Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 47, Number 187, Decatur, Adams County, 10 August 1949 — Page 3

ByNESDAY. AUGUST 10, 1919

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Xana club a meeting JL, Indiana club held a bindK and social meeting at the Ke <>f Mrs. Nagel recently. Plans K discuaaod for a party to InK. (he husband*. Kveral table* of heart* were |e<) and | rizes were awarded to ■ Charles O’Shaughnesgey and ■ |>ean Reber. ■yvely refreshment* were serv■by the ho«te«* at a later hour. K next meeting will b at the K e of Mr*. Ed Vogelwede. ■dies aid ■ MEETING ■he Ladle* Aid society of the Kley church met in the church Kement for a potluck dinner preKnr their regular meeting last Kk Hoste**** were Mr*. Ella Kerry and Mrs. Franklin Fruech■'he business session was opened ■ the president and eleven memL. and one guest responded to L r <)|| call with a Bible verse, lipttire was read in unison and L group sang several hymns. ■M:s Irene Blume was welcomed Is new member and the meetK was dosed with the ixtrd's syer. |T-,- remainder of the day was I rent in quilting. CKENNA-MILLER TES SUNDAY Miss Jane Frances McKenna beKtn>- the bride of Richard Eugene pil.r at a ceremony In St. Hetus church, Washington D. C„ nday. with the Rev. Owen Meisney officiating. IM Mrs Miller Is the daughter of ■r and Mrs. John Joseph Me|.nna of New York, and the groom the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Miller, of Washington. John H Idler of Monroe, and Mrs. Nancy |»ri*<m. east of Monroe, are grandgrents of the groom. After a wedding trip to Miami nd Havana, Mr. and Mr*. Milyr will make their home in WashMH. The Pocahontas lodge will meet It the Red Men's hall Friday eveting at eight o'clock. The Mount Pleasant W.S.C.S. si, nh scheduled for Friday evetin* at Hanna-Nuttman has been p>«tponed indefinitely. The Union Chapel Faithful WorkIn class and their families will have a work day party in the fhurch basement Tuesday evening it seven o'clock. Members are Mked to wear work clothes and bring welners, buns, a covered

Bright Future wo n-» HI "filaXjf* When it’s a date it's this smart ••’•l* sleeve'eea drew for you! •'’•ration-fit, due to that back fastening. Collared neckline :# «an» real flattery; simple cat *•**l the simplest sewing' Pattern mt; else* 11 M. 1«. >•• *• Rise 1C takes 4% yards 35‘tek. ro< *a for this pattern to Decatur [J *lly Democrat. Pattern Depart ••t. P. O. Box «745. Chicago M. ®- Print plainly Toor Name. Ad ‘reea. Zone. Use. Stylo Number. Now! A NEW Marian Martin Paahkm Book to ready! On its Mw are the moot beautiful sar ■* styles, designed to sew easily. «• make yoar fashion dollars to ’Wther than ever? Plan a F»«» Mttern printed ta the hook, a *M's heaeh robe made of towels «*M fthsea eoats more for this beak of yammer IMS fashions!

Society Item* for day* publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday S:3O a.m.) Phone 1000-1001 Betty Terveer Wednesday Beulah Chapel WWt.C.S., church, all day. Profit and Pleasure Home Economics club, cancelled. 8. E. Bridge club. Mrs. Jack Kline. 8 pm. Salem W.S.C.S., Mr*. Claude Foreman. 1:30 p.m. Thursday Women of Moose. Moose home, 7:30 p.m. Our Lady of Ixmrdes study club, Mrs. Raymond Vogelwede, 8 p.m. Methodist W.S.C.S., church basement. 2:30 p.m. Executive committee, Methodist W.S.C.S., church basement, 1:15 p.m. Friendship Village club of Bluecreek township, Kimsey school, 1:30 p.m. Friday Pocahontas lodge. Red Men's hall. 8 p.m. American Legion Auxiliary, Legion home, 8 p.m. Calvary latdies Aid. Mrs. Fannie Jackson. 8:00 p.m. Mount Pleasant W.S.C.S. picnic. Hanna-Nuttman park, postponed. Tuesday Union Chapel Faithful Workers class, church basement. 7 p.m. dish and table service. The meeting of the Decatur Garden club, scheduled for next Tuesday. has been postponed until August 23. Members are reminded that this will be an all day meeting at the lake cottage of Mrs. Georg* Ri-ntz at Celina, O. A potluck dinner will be served. The Kirkland Indies club announced today that the tnlt-taia-ment planned for member* of the

