Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 32, Decatur, Adams County, 7 February 1927 — Page 5
SOCIETY CtUB CALENOEK ; illw •' «• " e, iWouwns * ri * " 4 " Tuesdsy . Mar) s Chorus Cboir-Cathollc m. ' Needle Club-K- P- home ■ ,; Ui en l Club- Mm. Dee Fry- »■> Dun* Tyndall, 6 as mvmuiona! Valentine Ljt-Red Men Hall, s:ls. T. C. LL—Librai ;>• 3:30 P- m. ’ Wednesday ’ sundanl Bearers of M. E. church Lawai l ® 1 1, ®’ , , r . , . Uta, Fide Club-Mis. Frank Crist, ‘file Udles' Oyster Sppper 4,rd Party and Dunce - Catholic school building. » n Skake-peare Club—Mrs. A. D. ( Historical Club-Mrs. John Schug. Thursday Deuciug Club-Elks' Home, 8:30 P-, Maude Muller Club—lied Men Hall, J:J( P. m. jjdles Aid Mt. Pleasant ( lurch— Rrs David Cook, 2 <> clock. Friday Woman's Home Missionary tJoclley rc-jirs. Somerville Light 2:30 p. lit. | Thera Helen Johnson daughter of ir. Mrs. Caster Johnson, of Gary -siwls a sophoni'-i ■ .it Indiana UniverBiy has been pledg 'd to the Kappa Jlpba Theta sorority which is one of fte oldest Greek Inter sororities in the country. Thera was graduated from Srersou high si!:jo1 in Gary in 1925 ad was the youngest member in the class ui 166 pupils, I-ast year,' she was thana as one among a hundred otbtrstudents to ‘ake putt in the Jordan, ■Hirer Revue, the annual musical protenca of the university. She is pre'pra;: to take part in the productioif Sfuia this year The Johnson family faerly resided in Decatur and Thora .cii other members ci her family are H known here. , ** t A business mee: Jig of Uw Delta Jbila Tau sorority will be held at tfc home of Miss Alice Clark, this heating, at 7;tln o'clock. All members are requested to be present. Lenhart-Swearingen a The marriage .f Miss Helen Leona |Svtaringen and William M. Lenhart, popular young people, of this city, 4 was vjnielly solemnized Satin day even•te tt nine o'clock in the heme of the 'K". and Mrs. Somerville Light. Rev. feht. who is pastor of the Methudist (church, read the impressive single r * ceremony in the presence of ■Miss Marcella Ken: and Mr. abd Mrs. •.■Berman H. Myers, intimate ft tends of tllie couple. The bride is the youngest Bwjbttt of Mrs. i.nin Swearingen, of vSaretall street, She :s a graduate of Ideal high schi.oi and for the past years has been with the Hite Goods company, she is a niempw of the Psi lola Xi sorority and of Octagon Club. Mr. Lenhart is a ** ua John m. Lenhart and is a gra- , Ute of the local high school and is timber of the ffiin of Lenhart and ■ contractors and dealers in himi "H- is a member ,-f the Lions Club, organized in this city. Mr. “■Mis. Unhart lelt Sunday for Col- - Cleveland and other points L ''' ’AHer the fifteenth ol FebMr. and Mrs. Lenhart will be ■, ' ■■" in then newly constructed ’“•taeeon North Third street. ■J."' Box <’l>«uing of the Wocbui-' ' lUt 88^)Uar y Socitey of the Bat W - il l,e iKl<l tritia y afternoon |V. wil * l ADs. Somerville ji, lllter ®sting progiam will be Icvb ‘\ 80Ud alteni * anc ® of the memI tils 11 a ,lw assisting hosjL'u c" ’ ljl ' I,L ' I - V ’ Henry Heller | ' "■ E Schivlfk. g ' lhe ( Tri Kt ‘ w>i ' u tin- i 10 ’ a Pot-luck supper ■i t" - fa aie 2 eVening ' AU “ e “- fats, keil tu br »ng their own IJ ' v ' 'll hold a .iance, Uk Elk.' i "' llK ’ at 8:30 o’clock, in |fa'i to Atl nKlul K*rs are ■ lu attend. I. faudur’l o - ■ f ® thto' 1 11' 1 u l ,f, t-luck dinevam'" 1 ' 11 dln * a K room Wedilllvfatice ol '". at six °' cl ot'k. The K?'■■ ev i‘tJ nieinber is urged. Gl '“ t ' lbve Uvhteusteiger-
August will be hostess to th« Corinthian class Tuesday* evening at 7:30 o'clock at her home in High street.) All members of the class are urged [ to attend. The' St. Marys (Tkliuh Choir will i meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. In the Catholic high school. All plans have been completed for . the benefit Bridge party which will lie given by the members of the Psi lota Xi sorority Thursday evening, February 17, in tile Elks home. Tickets are being sold by the members. Refreshments will be served follow- . ing the games. The liberal patronage of the public is solicited. The Woman’s Christian Temperance i'nion will meet in the Public Library Tuesday afternoon