Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 212, Decatur, Adams County, 5 September 1924 — Page 3
[Local Briefs |
•^^frTTA^ roh "n‘ un ' l ' fben ' "'“L Gladys will go on to »° on ’ . where "he will resume herj lector in tMe An,lPrß ° n | W T Vm°i aehooU will open next, , b kv VMt Os the teachers have y ° Lnloyed, the trustees having !X thfieuft'y In securing teachers, vear, it wan stated. ' Robert Meyers, well known young „ of this city, is Planning to enter ma " , Pental College at Indianapo-., ‘ ust year he attended Notre Meat South Bend. Indiana. • y.„ Dorothea Weismantel of , wa kegan. Illinois is visiting at the J7 as 9 home in this city. Frnest Doehrman of Preble town!hip was a business visitor in the city today. j [r 3n d Mrs. Louis Wiesenberg and Bobbie Lachot of Fort Wayne are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. u Lammiman in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Cline and children of Moline, 111, who have visiting at the Henry Lichtensteiger home left tody for Ft. Wayne ’ and then for their home. Mrs. Hlixabeth Cline accompanied them to Moline and will visit with them. John Carmody, manager of the Hoiland St. Louis Sugar company has returned from Indianapolis where he attended the state fair and also looked after the exhibit which the sugar company had in the manufacturer’s' building. One of the largest crowds in the history of the state fair attended on Wednesday and Thursday. The exhibit of the sugar company attracted much attention and was visited by thousands of people. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Roeto> and daughter left yesterday tor New York. They . sail next Saturday for! Cuba, where Mr. Roese has accepted a position as engineer with the United Fruit company. 1 N. R. Holthouse and Heber Humbarger of the Cloverleaf Creamery and C. E. Holthouse have returned from a motor trip to Mammoth Cave Ky„ southern Indiana and a day’s visit at the Indiana state fair at Indianapolis. | W, L. Richmond of Ft. Wayne was a business visitor in the city yesterday. O. L. Vance acted as school teach-; er at the meeting of the Rotarians last evening. He called on the mein-i bers of the different classes in his-1 tory, geography, arithmetic and pro-' pounded questions to them and the' entertainment was clever and real! interesting. _ | I Luxuries Are Comparative When two prisoners were asked to name their reward for submitting to blood transfusions at Sing Sing, one asked for stewed chicken and the other for a bowl of spaghetti. The transfusion wus mude In an effort to save . the life of a fellow prisoner. —•— Old English Law An old English law required all English seaports and trading towns to contribute to the support of warships or to build and equip such ships. Toe law fell Into disuse ami was included In the Petition of R|«hf
| jnam>«cuw HE FOUND $3864 An Illinois man died recently leaving $3864 buried in the cellar of | his residence. After long search, the | Executor found the money. He is now looking for securities thought to be part of the estate. It is just chance that this money was discovered. And the interest loss was considerable. For example, if this $3864 had been deposited i <»s acc<'i«-' a vear it would have grown to $4020; in live years to more than $4700. It pays to keep i your surplus at interest. , y^^** 5 * '
REGISTRATION SUPPLIES HERE Will Be Distributed Among Voting Precincts ' This Month Supplies for the clerks to be used on registration day, October G.h. throughout the county, have been received from the county printer by County Auditor Martin .Taberg and will be distributed among the 34 precincts sometime during the latter nail of this month. All those who did not register two years ago or who have moved from their voting precinct since that time must regisier at the October regis-. tration in order to vote In Novem-I ber. Registration booths will be erected in every precinct in the county and those who fail to register on that date cannot vote on November 14th. unless they registered two years ago and have not changed their residence from one percinct to another.! | The county, city and tov n health officers the county must certify a list of the deceased voters, together with their former address to the county auditor in time so that the names can be tinned over to the clerks in the different precincts and their names taken off the registration books. County Auditor Jaberg this morning notified the county health officer, the city health officer in Decatur, the officers at Berne and Geneva to certify a list of those per--1 sons over 21 years of age who have died since October 5, 1922. | 0 ' Petit Jurymen Drawn For Federal Court Indianapolis, Sept. 5.—A venire of petit jurymen to serve in federal court here fiom October 1 until the end of the May term in November, was announced today. | The venire is composed of twentynine men: Joseph Armstrong, Bedford, Ind.; Charle s Ballenger, Spiceland; Oscar Bantley, Switz City; W. ! H. Bish, Chili; Frank Bolt, Coalmont; William J. Boniface. Union Mills; John Bondousque, Linton; B. L. . Bunker. Jonesboro; H. E. Coate Wa- ■ bash; A. J. Duff, Greencastle; D. E. Brnler, Gary; Frank Fisher. Knightsi ville; C. E. Garretson, Kokomo; G. E. I Cover, Vincennes; Frank Hardebcck, Earl Park; G. P. Hunt, Rushville; Timothy Lake. Morgantown; P. C. Logsdon, Evansville; Charles Miller, Churubusco; M. W. Mix, Mishawaka: E. Moon, Center Point; J. D. Oliver. South Bend; G. L. Oren, Kokomo; John Riley, LaPorte; C. D. White, New Carlisle; Joseph Wolfe, Hazleton, and Joseph Yundt, Lafayette. o Independent Indians The Croatan Indians In the state of North Carolina are not under the control of the United States government. They have their own tribal form of government. They are located at Pembroke. about 70 miles west of Wllmlng ton. In Roberson rennM-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,1924.