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4-H clubs on August 30 has been postponed because of polio. The Zion Walther league of Friedheim will sponsor an ice cream social and a bake sale on the school grounds Sunday evening. The public is invited to attend. The twenty-third annual MartinLeimenstoii reunion will be held at the home of Frank Yager Sunday, August 21. Mr. and Mrs. Roman Brlte and Mr. and Mr*. Julius P.rfte r»turn°d yesterday from a trip to New York City, where they accompanied Mrs. S. K. Murgatroyed, mother of Mrs. Homan Brite. who has been visit.ng here for the past three months. Mr*. Murgatroyed will fly to llruiiswiik, Scotland, and go from there to her home in Yorkshire, (England. Dick Mansfield. Sr . and D. Bur dette Custar were bniines* visitor* in Fort Wayne Tuesday. The Rev. and Mrs. G. Kenneth Shafer and son Byron, of Chicago, are vlsiUng with Rev. Shafer’s father. John W. Shafer, and the Edgar Gerber family this week. Mrs. Martin Mylott of South Fifth street will accompany her daughter. Mrs. Stephan Lyons of Washington. I). ('.. to Chicago for a visit there with Mr. and Mrs. Geiald Mylott. Mrs Lyons will re turn to her home this week and h< r mother plans to spend several weeks at the Lyons home next fall. Mt* and Mrs. James S. Halberstadt. Jr.. Pleasant Mills, are the parents of a baby boy. born at 5:27 this morning at the Adams county memorial hospital. He weighed six and half pounds. A baby girl wa* born to Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yosa, Geneva, in the Adams county memorial hospital this morning at 10:13 a. m. She weighed 7 pounds. 12'4 ounces, and has not been named. Mr and Mrs William It, Hurless. Sr., Portland route four, are parents of a baby girl, weighing six pounds and three ounces, born at 2:22 a. m. today at the local hospital. ————— ! ®JOSRITAL Amilted: James Rhodes, Berne route 2. * Dismissed: Mrs. Melvin llirscliy. feme; Mrs. Robert Yoder and baby Imy, Berne; Mrs. Richard Jackson and baby boy. Decatur; Mrs. Paul Herman, Berne. The total force of the Royal Canadian police was 3,895 in 1910. Trade In a Good Town — Decatur

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

IKK' I MRS. RAYMOND SCHUELER was the former Miss Ixtrna Buuck. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Buuck. route one. Decatur, before h r. recent marriage to Raymond Schueler. son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schueler. of Friona, Texas, In the Friedheim Lutheran church. The couple wld reside In Friona. Photo by Edwards

President Signs Unification Act Committee Named By Secy. Johnson Washington. Aug. 10.—(UP>President Truman today signed into law a bill tightening up direc tion of the nation's military as fairs, and the newly created de partmenl of defense speedily white ped Into the Job of further unify Ing the armed forces. Only a few minute* after the President scrawled his signature on the new uniHeation act, secretary of defense Louis Johnson created a defense management committee and appointed Gen. Joseph T McNarnty as chairman, or sort of "unity expt diter.” The President said he believed the act "will permit u* Io make real progress toward building a balanced and effective national defen**.” Mr. Truman had only one complaint about the bill. He said one provision which continue* restric tion* on the membership of the national securl y council was "unfortunate” and represented a "backward step” in generally progressive legislation. The legislation creates a new department of defense with John son as Its secretary. Heretofore the agt ncy w*ts the national military establishment. Chintz is a cotton cloth gaily painted with designs of Howers. et Chloric arid was discovered l>y Bertholiet in 1786. The history of dancing dates back to ancient Egypt. *• . ’ ■■ t'/Jtel . SENTENCED to prison for 70 year*. Dr. Robert C. Rutledge leave* Cedar Rapid*, la., jail for Fort Madison carrying a thermo* of milk and a carton of cigaret* under hi* arm. The 2S-year-old BL ikui*. Mo., baby specialist will be eligible for parol* only after aerving 30 years tn the murder bf Byron C. Hattman. 29. over Hattman • attention* to Mrs Rutledge. f later sMioaaJ)

