Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 50, Decatur, Adams County, 28 February 1945 — Page 3

IffINESDAY, FEBRUARY 28. 1945.

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Eorial service KnNEO SUNDAY linn <;rov.> Ualvniy F.vanK"i ehurch '''ill eomluet a MeService Sunday, a’ 1:3" Pq and is :<> pay ro ■ deceased .n-.nbers of the \\. ■s also I" ''' i " ul ln °' h ’ Kisl-rs: ministers wives. K peopl- ~"’.d -tar ■ Jor l-v> and girls in the MLeofthr >nntry. -Mik. Evert is genfi.il chairman and Ku.n<-« !li ' iW tnll,,ws; a Friend We ■■ in Jesus. _ Knenina T::-Nonma Rate. Kwar'k- '>y Evert l!anter - Neiderhauser. ■ to ntinisters-Rev. George Btton. ~ ■ to minis'*"-’ wives—Ml*. : Horge Holston- . ■r,,,,t0 toothers of the .-.lurch ■ R. Hopkins. -o t.it.t.-ts of the church Hrry Meetlherger. Kuiet inusii. to young people — Mrs. ip-'atn Grahdlienaid. Song "Say •' I’<-:iye: For The , ." Carolyn Sue Mesh. trger. Jtot ■ :n<>fi.ll- Mrs. Evt Banter. Tribute to ineni'bers of W. M. S. id candle service. Trituite to grid star mothers. Hoiriciis Wfi and girls in servCteing song-" When I Survey e Wondrous Cross. Benediction. The public ie invited to attend is service. EETING IS HELD V GARDEN CLUB Tie Decatur Garden club met iitfday afternoon at tne home of rs. Paul Feiber with 25 members id three guests present. 7- local organization has been lied to make a dish garden, swell fend gardens to be distributed niuitg the hospital ward* by the bn Wayne 1. S. (>. The Decatur tab decided to make tiwo such Irdene. Mrs. Man::: Zitnmr-rman and Mrs. irk "i.oia. program chairmen, ire interesting papers on “A.t it Seiding Hoard" by Mrs. Zimimi:m and “Birds in your Garra by Mre. Braun.

/ ... the shortest distance between two hearts! That tantalizing, insidious fragrance created \ for you who would leave '■■■ I ’-Vi behind — always — your tignature in scent. *•; 55.75 to no SaJSS SMITH DRUG CO. ”■■■■■ ma,*sac»«:rrra bsiii i ■ ■ =3l s ' 1 i I BE BRIEF WHEN YOU USE ■ YOUR TELEPHONE. " a I I ’ When you make unneces- ■ 5 sary calls, either local or long * < you hamper the war « i effort by tieing up the lines that ■ J are almost constantly being used ' by the government. ® • i • i I ★ I i

iConttetß in keeping with St. Patrick’s day were enjoyed by the club and prizes were t warded to Mrs. Hensel Nash and Mrs. Noah Bixler. Guests besides the regular members were Mrs. Amos Yoder, Decatur. and Mrs. Carl Hilty and Mrs. Leister Price from Berne. The hostess was assisted in serving refrcsdrmentH by Mrs. Zimmerman and Mns. Braun. The next regular meeting will be March 20. HONORED GUEST AT BIRTHDAY DINNER IMrs. John Hendricks. 121 South Fourteenth street, was the honored guest when friends and relatives arrived Sunday for a pot luck dinner in honor of her sixty-third birthday which will be March 1. The dinner was served buffet style and the table was centered with a i large birthday cake. Dinner guests included Mr. and ■ Mns. Eddie McFarland and daughters of Decatur route 6, Mt*. Martin Murphy and daughters, Mrs. Willard Hartnagle and daughter, all of Geneva; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hendricks and son of Berne. Mrs. Pear] Ray and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hendricks, Miss Sarah Hendricks, Elmer and Richard Hendricks of Decatur. Afternoon and evening guests were Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Affolder and eon ot Ossian. Mies Patricia Barkley of Monroeville., Mrs. Hobart Spencer and son. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Atfolder of Decatur. MUSIC DEPARTMENT HAS INTERESTING MEETING Miss Eleanor Reppert of North Second street wae hostess to the members of the Music Department of the Woman’s club Monday even-1 ing at their regular meeting. IM is. L. A. Holthouse presided over the business meeting. Roll call was made with current events. It was announced that the music department had been asked by the ministerial association to furnish I music for the Good Friday union I services which will be held at the I Zion Evangelical and Reformed, ■ church. The program chairman for the evening wae Mrs. Harold Grant and she gave a very interesting paper, choosing ae her rheme “Bells for Peace.” She reviewed the history of the belle and described how they were first brought to America from Europe During the social hour, refreeh-

