Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 265, Decatur, Adams County, 8 November 1932 — Page 5

Society

lovie actor and nturaes for the to one called • to fasten the 1 revet*a on the ■sing o: narrow 1 MEETING of the Union regular meets Rev. Frank street, Friday , ared. The roll fIPATiOK 'H OF CHILD” Discovered ier voluntary from terrible e birth of my ago! I have I nothing had Very reluc-ll-Bran’ with Much to my ; had so take i tarting to UoU i ago.”— Mrs. Abbey Road, Ineland. Irry tests show All-Bran two things which overRipation: “Bulk” to exlintestines; vitamin B to ■he intestinal tract. Bk” in All-Bran is much [of leafy vegetables. In- i My, it forms a soft mass, Itly dears the intestines | |y this is more natural [ng patent medicines — Inful. Two tahlespoonfuls usually sufficient. If not his way, see your doctor. AN also supplies iron for . At all grocers. In the. rcen package. Made by n Battle Creek.

. , , ~ , Hj 1 ' i fl Li'buys ImFEXTRA i CAN OF I JAP-A-LAC | 4-HOUR ENAMEL Come to our store —buy d pint, or a half-pint, or a quarter pint of above Four Hour Enamel at regu.ar price —and get another can the tamo size by pay* **', I ing only Ic. ISN'T that a REAL BARGAIN? ' —'fl This is the popular colorful Quick Drying Enamel, which has no offensive odor. It dries >n only four jj hours with a durable lasting lustre. Look around your home. Isn t there furniture,wood- . ... , work, toys or other articles that need rsfinishing? i | dries in You can do it yourself—and NOW iS TIME ■ hours! to buy while you can got —an extra can for Ic. Bo ‘A’OH ”Ic i K; a coupe n ontitlot (K« undorvgned to ’• ‘ P'«t, or p*«t <** «oov» (or Ic I j thorp it p full purchoto prico oo tini 1 !! oiiod ci . Ch«ch i tot »o!d. ? !ipint Nama 1 pint M | \?ftafer3(anjivare 60. Wf JSD „fpyr yo X7 JWOJVJE? 'V 1

CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Macy 1 Phonos 1000 — 1001 r Tuesday 1 Tri Kappa business meeting, Mi’s 1 Leo Say Firs, s p. m. * Adam® OUinty Choral Society, l. above Brook Store. 7:30 p. m . "i Psi lota Xi, Mrs. William Linn, i 7:30 ip. an. 1 Wednesday Mt. Pleasant Bible class. Mr. and - ] Mns. Charles Barnhouse. gp. ni. 1 i *V. B, Standard Beir rs, Mrs. U. i O. Porter, 7:30 p. m. i Better Homes Home Economics > Club, above Model IHatchery, Moilroe. Uuoled Bivllrreu, W. M. A., Mrs. . Gaylle 11 nag la ml, 2 ip, m. . Alpha Zola Bridge Club, Mbs VirIgtola Lfturcji,t, 7:30 p. m. 1 Beulah Chapel Ladies Aid. Mrst Charles Arnold, all-day. - Zion Lutheran Mi.ssio:i;i v Soi dety, Mrs. Arnold Gerberiing, 2 p. m. N. and T. Club, Mrs. Carl Hammond. 2 p. m. Histo-ical Club, Mrs. Fred Handier, 2:30 ip. m. i Ladies Shakespeane Club, Mrs. . Fraiitk France, 2:30 p. ni. Ic-Nlck Club, Miss Marie Zeser, . 7:30 p. m. Thursday Lutheran iLadies Aid Society, sehoolhouse 4 ip ni I £ stern Star, Masonic Hall, S: 00. I Young Matrons Club, Mrs. Ben | Kchiroyer, 7:30 p. m. ; Union Clia]>el Ladies Aid., Mrs- < ■ | Georg- Crtimer, 1:30 p. m. , I iM. E. laidies Aid New England j j Turkey dinner, church dining room , 11 ti>. m to 1 p. an., supper, f, to 7 i. | [i. m. Friday Union Chape! C. i. C. Class, Rev. i Fla ,k Engle, 7:30 p. m. prompt. < Ben Hur Tirzah Club, Beu Hur 1 hall, after lodge. Saturday [ Christian Ladies Aid Chicken | supper, church basement, 5 to 7 p. m. 1 Monday Research Club, Mrs. R. D. Myers, 2:30 p. m. ; meut a. d tho women mnming the 1 books of the New Testament. A pot-luck supper will be served I promptly at seven-thirty o’clock and ■ all members are urged to be pre- ] sent. i - MEETING OF BRIDGE CLUB I The Monday Night Bri.'go Chib! | me.t at the -home o.' Mrs. Cianti' An-; i i dcr-’on, Monday night. One aridi- A ' tio.. il guest. Mrs. Sylvester Ever-J i ' ( hart, w;t : present. j i Five games of bridge were played ; : j- d high score prizes were awarded < to Mrs. Fred Blosser and Mrs. Dave: | Rice. The hostess served a lunch- i I eon at the close of the gains. 11 Mrs. Blosser will be hostess at j l tho .next regular club meeting to be ; ■ j held to two weeks. j, The Ladies lAid Society of tho) ! Lutheran Church will meet for i 1 limiting in the sehoolhouse Tlntra- 1 day afternoon, at four o'clock. The Ben Hur Tirzah Club will ' i meet in the Ben Hur hall, Friday 1 night following lodge. . -

