Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 24 October 1932 — Page 3

'■* - WSOCIETY

- K| Paris Styles — *lllßl f*' ,: * knight |.', ...- nondrnl ; < ou- ' SB . nil, ri u'l thing J j .. The point in . U.S, Hl bl? W-S to II [ and alw -.o trimming, and «* upward to the cl- ■ to 111 ■ .... r.inginunts ,11 “ desirable K < r eveni I '. I jil - the oth.r .1 definite ; . ■Sponsor card party - Paul Such will ■

Mildren’s Coughs <MNeeo Creomulsion ' ..r i-i.iLl's o.ugh <r i or i j'J Wl1 '" "i > • i lieal the inflamed ■B' k germ growth. It '' ' ' is. in; contains no Un r. I,J. f.t a I’ r druggist right now J. r uwtaat use. (ad»J Where there i* a Will ■p there is I a Waij ■ to serve ■ I Well ) ■ I!. Zwick & Son Z.v..k, Lady Attendant ■E Phones 61 and 303. HI J- M Doan, Phone 1041

E I The p ark er Pen Company Announces: l accepted Ot I parkch ouoen 11 Ha' I Ip-iw-p' I . I A Timely Trade-in Sale I Look at these liberal allowances: for the Neu) Term of School ts Duof oid or Lady Duofoki Pen, and the New Business Upturn only 3 - and an old pen To reduce retailors' stocks for late fall and Christmas • 3 -7 S Pfencil to match, shipments, Parker offers you a $1.25 to $2.50 cash SK O O allowance for your u'.J pen on the new streamlined only “O - and an old pencil Parker Duofold Pen, or 75c to SI.OO for an old mechani•3.25 Lady Duofoid Pencil 081 I )en ' *' on a ilne new Btream hned Duofoid Pencil. j OSO C1 ’ The Duofolds offered are NOT discontinued models, only Z - and an old pencil bul Parker's finest and latest exclusive jewel-like *7 Parker D,.«r„ij c n colors in non-breakahle Permanite—Sea Green and raer Duofold Sr Pen, Blaclt> Black and Pearlj Black . Jade> and others-all only S 5 - and an old nan gold mounted, and all with Parker's super-smooth, $4 25 P -i ‘‘special-order” Duofold point, extra ink capacity, and »ncil to match, quick-starting, non-clogging feed. only $ 3 2 - and an old nencil The Pens an;i you trade in do not have to be lIOD, ** Parkers. We only require that the old pen have a 14k *« Duotold De Luxe Pen, gold point. onlv 7 5 - and »n «ld n»n So ransack the home and office for old pens and |5 D i n . P* pencils. Take them to the nearest pen counter, trade e t-uxe Pencil to match, them in, like cash, and walk out with a brand new . sdnn Parker Duofold Pen or Pencil, or both. But hurry—only ** - and an old pencil Parker reserves the right to withdraw this offer at any b time. The Parker Pen Co., Janesville, Wisconsin. -~‘ t Pa RKER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DISCONTINUE THI3 SALE AT ANY TIME—SO DON’T D- \y

CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Monday IT. B. Christian Endeavor party, 1 postponed. Dramatic Department, Mrs. P. i B. Thomas. 7:30 p. m. 1 Pythian Sister Hall ween ;i arty, ■ K. of P. Home. 7:30 p. in. I Monday Night Bridge Club, Mrs. Ed. Miller. 7:30 p. in. Research Club, Mrs. Fred Smith 2:30 p. nt. 1 Literature Department, Mrs. C. j A. Dugan 7.30 p. in. Music Department, Mrs. L. A.! ■ I Holth use, 7:30 p. m. Art 1> i; art,merit, Mrs. It. D. .Myers' 1 7:30 p. in. Tuesday Young Matrons Club, Mrs. Dallas Goidner. 0 p, m. N. and T. Club. Mrs. Francis i Eady. 2 p. m. E. L. of C. E., Miss Mary Grace Zimmerman, 7:30 p. m. Relbckah L„dge I. O. O. F. Hall, 7:30 :. m. Kirkland Ladies Club, Kirkland i high school, 1 p. m. Tri Kappa social meeting, Miss : M iry Suttles. 8 p. m. J St. Agnes S dality card party | ~ Catholic School hall. |l Boot 'l' wnship Home Economics .'Club, Mrs. Charles Gage, 1:30 p. in. Wednesday Ic-Nick Club masquerade party, ■I Mrs. George Stqlts, 7:30 p.m. I St. Vincent de Taul benefit card I party, Catholic School hall, 2 p.m. I Ladies Shak. sp, are Club, Mrs. I ! .1. L. Kocher, 2:30 p. m. I Historical Chib, Mrs. S. E. Hite, . 2:30 p. m. !' Union Township Womans Club. Mrs. Gi n Jacks n, 1 p. ni. Thursday St. Paul Ladies Aid Society, Mrs. ■ Harve Smith, all-day. St. Marys Home Economics Club. Mrs. Lula Hollowa; . 1 p.m. M. E. Ladies Aid Society. Mrs. Horace Callow, 2:30 p. m. | Mrs. C. E. Hocker's class of the : Evangelical Sunday Schott, Mrs. I W. E. Elston. 7:30 p. m. j Eastern Star, stated m tiinr, Masonic Hall, 7:30. Pleasant Grove Missionary Soc-I ietyy 1:30 m. Friday Hal lowccn Social Erwin School nations received will be distribut- ' ed among the needy of Decatur. Mrs. C. E. Hocker's class of tliei Evangelical Sunday School will meet al the home of Mrs. W. E. I Elston, 221 South Fifth street. : Thursday evening at seven-thirty ■ o'clock. The meeting will be in i the form of a masquerade party and pot-luck supper. Each mem Per is requested to bring her own table service. — The Evangelical League of Christian Endeavorers will moot at the home of Miss Mary Grace Zimmerman on Madison street, i Tuesday night at seven-thirty | o'clock.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1932.

ENTERTAIN guests AT HAMILTON LAKE Mr. and Mrs. Harve Kitson entertained a number of friends at their new cottage home at Hamilton Lake. A masquerade party was held Saturday night, and a delicious chicken dinner was served Sunday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. B. 11. Farr, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Handler and daughter Margaret, Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Hower, Mr and Mrs f vv Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Anuen. Mr. and Mrs. Kiley Chrisman, Mrs. Merle Chrisman. Mr. and Mrs. Delton- Passwater, and Mr. and Mrs. Kitson and daughter Miss Margaret. GIRL SCOUTS ENTERTAIN WITH MASQUERADE AND HIKE The members of Patrol four of i the Girl Scouts of which Miss ] Marcella Brandyberry is sponsor I entertained all the members of Troop -One of the organization, ] Mrs. P. B. Thomas and Miss Mary Kathryn Schug with a hike and ] Halloween party, Saturday evening. The members and guests met at the Central school building, cleverly masked. They hiked to Second Creek where a huge bonfire was built. Songs were sung and games played, after which a delicious luncheon of weiner sandwiches, marshmallows, pumpkin pic and whipped cream was served. The study meeting of the Ora- i j matic Department of the Woman's | Club will be held with Mrs. P. B. Thomas tonight at seven-thirty o'clock, instead of with Miss Lee Anna Vance, as was announced. The party which was to have been held tonight by the Christian | Endeavor Society of the United Brethren Church, has been post poned until a later date. ENTERTAINS SUPPER CLUB Mrs. C. C. Pumphrey entertained the Saturday Night Club at her] home on South Third street Saturday night. Following the supper which was served at six o’clock, games of bridge were played. — The decorations for the party! were of autumn, leaves and flow-1 ers. Mrs. G. H. Wehmeyer was a guest of the club. Mrs. L. A. Gra-j luim received the high score club prize. Tli- Pleasant Grov Missionary] jSoci.ty will meet .with Mrs. Rose Fairchild Thursday afternoon at■ one-thirty o’clock. LADIES AID PLANS RUMMAGE SALE T e Ladle > Aid Society of the Presby: ilan Chure.i met at the :h' .u'e of Mrs. FT d Patterson Thurr.<1 y afternoon. Tw ty fi v e m m- , bers after led the meeting, and two ■nut f town .u.sts were also pre-1 sent, Mrs. F. 1.. DeVilbiss of Pontiac. Michigan and Mis. Eckelber.' ; ger. Mrs. Ed the president i lhad charge f the dev.:i nil servie.s, assistt J by Mrs. C. I). Tee pie I and M -■ lyers Mrs. Macklin. ! chairman of the rummage sale, ask-' j cd that eaqti member of the organ!-1 ration donate fiunitur.. clothing! land beddi.ii.- : r tli ■ sile which will —- ... — , ...

