Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1927 — Page 7
SOCIETY,
CLI B CALENDER Wednesday *9 I„.atiir country club Bridge Par-j S|L Wednesday afternoon, 2:-30. for M,■„, h ,.rs and out-of-town guests. | SKicl-Hs fifty cents each. ' _ ’) -Thursday M s-> Cha Kae Hamburger Fry and r-HH-b.' FiNe class—M. F. Worthhome, 7:30 P- *“• j Christian L. A. S. -William Teeplc S Triangle Club of Christian church Mis. Andy Art man, 7 fr M. jE i.iptist Weman’s Society pot-luck sB t , ! ..,i > ..r. 6:30 P. M, public program ,a> r. M. at church. Friday * m F Undies Aid Society—Church M Parlors, Friday j The Junior choir of the Zion Re-. U<.. rtned church will meet for rehear-1 SI j >'ven o'clock tonight and the J W S nior Choir at eight o'clock. This ■ rehearsal is preparaory to the MisW . ... Eesival services on Sunday and Js t . necessary that every member be ■ present. Invitations have been issued to the I lu.Jes es the Decatur Country Club I ;,iid their out-of-town guests for a ■ 1 idge party to be held at the club I at two-thirty next Wednesday after■I noon. September 28. A charge of jS fifty rents for each lady attending, jj to cover cost of luncheon and other 1 expenses , will be made. Replies to R th invitations should be made to || Mrs. J. F. Arnold not later than gl Monday. i Miss Eloise Lewton. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. I). Lewton, and Miss | Helen Dorwin, daughter of Mrs. j Maude Dorwin. both of this city, have b, n pledged to the Delta Delta Delta ! nations Icollege sorority at DePauw I university, where they enrolled this I fall. Miss Lewton speht two years at Western College, Oxford, Ohio. | while Miss Drowin was graduaed D,. ..tur htch school last spring. — - The descendants of the J. R- Turnbleson family met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kortenber. Sepi mber 18. for the eighth annual reunion. At noon all partook of a bountiful dinner. The afternoon was spent in playing games and contests. Those present were: Mrs. Amanda Tumbleson, Miss Ethel Tumbleson. Mr. and Mrs. E. W Tumbleson and children. Velma, Olive, Alta, Edna. Hi! ,-l. Arb e,'Walter and Fay, of ;:--rnc: Mr. and Mrs. Curt Tumbleson, an 1 children, Jessie, Harold and E-ta. of Wren. Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Tumbleson and children, Cedri< Norma Jean and Alice Jeanette. Mr. and Mrs. D. I{. Tumbleson, daugiiter, Frames; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Markey, and son. Leonard, of Fort W ayne; Mr. and Mrs. Harley Tumbleson and children, Mildred, Helen, Bernice, Paul, Junior and Ruth Max Mr: and Mis. Chas. Fuhrman and children, Thurman, Elizabeth and Muy; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kortenber ami children, Joseph and Mary Ellen. It' was voted to hold the next i union at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hniey Tumbleson. Mrs. Ella Hech. sou, Earl, and grandson, Glen, Mrs. Mary Buckley, -ill of Huntington, were out-of-town guests. The Decatur Eastern Star lodge will meet tonight at 7:30 o’clock at the Eastern Star rooms in the Masonic hall. All members are urged to attend the meeting. ♦ All -members of the So Cha Rae are are requested to meet at the E. FG i s and Son Store, Thursday evening at 6 o’clock to attend the Hamburger Ely and Picnic to be held at Sunset Park. Miss Kathryn Dorwin was elected president of the Tri Kappa sorority in Decatur, at the annual reorganization meeting held by the sorority last night, at the home of Mrs. Charles Holthouse, 330 North Second street. She succeeds Mrs. Cecil Moser. Other ' Hirers elected last night wi re: Mrs. Herman Myers, vice-president; Miss Marcella Hower, corresponding secretary; Miss Helen Christen, recording secretary; .Miss Angie Firks, social treasurer; and Ml .. Charlee Holthouse charity treasurer. The hostess served refreshments at thV close of the meeting. p Mt 3. Airs Dawson entertained the Carpe Deim club at her home last
