Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 26, Number 233, Decatur, Adams County, 2 October 1928 — Page 7

M ■ u- _s] MU' \Zf MRS. JAMEB R - BLAIR Society Editor JJ] t 1 • Phone 100 °- K Bw*') •/ - -- ■ fcjncreasingly Important This Season H, Ort 2- <U.R> ~Moire is becoming increasingly important in appearing in formal afternoon wear as well as in elaborate and occasionally m wraps. H hi es and neutral shades in general is often used for blouses to Tand jacket costumes of light-weight woolens. The pattern H? ,S "he is again important in the field of metals, the new CoudurB’ ° t I , inOir . l ir ( ice is impregnated with 18-karat gold, being the new

Mr,, whose sunait is Kfthl-.tvpe. The newest moire K incidentally, are smaller K classical staple ones. K.. include evening dresses K i„ rich novelty fabrics. H. tulle and moire are ex B Willie taffeta velvet, sheer ■. supple metal media any Kd also H'"" 1 combinations K. arP observed throughout Kectiuns; a < billon drees uses B d green and navy blue afterKcks often have inserts of B, ns like transparent velvets. Btentlini-' themselves into the ■( all-year round fabrics. Many giving them a prominent Bit new collections of evening Bvhich will feature the college Bde during Thanksgiving and Ki vacations. Bsk'rts have become long Bppng for evening, increased B In a factor in dress, and Bkdy in the chiffon dresses, ■ require much swirling and ■of fabric to give the desired ■ Au importer states that the B required for the average B dress is now five to eight ■ This requires as many layer Brun for a heavy chiffon which Botas do the thinner chiffons. ■Peterson school will hold a box B Wednesday evening at 8:00 B Relief Corps will meet Thtirs■ternoon at 1:30 o'clock in the B» Hall. The new president will ■ and all members are urged to MNBt. Bajicclub to ■ opening banquet Dramatic Department of the as Club will hold their openmquet. Thursday evening, at •'clock, at the home of their lan, Mrs. Janies Arnold, West if! street. All members are ted to bring their own table t. At this time, the _l_L. dues Iso be collected, and reservamade for the opening banquet entire Woman's Clnb. which e held next Monday evening, r7, at the Country Club, ations will be seventy-five per member. All Dramatic lembers are expected to attend lay evening. ENTS JUNIORS dme reception John Tyndall, president of the ns Club, was hostess at a de--1 reception, Monday evening, ’ home on North Fourth street, unpitary to the Junior Departa newly organized department ! Roman's Club, comprising a 1 1*' high school girls. the receiving line, were' Mrs. *ll and Mrs. James Arnold, the being chairman of the Dra- ! Department, of the Club. Guests e evening included members of ™ior, Dramatic and Music De'’»ts cf the club, and numbered five in all. 4 Junior member had written *®e on a slip of paper and it on her dress as a manner 1 nig herself known to the memto* other departments who cn ? as sponsors of the new r organization, ! Dessolee Chester, chairman of nor organization, presided at ,‘ ng antl explained the oute work to be done by the hJ a , S we " as reading a copy .J > ’ laws ' A delightful pro8 >nen rendered by the girls “ “Eluded a piano duet by i . an J Daisy Holt house, vocal in nJ*™ 1 C,ou ' 1 ’ Josephine Anbv Vi t C eora Baker, saxaphone Uui' w ° » Sq,liles -and piano solos Olive Tee a tem l<i ' D ° T ° thy Ha ‘ ey lal| le . B Cl<i8 ® of the Program, Mrs. rick i/ Ved f^ain tly refreshments lce 'cream, cake and coffee. e ** Ch club i e R° PENING ME ET»NG “ eel 'ng d of h the‘ llb h * W ’ hetr open ' oon at o, ’ e Beason - Monday asMoses tI countr y home of Mrs. to rerun , ,nee ting was opened 'tor» rs n, f ?™’ which all ' A Voca| P ° n i ed Wlth curre »t ev«rMlv‘L? ° bx Mrs - c - E - Bell 1 Callow ) yed after w hich Mrs. 1 charge of tlle toted of 1 he att emoon, which er Curwonrt C e , xcellent review of ‘toaDam- ph ook ’ ‘’ The Plaius ' Prl °r to the review, Mrs.

