Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 77, Decatur, Adams County, 31 March 1933 — Page 3

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jKris Styles MBb p •mi «iii >•• •- , :1 d<-a<i. He adds.' |^fl. beach Hi- length F>» • ’ his y " ar .. , .. BR to ankle." . ' ll with the in-' ; ... both Kgb houses may call Ri search Chib ; KeM M'.ml.n !-'raiii> Mrs., be ■|C DEPARTMENT program K% I!■ part :i..-il will 1 to ai the meeting of the Chib in the Iliff 1 school 1 Monday night. April 3, o’clock. pre:;e-:ted With :..i-. Mis; Verneal M' Peterson, Mrs. ! .?'■ and Mrs. Frank; part in the first and ' tn. fid. Coffee, James Km an I Herman Ehi’iger in I Mrs. Knapp will sub-1 the play for Mrs. REMrti<re t e department i Were Miss Eva Acker, Knapp and Miss, winie members of the committee were Mrs. ■"•■-. Miss Lee Anna Miss Helen Shroll. Miaitman, Miss Aeka ' tile secretary and JK department next

BADAMS THEATRE ■SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY I lOc -35 c K ATE SMITH in IdZo Everybody I with Randolph Scott—Sally B’ane. i By Fannie Hurst. •ndent. Golden-voiced. Stirring 1 ! ... in a Story of Romance. Sweeping Drama and Honest Laughter, u ,lei bv America's Brilliant Woman Author. HI RSI. and Songs! Songs! Songs! ■ |)EI) An “OUR GANG” Comedy and Organloguc. | Tonight and Saturday tITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE” Kith MITZI GREEN. May Robison. Edgar Kennedy. ■“’— *he funniest comedy that LAUREL and HARIH ■Screened. zx j «■» f Hurricane Express’ ALICt IOC* Fcort theatre I SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY less of The Storm Country A beautiful story, read by millions —now on the screen, featuring JANET GAYNOR — CHARLES FARRELL. l^ ood . Com “ 1 ’*" d 10c,25c Matinee 2 P. M. Evening 6:30 lAn ; TON,GHT ■ 1 An jL ‘Taka Chance Nite’ Jl* I? 11 II I'z hour entertainment with an unusually good will re . EvPr .vbody likes “Taka Chance Nite." So • vou y°u attend tonight's program. SATI RDAA— TOM MIX in a big Western Thriller ILRl{()|{ TRAIL.” ALSO—Comedy and News. 10c

CLUB CALENDAR t Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 FRIDAY J Pocaliuntas lodge. Red Meu s hall I 1 7:3ft p. tn. i Ben Hur Lodge anniversary, Ben ' Hur Hall. St. Marys Twp. Home Economics ' Club, Mrs. E. W. Huw he. all day. I North Ward Play, Decatur high i school auditorium, 8 p. m. Saturday 1 M. E. Cafeteria supper, church 1 ibasement, 5 to 7 p. m. Sunday Pleasant Mills high school alum-1 ni, school building, 2 p. m. Monday ,i Corinthian class. First Christian I J Church, Mrs. Harmon Kraft, 7:30 p. m. ' Woman’s Chib, Dramatic Depart ■' ment in charge, D. H. S. auditorium,! . 7:45 p. nt. Zion Reformed G. M. G„ Ervin Miller home, 7:30 p. in. Tuesday Young Matrons Club, postponed jindefi nitely. ' Adams County Choral Society, aliove Brock Store, 7:30 p, m. Dutiful Daughters, Evangelical I cliurch, Mrs. Carl Noll, 7:3(1 p. m. Wednesday Ladies Shakespeare Club, Mrs. Burt Townsend. 2:30 p. m. Historical Club, Mrs. Kaunie Erie I toe, 2:3ft p. m. Research Club. Mrs. F. W. Downs 12:30 p. m. lyear and Mrs. p. R. Thomas will lie 'chairman with Miss Lee Anna Wince, cicef liairnran. Ttie study I program chairman has not been appointed, i The Women of the Moose nei<l their regular card a d bunco party I Thursday night at the Moose home. I Prizes in pinochle were won by I [Mrs. Bob August and William Les iter. Mrs. Bert Haley was awarded [the prize in bunco. MEETING OF GIRLS GUILD The Girls Guild of the Beulah Chapel church met recently at the home of Mrs. William Ehrman. The fore part of the evening was spent in Bible study after which games were played and dainty refresh-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. MARCH'3I, 1933

