Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 208, Decatur, Adams County, 4 September 1947 — Page 3
BItRSDAY, SEPTE]®ER 4, 194tft
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! ■fILA FRIES weds i#’ ii« Fries, daughter of I T Leo Fries of Tllorn ' J BXa d Wait. sou of Mr. and I T i (“ Wait of Union town- ■ Mien county. The Rev. Cle- ■ E^ ,d I W Brassard of Tri-Daked, wtth ■ Joe Brassard at the organ. M.' 3 J , liss es Margaret Helen and I I'vieie Fries attended their | Roger Wait served hw brothK best -nan and Paul Fries and | lente Wait, brothers of the ■t’bri^ re i<ne a full-skirted I MU n Os white satin Wlth 11 bat I Su neckline, long sleeves and a I tunic -'fleet, ending in a train. Bleaded halo held her fingertip I iXih veil. She carried gardenias I K Pinocchio roses. Margaret was maid of honor in a prindress of Pink dotted Swiss, I K ng c ap sleeves and a .sweetI Xt neckline. The bridesmaids identical dresses in blue dots' . Swiss. They wore matching length veils and carried '! piik glamellias and delphinium I flfawerettes. [ breakfast for the families was at the Thirty club and a reHKtion for one hundred and fifty. HKsts was held in the afternoon at I ■home of the bridegroom's par- [ Bflie bride was graduated from K Columbia high school and has Mfien associated with the Clank I ■ocery. The bridegroom was gradI uated from the Decatur Catholic I high school and is engaged with I his father in farming. I gerber-brodbeck I VOWS ARE READ | Bliss Mary Catherine Gerber, | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. route 2. Berne, became the I fade of Morris DeWayne Brodbeck E jo.i of Mr. and Mrs. Rufford BrodHLrk of this city, Saturday evenat seven thirty o’clock in a ■ Joulile ring eremony performed by BU.-fle S. Rogers in Dayton. O. i ■ The bride wore :i twb-piece length dress of aqua with ■park velvet trimming. Her acceSI Bries were black, and she wore a of red roses and a gold ■Jockel, a gift of the groom. l ■ Miss Bonnie Lou Burke, of B-B-'ire. attended the’ bride in a gray ■ Street length dress with black accessories. She wore a corsage of Keil roses and a rhinestone bracelI it a gift of the bride. H G. M. Alspaugh, of Wiltshire, 0., ■Served the groom as best man. ■ The new Mrs. Brodbeck is a Kraduate of Jefferson high school Hr 11 ' 1 * s employed at the Decatur jyidustries, Inc, Mr. Brodbeck atFirst On The List SIZES \////7a ! s. 14.16 x/// ///\ M 18-20 I 40.42 aSk foil M 1 ' 0 2 list' U ,S Pattern 9 . 3 "8 first on your itiest SlftS to raal{e! It's a prachroito aP L° n ' gay with easily emhtodered strawberries, and has oneveryone?” 1 11 6 * 1 DeCkli “ e pret,y is T e h asv P > attern gives P erf ect fit. trate<i y - t 0 USe ' Com P>ete. illusCl »" ->«»■ ™ •»W'an’s,” "T large A. 6 ?’ ™ edlum (18-20). ya rd S 35 inch ’ Size ' 2% TWENT Y-FIVE cents in Daily r? tbiS pattern to Decatut 155 N Ass° Crat ' , Patta rn Dept., 11l pi 1 erson St., Chicago 80, ADDS Fao plainly your name, «■ ano
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Phones 1000 — 1001 Thursday Monroe W. S. C. S., church annex, 7:30 p.m. W. M. A. of Nnttman Avenue U. B. church, Mrs. Lawrence Michel, 7:30 p.m. Women of Moose Officers Escorts Ritual Practice, Mooe.e Home, 7 p.m. restated Rainbow meeting, election Masonic, 0.45 p.c. Friday Legion auxiliary business meeting, Legion, 8 p.m. Work and Wn class of Trinity Evangelical U. 8.. Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Gilpin, 7:30 p.m. Ave Maria Study club, postponed. Sunday Zion Lutheran Married Couples club family lake party, Dierkes cottage, Hamilton lake, all day. Monday Gamma Nu sorority, fire station. 8 p.m. Tuesday Delta Theta Tau business and social meeting, Elks, 8 p.m. Happy Homemakers club. Mis. Carl Adler. Wednesday Business & Professional Women's Club, Swearingen Dining Room, 6:30 p.m. World Friendship build, Mrs. John Carroll, 317 Winchester street, 8 p.m. tended Pleasant Mills high school and is employed by the International Harvester Co. The couple will reside at 604 Mercer avenue. MARRIED COUPLES CLUB TO HAVE LAKE PARTY The Zion Lutheran Married Couples club will have an all-day family lake party Sunday at the Hamilton lahe cottage oT Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dirkes. Members needing transportation or road directions are asked to contact the club officers. Each family is to bring a basket lunch. A short devotional service is being planned