be held Saturday, November 12. The tentative location for the rummage sale is in th? building formerly occupied by the Deininger Milinery Shop. The meeting closed with the Mizpah benediction, after which the h'.'stesses served refreshments. A Halloween Social will be held in the Erwin school, located five miles east and four mile® north of Decatur, Friday night. October 28. I •A program and contests will be features of the evening's entertainment and the public is invited to attend. j The St. Marys township Home! Economics Club will meet Thurs-I day afternoon at one o’clock at the home of Mrs. Lula Hollaway. The N. and T. Club will meet' with Mrs. Francis Eady on Win ! Chester street, Tuesday afternoon at. two o’clock. The Young Matrons Club will! meet Tuesday evening at six, o’clock at the home of Mrs. Dallas | Goidner. The meeting will be in [ the form of a pot-luck supper and . program. Mrs. George Stults will l e hos- ] tess to the members of the Ic Nick i Club at a masquerade party to beheld at her home on Mercer avenue, Wednesday night at seventhirty o'clock. HOOSIER SALON TO GIVE PROGRAM A program will be given by the ’ Hoosier Salon Patrons Association ■ in the L. S. Ayres store auditorium in Indianapolis, Tuesday morning at 10:30 o’clock. This is the second program ot the third season. Following is the complete pro-' gram planned by the Hoosier pro-1 i gram bureau: I Vivian Humphreys Soprano Phoebe Snavelly Wilson ..“The Technique of Modern Poetry.” Kathryn Tofaute....Dramatic reader | LeVern Hayden . Golden Tone Marimba. jH. A. Henderson ‘‘Radcial Prob- ., lems of the Near East.” .'Mrs. Louis A. Brokliage ! Soprano (Costume recital) . Almeda C. Adams “Seeing Europe Through Sightless Eyes,” ! Ralph Warren Soule Lyric Tenor ! Hostesses: Mrs. Felix T. McJwhirter, Mrs. W. D. Long, IndianJapulis, Mrs. Fred Bell, Rushville, i Doorkeepers: Mrs. Clair McTurnau. Mrs. John Downing Johnson. Timekeeper: Mrs. Edwin 1. PostIon; publicity Mrs. Curtis A. Hodg : es. — DECATUR PEOPLE ATTEND MASQUERADE Mr. and Mrs. H rmin Mv:rs of sen'll of 'he city. Miss Hilda J'ulte-1 rey -r and Bud Brokaw attended a masque rade party in.» Huntington I ! Saturday night. Mrs. Helen Scott 1 att.tain.d with th .arty at the ?me o. Mr. and Mrs. Ames Maples The gusts w re giv .n numbers , Lis th y enter'd tie h..:ne and Bud I Br kaw dr w the lucky number and I I « ,s pr sented with a gift. The eve ! I nlng was spent in guessing cortastn and vari us games. The h. sU-ss s.r- --| vbd a delicious lunch.on. THREE CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARIES I' n Weidler, Er-i al Dale Shiffer ly and Mrs. E. W. Jackson eelehrat-1 ed their birthday anniversari n i which tak. place on the name date i at the E. W. Jackson ham.- Sunday. The tri' has celebrit d toe birth day iiainiv r.nries together for the 1 st sev nt en years. A dinn. r was served a the noon hour. Th dining table was centerd with a large birthday cake and I covers w re laid 1 r Mr. and Mi's. Walter Koos, d lighter Helen and 1(1e..i vii'V f An", la Mr. -nd Min. | Pm Weidler. Mr. a l Mrs. Otis' I Shit'., ily .ad family. Doris, Eldritl, ' E. mil Dale ami M'ldied. Mr. aid; 'Mrs Mb rt Muti hler and on Bob ' I by. Mr. and Mrs. Artie Jack tin. Don Koos. Maurice Jacks . HaniJackson, and Mr. and M.s. E. \V J .. k tun. The De. Pa il Ladies Aid Socr'.v will meet with Mrs. Harve Smith, '. 1! day Tliur i ' y A pot-luck dinn .-r will be served at nt n. LILLIAN SPRUNGER AND ARTHUR FOX WED Miss Lillian 11, Sprung, r. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Sprung -r and Arthur Fox. son of Mrs. Noah (Fox. ill of ne.r B rne. were married Sin day afternoon at 3 'cl ck a: th ■ home of the bride’s parents, ne ' half milt, east of Berne. Il v. C. H. Suckau officiated at i the eere.Ti ny and read the single ] ring ceremony. Miss Barnice Sp-run-1 ger. sist ;■ of the bride, and H rm-in I Fox. brother of the groom, attended ■ the c.uple. The brlda w re a gown of bieg tnnspir.nt velvet, with accessories to match. She carried a bouquet of Columbia'roses. 1.n.-m’diately foil wing the cert-! mony the couple left on a honeymoon to Washington. D. (’.. and on I their return will make their home with the gr om's m-ctlher. The bride has been emiiloyed ht t'he Berne Manufacturing company, and the groom is an employe of the Dunbar factory. Get the Habit — Trade at Home

