Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 165, Decatur, Adams County, 14 July 1931 — Page 3

/2 SPjH ; ~ 7 ’ Hi i I [f/* tW // K* v\ /’’A7/ 5r °r I • I u - 11 l\ 1J M'ss Mary Macy l Uif Jr Miss Margaret Haley Phones 1000 —1001

i J Paris Styles lObv MARY KNIGHT Bl press Staff Correspondent. Eg,. July 14—" The SeducE* /'petails" is the title that r'J.,l recently in a Parisian KS journal, and it is a pretty EaXuuely Perfect way to deimportance of the little r»iin assembling a wardrobe. EHvord detail" is literally to rl< j of fashion what the ILoLasses" i>- to civilization — makes the wheel go instances. Just stop fK n k what our dresses would [K e without « tiffs, collars, ex novel design, pins, million other things Eeii:.’ ,h, ‘ classification MELiis.- The great couturiers speak of "tlie detail of "the detail of line." e deta.il of idea." And EX come right down to it. that the dictionary is "minor part, an EsXy. ' it comes well nigh beEX most important feature of L» et‘ table. flowers, bags, scarves. < .-mbroidered batiste that can be mono-! tiny bolero jackets,] pins for the hair for k-gaiik are all details that will ■ e 1 e ,. r tlies,’ colors in mind: royal blue, green, beige, and black and white. honored 9feILY gathering Lehman, who left MonLB l.ittl, field. Texas, was hona family reunion of the family at the home |C ( Shoemaker in Hartford Sunday. fettle imon hour a basket dinFW e! j " ll an<l the afternoon | EL IP nt in a social manner. ■ were Mr. and Mrs.) Kjkn.ai. and son Orlando, Mr. I Edwin Neuhauser and Dolores, Mr. and Mrs. Lehman and sons Norman Mr. and Mrs. Alfred an dson Benjamin, Mr. and I elnnan. Mr. and Mrs. fej.®,’’m.o-’ : Mi and Mrs. Carl and Mr. and Mrs. Carl and daughter Sally MKJ Decatur. BORDERS ■■tED with shower fisai- M 'H' Guild of the ' pleasant M:< James Borders with I KMellaimmis shower, at her Meet. .Monday agreeably stirthe members of the het home. Mrs. «.i- Mi.-s t ram is Girod bemarriage of June 25. B* I - -I presented of beautiful and useful K •' following which games | were played in which the I Lillian Worthman and ; 1 rec.-ned the prizes. • -• Uteil to the games a delicious d i< lies, ice cream, I lo.fee were served ■ party HaroM Sautters and the 1... Held. Genevieve and ma Zwh k united in the members of their 1 theater party.] ■ oetutu 111,, members en-l ■■ s>i "'' Fort Wayne after! ■B*""' entertained with I ■M I " "" served in Kettle. golfers |MTOURNEY guests ■ a "’ beimi made by the ■" the Orchard BBr '"'■ ( 'hib for the invita- " ’ "irnament which Place i n the Orchard ■F" "nr-e. Wednesday, to 'bibs, including the ■V alters, have been ■'avers will tee off at nine"'•■lnesday morning.

