Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 270, Decatur, Adams County, 14 November 1932 — Page 3
Society
jp«s Styles * WaSHt* JL :v ilUl ' :l lE' s ■' ' :;;i ’ j"; Ea <W 1 li "‘ l ; '"" r .)’l T. , i fcaally '?"• * ils ,sWll '" ., ;| | I,Ollis XIV Kj|j. «¥■ " :|l:| ■ present." F3K|> •).,-.I with most ex- :> is known by the ■ and ■ySLdmilted by liistori ,ir. jaiiot ■. > t'fs «oro Epgt TV 1 ' ' '' iOS SO. 11l Ft ' ' W. CRIST E |E Q TJiI IETLY SATURDAY ''"' wa inS# l ■ > t'otnotiy wiiirli ' ■' ■ wo tliis city itiejlEuy £ :.: -■ Miss Sarah E ■oi tW* ' v niol Frank Jones Tly. Mr were united in marrht» W, of the church. Dr. iaißP" 'Tar , . , ■»<JBnre Bine the single ling ’fceay.jir. and 'lts. Frank FishEfdiElte:' Miss Ireta Fisher wed. Ling. K and N Jone.! will r< '-ide in ■Fistd® h' ' ll,J >' n B'ort Wayne, ■e he |l employed in the riil■7Y FUHRMAN ■EBRATfES BIRTHDAY ( fc. EMfi Fuhrman and Mi's. John ■Bin Kt e: lainol wit!) a birtliSEirty, Al ■ . afternoon ft ont o honoring their: , Eter jt> ml laughter. Botty I ■in, o occasion of her : ■ birtlkiay anniversary. afternoon, contests I ■gUMßwere played .nd prizes ■ won »y It iby Miller. Evelyn Ct:<t,Sth Hammond and Marii ■Bonita- At the close of the ■euott-'h: entertainment Li delb I ■ Itß*- a was served by the | (EbHaEssisttd by Mrs. Carl; r mKd's Coughs I Need Creomulsion the best, fastest and surest ■mad f your child's cough or [it mothers more and more to Creomulsion for any d that starts. n emulufie* creosote with medicinal elements and heal the inflamed check germ growth. It t , mW a f > remedy, but contains no 1 Si 1 is certain relief. Gel a P * w ® y°ur druggist right now tai ■* w W :cad >' for instant use. (adv.)
4 ~ f " DucnocttAWS — —- I *. nfk< The GIFT O ® has no Equal | 1 Your Photograph—a gift to he treasur- || fc : eci through the years — one that will S■- ' % X bring a happy reminder of a niemor- I |S ’ ] able Christmas! I! BsaMlKs, xf" 3 ~ , .■ i' : I I’amih. sweetheart and !! v; ••• : < cherish such a gift. I ». > I :?% 1.. £ Arrange for a sitting now—either the ’ aK <3 hi,l,v ’ fan,il ' ,;T '” 1 " ~r yoitrsc f—and |gS3k *"> take advantage of our pre-holiday ‘ W , XL-. :: :» Special. ' :i I • nV :: J 12 Photos make 12 Gifts j BOt OUR HOLIDAY SPECIAL jK’- V BMP We will give abso!utelv FREE one Bxlo ,>hoto ’< ra P h i nm with each tlozen photographs taken up to and includ- ■ iST/Airf ing November 26. r I Edwards Studio >'lLt IB . 1
CLUB CALENDAR 'j Mias Mary Macy Phones 1000—1061 ’ , Monday . church parlors. 2 p. ni. I I Monti ry Night Club, Mrs Herb' ■ Kern, 7:30 p. m. •| Junior Art Club, Miss Edwin?) : j Siu oil. 7.45 ,p. m. Tuesday . Pythiam Needle nub, Mrs ,T (rw ’| i Tritch in Fort Wayne all-day. ’ j Civic Section, Library hall, 7:30 : p. m. . M. E. Mary and Marth.i class, , Mrs. Mart Gilson, 7 p. nt. > l Research Club. Mrs. Fred Fruchte 1 1|2:30 p. m. II <’. L. of C. Social might, School I ‘ hall, 6:30 p. m. -1 Adams County Choral Society. I I above Brock Store 7:30 p. m. Wednesday I Zion Reformed Phoebe Bible class , I church parlors, 7:30 p. m . | Christia.rr Triangle class, Mrs.i Henry Neireiter. 2 >;. m. Supper Club, Mrs. Arnold Berber-i ding, 6:30 p. m. Ladies Shakespeare Club Mrs.! i Earl Adams, 2:30 p. m. 11 Zion Reformed Lidins Aid Society ! ichurch parlors, 2:30 p. m. | Historical Club, Charles Langston j i home, 2:30 p. tn. Open Bridge Tournament, Phi' "Belt illall. 