Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 143, Decatur, Adams County, 17 June 1930 — Page 3
>OE NEWS IM,. ,- w Ruscbe and | K to An-; and spent with their son and B d 51l M Busch... |H. I-... will remain w .eks V| | s. M' Keemn.i M, l: „ , Wayne
■/fr' Mr 1® ®WI I J W *HUfI F I 'Lr- J ffejS? IWMr [W-w! Smart! Quick! For furniture and woodwork there’s nothing like the new quick*drying enamel *■ Jlustaquik FINISH Sixteen lovely shades —easy to brush on—no T| offensive odor —waterproof and dry in 4 hours I tallow & Kohne Wherever There’s 4 News Story—k iS "“’ !ss iWjW 4 *—WWW I I-- Hr If B I B ' I Hf g«. ■ - s s MW I * S -A Wf Wil ■ m ■ ft * -If ■** dF *«k*.4.>.- S S 4» i |F ' ews Cameramen in Moscow tttere's Si Camera Hls not by chance that news pictures are gath iwd Cameramen have to be kept in readiness |wr the possible sources of news stories so t ey I'dl be able to get the pictures. fiily a tremendous organization like International few Photos, Inc., could avail itself of the ser ■■fieramen all over the globe. It is iae " or | re «st news picture gathering organization. ■ and most interesting of these nc " s> ■A and fashion pictures arc brought to you each I International I Illustrated News I fhrough daily service to Decatur Daily Democrat L_
|ml Dr. McKeemans grandmother Mrs. Jestine Hocker on Friday. Mr. C. V. Lahr of Huntington was' Saturday”" <’"! I Mr Harold Whin of Fort Wayne! jand Miss Margart t Ward of Data tur were married at the home of Rev. Vernon Riley ln Monroe 0 „ Saturday evening they were at-1 leompanied by Mr. and Mrs Th--tua Johnson of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. David Roth of Fort i
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JUNE 17. 1930.
?'**’’*■ of Mr ' I n Otis Brandyberry on Sunday. • i- amt Mrs. Albert Gehrig and 'lls. Maud Dorwln of Decatur call"d on Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hendricks op Sunday evening. Mr. and Mix. Alferd Hahnert and .ton Donald motored to Muncie on ■ s .iiuidd\ and attended to business and called on relatives. Miss Elsie H dlgarth ac companied them homo lor a viait. Mr and Mrs. Harry Klophenatien "I Bluffton. Ind., visited Mr. and! ■'l.s. Menno Roth on Sunday. Mr. Omer Lewellen of Muncie I visited hls parents Mr. and Mrs. Z ■O. Lewellen on Sunday. i 'lr. and Mis. T. J. Rayl and grand i on Frank Rayl and Miss Edna Rayl I••• ni ne.d on Sunday from a weeks I I visit with relatives at Kokomo, ind. vlr. and Mrs. Fred Smith of Fort I \\ ayne visited Mr. and Mrs. Charley i lab er on Sa'.uiday. M. Roy Andiews and daughters if h skegon Michigan spent the ' k< nd with his father Mr. Rob--11 Andre vs and Mr. and Mrs. Roy I McDaniels. M.ss Al -ta Hahnart of Fort Aayne sp nt the week-end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rev. Vernon Riley Mr. William Z iked, .vlr.-,. Lawrence Bietler and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gibson attended the Friends quarterly meeting at I Portland, Indiana on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Everhart ami | con Marcel attended the wedding if their soli Mr. Sylvester Everhart i and destine Zerkel at Decatur on I Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Beals of Portland v sited her parents Mr. and Mrs. 11. E. Fairar on Sunday Mr. an I Mrs. Joe Murtaugh of lecatvr ca'led on friends in Mon- ! oe on Sunday evening. Mr. Lewis McPherson of Beli lountaine Ohio and daughter Frans 01 Coliimbis, Ohio were the weck-t nd guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Floyc. Mr. and 1. c. Raymond Crint and j ton Quentin and Kermit visited Mr. an I Mrs. H. C. Parkisoti and family at Ossian on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hendricks motored to Pleasant Milin on Sunnay afternoon and called on Mrs. Elizabeth Fulltr. Miss Creo Crist of Fort Wayne spent he week-end with her parents Mi. and Mrs. J. F. Crist. Miss Marguerite Lewellen returned to Ball Bros Teacher College at Muncie on Sunday after spending a week's vacation with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Z. O. Lewellen. Mr. Harley Ehrsam left Saturday for Pittsburg, Penn, where he has accepted a position with the State Highway commission. o —- Last of Line Passes Paddock Wood, Eng., — cCPT — Mrs. Roe Sturgess, 70, champion woman rat catcher of England, died here recently after carrying on the work in which her family had been engaged for generations. • ——o Man, 77, Eager In Praise Os Famed Konjola Street Railway Employe Restored To Health By New Medicine Enthusiastically Tells Friends B w ■ MR. GEORGE W. COPSEY I “I shall always praise Konjola ! as long as I live," said Mr. George W. Copsey, 703 West Thirty First street, Indianapolis. “About thirteen years ago I began to have trouble with my stomach. Food soured after meals forming gas which bloated and pained me terr bly. Back pains, dizzy spells and’ frequent night risings were : wearing me down in health. Constipation finally added its misery to my condition and I was forced to bed. „ . , “In 1926 I began taking Konjola. I took a great many bottles of this medicine and it was the only thing that ever had the power to restore my health. It built me up generally' until I felt better and stronger than I had been in fifteen years. The stomach and back pains have all gone and I work steadily eveiy day which I consider exceptional for one my age. Today, long after I stopped taking Konjola, I am in excellent health so I know my relief wa« permanent.” Konjola has become the most talked of medicine in America because it makes good. And it makes good in the most stubborn cases when given a fair trial, over a i»eriod of from six to eight weeks. Konjola is sold in Decatur, Ind., at the B. J. Smjjh drug store, and bv all the best druggists in all I towns throughout this entire sec- | tlon.