at 2:3Q o’clock. The following Frances E. Willard Memorial program will be given: .Mesic —"Carry On.” Devotionals - Mrs. S. D. Beavers. Piano solo —Miss Monai Butler. Reading—Poem 'rF'ca nd ::.X'M Til Reading — Poem "Frances E. Willard," Mrs. C. E. 8011. Music —“Lead On, O King Eternal." Reading—" Memorial Dollar Carry Forward Far-Seeing Program ”, Airs. C. H. Colter. Oil ering far Frances E. Willard Memorial Fund. Ouronic Benediction. The Ladies’ Aid Society of the Calvary Evangelical church met Thurs- > day in the church. During the business meeting, which was opetted with song, scripture and prayer, plans were made to serve dinner at the Wayne Gaunt sale. A comforter was knotted during the afternoon. The next regular meeting of the society will be held with Mesdatnes Bernice Darr and Clara Hays will be hostesses. A delicious lunch was served by the entertaining committee which . included lona Shifferly and Virgie Harmon. Those present iacluded Berneice Darr, Orie Drake, Elma Gaunt, Clara Hays, Virgie Harmon. Fanny Jackson, • Etta Miler, Lucile Miller. Phoebe Miller, lona Shifferly. Donis Shifferly, Jennie Smith and Inez Walters. The regular meeting >t' the Woman's ’ (Tub will be hsdd tonight in the High school auditorium at 7:45 o’clock. Following the meeting, two oneact plays will be given Mis.-James Elberson dll ecu the first play which is "Aunt Deborah’s First Luncheon " Mrs. Travers, the wife of a "New Rich”, sell-made man, is trying to break into society. Several of the town's "best people" have called on her and she is giving a fashionable luncheon to impress them with her impeltance. in the midst of the final preparations, Aunt Deborah, arrive; from the countiy. Mrs. Travers, and her snobish daughter, Elizabeth, try to get her out <>l the way. but Aunt Deborah. tails to take the hints, and in nociiitly attends the luncheon. To the imazement of Mrs. Travels, Aunt Drb( i:ih, witl. her sweetness and quaint old-fashioue'i ways, wins the liking and respect of lhe gjests, "id becomes an asset instead of a liability The Second play, which i< unner the direction Os Mrs. Martin Van Alsbcrg, is /‘The Bishop’s Camielsticks " This sketch is taken front Victor Hug'i'a masterpiece, “Les Mi-er.tbies.” The play opens with a secene in •op’s cottage, and the first part of the play gives some idea at’ the Bishop's i hatacler, his utter selflessness, and gentle hnderstanding. Then con.es the diamatit entrance of Jean Valjean, es caped convict. Tike remainder of the play shows how the Bishop's influence and tinai of his last valuable possession, the si-iirg? candlesticks, turns Jean Valjettn. once a man, tow a beast tiirougn injustice and ill trea' •ment, into a man again. Riotous Comedy is* Wright Players Offering Arthur Kohl, whose success in comedy roles'at the Majestic theatre, Fort Wayne, has won him a host of friends . llrrougtiout northern Indiana, lias a new soit or role tor this week. As an illiterate S4O a week clerk who clashes down the bars of exclusive Long Island society to please Lis . ambitions tyit’e, Kohl portrays a role ‘ pathetic, as well as humorous. % William Anthony McGuire, writer of many big'c+ty stage successes, demonstrates a new type of play in "h i Was Rich,” the attraction in which ; Kohl has the role of Jimmy Sterling, ‘ k. 40 a week clerk. Jimmy retains all of his engaging illiteracy and his droll dry East Side ! humor tn his meanderings in and out of the homers of the rich. He awakes ■ sympathy and hilarity at the same time. "if 1 was Rich" is a fast moving .it- ! traction with an undercurrent of wise cracking and reactions when he fufds 1 his “rich” friends are dodging bill col- ' lectors cause merriment tor the and- 1 fence. 1 Bargain matinees will be given, us usual, on Wednesday and Saturday, i Succeeding “The Enemy,” drama, i "if 1 Was Rich" is an interesting co i- I traot and promises to be as popular i as “Luff That Off” or "The Family i Upstairs.” d "if 1. Wqs ffich" is well staged and I the Wright Players arc wpll cast for i this comedy cf human life. Early*seat reservations are advised by the theatre i management. Hx I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, FERRUARY 7, 1927.
