Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 216, Decatur, Adams County, 12 September 1932 — Page 3

Society

Mparis Styles .K-m ' ■• i 1 b u it',,*•■ ! "''"“’ !h, ‘ l^K.., fikei’’' ■' '" g 9K,*, .-V.:. ’» "" ,ll ' "" h ■' ■• '■' !a ”"' ||K n t , r ,|.l ! "‘“"V b,,V then WG ' wl, ‘ Kr ’"'" on a I’rimess line, titt- ,|„». > curve* of the ilUll ,. ;< uu il.'Wh the front broken by bows k anil tluTe is origi t s( arf with a bow arnrik. i snugly to the fMli.i this dress. (olored velvet pr,,!-! ringer, and l,y “ bow ,0 shoulder This is worn Hie arms which a I jp. . n.. t The Prill r a! , -d to tins model K fulness from just below , of a shaped P with matching ■Llo'C' and Slippers and is reaching es in general this announced meet ■ I Temperwill meet in the LiT: at n k Tie program for the will lie as follows: Mrs. John Hill fi • National Con Kit Mrs Henry Henry Adler and Runyon. session. benediction. ■ L ya: Workers class of the Sund .y School will night at sevenwith Mrs A. M. BreiT’l- ta Tan soorlty will ■ Ms. Margaret Holthouse nigi't t seven-thirty o'HjAL REUNION IN DECATUR Hp ■‘.g’.r-e-.th annual reuni. n of !i. id Sunday in I'ark on S nth street. More than one pers ms attended the renoon lioiir the basket din■p Using Soda! I Bad lor Stomach soda disturbs digestion. ■*"'■■ -’.-ti.-i. :. and gas. Adlerika better One dose will rid bowpoisons which cause ■and bad sleep. B. J. Smith

"■■■■■■■■» WMMManaBMHBBMMMaMMMMMHMMMiiIBMMHHOM■ w I U. S. No. 1 Grade Yellow ONIONS I Excellent Keeping Quality I 25 lb. Ag I BAG IONA i FLOUbt The All Purpose Flour 24./ 2 ft>. 4jfl BAG Follow the Crowds To AtlP FQ@® STOKES

CLUB CALENDAR Ml** Mary Macy Phone* 1000—1001 — Monday Adam* County Choral Society! picnic and rehearsal, Mr. and Mrs. i L. A. Holthouse. Tuesday Zion Reformed G. M. G., Misses Madgellne and Virginia Miller, 7:30 P. M. Delta Theta Tau sorority, Miss Margaret Holthouse, 7:30 p. tn. W. C. T. U. Library Hall, 2:30 P. M. Rebekah Lodge, I. O. O. F. Hr 11 7:30 p. m. N. and T. Club, Mrs. Ed Warren, 2 pm. Tri Kappi social meeting Mrs. Avon Burk 8 p. m. Wednesday Better Homes Home Economics Club. Mrs. Vera Rich 2 p. m. Thursday Methodist W. F. M S., Mrs. E. N Wicks. 2:30 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Workers class Mrs. A. M. Brelner 7:30 p. m. Evangelical Ladies Aid Society, church parlors, 2 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Daughters class, postponed one week. Friday Mt. Pleasant Ladies Aid ten cent supper. Mt. Pleasant school house, 5 to 8 p. m. ner was served cafeteria fashion. Boyd May, seventy-eight years of age. was the oldest member present, and Clement Debaugh Hoagland, . two weeks old. was the youngest, it was voted to hold the reunion next year, at the same time and place. The Ht. Pleasant Indies Aid Society will serve a ten cent chicken supper Friday night in the Mt. Pleasant school house. Ice cream and cake will also be served. The public is cordially invited to attend this l public supper which will be served from five to eight o’clock. MRS. EMELINE STALTER CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY .Mrs. Emeline Valentine Stalter celebrated her seventy-fifth birthday anniversary Sunday, at her home in Monroe. At noon a bountiful dinner was served, and the table was decorated with three large birthday cakes. Those present were her children and grandchildren: Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Tritch and son Max Allen of Fort Wayne; Mrs. Sherman Essex and son Har.-ld of Monroe; Mr. and Mrs. Fred F. Zurcher and j daughter I.ols and sons Reuben and Carl of near Berne, and Mr. Emeline Stalter. The honored guest received many beautiful gifts in keeping with the occasion. The Women’s Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church will meet with Mrs. E. N. Wicks, Thursday afternoon at twothirty o’clock. fortieth wedding ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Butler and Mr. and Mrs. Giles Porter entertained with a chicken dinner Saturday noon honoring Mr. an 1 Mrs. H. E. Butler on the occasion

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1932.