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Phones 1000 — 1001 Wednesday Methodist Church Mothers study club, church parlors, 2 p. m. St. Mary’e home economice club, Pleasant Mills high school, 7 p. tn. Red Crofie Sewing Center, Legion, I p. m. Historical Club, Mr*. M. E. Hower,, 2:30 p. nt. st. Jude’s Study Club, K.‘ of C. Hall, 8 p. tn. Shakespeare Club, Mrs. Eayl Ad-1 ams. 2:30 p. m. Thursday Union township club, Mrs. Frank Gleckler, all day. Joint meeting of Presbyterian Woman’s Home and Foreign miesionary society and the World Friendship guild, church parlors, 7:30 p. m. Men's Union prayer (service, ground floor public library, 7:30 p. tn. Church of God Missionary Society, Mrs. Herbert Hawkins, 7:30 p. m. Finfiß Methodifib Ever Ready Class, Mrs. J. T. Myers, 7:30 p. tn. W. M. A. of the Nuttman U. B. Church, Mrs. Earl Terrell, 7:00 p. m. Heidelberg Class, Zion Evangeliand Reformed church, 8 p. m. Rainbow for Girls, Masonic Hall, 7:30 p. m. Ladies Aid Society of Ist U. B. Church, Mrs. Vernoin Hill, 2 p. tn. tHvangelical Miesionaiy Society, Church, 2 p. tn. iW. S. M. S. Nazarene Church. Mr. and Mrs. Orval Sudduth, 7:30 p. m, Friday Red Cross Knitting Center, Legion 2 p. tn. to 5 p. nt. First U. B. Work and Win class, Mr. and Mrs. Adam Kunowich, 7:30 p. m. Monday Pythian Sister Temple. K of P. 7:3-0 p. tn. Junior Arts of the Woman's Club, postponed. Home Economics Choi tie. R. W. Rice,, postponed until March - 1.2. ments were served by the hostess, assisted by .Mrs. Roland Reppert, | Mrs. Wm. Feller and Mrs. Dallas | Goldner, The next regular meeting I will lie held March 12 with Mi*>. 1 Harold Grant as hostess. 1 DELTS HOLD BUSINESS MEETING TUESDAY Members of the Delta Theta Tau ! sorority had their regular 'business meeting Tuesday evening at the Elka home with Miss Helen Barthel presiding. Reports were given by the rummage sale committee and the cigaret committee. Mrs. Charles Holthouse, secretary of the board of trustees of the sorority, gave a report on rhe meeting of the national council held in Chicago. The chapter voted to donate ?50 to the Red Cross drive. MRS. BESS ERWIN RESEARCH HOSTESS iMrs. Bess Erwin was hostess to members of theßesearchcluibat the home of Mrs. Walter Krick, Monday afternoon. Mrs. Anna Vance, leader for the afternoon, selected as her subject 'This Great New York,” stating New York is the largest city in the world. It is one of the greatest historical landmarks, a city of colleges. Sew and Save 9040 / ’ =1 / , o! > » i * / e / b c*l Hi n lm u ■&1M1 MARIAN MARTIN New, smart frock, styled to slim your hips. Front opening makes it easy to slip on. Collar, front panel can be made to contrast, use salvaged material; cotton or rayon. Pattern 9040 comes in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Size 36 takes 3% yards 35-inch. Send Twenty Cents »m coins for this pattern to Decatur Dally Democrat, Pattern Dept., 155 N. Jefferson St., Chicago 80, 111. Print plainly Size, Name, Address, Style Number. JUST OUT! Send Fifteen Cents more for our Marian Martin Spring Pattern Book! ’ Easy-to-make clothes for all. Free Blouse Pab tern printed right in the book. Bend Now.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

On A Carrier iW < i Maurice E. Teeple. aviation machinist mate, third class, son of Mrs. Iva Teeple of route five, is aboard an aircraft carrier in the Pacific. He entered the navy in 1943 and took boot training at Great Lakes. He is a graduate of Pleasant Mills high school and was formerly employed at the General Electric plant. universities, specialized acadamies and schools and is known as t"he mother of skyscrapers. The flub will meet March 12 at the home of Mrs. Carrie Hau'bold. The Home Economic chorufc which was scheduled to meet at the ; home of Mrs. R. AV. Rice, has been : postponed until Monday, March 12.1 Mrs. Rice lives in Root township, one-half mile east of Monmouth. This meeting will be pot luck dinner served at six o’clock in the evening. The W. S. M. S. of the Church of the Nazarene will meet Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Orval Sudduth at seven-thirty o’clock. The huebands of the women of this or- ; glanization are especially invited. — IMr. and Mrs. Heitbert Leo La I Fontaine, Decatur route 6, are the - parents of a baiby girl, born at 9:12 p. m. Tuesday at the Adams county memorial hospital. Cpl. and Mrs. Floyd E. Miller are parents of a baby daughter, born February 5 at the hospital in Frederick. Md. The baby, named Sylvia May, weighed pounds and is a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Miller of thus city. 0 Must of us are much more sensitive on the subject of our prejudices than we are on the subjects of our real convictions.

