Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 261, Decatur, Adams County, 4 November 1925 — Page 5
■ecorator NSW ■enjoys health xi mb ,•, \ * ; .. Samuel L. Martin ■9s; oeuel L. Martin. 713*4 Main KL Evansville. well known paintin,l decorator, says. "Os course 1 younger. I feel younger, thanks Tanlac. but two years ago I was run down. |K.| w as weak all the time because no appetite and what 1 did eat g^K VP me no energy. The only thing from food was indigestion. H<r,iii and much constipation. I'd up tired in the morning. It was iM-tnie day a friend said. Tour is sick digestive organs. food is not digested; it causes heartburn and headaches. is a tonic for sick digestive ■g ans . Take Tanlac auiPyou'll help ur digestive organs give you took his advice and now Tanhas given me a healthy body. 1 fine Eat everything. I have Km h more strength. Even ceiling does not lire tne.” K bl Endorsed by many Indiana Kt-opl'' i,n '* m> :lions elsewhere. Get today ;H yotlr druggist's. 9H Tanlac Vegetable Pills for constitution. made and recommended by ■ manufacturers of Tanlac. 99 Th' New York Stillmans are back ■n th’ inside o' th' newspapers, but H doubt if they ever git ther ole front Huge position back. Elmer Swank Holed t'day jest t' see how it would t' feel free an' independent fer a K,, L _ Abe Martin, Indianapolis • * *9 Mrs. C. D. Teeple spent the day in ■fort Wayne attending a meeting at Hhe Presbyterian church there. Sam Brooks made a business trip Fort Wayne this morning. 9| Mi<s Leah Colter has returned to Ohio, whete she is a student ■ Western college, after an overK|unday visit with her parents. Mr. Kimi Mrs. C. 11. Colter. |l&j Lawrence Linn left yesterday tor where he will begin Hie ties at the National Five and Ten Ml', nt Store having been transferred Hp.iere from the Auburn store. ■ I Mesdames J. H. Borroughs. (\ S. ■t'arey. J. R. Horton., B. N. Covert. ■Fred Smith. M. J- Wertzberger, C. 9l) Teeple, C. C. Pumphrey and sevother members of the Presby■terian Missionary Society motored to ■Fort Wayne this morning to attend 9 | lm group meeting of the Presbyterian ■ Missionary Society. % Mrs. E. A. Goldner. of Preble, was 9' l shopper here this afternoon. ■ ' Mrs. C. S. Clark and Mrs. Mae Me.ib--9' rs ’accompanied Mrs. Anna Droppje--9 man to Fort Wayne this morning 9 " here she will enter the St. Joseph. 9 Hospital for treatment. i Dan Tyndall was a business visitor 9i>t Fort Wayne this morning. H Joe Kortenbrer returned from FoVi ■ Wayne this afterndon where he look- ■ cd after business affairs. " a Peru. —■ Charles Cox picked violets ■in the front yard of his home here, al- ■ tliough the mercury had dropped to ■IS degrees zero. Franklin, r- Final plans have been ■ completed by members of the John- ■ son county bankers' association to ■ purchase ammunition for the use of ■ vigilantes committees protections the ■ bank. • '» ■•— . -1,, ■u, L i _u 1,, . . . .