•e —— CLUB CALENDER i Tuesday Rebekah lodge. Odd Fellows Hall. ■ team practice. Carpe Dieni Club, Mrs. Alva Lawson, I 7:30 pm. i C. L. of C., K. of C. Hall, 7:30 p. m. t Dutiful Daughters, Evangelical S.S., i Mrs. D. E. Foreman, 7:30 P. M. Tri Kappa, Miss Mary Burk, 8 I'. M ( Pythian Needle Club, K. of P. Home, 2:30 P. M. , Psi lota XI Sorority, Mrs. Wm. ! Shreck 1 , 7:30 p. m. Wednesday t Box supper. Peterson school, 8:00. ; Delta Theta Tau Alumni, Mrs. Frank ‘ Lose, 2:30 p. m. I Mount Tabor Ladies Aid Society. Mrs. Nellie Jackson, 8 p. m. t Lutheran Alumnae Association. 1 Lutheran Nurses Home, Fort Wayne. 1 7:30 P. M. , Kirkland Ladies Club, high school I 1 P. M. I Shakespeare Club, Breakfast at 3 Country Club, 11:00 A. M. > Historical Club, Mrs. Fred Hancher t 2:30 f>. M. Thursday i Zion Lutheran Ladies' Aid, school house, 1 P.M. Amicitia Club, Mrs. Felix Graber, ; 7:30 P. M. i So Cha Rea. Miss Kathryn Omlor, 7:30 P. M. Relief Corps, Yeoman Hall. 1:30 P.M. W. F, M. S. of M. E. church, Mrs. > C. L. Walters, 2:30 p. m. I Missionary Society of Christian > Church, Mrs. Minnie Daniels, 2:30 P. M. Calvary Aid, Calvary Church. 1 P. M. Evangelical Missionary Society, church parlors, 2 P. M. ’ Antioch Missionary Sewing Society ' Mrs. William Kitson, all day. Card Party and Social, D. C. 11. S., ' 5:30 P. M. Presbyterian W. M. S.. Ed Moses, i 2*30 P. M. M. E. Everready Class, Mrs. Wilson i Beery, 7:30 P. M. Dramatic Club Opening, Mrs. James Arnold, 6:30 p. m. J. F. Fruchte gave a sketch of the . author's life, and Mrs. L. A. Graham 1 described the setting cf the story. The ’ review by Mrs. Callow was given in a I most Interesting manner. Between the two parts of the story. Mrs. Fred Smith played a piano selection. The usual business routine followed the program. At six o'clock, the ladies, 1 were joined by their husbands and a • most delicious chicken dinner was served buffet style. Small tables were arranged about the rooms of the Moses ' home, at which the guests were seated for dinner. The heme was prettily decorated for the occasion with beautiful garden flowers and candles placed here and there, and .centering (the small tables, lent the soft light by which the dinner was enjoyed. Miss Anne Carlisle was a guest of the dub Miss Kathryn Omlor will be hostess to the members cf the So Cha Rae 1 Club, Thursday evening, at 7:30 o'clock, at her borne on West Adams ! stieet. All members are requested to attend. The Rebekah lodge will begin to- ' night with its regular program of meet- ' ing each Tuesday evening. Immediately* after ledge tonight, the new drill 1 captain. Gao. Squires, will practice the team and each member of the team Is ■ urged to be present. I _ - ' Mrs. Felix Graber will he hostess to • the membets of the Amicitia < lub, I Thursday evening, at 7:30 o'clock. r 1 J. H. BREMERKAMP - CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY i Complimentary to Mr. John H. Dret raeikamp on his seventy-fifth birthday r anniversary, Mrs. Bremerkamp entertained at a six o'clock dinner cf lovely appointments, Saturday evening, at i their home on South Seventh street. A large birthday cake baked by his daughter, Mrs. Joe Laurent, centered the dinner table and here seventy-five burning candles. Covers at dinner were laid for Mt. and Mrs. Frank Kiting of Minster Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Eiting ts Piqua Ohio, Mr. and I Mrs. Joseph Laurent and son Bob. Mr. I and Mrs. Joseph Brennan and son Jim. and Mr. and Mrs. J. H. BremerI kamp of this city. . f The Ladies Aid of the Zion Luther ! an church will meet at the school f house, at 1 o'clock Thursday afternoon. The afternoon will be spent in . quilting. |

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1928.