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1932.

INTERESTING TOPIC GIVEN AT CLUB MEETING The members of the Research Club met at the home of Mrs. Nellie Haney, Monday afternoon. Mrs. J. T. Merryman was leader for the afternoon and chose as her subject, “Adventures in Tropics and Snows.” Mrs. Merryman stated that there are two kinds of places on the old earth where adventure is so busy that one wakes every morning with a new story to tell the children. One of these places is in the cold of tile frozen world, like the wastes of the Artie. There the world is covered with ice and snow from the beginning of time to the end. Most adventures in this country are hard and cruel. But as long as history has been in the making, liter, have tried to conquer (he two poles and they come back defeated in almost everything but spirit and the stories they love to tell. Another one of adventure's favorite haunts is the green jungle. Winds do not blow there. The air is still and hot. Everything happens unexpectedly and mysteriously and man is almost defenseless against the uncertainty. Adventure can be treacherous. Adventure can bring disaster and tragedy Adventure cun be silent and tease and mock, and again it has been known just to have a great hSg laugh. Adventure is right at one’s elbow only most of the time one passes it by. Mrs. R. D. Myers will be hostess at the next club meeting on Monday afternoon and Mrs. Fred Smith will be the leader. ENTERTAIN dinner guests Mr. and Mrs. Tony Koli.ne of south of the city .had' as their d inner guests Sunday, Mir. and Mrs. Robert Mliter and daughter Mary end son Jerome, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Gay ‘and daughter Catherine. The Mt. Pleasant Bible class will meet Wednesday evening at eight o'clock with Mir. and Mrs. Charles Barnhouse. LASIhHN SIAKS TO HAVE PROGRAM The regular st ated mooting of the Eastern' Stans will Ik> held Thursday night at eight o'clock in the Masonic hall. A special program lvs been arranged including oindle light service, special music, and 'lnstructive talks. At tlie close of the meet.ing refreshmer,t» will be served in the dining room by a. committee composed of the Mead am e» Wilson Lee C. C. Pumphrey, and C. A. Dugan. LADIES AID TO SERVE NEW ENGLAND DINNER The Ladles Aid Society of (he | Methodist 10, isccr al Church will | serve a New England turkey dinner in the church dint.g room, Thursday. Novembe r id. The dinner is an , annua!' Ifnlr. it will be served from J eleven until one o’clock. The dinner | will Is? forty cents for adults n. d | twenty five cents for children and high school pupils. I A cafeteria supper will he served | Thursday night from five to seven | o’clock. i The mi mi for the dinner at tite non hour will include turkey, chicker,, mashed (totatoes, sweet potatoes, gravy, dressing, creamed j slaw, cranberry sauce, pickles, celery, jelly, mince and pumpkin pie, ti'i id, butter ' lid coflee. Tlie mi :iu for the supper will lie! cncialhi. n 1 chicken, mashed |potit::! . swi l l pot Hoes, linked heanti, gravy, dressing. Macaroni, potato isa'ad, fruit salad, pie, cake, rolls i and co fee. | i CLASS HOLDS ANNUAL THANKSGIVING DINNER Tlv Work and Win class of the ‘ United Brethren Sunday School |held its mnnal Thanksgiving snip ji t and business meeting at Ulo co Dairy home of Mr. and Mrs. llumI Amid Monday evening. Following the -upper, the cl 1 r,® president leaded the buninoas meeting to crier. J There were fifty-seven members l<hi!dren, and guests preseat. Tlie levelling was spent in the «! ,glng of I'kymns and in pi tying games. The Ic Mick Clu-h will meet Wednesday night at seven-thirty o’clock j with Mias Mario Zener. The Ladies Aid Society of tho Christian Church will serve a twenty cent chicken supper in the eliiii'cli I ..moment, night from live to seven o’clock. The public is invited to attend. — —-—o— . Fort Wayne Surgeon Dies At Home Today Ft. Wayne, Nov. B—(UP)8 —(UP) —Dr. B. P. Weaver, prominent local surgeon and members of the lAnverican College of Surgi one died at his home here today. Cause of death was not a;n'"ounceri. o Portland Livestock Darns Are Destroyed Portland, Ind., Nov. 8— (U.R) Fire believed to have been started by traps destroyed three livestock barn.- at the fairgrounds here early today. T o Get the Habit — Trades at. Home I