GREYHOUND (Cont. From Pag<- One) )y curve* to the morgue. Cranmer seemed to be the only person who knew for sure how many persons were on the bus He stuck to the figure 29, Including himself, hour* afterward In Bloomington hospital where a Greyhound repre. entative said he had been given a sedative because he wa* suffering from shock. . Dead And Mining Bloomington. Jud.. Aug. 10— (UP* Tentatively Identified as dead in the Greyhound bus crash fire today were: Mr*. Joan Aikman. Kokomo, Ind Mrs. Aik man's fouryearold daughter. Vicki. Mrs. Aikman’* six year old son. Jimmy. Charles Ellcrbroi k, 79, Evansville. Ind Mrs. Ruth Ellerbrook, 67, hl* wife. Missing and presumed dead were: Mrs. Grace Cardwell. 29. Evghv ville. O. (1. Brown. Indianan'-'U. Mr*. O. G Brown. Intl&napoli*.

WWWWWWWWMMMAMMAAAWMAAAAAAAOAAAWWM I FOR ROOMS THAT 1t»rl St x ' Ek Lmhi7 c J Ktaobuctyl That ».l».ty ih«n-which waih.t <o ratily—wcari io long— It found only In FfHfCTION WALL KIN AM H. In NON- RF * ■ VfIIOWING whit, end 10..1y colori. So many fXTRAS of I "All ■ NO tXTRA COST moh.i ony room toy w.komo, I KIN AM-fl J SMITH DRUG CO. i t there are taxes in your talk The UnmdeS***** Government t»ke» its toll on *ll telephone t«r»KC today. Federal tax on local tervtca u 15 percent. On long distance service where the charge t> 25c or OV<f # the tax i* 25 percent. Other iormt ot telephone *ense are taxed from 8 percent to 25 percent. J Thi* tax is imposed ufon yom a* a telephone user. Your telephone company h*» the added expent* of acting at tax collector. Jutt about everyone would agree that telephone service is a *H««Mfy. Yet the 25 percent tax on long distance and other telephone services is higher than the 20 percent rat* for htxttriti such a* furs, jewelry and perfume*. lelephon* users everywhere have been expressing their views on this high excise tax to their Senator* and Re preventative* in Congaesa. Their view* will help to guide future ( ongressionai action on the repeal of thi* moat unusual peacetime ta* on ■ necessity. We are certain that your Congressmen would appreciate your view* a* a taxpayer and ctuaen oa tins telephone tax. CITIZENS TELEPHONE CO* !

Milk Deliveries Resumed At Gary 10-Day Truce Halts Delivery Shutdown Gary, Ind.. Aug. 10— (UP)— Miik deliveries were resumed today in Lake county after union and management representatives agreed to a 10-day truce to halt the twoday shutdown. The AFL Milk Driver* and Dairy Workers union struck the Borden company over a wage dis pute and 11 other dairies halted operations, declaring that a strike againzt one was a strike against all. The union branded the shutdown a "lockout.” The truce was arranged yester day at a meeting called by Mayors Eugen* Swartz, of Gary. Vernon Anderson. Hammond, and Frank Migas, East Chicago, the three cities most affected by the closing. The dairies said milk de'iverles would be moving normally within 21 hour*. The agreement provide* that the union will hold the Borden strike "in abeyance" pending negotiations aimed at settling wage terms with all the dairies. The union ba* demanded a SB* weekly wage boost. The companies have offered 31 During the shutdown, retail dealer* milk from Chicago, a few small Independent dairies continued to operate, and some housewives drove to Chicago to get their milk. Unless you repent you will all likewise perish - St. Luke 13:3. The rules of modern professional boxing were first adopted in iB6O. The city of Boston. .Mas*., Is an 'mportant wool market.

Say IF Wilh* FLOWERS From

Petersburg Pastor Is Drowning Victim Petersburg, Ind., Aug. 10 H'Pi The Rev. Paul K Hands, 37. pas j tor of the Church of God, Jum:>ed into White River and rescued nis i teen-age daughter from Its depth*, but he himself drowned when III* ! water-soaked clothes apparently dragged him down, authorities said today. Hl* daughter. Ix»l«. 10. was wad ing in the river with her six-year-old brother. Jerry, yesterday. The girl called to help after wading into deep water and Hands dived after her. fully clothed. He reached the struggling girl and pushed her to safety. But the weight of his clothing apparently '

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pulled him under. His Isxiv wa* recovered from seven feet of water about 3u minute* later. The tomato is of So::t' American origin.

4 COLD I FUR STORAGE Si STILL TAKING IN E FUR COATS Phone 359 I