at the cottage. YOUNG PEOPLES CLUB IN MEETING The Young People’s class of the Mount Pleasant Methodist church held its monthly meeting at the home of Loren and Bill Brentlin/er Wednesday evening. During the business meeting, a committee was named to superintend the sending of relief boxes to needy families in Czechoslovakia. An educational lesson, entitled “Stewardship,” was given by Nelvalene and Imogene Beihold and Bill Susdorf. The meeting was I closed with sentence prayers. Following a social hour, supervised by Miss Mabel Hoagland of ! Detroit, delicious refreshments I were served. Those attending were Betty Mil- - ler, Bill Susdorf, Frank and Raymond Conn, Brice, Charles, Jim and Norman Sheets. Jeanette and Bob Fuhrman. Nelvalene and Imgefle Beihold and the hosts, Loren and Bill Brentlinger.
DELTA THETA TAU TO OPEN CLUB YEAR Omicron chaptar of Delta Theta Tau sorority will have its opening meeting Tuesday evening at eight o'clock at the Elks home. A combined business and social meeting will ensue with the committee appointed for September acting as .hostesses. During the business meeting, plans will be formulated and committees appointed for the annual style bridge to be held in late September. Catherine Weidler is serving the sorority president this year, assisted by Betty Schneider, vice president; Lois Meyers, recording secretary; Arlene Heare, corresponding secretary; Rosemary Spangler, treasurer; Mary Ann Laurent, sergeant-at-arniis; and Joan Zeser, historian. PSI IOTA XI HAS BUSINESS MEETING The regular business meeting of Psi lota Xi sorority was held last evening at the Elks home, with Mrs. Eugene Durkin, president, presiding. Following routine business, Mrs. Joe Kelly, a of the Bluffton chapter of Psi lota Xi, was welcomed into the local group. The Business and Professional Women's club will meet Wednesday evening at six thirty o'clock at the Swearingen dining room. Mrs. Norman Finlay, the former Rosella Inniger, will present a description of her recent trip abroad. The World Friendship guild wall evening at eight o’clock at the home of Mrs. Jota Carroll. 317 Winchester street. K The Hdfemakers cliW 'wiljgjnapt TWsday at the home of MrT*Trl Adler for a back to school party. Eacbggnem her is asked to wear school™otlies.
I iHI®! pHI ■111sBI • .1 I w I IMMir f ME Mlßil J \ 1 r 'lft ' ■ ■ RECENT BRIDE—Mrs. Wayne Wagner was, before her recent marriage in the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church. Miss Max Ellen Liniger. youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Liniger. The couple is residing in Muncie. (Photo by Anspaugh)
Admitted: Junior Odle, 230 North Seventh street; Herman Lehrman, Decatur. Admitted and dismissed: Mrs. Charles Summersett, Ohio City, O.; Miss Sueann Dubach, Geneva. Dismissed: Miss Joan Mowery, 225 North Eighth street; Mrs. Ira Whittredge, Berne; Mrs. Lowell Noll and baby girl, route 6. o Monthly Report By Service Officer 624 Services Are Rendered In Month A total of 624 services were rendered during the month of August, according to the monthly report of the Adams county service officer. Dwight Arnold, released today. The services are broken down as follows: Person interviews, 217; hospitalization, eight; burial allowances filed, seven; headstones secured, three; repeat interviews, 66; claims against VA, 21; out patients. 26; terminal leave pay, 23. Educational: academic, 16; apprentice and on-the-job, 35; rehabilitation, two; flight training, 10; insurance, 39; loans, 11; USE, three; Indiana employment security, eight; return of war dead, six; bank, seven: housing, 28. WAA, 43; civil service, five; pensions, 21; veterans organizations, 17; Red Cross, three; legal advisers, six; welfare agencies, six; allowances, four; individual
. W. ' • -X v W tanJVVW ' ** • vJogegcpcc yjyTr lIT jjul'. <& 3 ® • :'* wMggSKgjK*;§• i \A 'wil^;l> ,'.-? is ?\OS.~ ' t~iS!l < ' 0"' Ibis i yJBm, W .5 J||| f ’ .ww r* LORD INVERCHAPEL, British ambassador to the U. S., and his Chilean wife, whom, he remarried in Edinburgh, iscotiand, after a tw ( BittS r arrive at LaGuardia Field, route to WashiiigtM, DfjpPMarricd in 1928. the couple separated Q
DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