night. Musical composers were studied. Mrs. Harry Magner sang a group of songs and Mrs. C Schafer gave two piano selections. Follow .ig the meeting, Mrs. Russell Owen was takenHuto the club as a new member. Mrs. Archie Smithy ami Mis. Carl Schafer were guests besides club members. The hostess served delicious refreshments. The next meeting of the club will be in two weeks with Mrs. G. F. Eichot n. - ■ ■ ■ - -o Personate yrmr-— Glenn Beavers returned to Columbus, Ohio, yesterday to begin his junior year in Ohio State University, after spending his summer vacation witli his parents, Mr. aud Mrs. E. A. Beavers. » Mrs. C. A. Dugan and Mrs, J. H. Heller motored to Bluffton this afternoon to meet Miss Helen Dugan, who is returning from a visit m Indianapolis. The Journal-Gazette at Fort Wayne. Lew Ellingham’s paper, is moving into their new building tills week. Mr. Ellingham purchased the building the Journal Gazette has occupied for years and also that part of the building used by the News-Sentinel, rebuilt the entire block and will have one of the finest .newspaper offices in tlie middle west. It will probably be a week or two until the moving job is complete as they are operating in the meantime. Judge David E. Smith of Fort Wayne attended to business in court here today and found time to say howdy with his old fashioned smile to a number of friends. Otto E. Luedders of Coldwater. Michigan is here today investigating the proposition cf publishing a city ams rural route directory. He has done this in Auburn, Angola and other cities hereabouts for a number of years, the fact that he repeats each two years being evidence that he knows his business H’> will return next week to take the mutter up with Cal E. Peterson, president of the Decatur Industrial Association wha is absent on a vacation this week. If there was any frost Jast night it was very light and only on the low ground, according to reports received here during the day. So far every thing is alright. The Decatur postoffice Is to be made comfortable during the cold months with a brand new heating plant. The Fred Ashbaucher'company is installing a. large size Majestic hot air plant guaranteed to keep the chills away no difference what the temperature. Work started today and the new plant will be ready tor use within a week or so. — —i. Medical Society To Meet Friday Evening > The Adams County Medical Society will meet at the Adams County Memorial Hospital at 8 o’clock Friday evening. I),. Flank LAc will have the papel. ■ i ■ ■ ■■—o— ———
“Boyish Figure” Craze Threatens To Ruin AH Benefits Os Modern Dress Chi'.-igo, Sept. 21.— (INS) —That "Ih y:sh figure" sought by the modern C apper, threatens to ruin all the benefits derived from the discarding cf long hair, corsets, bustles and voluminous .petticoats, according to Dr. John F. Spaunliurst, of Indianapolis, in an address before the American Electronic Research association here. "The health of many women has been undermined by attempts to be slender,” Dr. Spaunhurst said. “Tluu use of various reducing compounds has been extrenieC'y injurious, and the tli ng to do is to reduce'the jutake of foods to the minimum necessary for daily energy”. O , Thin, Nervous Girl Gains With Vinol “I was nervous, rundown, and my druggist recommended Vinol. I have better.”- —Marie Remmel. You begin to feel stronger, eat and sleep better the very FIRST week you tyke this simple, strengthening iron and cod liver compound For over 25 years Vinci his helped weak, nervous women. over-tired men and frail children. Contains no oil —pleasant to gained 5 pounds and feel HU) per cent take. Smith, Yager & Falk, druggists. i
• x DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1927.
Dancer Sues Film Comedian ajja * Wk \ ... W <3- “ V , n ■» W Ig'jßL || / Wallace Beery, celluloid comic, shown with his '.vile, is b, intj sued.by Juanita Xlontanya, New York dancer (below), who asks million dollars’ damages.
COUNTY JUDGE SHOT IN COURT - Disabled Former Marine Slays .Judge During Hearing On Pension Owenslmro, Ky., Sept. 21. —(INS) — County Judge J. L. Patton, 62, of Hart- • iord county, Ohio, died at a hospital Giere early today from bullet wounds uffered late Tuesday, as he sat on . the bench in his courtroom, holding court. He was shot by James Johnson, 45, a disabled former marine, who lives at the National Military home, r at Dayton, O. Johnson is held in the county jail . and probably will be charged , with murder today. , , The shooting followed an inquiry which Johnson is said to have direct- , ed to the judge concerning payment of his pension, which by court order, had been paid recently to Johnsons [ guardian, L. B. Tichner, who was in the courtroom. Officers said, they believed the shots which killed Judge . Patton were intended for Tichner. I 0 AVIATORS TRYING FLIGHT FROM NEW YORK TO SPOKANE (covnw i-:i> from i-aue oae> ’ closer to their goal. - According to reports reaching here ’ var y today, six of the class B pilots ■ i who hopped off from Chicago yesterL day morning on the second leg of the ’ cross country flight, had reached Glendive, .Mont., one of the scheduled Stops. Miller Still Leading Leslie