8:1X1. Thursday Christian Ladies (Aid Society,' ' .Mrs. August Kelly, 2:30 ip. m. j Zion Lutheran! Lillies Aid, school house, 4 p. m. j Evangelical Ladies Aid Thanks- ! giving chicken dinner, church basement, 11 A. M. to 1 p. m.; supper, 5 to 7 p. m. M. E. Ladies 'Aid and Foreign Mission Society joint meeting, Mrs. Clyde Butler, 2:30 p. m. I Afternoon Bridge Miss Emily | Crist at home of Miss Madge Hite j 2 ip. m. St. Marys Home Economics Club Mrs. A. W. Bleeke all-ldav. | —; day cake, herring ten lighted canIdles, formed « decorative note for the occasion. Betty received a number of pretty useful birthday gifts from the little guests, who were Norma Tumble'json. Norm'i Peterson. Ruth Hammend, Dorothy Hammond, Betty Melehi, Ruby Miller, Phyllis Koltcr, i Marilyn Bonifas, Ethelyn anil Evelyn Bi’.fflet't, Kathleen and Pauline I Acker. Mary Fuhrman Patsy Mci Con, veil, and Peggy Lou Gaunt. The Civic Section will meet Tuesday right at seven-thirty o'clock in the Decatur Library. Mrs. Arnold Gerberding will entertain the Supper Club at her home | Wednesd ly evening, at six-thirty l o’clock. The Pythian Needle Club will : meet at the home o. Mrs. Jonas | Tritch in Fort Wayine, Tuesday. A pot luck dinner will lie served at
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1932.
I the noon hour and the women are | each asked to take one article of tood and, her own table service. . Rolls and coffee will be furnished. The Triangle class of *the First Christian Sunday School will meet Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock with Mrs. Henry Neireiten The Ladies Aid Society of the Christian Church will meet at the ; home of Mrs August Kelly, Thursday afternoon at two-thirty o’clock I good attenda.Tce is desired. ': The Phoebe Bible class of the | Zion Reformed Church will meet I I Wednesday night at seven-thirty I o’clock in the church parlors. The . hostesses for the meeting will be 1 i the Mesdamcs Forest Owens, Bern ( I Shroyer, p. w. Vitz and Archie Foley. Each member of the class is requested, to be presnt and the elec- * tion of officers will be held. , j o Attempts New Record i New York, Nov. 14 (UP)—Col. i Roscoe Turner took off from Floyd ' i Bennett airport at 7:46 A. M, on an attempt to break the coast-to-coast ! I airplane record. j A similar attempt, which he startJed at Ix>s itngeles Saturday, failed jat Columbus, Ohio., when a tire j blew out. liurner said if headwinds proved I too strong he would abandon the '; record i.ttemipt and finish the .flight . i to the coast in easy stages. PONDERS OVER i 1 INVITATION TO ARMS PARLEY CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE , when he told an enquiring world that he intended to rest until tomorrow, was still on at the execu- , five mansion when word was flash,ed that President Hoover had in- ' j vited his successor to the White ! ! House for a conference. PHILLIP HODLE DEATH’S VICTIM , I CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE i George, Jacob and Anthony, Mar1 garet and Sophia Hodle, all of PemuT- . i sylvania, and nine grandchildren, ■ ilso survive. I Funeral services will be held : Wednesday afternoon at 1 o’clock at the home. 310 North Ninth street "land at 1:30 o'clock at the United Brethren Church with the Dr. Char- ’ les J. Roberts officiating. Burial ’ will be nude in the Marquardt cem- ’ etery, west of Monroeville. 5 The body was taken to the Black Funei 1 Parlors and will be remov- ; ej to the home at 7 o’clock tonight after which the remains may be viewed until time for the funeral. i io . . Years Hol 1.-npo. iant Eskimos do nor 'nke any interest | In (heir own iges or the ages of their children ax jieasured In years I and it is seldoui possible to kn->w | how old a person ‘s unless his birth i I erm be cheeked up lr. comparison , ' wilii some 'oowir visit of an ex ' plorer wli.ilina vessel or some | event
