Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 64, Decatur, Adams County, 16 March 1945 — Page 3
iAY/ march. 16. 1945.
-SOCIETY
c c H AKESPEARECLUB | EE ?|NG WEDNESDAY Shakespeare club met M nf Mrs J. L. Kocher, home oi .jnfc'day afternoon. Suf I <’», Sr. gave a paper on Emil LeuL “Tunkey.” The interest volume was enhanced by lh ,. unusual but remark!f o£ tb e author. “The govli oppression of Turkey ‘ national characteristic of hing - for fear of being misnod by all citizens, and this ndne.se retarded the pro Turkey by centuries. And P answer seemed to be part- . religion as Mohammedanfprs little to cause the worto progress. Add to this a ■ion of aibsolute monarchs, rpes ive taxation system and . ud , of take but never give . part of government offind you better understand the the citizen in .this land of jr k The author shows such „dly regard for the modern y and she may emerge from considerably strengthII1( | be a model of peace lovation.” Mrs. John Tyndall isuib-topic of interest, wing the program, Mrs. , served delicious refreshThe next meeting will be at onte of Mrs. Leigh Bowen [rs. D. Erwin will bive the ap-r. Circle meetings of the MethV. S. C. s. will be held Thursternoon at two thirty o’clock. I, home of Mrs. Forrest Elssisting hostesses, Mrs. O. K. Miss Ora Gilpen; fesson, D. Lewton; devotions, Mrs. Vance. Circle 11, home of Mrs. Bowen; assisting hostesses, ff. Plasterer, Mrs. W. Barkwon, Mrs. Walter Krick; de6, Mrs. R. A. Stuckey. Circle rs. Guy Brown; aesiating hos- , Mrs. Clifford Essex, Mrs. hyback; l-sson, Mrs. Lowell ; devotions, Mrs. Fred Han-
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cher. Circle IV, homo of Mrs. John Parrish, assisting hoslese. Miss Katherine Mangold, Mrs. Amos Yoder; lesson, Mrs. M. O. Lester; devotions, Mrs. Ed Clark. ’ The employes of the Adams county war price and ration board enjoyed a breakfast Thursday morning in honor of the birthdays of two of the office girls, Miss Mary Kathryn Keller and Miss Marjorie MoAlhaney. Ihaides the two honored guests, the party included Mieses Rosemary Spangler, Virginia Archer, Joan Wemhoff and Mrs. Ada Martin. IPs! lota Xi sorority will enjoy a. pot-luck supper Tuesday evening at six thirty o’clock at the Lutheran church. Saturday, March 24, an all day rummage sale will be held in the old Staley confectionary building on South Second Street. The meetings of the Loyal Daughters class of the First Evangelical church have ibeen ’postponed until April. The junior auxiliary of the American Legion will meet Monday evening at seven thirty o’clock at the Legion home. f) * Alfred E. Brooke, Fort Wayne, traveling freight agent, and A. M. Garrison, Chicago special agent, in the freight traffic department, of the Pennsylvania railroad company were visitors Thursday at the Central Soya company plant in this city. G. D. Mac Lean was a visitor in Marion, 0., Wednesday looking after business for the Central Soya company. IMrs. L. L. Frank has been in Shreveport, La., the past several weeks visiting with her son-in-law and daughter, Lt. and Mrs. Vaun
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Phones 1000 — 1001 Friday Red Cross Knitting Center, Legion, 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. Monday Pythian Sister Temple, K. of P„ 7:30 p. m. 'Corinthian class of Christian church, Mrs. Dan Roop, 7:30 p. m. Junior auxiliary of American Legion, Legion home, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday Decatur Garden- cluib, Mrs. Arbie Owens, 2:30 p. m. iPsi lota Xi pot-hick, Lutheran church, 6:30 p. m. Wednesday Home Economics club, Mrs. Niland Ochsenrider. Red Cross Sewing Center, Legion, 1 p. m. Thursday Methodist W. S. C. S. circle I, Mrs. Forrest Elzey, 2:30 p. m. Methodist W. S. C. S. circle 11, Mrs. Leigh Bowen, 2:30 p. m. Methodist W. S. C. S: circle 111, Mrs. Guy Brown, 2:30 p. m. Methodist W. S. C. S. circle IV, Mrs. John Parris, 2:30 p. m. iSo Cha Rea, Mrs. V. J. Bormann, 7:30 p. m. IMen’s Union Prayer Service, ground floor public library, 7:30 p. m. K. Liniger and son, Cary Dee. Mrs. Frank will return to her home in this city next week when Lt. Liniger will be transferred to Selfridge Field, Mich. Rev. Arthur K. Korteling of Bluffton, moderator of the Fort Wayne Presbytery is expected to attend the meeting of the advisory board, at the First Preribyterian church here this evening. Tom Terveer, James Strickler and Hubert Schmitt left this afternoon for Indianapolis where they will attend the Indiana state basketiball tournament. 