim. ,rd Paying in the |^ t <o? , t^^ n^ d,imw - ta 2? t ? con -' cl y ro ««> or ner radio shows. B talta^'the'ci"’ CM * d * ,or " Ca P* ' ! leaned . ?x? OUd, ‘ ,J ‘'n*» Carney I F X oa£?V lt t 0 “ I tranaUn °® wr * ud(, «nly I “* "WtSta w sharing kit to i n. w r±L2? ,o, ‘P o,o «* 1 | hecomra on. of Cagneys -

I tar meeting' with a tarry-ln lunchI eon Thursday at twelve-thirty | o'c lock at the Methodist church. Each ineinfn i la to bring her own I table service. Rolla, toffee and I cream •Will be furnl-hed Member* are reminded that this will be 'duea paying meeting The Calvary ladles' aid aoelety will meet Friday evening at the home of Mrs, Mila Harmon with Mr« Mary Miller aa the as'lsting hostess The Baptist Woman's Society will meet at the home of Mrs <’ E. Peterson Thursday afternoon a' two-thirty o'ckwk Mra J F Mott ger will r.ssist Mra Peterson as hostess. The Union Chapel W. M A will meet at the home of Mra George Hrown Thursday afternoon al owe thirty o'clock Mra Thurman brew Will be the leader ..-■■■ g.. Mln brace flrether left the flrat of the Week for Muncie, where she entered Hall Stale Tteachera college aa a freshman laiwrence Hotn of Fort Wayne was the guest Sunday of Mias Irene Tope of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Itota.t Braden have returned from a ten days' honeymoon through the east including Washington. It <’. New York City. Montreal and Toronto. Canada Niagara Falla and the Al'eghney moun tains. They will be at home October first In their newly fnral«hed aparti ment at 303 West Monroe street. I Mr and Mrs. Robert Pasawater and son lhil> If. of Fort Wayne and i Mr and Mrs. Ihdton Pass water of thia city have returned from a week's fishing In Northern Wlacom sin. The Adams county convention of the Woman's Christian Tempermice I'nion will fie held at the Me thodiat church Tuesday afternoon ami evening. MtffMemlier Id. Th •' program will lie announced later. Mr and Mra. Orval Sudduth lookI ed after business in Monroeville to‘day. Mrs. Emma Stewart of Craigvllle I Visited here yesterday. Miss Beverly BPe-r returned to | her home in Portland after visiting ' her* yesterday Mr. and Mra. Eugene Runyon enjoyed the weekend in fiary With the Inlier's brother-in-law and sister.

treasured souvenirs Beeame It was flown to England on a ferried bomber and then back across the Atlantic. Jimmy Is buying similar kits for every man in the squadron. Dan Dailey, Jr., win enter two horses at the Pomona Fair. He'll ride one, Stylish Rex, In the jumping events and the ther, Jim Dandy, in exhibition. In the early scenes of “Call Out the Marines." Victor McLaglen plays a truck driver and wears dungarees and a blue serge cap. They are the same garments he used in “The Informer." Vic thinks it may bring him luck. VZlth “Appointment for Love” washed up. Margaret Sullavan, accompanied by Deland Hayward, is off for a vacation In Jasper National Par' in Canada. The star's three youngsters (Brooke. «; Bridget, >H and Bill 5 months) will remain in Hollywood. Incidentally, Margaret recently said that she considers six children an ideal family. Judy Garland and David Rose, riding In a speedboat, pulled five kids out of the water at Lake Arrowhead. The kids' sailboat had overturned. Bill Holden is home from the hospital and Brenda Marshall follows him In about a week. When both are well enough, they’ll get to Nevada for a Ashing trip.. . . Veronica Lake personally did all the Axing up of her baby’s nursery. He caught a 2SO-pound swordfish. He'd been trying for years. . . . Dick and Joan Blondeli now have four boats. ... Was Kay Aldridge’s face red when Warners' “Navy Blues'* sextette broke in their act at Huntington Park. Her brassiere started to rip in the hula number and she had to make a frantic grab to save it . . . Michelle Morgan and Richard Ney (he’s testing at M-G-M) are a new twosome. . . . Ditto GwUi Andre and Reginald Gardiner, who were having gay times at the Mocambo. . . . Peggy Diggins is so happy. Warners picked up another option. . . . Producer Graham Baker planned to use a running gag with a catsup bottle all the way through the picture. “Valley of the Sun.” Then he found out that tomatoes were considered poisonous at the time of the story. And that catsup didn’t come into use until 13 years later.