Fifteenth Milestone Passed by Soviet Russia * * * > * * * Anniversary of October Revolution Marked by Gigantic Demonstration at Tomb of Lenin. President Hoover Subject of Verbal Attack by Red Leader. === ' ■ ■ - niRHAiv Kalinin Josef St aw ft Before Cenins Tomb m Red Square, Koscov While bands played and thousands cheered, the hosts of Russia’s Red Army, detachments of her navy and legions of workers and peasants paraded before the tomb of Nicholai Lenin in the Red Square at Moscow in commemoration of the fifteenth anniversary of the October revolution that placed all Russia in the hands of the Bolsheviki. The gigantic demonstration was reviewed by Josef Stalin, virtual dictator of the Soviet Union, and Mikhail Kalinin, President of the Central Executive Committee, who, though nominally superior in rank to Stalin, must take his orders from the latter. But it was to neither Kalinin nor Stalin that the ® re *f host of Russians paid its tribute, but to Nicholai Lenin, who unhearing and unseeing lay in his magnificent glass-topped sarcophagus in the Red Square. There are many keen observers of Russian affairs who confidently predict the fall of Stalin at an early date. So far he has overrode all opposition and criticism in his method of conducting the progress of the Five-Year Plan. The great experiment is a long way behind schedule, it is said, and the blame is laid upon the shoulders of Stalin, whom his enemies accuse of diverting the course of the Soviet ship from that originally mapped out by Lenin. In a speech before the anniversary celebration, Kalinin took a fling at President Hoover, asserting that the American Chief Executive was like “an illiterate peasant waiting for Heaven to send him rain.”
.1. F. LEHMAN DIES SUNDAY continued from page one nonite Sunday School at Berne. Surviving besides his wife Elizabeth NeUeiiHchwander Lehman are six children. They are Clinton Lehman, Villa Park, Ill.; Dr. G. A Lehman, Rochester, N. Y.; Mrs. William Albrecht, Columbia, Mo.; Mrs. Vernon Ramseyer, Oskaioose, Iowa; Mrs. M. M. Baumgartner, of i Berne and Clarence Lehman ot i Geneseo, N. Y. Nine grandchildren and four sisters. .Mrs. D. C. Neuenschwander, Mrs. Peter Gillion, both of Berne; Mrs. Joe Welty of Fort Wayne and Mrs. James McCaslin of Kaflsas, also survive. Funeral services will be held at 1.30 o’clock Wednesday afternoon at the home and at 2 o’clock at the Mennonite church. Burial will be made in the M. R. E. cemetery. I Dr. S. K. Mosiman, president of ! Bluffton College, Bluffton, Ohio, will I deliver the funeral sermon. The body of Mr. Lehman will lie in state from 12 to 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at the Mennonite church. The Berne stores will close during the funeral. o Drop Theft Charges ! Indianapolis, Nov. 14 (UP) —The i times said tol-ay it had obtained ini formation from Wadhiiigton that | Amos W. W. Woodcock, National r rchibitiai director, will absolve ;■ ndianfi'polis Federal agents from blame in connection with the disappearance of 1,200 pints of confincated liquor from the Federal I buildinghere a year ago. I The missing liquor was said to have free r an excellent grade ot’ im ' ported Burbon whisky. It was part of a : right car load seized at Evansville in March 1931. “The ease has been charged off to Toss and experience' on books of ■the prohibition administrator,” the Times said. ‘‘There will be no grand jury action in the cuse. which has been j'dropped as fir as the prohibition of- ■ flee is concerned.” DRESSMAKINK NOTlCE—Address changed to 312 N. sth St. Mrs. 1 Esther Hunter phone 1203. 270 31' o— CORD FIGHTS FOR CONTROL J?ON TINUE D SOMPAGP? ONE ' management of the air company, | which alleges that Cord “seeks n I controlled market for his pro- : ducts.” Each side Is rallying supporters lin appeals to the 28,000-odd stock- ■ holders for proxies. Representative Fiorello H. La- | Guardia, of New York, entered the i 1 fight yesterday from the standpoint ■ 'of labor, charging in a letter to I | Postmaster General Walter F. ■ , Brown that Cord interests were at-1 tempting to gain control of the, company in order “to repeat their | attempts of tearing down the standards in the flying and motor personnel of air transporation.” The Air Line Pilots Association on Saturday had issued a statement upholding the present aviation corporation management, saying that “airline pilots have by reason of their highly specialized knowledge become prominent sac-. tors in the scheme of national de--1 I