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CLUB CALENDAR T uetday Kirkland 411 (Tub, Kirkland] i school building, 1:30 p. m. Rebekah Lodge, I. O. O. F. Hall, 7:30 p. in. Wednesday Mt. Pleasant Bible class, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Fuhrman, 8 p. m. (Cat.) Zion Reformed Ladies Aid Society picnic, Lehman Park, Berne. Meet at church at 10:30 A. M. Religious Study Club, Miss Helen Holthouse 7:30 p. m. Five Hundred Club, Mrs. Fred Deininger 8 p. m. Frivolity Club Dinner party. Mrs. Dick Burdg, 6:30 p. m. Thursday D. Y. B. Class of U. B Sunday School annual picnic Mr. and Mrs Frank Hurst. 7 p. m. Zion Lutheran Ladies Aid Society school house, 1 p. m. Riley School Ha| monies Band practice, postponed one week. U. B. Progressive Workers class Mrs. Everett Venis. 7:30 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Daughters Class Annual Picnic, Lehman's Grove, Berne. M. E. Young Married Couples [Class, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ahr. Beulah Chapel Ladies Aid ice | cream social and pastry sale, post- ' poned. Evangelical Ladies Aid Society, church parlors, 2:30 p. m. Sunday Fifth annual Neuenschwander reunion .Lehman Park, Berne 12 p. m. Friday Mardi Bridge Club, .Miss Mary Madeline Coverdale, 8 p. nV and eighteen holes will be played, with a luncheon served in the clubhouse. Ptizes will be awarded the winni ing players of the first and second I low gross scores and the winners j of every third low gross score thereafter from the fifth to the twentyninth contestant. A number of the local women golfers of the Country Club are planning to attend the guest tourney tomorrow. The Loyal Daughters Class of the Evangelical Sunday school will hold | its annual picnic, Thursday even- 1 ing at Lehman’s grove in Berne. A basket supper will be served and a social evening enjoyed There will be an open meeting of the Red Men and Pocahontas at the i Red Men Hall, Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock, important business will be transacted after which a social party will be enjoyed AU members of both lodges are requested to be present. OSSIAN COUPLE married Saturday The marriage of Miss Mildred E. ;Knight, daughter of Charles Knight |of Ossian and Willard B Clark. OsI sian. the son of Theodore Wilson I Clark, took place at the Methodist Parsonage at Ossian, Saturday evening at seven-thirty o’clock. The couple was attended by Miss Mild red Hoover of Ossian and William ] Miller. Tocsin. They will reside | with the bride's father, west of OsI sian. HONOR GUESTS WITH DINNER PARTY Mr. and Mrs. John Everett and Mr. and Mrs. Cal Peterson enter-1 [ tained at their home on West Ad-! lams street, Monday evening with a! I six o’clock dinner honoring Mr. and | ‘ Mrs. Horace Reider and daughter I Rose Ann and Miss Geraldine Everjett of Indianapolis. Mrs. Reider was i formerly Miss Helen Everett of this I city. They are spending their vaca-1 tion in and near Decatur, visiting relatives and friends. DONALD LIECHTY HONORED ON BIRTHDAY The fourth birthday anniversary of Donald Llechty of this city was celebrated with a birthday picnic dinner in the Lehman Park at Berne Sunday. Those present included Mr. and Mrs. John Llechty and daughter Barbara. Mr. and Mrs. John Llechty’ 1

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1931.

and daughter Norma of Berne; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Llechty and son ] Itonaid, Mrs Ellzabeth. u Stanley and 1 Miss Laura Stanley of Decatur. The Progressive Workers class 1 ! ot the United Brethren Sunday ] i School will meet with Mrs. Everett > Venis, 510 West Grant street, Thurs- 1 j day night at seventhirty o’clock.' I Every member is invited to be pre-! sent. Miss Mary Madeline Coverdale' wil be hostess to the members of the Mardi Bridge Club, Friday night I at eight o’clock. ENTERTAIN I DINNER GUESTS Mr. and Mrs Aurand Schultz en terrained with dinner. Sunday, for Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Fishbaugh and! family of Versailles; Mr. and Mrs. I 1.. M. Jackson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Janson and family ami Mr ami Mrs. Carter Maxwell of Van Wert, Ohio. ENTERTAINS MUSICAL GROUP An entertainment was given Sunday, at the borne of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kruckeberg for the Octet ot Napoleon. Ohio. The afternoon was spent in playing baseball and other outdoor games. At the noon hour a delicious din-' ner was served cafeteria style and supper was served during the evening. Singing and music wer enjoyed, and songs were sung by little Miss Genuit of Napoleon, Ohio, and by the Napoleon, Ohio octet Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kruckeberg, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Steele and family, Mr. and Mrs Gustave Kruckeberg and fa-< mily, M •. and Mrs. Edwin Krueckeberg and family, Mr. and Mrs. j Louis Springer and family, Mr. and' Mrs Walter Bleeke and son Norbert Mr. and Mrs. Emil Kruckeberg and daughter Elma. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Krueckeberg and son Johnny. Napoleon guests were Mr. and Mis. Paul Genuit and children. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller and son Carl Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rohrs, Harry Krueckeberg and his The Riley School Harmonica Band which was to have met for] practice next Thursday, will meet instead on Thursday, July 23, for practiceIDABELLE WORTHMAN SURPRISED ON BIRTHDAY. Miss Idabelle M. Worthman was pleasantly surprised at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J Worthman, Sunday, when she returned from church and found a host of friends gathered at her home to assist in celebrating her eleventh birthday anniversary. At the noon hour a chicken din-1 ner was served with a large birthday cake arranged with eleven | lighted candles centering the table, i The afternoon was spent in playing out ot door games ami contests, and music was also enjoyed. Billie Woods and Mr Yager, and Miss Mamie Scherry played a number of musical selections. Those present were the Misses Emma, Lucile. Eleanora, and Margaret Hilgemann, Cordellia, Ruth, Mary, and Helen Worthman. Billie Woods, Otto Lybitz, Marie and Marcella Scherry, Eetliel, Florence, Lois Idabelle Worthman, Vera Jane Scherry, Amanda Worthman, Rolland Scherry, Irwin Worthman.! Daniel Scherry, Mr. and Mrs. Louis H. Worthman. Mr. and Mrs Milton C. Scherry, Mr and Mrs. Frank C.! Bauer and children. Clifford E and Mary Evelyn of Van Wert. Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Worthman. The Ladies Aid Society of the Zion Lutheran Church will meet thursday afternoon at one o’clock in the school house. A pot-luck supper will be served The members of the D. Y. B. Class ; of the United Brethren Sunday I School will entertain their hus-1 bands and families with the annual 1 .pot-luck supper and party at the j I home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hurst. | Thursday evening At seven o’ clock j | a super will be served. POLITICIANS STRUCK AGAIN ■ (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) the merciless tests of that office his fundamental inadequacy of character undid him and he stands! today stripped of all his carefully conjured glories," it is asserted. "Perhaps the most important answer to Herbert Hoover’s failure; is that fact that deeply ingrained in his make-up are two unfortun-! ate charact,eristics, fear and vacil-1 | lation, which, coupled with a petty j personal temper, sorely try even his most loyal friends." i The author declares the war- | debt holiday plan was "put over ion Herbert Hoover through the combined efforts of Charles G. Dawes. Dwight W. Morrow, and j Andrew W. Mellon, plus a dozen | New York Bankers who clamored I at him in person and by long-dist-ance telephone for nearly a month. I Finally, his confidence restored by a trip to the hospitable middle 1 west, Mr. Hoover adopted the plan | and was never more surprised in | his life when it was heralded as j his master stroke.” Exercise of autocratic power in, i his earlier days in China spoiled j

