Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 281, Decatur, Adams County, 28 November 1930 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
HUNTER DIES; TWO CRITICAL Thanksgiving Day Hunting Accidents Fatal To One Hoosier Hunting accidents on Thanksglv■ j ing Dav cairned one death. critic.il ■ inlur.cH to two other persons in I Indiana, and lesser injuries to one , ; i youth. blank W. Seeger 28 of Frankfort , j died of u wound suffered when ills [ i shotgun dlscarged accidentally as
CUTSHAWS CUT SIATE DRUG CO. — SATURDAY SPECIALS — 50c IPANA TOOTH PASTE V ...29C .$2.00 S.S.S. BLOOD TONIC . ~ $1.59 50c GILLETTE BLADES 39C SI.OO ADLERIKA 84 C SI,OO BLUE ROSE FACE POWDER 67C 60c AQUA VELVA 39C $1.20 CALDWELLS SYRUP PEPSIN 79C 50c JERGENS LOTION 3/C SI,OO DR. MILES NERVINE 74C SI.OO PRINCESS PAT POWDER 79C $1.20 VLNOI 98c $1.25 CREOMULSION 97C $1.50 ALARM CLOCKS 98c 35c VICKS SALVE 24C 135 N. 2nd ST. PHONE 56 FREE DELIVERY WHY PAY MORE?
© & I A Happy Surprise for | s Christmas Club Members: © e © ® $ SMRiiiM CHRISTMAS CLUB checks will be Q © *• X) ' mailed to our Christmas Club mem- €*■ ® <7 kers the first of next week. This is O ® iLu ■£! 5 done to ® e ® 9 ~ J ■» I — ena, ’ !c members to profit by the prevail- G O JT * ng l° w P r ’ ces “ — a ’d employment by immediate and sub- > stantial increase of community pur- @ £ W* LyTf chasing power 9 \ a A 7; i i 3—as a service to the community, which we Ir * ’ jjg.i/ conceive to be not only a banker’s duty ® j/wt'c hut a^so a verv pleasant privilege. O ® 0 • This bank is thus releasing $15,000 which will be a decided benefit to the whole community. X • Do your Christmas shopping promptly. Buy from our 7 q local merchants who stand back of every piece of mer- ® chandise they sell and are at this moment offering ex- Z ceptional values. Z 9 Your Christmas giving will make you more happy S than ever this year because your dollars will do double @ 9 duty — securing extra value and making jobs more • plentiful for others. @ ? OLD ADAMS COUNTY BANK I • a
'he wus climbing through a wire] lienee. He is survived by a bride of | six weeks. Painful but not serious woiinda I In the legs were suffered hy Homer 1 | It. Celling, 20. Purdue University | indent, when he got in the line of | .ire of his companion. J. M. Kessler! ' >! Anderson. They were hunting 1 ! a hits near Brookston. The shotgun which John McKe'* wus < leaning at his home 12 miles i [north of Rochester, utter returning (from u hunting trip, discharged ac- [ | < identally and Ills daughter. Catherine, 7, was wounded critically. * Serious injuries were suffered 1 by Gilbert Mangold 18. <>: near Fair-1 I view, when he was shot acciden- i [tally by his hunting companion, I Robert Heaver, form the opposite!
■ A • isl v mc.« * JMb > A A Milt IM' ? fIHH -•v * JI •• '''lk . • ..„• * - Idv W Reading t'rcm left to right—Mrs. Will Reynolds, Elwood; Mrs. Cora Campbell, Brown county, Ind; Mrs. Rebecca Nelson. Melrose Park, ill; Mrs. Cantp-a Schaffer, Mt. Liberty, Brown county. Ind; Mrs. Adelia Patterson. Monroe. Ind.. R. R. 2. (age 80); Mrs. Mary A. Stull, Mt. Liberty. Brown county, Ind.