SUPREME COURT DENIES REVIEW OF CONVICTIONS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE , • ♦- » » « ***•«*« • ♦ ♦ j Other events which denied them j ian impartial trial, it was contended, included the calling of a special ' term of court, the improper admission of testimony “inflammatory” arguments by the prosecutor and : an “unfair and prejudicial charge” ! by the trial court. o FEDERAL JUDGE IS OVERRULED i CONTINUED FROM ONE ! each of their many departments I must compete with the smaller j specialty shops, while their re- ■ ceipts are lumped to bring the i taxable income into higher brack- ! ets. The J. C. Penny and Kroger I Grocery and Baking company ati tacked the law claiming a provi- : -don requiring chain stores under one management to file returns as one store placed them at a disadvantage compared with the in■dividual stores with which they ' must compete. o ITALIAN LEADER ISSUES APPEAL CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE great" American people,” Mussolini shouted. The premier stressed the fascist belief that the German demand for juridicial parity in armaments is justified. “While the disarma-i ment conference, lasts. Germany j cannot ask to be allowed to rearm: | in any degree, but if the confer-1 once ends without a decision.: Germany cannot remain in the i league of nations if her nioritification is not removed." Mussolini said Htaly would re-

= ■ " ■ ■■' ■ . I,* c/ ’ • • Si: - - ' JI i ... ■ #• •. ' ' Cm i I j. > y*»>< i i jr ; IWK.Z /'- ’■ oßr> I you c ° ° s k f° r * * 111 I HERE’S romance in a Chesterfield —the S a / f I romance of fine tobaccos from all over X VZ the world. The search begins in far-off Turkey where Chesterfield buyers visit every important tobacco-growing section... and continues C throughout our owu Southland. Year in and year out Chesterfield gives to its smokers the pick” of all these fields, hesterlield

