Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 15, Decatur, Adams County, 18 January 1927 — Page 5
I society I CLUB CALENDER ■ Tuetdiy I Iry ' I ’■»*«. I * n ? ■ E ’ U , church. 5;45 P- in - I u " r ‘Z”'""' s, ’" > I 1,,0 , n Tof (’ Guest Night. Pot Luck I r K »f <’• Hall. 6:30. I [ l ’ lline^ K ‘ Wednesday I m , e suPl«'r. card party aa.l dance. ■ i lie school buihllug postponed. I L iistorieal Club-Mm- Phoebe Hite. | Wednesday I Zion Ladies’ Aid Society I 'S^^^- DB - BrW ' n ' | THURSDAY ■ v . b. Ladies’ Aid Society—Mrs. J. ■ n Wisehaupt. 2 P- m - | sefha Ifia Miss Marie Murtaugh. ■ ' st.'.Mary’s ( horns Choir—Catholic ■ school building, 7:30 p. m. I Presbyterian L. A. S. - Mrs. Ija B Fuhrman, - P- m - ■ Friday ■ Auction Bridge Club-Mrs. Lee Law■l less, 8P- ntI Reformed church Choir practice- ■ After services. I The plate supper, card party and I dance to have been given at the I Catholic school building Wednesday I night by the Catholic ladies, has been I postponed until further notice on ac- ■ count of tin- inclement weather. B Miss Marie Murtaugh will be bosi tes < to the So Cha Rea Club Thursday | evening at 7:30. AH members are urg- ■ ed to attend. I All members of the Every Ready B class of the Methodist church are urg- | ed to meet at 7:15 o’clock tonight to ■ attend the church service in a bod:. I The members of the Country I Club are urged to meet in tiie IndusE trial rooms tonight at <:3O o clock. The Ladies' Aid society of the Zion Lutheran church will meet, in the school house at 3:30 o’clock Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. J. D. WJsehaupt will be hostess to the Indies’ Aid society of the United Brethren church Thursday afternoon at two o’clock. Members ate urged to bring articles for the traveling basket. The Monday Night Club met last evening with Mrs. ay Languell. Five Hundred was played and prizes were awarded ho Mrs. Amos Yoder, Miss Berneta Tanvas and Mrs. Cecil Bair, j Guests besides the club members in- ■■ IbM*. Fry back and Amos Yoder. The hostess served delightful refreshments. The next meeting will be held in two weeks with Mrs. Joe McConnell. Zeser--Gass A simple and impressive ceremony was solemnized this morning at eight-thirty o’clock at the St. Mary's Catholic church when Miss Marie Gass b'came the bride of Daniel J. Zeser, both prominent young people of this city. Sister John Berchman Played Lohengrin’s Wedding Marell for the entrance of the bride and groom and their attendants, and during the ceremony she played the Wedding March from Mendelssohn. Rev. J. A. Seimetz received the vows ' f the single ring ceremony. Roses '•'er e used as a note of decoration in ihe church. Miss Helen Gass, sister ' f the bride, and Edward Zeser. brother of the groom, were the attendants. Robert Gass and George. Andrews aced as ushers. The bride wore an attractive frock of tan georgette, Valencia cut, with shirrings of chiffon velvet. Her tam was tan 1 iffcta and gttraw and her footwear, Monde kid with aligator trimmings, fihe carried a shower bouquet of •fphelia roses. Miss Helen Gass wore “ ,)ol 'oming two-piece frock of Athene 'use georgette with pleated front and rose at - the left shoulder of the buket. Her hat was a combination ' 1 rose straw and silk in tam style and her footwear was tan kid with "Higato.r trimmings. She carried an i ‘ r,n boutuet of Sweetehart roses. ‘ '' s ' E- F. Gass, mother of the bride, wore green georgette with tan trinv "inigs un ,i a lan ] iati elcven-tliir-°<lock. a wedding breakfast was m'T “* ,h ° B ‘ k ’ 8 h<Mne to forty ,< s,s - Hie centerpiece of the long was a huge rose in which was nuT ed the lierc '’ WP!lfl,n K caae. The :n ■ i 11,154 " 01e sma " rase creations,' ~.'‘<l ng 'he,centerpiece. Mrs. Fred ' enka, “P- Miss Rose Fullenkamp. ° f tho l "' We ’ a,ld th c Misses . T 1 M yl°tt and Mary Meyers, di,,r"> S 01 * he bl ' ll,e ' Bcrve(l the w<Mi, b T ikfaßt - Mra - zeser * p ,lau ghter of Mr. and Mrs. E.' J ' ißb ’ o£ w ®st Adams street. She I
