Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 73, Decatur, Adams County, 27 March 1945 — Page 3
,[p A Y, MARCH 27,1945.
K),SOCIETY'
■ N SISTER NEEDLE ■ EETS MONDAY ■ in , (he regular temple ■nf ihe Pythian Swlers last ■ ttlP following hostesses ert■‘the Pythian Sister ■| irll Mrs. Frank Carrol, Carrol. «»d -«»■ EL ft business nr etiiKg. after ft gan.ee of bingo were enft prizes were awarded the. ■winners. I the social hour, delicious Rents were served by the I n week cottage prayer I o f the Methodist, church, ft bv the ladies pf the E w qi be held Wednesday I ficm nine to nine thirty ■at the following homes: ■ Ward Calland, Mis. O. L. ■ Mrs. Homer Kuehn, and ■ (’ Baughman, 3<5 stevcuLt These prayer meetings ■ving most helpful and all If the church are invited Id. |nd Mrs. L. W. Murphy en-
111 Easter Toiletries • 1 1 for the girl OF ■ i YOUR CHOICE ■ BgL r lt goes to youri" x ■ !■’ \Vl\l4 heart! _ MT.\y Zl' \ VXW/ INTOXICATION I ■ I//’ ’F Stirring new ■ ■LfiW' p '^; y ;w|w: ■ • 10.00 and i k 18.50 | . I r—\ “ SISW ‘ ■ El —t Heaven Sent /Pl ’•Aya\. ' ■ IB Eau de Toilette 1.75 V//K ‘l\\lrV I Heaven Sent Perfume, purse size 1.00 ;H ll\ W ■ |.| LC'MC'i Heaven Sent Co- i Iri Urt Vwi ■ M i .MV I logne Compact 1.50 1 ■ Eg P jr'A’ I Heaven Sent Dust- j / 111 f j A V ■ 9 l ing Powder __ 1.25 1 /I W 'll h' ■ IF — Bnßnftl a H PERFUME K by Faberge' ® B Uphrodisia, OLD SOUTH g HI ' Woodhue, ‘ ‘ :? a — | Tigress, i Cologne » Bl Straw Hat, and ■ ■ B Chambray g t. B 1 00 I 3.50-5.00 I 8.50 ; | 1.50 to 4.00 ■ ■ Evening L tV\ In Paris ■ 9 iVk Perfume — ■ H MWk Purse I «0e fetor, ■ K \ wk V " Evening ® K \ n ln Paris MI 5 K VM Powder **„* KK 89% H I w 1.00 "I J S TA I Jl' Perfume ■ I 2.75 - 7.50 MSMfP KB ■ J| TAB) Lipstick fM9|■ I i. 50 ■ I TABU Face I ■ Powder I I 1.75 [Smith Drug Co. § ,T 4,, g ' i Hi EASTER EGG-STRA 'B ll|f| EXTRA! READ ALL AB^ [i T (ft j FLASH—A beautiful assortmen B J Easter items now on ll ‘ spla! f ‘, s waiting your approval at 1 ump »; 1 n| Don't fail to see this outs anding ||g array of gifts to please e y ; BNUm I wife ' mother and sweetheart versa — and ’ n a pr * ce range BfBB every purse. g, fl^^B 1 iEiiisil IS PUMPHREY U Hi C 9 r H |H Jewelry Store B , z>v! i> • W v
tertained at dinner Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Chalmer Ffeher and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jones, Mre. Helen Meehan and son, and Mrs. 'Margaret Jones, all of Fort Wayne. GOOD NEIGHBORS HOME ECONOMICS CLUB MEETS The Good Neighbors home economics cluib met Thursday evening at the home of Mns. Menno Nussbaum. 'Mrs.. Carl Sichug, president, presided over the insetting, opened with the group singing "In The Garden,” ■followed by scripture and prayer by Daisy .Harrieon, The creed was repeated in unison and roll call was answered with "what plans have you made for Easter.” The business meeting followed. A report on the new campagin for farm bureau hospital insurance was given by Mrs. C. W. R. Schwartz, and the urgent need for more good gardens and food preservation was stressed by Mrs. Ben Mazelin. .Following the (business meeting, “Alone” was sung by Mrs. Carl Schug, Mrs. Ben Mazelin, and Mrs. Joe D. Schwartz, with Miss Viola Halbegger at the piano. During the social hour, delicious
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesday Rebekah lodge, Odd Fellows hall, 7:30 p. m. Kirkland home economics club, high school, 1:30 p. m. Delta Theta Tau, Elks home, 8 p. m. Wednesday Church Mothers study club, Methodist church parlors, 2 p. m. Imdies Shakespeare club, Mrs. Leigh Bowen, 2:30 p. m. Red Cross Sewing Center, Legion 1 p. m. iSt. Mary's township home economics club, (Mrs. Clyde Jones, 1:30 p. tn. Union township Woman's club, Mrs. 'Harry Lehrman, 1:30 p. m. St, Jude study club, K of C. 7:30 p. m. Thursday Men's Union Prayer Service, ground floor public library, 7:30 p. m. Women of the Moose, Moose homb, 7:30 p. m. ISt. Paul ladies aid society, Mrs. Harve Smith, all day. Friday Red Cross Knitting Center, Legion, 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. Monday 'Pythian Sister Temple, K. oj! P. 7:30 p. m.