friain a member of the league, “especially as today the league ie very sick, and we must not abandon it. The league being too universal in character results in its orders and instructions losing I their efficacy in proportion to the I distance they travel.” o— MOHAMMEDAN IS IDENTIFIED BY GIRL VICTIM CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE night. Morris, Anna told police, ennie into the grocery and told her he wanted a girl to take care of his sister's baby, she took the job “because I wanted to make some money,” she said. They took a taxi and her kidnaper had the driver stop beside some woods. -She was scratched and cut climbing through brush as they went into the woods. “He tried to drag me,” she said, “and 1 cried. So he stopped. I knew he was a bum because I smelled booze on his breath.” Anna said she went to sleep. When she awoke it was daylight] and the man was running away. She felt blood on her neck and on her dress. She had not felt] tin knife cutting her throat. o Grain Deliveries Fall To New Low Chicago, Oct. 24 —(UP)— All deliveries of wheiat and corn fell to new lows for the season on the- Chicago I',>iim of trail t day. December wheat touched 47 3-8 .'cents :”er bushel or within 2 3-4 i cents of the'all time record low set last fall. I Det-timber corn, touched 25 cents, ! equaling the low established in Dei ceniber 181)6 and with that e-xcep- ■; ticn the lowest since September 189(5, when the all tim ■ record low <>. 2n 3-4 cents was set.

(EMOCALS

Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Whitright, Miss Gladys Whitright and Ray Johni son spent Bunday at Monroeville the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elmerj Mooney and family. Other guests were Miss Zelma Lennington of Monroeville and Floyd Kelley of Fort Wayne. Mrs. J. O. Smith of Fort Wayne ■ spent Sunday with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Alva Buffenbarger. Mrs. Roscoe Boqkinan will return to her home in Fort Wayne tonight after spending the week with Mrs. Amy Bockman. and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Knapp and family. Harve Rice left today tor Akron, Ohio, whe-fe he will spend a week or ten days visiting with his sister. Rev. Clare Peters had charge of the services at the Pleasant Grove church Sunday evening. He was assisted by Rev. Shume and Miss 'Hattie KeopUe, soloist, students at the Huntington U. B. College. . Mr. and Mrs. IHerman Baumgartner and family visited over Suu lay in this city. Miss Marjorie Johnson spent the week-end in Garrett visiting with Miss Fern Zimmerman. Mrs. Bess Erwin and Mrs. F. L. DeVilbiss visited with friends in Van Wert, Oihi-j, Sunday. ■ Mrs. Joe Lose returned Sunday night from Indianapolis after spending the week-end with Mary Helen Lose and Mrs. Wm Berling and I family. The Misses Ruth and Vera Por-, ter have returned from Detroit, Mich., where they spent several days visiting with Mr. and Mrs. .1. R. Kerr and family. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Burdg and sen Max have returned home from a

PAGE THREE

business trip to Chicago. They visited Mrs. Hurdg’s sister and her husband Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Townsend of Aurora, ill., Mr. Townsend is a commissioner of the Public Utilities. En route home they stopped at Schafer Lake where they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Luckey of Indianapolis. Mrs. iAI Burdg who had been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Luckey, accompanied the Burdg family to this city. T'he party called on Geojge and Charles Northcutt at Flora, and the Rev. Stoakes family at Kokomo. Andrew Mylott and Gerald Mylott, Misses Celesta and Mary Mylott all of Chicago spent Sunday with the M. J. Mylott family. — 0 Plan for Better Control-of-Colds Proved by Tests Greensboro, N. C. -Clinical tests —and use in thousands of homes —have proved the new Vicks Plan for better Control-of-Colds. The number and duration of colds reduced by half! More than half of t'he costs of colds saved! Full details of the Plan are in each package of Vicks Vapoßub and the I new Vicks Nose & Throat Drops. NOTICE PATRONS We will be out of our offices from Oct. 24 to Oct. 28, while attending International Medical Clinic, at Indianapolis. DR. L. E. SOMERS DR. C. C. RAYL, DR. E. L. MOCK.