Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 21, Decatur, Adams County, 24 January 1935 — Page 3
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SSL paper MEETING g,„-li>'r wus i‘” ! ‘ IK ; , li.mx- W edm*-1 Mn-f-" , call with - ,llil ' r for uii.l i-a'l •> .-ph ndKl ..■!•>! Minina Frontier. (| ,|„. gold , . interest-! id you je easily? H 4* M appetite K | , losing weight 9 /Jj t nervous t pale ■pt gamble with your body reason out the cause of | condition? wr |irst thought nuiy be, “I must That's not all. You should you do eat. Frequently, ■1 cells are low ... and this, ■is « hat makes you feel weak. ■ is lour trouble the stomach tailing for sufficient food, ■ut mav be lacking. But what ■nee S.S.S. makes when taken Z < meals. Just try it and ■>u your appetite and diges■rer Stimulates the flow of gastric ■><l also supplies the precious ■icuu'iits so necessary in blood-up-building. Do ■ iu:ir l>e tlie rainbow you need Haway present discouragement ■r health condition. © S-S.S. c °. ■' l dO M insist r T J ■ .S. be V I if Id K BL* K 1S Fjfc ■>A Makes yout V I feel like I Ey . 1 yourself 1 If* again ■2 • 11
ffaga wm® "W/ Or Svßzi w liuls /II lb 111 /IK /JI 11 low Sr ■ < i 11 1 ti rmyw /» f. I- //-VI 1 IMS A( 720 Jr. ®Z Hl/ S H\’\ o ■A iB 13 © V7 U AU patterns 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Wrap coin carefully.
IL -Simple Elegance, This is designed for sizes 14, 16. 18 • 36, 38 and 40-inches bust ?. re - Size 16 requires 2j£ yards ’inch material with I*4 yards of th contrasting. ’ harming “Cocktail" •• This style is designed for 14 16, 18 years, 36 38 and 40- ’ bust measure. Size 16 re- ’ yards of 39-inch materia! ‘U yards of 39-inch lining and ards of braided trimming 879—Cute Party Dress. This ts designed for sizes 2, 4 and 6 Size 4 requires 1?4 yards of
D J liy Democrat, “Fashion Center’, Times Square, P. O. Box frStiuj York ' N- Y ’ (Editor's note —Do not mall orders to Decatur,
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mite Mary Macy Phone* 1000—1001 Thursday Christian Ladles Aid Society, Mrs. Sum Chronlater, 2 p. m. Eastern Star regular stated ..•neoting. Masonic Hull. 7:3(1 p. m M. E. Ladies Aid Society, .Mrs. Nellie Haney, 2:30 p. m. United Brethren V. 'I. S. claw, Aile n Porter. 7:30 p. m. Friendship Village Homo Economics Club, Mrs. Clara DoF h, 1:30 p. m. Baptist W. M. S„ Harve Shroll, 2:30 p. m. Zion Lutheran Ladins Ai' quilting, Lutheran e' hool, 1 p. m. Friday W O. T. M. pinochle and bunco party. Moose Home, s p. m. American Legion Auxiliary. Legion Hall, 7:30 p. m. Zion Senior Walther League card party. Lutheran school, 7:30 ip. m. Saturday Christian Church dinner and euptper, churoh basement, U u. m. to 1 ,p. m. and 5 to 7. p. m. Zion Reformed Mission Band, church 2:30 p. m. M nmouth high school girls bake sale. Brock store, all-d ly. Monday Literature Detpartment. Mrs. John Tyndall. 7:30 p. m. Music Department, Mrs. C. E. Bell 7:30 p. m. Dramatic Departm nt. Miss Eva Acker, 7:30 p. m. Art Department. Mrs. A. D. Suttles, 7:30 p. mResearch Club, Mrs. C. C. Pumphrey, 2:30 p. m. Tuesday Carpe Diem Cluh theatre party • ind .socia meeting. Mrs. Jonas Bush. Kirkland Ladies Club. Kirkland school. 1 p. m. D. H. S- Seinor class play, school auditorium. 8:15 p. m. Wednesday Historical Club. Mrs. Ben DeVor 2:30 p. m. Ladies Sil ikespeare Club, Mrs. Ralph Yager. 2:30 p. m.
Pikes Pfuk. She also described trhe different mines dwelling w;on the Big Bonanza. The club will meet in one week with Mrs. Ralph Yager and this will Ibe the annual business meeting-
39-inch material with I>4 yards of I-inch ribbon. The Guide to Chic You can have a very smart wardrobe at little expense of time and effort — our attractive BOOK OF FASHIONS is just bulging with ideas that you can turn into chic wearable clothes. Send for your copy today. Price of BOOK 10 cents. Price of PATTERN .15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap com carefully.
DECATUR daily DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1935.