BORAH PRESENTS VIEWS OF 0.0. P. Minneapolis, Minn., Oct. 2.—(U.R)— I Senator William E. Borah, of Idaho, speaking before 12.000 persons here | hist night, presented a republican version of issues raised by Governor Alfred E Smith during the democratic presidential candidate's western I speaking tour. Continuing his campaign for the ■ republican national ticket, Borah accepted the challenge of Gov. Smith I and forced questions hurled into the republican camp concerning the G. O. i P. stand on farm relief, inland waterways and prohibition modification. Declaring Herbert Hoover, the republican presidential nominee, had pledged himself to uphold the constitution by enforcing the Eighteenth amendment, Borah attacked Smith's assertion that he would enforce the dry law. if elected, although advocating its repeal. Borah expressed belief that Smith 1 would oppose the St. Lawrence wate -' way. If elected, and ached proponents! of the project to consider Hoover's ' accomplishments as an engineer and his declaration in favor of inland waterway development. —o Personals Mr. and Mrs. John Everett and Mr. and Mis. Cal Peterson returned last evening from Kelly Island. Ohio, where they had spent their vacation f.r the last two weeks. A very fine time was repotted. The Misses Le na Bowdi n. Ida Potts, and Edythe Johnson hiked to Berne Sunday afternoon .and visited at the Carl Schug residence. Charlie Phillips, of Lima. Ohio, is visiting his mother. Mrs. Belle Phillips, of this city. Ralph Kenworthy and Dale Koos motored to Hamilton. Ohio, today, where they were business visitors. Clarke Coverdale and Mrs. Earl Coverdale spent the day in Fort Wayne. Mrs. D. B Erwin is visiting her sister at Pontiac, Michigan, for a few days. CURTIS CANCELS SPEAKINC DATES Chicago. Oct. 2. — (U.R) — Senator Charles Curtis, republican nominee for vice-president, cancelled all speaking engagements for this week when he arrived here today from Topeka, Kas. Still tired from his strenuous western campaign, the 68-year-old senator told representatives of the national ‘ committee he would need several days of complete rest before resuming his campaign. "I didn't know how tired 1 was until the tension let down during my two tlays at home," he said. Curtis still catries his right hand | in a sling to ease the pain of a mash ed thumb, caught in the door of an i automobile last week, and has his sore throat treated twice daily. He was met at the Rock Island station upon his arrival here by Senator Charles Deueen, Mrs. Bertha Bauer, national committee woman from Illinois, ami a deletion from western quarters of the national republican committee. ‘He went directly to the Union League club for a reception. . He will be a guest this afternoon lasd tonight at the home of Albert Lasker, former chairman of the shipping‘board in latke Forest, 111. Tomorrow he will take up residence at the Edgewater Beach hotel for the remainder of his Chicago sojourn. A ha>f dozen speaking engagements in the northwest have been arranged for next week. •CLOSE FRIEND OF GOV. SMITH IS NOMINATED —» KOI r.fob VA«U.‘ Alfred E Smith will watch the democratic state convention pick a cAndi date for governor today and then catch a late train for Albany for a few days rest from his strenuous western campaign. die closed his first campaign trip here last night and opened his campaign for his own state dramatically with an analysis of his record as governor and denunciation of repubIhans as "stand pat and reactionary " and an obstructors of his "progress-, ive program.” in a speech to the democratic convention. While he devoted his entire attention to the state, he was talking for national consumption. His record ns governor has been emphasized by his campaign managers. It went to millions of radio listeners last night over a national hook-up. Smith spoke again on “party responsibility" this time as applied to The state, qnd took for his “text" the republican state platform adopted recently at Syracuse. Referring to this. 1 he wove in and out of it his story of his gubernatorial history, denouncing republicans time after time as ob- | structors.

Marital Difficulties at 13 L-j Ww * ‘Ww / w / ** ' I Be- ■ . J 7- • Mrs. Maria Contreras, 13, Mexican refugee living in Chicago, who is involved in a set ot cross-bills for divorce though she is still young enough to enjoy her dolls, as pictured. Her husband first sued for divorce; then she filed a crow petition, charging cruelty.

MRS. CATHERINE LENHART DIES Mrs. Catherine Lenhart, aged approximately 75 years, widow of the late Clinton Lenhart, of Monroeville, died Sunday evening. September 30. 1928, at tile home of her daughter, ‘Mrs. Clyde Schafei. of Warren, Ohio. Mis. Lenhart had been in failing health for some time and had gone to Warren for a several weeks visit with her daughter. A son. Lloyd Lenhart, near Monroeville, also survives. The husband, Clinton Lenhart, died last spring. The b dy arrived in Decatur over the Erie railroad from Warren, Ohio, at noon today. It was met by a Monroeville undertaker and conveyed to the family home southwest (f Monroeville. Funeral services will be held at 1 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at the | home ami at 2 o'clock at the Evangelical Lutheran church in MonroeI ville. Mrs. Lenhart is a cousin by marriage cf Mrs. Frank Downs, of tills city. —o— — Firemen Called When Automobile Catches Fire The fire department was called to the home of James Rice, 219 North Seventh street, about 2:30 o'clock