is prominent, In social affairs and, for | the past several years, has successfully managed her father's ready-to-wear stor,e. She is a member of the So Cha Roa club and many other social organizations. The groom is a Kin of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Zeser ami is manager of the Sunset Dance Pavillion and park, south of the city. After a throe week’s wedding trip. Mr. and Mrs. Zeser will reside with the groom's parents, temporarily. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Charles Zeser and daughters. Mildred and Kathryn, Mr. and Mrs. Engelking and children, Maurice. Arthur and Marguerite, all of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Gass and children, Junior and Jane, and Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Borman, of Huntington o Locate A letter from Rev. B. N. Covert says: “Have had growing crowds from Sunday to Sunday, had a very large crowd at the Hymn Festival service tonight. Have a young people’s choir of twenty-five voices, both morning and evening, halt my crowd being young folks. We have a $20,000 manse here which we enjoj immensely.” Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Kampe motor ed to South Bend yesterday. Nothin’ makes a sixty-year-old man as mad as havin’ a twenty-year-oh clerk tell him what kind o’ shoes h< should wear. Th’ honeymoon may run along fer a while longer, but thing are never th’ same agin after th' wist drops th’ electric iron. —Abe Martin, Indianapolis News Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Borman, of Hunt ington, were here today to attend th wedding of Miss Marie Gass and Ilan icl J. Zeser. Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Gass and famil; of Huntington, were here today to at tend the Zeser-Gass wedding at th St. Mary's Catholic church., Mrs. C. 1). Teeple spent the day i: Fort Wayne visiting with relatives. Mrs. William Murtaugh, who ha been visiting relatives in West Virgil ia for the past month, will arrive horn tomorrow. Gustav Beiberich, of west of th city, was a business visitor here thi morning. Miss Hayme Terveer, ot the Vogl< wede Shoe Store, is confined to he home today on account of a sever cold. Mrs. C. I). Teeple is attending < meeting of tjie officers of the Presby tery at Fort Wayne today. Mrs. Teepb is secretary of the organization. Tommy Voglewede, eon of Mr. am Mrs. Charles Voglewede, is confine< to his home with the mumps. Wilson Lee, J. L. Kocher, Johi Schug and (’. D. Teeple will attend ■ meeting of the committee from th ] Presbytcriaq churches in this distric ■ for the <ls(M)tkOOO,vei*ion for mil. liters, ill’*! "i' : Wu.vlii- rbiiiclK William Meiners, ot Fort Wayne ■ called on business friends here thi. I afternoon. The meeting of the St. Mary's i Chorus Choir has been postponed from evening, until next Tues- ; day night. Members please notice, i! 0 : — . Newcastle—A lot of sleep was lost here when a whistle bn a I’ennsylva ‘ nla locomotive stuck and blew foi ' half "an hour while trainmen made i frantic efforts to shut it off. > i 0 i Good Kentucky coal, $6.50 off - car. Krick & Stuckey. 11 o PILE SUFFERERS ’I AVOIR OPERATION GET RELIEF EASY Tests over a period of five years ir f thousands of cakes prove Interna’ 1 treatment and removal of cause is lhe one quick, harmless, painless, effee tice way to give pile sufferers real .' relief. Doctors agree and it means 1 one need bother no more with salves ’ and suppositories. ■ No matter how long or severely 1 you suffer — just swallow two small , harmless pills three times daily with a little water and in 24 hours in many 1 cases and shortly after in even bad ’ cases the piles and sliffering go away i i completely. One user says: t 1 "Twenty years ago I got bleeding piles. I was operated on. but eventu ally the piles returned. I was in bed ; when I first took Colac Pile Pills, but • in 3 days could return to work and • in 2 weeks the piles were completely ; gone. This was 7 months ago and there is no sign of a return. Colac is marvelous." —• Joseph Winter, Glenn : Falls, N. Y. | Colac Pile Pills are made in the world's largest laboratories of finest ! ingredients— harmless to even the most delicate person. Doctors agree for lasting results internal treatment and removal of cause is best. Don't delay or suffer another day. Get a 60c bottle of Colac Pile Pills at The Enterprise Drug Co., or any good drug store, or bottle by mail in plain wrap- , per on receipt of 60c in stamps, or check — Colac Chemical Co., Inc., .Brentwood, Md. <
DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1927.
