Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 21 October 1926 — Page 5
gUKES COMMUNITY I SPIRIT DISPLAYED I W A. Klepper, Os CJoverI leaf Creameries, Sees Much Good In Dairy Day Dairy Duv over, so let us analizo I what it has meant to our community. I In the flrgt Place, as the writer -visI ..Mzm It, ot> r Rceatest benefit has I een the fine of cooperation I tha( W as shown by our business men I and the public who assisted in the I entertaining of vlstitors from the I nearby counties and the neighboring I ’Vhas been a revelation to see I such splendid hospitality shown to I (be visitors. Many kind words have I been said about Decatur and its peo I pie and we have received numerous I letters at our office offering congratI ulations and commendations. So. it makes one feel very proud to I live in this community and to have I the Cloverleaf Creameries, Inc., reI C eive such wholehearted support. We I feel quite fortunate to be in the I Dairy business, and we know, that I this being an agricultural community I that by our placing dairying on a I higher plane, we are not only helping I ourselves, but the producer and the ■ public. We hope that this demonstration I that has been put on will make the I business men, as well as the comI munity realize the importance of the V I dairy business. We will then feel i I that the labor and the expense that I has been involved, to make Dairy I Day a success, will be amply repaid, I if it will just help to make the dairy I business of the community more proI fitable for the producer. It is true that the Cloverleaf Creameries, Inc., has been benefited by this day, for the more butter that
“ALONG GOOD WILL HIGH WAY ’ ’ B’- /'* V /h\ ,n. ’-. ■ ■k - Perhaps they can save you a trip to town! It is not always necessary to waste three or four hours going to town when your | tractor or your automobile is not working right! Maybe the trouble is wholly with your oil. If it is, the man who drives the Sinclair Truck past your place probably can tell you what is wrong and what to do about it —and save you a trip to town. He is a friendly neighbor of yours. He knows tractors, trucks and automobiles — and he knows oil. He can tell you how to use oil to get the most out of it. ' Give him the opportunity of making friends with you. He is at your service—whenever you hail him along jthe road. Let him give you a copy of “Oiling” Sinclair’s new help-booklet for motorists. Sinclair. OPALINE MOTOR.OIL Seals Power at every Degree of Wear <fc u tw 5* BUY IT LN A HANDY A SAVING
Iwe manufacture the more business we will do and we hope that as time goes on. wo can enlarge our plants to take care of the increased demand for our products, and in turn th*benefit will revert back to the producer, as well as the public and ourselvas. It is our ambition to continue to help make the dairy business one of the most important occupations of 'the farm today. We also hope that the few who have felt that the Cloverleaf Creameries, Inc. would derive all the benefit from Dairy Day, will see that we had no selfish motive in mind, for Dairy Day has also meant an expense to us, but because we build for the future we will profit. We surely wish to thank Mr. John Heller, the general chairman for Dairy Day, and his able assistants, who had the vision that they had, and worked out Dairy Day and made it th esuccess it has been. It is our hope that we can put on similar demomrtrations each year, to maintain the good will and the confidence which has been shown in the past. Our slogan for Decatur that “Decatur Can and Will” has surely caught the spirit of every business man, and all those who took part in Dairy Day, and it is the writer’s hope that we will continue this fine spirit in our community. W. A. KLEPPER, General Manager of Cloverleaf Creameries, Inc. S. S. CONVENTION PROGRAMS GIVEN (OOMTixtraD from rasa ow*> school convention will be held next Sunday. The afternoon session will be held in the Ceylon M. E. church, beginning at 2 o'clock, and the evening 'session will be held in the Geneva U. B. church, starting at 7:30
BECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1926.