• r»< • i ia'ii. i Friday Good time party by C. E. Society of E. V. Church at church basement, s i p. m. W. R. C —Legion Hall at 2 o’clock. Saturday Pastry Sale. I.lchth meat market, by L. A. S. of U It. church, 9:30 a. m. Monday Evangelical Mens Club Pot Luck Supper—At Church. 6:00. Monday Delta Theta Tau —Mildred Niblick Six O'clock Dinner Miss Lee Anna Vance entertained a party of friends at a delightful six o’clock dinner at her home cn North Second street last night. The color sceme carried out in Yho decorations and dinner was yellow and white. I Following the dinner the young , people enjoyed dancing and music. These present were the Misses Jeanette Clark. Katharine Hyland ■ and Margaret Luukenau and the ; Messrs. Bub Helm. Milton Swear- . Inger, Carrol Cole and Dean Dorwin. | i' * Mrs. Paul Edward and Mrs. J. R. • Blair entertained a number of friends iat a theatre party at the Adams ■ theatre last night. Following the ■ show a social hour was enjoyed at the i Edwards home, were refreshments ■ were served. Those who were guests ;at the party were the Misses Margaret Zwick. Helen Kocher. ’ Lucille Engle, Ruth Castle, Josephine Suttles. Mildred Butler, Harriett ■ Myers and Jesteen Hocker. | A highly enjoyable day was spent at the water works park in this city yesterday by members of the Sunday School of the Monroe Friends church. . A picnic dinner was served at noon. The members of the Sunday school . are grateful to the city officials for the use of the park. Those present at the picnic were Rev. and Mrs. Whitemack and sons. Carl, and Harold; Mr. and Mrs. Dick Haggard; Mr. and Mrs. John Haggard and daughter, Dortha and Frances; Mrs. Alta Lalsure and daughter. Doras; Mrs. Ida Marty and daughter Vera, and son Roy; Mrs. Naomi Andrews and son, Otho, and daughters, Christena and Esther; Mrs. Nellie Bovine and son. Billie and daughter. Evaline; Mrs. Bird Carner and daughters. Fay and Lucv, and son. Buddle; M*s. Cecil Rinehart and daughters, Iris an I Virginia; Mrs.! Sadie Moore; Mr. anil Mrs. Otho Lobenstein; Mrs. Viola Marty; Mrs. Amos Brandyberry; Mrs. Otis Brandyberry: Honad Brandyberry; Mrs. Zella Ag ley; Mrs. Susan Bitler and son Harry; Master Nolan Burkhead; Hubert Wolf; Miss Mabel Hocker. Miss Ruth Gilbert, and nephew George; Mil. Isabel Andrews; Mrs. Elta Hendricks; Mrs. Ella Debout; Mr. and Mrs. Will iam McKean, and daughter. Alta; | Mrs. Ezra Brandyberry and daughter Anna: Mrs. Mary Graber and son and daughter; Miss Rubt Rineheard; Miss Dean, of Decatur. * I Mrs. Mark Braden gave a delight , ful birthday party Thursday afternoon | in honor of her son Robert, it being. the latter's ninth birthday ar.nivers , ary. The rooms were decorated with. garden flowers. The table decora tions were large baskets of fall roses and a beautiful cake, bearing candles, was the center piece. The afternoon was spent in playing games and toasting marshmallows. At iix o’clock a delicious two-course luncheon wa s served by the Misses Helen and Mildred Teeple. The invited guests were Bob Arnold, Jimmie Lose, Johnnie Carroll, Herbert Knapke Franklin Teeple, Edward Teeple, An thony Teeple , Dick Macklin, Monroe Fuhrman. Max Zimmerman and Richard Milan. Robert received several beautiful gifts. The guests wished Robert many more happy birthdays. ★ Dailey-Niblick Reunion The annual Dailey-Niblick family reunion was held at Bellmont Park, Decatur, last Sunday, August 31. The following officers were elected: Charles Niblick, Decatur, president; Chalies Daily, Bluffton, secretary-treasur-er. The reunion will be held at the home of Mann Daily, north of Bluff ton, on the last Sunday in August I next year Those present at the reunion last Sunday were James T. Niblick; Mrs. Mary Niblick; Dan Niblick, C. R. Niblick, Jesse G. Niblick. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Holthouse, and children. Bill, Rosemary. Patsy and Jack; I Mrs. Amelia Niblick. Regina Gast,' Verona Niblick; Mr. and Mrs. C. X. 1 Niblick, of Fort Wayne; Mrs. Ellen Daily, Ruth Keyes, of Indianapolis; 1 Mr. and Mrs. Amos Cole; Mrs. Alice ( Oppenhein, of Marlette, Ohio; Mrs.' R. M. Daily; Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Davis; Mrs. Anna Daily; C. R. Nib-