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J 9 I* CLUB CALENDER Wednesday Bachelor Maids — Mayme Terveer, 6:30 p. in. W. M. A.’of United Brethern church —Mrs. Gracrf Hurst, 2:30 p. m. Auction Bridge Club — Mrs. Herb Kern. 8 p. in. Faithful Followers Class of Mt. Tabor S. S. —Miss Bertha Bunner. Five Hundred Club —Mrs. Frank Barthel, Shakespeare Club <— Mrs. D. I). HellerJ Historical Club — Mrs. James N. Fristoe. Tri D. Club—Mrs. Frank Rowley, 7:30 p. m. I Thursday Work and Win Class of It.II. church - Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Drake. W. R. C— Legion Hall. Ladies' Aid Society of Zion Reformed. church, Fruit and Pastry Drive for Orphan’s Home at Fort Wayne. Ladies’ Aid Society of Zion Lutheran church —-Schoolhouse, all day. Baptist Woman's Society—Mrs. G. Parmer, 2 p.m. ‘ • Christian Indies’ Aid Society—Mrs. Arthur Fisher. Evangelical Missionary SocietyChurch Parlors, 2:00 p. m. ■ Eastern Star Party for Families and All Masons —Masonic Hall, 7:30. Friday St. Agnes’ Sodality—Catholic High School auditorium, 7:30 p. m. * Rummage Sale, Ladies of Presbyterian church Niblick buildingWoman's Missionary Society of M I* Church—M>s. C. H. Colter, 2.30. Saturday Rummage Sale, Cadies of Presbyter-' ian church —Niblick building. Home Guards —M. E. church parlors -2:30 p. in. Ladies’ Aid Society of M. E. church I Cafeteria suppet —Church. 5 to 7 p. Ip. I Mrs. IL M. Crownover’s Class? of Pleasant Mills Baptist church— Market Schmitt Meat aMrket. Monday Research Club —Mrs. A. A. FledderJohann. Woman's Club high school auditorium, 7:45 p. m. The W. R. C. will meet Thursday afternoon at the Legion Hall instead of Friday afternoon as previously announced. The meeting has been changed on account of initiation. Mrs. A. M. Anker entertained th\ of the Tuesday Afternoon Club yesterday afternoon at her home on Winchester street. Guests bes'des the club members were Mesdames C. A. Dugan. W. A. Klepper, Janies Arnold, J. Q. Neptune, George Flanders, and Miss Carlisle. At the conclusion of the games refreshments were served by the hostess. Mrs. Henry Colter* of Bobo, was pleasantly surprised last evening her children and their families. The occasion was her seventy-fifth birthday anniversary. Al six-thirty o'c'ock, a dinner was served, after which a social hour was enjoyed. The guests were: Mr. ami Mrs. W. A. Colter and Miss Frances, of Willshire. Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Ben Colter and sons. Donald. Robert and Deane; Mr. and Mrs. C. 11. Colter, Mrs. Martha E. Beery. Mrs. Earl Colter and sons, Richard ami Jimmy. . I Mr. and Mrs. Eugene "Runyon ami Mrs Yred Hofhwan entertained at dinner Saturday evening for Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hoffman and daughter, Betty, ami son Bobby, of Fort Wayna, and the Misses Margaret Jane Hoffman anti Margaret Jane Holden, of Ox-, ford, Ohio, who are students at Western College. The Work and Win Class will meet Thursday evening at the home of Mr. rnd Mrs. Clarence Drake. Mr. ami Mrs. Russell Debolt will assist in entartaining. All members are urged to attend. f I
All jnembers of tiio Eejistern Star, their families, and all' Masons are invited to attend the party at the Masonic Hall Thursday evening. A threepiece orchestra will furnish music for’dancing. The Bridge and Fiv4 Hundred J’arty given last evening at the Elk’s home by the lady Elks was a success socially and financially. At bridge, Mrs Raymond Kohne and Mr. D. J. Hensley won prizes, and at Five Hundred, Mrs. C. Reynolds and Mr. Fuhrman were awarded prizes lone hundred twenty guests were in ' attendance. At the conclusion of I the games sandwiches, pickles and coffee, were served. The commitete lin charge included Mrs. J. W. Meibers, Mrs. Clem Voglewede, Mrs. Will z Shoeipaker, Mrs. Joe Smith, Mrs. I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1925.
Called Bandits. Wa •« ’•erf** W e v: ■ £ ' ■■'JKemll I v - VIOLET HAMMON L> MARI E MAVFTEI/D Marie, Maxfield and Violet Hammond, arrested in Chicago, are accused of taking part in eighteen taxicab and vestibule holdups in Chicago.