Miller of Des Morines, flyp ing "The Spirit of St. Paul,” who set j the juice into Chicago from Nnw York ' ami again into'St. Paul, was said to ■ I have led the aerial caravan into the ■ j Montana town. ■' S!x other class B fliers who continued the race from here yesterday were reported forced down at various points along the route. The weather was the worst encountered sb far lon the trip. j' The battery of class A planes that I left New York yesterday morning began arriving at St. Paul, their [ first; scheduled ovelr-nightj stop, on > the heels of somd of the slower class ; B p'anes. The first class A arrival was K. E. Ballough in plane No. 6, A. Laird, and carrying a. passenger. C. D. IXcki inson. They alighted at 2.33 p. m. and were followed immediately b* 3 Charles (Speed) Holman of St. Paul. > These racers were in sight of each y ether as they landed. j 1 Thereafter, the speedy class A rac--1 ers were followed soon by a pair of ..class H contestants, ami then for the . rest of the afternoon the class A pilots checked in. Two Planes Missing St. Patil, Mpm.. Sept. 21.—(INS)— [Two ships riving in Class B of the trans-continental air derby were miss- , ing early today as derby officials ■ here checked up on over-night stops i of the contestants. Herald Smith, Tacoma.'Wash, fly- ' ing No. 42. an Eagierock plane, loft ; here at 4 13 p.m. yesterday, a few m'nutes before the deadline for takeoffs. Ixmiid for Fargo, at midnight, he had not arrived there, officials learned. j The other missing flier is A. M.<
Banks. Philadelphia, wjlo left Chicago at 11:27 a.in., yesterday for St. Paul. He has noF reached here, and no word has come from his to race officials. It is believed that he may have been forced down for fuel at some obscure point and then remain ed there or landed again on account of darkness. The stretch west of here proved a bad one for the fliers. Leslie Miller, leader of the class B fliers, made a forced landing in it, and another flier Mimmo Black, of Chicago, made two, one in a snowstorm, and finally was forced to abandon the race and return here. R. E. Dake, Pittsburgh, who left Chicago a short time before Pilot Banks, made a forced landing for fuel at Prairie Duchien. Wis., and reached lierti just, before darknpss made flying hazardoos. He told officials he did not see' Bank’s ship.. Officials here are not concerned for the two missing planes, believing them forced down at some out of the way place by darkness. If, however, they are not heard from today, a search will be begun. Western Race Starts Mil's Field. South San Francisco, Calif., Sept. 21 —(UP)—The San Fran cisco-Spokane air race started just before dawn today,»with ideal weather conditions reported along the 650mile route. Eleven planes, divided into two groups, were in the contest. Two titer p'anes withdrew. One, Arthur E. Manson’s Eagle Rock biplane, was damaged in an accident enroute to the field. J. C. Sams failed to report with ids international biplane in if me for the take-off. Six planes in the class B grout) took off between 4:59:40 and 5:02:25 a.m. P. C. T. Leo Wiley, piloting an Eaglfc Rock biplane with Arthur Carlton as passenger, was first. • An hour elapsed under rules for the race between start of the B and A class planes. Lee Schoenhair, pilot and T. F. Wells, passener. were away at 6 a.m. in an international biplane, llie f rst of the heavy A class planes to take off. o -JOHN JOSEPH IS NATURALIZED immi l-:i» FROM P.FGF. O.M'D he told the judge. He answered practically every question asked him. Four other Adams county residents were naturalized this afternoon. They were Chris Zuercher, of Berne; John Burk, of Geneva, route 2.\ Clovis Oberli, of Berne; and Adolph Reinhard, of Monroe, route 1.
No More Gas In Stomach and Bowels If you wish to be permanently relieved of gas in stomach nnd bowels, take Baalrnann’s Gas Tablets, which are prepared especially for stomach gas and all the bad effects resulting 1 fx-om ga« pressure. That empty, gnawing feeling at the pit of the stomach will disappear; that anxious, nervous feeling with heart palEitation will vanish, and you will again e able to take a deep breath withput discomfort. That drowsy, sleepy feeling after dinner will be replaced by a desire for entertainment. • Bloating will cease. Your limbs, arms and fingers will no longer feel cold ana “go to sleep'’ because Baalrnann’s Gas Tablets prevent gas from interfering with the. circulation. Get the genuine, in the yellow package, at any good drug store. Price sl. Always on hand at Holthouse Drug Co.