ments were served by the hostess. Those present were the Misses \ ehna Spade, Frances Schlickman, Dorothy, Gertrude and llerenta Hoffman, Verea Heller, Susan Dresick, Doris Johnson, Elizabeth luhrman, and the hostess, Mrs. Fuhrman. The next meeting will be held at the home of Miss Elizabeth Fuhrman on April 25. The Corinthia.. class of t e First 'Christian Sunday School will meet jat the home of Mrs. Harmon Kraft |at seven thirty o'clock Monday i evening. | The Adams County Choral Soleiety will meet above the Brock | store. Tuesday night at seven-thirty | o’clock for rehearsal. The Dutiful Daughters class of the Evangelical church will meet at the home of Mrs. Carl Noll, 506 South Thirteenth street, at seveni thirty o’clock. Tuesday evening. j MENU ANNOUNCED FOR CAFETERIA SUPPER j The Indies Aid Society of the Methodls Episcopal "hurch will I serve a cafeteria supper in the church basement, Saturday night I from five to seven o'clock for tjie benefit of the Epworth League of the t lurch. The menu will consist of creamed chicken, baked ham, mashed potatoes, gravy, dressing, noodles, sweet

PMARYFAITfr 11 bi J Beatrice Burton COPYRIGHT, 1931, BY KING EEA.TURES SYNDICATE, INC

SYNOPSIS Mary Faith, young and comely fiancee of Kimberley Farrell, handsome blor.d youth, just out of law school, leaves her position as secretary to the wealthy Mark Nesbit to marry "Kim.” Mary Faith receives a note from Kim’s mother inviting her to dinner. CHAPTER 111 “Kim, what’s the matter? Are you angry with me—” she was beginning when he brought his hand down hard on hers, interrupting her. "Wait, let me tell you about my mother,” he said. "She was awake last night when I got home and 1 told her that you and 1 had just about made up our minds to get married on the first ’’ “Just about made up our minds?” echoed Mary Faith as he stopped. “Why, Kim, we have made up our minds, haven’t we? 1 thought we i settled everything last night.” Surely there had been no ifs-an'-ands about their getting married when they had talked it over the night before. Kim had been very clear and definite about their plans then. They would be married on the first day of October, a Saturday, and leave town in his little roadster for a week's honey moon "just bumming around the state.” Then they would ' come back to the fiat where he and his mother lived and settle down to be Mr. and Mrs. Kimberley Farrell for the rest of their lives. “Os course, we did settle everything,” he said now. "But you asked me what my mother thinks about i our getting married, and I'm telling you She thinks we ought to wait until I’m making more money—j enough to give her a flat of her own l somewhere. She doesn't want to live with us. She says it’ll never work.” In the darkness Mary Faith’s face Washed. “She's been saying that for almost four years, Kim," she reminded him. “She knows it will be years before you’ll be making enough money to keep up two homes. You're twenty-eight and I’m twentyfour. and we know we care for each other and that we're old enough to marry and settle down. I’m sure we won t mind facing a little poverty together, if we have to. Suppose we do have to pinch pennies? Who cares?” She bent her head and her lips brushed the sleeve of his coat. “I shall love pinching pennies, 1 shall be the most stingy wife under the I sun—as well as the happiest one,” 1 she added. “You're sure you won’t mind having her live with us?” he asked after I a minute or two. "I never could stand listening to two women bickering every night when 1 came home, let me tell you!” His voice was harsh and his eyes were straight ahead of him on the lamplit road. He took his hand from hers and laid it on the steering wheel. “Kim, please don't say things like that to me. Haven’t I always been nice to your mother?” she asked him. “And you know I won't mind having her living with us. I won't care who lives with us or where we live—so long as you and I are together.” Kim and his mother lived on the ground floor of an old-fashioned apartment in Wilton Street. Mary Faith always enjoyed her visits there because it was Kim's home; but it was a depressing sort of place. The living room was crowded with upholstered furniture. All of the chairs had little lace doilies on their I backs. A big brown crock filled with pampas grass stood in front of the fireplace. On a -hell above it stood a cupid clock made of silver gilt The j cupid was much too fat, and he smirked.

| potatoes, baked beans, macaroni Land cheese, potato salad, pickled . I eggs, creamed slaw, pickles, rolls, 11 jelly, pie. cake fruit salad and eof - fee. The public is invited to attend! i the supper. 1 The meeting of the Young Matrons Club scheduled for Tuesday 'has been postponed indefinitely. FRED MUTSCHLER DIES THURSDAY AFTER ILLNESS (Continued i-com PAfti-i <i.\i:> Albert and Edgar Mutsehler and t son-in-law, Mr. Schroyer, built the 'I business and enlarged the plant to. .its present large proportions and i ! modern facilities. It is recogniz-! f led as one of the largest independJent meat. packing plants in this . j section of the country, including an i artificial _ ice making plant, which: •supplies the Decatur territory with j ice throughout the year. His was a guiding hand in the expansion of the industry. > Appreciating the worth oi Adams; I county farm lands, Mr. Mutsehler a and members of his family, a few t years ago began the purchase of ? several farms in this county. Their f holdings are listed among the largest in the county. I Os a kind and benevolent nature - and with a bountiful purse, Mr. t Mutsehler was never known to have!

i v fife/ “Why, Kim, we have made up our minds, haven’t we?”

