Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 151, Decatur, Adams County, 26 June 1925 — Page 5

CHILDREN TO GIVE PAGEANT i Missionary Program To Be G,v «" At Christian Church Sunday The chi dren of thn Christian church will give a Missionary p a g eitnl w ' church on Sunday evening, The Krain will begin at 7: ao o'clock The pageant is entitled, “over the Hills" During the evening, songs and recitations will be given. A cordial invitation is extended to the congregation and to the public to attend. Following is the program. Opening Hymn by Choir. Address by pastor—Hev it w Thompson. ' w Recitation —"What We Think" Mar garuite Staley, Katherine Hrandyberrv Kvaline Koh.s Martha Myers. * Song I washed my hands this morning"—Robert Lord. Recitation "Just a Little Bud”— Helen Jean Kohls. Recitation "Paying and Praying"— Loretta Reefey. Solo. “That Sweet Story", by ler-Josephine Anderson Characters in the Pageant are as follows: June Olive Teeters. R° bin Sylvia Riihl. Sairy—The Mountain Girl ..Inez Anderson. , Tilda—The Mining Camp Girl Gertrude Brandyberry. Green Leaves .... Gladys Thompson. Rislma Hindo Girl.... Eveiyne Kohls' Jacob —Indian Boy . Roselyii Foreman RURAL CHURCHES Antioch Church. William Hygema, Pastor. Quarterly business meeting Saturday evening. 7: IS. Sunday School—9:00. Communion service—lo:ls. Evening servihee—7:3o. Prayermeeting Wednesday—7:ls. Rev. H. M. Metzger, P. E., from Urbana, Ohio, will be with us over the week-end to hold the last quarterly meeting of this conference year. Prayerraeeting at Beulah on Thursday evening. Study fifth chapter of Galatians. Decatur Circuit Lester L. C. Wisner, Pastor. Preaching at Mount Pleasant on the morning of June 28; at Beulah in the evening. The Philomath Bible Class will meet with LetiU» Singleton on Wed nesday evening, July 1. You will be interested to hear his he's alive. He leaned over a revolving shaft in a factory and caught his shirt. The shirt gave way, saving his life. You are cordiafl yinvited to attend these services. BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Sholty, of this city, have received an announcement of the birth of a son to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kane, of Lafayette, former residents of this city. The baby was born on June 23, and has been named Thomas Jesse. This is the fourth child but the first boy in the family. The mother before her marriage was Miss Jessie Magley, and was a reporter for the Daily Democrat. FINDERS NOT KEEPERS Elkhart, Ind., June 26—(United Press) —Walter Koontz, 10. told Judge Walker he dropped 30 cents on the ground and Walter Hendry, 23, of South Bend, picked it up and refused to give it back to him. Hendry was sentenced to thirty days in jail. —■ ■ —hl.— ’jrr. = The Piercing Pains o! NEURITIS Torturing pains — the kind that pierce and burn and nover seem to let up—that rob a man of his sleep that make him just a bag of nerves and all worn out. Those are the pains that dope anu coal tar products can only relieva You've got to get something more la,, ing. The quickest, safest and surest way to get rid of the persistent, nei't racking pains of Neuritis is to get a bottle ts AJlenrhu Special Jonmja No. 2. Be sure you get No - tomes in capsule form. ,ik ®. little dark green capsules as direrte aud notice how in about 24 hours they have considerably reduced it . t rely banished those severe. ing pains that have caused many sleepless night - <-on m two or three days more or unt pains have entirely It doesn’t matter how long . - • have suffered or whether j or rities is in the shoulder, ar . - 2 -legs, Allenrhu Special Formula. M- - will stop the torture and gt 6 • speedy jeltat _ „„ good Hoithotise Drug Co. or M * druggist will be glad to supi . -

