Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 26, Number 1, Decatur, Adams County, 2 January 1928 — Page 5

$ Ik * rSrTm;' *r"W' »r y~ jP* 1 • KI t_ .—_ , '“club calender T~“ : . .... Anker, who is here Mo " d ”' ', made a lovely picture Mass Meeting and . A made bouffant sashRaformed Church, 7:30 P. M. , B i ie wore a black and Pythian Needle Club Diunar, Mghawl. Miss Alice Haw- , fan fcome HH striking dress of Tuesday SfX ?*!ver sequins, with this Rebekah Lodge Installation, I. Icerise fan. Miss TawOF. Hall. Three Link Club. |e orange velvet, with W. M S. Zion Reformed church, po . silver slippers and yoned one week. Josephine Myers Delta Theta Tau —Naomi Durklame orange color in 1:30 P. M. Simmons, of Chi- | Psi lota Xi, Jestine Hocker, 7:301 period dress of gold M. S touched the floor be- , Wednesday was shorter in front.. Five Hundred Club, Mrs.lJoe IzJit at the waist with a 7:30 P. M. knot turkday line circled the Presbyterian MlssionarjL.- Soc!e t ’ ral times, and at the , Mrs. W. E. Smith, 2:30 P. ML narch programs were , Shakespeare Club Bus Ass Me®7»- These were done ing, postponed. with the crest of Pleasant Grove Misak nary SOc»» stamped on the covers. Mrt. May Welch. 1:30 P. M. sre favored with lovely Historical Club, Mrs. Ben De-uets composed of or--1:30 P. M. and gardenias. Thursday ■MBr anls were secured from Everready Class, M, E. S- S.< K Favor House, of ChL C. L. Walter-,, 7:30 P. MjF - " flowers from the Hill- ' Company of Cincinnati. TRI KAPPA fijßity members." CHRISTMAS WREATH OAI*G6 Approximately one hundred couplMED C. E. in quest of the New da*- 3^ 0 c ; E ' , • way the "waiting" hou< Sttur Christian Endeavor soevening, to the tuneful melodies zion Reformed church nishel by a peppy orcKstra A o,d year K ° an( ’ the new Huntington. The dancej which the home of Chalmer one of the prettiest the JholMay :» eat Monroe street. About son held in store, wagjthe ant present, Including New Years Ball of the Kappa Kv a were enjoyed and a deKappa Sorority, which was giveß'on served at a late hour, the Masonic Hall. Chap Acmes ofH election of officers took dance were Mr. and Mrs. ; F. E. Frai suited in the election of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. MyH and I as president; Chalme’Maude Dorwin. president; Russell Jaberg At nine o’clock, the doors of d Ed Musser, re-elected ball-room were opened add the asr Russell Jaberg was apb'ed guests beheld a gorgt.ist for the society. I„ist Christmas bower, of evergreen ttthe society met at the parsnow and ice. Hanging surpeftheir annual Watch party, from the ceiling was a mass of was pledged for the ling icicles and everywhere 4i Dg debt. This amount will head was a mass of snow. Ic- !n full, half of this amount hufig from the window frames, L pairi the first part of the Dame .Nature complete® the flocietv has been active durplctuK-. when she addfl, a ye;ir The aver age atteneoat ot froet to the e.xarior otflje regular meetings has window panes. On the,north wa, 5 One tof , he societ - the ba.l-room was a out ph th( . !