the ScenesO

By HARRISON CARROLL King Features Syndicale Writer HOLLYWOOD —“The Dolly Sisters” will have played to a big audience before the picture even leaves the Twentieth Century-Fox studio. Actors, writers, producers, who

have no connection with the film, like to come onto the set and watch Betty Grable and June Haver work, specially in the musical numbers. And newspapermen like me come kibitzing. Director

Harrison Carroll

Irving Cum-1 mings is shooting a Folies Bergere | sequence this week. Betty and June are up on a stage singing “The Darktown Strutter's Ball’' in French, and dancing as they sing. They are wearing tall, plumed hats and long, high-necked but skin-tight satin gowns, each with a single row of buttons down the center from throat to hem. Betty’s gown is black, June’s is white. Dance Director Seymour Felix, a pint-sized little man with a gnome-like face, is scouting around and gesticulating underneath the arm of the camera crane. Designer Orry-Kelly is contemplating the gowns on the two stars, his handiwork. “This was a fussy period,” he says to me, “but I am dressing Betty as simply as I can. I think her clothes have been over-oomphed upon occasion in the past. Like they did with Ann Sheridan at Warner Brothers. It isn’t necessary. Girls like Betty and Ann have plenty of oomph of their own.” I remark that June seems to be blessed with plenty, too. “She certainly is,” said Kelly, "and furthermore, what you see up

£ imiljg fl LI » Cpl. Floyd E. Miller has recently ■ been advanced to that rank and his address is «<s follows: Tech. Section. 9766th J. S. 2. Station Company. Camp Detrick, Md. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Miller of this city. The address f Donn Eichar, who left last week for navy service, is an follows: Donald Eugene Eichar. A. S., Co. 257 United States Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, 111. o ♦ • Adams County 1 Memorial Hospital | • • ■Admitted: Mns. Tony Gracia, 336. West Oak; Rev. Rolbert Mcßrier, I Decatur route 2; Mrs. Robert Work- ■ inger, 815 North Fifth. Admitted and dismissed: — Mrfi. Hanna Honeier, 121 North 10th; Mrs. Donald H. Callow, 1210 Master Drive. Dismissed: Mies Jeanette Robertson, 121 North Third; Donald ; Aeschliman, 310 Winchester; Mies I Marcella Shrock, Berne; Frank E. Hower. 1026 Patterson. o Mrs. Hattie Parr Is Taken By Death Mrs. Hattie Pearl Parr, 61, died Tuesday at her home six miles east of Berne after a long illness. Surviving are the husband, T. M. (Dick) Parr; sour sone, Marcus. Bert and John, near Berne, and Sam. at home; six daughters Mrs. i Nolble Reynolds of Decatur, Mrs. Jesse Brewster of near Geneva, Mi*. Vilas Luginlbil] of near Berne, Mrs. Daniel Price of near Ossian, Mary and Oral, at home; a brother Samuel Clase of Tipp City, O.; a sidter, Mi*. Carrie Mahemson of Warsaw; 19 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. ■Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Friday at the Bethel Brethren church, east 6f Berne, with burial in the Mt. Hope cemetery, northeast of Berne. 2 0 Third Lenten Sermon Is Delivered Here The Very Rev. Henry A. Hoerstnian, pastor of St. Andrews church, Fort Wayne, delivered the third Lenten sermon at St. Mary's church last evening. His thfme was on avoidance of ein and doing good. 0 Democrat Want Ads Get Results

there are strictly the girls’ own curves. We are not trying to fool you at all!" There’s only a moderate crowd of visitors on the set today. George Jessel doesn’t count. He’s the producer on the picture and, with him, it’s just a case of loving his work. But there’s another producer (I won’t mention his name), a sailor, two Marines, three Army aviators—and Lloyd Nolan. I ask him what he is doing on the set. "Listen, ’• he says, "I’m in the Rickenbacker picture down the way. For two days I have been sitting on a raft with nothing to look at but Fred Mac Murray. So finally, I get desperate. I run out of the stage, I find myself here." That shuts me up. As Damon Runyon says, "You gotta go along with a guy like that. _______ Those two perpetual motion producers, Bill Pine and Bill Thomas are whipping out a mystery comedy for Paramount called “Follow That Woman.” The two Bills specialize in action and in small budgets. When I got onto the set. Bill Gargan and Nancy Kelly, Regis Toomey, Ed Gargan and a halfdozen other players are a little punchy from the number of scenes Director Lew Landers has knocked out during the morning. But, if they are jittery, a new soundman, who has never worked for Pine and Thomas before, is about to jump out of his skin. As Director Landers plunges headlong into another take, the soundman cries: “Just a minute! The sound isn’t up to speed!” “Anybody can make it with the sound up to speed,” flips Producer Thomas. Producer Pine is a wise-cracker, too. The boys decided the other day that they wire going to make a picture about the famed “Tokyo Rose.” “Don’t you think it would sound E impressive," said Producer “if we called it ’Thirty ds Over Tokyo Rose’ ?" .' l