Francis Schmitt, Mrs. Ed Whitright, Miss Bertha Voglewede, Miss Marcaret Moran. Plans are being made for a series of parties to be given during the winter. The ladies wish to thank the public for their patronage. Mrs. A. F. Stalter, of Portland, entertained the members of the Psi lota Xi Sorority at a pot-luck dinner last evening. Mrs. Frank Rowley, who was Miss Donna Parrish before her marriage, October 6, was showered with several beautiful gifts from the memI>ers. Plans were mad for the Christinas p#rty. and the, entertainment committee, which includes Mrs. Charles Knapp. Mrs. Frank Rowley and Miss Fan Hammell. was appointed by the president. Those who attended were the Misses Helen Swearingen, Margaret Zwick, Florence Magley, Fan Hammell, Mildted Butler, Marcella Kern. Mesdames Frank Rowley. C. ('. Pumphrey, C. O. Porter, Charles Knapp Hugh Hite. 11. H. Lainmiman. A. R. Holthouse, W. P. Schrock, F. E. Vail, J. H. BttrrouglN and Sim Burk of this
city, and Mrs. J. A. Baumgartner, of Portland, who is also a member of the . sorority. I Mis. 11. M. Crowucver’s Sunday > school class of the Pleasant Mills Baptist chui’ch will hold a bake sale at the Schmitt meat market in this citynext Saturday morning. The patronage of the public will be appreciated. | o .—__ U. S. Pictured As A Shyrock In France (By Ralph Heinzen. United Press Staff Correspondent) j Paris, Nov. 4—(United Preijs).— .There is more than a grain of wisdom ' in that old adage that to lent! a money is to lose a friend. i Never in all the years that Americans have been coming to France, have they been more welcome, but never have they- been open to. such ridicule and criticism in the public ; press as at present. | The return of M. Caillaux and his party of negotiators and the opening of Parliament where one of the first Mg problems is that of war debts have given the caustic writers and artists of the French press ample material. j ; “Shylock” is the phrase most fre- [ quently heard, and bearded Uncle Sam hoarding up his gold bags is caricatured in ail his gftiry and ridicule. Not even the shell-rimmed glasses, the "Oxford bags,” "plus
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fours” and thick brim straw huts of American men and the flat heels and swollen calves of American women visitors escape the vitriol. And there are all sorts of suggestions ns to how France can pay America One Senator actually suggested that France wipe off this debt in payment of the one America has owed Fiance since XVI and of which nothing more Is ever hoard. A deputy, M- Frederic Brunet would carry the whole debt situation before the Permanent Court of International Justice at The Hague. j But an Idea which might meet with popular approval, even though the experts wyjild throw up their hands In horror was’ proposed by “L’Oeuvre” a Parisian newspaper of radical tendencies. That paper suggests that France pay America in kind. That every year 1100,000,000 worth of French wines, French liquors and French pastry be set astde, earmarked for America "to be consumed In ■ place” Thus tn forty years. America would die of gout but the debt would be paid. \ | Perhaps the finest “bon mot" was that of one of the wittiest of French deputies, M. Bouteille, representing the Oise Department. He played on the fact, that “la tailllte,” in French, although pronounced exactly as Americans speak the name of La Fayette mhans He turned around the phrase, cred-
ited to General Pershing although that worthy has repeatedly denied that he over thought of it. as he paid bis vis't to La Fayette’s tomb upon his arrival in France in 1917, —"La Fayette, we are here.” M. Bouteille repeats it: "la failite, nous voici” —"bankruptcy, we are here.” But the greatest joke in French public opinion is that America asks for payment for the war stocks. Th'ese stocks of the American army have formed a standing joke for vaudeville comedians and somehow or other Parisians cannot get down to taking the stocks seriously. When the American armA 'went home, fine business heads enrolled as temporary officers, saw the impossibility of carrying back all the war material —railroad trains, automobiles food .stuffs —which had been shipped overseas. They broached the idea of selling- it to France for $407,000,000 payable in ten years. At that time a dollar was worth five francs and the cost of the stocks was two billion francs. Since then the franc has dropped in value and the same stocks are charged today, eight billion francs. But the stocks no longer exist. Not a small percentage were stolen or rusted away.. Cadillacs were sold at 4,000 francs each, strings of motorcycles went for a song, that food stuff which could not be sold rotted in its time —all that remains today is the stocks debt •which has quadrupled in six years. . o — '“Murderers Row” 1 Is Being Restored By Henry L. Farrell (United Press Spirts Editor) New York, Nov. 4.—(United Press) —During their recent happy days in the American League big money, the New York Yankees were propelled principally by a powerful attack, feat-1 uring "Murderers’ Row.” When their chief murderer, Babe 1 Ruth, started to get less brutal and savage with the bat, th£ whole row ! succumlx'd to the contagion and the attack ceased to function. Next Reason the Yankees are threatening with another array of long dis- - tance sluggers headed Dy the Babe, Bob Meusel, Lou Gehrig and the newI cornel. Tony Lazerre from the Pacific Coast. “There's enough power there to . blow typ plenty of ball games and