( . I)derj of in colors of a huge evergreen tr. |rshl . the first Sun-1 H--± f Se T ehiß,ng of .a ' month \ splendid it if roof, a big white sufcw marn s , ‘ . ing by a huge snow drift. Th J 8 y as rented attractive part of the entire de nd ’ « nu audience pre ’ tion, Sowever, was a huge CM< e of «’ treme cold wc »’ Wreath of evergreen, about ten in d'.dmeter. Many ttfay red 1 outlined the huge wre® and f Lcsc win entertain the forth a beautiful glow of light w rc<! ( lul ’> Wednesday eve together with the sof| shaded gF r honw on Second street, from the chandeliers]above, gaslock. colorful indirect lighting .effect L entire room A hugq red bodr- s tied at the top of the wreath, MION back of it, in a bower of Chrir of 1921 graduates of Detrees, the orchestra wfcs seated, school, held their annual The grand march was the Jews Years Day at the Defeature of the eveang’fl prof try Club. A dinner at one and was led by Mias Kathryn tured the reunion, plans win, Soorority president, and were more or less dissarescort, Mr. Albert G-hrig. Folk several of the members was Miss Josephine Myers, vice! from other cities being undent of the Sorority, with Mr. cj: her, b-> ause of the cold Kessler, of Monroe, as her * is also uncomfortAs the march ended . Eileen land the dinner was hurried passed out ami grams to the gentleAu, white if the class are: president, rytt Hower passed aJ beautiful ; vi< - president. Pat Hy wrist corsage to eaeKpf the Iscretai? Marcella Kern; The dance was on aft the pr| Mr Imn Kern. Decisions was interspersed tjftfGUghoutL. houewr. before the clans evening with favor dSces. Aptivts disbanded, to hold has dance was one < a next year with hopes each guest receiving®. Cleverkeatht-r man will not be paper hat. In anothej dance, la vere Those in attendance squawkers, whistles, bells andlicheou vesf-rday were Chas, noise making instnisKiß prtxgr. and Mrs. Pat Costello, t® welcome the Now Ifw in ajifr: !>»••> Kirsch, Winifred manner. As a fittinEtclose tlima Erwin, Eleanor Repwhole affair, the of “fcria MilkVxtry," were heard, and Tri 1 girls, as newsgirls, M CLUB room wit their PARTY.” which they sold at tw* fe>r five .~f t he C arpe Diem Club The "Uxtry” proved ■ bts • hush.r watched the Old newspaper take-off liflMLthe | ailli th. New Year in. SatKapp® Special EditioiKind It the home of Mr. much mirth and ine^^^^^VP,.',., h Hower. Bunco furU»» perused it's lines^^^^^K rtirs ;, lH .-„ r the evening and The entire dance A h hug F( . won by Mrs. Dr. Eichorn Ceas, ami as the Albert Beery. Radio musje Hian v compliment® ( /, At the close of to .the entire Tri Cappa cly„. .. th- hostess assisted by •JJtas Josephine M>erflMtß:u® Brown, served delicious man of the decoratiot^^^HK^ Those present were: the evening. Eichorn. Mr. and • The following is aJHbuct. . t Mr- Mrft - Har ’ the "Uxtry," which Mr :lU d Mrs. Alva Lawsome of »lu cortnmc * n ,'| Floyd Enos, Mr. Q*«ning: .. r , iv n. Mr. and Mrs. "A glittering, scintiiiftting, v r jud Mrs. Ralph line of dancers forracwt irinel j.. lUll Mrs. Dee Fryback. last night, for the Miles Roop, Mr. and th® Sixteenth annual Nw Y«a.- au d Mr. and Mrs | Bali of the Tri Miss Kathryn — the chaptx‘r, leading . N W | T h her partner. Mr. Alb,^ RS E vt DINNER ’Doruin was beaut if ’ ~ r m cv entertained «re»»u tpffeta. and she^B^df~ .' New Years eve IV j Veuitian shawl. (I|l North Fifth street, pasiel colors of blue \ , y jrs. Albert Lachnit, ■orful gowns were j, „ aß d son Milly. of Tyndall was striking' y . ( . yrps. Don Vangette; Mitts MarcunWhrt' $’ j ulie Eleanor, ot