sense. Obviously operating ■ policies of airline companies constitute the controlling factor in main-
‘ I i I • f -W w I ’ *W * * ‘■ •■"• - ArOlZiinZ--->N . w . rf w : w, ; dtfmhnnnniily j®:. . -W JFat-: ® .. ■ ;•■■:•;■.., .xt-z w‘X-;'3BMMBo3BMdfiBSSft • ........ (2/Le > r anwwHHffiTWMH f / P/(/' ’To make tobaccos mild and mellow for Chesterfield '■ / I cigarettes, just about Jour ziii/es of warehouses arc filled with / / I mild, ripe Domestic leaf, stored away to age for two years. I Ql? p / / The greater part of 90 million dollars is invested in ‘' J these tobaccos. Is it surprising that Chesterfields are \ / J / milder? That they taste better? Everything known to Science is used to make Cheater- •/ fields right! They’re mild—and yet They Satisfy. © 1952, Liccirr & Mvsu Tobacco Co.
-1 taining the high standards of piloting to insure the greatest margin of public safety."
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Charles Gage of Monmouth, who j | has been ec.Tfinert to his home for i the lust few weeks with illness is, able to be about again. The young men's vested choir of i the Zion Reformed Church itte.uled : services held in the Reformed I Church at Bluffton Sunday night land sang several musical selections. I Mr. '.rid Mrs. Harry Rowell of Fort Wayne were supper guests of ! I Mr. and Mrs. Fred Linn orr Mercer i I avenue, Sunday 'night. Mrs. Robert Fritzinger his re-; j turned home 'after a two weeks visit I iin' Fort Wayne. Word has been receive.! here that ; Earl F. Bantz, former resident of i Decatur aul an employe of the Gen I era! Electric ,is seriously ill in a I Denver. Colorado hospital. T. M. Reid of Rome City came | down this nionning to look after business and declares he has fully recovered from the election. Mr. and Mrs. Laverne McDonald of Gary are here for a few days. Glen Cowai, auditor-elect, is spending a few hours each day getting acquainted with his duties, beginning today. He will .assume office January Ist. Mr. and Mrs. Dan H. Tyndall visitied i:i Berne Sunday evening. | Mrs. lantba Townsend of Chicago I is visiting here. I 'Fr-i.nk! Heller of Hartford town- | ship was a caller here toduy. I Mr. and Mrs. C. O. France of Gary pMr. and Mrs. Tom Peterson of Roch- : ester. New York and Mr. and Mrs. I Dick PetersC' i of Chicago are here I because of the serious illness of I their mother, Mrs. Fannie Peterson, i Mis. Florence E. DeVilbiss of PonItiac, Michigan, will arrive this afternoon for :a visit. Adum Reiff of Jefferson township -! was a business caller here this nionning. Mr. iand Mrs. C. K. Bell of Fort i
PAGE THREE
j Wayne visited relatives here last i evening. .—o Jobless Will Organize | Huntington, Ind.. Nov. 14.—(U.R) I —Unemployed residents of Huntlington county will organize tomorjrow night in an effort to find addil tiona) work throughout the winter. Paul V. Smith, city engineer, and I Earl Yoos, former deputy stirveylor at Wabash, will he in charge of | the organization meeting. Q Medical Director Dies Marion, Ind., Nov. 14 — (UP)I William Mac Lake, 58. medical dir I ector L> charge of the U. S. Veterlans Hospital here since 1921, and nationally 'kinown ipsychiatrist, tiled Sunday. Final Notice This is my last wanning to you to . redeem your w itches and clocks | or 1 will be obliged to close up and ; sell them at once. Some have been I in my place for six months to three l years. M. S. Elzey. Jeweler. 270 6tx
Fewer Colds, less severe colds lor you this winter with Vicks Plan for better Contrcl-of-Cclds. PREVENT & end a many Colds SOONER