Mr. Hoover for dealing with equals the book, contends. It continues: “Once, expounding his views on labor troubles to a friend, he told how he had always found that chaining a Chinese coolie to a stake for a day in the hot sun was conductive to good discipine and a minimum of strikes”. The state department is analyzed in a caustic chapter entitled "Wrong horse Harry", from the fact that Secretary Henry L. Stimson lent this’ support to several South American governments that were quickly overturned by revolutionaries. Many stories are related about ' ' other characters. The reader i t I told for instance: That Mrs. Stimson complained to a friend tliat Mr. Hoover was a ! ' slave driver'." That Rep. Fiorella La Guardia of New York gives his White House inviltations to friends' children as souvenirs. Tliat Mrs. Dolly Gann’s husband telephoned newspapers to deny that he was “meek" or "mild." That the wife of an administration' official smokes a pipe That state department letters critical of Mexico were somehow Intercepted—and returned to the department by the Mexican am- ! bassador. o— FLIGHT ENlfs WHEN FLIERS LEAP SAFELY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) er Magyar. Hungarian aviators, waited todav with their plane, the Justice for Hungary, for favoralde I weather for their proposed transI Atlantic flight to Europe, i Endres and Magyar reached here j yesterday from Roosevelt Field, L.1., after “iflying blind" in a dense fog and passing Harbor Grace in the mist. They had planned to start over the Atlantic today, but bad weather caused them to postpone their start. Moscow, July 14 —(U.R) —At least one high aviation official was among th? group of fliers killed when their airplane crashed near Alabino station on the Western railroad last Sunday, it was learned belatedly today. Eight military aviators died in the accident, the announcement Said. V. K. Triandofilo. assistant-com-mander of aviation, was reported among the dead. The bodies were ordered to Moscow where they will be buried with highest military honors. TAXPAYERS TO HOLD MEETING ! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) This is the first meeting of its kind i to be held in the northern part of j the county and much interest has been shown in the proposed meet- ' ing. The Indiana Taxpayers Associa- | tion is organizing local units throughout the state The last legislature passed a law prohibiting the increasing of budgets for next year and effort is being made in many counties to reduce the budgets and levies under a year ago. INSTITUTE TO ATTRACT MANY j /CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONEI A tentative list of those who will attend include the president of the society, Miss Helen Eady, the Misses Bernice Nelson. Victoria Mills, Eileen Burk, Kathryn Hower, Helen DeVor, Harriet Shockey, Mary Kathryn Tyndall, Elizabeth Franklin. Louise Hait- | bold. Doris Cook, Edwinna Shroll, ' Anna Carper, Gladys Thompson, i Vera Porter. Fern Zimmerman, ' the Messrs. Henry Busche, David 1 Heller, Marion Baker, Marion ] Feasel, Ben Franklin. Jr., Paul ! Hancher, Harold Strickler, the , Mesdames Homer Lower, Avon ! Burk. Dan Tyndall, M. E. Hower. I Ervin Elzey, Ben DeVor, John T. Myers. Rev. and Mrs. B. H. Franklin. Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Bowen and Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Wicks. - Regular meeting of Blue Lodge [ ! tonight at 7:30 o’clock. tKKIVALS Mt. and Mrs. Paul Phillips of North Eighth street are the parents of a girl baby, born Sunday, July 12, 1031 The baby, which is the second daughter in the family, has been named Jane Alice. o HOSPITAL NOTES Anna Lehman, Berne, Route 1. submitted to a major operation at the Adams County Memorial Hospital this morning. Robert Beavers, 134 North First street, was removed to the local hospital this morning where he tinI derwent a tonsillectomy operation. o Get the Habit—Trade at Hom* 1