Over the whole flat hang the smell . of dusty carpets, coffee and meals cooked in grease long ago. Mrs. Farrell was sitting beside the window, reading the evening paper. , when Mary Faith and Kim walked , into the room at fifteen minutes after seven. She glanced up at the cupid and Mary Faith saw that she had ! been crying. , “I had dinner ready forty-five minutes ago,” she said, getting slowly to her feet. “I made a cheese souffle. . It's ruined by this time, but if you , don’t care I’m sure 1 don't. . . . Would you like to put your things ; in my room, Mary Faith?” Mary Faith followed her down the dark narrow hall to her bedroom. She took off her hat and coat and smoothed her hair back from her forehead. Mrs. Farrell stood watching her for a second or two with her reddened eyes. Then she muttered something about the souffle and went hurrying out of the room. She bumped against the door as she went. She was the awkward kind of stout woman who is always bumping into doors or dropping dishes. Mary Faith hurried after her. "Can't I help you with dinner?” she asked. "You know what a treat it is to me to help around a kitchen.” She had alwavs had a mortal longing for a kitc-cn of her own. A bright new little kitchen, all colored tiles and shiny pans and white dotted curtains with sunshine and wind coming through them. “You know 1 learned quite a lot about cooking when I took that course at the Business Woman's Club last winter," she went on. looking round for an apron. "What can I do to help?” Kim's toother didn’t answer her question. A smile dickered in her plump face for an instant. A tightlipped smile. “1 guess you didn't learn to keep a souffle from going to nothing an hour after it was made, did you?" she asked as she pulled a baking dish

refused an appeal in the name of [Charity and his contributions were numerous among civic and ehurch organizations. | : The deceased was a member of [the Zion Reformed ehurch in this ity and from 1906 to 1914 served : !as one of the trustees. Besides the two sons, Mr. < 'Mutsehler is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Huldah Schroyer. wife of B. F. Schroyer and Miss Ela Mutsehler of Fort Myers, Florida. 'One daughter. Mrs. Edward Worthman, died in 1911. One sister, Mrs.' I Peter Kirsch of this city and a brother, Phillip, also survive, to-; gather with three grandchildren, Frederick and Catherine Schroyer and Robert Mutsehler of this city. Pending word from the daughter ! in Florida, funeral arrangements 'were not completed until late this afternoon. The body was t iken to the W. H Zwick and Son funeral home and will be returned to the Schroyer I home this evening, where it may be I viewed by friends. i Funeral services will be held Sunday afternoon at two o’clock from the house and 2:30 o'clock at the Zion Reformed Church. The Rev. L. C. Hessert of S'iieboygan. Wi:t---i cousin, former pastor of the local [Reformed ehturch. jwill officiate,: assisted by Rev. Charles M. i’rugh, ; present pastor. I Word was received this afternoon

I from the oven of the gas range. ; “Just look at that thing!” The souffle lay flat as a pancake . in the bottom of the dish. It was , plain to see that all the life and soul I had gone out of it. “It's only fit to be thrown out.” | she said "There are eggs m the ice- | box. How would you like to fry some the way you learned to fry them at your wonderful woman's , club last winter? There's dripping in that bowl on the stove and the ’ frying pan’s hanging under the sink." She began to scrape souffle into a bowl on the drain board. “This is the soil of thing you’ll have to learn to expect when you're married to Kimberley.” she said i presently. "Meals spoiled because . he’s not here to eat them on time! Whole dinners put away untouched sometimes because he doesn't show up at all! But I suppose 1 shouldn’t complain, because it's all my fault. I’ve spoiled him all his life. I've made a rod for my own back!” There was bitterness in her voice : and in her face. Bitterness that narrowed her eyes and drew down the corners of her mouth And yet it was apparent that she had once beer, very handsome. There was still a kind of beauty in her straight fei tures and the poise of her head with its bright brown hair. "What time did he get to your place tonight?” she asked suddenly "Around seven.” "Did you ask him where he had been until that time?" Kim's mother was lighting the gas ring under the coffee pot now. “He said he had been delayed at the office." “Did you see him last Sunday?” Mrs. Farrell asked next. ‘I saw him last Sunday night He spent the whole evening with me,’ said Mary Faith, turning to look at her with puzzled eyes What was Kim s mother getting at anwav. she ( wondered do He Continued) Copyright, I9SI, by Beatrice Hurtoa Distributed by King leaturaa Syndicate. Inc