employer, four; employment, seven; social security, four; family allowances, five; claims for travel pay, six; property and income tax, seven; lost discharges, two; calls in, 61; calls out, 54; letters in, 60; letters out, 52; miscellaneous, four. 0 Berne Resident Dies At County Hospital Ellenberger Rites Saturday Morning Mrs. Elizabeth Moser-Ellenberg-er. 62, of Berne, died at 8 o’clock this morning at the Adams county memorial hospital after a long illness of carcinoma. She was born in French township September 17, 1884. a daughter of John and Elizabeth LehmanMoser, and had resided in the county her entire life. She was married to Henry Ellenberger November 9, 1905 She was a member of the First Mennonite church at Berne. Surviving in addition to the husband are two sons. Arlie of Geneva and Harry, at home; four daughters, Mrs. Mabel Gallagher of Dayton. 0., Mrs. Niina Farlow of Berne' Mrs. Orpha Cook of Geneva and Miss Helen Ellenberger, at home; six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a. m. Saturday at the First Mennonite church, with the Rev. Olin A. Krehbiel officiating. Burial will be in the MRE cemetery. The body may he viewed at the Yager funeral home after 2 p. m. Friday.
Dan Haefling, who left here 45 years ago and has for many years served manager of the Kentucky flffaty plant at Lexington, Ky., visited here yesterday afternoon. He was accompanied to Decaturfay Mrs. James P. Haefling of Fort Wayn<, and Mrs. Tom Haefling of Indianapolis. o Leo Ch'ildo of Findlay, <>.. was a business visitor in Decatur last evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Kennedy have returned home from a month’s vacation in Oden, Mich. Pauline Anderson has received word from her brother, Ted Roth, in Cadilec, Mich, that he is much improved. Mr. Roth left last week for his health and plans to remain there indefinitely. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kuhn and eons, Bobbie and Billie, of Crystal Lake, New Carlisle. 0.. and William Baun of Dayton, 0.. spent the past week at Lake St. Mary's. Miss Terveer Ginter. Miss Delores Ginter and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Crozier are attending the state
11 *TAe Friendliest habit you can have." Greeting card* »o often soy those little things you wont to express, better than you can say them yourself. Remember, too, when you send a Gibson cord, your friends know you've sent the finest. / Thfaffa's an appropriat* Gibson Card for every occasion Holthouse Drug ATHLETES FOOT GERM KILL IT* FOR 35c. IN ONE HOUR, ff not pleased, your money back. Ask hny druggist for this STRONG fungicide, TE-OL. Made with 90% alcohol, it PENETRATES. Reaches and kills MORE germs ON CONTACT.* ioday at Smith Drug Co. • OFFICE CLOSED My dental office will be closed from Sept. Bth to Sept. 22nd. Dr. Fred Patterson
Mi■■k■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 ■ ■ a EVERGREENS FOR SALE ■ B As the season is here for landscaping, we can supply | ■ you with SMALL, MEDIUM, or LARGE sized Ever- ■ greens in several varieties at various prices. Before buying call and inspect our stock. Call after 4:00 P. M. Z HARLOWS GARDENS i ■ U. S. R. 27 ON THE JOB jHS? m —— ——w. . — J . “SNOOPIN for Values ” The mystery is solved when you see and realize the values in food at Dunlap Groceries & Meats Ground Beef 2 tbs. 78c Armour’s Sliced Bacoi®__C 1 lb. pkg. 69c Round Steak lb. 69c Ivory Soap, Large 15c Lava. 2 for 19c Dreft, 29c Camay,2 for 19c s 2 Oxydol, soc ® Duz, 30c o Tide, 30c <© ■o zgAlso complete line of other Groceries and Meats. @ FormerW Ahr’s Market 1 N. Second Phone 22 ®||
fair at Indianapolis. MisSborothy Wemhoff, daughter Mr. and. Mrs. Adrian Wemhoff. ifill university this fall, where she plans to major in art. Miss Wewhoff attended the University of Michigan anil also took extension work at I. U. extension in Ifart Wayne. F. F. Kulm and Cattanooga, visited at the RoY Kuhn home. A mick owned by C. G. Davies of Burlington, Vt., which was stolen August 24 has been recovered. It was found abandoned along highway 224 between here and Van' Wert and released to Silas Dequette, driver. Jack Fisher, 17. of this city, has been ordered to appear in justice of peace court at Bluffton Saturday afternoon to answer charges of driving his car without lights. The Niblick Store is being improved and redecorated. A new ceiling is being put on the main room and the walls renapered to add to the appearance of the big dry goods establishment. Yellow Jacket fans are looking forward to the first football game of the season tomorrow evening when the locals meet their old rivals, the Bluffton Tigers.