CLUB CALENDAR •ailaty Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Maty Phenes 1000 — 1001 Tuesday W C T I'., Mrs. Oils Rrandyberry at Monroe. Af'ernoon Bella Theta Tau Business Meet Irg. Elks Home, h p m Zion Walther Business Meeting. Lutheran Church Roclal Hoorn, gpm. Church Mothers Study Club Me. thodiat Church Social Rmim. 2 To P m. Slaters of Ruth. Mra. William Kohls. 7 TO |i m I'nion Chapel tadies' Aid Mrs. Walter Whittedbarger. I So p in liidiekah lodge Odd Fellow- Hall. 7 so p m. Teens and Twenties Club. Lin coin School, i p m First r It Otterbein build. Mias Ruth Foughty, 7 So p in Wednesday First I'. II W M S, Mrs Clifford Hakey. 2 p in St. Jude Study Club K of C Hall, 7:20 p m. Zion Lutheran Missionary Sih--Inly. Lutheran Church. 2 p in Beulah Cliapel W H C H . Mr> [ I'ugene Sommers. All Itay Thursday Mt Pleasant W S C S. Mrs. Milton Fuhrman. Afternoon Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of Nasarene Church. Mrs Barrell Millet. 7 .H> p m W S ('. S. O|>ening Luncheon. , Methodist Church, 12 M p m I'nion Chapel W M A Airs, beorge Brown. I So p m Baptist Woman s Society. Mra. C E Peterson. 2 Sil p m Pleasant drove W M A.. Mrs Jess Sheets, 1:30 |i in Monroe Better Homes Economics Cluli. Mrs. Erwin Stucky. 7 30 p m Church of ibid Missionary Bo clety. Mrs Clarence htrickler. 2 mi p m. Eastern Star, Masonic Hall. 7 So p in Friday Calvary Ladies' Aid Am le’y, Airs Mila Harmon. Evening Atnerlcen legion Auxiliary. Legion Home. 7:30 p tn. Hamiy Homemakers. Mrs Clifford Roe. I 30 p in Monday Rad Cross Center Open For Instructed and Supervised Knitting and Crocheting. Legion Home. I to' 4:10 p m Pythian Sisters T- tnple Meeting. K. of P. Home. 7:30 p m Mr and Mrs Claude Briggs and ; their son Bot> Bob left today to eater his third year of pre-medics at Indiana university, Bloomington Elmer Htlmmal of Craigvllle was among yesterday's business visitors in Becatur MisaEvangelino F.ihiman. daugli ler of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Fuhrmali left yesterday afternoon for Ball Htate Teachers college where she | entered her junior >ear. She was | an ompa ii led by her mother. Vilas Bollinger of Rockford. 0.. was among this morning's business visitors in Becatur. , Mr and Mrs C. M Ellsworth were business visitors In Fort I Wayne yesterday. Mr and Mra. Charles Lose were called to Lima. Ohio today le-cuuse of the serious Illness of the latter's brother. Chalmer O. Porter of Huntington Is rwoverlng from an appendectomy which he underwent last week at the hospital in that city | . He suffered an attack upon hi<t return home from the east, where Mr and Mrs. Porter visited their son. Roliert Porter, who is a midshipman at Annapolis Naval Academy. "Best-Hatted Women” Picked By Designer Hollywood. Kept. P -ll'Pi Actresses Claudette Colbert and Marline Deltrlch were chosen today among the five "best hatted women" in America by Edward Stevenson. Hollywood fashion designer. The others were singer Lily Pons, actress bertnide l-awrence and socialite Mrs. Byron C. Foy Stevenson made no distinction ainong the five. SB Hon-E-Krust Enriched Bread - • provides the nourishing, wholesome qualities of white bread, plus all the vitamin 81. also the pella-gra-preventive vitamin and iron of whole wheat in amounts equal Io bread made with average whole wheat flour. Order A Loaf Tomorrow. HON •E- KRUST Baking Co. Phone 1

DECATI'R DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATt'R. INDIANA.