side o fa bush into which they had chased a rabbit. o MAGLEY NEWS 1 | ♦_ « Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bioemker ! spent Tuesday and Thursday at I Mr. and Mrs. William Worthman’s. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Helmrick spent I the week-end at Detroit. Michigan. ! O. V. Dilling called on | Miller Saturda yevening. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bioemker, Lewis Manns and Mrs. William Worthman at ended the funeral of I Miss Gertrude King of Geneva Wed- ! nesday. i Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dettlnger of Detroit Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Keil and family of Van Wert ; Ohio, Miss Bettie Dettinger and Alton Hower of Garrett Indiana spent the week-end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dettinger. Fred Bioemker and Lewis Manns made a business trip to Bluffton | Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jaberg en- | tertained for dinner Sunday Mr. (and Mrs. William Worthman and , Mrs. Ma-ry Warden and family Mr. and Mrs. Ed Borne and family of I Preble, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Beiberirch and son Dwight of Fort Wayne i Crist Borne and children Eulalia
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 1930.
Celebrates Her 100th Birthday Anniversary
I and Chalmer. j Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kolter and [ I son Robert were dinner guests of [ Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dettinger and I family. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bioemker 1 .and Miss Minnie Bioemker visited I Mrs. Caroline .laberg and daughter Whelma Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kruetzman [entertained for dinner Sunday Mr. [ and Mrs. Irvin Lockner, and Mr. i an d.Mrs. William Worthman and [ ! son Loren. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keller Mr. I . and Mrs. Edgar Woods tlnd Mr. and 1 Mrs. Arthur Fruchte of Fort Wayne visited with Mr. and Mrs. Frank-j dn Fruchte and family Sunday a:-. [ ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Hilgeman and family entertained for dinner Sun-! ■ day Mr. and Mrs Fred Bioemker Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Peters, Mr. and . Mrs. William Worthman, Mr. and] : Mrs. Otto Hildebrand and daugh- 1 ters Irene, Marie, and Helen, and i Jacob Bioemker and daughter Em- i I ma «f Preble. RELIEF FROM i COLD PROMISED i BYWEATHERMAN Snow Predicted for Indiana: Six Deaths Are Blamed on Cold [COLDEST ON RECORDS (By United Press) ! Temperatures in Indiana conj tinned around the zero point to-1 I day, with promise of some relief ! [tomorrow, with resumption of[ i snowfall. j No deaths directly attributable Ito the cold, bad been roprted, dei spite the coldest Thanksgiving Day i with'n 40 years of weather records. | Six persons died, however, and several were injured, as the indi- ! rect result of cold and icy pave- [ ments. Charlotte Chapman 4S. of Muncie, died of injuries suffered near i LaFountaine Thanksgiving Day, (when the auto in which she was [riding skidded in the snow and struck a telephone pole. Mrs. L. Alien Wiseman, living [ on a farm near Salem, died of exposure after suffering an apoplectic stroke in a feed lot. She laid in the zero weather for several hours before her husband found her. Heart disease, aggravated by the cold, caused the death of Charles I Huff, 57, while he was riding on a load of corn fodder in Terre Haute. The blinding snowstorm of the holidays obscured the view of an auto driver, and Mrs. Henry i Krouse, 65, of Argos, was killed when the machine was struck by a Nickel Plate train. William P. Wren, 58, of West i Terre Haute, died of a broken neck when his truck skidded from a highway and relied down a 20foot embankment. W. L. Rankin, 51, of Saline, Mich., was another victim of a skidding j aiito. His machine overturned in Mishawaka. Temperatures today ranged from slightly below zero in the northern sections to slightly abeve in central and southern portions. Snowdrifts in the northern part 1 of the state impeded traffic on somej north and-south highways, but for the most part there was no interference with travel on roads and railroads. j
Among the many injuries caused by slippery roads was the case of two men who drove their auto into u snowplow cn state road No. 30 east of Valparaiso with such velocity that they wrecked both their machine and the plow. James Fair, 25, Cassopolis, Mich., and John McClelland, 28, of Chicago, occupants of the auto, were recovering today in a Valparaiso hospital.