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1928.

Cincinnati; Mr. and Mra. W. R Smith and Miss Catherine Mangold. The Presbyterian Missionary SoclMy will meet Thursday afternoon instead of Tuesday afternon as announced in Saturday's paper, at the home of Mrs. W. E. Smith. Members are please asked to note the change. ZELMA FUHRMAN AND CLAUDE FOREMAN MARRIED Miss Zelma Fuhrman, of this city, and Mr. Claude M. Foreman, ot Berne were united in the holy bonds of wedlock at four o’clock, Sunday afternoon, January 1, 1928, at the home of the bride's parents, just north of he city limits. The Fuhrman home was decorated for the occassion in cut flowers. The Rev. R. W. Loose officiated at the nuptials, and read the beautiful loubie ring ceremony, while Mr» Loose played softly at the piano. The bride was dressed in pearl pink Grecian Crepe dress with accesories o harmonise. The couple were unittended, and the ceremony was witnessed only by the immediate families of the contracting parties. Following the wedding, a delicious dinner was served to the families of both the bride and groom. Mrs. Foreman is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Fuhrman. For the last six years she has been employed at the Niblick and Co. Dry Goods store, where her pleasing personality has won for her a host of friends, who unite in extending congratulations and best wishes. The groom is a son of Mr and Mrs. Ed L. Foteian, of Berne, and has'been barberIng tn Fort Wayne for the pa it sevci al months. Mr and Mrs. foreman will establish their home at 31< Oak street, in this city, where they will he at home to their friends. —o EXTRA MASS TO BE CELEBRATED St. Mary’s Catholic Church To Have Three Regular Masses On Sunday Beginning next Sunday three regular masses will be celebrated at St. Mary's Catholic church, every Sunday. On account of the large number ot persons attending the first maw at 7:30 o’clock, a children's mass will be held at 8:30 o clock Sunday morning. This is the extra mass and will be for children only,, although, if necessary, adults may attend the service. The time of the first mass will be changed from 7:30 to 7 o'clock and the high mass will be at 9:45 o'clock. Beginning next Sunday the masses will be held in the afternoon on Sunfay unless otherwise announced. The Rev. Joseph Hession, acting pastor, stated this morning that uo extra preist will be engaged to say the third mass, but that he or his assistant would say two masses on Sunday The trustees of the church have mailed a supply of envelopes to every member of the congregation, there being envelopes for the regular Sunday collection, holy days and extra envelopes for the special collections and for the school fund. These envelopes are to be placed in the collection on Sunday or HOly days. The annual election of church trustees will be held Sunday, January Bth following the regular 9:45 o'clock mass. The renting of pew\s will also take place next Sunday, following the election. The special Christmas collection taken up on Christmas day for the orphans of the diocese Amounted to nearly SI,OOO. On Christmas day, the sum of |983 was donated for the orphan's homes and yesterday several dollars more were received and it is expected that the collection will total an even SI,OOO. PHONE SERVICE IMPAIRED SUNDAY (CONTINUED mon PAfiE ONR) had been torn down by the wind. The telephone lines from Decatur to Fort, Wayne were out of commission for several hours Sunday arid lines were weakened to mauy other points Workmen were called to duty today and it is thought that most of the main lines will be in shape for use again today. Electric light wires that were torn down or broken off during the storm were being repaired today and the city force made several emergency calls Sunday. o Personals Mrs. Pierre F. Goodrich, of Indianapolis. daughter of Mr. aud Mrs. 6. i A. Dugan,' has- been re-elected president of tho Indiana Vassar clnb. The boys have a chance to try out their new Christmas sleds and they don’t need to bo coaxed. The only trouble is thut school 'reopens tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Sutton, of guests of Miss Mary Burk, of this city and attended the Til Kappa dance. Mr. Charies Keller, of Peru, was an over New Years guest in this city aud attended the Tri Kappa Dance at the Masonic Hall.

MANY MOTORISTS ARE SNOWBOUND Garagemen Kept Busy Sunday Towing In Stalled Automobiles New Years day was a good day for automobile service trucks in Decatur and practically every service car in the county was busy all day Sunday answering calls from motorists who had faced the snow drifts. It 1h estimated that more than 50 automobiles became caught in snow drifts yesterday or skidded Into the ditch in Adams county. No serious accidents were reported but many motorists kept the telephone lines busy for aid. Several of the main roads near thicity were heaped high with snow and in several instances it was impossibb for motorists to get to their destina tion. On the paved road north of this city, the tracks became slippery and many cars skidded into the ditch. One local service truck was making calls continually from early Sunday morning until 11:30 o'clock last night. Other cars were almost as largely in demand. WALTER MYERS ENTERS RACE <CO.NTINVKU KROM PAVE ONE) must be redeemed. To bribe Cabinet heads, to tamper with juries, to nom Inate or elect candidates at a cost of millions, or with a contract of control attached to the office, to abort justice and then mock the Constitution that secures our liberies by invoking its protection againdt self,' incriminaton scoundrelism that not only (falls for turning rascals out, but for sending them to prison. “The purchase of governmental privilege Is the first milestone on the road to ruin. You cannot serve your country and Sinclair, your country and D. C. Stephenson, or any other crook, resident or absentee, any more thar you can serve God and Mannon. For ccrrupt leaders to make corrupt engagements with corrupt Cabinet heads -orrupt Congressmen, corrupt State officials or corrupt Mayors is to defy the integrity of free institutions, to impair the functions of free govern ment and to infect public virtue with j iiseased confidence, all of which shatters respect for law. “Laws have been losing force ans •espect because of their number There are far too many now. They stifle liberty and enterprise. While liberty should never be stretched into license, neither should it be squeezed into misshapen tyranny. Business, large and small, is of the nation's bone and sinew. Interfering regulation by bureaus, boards and commissions has reached the costly stage of meddlingcostly because cf the heavy taxes to pay the political clerks and agents who asume to supervise without knowing what it is all about, and because it charges business with an unwarranted overhead to meet the demands of the meddlers. “Business must keep on growing, but never at the expense of government. If government and business each tends to its own affairs, profitable enterprise will make profitable wages, profitable markets, profitable communication and transportation, and a resulting distribution of better goods at lower prices to satisfied public. Employers and employees should be, and if they but knew it, are partners working together for the largest good to themselves and those they serve. This has made the American standard of living the highest in the world. "The blrgest business of the natio«