. _ — The People’s Voice i This column for the use of our l ( readers who wish to make suggestions for the general good or discuss questions of inter- ! eat. Please sign your name to j show authenticity.. It will not ; |be used if you prefer that it ' ' I not be. i 1 • ♦ I GOING BACK HOME It I'm going back home to relieve my , mind By seeing the things I have left , behind; j By visiting where I first fnw the light And slept In the crib near mother at ti ght. I'll open the cate of the garden I well And peen at the things as I did when small; I'll w"’k down the paths with a rhildDh jny And fancy I am the same little boy.! I'll <-tt down under the blossoming trees To watch as I did the big bumble-' bees x As thev come and go with their buzz and hum And laden their legs with the I
honey-comb. I'll look around for the strawberry bed • Where I'll sit and eat 'til my lips are red: I'll run 'n.the house to see my I mother Take her the best with big ones for father. Then I’ll drop right down at my mother’s knee And nrav to her God as I did when J three: And I'll look through her eyes in- 1 to her heart And worship the God of whom I we’re a part. Oh. No' I forgot, my Mother is Gone And rather soon went when left i thus alone; . My four sisters too have fled to the skiee And brother Thomas by auto surs prise. Brother George and I are all that is left ‘ Os the Luckey house, the rest are I bereft; : And the place of our birth is not i the same As it was the day when we youngr sters came. i , And we are going—we soon will be cone— But we'll leave an Impress to help things on Chartge 'e for better if true to our qall When each.serves the purpose for 1 each and all. I ' Our village and town we see them ■ i no more A proud city stands where they did of yore; Her streets are now paved, her. structures refined Her people happy and Just the right kind. 1 So, while I came back to relieve my mind 1 By seeing the things I had left behind And found them ail gone wish the changes great. The progress made Is a joy to relate. The going back home is a helpful ■ thing Though the friends and loved have taken wing; 'Tis a joy and strength the progress to see i And know the homo folks Jia\e advanced with thee. The past is made great ami the present fair By living right and-being on the square; Our fathers huilded better than j they knew For they trusted in God to put; things through. By faith and trust and the work of their hands The wild woods were changed to fine fertile lands; 1 And their children rejoice to carry ’ on With the same Good Spirit since they are gone. [ Their going makes it more easy , for us To pass through death's veil whenever we must; ' i And when from earth's city our leave we take ’ The CITY ETERNAL will lighten the ache. I Copyright 1930, by Leonard W. A. Luckey, Ph.D., D. D. , | o . * THr*,Y . • -/iiPj- ■. “ena'.e ’ Takes up rivers and harbors bill. ! Foreign relations committee con- ', aiders London naval treaty. House I Takes up minor bills on calendar. Communist committee continues I I investigation. Loses Leg, No Pain t' Fremont, O. — (UP) —When James - Bath. 61. of Bangor, Main, was dist covered lying beside a railroad i track here, howling lustly after a r rapidly disappearing passenger .[t .tin, hls finders thought him mor.'tally hurt. Instead he was moaning 11 the loss of his wooden leg. The 11 member was sliced neatly in two, -|the lower end lying between the. I tracks. I
RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT We, the committee appointed to draft resolutions of respect to our departed brother, Oliver Jackson, (Would respectfully submit the following: Whereas, it has pleased In His all wis , mysterious providence to, call from us to Hls realm above, the spirit of our departed Brother Fireman, ami while we bow In humble submission to the divine call, it is but fitting that we bear testimony to his good qualities and express In this manner our deep sorrow, and while we mourn his | decease, our heartfelt sympathy I jgoes to his sorrow stricken family,! for them It is an Irreparable loss. Resolv-d, that we extend to hls family our heartfelt sympathy in this, their time of sorrow and com .mend them to the infinite love and) mercy of God. Resolved, that a copy of these; resolutilons be spread on the mln-j utes of the Decatur Fire Company, a copy of the same be sent to the I family of the deceased brother, 'and also a copy be published in' lour city paper. L. C. Helm. Arthur Clark, Ed Hurst.