WI;W ' fl I \\ al j Bl J g........ FIRST AERO CLUB IN A HANGAR—A Red Cross girl has a G.I. sign his name in the state register of this Aero club, site of a forint r German fighter base. And what makes a better writing desk than a Focke-VVulf wing? Another wrecked plane frames the over- I Reas worker and _

Funeral services will be held a’ : the Church of Christ in Markle toi morrow afternoon for Mrs. David Fritz. 79, who died Sunday at the Wells county hospital. She wus stricken while feeding the livestock and was found by a nephe-w eeveral hours later. Mr. Fritz, a prominent farmer of Welle county, died a year ago. Van Wert is advertising for bids for thoussindw of dollars worth of equipment and material to improve RESTLESS HIGH-STRUNG Oh “CERTAIN DAYS” Os The Month? Do functional periodic disturbances make you feel nervous, fidgety, cranky, Irritable, a bit blue, tired, and "dragged out”—at such times? Then start nt once — try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Pinkham's Compound Is famous not or.Jy to relieve monthly pain but also accompanying weak, tired, nervous, restless feelings of this nature. Pinkham's Compound helps nature! Taken regularly— this great medicine helps build up resistance against such distress. Also a grand stomachic tonic. Follow label directions. Buy today. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S

i - * * £h| "" zb Qwcfest wy to/ose *25 There’s nothing to it... Isn’t that an easy way to drop $25? All you have to do is take one of those And isn’t it a foolish way ? SIOO War Bonds for which you recently Most people think so! That’s one reason paid $75... go to your bank and say... w hy they’re holding on to their War “1 want to turn this in.’ Bonds. The bank takes your SIOO War Bond— They don’t know any easier way to gives you $75. make $25. And you lose s2s—just like that! Do you? KEEP FAITH WITH OUR FIGHTERS BUY WAR BONOS FOR KEEPS This Advertisement Sponsored in Honor of Adams County’s Fighting Men by The Decatur The First State Burk Elevator Co. Casting CO. Bank Coal-Seed-Grain Light Gray Castings Local Bond Issuing Agent Bag SCTViCC, IRC. Kraft Cheese Co. The Krick-Tyndall North second st. Maufacturers of Dairy Products Company Lankenau s Cal E. Peterson ‘"jr™ h.nj» th. t "‘ ciothier Model Hatchery, Central Soya The Schafer Co. Monroe Company, Inc. Manufacturers & Jobbers Quality Chicks Livestock Foods This is an official U. 8. Treasury advertisement—prepared under the auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising Council

■ and clean the streets cf that city. They will buy tractor With nttath- i mentß to clean streets, cut weeds i and move snow, power machine to | clean eewerw and catch basins, 100,000 gallons of asphalt emulsion to ' patch streets and will let an SB,OOO ■ contract to repave Glen street. Roacoe Glendenning, cashier of the Firet State Bank ill tills city, underwent a major operation at the Adams county memorial bojplUil Monday. Reports from hospital alRed Points are as Valuable as Money. SPEND THEM WISELY! REGARDLESS of the QUALITY of Meat you buy, the point value is the same. GET THE BEST FOR YOUR POINTS. Be sure of Quality by buying cuts from cattle selected from Adams County’s Finest herds. Gerber MEAT MARKET ——_ i

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taelien said hte condition was good. I Mr. and Mrs. Frank. Graham of Alberta, Canada ar? visiting for a month with Mrs. Alf Hahnert of Monroe and Mr. and Mre. L. A. Graham of Decatur and other relatives in the county. o _ Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Lengerich. Glamour of ’45 DOROTHY’S BEAUTY S H O P 703 N. Third St. For appointment phone 1049. . ! F/ / fir. ■I i ® do BUBBLE BATH FRESHNESSN New Spartie... Coton BritMened 4 ... speedy mnEIC FOHIH bubble teth for draperies, sptaf- g sterad furmture, rags, tapestries Z ... soil and grime whisk away Q instantly with the 10an... no F water used... modem... econom- ? ical... a gafion cleans a room. J, r QUARTS *5« HALF GALLON D M S GALLON SI.7S C Satisfaction Guaranteed ? Holthouse Drug Co.