that Miss Ella Mutsehler would arrive in the city at 2:3ft o’clock Su.i- I d'ay morning. o GEORGE LUCKEY DEATH’S VICTIM I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ! United States Bureau of Education, j ; Washington, D. C., and served in ' that capacity for five years. On leaves of absence he went abroad .where he engaged in graduate slud y, principally in England, I France and Germany. He was united in marriage to Bertha Mu.sson on December 211. ■ 11882 and two children were born to i the union, Bertha Musson Luckey, i director of clinical psychology in' the public schools at Cleveland, 0.,! and George Paul Luckey of Lan | caster, Pennsylvania. Surviving is one brother. Leonard \V. A. Luckey of New York City., Four sisters and two brothers are!

Suggestions For SPRING HOUSE - CLEANING HOUSE CLEANING TIME IS HERE! — x ( _ \ ’ Make this work easier by using the correct \ \ T \ Articles to he had at this store. = V = 4 T S Dicadoo Paint Cleaner XChamois — Sponges T K WaH size W vßhoades Furniture Polish ,'(T \ § Johnsons Floor Wax rhe New Puritan Wall Paper Cleaner WALL PAPERS Steel Wool Have Arrived! T) r j R r if p Pnlieh SMART new designs, exquisite , fl ,ir,lC 1 01,811 color combinations give charm to wj. . the new wail papers. Your fur- 1 iHStIC WOOd nishings, rugs and hangings will be more attractive if you give , P'lillftt them a new setting. ® j Roh Wall Paper ‘» V and up The B. J. Smith Drug Co New Store—2nd Door South Old Location I The Rexall Store Phone 82 >fw w in! -iii'w win- iw'rp ii wgnwwwwwiwim_wi— — The B. J. Smith Drug Co. —T h e Rexall Store — New Store — — 2nd Door South Ohl Location — — Phone 82 VF.ENOLA SPECIAL! < SPECIAL '!,' ,h -i an ; , p “ rchi r al M SAT. ONLY Recommended tor fl , ul Dnlet Goods or Enlarged Veins Greeting Card depart- $2.00 size Dr. Hess Piles. Varicocele ment - vou will receive stock Tonic <1 II 1 C free ® sl-49 -Let/tf or 1, r $2.00 size Dr. Hess a 25 « Os Caro Panomin Nome Face Powder. Candy Special Chocolate Covered Peanuts IO Old Fashioned Chocolate 1 per pound IVv Drops, per pound AvC Peanut Butter Kisses 1 Horehound Candy-sticks QAz» per pound JLvC per pound REN ALDO - - - Regular 50c O Box of 10 Ciffars OUL Toilet Paper 10c Rolls *sc The Hand of Reliability >* • Compounds Your Prescriptions X. PROP ESSIONAL skill and unerring accuracy are combined to properly safeguard your prescriptions.

[deceased. Mrs. W. E. Smith. Mrs. [ Earl Butler, Dallas Spuller, Charles Brock and George Kern of this city are nieces and nephews of the Ideceased, and Mrs. N. A. Bixler Is 'a grand niece. o MUNCIE PASTOR OFFERS ALIBI I ! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I ♦-♦ ♦ • « 11 ) Lennington. chief defense coun- ' ' sei. | Miss Huffman «at quietly at ani other table, conferring frequently ' with prosecutor Lefler. Conway was expected to testify , :in nis own defense this afternoon. -o . Not • Scientific Fact There is no authentic case on ree ; ord where a scientist has been able ! to create life frmj a ce || t n which ! life did nU already exist i D %0Ia(i 1 form.

Page Three

PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith and 'son Lewis motored to Cincinnati, 1 Ohio, this morning to spend the 1 week end with Mr. and Mrs. Don i Vancil. 1 James Habegger, Eloise Christy, Loris Habegger and Leo Nussbaum jwill represent Monroe high school in a scholarship contest at Fort 'Wayne, April 8. Tony Schumacher Who had donated his services as barber for the unemployed in Decatur, reported to[day that he had cut 58 heads of hair (this week. He conducts the barber shop in the Adams County Oarage, [corner of First and Jackson streets. Mr. and Mrs. 11. L. Kraft, Mrs. Fred King, Mrs. Dorphus Drum and 'Rev. C. R. attended the 1 evangelistic services held in the jChristian Church ai Markle, last evening.