lick; James D. Sturgis; Ruth M. Stnr- 1 pls; Margaret Ann Sturgis; Gather ’ iue Edessa Sturgis; R. M. Daily, Os- 1 Han; Adalino E. Dally; Mr. and Mrs., J. N. Dally; Mr. and Mrs. George Bowman; Mildred Hartman; Mrs. John Dally, of tocsin; James Dally; Mary Daily; Mr. and Mis. E. W. Longfellow and daughter; Mr. and .Mrs. A. C. Ferguson, Mrs. D. J. Fdrguson; Jess Ferguson; Miss June Turner; | William H Ehret; J. Ehret: Daytbn : Ehret, of Ossian: E. F. Shoe; Pauline Shoe; Mardle Shoe; Edward Laven . Shoe; Lewis Meridi'.h Shoe; Hattie , K. Shoe; J. ('. Galllvan. Tocsin; Mrs. , .1. ('. Galllvan; Dwight Galllvan; Victor Eatl Galllvan; Ross and Grace ( Niblick; Robert and Dwight Niblick; Mrs. Estella; Joe Coffee and children. Harry, Cathryn, Vern and Frank; Iris Hebble; Tom Yoars and family, of Bunker Hill; Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Niblick, of Bluffton: Gwendolyn Niblick; Mr. and Mrs. George D. Bowman, of Fort Wayne; Mrs. Charles G. Daily, of Bluffton; Robert Daily; Charles C. Niblick; Ervin Breiner; S. T. Niblick; Charles G. Daily; Daisy Daily; Robert M. Daily; Adah Davis; Robert Daily Davis; Francis Louise Davis: Vernon Niblick, of Fort Wayne; Arthur Suttles; Helen Suttles; Hattie Niblick Suttles; J. N. Niblick, of Warren; Mary C. Niblick; Amelia F. Niblick: E. E. Zimmerman; Mrs. Ide Zim- ‘ merman; Max Edwin Zimmerman; Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Chroninster; H. F. Niblick: A. A. Kreigh, Ossian; E. D. Kreigh, Ossian; Ruby Dingman, Ossian; and dMrs. Guy Myers of Bluffton. The Delta Theta Tau sorority will meet Monday evening at the regular time with Miss Mildred Niblick. The Wambansee Camp Fire girls will hold a meeting Tuesday evening at 7 o’clock at the home of La urine and Patricia Teeple on First street. * The Men’s Brotherhood of the E t V. < hurch will give a pot luck supper at the church next Monday evening ■■ Business and pleasure will be mixed . in this meeting, and every member . is requested to bring his family I and also something to eat with him. ■ o Powder Factories Blow Up Near Constantinople London, Sept. 5. —The countryside ' around Constantinople was shaken for 1 miles, many workmen were killed and the town of Makrikeny was practically wiped out, when powder factories ! about twenty miles from the former Turkish capital blew up. according to a Central News dispatch today. Communists were blamed at first. IT DRIVES OUT WORMS The suiest sign of worms in children is paleness lack of interest in nlav, freti illness, variable appetite, pick'ng at the nose and sudden starting in sleep. When these symptoms appear it is time to give White’s (’ream Vermifuge. A few doses drives out the worms and puts the little one on the road to health again. White’s Cream Vermifuge has a record of fifty years of successful use.' Price 35c. Sold by Holthouse Drug Co. OLD FOLKS CAIN I STRENGTH WITH | COD LIVER OIL Thank Goodness You Don’t Have to Take The Nasty Tasting, 11l Smelling Oil Any More For McCoy’s Cod Liver Oil Tablets Can Be Purchased At Any Drug Store. . Why should any old person let feebleness overwhelm them in these enlightened days? Surely everyone knows by this time that Cod Liver o'l contains more vitamines than anything else on earth and is the g: atest body builder in the world. | You'll like to take McCoy's Cod Liver, Oil Tablets—they are sugar coated and as easy to take as candy ai.d they do help old people. Q Why not try being 10 years younger again—why not grow stronger in body in mind, in vitality? Why not | lake McCoy’s Cod Liver OU Tablets I and drop 10 years from your age in 30 days? We mean this literally, of ! course. We believe that a 30 days treatment will make you feel 10 i years younger—blit at any rate try them for 30 days and if you are not satisfied get your money back —60 I tablets—6o cents at The Holthouse Drug Co., or any progressive druggist, Be sure and get McCoy’s—the original and genuine.