FROST USHERS IN FALL SEASON First Frost Os Season Reported In Nearly All Parts Os Indiana Indlaiuipolis, Ind., Sept. 21— (IN/)—Autumn arrived tn Indiana early today on the glistening wings of old man front. From nearly all parts of the state came reports of the season’s first freeze. Tile float was heaviest in' the ccn- ’ trul section of state aud great lakes. Cloudiness apparently prevented heavy frosts in the north, accordin:’ to government meteorologist J. H, Armington. Columbus repotted the lowest temi- ’tatuie with a mercury reading today of 30 degrees. Damage To Corn Unknown Reports from some points inidcated that there was some damage to Indiana’s bumper corn crop but Armington’s comment was that “we cannot tell about that for two or three days.” Columbus reported th< E west temperatuie with a mercury reading early, today of 30 degrees. Paoli was next with 32 Cambridge < ity and WheatHeld, ?4; Farmland 3(1; South Bend 39 and Angola 42. Heavy frosl was' reported ut Bedford, Marion, Farmland, Logansport, Columbus and Vfncenm s. “Continued cool” was the tenor of
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WIpSWI.~ ■■ ■TI Great New Chrysler '*62’’— ' w /ffljl . 6-cylinder motor. 7-bearing crank- ■ n—shaft. 62 and more miles per hour. ■» Invar-strut pistons. Oil filter and air '-- I '■><-'■■ cleaner. Ventilated crankcase. h--lxdr^**s?~* pulse neutralizer an.l rubber • ,:>:<■ mountings. New cellular type radi- »* ■.' ator, 4-wheei hydraulic brakes. Road <S Ogß''' — jfSa 'j levelizers, front and rear. Chrysler aci’xx c K *SMrk c c k k a»W< ,?v MLS 1 Ms Ms ] MsV? $725 to $875 $1095 to $1295 $1495 to $1745 $2495 to $3595 (All prices f. o. b. Detroit, subject to current Federal excise tax} reat Cars in4Great Markets —k. -'** CHRYSLER cars arc designed comfort—marked freedom from and built for people who want mechanical cares—alluring smart* that extra something which makes ness of line and color. all thcdifference between perform* Thcre „- e four lines tQ mcct ance and value that are merely thc four divisions of the satisfactory and performance and market „„ „ « 62 .. ?2 „ and value that are truly distinctive. the imperial « 80? > See them . Pick-up, and power and speed that Among them you are bound to amaze as much as they exhilarate find the car that exactly fits your — instant responsiveness to steer* needs*—the car that actually proH i wheel —brakes that positively vides that “extra something” at a i ourfe safety—most unusual riding price unbelievably low.' 9SS W. H. Oettinger Craigville Phone Dealer for Adams County Decatur Route t — — —!l — ——■— y-~
Armington’s weather forecast for today and tomorrow with a probabllty of a light frost tonight. —— p Putnam County Senator Gains Fame As Curiousity Gieencastle, Ind., Sept. 21—(INS)—i ’’The agriculturist senator coming i from a township in which there Is not a single golf ball nor a full suit of pa-1 jamas” is the way Senator Andrew W. Durham of this city, describes him-1 seif. The senator from Putnam county has made a number of speeches recently, interspersing comment on his home neighborhood with “Inside dope” on the legislature. He has often been invited to speak
I THE CORT S Last Time Tonight Hi 3n| 1 T| Irene Rich anti good cast in 4n a Warner Bros. Classic ‘□rfl “ DEARIE” ■ ’lbe cabaret sensation! A drama of blazing hearts under sliiintnering silks. fie S Also Good Comedy 10c —25 c aa Thursday and Friday — “CHINESE PARROT." S Sunday and Monday Bicliard Barlhleniess fir in “THE DROP KICK.” gl I THE ADAMS Theatre | |§ • Last Time Tonight Peter B. Kyne’s Masterpiece : ‘, i * ‘‘BREED OF THE SEA ” ' * jO with Margaret Livingston, Ralph Ince & Dorthy Dunbar S ■rS Piracy n the South Seas! Stealthy forms gliding over the schoon■ft er’s rail! Clashing cutlasses guttering in the moonlight! The LE K thud of bare feet on the deck! The heave and strain of surging gjp IfA bodies! Shouts and curses echoing over the shadowy lagoon! Sn The slither of steel against steel! Peter B. Kyne’s enthralling tjpj tale of love and adventure on the Java Coast! S Also—Aesop's Fables, Pathe News and Topics of the Day Jfi 10c 25c j-fi Thursday and Friday—“NOT* FOR PUBLICATION,” with 3? Ralph Ince, Rex Lease aud Jola .Mendez. !fi Sunday and Monday—“CALLAHANS fc MURPHYS” with Marie Jfi Dressier, Sally O’Neil and Lawrence Gray. . . . . ■
PAGE SEVEN
at vaiion.i.gatherings the Senator said but “it was only recently I discoverI ed I was being put up before them as ' a curiousity rather than as u speaker." —. —ft •••■ —• Get the Habit —Traae at Home, It Pays
Qeadache? Instead of danreroua heart depreaBnnta take «afo. mild and purely vegetable NATVM's Rkmkot and get rid of the txi . nt pouonathatcauaethetrouble. Nothlm-I 1 ' N? for biliouaneas, sick h.-.uluch.and i "11etipation. Acta pleasantly. Never gripes.