FORMERLOCAL RESIDENT DIES Funeral Will Be Held Wednesday For Mrs. George Ulmer Funeral services Inr 'Mra. tleorge I'lmer. 70. former Becatur resident, who died Saturday at Buyton. Ohio, will die held there Wednesday morning at k o'clock. Mrs. I'lmer died Saturday night Os paralysis She was formerly Miss ■Molly Fortilng o! this elty Surviving are the huaband. a son. Ilobert and the following sisters and brothers: Mrs. II J. Smith, this city, Eleanor Fotblng. Mrs I Frank Cavanaugh. Vlncen* Forbing. all of Fort Wayne: Anthony Forbing of Milford. Mrs J. A Melnerd Ing. Lima. Mrs. Joseph Feffner. Toledo. Ohio and Mrs. J-.mes Ktrlckel of Chicago. The body will remain In Baytnn and burial will lie in that city • CHURC HILL SAYS ■CONTINtTRD PttrrM PAQW <*NDI raid the vessel had been hit Sept 7 but the maritime commission today filed the earlier date That sinking followed by 4tt hour* an encounter southwest of Ireland between the I' S destroyer Oreer and a Herman siihmarlnr In which the Oreer’s officers reported that she counter attacked after torpedoes had been fired al her Berlin charged the Greer fired flrat These developments strengthen ed belief here that the navy would meet force with force in American waters In challenge to any German efforts to cut the British life line Shortly before loss of the Kes«a was announced, prime mlnlalei Winston Churi hin told the house of commons In I-on don that Adolf Hitler might force naval warfare on the I' S in an effort to cut oft the broad stream of aid to Britain war supplies Senator Elbert B Thomas. B. I'lah. told questioners that the I'nlted States had pledged further naval aid In Great Bi Haiti after the I Greer ineldeni and that inalritc i 'inns hail been sent to the Amerl i an fleet o—--15 CAI-LED TO (CONTINUED PltOM PAOE ONEI I 1292 John William M< Millen 1322 Merril Emory Johnson 1335 James le-ster Habegger. --—'e— Adams County Memorial Hospital • — I Admitted Monday: Mrs. Frank , Baker. 342 North Eleventh street; I Mrs. Lydia Reece of route I. Beca I lur tand dismissed today I; Ulen | Bergdall. route 1. Hoaglaud Ad- I mitted Saturday: Harold Hake, route 4 Itlstnlssed: Mra. Helen Easley. Ossian; Miss Juanita l-andram. Monroeville; Mrs Lawrence Bradlmuellrr and bbby. tuule 1. Hoag land; Miss Mary Hamilton. 221 South Rourth street; Kenneth Koop. Craigvllle; Mrs. Blanche Elgey. North Eleventh street. I .0 FARMERS ARE CONTIKUKD FltOlV PAOR ONE Monday evening at Marlon. Farms visited this morning were those of Clarence Wine In Marlon coun ty and the James (I (lordoil farm in i Weils county GREAT BRITAIN CONTINUED PHOM PA<IB t>Nl from Greenland, the Arctic coast of Norway, and the Russian island groups of Fraui Josef laind and Nnvaya Sehlya. on which Russia has maintained Arctic airplane forces and Important tneieorologl cal stations. A war office communique which gave the first news of the British : expedition said: "For various purposes' It was recently decided to send a military force to the Arctic In course of the operations, which were carried out without enemy Interference, a landing was effected In Hpltaber gen for a mixed Canadian. British and Norwegian force under Canadian command. "The main purpose of the land Ing was to prevent the enemy from utilising for their own war pur poses Spitsbergen with Its rich coal mines. "Previously a proportion of Spitsbergen coal had been at the disposal of the population of north ern Norway. But it has become known that the enemy's plan was I to seiae all the coal available. Including that from Spitsbergen. . which would be used mainly for war transport to the far north. "This source of fuel has now bowu denied the Germans "The immediate result of the Spitsbergen landing Is that a considerable number of Norwegian miners and th(»lr families have now arrived In Britain to play a part In the allied war effort here Moat