of their fortieth wedding annlver-: sary, and also the birthday anniversary of Mr Butler. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Butler and daughter Mary Joe, Mr. and Mrs. Giles Porter and children, and Been Byerly. The social meeting of the Tri Kappa sorority will be held at the I home of Mrs. Avon Burk on I Fourth street, Tuesday night at I eight o'clock. ENTERTAINS WITH i ROAST PIG DINNER j Mrs. Martha Fisher entertained a i number of relatives and friends at a roast pig dinner, Sunday. The dinner was prepared and served in her home. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Ornlor. Mrs. Petri Brown, Miss Vernetl Wiialen. Mr. and Mrs. William Murphy. Lew Murphy, Junior Murphy. Chalmer Fisher and the h stess, Mrs. Martha Fisher. The meeting of the Loyal Daughters class of the Evangelical Sunday School which was to have met next Thursday has been postponed until September 22. The Ladies Aid Society of the Evangelical Church will meet Thursday afternoon in the church parlors at two o’clock. The September section with Mrs. Ccy Mirtz, the chairman, will be in charge of the meeting, and all members are asked to be present. The Girls Missionary Guild of the Zion Ref rmed Church will meet Tuesday night at seven-thirty o’clock nt the home of the Misses Virginia and Madgeline Miller on Adams street. Every member is requested to lie present, and members having reading circle books in their possession are asked to bring them to the meeting. The Better Homes Home Economics Club will meet Wednesday afternoon at two o’clock with Mrs. Vera Rich. REV. VANCE FAMILY ENTERTAIN AT SUPPER Mr. and Mrs. Rolla Jackson entertained" at supper Saturday evening for Rev. and Mrs. R. E. Vance and children. Alice. James and Junior. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Busche and son Henry. Miss Vance and Mr. Busche will leave Tuesday for Indiana Central College at Indianapolis. HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Paul Phillips, Eighth and Madison streets, underwent a major emergency operation at the Adams County Memorial Hospital Saturday. Mildred Smith, route 1. Monroe, submitted to a major emergency operation Saturday at the Adams County Memorial hospital. Eileen Hess, route 5, Decatur, is a patient at the Adams County Memorial hospital where she underwent a major emergency operation Saturday. Will Hays Expected To Aid Republicans Indianapolis, Sept. 12 — <U.R) — Will H. Hays, former Republican national chairman and head of the • motion picture industry, is expect--1 ed to aid in the Indiana campaign during the latter part of October, according to United States Senator James E. Watson. Hays volunteered to come to I Indiana to assist in organization I work, Watson said. • o GERMAN BODY IS dissolved! ] CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE !by a government which had been overthrown by the reichstag. The reichstag then adjourned unI til tomorrow, despite the fact that the government now regards it as ; non-existent. The government was expected to proc'aim a state of emergency this evening, under which it would rule much as under martial law. It was thought troops probably would occupy the reichstag to prevent it from meeting tomorrow. o Frank Kamm Receives Two Years In Prison Terre Haute Sept. 12 —(UP) — Frank Kamm. who, while Vermillion county surveyor, was indicted by the federal grand jury on liquor conspiracy charges was sentenced to two years in federal prison today by Judge Robert C. Baltzell, following pleas of guilty. Five other persons accused with Kamm were sentenced also on guilty pleas. — o Mahatmi Gandhi May Go On Strike Bombay. India, Sept. 12.—(U.R> — The Mahatma M. K. Gandhi, famous leader of Indian nationalists, is threatening to go on a “hunger 'strike’’ in his prison cell in protest against the government’s arbitrary settlement of the Indian communal conflict. , o Get the Habit — Trade at Hom*

Striking Farmers Parade . aMMMUTak WMMTWMMaKM Striking farmers. 5,000 strong, mounted on truck ; and autos, parading past hotel in Sioux City, lowa,] where governors and representatives of nine Middle West states held donference in effort to solve some, of the many problems confronting farmers. The ofti ial conference on farm problems was held in the room just below the American flag ip the upper left of the picture. The parade was orderly, although the strikers had attacked newspaper photographers a few hours earlier.

FLYING FAMILY MADE FORCED LANDING IN SEA CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ] Mrs. Hutchinson, their two young daughters. Katherine, 8, and Janet Lee, 6; Navigator Peter Redpath; Mechanic Joseph Ruff, Radioman Gerald Altissish; and Cameraman Norman Alley. The radio cjperator aboard the Hutchinson plane exchanged messages with the operator aboard the trawler for more than an hour after first flashing news of the forced landing at sea. Then the messages stopped suddenly. The skipper of the trawler neither heard nor saw any more of the flying family. The plane made the emergency landing at 3:10 p.m. Sunday. More SOS signals stoppel at 4:20 p.m. The position of the plane was given 68.28 north. 38.45 west, about 30 miles south of Angmagssallk. The flying family left New York August 23 and flew to St. John, N. 8., without incident. Hutchinson