| , Fire Rescue Revealed Alleged Death Plot * * * * * * * Saved from Nailed-Up Room in Blazing House, Wife Charges Mate and Son with Attempt to Burn Her Alive as Climax to Long Period of Brutality. * Kka 6 E Diuacd in 'Fire Trap:' Arrov shows Naiied-up Dooku Hacked to safety out of a blazing room that had been securely nailed up, Mrs. B. E. Dillard, of Atlanta. Ga., told police an amazing story, in which she charged that the fire had been a deliberate attempt on the part of her husband and son, Earl, to burn her alive. Following the arrest of the husband and son, the rescued woman told authorities that the alleged attempt on her life was the climax of two years of brutality, during which she was virtually banished to one room in the house, denied food, clothing and heating and bathing facilities. The door which connected this room and the main part of the dwelling was nailed up, according to Mrs. Dillard, and she was obliged to go in and out through a back yard. When Bremen went ta Mrs. Dillard’s rescue in the burning house, they found that both doors had been fastened on the outside. They further discovered that the fire had originated in a pile of kindling beneath the room where she was imprisoned. Dillard and his son are hold without bond for investigation, but both vigorously deny Mrs. Dillard’s story of a death plot. It was only a short time ago that Mrs. Dillard swore out a warrant against the two she accuses because of alleged threats.

OLDEST CONVICT ;■ WONT DOIT PEN Parchman, Miss.— (U.R) — A. J. Tabor, Mississippi's oldest convict, isn’t going to risk the hardships of 1 a cruel world for the comforts of ' prison life. So, perfectly happy with his prison life, Tabor, now 89, refuses to accept a pardon, and to the suggestion recently by r son that he peti- J tion for a pardon, trs replied: “Not on your life, Ynp needn’t I say a word about getting mo out.! I ain’t going. You can’t beat this ]

"N'lturt'intXe Raw 8 •' ' tobaccos haw no place in pj No raw tobaccos in Luckies - -that’s why they’re so mild vS® \W‘E buy the finest, the very finest mellowing, are then given the iW'/ ««Y\ vfil tobaccos in all the world— benefit of that Lucky Strike puriWI ( I | |l| but that does not explain why fyi n g process, described by the u'l t mvHL folks everywhere regard Lucky words— It’s toasted". That’s \ to « Strike as the mildest cigarette. why folks in every city, town and \The fact is, we never overlook the hamlet say that Luckies are such truth that "Nature in the Raw c >g ar^ttes. is , sddom Miid ''- s ° th “c fine it's toasted” tobaccos, after proper aging and That package of mild Luckies

j place for comfort, and I’ll be right 'here when the Lord calls me,” He has served 17 years of a life ! sentence after conviction in a slaying cafee from Lafayette county. ! A party was held for him in the home of Manager and Mrs. O. G. Tanrt on his 89th birthday. He is the only prisoner on the farm, who is allowed to leave the prison boundaries without permission. He spends part of his time fishing and almost any day he can be found on the bank of some nearby lake. His only required work iu to handle a soft drink stand in tlie penitentiary office. Celebrate the Election Confetti dance. Wed. Sunset.