The Understanding Heart I By PETER B. KYNE 1 1 reckon Monica Dale was a long'' yeatlitig about that time, her old man' stuck around home after that and raised the child, but you know the kind cf raising a daft pocket-hunter could give any youngster. Why, the old fool couldn’t raise a calf! "Tlie girl grew up somehow, and the old man managed to pan enough ' dust to keep her boarding over to ' Siskiyou Center, where she went to school. When she'd learned all they had to teach iter there, site was sixteen, so she come home to Dogwoßd Flats. Seeing ns how she was big enough to take care of herself by now, her curious male parent took to poeketuutiting again. Girls marry mighty' young up here; most’of them have a 1 uaby at sixteen or seventeen, ami are i 1 via women at thirty, and 1 suppose' old Dale figured nis daughter would' be getting married early, like all the lest. “This hese convict we're chasing |' had known her all her life, and folks, to I'm told, sorter figured they'd make a match of it. Mason was running close to a thousand head of beef critters in the San Dimas and he had a little lanch over in nouey Valley— 1 k was tiiere that he wintered his cattle. As pretty a little ranch as lies i utdoors —all flat meadow-laud, taking i.i the entire valley, and all sub-irri-gated by the melting snow from Ml. Shasta. * ’ He d seeded timothy and bluegrass with the native grass, and used to cut two hay crops a»year—euougli to carry his stock over the winter. He had a nice, neat little log bungalow on it — tunning water and modern plumbing i i the house, too, and a good barn and a flower garden and vegetable garden. "Honey Valley adjoins the section < f hill land old man Dale used, and Bob Mason got into the habit of looking after Monica anil her few l ead, of beef critters. He figured a ( t -w cows more or less didn't make much difference to Honey Valley or Lis haystacks. ”1 remember I come through there i nee, trailing a bad Inuian, and Monica was working cattle with Mason i:i.th e corral, it did me good to see tile smart maifher in which she could put her rope around thfe hind legs of' a short pearling and drag him up to the branding fire. “She can ride a bucker as long and as rough as any buckaroo in this conn-' try, and she srfVed Mason the wages! of a top cow hand. Reckon it was the only way she could repay him for wintering her stock.” “What sort of chap is this man Mason?" the ranger queried. ’Not a bad sort, as men go. Far above the average as they go in this country —and at that they don't go so' bid up here. They're hard-working. | honest, and law-abiding until they get' into some sort of tangle where they I t'unk their honor is involved. Even 1 then they're law-abiding according to, their lights. They give fair warning J and then they get out the old six , volume law and argue the question in smoke. They're pure-strain white men', up here, and most the descendants of Price's rebel army. t "Monica’s lather was named Ran dolph Jackson Dale. Old-timers tell me her grandfather was a major in'| the Mexican war—ami old-time Ken-1 tucky aristocrat. He was killed in a duel at seventy-five. The old war- , Tior knew he couldn't see to sight a , gun, but his honor or the honor of his , tiibe was in question, so he called , his man out —another old fool of six- ( ty-seven and as near-sighted as the major. They each wore two guns, and a the command "fire” they commenc ed blazing away at each other, and the major was accidentally killed. "I knew that girl had blood back of her." In the ranger’s tone was the satisfaction one feels at an important and wholly satisfactory discovery. CHAPTER 13. "Monica has fightin' blood bac k of her,” the sheriff agreed. "1 don't know anything about her mother’s people, except that tlley were Bantlings and if she came troin the Hannings of Shasta Valley she came from fiery stock. I think she did. I think her uncle was old Judge Ellsworth Banning, a scholar, a good lawyer, and a gentleman. He was superior judge in Siskiyou for fifteen years, ami never had a decision reversed on him." “We were talking about Dob Mason ami his ranch and the prospect of his marrying Monica." Garland reminded th ( > sheriff. "What happened to prevent that?" “Nobody knows. Perhaps Monica . • just figured she wouldn’t