YOUNG OFFICER J* Hi FRED MAJOR Fred Major, newly installed vice-, grand of the local Odd Fellows lodge,] Is the youngest mau to ever hold an elective office in the local lodge and ’s one of the youngest 1.0.0. F. off!- ■« rs in the state. OBITUARY Samuel H. Amrine, was the son ot Frederick and Mariah Amrine, and was born in Shelby county, Ohio, on! Tan. 6, 1852. He was one of a famly of eight children, three of whom preceded him in death. On November 19, 1874 he was unit’d in marriage to Lydia Davis and to . this union were born four children, r son and daughter dying in infancy and a son and daughter survive. This marriage was severed by the death it the wife in 1882. In 1881 he came to Indiana with his family and has since resided in this state, with the ■xception of short intervals when he ’ound work elsewhere. In 1884 he was again united in mar•iage to Eliza Johnson, who survives. Besides the wife, two children. Mrs. Vm. Pennington, and Ben F. Amrine, i*fo»ter daughter, Mrs. Henry Hill, a itepson, Curtis Johnson, ail of Decaur, Ind., one brother, Ben Amrine. >f Decatur, three sisters, Mrs. Catih>rine Stetler, of Decatur; Mary Snid>r, of Bucyrus, Ohio, and Mrs. Peter ?ross of Rockford, Ohio, together vith two grandchildren and two great randchildren survive of the imme'iato family. Mr. Amrine had been in failing ealth for nearly a year, but coiifind to the bed but a few weeks. He ■assed away from flic home of his laughter, Mrs. Wm. Pennington, of Oth street, January 11, 1927, where te was making his home. Aged 75 'ears and 5 days. Funeral services wiere conduct'd rotn t.he U. B. church Thursday afernoon at 2 o’clock. Burial in Salem •emetery, east of Decatur. Rev. Cecil I. Smith, offli- ating. o - ■ — Mr. and Mrs. Bryc Roop are the , ; irei.irr— .-‘r -hr.-:-/—’-; his morning. The baby has been amed. Dona bell Frances. o— SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAIR DARK t That beautiful, even shade of dark, (lossy hair can only be had by brew- _ ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Your hair is your charm. It 2 makes or mars' ....** W the face. When it fades, turns l(J' gray or streaked, Ifi jugt an applica- /* J \ tion or two of / I Sage and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundred-fold. Don't both?r to prepare the mixture; you can ■ ret this famous old recipe improved ' by tho addition of other ingrcilionts or only 75 cents, rfll ready for use. it is called Wyeth’s Sage and Sul- , phur Compound. This can always be i lepended upon to bring back the neural color and lustre of your hair. Everybody uses “Wyeth’s" Sage , ind Sulphur Compound now because a t darkens so naturally and evenly ’ 'hat nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this ' through the hair, taking one small 1 strand at a time; by morning the 1 gray hair has disappeared, and after ' another application it becomes beauI tifully daik and appears glossy and ' ustrous. 1 Minute Test Stops That Itch Try This One Minute Tert Are you tonne n ted with the agony of a burnrig, itching skin wluch seems to defy relief? Do you Suffer from eczema, pimples, ulcers, and other lorms of skin troubles? At no risk to you. we invite you to try this one minute tact: Ge to any drug store and eci i bottle of D. D. D. on trial. Gontly wash the itching portion ot your skin with D. D. D. prescription. the amiscUtic heeling lotion. Then watch for results. 11 you do not experieme that calm, cool sensation, if that iten is not i'opted in one minute, just bring the bottle back and your money will berctunded ci once. iiißeaiing Skin Lotion |
I. O. O. F. HOLDS INSTALLATION (COItTIYVKII FROM PAGE ONEI , rooms occupy the second usd tiiird 1 1 V 1 floors and the Boston store Is loI rated on the first floor. The newly Installed officers have outlined a program for 1927 which they hope will bitild toward the , greatest year that the local lodge bus ever experienced. “Geography Os Calamities’* | Aids Red Cross In Planning For Disasters In Advance — Ij Geneva (Ui<ted Press).—The average small boy who already regards geography as the equivalent of punishment may still have new mental tortures before him in a study to be known as the “Geography of Calamities.’’ I “The Geography of Calamities,” which the Geneva Society of Geography has just undertaken to develop under the auspices of the Internation-1 al Red Cross, is to lie the basis for the new International Mutual Protective Union for Nations stricken by disaster, which will be launched this year under the auspices of thp League of Nat Loras. I In order, to- render aid as effective as tis possible it is naturally desirable to know in advance just where disI aster is going io happen, and to have men, money arid material there when ( it breaks.” And this is where the geography of calamities is to come in. The Geneva Society of Geography 1 “My little girl had a bad cough. I gave > her a few doses of Foley’s Honey and I Tar Compound and she was greatly relieved. If you want rest at night, especially where there are children, ! keep Foley’s Honey and Tar Cotnl pound on hand.” J Clyde H. Benson, I Marlboro, Va. No opiates, no chloroform, a fine ■ dependable family cough remedy , for children and grown persons I, • Remember the Name FOLEYS HONEYatoTAR COMPOUND . Sold everywhere ’ Thousands Keep ’ Well-Nourished Right Through The Winter—They f Take SCOTT’S EMULSION 1 Rich In Cod-liver Oil Vitamins Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield. N. J. 26-30 " ’ -Tn fflr TT-ft-tfifT- , 'Tin inn 111 1 i -■■■■—ff 11 .' 1 ’ !■ , ■ —/ Adams Theater “Where the better pictures are shown” Tonight & Tomorrow e ■ I • BEBE ■ Dwieis f I SWDID ' W PA/?/S , , WITH JAMES HALL ford sterling IRIS STUART DinEcreo ov ARTHUR ROSSON eatMaru t» ADOLM tU*O« — JUM L (ASK* A Highly Romantic , Comedy in which BEBE wins a trip to I fascinating, gay Paree and becomes stranded without a cent! a QvajnotDS Qttwr r.* Also—Aesop's Fahies and I’athe News. 10c 25c Coming—Sunday and Monday, “The Volga Boatman.” The picture you have been waiting for. A .