0 BERGMAN & CROSBY (Continued From Page One) Crosby stammered. “Do it just like you rehearsed it, bub,” sneered Hope. Miss Bergman, dressed in black , silk with silver sequins dripping across her bosom, said she was happy to win—for one special reason. “Tomorrow I go to work in a picture with Bing and Mr. McCarey,” she said. “And I’m afraid if I didn’t have an ’Oscar’, too, th«y wouldn’t speak ,to me.” — —o —• —•— Democrat Want Ads Get Result* IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT FOR DOCTORS HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. Now Has PENICILLIN For use by the medical profession for civilian patients. Dress and Cape 9010 /jTiVuul sizes m 6 ’’ 4 l & 3 • In' I 1 j /A? #4' Jh i HL if Jr * f-- \ «'W' : ; 'bt " Mil \ MB marian martin Pattern 9010, a dirndl and cape a young miss can make for herself— it's that simple to fit and sew! Make the cape from a discarded coat; dress of cotton or rayon. Pattern 9010 comes in sizes 6, S. 10, 12, 14. Size 10, frock, 2% yds. 39-in.; cape, 1% yds. 54-in. 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 Pattern printed right in the book. Send Nov.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.
A B-24 Pilot I . — Sec. Lt. Maurice E. Spangler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Spangler of the Studebaker farm, east of Decatur, is visiting here with his parents. He is a pilot of a B-24 Liberator bomber and has selected his crew for his ship. He will return to Mountain Home, Idaho, where he has been stationed. He joined the army in January 1943 and was commissioned last August. The lieuten ant’s brother, Pfc. Ambrose Spangler is in front line fighting in the Philippine area. He has been in the army since April 1941 and went to the Pacific in January 1944. o Special Services And Meetings Os Churches In Areo HgliPgy Holiness Association The monthly meeting of the Adams county holiness association will he held at the Monroe Friends church Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock. Rev. Joshua Stauffer, of Westfield, will be the guest speaker. The public is invited to attend. I 0 — BREAK-THROUGH
(Continued From Page One) they were hurled back. (The Germans hinted allso the British and Canadian armies rnaseed along the river farther north were about to storm the Rhine. iDoughboys of the American aeven'th army opened the nutcracker offensive on the German Saar basin with a general assault along a 50-tnile front from a point west of Saarbruecken to the Rhine corner opposite Karlsruhe. Kicking off in the darkness at one a. m. Thursday, the seventh army rolled up advances running to eight’ miles in the first 30 hours and at last reports was grinding into the first belt of the Siegfried line defenses The fortress town of Bi'tche was all but surrounded from the northwest, south and east; Saanbruecken was menaced by infantry colums that crowded into within a halfimile of the city from the west and albout 1% miles from the southeast; Hagen'au, on the eastern flank, Was virtually cleared of Nazis after an all-day street battle. iAs the seventh army began t« roll, Lt. Gen. George S. Patton’s third army leaped into action with a coordinated attack from the north that crumpled the Nazis makeshift defense along the Moselle, the thrust threatened to turn the entire Siegfried line fortifications which were being stormed frontally by the seventh army. 0 Democrat Want Ads Get Results Women n in your Do these symptoms Betray your Age? Do you—like bo many women between. the ages of 38 and 62—suffer from hot flashes, nervous tension. Irritability, are a bit blue at times—due to the functional "middle-age” period peculiar to women? Then start of once—try Lydia ®. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. This great medicine helps hatubs. Taken regularly—it helps build up resistance against such “middle-age” distress. For almost a century—thousands upon thousands of women, have reported benefits. Also grand stomachia tonic. Follow label directions. VEGETABLE COMPOUND