aPVtIHU biirt (. UIA/IU - • VZ CO I II I I ,

j this afternoon, wheie the wires on an automobile owned by Alva Lawson, had caught fire. The blaze was I quickly extinguished by means of a | i ucket of water, it not even being 11 : necessary to use the chemicals. Baby Born Dead At Hospital This Morning A still born baby was born this morning. Tuesday, October 2, 1928, to ] Mr. and Mrs. William Worthman, of Decatur route four at the Adams Coun i ty Memorial hospital. The child wash a girl baby and was named »Norma I Jean. The mother is getting along nice- | q I Sore Throat? Don't Gargle J Quicker and Better Relief I With Famous Prescription Don't suffer from the. pain and soreness of sore throat —gargles and salves are too slow- they relieve only emporari’y. But Thoxine, a famous . physician's prescription, is guaranteed I to give relief almost instantly. T.hoxine has a double action—reI'eves the soreness and goes direct to I the internal cause. No chloroform, innt or other harmful drugs — safe and pleasant for the whole family. I Also wonderfully effective for relieving coughs. Quick relief guaranteed or'your money back. 35c, 60c and JI.OO. Sold by Holthouse and all other good drug stores.

PYTHIANS OPEN STATE MEETING Lodgemcn Pay Visit To State Home At Lafayette Today Indianapolis, Oct. 2.— (U.R) —Business ot the grand lodge of Indiana of the Knights of Pythias was suspended this afternoon when 1,500 members and delegates journied to the Pythian home at Lafayette. Ind., by special train. The sixtieth annua) convention opened here today with routine business and reports of officers. The election of officers will conclude the convention Wednesday. Edwin R. Thomas, Fort Wayne, and J. Burdette Little, Indianapolis, are candidates for grand inner guard of the organization, and A. C. Duddleston. Terre Haute, Harry C. Sullivan, Vevay, and Walter Domer, Elkhart, for grand outer guard. John H. Frank, Lebanon, aud Henry S. Bailey, Peru, are contesting for the |

| THE ADAMS Theatre | Tonight and Wednesday i MADEMOISELLE from ARMENTIERES yp; Jfi WITH AN ALL-STAR*'JAST. LOOK WHO'S HERE! Mademoiselle from Armentieres! Shell |£j win your heart with her gay, saucy humor this charming French ■tl mamselte famous in song and story; She’ll thrill you, too, with her 3i) courage and sacrifice! A war picture that is big and different! IE A mwvelous blend cf romance, laughs, and actual battle scenes you’ll never forget! The ‘BIG PARADE’ of the British. 93 eg ALSO—‘THAT NlGHT”—with Max Davidson and Polly Moran. Mj | 10c—25c | Uh THURS. & FRl.—Double Feature Bill 'BACHELOR'S PARADISE’ |UP —with Sally O’Neii. and “TENTACLES OF THE NORTH," gQ A JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD Story—at Only 10 and 25c. 31 SUNDAY & MONDAY—"THE DRAG NET”—with GEO. BANCROFT, EVELYN BRENT and WM. POWELL | THE CORT | S Tonight Only | “THE 4 FLUSHER” g Glorifying the American youth in a breezy comedy JjS with Marion Nixon and Geo. Lewis. 31 A man may be down, but he’s never out! Getting him down K? Ul was one thing—but keening him there — that was something l£ US else again! They thought he was a fourflusher—but he showed them some tricks that changed their ideas quick! A whizzing. zippy comedy of speedy American youth. This picture is qj-aj THERE! . [r--NO BLONDES ALLOWED.” NEWS. g 10c -25 c WEDNESDAY—"STORMY WATERS” with Wonder Cast. No Age Limit! THE little tot to whom a dime looks like a lot of wealth the young woman or young man with whom money is “easy come- easy go’’—you older folks whose earning capacity the years may soon curtail—all should SAVE! A substantial bank account assures future happiness for all alike. The child will get its education and the right start in life. And grown-ups need hae no fear of adversity. This Bank invites and welcomes your account. Old Adams County Bank '

PAGE SEVEN

puHition ot trustee. Officers named at the Monday session Included: C. A. Phelps, Newcastle, colonel of the Third regiment; G. T. Bartlett, Seymour, lieutenant of the Fourth regiment; Charles L. Keifner, Terre Haute, colonel of the Sixth regiment; Lee Ellis. Silllivau, lieuten-ant-colonel of the Sixth regiment. - o START—Your pullets and mmilflng hens to laying and Ueep them laying by feeding Royal Egg Tonic. For sale by Rexall Drug Store. Decatur, and Hocker Drug Store, Monroe, Indiana. 233-Oct 2-9 2tx ' —o 1 Get the Habit—Trade at Home, It Pays Watch for the SHAMROCK The sensation of the Worlds Radio Show in New York. It will be in Decatur soon.