Harvard Students Strong For Rowing Cambridge.— (U.R) —Harvard students, from the graduate .school as well as freshman and upperclassmen, have taken to rowing as their favorite exercise. The Weld boathouse on the Charles rivers reported through Blake Dennison, official checker for the | Harvard A. A. at the boathouse, j that 8,874 calls for wherries, broad j compromises, narrow compromises ! and singles shells were received during the spring season. So great was -the demand this | year that a time limit was placed! on the number of minutes each ‘ shell could be used by an individ-1 ual. I

Charles Barnhouse of rural route fouir sui.fe.red a broken arm Sunday evening while cranking an aut<> mobile. V' ughin. Schlagenhauf and Miss Mary Schtagenhauf of Bluffton visited with Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Eekrote and Miss Olga Heller over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Close of Fort Wayne returned to their borne Monday after spending tlie week-end j in this city the guests of Mr. and i Mrs. Otto Kirsch. Ernest Uhriclc of tlie Irene Byron i Saiiitorium in Font Wayne spent: the week end .in ihis city and voted here this morning. Broken Ribs Pained Her For Six Weeks Ueedley, Cal. — (U.R) — For Six weeks. Mrs. Hilma Ditanon com- \ plained of pains in her left side. She felt the pain, she recalled, just after she slipped and fell in her home. She went to a hospital, where physicians found that all the libs on her left side were broken. She will recover. Patients Think lip Witticisms On Name Indianapolis, Ind. —(U.R) —Convalescing patients at the U. S. Veterans Hospital here devote their! spare time to thinking up new witticisms on the name of their! chief surgeon, Doctor Doctor. i Doctor Doctor prefers to sign j his name W. R. Doctor, M.D., but I ratients find it could be M. 1) W. j R. M. D., or any one of various combinations of plays on his name.! His son, who has inclinations to- j ward his father’s profession, will bear the same name, but will be I more complicated by the addition j ot Jr. “Everytime 1 meet somebody I'm 1 compelled to go into my ancestry,” Doctor Doctor said. “I’m of Ger-1 man descent. Translated into German, I think my name would be ’Artz.’ But I've never asked my J

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parents. I'm the only one of the Doctors who is a doctor.” > During the World War, Doctor Doctor won a Croix de Guerre for bravery in the trenches. o Caretaker Gets Mine In Lieu of His Pay Wenatchee, Wash. (U.R) It isn't every day you can buy a million dollar gold mine for $2,000. I J. D. McVane recently was giv|en u bill of sale by the sheriff to the famous old Illtwett mines on | Boshaatln Creek, from which "’tnll- | lions of dollars worth of gold have been taken since its discovery ! nearly 50 years ago. McVane, a caretaker at .the miniing properties, had a claim for wages of $2,303.95 against the I Washington Gold Mines Corporation, present owners. They were unable to pay and his attorney today took the entire mining property as satisfaction for tile claim. The mines, including a 20-stamp mill, have not been operated for many years, although they were once one of the most famous properties in the northwest. African Dodder Didn’t Dodge Stray Bullet Revere, Mass.—(U.R)—John Bell jis an African Dodger by profession I but he draws the line at dodging j bullets. Taking a nap in back of his conI cession at an amusement resort ] here, Bell was awakened by a stinging sensation in the calf of his | left leg. A slra.v bullet fired by an | Inaccurate marksman at an adja- | cent shooting gallery had struck « him. VICKS COUGH DROP ... All you’ve hoped for in a Cough Drop—medicated with ingredients of * as* {« W Vapoßub