SPECIAL COLGATE TOOTH POWDER Giant size and one regular size BOTH 4Ic for ***** One regular 50c bottle Jerris Hair Tonic and one 50c bottle Jerris Cream-Oil BOTH g ■ r FOR > * V 5 Klenzo Super Thin Razor Blades and 3*/ 2 oz. tube Stag Coolated Shaving Cream both FOR 3 / ** Regular size bottle Fitch’s Quinol Hair Tonic, regular size Fitch Dandruff' Remover and Rubber Scalp Stimulator, Regular $1.60 AQm value. Special V Regular size bottle Rexall Foot Balm and 4 oz. can Rexall Foot Powder Special 49c SmithDrugCo
CHURCH NEWS Baptist Church Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cook, returned missionaries from San Domingo, will the speakers at the Baptist chtfrch Sunday. They will be heard at both the morning and etußjing services. At the evening services, several of our own young people who have offered themselves for missionary service will also have a part. Edward Moser will be the soloist for the day.
;; 24 Short-Stemmed Beauties, Arranged f I: in Containers with Floralife ... T Complete ? DELIVERED X . . — ALSO — T Varigated Ivy, Gloxinias, Lat*ge Philadendron, African Violets, Z <> Potted Mums, Ferns, Novelties, Pottery. Flowers properly T ' • designed for Weddings, Anniversaries, Sick Room, Parties, £ E and Funerals. fa • • Open 7 days a week. I <• W. Monroe St. (At Cemetery) Phone 5142 J « . faf X A -V- *-V -t- -V -V- Ji. .t. .V. J. -<■ -t- -Y. -* ■>, .». .4, ,t, ,T. .<■ .t. -I. ,V. A -t- Jt. V, -t. J- -t- -*- -» i 4 4 4 4 U • 4 4’A 4*r P *r • 4 4 * 4V 4 aV • I 4 A*F 'A " A 4 4 4 4 ’ir ’*• •** **■ '* ’•* **' >s< fx:«iaT« lx «X lx f x;gW ■jtj ' § I S&we 'Sm s I H 5 Two Delightful Cake Treats ■mi The Whole Family Will Enjoy K si a « * Zs C ' A'kl 4*5C I I § = | itwie - I i Top off the Sunday Dinner with a real cake treat. Serve 'em Cake . . . better than home made. Ask for Cherry or Lady Baltimore Cake at your favorite independent food I store or at our bakery. I | Stewarts Bakery | Just Arrived at * GUMM 210 N. Second St. a O 100th Anniversary Pattern ® & Come in today and see Remembrance W '— l^e ma g n >fi cent new P a tt ern creuE ated by 1847 Rogers Bros, in honor of their 100th anniversary. Each beautifully made piece has the H lustrous beauty and rich enduring I < quality of America’s Finest Sil verplate. E Remembrance will bring new beauty to either modern or traditional tables. 7 tK wWk « ft ißi ffL qjagL ¥ 52-PIECE "ANNIVERSARY CHEST” FOR EIGHT, including Chnt 100th Anniversary - lOOjSiece service for Specially designed Cenfennlal Chest $17.50 extr, q? ®> ® $
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Trod** In *• <;«»o«kTou n — Decntur TwbmdS, NERVOUS AM cranky *every month’? Are you troubled by distress of female functional periodic disturbances? Does this make you feel so tired, high-strung, nervous — at such times? Then no try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms! Pinkhams Compound Is made especially for women. It also has what Doctors call a stomachic tonic effectl Any drugstore. V LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S S t oZd e