i"" G ° ne and Almoat Forgotten ; = I t e ,yll "" yetaran, when 1 , ,oUrth Wi,e he h•*AN(iALOS confident R ev°luti° nary Lcader Sure 0f Hj| Jl 'ty To Reorganize Governm «nt In Greece. 1 l otted Press Hervlre) :li j J ""* "-«»** I’.nftlo, terdav . , rßvolution which yeslous e lUleil ° Ut lhe Mlch alacopeThe,-, t, a “ ty ,0 form a cabinet, before ih, h ° expected to appear 7 con m SSembly and ask « vote fused e ' ShoU,d ,hls be reI * U " derßt ood that he plans to dissolve the chamber and proc 8 m uew elections later. It was reliably stated today that Admiral Kadjikrtacos will not partinpate in Panagalos cabinet, but he is expected | alPr to repluce Pres} _ dent Coundouriotis, should the latter resign which is considered probable. l anagalos has ordered the arrest of the roval general Condylis, who opposed thei revolution). Panagalos has announced that he will not interfere with the liberty of the press. 1 ear Second Avalanche Ol Rocks In Wyoming (United Press Service) Jackson, Wyo, June 26—Fears of a second avalanche of rocks and dirt in the famous Jackson Hole region - near here has held up scores of tour-1 ists whoso way to the south was effectively blocked by Tuesday's gigantic earth slide. Traffic over all roads in the region has been forbidden. The Gros Ventre highway was obliterated and highway officials do not believe it safe to construct even a temporary road through the stricken area Tuesday’s landslide came when the entire north end of Chief mountain. loosened and softened by spring rains, started its march to the valley below. Earth tremors felt during -yring months may have been a contributing cause, or they may have resulted from the gradual looseniug >f ;t:e huge section of ea-th ALL OVER INDIANA Indianapolis. — C. C. Ball, 90, of! tndianapolis, knwn as the whisling | book agent, was slapped on the back! U Muncie by Dr o. W. H. Kemper, | Civil war veteran. "Hello Kid,” said! the ‘‘whistler." Tipton. — W. R. Bagiev, Tipton, is i organizing a new orchestra. He claims he world's championship for endurince at the piano, playing fifty hours ind ten minutes severay iears ago. Greensburg. — Nervous neighbors learty fired shot gun when they saw strange looking men prowling in early j hours. It was only Thomas Wright, i E. E. Wright and Ot Dean starting on : v fishing trip. Greensburg. — Lightning struck ajhimuey at the home of W. A. Switz-j i ?r at Greensburg. Helen. 6, was se-j verely shocked aud the kitchen was ; ailed with soot. Lafayette. — If there isn't a turtle ihortage in Wabash river, don't blame CJeorge Rosenberger, Hugh Woods, Thomas Tobin and Ernest Rothiughouse and Walter May. They caught 101 turtles at Lafayette. El wood. — Milton Phenis, 18. of El wood, aimed at a tin can in rifle practice. The bullet instead hit Miss Ethel Porter. She was not seriously hurt. Newcastle— July fourth celebrations took early toll at Newcastle. Mrs. G R. Featheringal was hurt wlieg a sma bov threw a torpedo at her. Bernard Chambers. 10 Vas hurt when he stuck a fire cracker in a pop bottle and lit it. Warsaw— Warsaw seeks the identity of a driver who drove a heavily oaded truck over Market st„ paved recently at a cost of $94,000. The truck heft tracks an inch deep. ' El wood - Right of way for a new approach to Kilbuck bridge on Alexander pil-e near Elwood has been o - tained. Elimination of the death eurve will he the result. Windfall. - Red Men of Windfall will observe their twenty-fifth anniversary Thursday with a monster meeting in a grove with public-degree W °Bhiffton. - Bluttton postofiice has a change of add, ess of Its own. Post- ! master Van Horn, superintendent, of the postoffice is moving to new quartP! Laporte. - A train hurled Frank Eskridge's auto against a telephone pole demolishing ,it. Eskridge crawled out, brushed his clothes. He was unhurt, but his new straw hat was rumedo wv Shipment of Summer Material trimmed m lace $3.95 Burdge Millinery. 10 1 1

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1925.

MYSTERY ANIMAL FOR FIELD MUSEUM, CHICAGO

- V M \ ” " -S-J

I CHICAGO An okapi, regarded by big game hunters as "the trophy of ", 11,6 AfrkaU equatorial forests - has been bagged by the Capt. Marshall Held expedition for the Field museum to the Belgian Congo, led by Ed mund Heller, assistant curator of the division of mammals of the museum's zoological department. Heller's wife, Dr. Hilda Heller, is with him on the hunt for big game. A cablegram from Heller at Irumu to Stanley Field, president of the mu scum, announced that the opaki had been secured "with the assistance of the pygmies." a midget race of people, who live deep in the Semllki forests, .which the okapi inhabits. v J Hie okapi is a strange and beautiful animal of flashy colors and stripes It has a body somewhat like a zebra, a head resembling that of a giraffe,, and is the size of an-ox. It Is so speedy, elusive and skillful in hiding in the | dense foliage that only a few specimens ever have beea obtained.