W* J7 a] t. 7■;?.;;; ~CI- , H v.’7X 0 0 tOS;; 11 .CItiZSi-Swei’L-’.. •» * - YU ; • V> '.‘J ■ * •■• . r\\ « • ■ 4 ■.< - - ’-■ ’XM3Z - K77 * • r ' 7 N 2L2 Y~ M ... .•«*. : <C A * — I? ‘ s x wßk | Santa Claus Av and his Reindeer will he in Decatur * * all day lfi* ! - » . IHBa’ -’AHMI TOMORROW Y 7 7 Bring the Kiddies to meet Bl ’ this Jolly Old Fellow and ® >7 » to see his Live Reindeer. iP'ff'J l „'4 y j sia 1 EMMSB • ■ -.xMM-1 Don’t Miss This 7 ~‘ihL’a j ■ 11 ii.■ .i ■ n in. i i i j!:■ / ! * r ffij* 3 HB Decatur Merchants are Ready for Christmas Shoppers w£-‘’ '■■ with stocks of all kinds suitable for Gifts. i Do your Shopping Early jfi ■ sfa <«O1 Decatur Offers More Because : ! Decatur Has More To Offer «J —-J '. ||Jl r i—
lURAL CHURCHES Willshire Circuit United Brethren in Christ Rev. T. Weyer, pastor. Willshire Sunday School, 9:30 a. tn. Floyd Morrison, superintendent. Preaching, 10:30 a. tn. by Robert Schumm. Christian Endeavor at 6:30 p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30 p. m. ■ Winchester I Sunday School at 930a. m. Meranda Bolinger, superintendent. Preaching at 10:30 a. m. by the pastor. Evangelistic service at 7 p. m. Th evangelistic efforts will continue indeflnately, beginning each ! evening at 7 o'clock. Everybody is | invited to attend. Calvary Evangelical Church Sunday School al 9:30, Chalmer Miller Superintendent. Prayer and Praise service at 10:30 conducted by the class leader O’is Shlfferly. On Thursday night this congregation will attend the First Church at Decatur to hear Bishop L. 11. Seager. o ’ Mt. Tabor M. E. Circuit H. E. Matteson Pastor Mt. Tabor M. E. Church 9:30 A M. Sunday School E. Koos Superintendent. 9:45 A. M. Preaching by Pastor. Clark's Chapel M. E. Church 10:00 Sunday School C. Clem, Superintendent. 11:00 — Preaching by pastor Salem M. E. Church 9:30 A. M. Sunday School C. Sipe Superintendent. 7:30 P. M. Wed. Prayer service. , The Salem Revival Services are | expected t oclose on Sunday evening at hich time there will be a Un- i ion meeting. Let us have a good representation from this circuit. The service begins at 7:00 p. m. [
HOSPITAL NOTES i Miss Patsy Garard, daughter of 1 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garard, 719 Mercer avenue, underwent.u tonsillectomy operation at the Adams County Memorial Hospital thin mottling. — o—A— Get the Habit—Trade at Home.
W REVERENCE u|| Alter all, the essential requirement I '[TA of funeral service is reverent cure of | VJi 1 the loved one who has passed on, and i ’ M sympathetic assistance to those who J 'A’ remain behind. While we have keot I] Vk’i I ally abreast of the times in technique F ! and equipment, we have not lost sight H of the fundamental need on which our 1 yM profession is based. I S.E.BLACK ) M funeral Director I M 206 South Second St. t W - L|j H 1 " 1 !_ 1 --?'■»« r F™ !UI I . ' a. = ■■Sill Ba JM.tm ra n — Vis
station WBOWat triinHlH-reil nols, where he win h n •he Station WJHL ** wn W®ll Rutaced Club n, 2« n,a ’ Hall, I rida 4 x C M (■><• couple. " ‘X|