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continued to An.ticosti Island, in 1 the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and, j awaited favorable weather to con- | tlnue to Greenland. “Fine weather, can’t wait any' longer.” he wirelessed to his New York backers, when he left Anti-' cost!. Huntchinson flew to Greenland despite the fact that the Danish government had refused him per-' mission to land, due to the danger: of taking eight persons, including; a woman and two children, over' the dangerous Greenland ice pack. I When Htftchinson reached God-i , thaab. he and officials of the! Greenlandic Trading company] , there were not sure whether he • would be helped or fined for landing. Finally. Hutchinson paid a fine of SIBO and was permitted to continue aiteiA promising to follow the coast and not edass the interor. Greenland authorities gave the flying family all the help they could. They permitted Hutchinson to use stores of gasoline which had been deposited for the

w-orld flight planned by Col.j j Charles A. Lindbergh. The Danish government was/ i opposed to the Hutchinson flight ' on the grounds that the motor might freeze if he started over 1 the ice pack. o Found Sane And Sentenced To Die Chicago Sept. 12 —(UP)— Howard | ' Bonham of Evansville, Ind., was i found sane by a jury today and ■i Judge Michael Feinberg sentenced ' him to die in the electric chair OcI toiber 7 for the murder of Paul Tulnpan, restaurant owner. •I Q w— Quaker Services. Once a Year ,| Yarmouth, Mass. —(UP) — Only . j once a year are services held at a J two-century old church in West Yar- ! mouth, known as the Friends’ Meet>jing H use. an institution of Quak- • er origin. The anniversary services . |are arranged by the National So?i ciety of Friends. In other days “'weekly services were conducted.

IO G ALj

Mr*. A. L. Glanz and son Robert of Minneapolis, Minn., and Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Rupp of Alma. Wisconsin, arrived Saturday to spend a week with Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Neptune. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hammond and children and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Daniela and children attended the horse show at Centllvre Park in Fort Wayne Sunday. Cards have been received from Leo Saylors, who with Mrs. Saylors are enjoying a vacation at Emporia. Kansas. They will be gone another week. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Koontz of South Whitley spent Sunday here with relatives. Dr. and Mrs. H. O. Jones of Berne visited here Sunday evening. Daniel Schafer, son of C. C. Schafer. will leave this week for Durham, N. C., where he will enter Duke University. Daniel was graduated from Culver Military Academy last June. Miss Jeanette Uhl returned to her home in Toledo today after a | visit here with the Misses Mary | Margaret and Helen Voglewede. Miss Mary Margaret Voglewede ■ | will leave Tuesday for Mt. St. j Joseph College, Cincinnati, to resume her studies. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Stuckey, Mr. 'and Mrs. Roy Price and Mr. and | Mrs. William Stuckey, of Monroe, jspent the weekend at Hamilton Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maley and daughter. E'.va Jean, of Goshen, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schrank on North Tenth street. Mrs. Maggie Jefferies of Huntington is visiting in this city with Mrs. Al Burdg. Mrs. Helen Hlllegas spent Sun(day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 1 Ben Schrank and returned today to Ligonier where she is employed. ] Mrs. Bernard Terveer who has' been ill at her home on West Madi-; son street for the last several days ] is somewhat improved today. Miss Mary Mdlntosh of Fort. Wayne visited with her parents in, this city. Saturday. Miss Eola Gentis of Fort Wayne, was the guest of Mrs. Esta Liddy j in this city Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith of Monroe and Mrs. Ben Devor of this city accompanied Mrs. George. Smith and son Terry to her home; I after visiting here for the last two 1

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weetlta. Mrs DeVor will remain |n Fremont for a visit. Mr. and Mr*. W. P. Ixtse and daughter Margaret, Mr. and Mr*. Jerry Coffee spent Sunday In Custar, 0., the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thompson. Ralph Reed of Fort Wayne spent week-end in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Cowens and family visited in Bluffton Sunday. Miss Geraldine Smith and John Burnett spent the week-end in Columbus. 0., the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Butler and baby. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mutschler and eon Bobby were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. WaltexKoos in Angola. Mrs. Clarence Wade and daughter Margaret of LiGrange, visited in this city en route to Muncie where Margaret will enter Ball State Teachers college. Mr. and Mrs. Giles Porter and family were guests at a chicken dinner Sunday noon at the home of Mrs. A. J. Porter in Pleasant Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Hiran Rust of Albany, N. Y. are the guests of Mrs. Maggie Townsend-Jefferies at the ] home of Mrs. Al Burdg in thts city, land Mr. and Mrs. Bert Townsend and friends. They will leive for Huntington and Chicago, cn route to their home. Mr. and Mrs. James Staley and children and Miss Margaret Daniels attended the horse show at Centlivre Pork in Fort Wayne Sunday. Major Taylor To Be Buried Tomorrow Indianapolis. Sept. 12.—(U.R)—The body of Major Richard F. Taylor, commander of the 113th observation squadron, Indiana National Guard, lay in state here today. Funeral services with full military honors will be held tomorrow. Major Taylor died in the Vermillion county hospital at Clinton of I injuries incurred when the plane ihe was flying in patrol duty over line mine area, crashed, his body I was returned to Indianapolis by an honorary guard both on land and | in the air. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemitery. Sergeant David B. Vickery, who , flying with Major Taylor, was recovering at Clinton. He was not 'injured seriously.