$2.75 to CHICAGO jj $3.00 to CLEVELAND | Round Trip from Fort Wayne Sunday Excursions via Nickel Plate Road Proportionately Low Round Trip Fares To Many Other Points Call on Local Aj»ent of the Nickel Plate Road or address C. A. Pritchard, D.P.A., Fort Wayne, Inti. 1 '.'i." -'- 1 '"" 1 . -rr . . ———jj'vl I THE CORT I LAST TIME TONIGHT i| “FEAH - BOUND” I I™ Intense and Interestinfc, featuring ji Marjorie Daw and Wonder Cast. ¥■s Secret fear shackles every man and woman h —see how one youth freed himself. if "The Sheik of Hollywood,” Comedy. p Saturday—Richard Talmadge in “LAUGHING AT DANGER-’’ Also Comedy. g Sunday & Monday—Dorothy Mackaill, John Bowers. ■ Hobart Bos worth in the great play, “CHICKIE-” - • —■—■— r 1 " i- ..i- 1 — It Takes Time To Raise Crops Tune for plowing, harrowing, I discing, seeding; tune for crops , H to grow and ripen, time to narIvest them. ( It takes lime to raise a good crop of money-a long senes of regular deposits, compound ‘ interest additions, more deposLits, Then at harvest time the things you wanted but could not afford are within your reach. Success is yours. Grow your crop of money in this strong bank. Capital and Surplus f!2AOOO.M .

'WAGE SCHEDULE TO BE REVISED Salaries Os Pennsylvania Railway Telegraph Operators To Be Adjusted (United J’l-eim Servicei Chicago, June 26 -Wage schedules' are to bo revised, and working hours adjusted for 6,000 telegraph operator* of the Pennsylvania railroad system, F, B. Hamilton, vice preaident and general manager, announced today. The revised schedules are the result of a aetles of conferences between the employes and management of the road. The available sums appropriated for wage adjustments will be alloted to the various divisions, and their application will be worked out jointly by a committee of the employes and the management. Tlie question of working six or seven days a week is to be put up to tl;e employes and the decision of the • majority will stand The employes all work on an hourly basis, and they are to decide whether they prefer | additional spare time or additional wages. — — o——— Leisure. — Nova Dale, or Leisure, , cranked a Ford, broke his arm in three places. BAND CONCERT and I FIREWORK [ DISPLAY Thursday Evening July 2 PREBLE, INDIANA Games, Contests. Refreshments of All Kinds. Conoert by Wiltshire Band. Auspices Preble A. C. and , Business Men's Association. "■ - ■

! 111 ' ■■ — r-r ~ T*ilS —i ■■ ■ ♦++4-+++++++++-W-++*+++;•;+v<-«v+»+>*•+*<■*++++ i**++<*+*******+** ****** ii n i. •* j j I l DID YOU EVER | | STOP TO THINK I i: i; ! I tHAT the motive power of any business is truth- ;; ; ■ ful advertising? ! I ;; ;; THAT advertising should lie the lasi item on which 1; . ;; a business concern should retrench and the first !j ;: on which they should seek to enlarge? j ; II ;; THAT persistent advertisers meet success by main- '< I ; taining a close connection with both their custom ;; 11 ers and prospective customers. Advertising cements II I I! the link between the business and its customers? 11 * j i ii | THAT peristent advertisers always handle goods ;; ;i !! of the highest possible degree ol constant quality? ;; I :: THAT advertising gives assurance of an earnest ; | ;• spirit to give good value? •> I t THAT advertised goods "ring true to a high stan- ;j I ' • dard” and are ever growing in popularity? ;; ■ \ < ► , «» fc !! THAT advertising through the printed page has I •• been proved the most satisfactory way of loathing | '■ the masses. It.will meet the most exacting lecjiuieImeids and proves to the world that the advertiser * wants to please. X ’ CAREFUL SIIOIMM RS. WHO STUDY I HI REL- : ativk merits OF DIFFERENT MERCHAN I DISK AND SERVICE, MAKE St RE OF ( >b,l TING J T IE BEST DUALITY AND THE REST FOR J; THEIR MONEY BY HI VINO ONLY FROM : THOSE CONCERNS WHO ADVERTISE. ; —By E. R. Waite. !: ..... j >*************************** ♦ *************** >IMWHHW*W ******

North Manchester — Citizens of North Manchetter havo contributed funds for a bronze tablet to mark the (birth place of the late Thomas R. Marshall.

• --- -.. v. «. * G-jt. - ' yme 1 , Edgewater Park j Celina, Ohio. SPECIAL ATTRACTION! I -JygPaul Dienstberger and his New York Orchestra—composer and former director of Paul Whiteman’s James Boys Orchestra. Every night except Monday—starting June 27—for the season. fc \ N- - - f y, -A . - | f •- ■ A : Hwl AUTO REPAIR Briiifj your automobile repair work to us. We are prepared and equipped to take cure of your work no mutter what it may be. Your work will receive our most cartful attention and will he done in a satisfactory manner. Remember, no matter how large or small, let us do it. A. W. TANVAS North First Street iiiwi iiiMiigiii^iiMiimniiwwrwMnrMTiWMi — - ■" 1 ■ 1 - " '***“ ■ ■ — -srasnas-* ".T=r. I .

Tipton.— Resident* of Tipton rushed to their door* when a terrifying sbrelk «aa heard. It was the new siren, being tried out at the light plant.