lias undertaken aa far as is possible to locate geographically tha great calamities from which mankind suffers, to determine the causes, to study the accidental or periodical return of those calamities and to strive by all of the means possible to foresee, avdid and overcome them.” All of tho leading scientific Institutions of the world as well as all of the leading individual scientists will be asked to send in whatever discoveries, theories, findings and statistics 1 they have along these lines, | Tho new union will work largely with tho organization and resources of the international Red Cross Comjnittee and the International League of Red Crose Societies. Its fundamental idea 4s to have funds and organization ready to rush to the aid of any nation stricken by some great , natural calamity Instead of waiting till private charity and private organization can get into action. Grandmother Knew I there was nothing so good for conges- |! I tion and colds as mustard. But the old- ! fashioned mustard plaster burned and j blistered. . Musterole gives the relief and help L tliat mustard plasters gave, without the i plaster and without the blister. It is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Gently rub it in. ■ See how quickly the pain disapjiears. Try Musterole for sore throat, bronchitis, tonsillitis, croup, stiff neck, | asthma, neuralgia, headache.congestion, . pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, j sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted I feet, colds of the chest (it may prevent pneumonia). j Jars & Better than a mustard plaster
ECONOMY h* price—in use —one spoonful equals two of many other brands —prevents waste of baking materials. It never fails. CALUMET W THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAHitNG POWDER MAKES BAKINC EASIER-IT’S DOUBLE ACTING Sa* is •*■,» Knie« Those of Any Other Brand ■ . ..——l , _ Great Northern Hotel CHICAGO I I 1 — 1 — In the shopping and theater district, two J m w M 1 squares from the financial center, and - _ ZZZT '•“* convenient to the wholesale section. (j] “The comfortable Great Northern” is a hotel for all the family. Its many little niceties of service are z ’ especially appreciated by the ladies j and the young people. (j) Favored by the patronage of many distinguished L visitors to Chicago because of the large, light, '///. livable rooms to be had at rates not excessive. In the famous restaurants, /' food of choicest quality at /// prices in keeping with the hotel’s policy of moderation. ■ ’ n' --, v- y/AN' Accommodations for / r' ICS fill -
1 JiR"V> Ik \ u vj] whon ty *vj U W PAZO OINTMENT ® \ j Is Applied, because I\- // 'I ls Posiiivc in Motion It begins immediately to take out the Inflammation and reduce all Swelling. The first application brings Great Relief. Stops Itching Inatautly and Quickly Relieves Irritation. Severe teste in canes of long standing have proved that PAZO OINTMENT ran he depended upon with absolute certainty to Stop any case of Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Pilea. * . Recommended by Physicians and Druggists in United States and Foreign Countnea. PAZO OINTMENT in tubes with Pile Pipe Attachment, 75c. and in tin boxes. 60c. The circular enclosed with each tube and box contains facta about Pilea which everybody should know. PARIS MEDICINE COMPANY. Beaumont and Fine Street*. St Louis. Mo. • ■■ Since 1889' DEMOCRAT WANT AUS RET RESULTS I THE CORT | Jfi Tonight—Tomorrow | “THE BLUE EAGLE” | gy A Wm. Fox Attraction, featuring George O’Brien, sfi gB Wm. Russell, Janet Gaynor, Margaret Livingston and others. This great drama smacks of the seven fIS seas. It reveals the souls of hearty fellows that fol- qm ip low the compass And man alive, what scrappers n=> they are. W hat courage they have—these giants of gg bg the main! SD S ALSO—“HONEYMOON HOSPITAL," comedy International News 10c, 25c 3i
FIVE