refreshments were served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs. Eli Schwartz. 'The St. Paul ladies aid society will have an all day meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. Harve Smith. .A pot-luck dinner will be served at the noon hour and members are asked to come prepared to sew. Mrs. Jesse Niblick, 308 North Fifth street, has returned home from Chicago, where she attended the commencement exercises at the University of Chicago last Friday for her sister, Anna Winans Kenny, who graduated with the degree of doctor of philosophy in education. Dr. Kenny formerly taught in the schools of Adams county, serving last as principal of the Monmouth schools. Mrs. Nilblick was joined in Chicago by Nellie Winans Clark of Dayton, 0., who also attended the exercises. Mrs. John Simerman, route 1, has returned home after spending a week with her hueband, Pvt. John 'D. Simerman, who is stationed at Will Rogers field, Okla. , i The Lafayette Courier-Journal publishes an attractive picture of Miss Harriet Nell Kane, daughter of Mr. and Mns. Thomas who was chosen queen for 1945 at the Purdue navy electricians sweetheart dance at the Lafayette armory. She was awarded a silver loving cup. During the dance six young women were selected as candidates and the final selection of queen was made by a judging staff of navy officers. C. W. Baumgartner writes from Ossian that he has written a novel entitled ‘“The return of the girl of the Limberlost,” It is now ready for printing and the author hopes to have it. on the market soon. The story 'brings the girl of the Limberlost back to the lob and tells her story of love and her experiences
Junior Miss Dirndl Ci 9163 wMT sizes "•‘7 fl llj j Ja IT*' r 'I ’ft *« * \ \\ I i * rxo'n W, L J MARIAN MARTIN Sure-fire date-bait! Drawstring neckline, sleeves cut in one with blouse, and simple gathered skirt make dirndl Pattern 9163 jiffyquick sewing even for beginners. Pattern 9163 comes in Junior Miss sizes 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18. Size 13 takes 2% yards 35-inch. Send Twenty Cents m coins for this pattern to Decatur Daily Democrat, Pattern Dept, 155 N. Jefferson St., Chicago 80, Hi. 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 No®. _ _ „ —
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.
r nnm luinllnnlniinjn Ti U,N€£E MM Mrs. Laura Eichar and Mr. and Alls. Harry Brown have returned home from Great Lakes, 111., where they visited the former’s son, Donn Eichar, who is receiving boot training there. Don expects to arrive home April 14 for an ILday leave. ILt. and Mrs. V. N. Liniger and son Cary are spending a leave in this city, visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Liniger. and Mr. and Mrs. Leland Frank. Mrs. Liniger and son will make their home here temporarily while Lt. Liniger is 'being transferred from Shreveport, La. Russell Arthur Andrews, ML 2/c, new address is Shop 81 SRTU, Nyd., Mare Island, California. For the past year he was stationed at the ship base at Philadelphia naval yards. In Colorado Pfc. John A. Voglewede, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Voglewede of route 2, Decatur, arrived in the states aibout a week ago and is now located in an army hospital in Colorado. On January 23, Pfc. Voglewede suffered from frozen feet while fighting with Gen. Hodges first army in Belgium. Hie military training started in March, 1944 and he loft for overseas in October, 1914. He was in the infantry. His address is as follows: A-25 Hospital Plant, U. S. Army, Camp Carson, Colo. In Philippines 'Pfc. Richard Engle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Engle of this city, was recently advanced to that rank in the Philippines, where he is stationed with the amphibian engineers. In a recent letter to his parents, Pfc. Engle enclosed a reprint from part of a broadcast made by iW'TAJM, Cleveland, on February 1. Part of the broadcast, a tribute to •the amphibian engineers, follows: “This is their second birthday, and since then they have made more than one landing possible in the Pacific. They are the scouts who sneak into enemy waters testing but possible landing spots, even before the invasion begins — they take on the dangerous jobs of the war. They are among the first men to storm ashore on invasion day ItsplC Without them the 'road back' to 'the iPhilippiWs would :havp been mwch longer than it'wasJ’t o MiTs IMr. and Mrs. Stanley Smitley, 340 Stevenson street, are the parents of a baby boy, born this morning at 7:i25 a. m. at the Adams county memorial hospital. He weighed 8 pounds, 3 ounces and has not been named. Mr. and 'Mrs. Harold DeiArmond, Berne route 2, are the parents of a Ibaby girl, born at 8:17 a. m. this morning at the Adams county hospital. She weighed 8 pounds, 6 ounces and has been named Marjorie Ellen. o— I Adams County Memorial Hospital .Admitted: William Roe, 324 Grant street; Baby Dianna Lou Hitchcock, Line street. lAdmitted and dismissed: Carl Geiiber, 027 Mercer avenue. ■Dismissed: Howard Williams, CIS Nuttman avenue; Mies Patricia iSchnepp, 615 Short street. oCOAL NEGOTIATORS (Continued From Page One) Van Horn said that the bituminous operators would meet before flie conference with Miss Perkins to frame an answer to solid fuels administrator Harold L. Ickes, who yesterday requested the producers and UMW to agree to extend their present contract until May 1. Van Horn said the conference had discussed the letter. UiMW president John L. Lewis refused to talk to reporters. His spokeehnan said that the UMW “has no statement at this time.” Government seizure of the soft coal mines hinged on reaction to Ickes’ request. with birds and animals. Mr. Baumgartner has been blind for 11 years and has devoted himself to writing during that period. A number of his poems and several short stories have been printed. IMr. and Mrs. E. W. Steefe and family of Fort Wayne were Bunday guests at the home of the foruuei ’s mother, 'Mrs. Goldie Roth, and relatives of the James A. Beery family of route 2,
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Flight Officer Frederick W. Schamerloh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Schamerloh, 1010 West Monroe street, was graduated from the advanced navigation school at Ellington Field, Tex:, recently. Flight Officer Schamerloh was graduated from the army air forces training center for bombardiers at San Angelo, Tex., and received his appointment. as flight officer, and his wings of a rated bombardier, October 21, 1944. He now wears the silver wings of an aerial observer and celestial navigator in the army air forces.