After January Ist The VICTORIA BEAUTY SHOP will be located northeaat corner First and Monroe Streets For Super Service in our line, call PHONE 220 PHONE >AMS Theatre | t Time Tonight §1 ERY and RAYMOND HATTON g of<0 f < Comedy Team—in UE V, SAVE MY CHILD” funniest men in pictures—in their Mj n film! Save your laughter for ihild!' A scream from start to finish, u; Feed’’-—An 'Our Gang’ Comedy. ——3 s c ue SDAY—“LIGHTNING”—A ZANE GREY Robert Frazer, Jobyna Ralston. ' et Livingston and others. 35

is farming and, unlike baseball and the movies, it has no high-salaried czar to coordinate its activities. The farmer's toil from dawn to twilight Is measured ip bushels, pounds and tons. Transulated into dollars, these have shrunken till It hurts. While artificial tariffs have indirectly taxed all, in eluding the farmer, for the betterment of business, the farmer has been given nothing but a chance to go in debt. If the present slate continues, he will I be reduced to a mortgaged peasantry; | and the beginning of peasantry marks | the end of that pioneering spirit that i made America. Either thru farmer's ! pound or bushel must buy more things I >r his needs must cost less. "If ft is right to promote other bit- i tlness by artificial means, it is right I o aid the farmer by artificial means. ] f it is wrong, to aid other business I rtificially, the wrong shculd be cor- I ected so that the farmer does not sufer by discrimination. "Tariffs cannot help the farmer. ’ Ihould foreign powers adopt our policy I hat prosperity follows protection, and I build waifs against us as France so i lately threatened to do, what would aecome of our present advantage of I manufacturing in a protected market? | If walls should be raised against the I farmer's products In foreign lands, < what would become of his then? "The foreign world is in our debt, 1 and it can only pay in goods. To keep out their goods is to prevent them j from paying their debts, becaus much of the money they now have Is borrowed from us. "Some naUons clamor loudly that I we forgive bur wap- debts. Why- We must pay our own. If we pay theirs too, we then are paying for a war that we did not begin, but did much t i end. If we do it now, may we not b isked to do it soon again? If these n:i ticns are too poor to pay their jus: iebts, they are too poor to spend bi! ions for military and naval equij .nent. Yet that is what they are bor•owlng money to do. Peace with equity should be our end. "It is my purpose to make a campaign with candor toward all and ill feeling toward none. Principles must make the program. Policies must put hem into practice without evasion or pussyfooting". o Zion Lutheran Church Paul W. Schultz, pastor The day sclicol will start tomorrow norning at the usual time and all pupils are requested to be at their desks. —o . 3et the Habit—Trade at Home, it Pay. «H On fflLD' WHANGS ON Persictent coughs and colds lead to seriis trouble. You can stop them now with Tecniulsion, an emulsified creosote that j pleasant to take. Crectr.ulsion is a new nodical discovery with two-told action; it .otlies and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Os all known drugs, creosote is recognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent coughs and colds and other forms cf throat troubles. Creomukion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks '-e growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respiratory diseases, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if any cough er cold is not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist, (adv.l

Miss Margaret Rose, of Fort Wayne was a Saturday evening guest at the Tri Kappa New Years Dance. Miss Veronica Anker has returned to resume her school duties, having visited over the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Al Anker In this city.

g Last Time Tonight ffi ffi “THE VALLEY OF THE GIANTS” ‘- r I rl A First National featuring K MILTON SILLS and DORIS KENYON ft De Sills takes you to the northwest woods where the Be hardships are many and a man’s fist is the law. Added Comedy 15c, 35c Ug Tuesday and Wednesday—“CHEATlNG CHEATERS” u*j with Betty Compson and Kenneth Harlan. I Announcing the opening of the : Swiss Dry Cleaners I 161 So. 2nd street —Phone 285 i Owned and operated by Lawrence A. Matthys, formerly E assistant manager in charge of the Cleaning and Hat de* partment of the Presseretti, Van Wert, Ohio. Fifteen years experience in cleaning. We will do Cleaning and Pressing of All Kinds and will make a specialty of Ladies Work. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. THE NEW YEAR A HAPPY NEW YEAR is the cordial wish of I this bank to all. May your prosperity increase and bring with it such health of mind and body as may increase your happiness. The Peoples Loan & Trust Co BANK OF SERVICE

: croup I Spasmodic Croup Is frequently j relieved byons application of— ViCKS ▼ Vapoßub ' °** T J»n Ytarff

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