of them will |oln the Norwegian' forces or the Norwegian merchant , marine** It was understood that almut 7<Hi Norwegians, liwlndlng 7'l women I and 7o children, tame to Britain I with returning irrmps Alum I 2.500 Russians have lo*en | engaged In coal mining In the Islands. Quls'lng Angersd Stockholm. Sweden. Hept 9 H'Pl Norwegian reports said today that Quisling quarters In Nor way hud been astounded and angered by news of a British expedl'ion Io Spitsbergen Il was said In well Informed quarters here that Sweden's only Interest was In the extension of war operations In the Scandinavian area aa emphasising the threat io Sweden's own neutrality Military experts here were puss I led hy the news, because aside from the question of coal they wondered whether the expedition wan a move in a more general British operational plan REfJISTER FOR (CONTINUED rßOxf PA OK ONE) ployment In defense Industry an opportunity to specialise In their work, according to Mr. Fisher "The engineering defense train Ing program offers training In col-lege-grade work, and should not lie confused with vocational training." he stated Courses In Im- offered in the second district Include metallurgy, electrical engineering, elwtroolcs. production supervision, production engineering tool and die design, and engineering mathematics Mr Fisher has taken offices for the second district In room 4'n; Central building. Fort Wayne, where In- will Im* asalsteff by Cleland D Reltelshees. graduate of Huntington college mil. Wayn<E Toliver. Indiana university. 1941. and John llavla, Franklin college. 1941. Classes will Im- held also in Fort Wayne. Bluffton. Huntington. Wabash. Warsaw. Kendallville. Auburn and Coshen Registration In each of these places will be held Kept. If>. according to W Guy Brown, local representative of the program here RAF SPREADING CONTINUED PHOM PAOE ONE to Hlclly. and Russian planes had made a heavy raid on Bucharest, i I'Bpital of Rumania The scale of the British raids was indicated by the adnilsaion that 20 iMontiing planes had lu-en lost in the great Sunday night raids, that two Aineriian-built flying fortresses had been lost In raids on Norway. and that three planes of the i American Eagle squadron were missing after a sweep over northi ern Frame Sunday Authoritative quarters said th»« . the missing American pilots were pilot oMi er W H Nichols. San Car- ! Ins. Calif., pilot officer S Fenlaw. Lewisville. Tex. and pilot officer I Eugene Quimby Tohln Los Angeles. It was believed that Nichole' plane exploded in the sky but it was hofu-d that at least one of the others and possibly both might have reached the ground safely on the French coast. German long range guns on the French coast Bred across the Dover etrail last night in (heir first bomboardment in several weeks. Several homes were damaged on the i Dover coast ami it wax understood I there were casualties. PASTORS HOLD : .CONTINUED FROM PAOR ONE) It W Graham January -"Underlying forces and outstanding |M-rsonallties of great evaiigelixtlc movement." Dr. ('. M I’rugh February "The cburch'e task In social, einnomic and political life of our day." Rev (’. R. Moser. April "The meaning and Importance of Easter In the early church, its significance In our evangelistic program." Rev, George H Ixutler. June "Development and use of music In worship and its import ante tn our day," Rev Paul Brandyberry. —

MkSB Jim g| H jfm ANOTHER TRUCK LOAD PE ACHES tomorrow 7E/» BUSHEL > » LARGE SIZE, TREE RIPENED. S WT BRING OWN CONTAINER. ID LI IC CX 24 hour serv,ce opEN I)AY AND night -

NAZI RIVE ON MOSCOW HALTED Reds Force German* Back; Strike Hard At l-eninarad Moarow. Sept 9.— tl'P) —The Red army of Marshal Hemyon i Timoshenko has smashed Nasi | preparations for an attack on Mos i row and la driving hack a virtually encircled German field army "in disorderly flight" toward Smolensk. It was reported officially today The Russian force Is now lesa than 40 ntlles from Smolensk. Russian correspondents reported, ami la rolling forward at an average rate of eight miles per day through a mate of smashed German blockbouse* and heavy field forelfimIlona, hastily thrown up by the Wehrmacht. Eight German divisions have been 'mashed, the reports said, and more than M Soviet villages reoccupied In the last 49 hours The Novtet attack la directed weal from the town of Yelyna 5u miles from Hmolensk and has now advanced II miles beyond thia Intermediate hare, the Soviet reports said Al the name lime the Soviet high command reported that tin Red army forces and Blai k Sen marines protecting Odessa have inflicted 20.000 casualtiaa on the Rumanian forte attacking that Black Sea phrt ami have raptured quantities of war tnatei'lals. The central front operation of Timoshenko, it was evident today, la the most exletislve Russian Offensive undertaking of the war. Russian forces were sold to have captured at least 10l lannon. 2'Hi machine guns ami hundred' of thousands of xhelb Th-- correspondent of the communist party newspaper, Pravda. I reported that Timoshenko's troops ; have fought their way through a German fortified region of heavily built permanent blot khousm, elab- 1 orate trenches ami barbed wire entanglements. The Kuaalan attack was said to be proceeding tsiili frontally and on both flanks of the virtually encircled Natl army which was described ,ie "in disorderly flight." Attack Leningrad Berlin. Hept 9 I I’Pt Masses of German tanks, motorised artillery and infantry paced by the llftwaff*- which the high command said struck at la-nlngrad in day and night raids, were reported today to lie closing In on the former exarist capital, now rut <>ff from all land contact Germnli bombers etruck at anna i ments factories and supply depots ! In Lvii tiKrad by day and night, the high command said, ami attacked Moscow Tin- Russians were reported to h.'Vr litot as planes yesterday, 91 of them in air combat Regarding land operations, the high command reiterated last night's sfiei'ial com tn unique claim- i Ing that hard driving, speedy troops had stormed the la-nliigrad suburb of Hi-hli'selhurg. 21 niilie to the 1 east, to complete the encirclement of the Hoviet second city. Nasi Informants said that with German forces striking heavily at hoth ends of the 1 9'Hi-mlle front, both la-ningrud ami Odessa, besieged Black Sea port, might (all "be fore the first snow falls next month " o— Local Man’s Brother Marks 99th Birthday A J Smith of thia city recently attended a party at tile latwton Park •uinitarluin in Fort Wayne for Henry Smith, his brother, in com tnetnoratlon of ihe latter's 99th birthday Despite his advanced age. the birthday celebrant is .n apparently kixhl health He has been a resident of the sanitarium since last November 3 Four sons, William E. of Fort Wayne. Fred L. of Monroeville. Frank M of Warsaw and Orval of Grabill. and a daughter. Mrs Effie Clark of Columbia City also attended the event