i o'clock. i Mrs. N. P. Barton will deliver the i principal address at the afternoon I session. There will be several must-1 k cal numbers, also. At the evening I session, Hon. Jesse C. Sutton, of De-, catur, judge of the Adams circuit■ > court, who Is a former resident of r Wabash township, will give tho prinf clpal address. The following pro- ' gram wll be given at the two sess- , lions: Afternoon, 2:00 o’clock (Song Congregation • Devotional .... Rev. Robert Rash ’ - Song Congregation >' Reading Minutes. , I Welcome Tester Grile ■ Song Mennonite Quartette Address Mrs. N. P. Barton Solo Miss Ella Glendenlng I Song Mennonite Quartette ■ Announcements„E. C. Blere J Seng Congregation j Benediction Rev. J. R. Knlpe Evening, 7:30 o'clock. I Song Congregation 'DevotionalK. F. Shoemaker 1 Song Mennonite Quartette > Reading Mrs. E. B. Gauker ■ 'SongM. E. Mixed Quartette J Address Hon. Judge Jesse C. Sutton I Solo Miss Mae Barton .Song , Mt. varmel Quartette ■(Announcements E. C. Bierle ! Song Mennonite Quartette , Song Congregation . Benediction Rev. N. P. Barton | o | Ohio City Boy Fatally Injured By An Automobile ■ < I Junior High, 6-year-old son Ct Mr. I and Mrs. D. A. High, of Ohio City, 0., J was fatally injured Tuesday evening, when he was struck by an automobile a short distance south of Ohio City. He died at his home about midnight Tuesday night. The lad, with his little sister, Lucille, was driving a cow a-, long the road when the accident occurred. Relatives said a car dr’ven I by Harold Kline, of Ohio City, struck ' the boy. The little girl was not struck.; The machine stopped soon after the, accident and the driver helped take the boy to a physician in ohte City.
| The boy is survived by hia parents, two sisters, Lucille and Betty Ruth, i and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. . W. H. High and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. ' Bevington. Funeral services were held I at 2 o’clock this afternoon at the Tom- . | UMoa church, southeast of Ohio City. Sacred Concert At Magley Church Next Sunday Night A sacred concert will be given at the Magley Reformed church next Sunday evening. October 24. The program will begin at 7:45 o’clock. The public is cordially invited to at- | tend. Following is the program for the concert: Prelude Mixed Choir Scripture Reading and Prayer Ladies' Quartet Solo, Mrs. Henry Borno Male Quartet Duet. Miss Hildebrand and Miss * Kruetzman Male Choir Trombone solo, Arthur Fruchte Song, congregation.. Duet, Miss Hildebrand and Rev. Gretber Mixed Quartet Offering Ladies Choir Solo, Rev. Grether, assisted by the male quartet Mixed Choir Benediction.
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Former Warden Os Sing 1 Sing Prison Dies Suddenly Auburn, N. Y„ Oct. 21. —(United Press) —Thos. Mott Osborne, former warden of Sing Sing prison and famous prison reformer, dropped dead on the street late last night. He was returning from a theat:a when he collapsed. Osborne was 67. Osborne was internationally known as a prison reformer. Although a Millionaire, he served as warden at Sing Sing to put into practice some of his theories on how a model prison should be conducted. He was twice Mayor of Auburn and the founder of the Mutual welfare League at Auburn prison. In 1888 he married Mary Devens ■ of Cambridge. Mass. I ■ ■■ —■■■■o ’Anti-Saloon League To File Expense Statement Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 21. —(United Press) —Trustees of the Indiana AntlStdoon League today informed Attorney General Gillioni that the league will file a statement of campaign expenditures this year. Gilliam some time ago wauied the trustees they must comply with the
corrupt practices law by filing a statement. Replying to Qilllom. the trustees said he was the only Attorney General of Indiana who bad eveff taken' the stand that ft was necessry sos (he League to file the statement. , —.... ->-■ — 100 Tons Os Caviar Ordered From Russia Berlin (United Press)—A contract for Immediate delivery es 34,000 pounds of caviar has been concluded between the Zentrosojus—the Soviet department for export t rade —and two German fitms. An additional 150000 pounds are to be delivered under this contract within the next twelve months. o Hammond —Bernard Dyer escaped a six months sojourn on the penal farm because he happened to be the father of a brand new baby boy. He was fined >lO and costs and sentenced to the penal farm but the sentence was suspended when the judge learned of the birth of his son. ■ O "ii If you wish beautiful snowy white clothes always use Russ Bleaching Blue. Al igrocers TT
NOTICE I will be gone frum Saturday morning until Sunday evening. Oct. 24. DY. W. S. SMITH 249-2tx o Church Choir To Rehearae The members of the Zion Reformed church choir will meet for rehearsal at 7 o’clock tonight, instead of tomorrow night. Members take note of his announcement and make it a point to be present. ———o BOYS! OH! BOYS! — JOBS FOR BOYS—Earn money after school and Saturdays selling the Curtle publications. Call at 226 N. 7th st., or phone 625. 248t3x Typewriting Stenographic Work If you have any extra typewriting or stenographic work I will be. glad to do it Phone 42 for appointment. Florence Holthouse Judge J. T. Merryman’s Law Office, K. of C. Bldg. _j_t. XL-ii— -’.J' '
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