Talk

Mrs. William Zimmerman and 1 daughter Mary Grace visited with Mrs. Sarah Lehman and daughter] Frieda in Berne, Sunday. Mr ana Mrs. tvan Stucky and 5 son Ronald of this city were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joel Augsburger and family. Miss Mabel Nott of Wisconsin University is spending her summer vacation with Miss Ruth Martz at Ossian. Robert W. Freitag has returned from a two weeks vacation with relatives in Boston, Massachusetts. Jesse Brinker reports tliat his cork arm which was stolen from the rear seat of his car the other day lias been found It was lying on | a corn plow between Monroe ami Pleasant Mills and was evidently taken for a joke. Such practical ] tricks are serious. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Lower have I

ifotvt CLfawJ (Ipph !! Don’t Rasp Your Throat With Harsh Irritants " Reach for a LUCKY instead" Touch your Adam's Apple with ycur Finger. You are actually touching your larynx —this is your voice box—it conrains your vocai chords. When you consideryour Adam's Apple,ycuarecon- us / sidering your throat—your vocal chords. / *‘lt is part of my business to notice the types of tobacco bought by various concerns. In all instances. The Ameri* can Tobacco Company's buyers select / that rich, mellow type of tobacco ■■ that the farmer justly calls ‘The Cream of the Crop’ for their brand of LUCKY STRIKE.” These are the very words of an experienced tobacco buyer on the Southern market. LUCKY STRIKE not only promises but t gives you the very finest of each sea- Ik son’s tobacco crop. We pay the highest ML prices, to be sure of getting the Cream W of the Crop. And then to be sure that r .-' you get the greatest enjoyment, we "TOAST" these fine tobaccos —thereby expelling certain harsh irritants present in all raw tobaccos. These expelled irritants we sell to manufacturers of chemical compounds. LUCKIES are al- /W ways kind to your throat. Be careful ■ " z In your choice of cigarettes. ' ~ x&W “It’s toasted” TUNE INDance Orches* Including the use of Ultra Violet Rays tra, every TuoSunshine Mellows —Heat Purifies evening over N.8.c..u 1 w 0 ,u Your Throat Protection - against irritation - against cough

returned from a visit at Shelby. ] Ohio. ] J. D. Dailey ot Paulding, Ohio, | vlglted here last evening. Miss Nola Banter, a diet kitchen employee at the Adams County Memorial Hospital is enjoying her! vacation waiting her parents at ’ Clinton. Mrs. Jennie Runnier is spending : several days visiting her granddaughter, Mrs. Roger Swaim of I Bluffton. Miss Myrtle Akey of Muncie i;enjoying a week's vacation visiting! ■her mother and sister, Mis. Dora !V. Akey and daughter Mildred in! this city. Bob Riche. Hob Paxton and Dale I Ellenberger of Bluffton visited with . friends in this city Monday evening, i Miss Helen Sliioll lias returned; ■ from Bluffton where she speht the ! past week, the guest of Miss Mar-!

I tha Reed. Master Dick and Jim Colter are i spending their vacation with their grandmother Colter at Rivarre. Wiley Austin, Will Johns, Otto Case, James Sprague and Frank Schumacher will motor to Chicago Wednesday morning to witness the] tall game between the Cubs and Giants. Maurice Maloy of Monroeville vis- i ited in this city Monday evening. Marion Thompson and family of! Gary have returned to their home I I after spending the past week with ! Mr. Thompson’s niece, Mrs. Roy Steele. 196 North Eighth street. The Misses Mary Mclntosh and Ruth Roop of this city are spending 'lie day in Fort Wayne. Miss Helen Fritzipger of this city I returned Saturday from Indianapolis where she spent the past week I visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Al i Fritzinger. Miss Mary Helen Lose has acrs’Pted the position as stenographer in the law office of Ed. A. Bosse. Miss Lose began her duties Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peterson and* j children Bobby and Joyce of Da/ ton, Ohio returned to their home last night after spending tlie week- 1

PAGE THREE

end here visiting Mr and Mrs."Jolw S. Peterson Clark William Smith returned from Cincinnati. Ohio where lie , spent several days visiting his . grandmother, Mrs. Nancy Smithand aunt and uncle, Mr. anQ .Mrs. ] Don Vancil. ’ ! Miss Eva Doi win of Lafayette is | tlie guest of her cousin, Mrs Fred i Smith of this city. Miss Betty Barto of Fort Wffyne • ■ 4 H i is spending the week in this city I visiting with Mr. and Mis. J. B b , L’lrey.

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