i - , £ ? BL | iqijg * ijy IBr i ' Lir Z'""• - EXPRESSIVELY getting into the swing of his talk, Ensign Charles A. McCrea, Asheville, N. C., is shown as he described how it feels to shoot down three Jap planes in two-days of combat. He made the broadcast aboard a Navy carrier following attacks on Tekya. (International) . o Painful Pleasure Marriage has many pains, but celibacy no, pleasures.—Samuel , Johnson.
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IT ISN’T WHAT THEY DID FOR AMERICA...II’s what they’re going to do!
THE Railroads have made some mighty contributions to this Country of ours. But that’s past history. We of the Erie are looking forward to a future for America in which your Railroads will play an even greater part than ever before. As America’s mass transportation system, your Railroads will be a vital link in the postwar chain of
Erie Railroad ftgMfaLii ■ ONE OF AMERICA’S RAHROADS-AU UNITED FOR VICTOR ▼
Commended Sgt. Vernon L. Krugh, son of Ernest 1). Krugh, 219 S. Eighth street, lias been commended by his commanding officer, Major R. E. Bowman, for his splendid service as a soldier, in a letter received by his father. Thp letter reads: “I am writing you in reference to the splendid performance of duty of Sgt. Vernon L. Krugh, who is presently assigned to the Supply Division. Throughout the time of his assignment to this Division he has demonstrated a loyalty to the command that has reflected credit upon him as an individual and upon his unit. His character and conduct have earned the commending approval of his commanding officer. 1 felt you would be Interested to know of the record that he has achieved as a soldier. It has been a very great pleasure to have Sgt. Krugh in this division.” Sgt. Krugh has been in the service since April 1942 and was formerly employed at Steury Locker company in this city. He is stationed in England.
Al Capone Brother Pleads Not Guilty Chicago, March 27 —(UP) —Hearing on a murder indictment against Matt Capone, 37, was continued today until April 30 after Capone plead-d not guilty in the fllaying of Jene D. Larrison, a race track employe. Capone, who (tears a marked resemblance to his older brother, Al, owns the Hall of Fame tavern, where was ahot fatally last April 18, 1944. o Infantile Paralysis There were 12,404 cases of infantile paralysis reported in the United (States last year.
Veteran is Home ■gHji. Beßel sSMB sK ? Ji™ / L ■< T/5 Robert Dull returned to Gardener’s general hospital in Chicago today after spending the weekend in this city and Wren, O. T/5 Dull arrived in the United States last week from England, where he had spent three months in an American hospital, convalescing from wounds received in Belgium in January. He has been awarded the Purple Heart aud the good conduct medal. He also wears the European theater of war ribbon with two bronze stars. His wife is the former Miss Evelyn Lobsiger.
[- 1 -.. L. , I iuu>eitK B Make cellar floors Sgsy t ' z ,z L eas 7 *° dean with ~ II ! *“* 1 Kyanize. Seal out dirt. Add the spark L to all floors — wood, concrete or Z - pattern-worn lino- •* leum. Floor Enamel Mg mQ| is DurnSm'IB I a klc. Waterproof. B 'Fry the pleasing esect a two-coior spatter finish. Choose iummoothihs ’ HsM FLOOR ENAMEL ftsfeft Kohne Drug Store
production and distribution . . essential to continued high employment and better living standards. Many amazing advancements have been mad«, under the impetus of war, tn the fields of electronics, chemistry and metals. Erie will use this new knowledge wherever it will contribute to improved, dependable. economical railroad transportation.
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