innii innnnTijinnTn** UNCfILE MMI >Pfc. Nolble D. Nicodemufl, eon of Mr. and Mns. Walter Nicodemue, 416 Patterson street, has been assigned to the AAF Training Command radio school at the Sioux Falls army air field, Sioux Faile, S. D. for training ae a radio oper-ator-mechanic. Upon completion of a 26-week course, he will be fully trained to take his place as a member of a highly skilled bomber crew member. Pfc. Nicodemus has been in the army since September, 1942. He had previous training at Boca Raton Field, Fla., Santa Ana, Cal., and Yuman Army Field, Ariz. II — 9 CPO Herman Keller has returned from active sea duty and will arrive in this city today to spend a leave with his wife, Mrs. Lorena Keller, and other relatives and friend. His brother, S/Sgt. Robert E. Keller, is expected home from three years service in the Pacific. IMr. and Mrs. Jesse Singleton of Root township have received word that thier son, Kenneth Singleton, RT 2/c, has arrived safely at his destination. T/5 Richard Des Jean has arrived safely at his destination, according to a telegram received by his mother, Mrs. Florence Des Jean. 0 MARINES SQUEEZE (Continued From Page One) way to attack — frontal assault,” Smith said. "The Marines knew the Japs had had years to perfect defenses and in doing so could register every available weapon on the only beaches possible for a landing. “The cost of winning was no douibt weighed carefully against the importance of having this island as an operating base and speeding the ultimate defeat of Japan.” While the fifth marine division steadily whittled down the last enemy pocket, the third and fourth marine divisions in eastern Iwo mopped up stragglers and snipers overlooked in their breakthrough to the east coast. (Front dispatches said construction forces were rushing repairs to the three captured airfields on Iwo and otherwise converting the island into a major ]>ase for t]ie cope Ing assault on Japah. —.—o— Democrat Want Ads Get Results'
| Glenwear Blouses Feminine little blouses to spark your suits and skirts —make you picture-pretty! A,Crisp whites, refreshing pas- ; tels, smooth stripes, vivid I \ prints — with news in cap sleeves . . high and low neck- \ lines! Tailored or frilly beauvk I t’ es — peasant charmers too I —for now thru Summer. 3- 50 - Hanes No-Seam Hosiery / jfl®/ There’s glamour afoot '>n / hosiery from our fresh 1 spring stock. Sheer rayon Ibareleg hosiery in new colors. Sizes B'/2 to 10’/j. 7 . 57c Pai . Gloves fj H p* Jut All Spring shades — tan, 1/ y B \ \ white, navy, turf, pastel Vg■ h IX and black. Cotton and I' ravon. I 9 *i-°® t Niblick & Co.
In German Drive MOSgt. Loures Meyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tony Meyer, 303 Grant Street, is back in Germany with the Fifth division of mechanized cavalry of General Hodges’ First army, he has written his sister, Eileen Ruth "Meyer. He was in the drive that took Luxemberg, then had to fall back to Holland in the German push last December, and now is again in He has been overseas since January 1944 and in the army since July 11, 1941. In his recent letter he stated. “I know what it is to be tired, hungry and cold. I can see now why veterans of battles do not speak of their experiences.” PAYROLL PLAN FOR (Continued From Page One) expected to buy an extra $18.75 bohd. Purchase of government bonds is still a voluntary matter and the treasury intends to keep it that way, war bonds officials stated. Each company is asked to figure its own allotment and then allocate the amount to individual employes, depending entirely on the individual to buy his share of government securities, as has been done in past war loan drives, Mr. Graliker emphasized. NYALGESIC | A pain-easing rub for muscular soreness, strains or sprains due to exercise or exposure, shaker-top bottles.... 49c 89c Holthouse Drug Co.
No merchant ship missed convoy during the holiday seasoil, thus maintaining an unbroken supply line of ships sailing to the fighting fronts. BEST-KNOWN home remedy for relieving miseries of children’s colds. OWVICKS Ww W W Vapoßub
MARCH TO CHURCH Sunday School 9:3o—Morning Service 10:30 a. m. Y. I*. S. Meeting 6:3o—Evening Service 7:30 p. m. Special Sing—Accomplished Violinist. “You are Always Welcome To Our Services.’’ Church of The Nazarene Decatur, Ind. J. T. Trueax, Pastor Doyle Lytle, S. S. Supt. MONTH of MARCH
IB filL 'W K':' I jnjpy* g I ■Ff’iMi y z 4< a") ASi BI st 9■- - feMB? fgg g gftfgS ■ t *jjT. BT : - JSf JI ? j|F Jg ' Buy it fresh, make it fresh ■MI - it’s better every time! One sip of this grand-tasting coffee and you’ll agree—here’s W?. J, ® coffee at its delicious best! Here’s a why: it’s really fresh, sold in the ■!. | bean—then ground to your Q ib. EQc order. Remember, too, there’s a * ** s *** blend to suit your taste! * H,r * at * ,h * odvontagai of getting Br I coH ** 5 WAYS BITTH: ” ’ Su < Mrb “rt°f°F quality, (2) “Flavor-saver" roasting, (3) /1 Fresher coffee... In the bean, (4) Cus,ICH * N6 I ,om ® ,ound service, (5) In a blend to jjffijOjLy -- • | w(t your tart# “ 24 ‘ — l “ lw “* **ownin| |W ■■. W Hjg ™i & w
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