—iZZJ __ -Mill L l-lM" 1 - -IZ-' i - I II When tempted to "Reach for a J < 1 Lucky Be moderate —be moderate in all things, even in smoking. Avoid that future shadow* by avoiding over-indulgence, if you would maintain that modern, ever-youthful figure. “Reach for a Lutky instead. Lucky Strike z the finest Cigarette you ever smoked, made of thefmesttobacco—TheCream of the Crop—"lT'S TOASTED." Lucky Strike has an extra, secret heating process. Everyone knows that heat purifies and so 20,679 physicians say that Luckies are less irritating to your throat. /111 "IT’STOA SnP //JlHlhlj ■ C° m,n 9 events IMI fV K 1 cast their shadows before" J” s“-" JxS LOaSLcQ Your Throat Protection—against irritation —against cough *“Bevond 30 years of age, the mortality among ove w< ights rises rapidly with the age and with the weight” says Dr. Brandreth Symonds in an article in The .Medical Record. We do not repiesent tha smoking LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes will bring modern figures or cause the reduction ol flesh. We do declare that “when tempted to do yourself toowell.il' you will “Reach lor aLt( k\ instead, you will thus avoid over-indulgence in things that cause excess weight and. bv avoi di n g over-indulgence, maintain a modern, graceful form. C> <-30. The American Tobacco Co.. Mfra. I . J I
TOCSIN NEWS Mr. ami Mrs. Durn Myors enter-tnlm-il for dinner Sunday In honor of their non Junior* flr«t birthday unnlveisary. Guesta nt the affair i Included Mr. and Mrs. I'arls Ashenel’t ami Margaret Gene Nash | of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. ('mis ' Ruprlght, Mis. Genevieve Nash ami children. Mr. amt Mrs. W. J. Ruprlght anil Opal and Roseanna Myer Mrs. t'rlst Beery came home Saturday from Decatur where she spent | the week with her sister Mrs. Jacob Johnson and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. George Myers and son Gene of Decatur were supper guests Wednesday evening of Mrs. Ella Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Woodward and daughter Margaret called on ' Mr. and Mrs. William Strahm near It'raigville Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Wa 'son land Miss Opal Wasuon of Fott I Wayne visited with relatives at this : place Sunday. Misses Janet and Evelyn Stogdill ! are spending this we k with reintlvea in Fort Wayne and New Haven. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Sowards and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wasson mo-
ton'd to Peru Sunday morning where they spent the day with Mr and Mrs. George Sowards. Mr. and Mrs. John Engle, Mrs. Elmer Engle mid son and Mrs. Ralph' . Sturm r of Fort Wayne were j guests Sunday afternoon of Mr*. Ella Johnson. Mis. John Matthews of Chicago I -Mis. Rank Hull, Miss Roseievn Hull I and Jack White of Fort Wayne . were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. I ’and Mrs. Me] Kieinknlgbt. i Mrs. Phillip Householder of Bltifi'-j ; | ton is HI suffering with pneumonia at tlie home of tier daughter Mrs , Irvin Dailey near Tocsin. Dinner guests in til'' home Sunday were | Me. Phillip Householder, Mr EarI ne t Householder and Mr. and Mrs. • Oliver Cole of Hliiflton anil Mr. . Frank Bowman of Elkhart. Evening Igilests wer ■ Mrs. Earnest SchliniI mer and baby and Mrs. Virgil Nusu i and children of Fort Wayne. • Mi. and Mrs. Earl Sowards spent Sunday afternoon ii the John i Kreigh homes near Zanesville. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kreigh and i daughter Bonnie Lou were dinn- r guests Friday In I lie Russel Wells 1 home in Fort Wayne. -: Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Miller enter- - tained foi dinner Sundav Mr and Mrs. Ned Baker of Chicago Heights I Mr. and Mrs. Georg ■ Klotz and • daughter Mary Anna. Mr. and Mrs.
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Chas Farmer of Fort WiQ’ne, Mrs. Lydia Richey and Mrs. John Mich- ■ iu-Ih of near Crnlgvllle. AfterqfliTh guests were Manin Heckle and Mrs Lawrence Greiner and children Eu-" b tie and Betty spent Sunday, at ‘ ! Blue Luke. Mrs. Ella Johnson and son Buaris" were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. ~ i and Mrs. George Myets ol Decatur.," Mrs. Ida Klelnknlght spent SW 1 "" ■lay afternoon with Mr. ami Mrs. J .Mi 1 Klelnknlght. Mr. ml Mrs, llnrve Kltson of De- : i iitur were guests Sunday after- ! noon of Mr. and Mrs. Hansel Kreigh Mis RuL'i Lindeman of Fort Wayne spent the weekend with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Jule IJndemuu. Mrs. Earl Sowarda entertained •he Willing Workers Bible Class of he Torsi i U. H. Church at her home Friday evening. Rev. F. D. I Pugh hud charge of the lesson taken from t e rhirty-flr t to thirty slilth chapters of Genesis. Those present wer Rev. and Mrs. F. D. Pugh. Mrs. Bay Wolf and children Mrs. Don Bine, Mrs. Ella Dailey, Mrs. F Ha Johnson. Mr-. C. E. Potter, Mrs. Orval He. kley, Mrs. Genevieve 'I.Na h ami daughter Ellen and Mrs. 1 Earl Sowards. I th* Mahlf—*r Mnm*