TWO KILLED IN WRECKED TRAIN Ntffro Transient, Engin* cer Are Killed In Train Wreck Monday Fort Wayne. Ind H'l>’ '• fl’Pi Otto Ro>t, (4. Fort Wayne englnleer nt a Pennsylvania |<a-senget train that was derailed and wreck ed berw last night died at Iditheiaii | tio'pital shortly after noon today Rost was the second Victim from the accident Previously a negro Iran'lent. Jack Hu>«m*'. addle* unknown, died Three other personWere injured. The injured W G Priddy Fort Wayne, fire man; Hamuel lasxc, Na'hvtlle. Tenn a Negro believed Io Im- a transient; and William Me Partland. 71 Quaker Hill Conn . a pasenger. Attendant' at Mt. Jo-m|>li hospital said MoPai'laml was suffering from a heart ailment Induced by sho« k Officials of the railroad «aid cause of the wreck could not he determined Immediaiely Bnperinlendent John II Cooper however.

ky n [ . In the hour of grief you can well depend upon Zwick to assume the obligation of a beautiful, well-planned tribute to / /your departed one. The same, understanding ser- /• vice to all, regardless of the price you wish t<» pav. $ - fc ZWICK FUNERM. HOME ’ ' / W H ZWICK • ROfitRTJ ZWICK TOin Z ROBERT B FREEBY y"’’ Service, MFt JS P' i Qut PHONES'- 61-800 " Mr WALLS AKf AS BfAUHFUL iff' £-11 AND lAsr TO KHP CLtAN AS ,F j| A CHINA DISH SINCE I ■ B BAINTtD WITH 2S| WAH KIN-AM-B * * PERFECTION WALL KIN-AM-EL IS REALLY WASHABLE ' • Lasting Lustre • Easy Brushing ' • No Brush Marks • Won’t Run, Sag. Chip or Crack (•) B. J. Smith Drug Co.

PAGE THREE

- - ■■ .tirwMi •n---r~-*r 1 ■aid preliminary girestiga'lon eliminated th* possibility of sabotage The wreck, which occurred about l«» p m tore qi 3tm ymds at track, derailed all seven coache' and overturned the engine. Haan Attacs Fatal Fort Wayne, Ind. Hept. 9- tI'PA George J Alter. 81, Fort Wayn » one of a crowd estimated l»y polu-e ai b.'HM' which was d-awn to the •cene of the wretked Pwtinsylvania train here last night, suffered a heart attack and d> ■d ARRIVALS Mi xml Mra Leslie Marquart of Monreevtlie are the parents of a taby boy, I,Sunday morning at 3 S 3 o < Inch xi th" Adams county memorial ho-pltal He Welgh"«l eight pound and fourteen ounces Mr. and Mr- Fred Ahr of route 3 are the parents of « taby lety. born at the Idant' munty memorial lio'pital Friday evening al eightthirty o'clock He weighed alg and one half pounds A girl Ittxby was horn to Mr and Mrs. Haymond Hhacktey of 3'CI North Ninth street, al the Ada incounty memorial ho-piial Haturday afterniMin at !3" o'clm-k. Hhe Weighed M'Veli pounds, five and one half ounces.