marry him, although nobody knows that he even ( asked her, although he was a dtinged fool if lie didn’t. Bob Mason was ' the most likely prospect in the lot. i, He’d been to business college down top Sacramento, on account of hfs old man figuring there was more money , in book keeping than in cows. Bob. , had a good job in Sacramento, too. 1,. "They tell me he was making a 1 ( hundred a month, but when his dad j died he come back to settlo up the | estate and after that lie never seem-, I cd to care about city life any more. | 1 I’lie old man left him pretty well 1 fixed—l think the estate was appraised at forty thousand dollars ami Bob 1 bought Honey Valley and continued < in tt»e cattle business, having sort of ; inherited a forest reserve grazing per- < •mit from his father. Just about the. . time everybody was wondering what the devH uisde him so slow about | • marrying Monica Dale he tips and j marries old Jeff Harrington’s girl over ] to Klamath Fails. Kelcey was a town ( 1
girl, pt atty as a picture but not any more sensible or wall balanced than u magpie. "They had a baby the first year n| boy—and seemed to be getting along right well until the superintendent of the Hercules crowd over on Dogwood Fla's took to spending a lot of his spare time over to Honey Valley when Mason was off working cattle or buying feeders. Folks got to talk-! ing, and somebody sent Mason an 1 anonymous letter, so he>called upon | tills here superintendent the teller’s . name was Grant Bardwell —and told him plain, in the presence of two witnesses, that ids visits to Honey , Valley was causing unseemly gossip: that it didn't lie in the blood of the . Masons to stand by and let their wont , i n get talked about, and in conse-11 quence he'd be obliged if Mr. Baril- , well could see his way clear to cease , his visits: that ft lie couldn’t, his next visit to Honay Valley would be his ! last visit anywhere. Bat dwell took u , chance, and Mason tunneled him.” ( “What did Monica Dale do after Mason married'.’” , "Monica Dale didn't see much of , t Mason after he married Kelcey Har- | rington. Folks said Kc'cey was jeal- ! ous of her old friendship for Mason. I At any rate Monica sold her cows to i Bob and kept away flout Honey Vul-, . I ley. “Last year she got a job as lookout ( on Bogus ami moved up "here. She built that cabin liehselt — said she , wanted a house built the way she | liked it. not the way 4 ncle Sam liked , it. She could do this because Bogus | isn't in the San Dimas. The edge of the reserve passes two hundred yards ( below house. "She's applied for a homestead of , six hundred and forty acres under-the ( Stone and Timber act, the land being . worthless for agricultural purposes, , and as soon as she's complied with , the law 1 reckon she'll be given a patent to it by the land office.” , "Do you suppose she was in love , with Mason?” Garland queried casually. “Nobody knows. Anyhow, 1 don’tI think they were just good neighbors. He was a likeable feller and any girl would have liked him as a friend. He’d been mighty kind and neighborly to her at a time when mebbe she needed a helping hand. "Well, I dat" spy she’s trying to catch even. Sheriff. Whether she is or I not. I’m for her. And what’s more, i I’m for that man Mason. 1 hope we don't catch him." The sheiift was an honest man and very human. "I hope so. too, but that ain't going to make me try any the less to catch him." he replied. “That's my job and I aim to do my ,duty regardless of my personal sympatJiies." i “The moon's up.” Anthony Garland ■reminded him a few minutes later, (breaking a long silence during which I both men sat tlrnkiffg of the tragedy ’ in which they were now participants. "Guess we can see our way down Bogus to the Forest Service trail." They rose and, leading the horse, made their way down to the frail. After following it half a mile they came across a menjber of the posse seated on the rump of a ad horse .add calmly smoking a cigarette. | “I'm siltin' my horse in the trail, (tapin’ a look down yonder into the | valley, Sheriff." he explained, "when Mason come riiiin’ down the trail on (horseback. At first 1 thought you i were coinin' he had a horse thf» I image of yours—but when the sight of me caused him to turn off the trail and go stampedin' Hown-hJH into the valley I looked closer and saw it must |be Mason. I yelled to him to stop and called hint by name. He pulled , up, sorted out a rifle before I could get mine out, and let my horse have it. I “We rolled in the trail together, but 1 managed to jump clear. Unfortunately my horse rolled over on the scabbard with my rifle in it, and 1 had some delay gettin’the carcass oil my weapon. Meanwhile, Mason was skally-lioottn’ down Bogus i k ■ a deer,