but later the disaster was attributed' to carelessness on the part of em ployes. o Leave Soon To Resume Studies For Priesthood Leonard D.luingcr. Gerald Durkin, Ambros • Kohne and ,Simeon Schmitt. Decatur young in n who ure studying ‘ for the Catholic prle I hood, will Lave 1 September 15th for Mt. St. Marys, Norwood, Ohio, where they will resume their studies. Mr. Deining’r, is entertaining upon his last year of study and will be ordained a priest next summer. He has been attending college for the last ten years. o —■ Foolish Ambition It Is an Indiscreet and troublesome ambition that cares so much about fume; about what the world snys of > us; to be always looking In the faces of others for approval; to be always anxious about the effect of what we do or say; to be always shouting to hem | the echoes of our own voices.—Long I fellow 11 — 1 -— Ashbaucher’s DJRNACES LIGHTNING SPOUTING SLATE ROOFING i II PHONE at 739 (DEMAND w World's Ben Took Over 100,660 people have testified that TANLAC has relieved them of: I® Stomach Trouble, Rheumatism, Mal-Nutrition, ;, _ Sleeplessness, Hj Nervousness, Loss of Appetite, S'* Ixrss of Weight, frig Torpid Liver or I! & Constipation. “Ask Anyone Who Has Taken TANLAC” v?) OVER 40 MILLION BOTTLES r BOLD Im For Sale Ex AU Good Drextiats
I £> • naEyffSlMP- - '* ' ■ ' * /■ f , ’ .. . . ' ' ,r ■ ’V" Ifew! T-Ji V —• Here's the Advanced Six Touring 121-inch Wheelbase Four-Wheel Brakes, Nash Design Full Balloon Tires, Standard Equipment Five Disc Wheels, Standard Equipment New Force-feed Oiling System Highly Refined Performance Full 5-Passenger Comfort Bevel Body Beading Special Leather Upholstery ADVANCED SIX SERIES-SPECIAL SIX SERIES Models range from $1095 to $2290, f. o. b. factory ADAMS COUNTY NASH COMPANY Herne, Indiana Phone 51
Kellogg's Bran delights father by bringing health to children
Pcnr lit tin kids—they needed bran badly. But. they wouldn’t eat ordinary brans. They didn’t like them. Most folks don’t. Then their father tried Kellogg’s Bran, cooked and kruiiibled. What a difference! 110 tells the story in his letter: “Dear Sirs: I wish to express my appreciation of your kruniLled bran, which I have used for my children this summer. We had a groat deal of trouble with them through constipation, and bran had been the most satisfactory remedy but they could not be induced to take th<» old varieties . , . because they disliked them so. They enjoy the k rumbled bran and consider it an essential ingredient of their porridge. No one whose children have not been troubled in this way can appreciate the relief there is in having their bowels move regularly.” (The original of thh letter b on file
A STRONG, FRIENDLY BANK UNDER STATE SUPERVISION Founded Built on by Security Service “Pocket Money” Is Quickly Spent It is also easily lost. That is why yon should —as far as possible—avoid carrying cash with you. The safe way—the sane way—the modern way—is to open a Checking Account and— I Pay Your Bills by Check Old Adams County Bank Established Fifty Years Ago |
at th. K.llogr Company, Battle Cr.ek, Mich.) Constipation is a dangerous disease. It should not be neglected. But do not try halfway measures in seeking > relief. Kellogg’s Bran is ALL bran. And it takes ALL bran to bo 100% effective. Kellogg’s Bran is guaranteed to bring permanent relief, if eaten regularly, in the most chronio cases. If it fails, your grocer will return your money. Eat two tablespoonfula daily—in chronic cases, with every meal. Eat it with milk or cream. The flavor is delicious. Sprinkle it on other cereals. Cook it with hot cereals. Try it in the recipes on every package. It will bring you health. Begin eating it to-day. Made in Buttle Creek. Sold by all grocers.