MAIL ORDERS NOW MIZPAH TEMPLE FORT WAYNE, INI). Presents CHICAGO GRAND OPERA COMPANY f - in “AIDA” Friday Evening, Nov, 20 Curtain at 8:00 sharp. MIZPAH AUDITORIUM West Berry and Ewing Streets Fort Wayne, Ind. Complete cast, including losa Raisa, Cyrena Van Gordon, Marshall. Rimini, Lazzari. Giorgio Polacco, Conductor Ballet of 60. Orchestra of 60. MAIL ORDERS accompanied by check and seif-addressed, stamp- , ed envelope (to insure safe re.urn) accepted and filled in the j order received. Address and make , checks payable to James H. Haberly, Treasurer Mizpah Dedication, P. O. Box 343, F<yt Wayne, Indiana. All seats, $10? plus war tax, $1- Telephone Ahthony-9282. j >
'crack the fences all around the circuit,” Ed Barrow, business manager of tlie Yankees said recently. Barrow | thinks that the club is sure to be up around the top next year. Laierre hit sixty homers in the Pacific Coast Izrague last season and surpassed Ruth's record although he pjayed in 200 games while the Babe's season is limited to 154 games or as many elss as hfs physical condition requires. Several major league scouts, talking during the world's series, said that J Lazerre was a gooil natural slugger, but they pointed out that Salt I-gke City was a fine place to hit in. I “That Salt Lake City stuff is largely the bunk.” Barrow said. ' hit just about as many on the road as he did In Salt Ijike City, and, if we didn't think he'd hit in the American , League we would not have bought I him," J There Is no doubt that Babe Ruth lean hit when he is In shape and there J are reasons to believe that he will be in playing condition at the start oF . the next season. ( l In company - with Eddie Collins, Bob ! Shawkey. Joe Bush and several other , American League stars, the Babe is t chasing the elusive moose in the Canadian wilds and as there is nothing else to do at night but go to bed in ' the woods, the Babe ought to get him- , self into good condition. I The row be had with manager Hug-
I 99 9 I • • • || Have you sent S if your H | MAIL I !order| J For Seats? I McCormack I | CONCERT f l u. h H 9 I Friday Evening g J Nov. 20th J Notre Dame Gym K South Bend Li Mail Check « SCHOLARSHIP f CLUB ■ 630 W. LaSalle Ave-So. Bend S vj* Prices: $1.50, $2.00, ■ f $2.50, $3.00 < ■ Interurban and Busses will ■ hold until after performance.
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—. I ( gins lust season, which resulted in a of the whole team ought to bo iinsuspension and a fine of $5,000. should P roveil bec »°* RuUl ' B su “ e ' ,H *“ gßt ; ting away with most anything did not be a good lesson to Ruth. He learned mßlte (he o(htJ . p|avers feeJ uny too that he was Just one of the players on W jllinß to observe the rules that Ruth the club and that he was snbjectw to ignored. the same discipline as the cheaper help on the team. -> o— If Ruth is made to adhere to the „ chef>r Up .. 1()t() 0< fuD au(J g(K)( , rules of the team next year, the morale music Nov 17-18. 248tf U "-.--rr- IXW..'BLF'IL: The Luscious Laxative made with Real Fruit If you like fruit, you will like t BOAL’S ROLLS. They are deli- N cious to the taste and marvelously effective. Old and young like W them. Each package contains six rolls — each an average adult dose. All druggists—ls cents. ; ' BOAL'S ROLLS CORP .214-216W.14th St., New York B r/ Th, Went -r . IL.S(i..US Actual Size of Package
Theatre I S LAST TIME TONIGHT 3 Pit fence Vidor. Tom Moore. Esther I’nlston and Ford K Sterling in a Big Paramount feature ■ ‘ THE TROUBLE WITH WIVES” 3 Husband vs. \X*ife in a comical clash for the chain- ■ IS pionslii|> of the home. Six rollicking rounds. n Come and cheer the winner. 10c 25c 38 Thursday and Friday—“A SON OF HIS FATHER” ■I Harold Bell Wright’s latest story with Bessie Love, Ba M Raymond Hatton, Warner Baxter and others. II Sunday and Monday—Bebe Daniels in Kg 33 "LOVERS IN QUARANTINE.” ff9M999MM9fIMfiH999HHM999H9999|| I THE CORT I TONIGHT ONLY E I “WINE OF YOUTH’’ | ■ A Metro-Goldwyn attraction with Ben Lyons. Eleanor Broadman, Win. ('.oilier, .Jr. ,and "others. ,■ A jnothcr’s trust left her children free to reckless ell- ■ joyment. A new thriller on the revolt of youth. gg ’’ALL ABOARD” a good comedy. |3 10c 25c t) Thursday Only—James Oliver Curwood's story if "STEELE OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED” 9 Tuesday and Wednesday—" The Phantom of the Opera.”