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dogln’ lu and out aiuoug the trees J and the range wiN pretty long before : I got into action. I my magazlnp at hlin, but ’ the light was poor and goln’ fast,' and the last I saw of Mason Up was goln 'faster. Before it got t<M> dark I saw him streakin’ across the floor of the valley and headed up into the ( tlnilwr fn the north." j ' “He'll make for the lava beds over In Modoc," the sheriff decided. ‘T’ve got to gi*t to the nearest telephone ind have tlie chief ranger warn the tanger force up that way to lie on the lookout for him. How fur Is it toi your station, Garland?” “About five miles, but by Wte tiine| Iwe get there Mason will have passed I the station on the north fork of Junobug Creek. He'll try for the Forest Service trail leading Bp June-bug—-the timber's too thick for him to ride across country even in the moonlight. It's black as a ixicket in the heavy t,Tuber, and the undergrowth is very thick. "Ranger Bolton ami two forest guards are at June-bug station and if we get word to them immediately BcVpn may he able to intercept the i tan. I tell you he’s got to ride the June-bug trail. You had better teleI hone from the Bogus Lookout station,' Sheriff.” "Her phone is out of order. Ranger.” “It wasn’t out of order this afterrootl when 1 was there. 1 heard the bells ringing when headquarters was calling other stati-ns on the line. If it's out of order Monica Dale put it *mt of order and I'm the l>oy who can put, it back in order." “I'll go back with you. Ranger. I reckon I ought to apologize to that girl anyhow, even if she has made a fool out of me. And while we're there we might jolly her into giving us supper.” “I think I'll go too,” the recently dismounted member pt' the posse decided. "Scenerys mighty poor diet for a man that's been in the saddle sixteen hours. Where’s your horse, Sheriff?" (To in: < <>\ rixt i:i>) Copyright Bi-.il Peter It. Kyiiif L.v arrangement witli King l eatu*. s .Syndicate, Inc Get the Habit—Trade at Home, It Pays
20 Years of Stomach and Kidney Trouble Trouble All Gone Now. Backache Quit. Eats Anything. “I suffered with stomach trouble for twenty years. I was bloated and at times I felt as if there was a rock lying in the pit of my stomach. My kidneys were weak and I had to get up several times during the night. My back ached all the time. Nothing I ate did me any good, and I tried different medicines without improving. Then a friend told me to try Viuna. The first bottle made me feel better and so I kept right on. When I started in I only weighed 145 pounds; now I weigh 157 pounds, a gain of 12 pounds, and I feel fine. Don’t have' any‘trouble with my stomach any more and can sit down to the table and eat a good hearty meal without one bit of fear. I don’t have any trouble with my kidneys and back, either. All the pains have gone. My constipation is entirely gone, and I want io say Viuna did it all.”—Chas. L. Scott, 839 East .Maryland St., Indianapolis, Ind. Viuna acts promptly on sluggish bowels, lazy liver and wonk kidneys. 1 purifies the blood, clear* the skin, restores appetite ami digestion, and brings new strength and energy to the whole body. Take a bottle on trial. Then it you're not glad you tried Viuna, your money will be refunded. $1 at druggists, or mailed postpaid By Iceland Medicine Co., Indianapolis, lud. VIUNA 1 he vegetable regulator Sold Bv CALLOW th KOHNE
Adams Theater Last Time Tonight Sil, kI lie niij<lity dniniii of :i mini who had to haltlc lor love and happiness againsl lhe very elements ol nature itself. —Also—“Bring Home The Turkey” Our Gang ('.omedy. 15c 35c — TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY — t "LOVE'S BLINDNESS’’ an ELINOR GLYN production. with Antonio Moreno, Pauline Starke and a wonder cast, COMING—HAROLD LLOYD in "THE KID BROTHER."
Miss Harriett Myers, student at Madam Blaker's School In Indianapolis spent the weekend here with her ' brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Myers. Enmannel Hurt of Monroeville one of the best known me i of the section wus a culler at this office today. Samuel Slmison, pioneer of Berne culled on llecalur friends today.
THE CORT | Sn Last Time Tonight ifi “McFADDEN’S FLATS” $ A First National, featuring -f] □fi Chat lie Murray and Chester Conklin. ‘□li lA ir Two of the funniest clowns on the screen. p! McFadden's life was a series of ups and downs with Sj| a hod on his shoulder. But the way he worked to lhe 3] 131 top of the social ladder is a story without a Haw! ir- “A DIPPY TAR,” Clever Comedy Scream. rfi I 15e 35c I Tuesday—Bessie I.ove in “GOING CROOKED.” fiS THE HIGHWAY LEADING I .TO PROSPERITY I Along this broad highway you will find THRIFT, E ECONOMY, AMBITION, Persistence and last but not least I a BANK ACCOUNT. / • If you have not a Bank Account you are on the wrong highway. Better get on this highway before Adversity overtakes j ou. i THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST CO, ♦ BANK OF SERVICE The Service oi Science “Research has graduated from a thing'of pure science and abstract theorizing into a full partnership with practical industry.” This significant statement, made by Industrial. Management, is illustrated by conditions in the Stand,-rd (it Company {lndiana: where r■ earch is recognized as a definite unit animating and influencing the activities of the business. I Chemists and other research engineers, working (in the well-equipped laboratories of the Standard ( Oil Company (Indiana) are striving constantly to i develop new and better products from crude petroleum. Practical business men and scholarly scientists work together in the Standard Oil Company (Indiana, to serve the people of the Middle West. The result of this remarkable partnership is an I efficient organization that is progressing in step with the advancement of knowledge. i We ar? living in an era of scientific revolutions, i ?fay,’ principles and new processes are replacing the old. New products are appearing. Competition is growing keener. i A business must he “on its toes” if it is to survive. Scientific work which may seem theoretical and unni-cessary to the unenlightened is really the most j practical and vital part of industry. i * The management of the Standard Oil. Company ' I (Indiana) always has realized the importance of * research and the scientific method. Today the products of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), its processes and its methods of manu--1 facture represent the application to industry of the most advanced technical information. Tlie Standard Oil Company (Indiana) recognizes the service of science in devising methods to eliminate waste, to minimize lost motion, to develop new products to meet new needs, to make the raw 4 material yield the utmost in the shortest time and to lower yabstantially its costs of production. Through the practical application of science to ■ industry, the Standard Oil CoTtpany (Indiana) has bit . to do :i bitg job in n t'-ig way: it. 1 ,i; n.atLthe stock of the Company attractive to shareholders from the viewpoint of profit and safety; i and it has supplied the petroleum products needed P ’ to ,nect t * le ever 'S row ‘ng demands of the thirty j \''z * tf'y million people of the Middle West in away to merit and win their confidence, respect and esteem. ; Standard Oil Company - (Indiana) Genera! Office: Standard Oil Building 1 910 So. Michigan Avenue, Chicago T.S3
■ - Children like I Kemps BALSAM I . for Coughs! J
N Get the Habit—Trade at Home, It Pays
FIVE