CLUB ENJOYS INTERESTING PAPER Tie Historical Club met Wedn .s---d iy afternoon at the h me of Mrs. ■I. M. Miller with seventeen memhern present. The roll cull was responded to with quotations mid current ev nts. Mni. M E. Hower had the paper and she chose us her mlliject, "The First Famous Girl at the White House,” She whs Miss Nellie Curtis,! the adopted daughter of Georg i Washington. Mrs. Hower told bout tier educa ; tloa. She wus ten years old when I Washington was elected preßident.j Iler marriage to Lawrenc • L 'wlsi took pla e at Mt. Vernon on Washington's birthday, February 22, 179 b. | The next me ting of the club will be held with Mrs. Ben DeVor next Wednesday afternoon. MEETING OF BRIDGE CLUB The members of the Alpha Z ta Bridge Club met Wednesday night with Mrs. George laiurent. Prizes in bridge were won by Miss Marie Murtaugh and Mrs. Herb Kern. Following the gumes a one course luncheon wa.s served Mrs. Kern will he hostess to the club members at the next meeting to be held in two weeks. • FINAL PARTY OF SERIES OF THREE The third and final of the .series of pinochle and bun > parties will ibe held In the Moose Home Friday night at eight o'clock. These parties have been sponsored during the past few weeks by the Women of the Moose. At the party tomorrow night grand prizes in the games will be awarded. Refreshments will also be served. The members of O'.ie Carpe Diem Club will enjoy a theatre party at the Adams theatre Tuesday night at seven o'clock. A social meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Jonas Bush, 611 North Second street following the theatre party. The annual guest night of the cluh i will be an event of Tuesday night, | February 12, at seven-thirty o'clock at tkie horn? of Mru. Roy Johnson. MEETING OF MINNEHAHA CLUB The monthly m eting cf the Kirk- ; land Minnehaha 4-H Club was held at the home of Miss Hazel Yake Tuesday evening. During the business meeting three new members were taken into the cluh. Nadine Berger, Betty "Yaney and Betty Rosnaugh. The cluh now has a total enrollment of twenty one members-
1 I ' *bb S Ik *"R■ *>*...jt t g JHa < Zf/JSlfe B B ' S Z. Jrig |Z; ..|8 WohMHHk 4 V sja» *«« •; iMMHßgplßrww ?.?. < 'W-« &ys3HEWSK gO? JK Jj&f t tfilft W wHPWBHIHr X* W-MMF er TFi!pwM. y wF * A wP*** - .- s£% . CTfe4RwW - O WBiBBIIWwi M where Chesterfield tobaccos J ust what is meant are blended and cross-blended. JE by cross-blending tobaccos... and 0W oes jna^e a cigarette milder fW XZ\x and taste better... / Well, in blending you take two or more , | i tobaccos and mix them together—a rather simple " y process. But cross-blending goes a step further... T N making Chesterfields we take and the right kinds of aromatic Turkish. Jf ./ Bright tobacco from Virginia, the Then, instead of just mixing the to- / Carolinas, Georgia and Florida. We baccos together, we blend and cross/Cx" X.\ / take Burley tobacco from Kentucky and blend them so that all the different H (- 7 bp :> / Tennessee, and tobacco from Southern flavors go together into one full flavor /f\ -4 IQ (ZBv / Then in addition to these home- smokers like. Monday Wednesday s / grown tobaccos we take tobacco grown Cross-blending tobaccos as it is done luchezia LILY K in Turkey and Greece. in Chesterfields gives the cigarette a BOIU lol™. “^dchobiT 1 * We balance these mild, ripe home- pleasing taste and aroma —they're 8 P. M. (c. s. T.) -COLUMBIA network grown tobaccos with the right amounts mtld and yet They Satisfy. © 1935. LicciTT A Myb«s Tobacco Co,
Giiniea were played after which refreshments were served by the hostesses, Hazel Yake, Delores Byerly ami their mothers. Mrs. Lew Yake and Mis. Victor Byerly. Thoe ■ pr...ent were Dorothy Hoffman, Virginia Hoffman, Margiret I" ling. Juanita L h.mati. Betty Yaney. Eileen Eurni.m, Delores Byerly, Edna Smith, Mary Margnnt Henschen, Betty Fmnough, i Irene Fosnotlgll, Nadine Barger, AnI nabel Henschen, Hazel Yake, Donna I It He Roth, Eileen Byerly and the Header, Miss Mildred Hensclien. Ths next meeting of the club will be held at the home of Miss Eileen j Byerly. I MEETING of STUDY CLUB UNIT Our luidy of Good Counsel Study Club, unit seventeen, met at the home of Miss Monica Colchin Monday evening. After the regular routine of business a social hour was enjoyed. The next mooting will be held with Miss Dorothy Heimann In, two weeks. All members of the Kirkland Ladies Club are requested to he present at the meeting to be held | Tuesday, January 29 at the Kirkland school as plans for the menu for the farmers institute to be held February 8 will be made. A request has also been made that all members pay their dues in the January meeting if possible. The hostesses for next Tuesday at Mrs. Lieb Arnold, Mrs. Helen Mann. Mrs. Cathryn Ehrman and Mrs. Edna Shady. ENTERTAINS CLUB MEMBERS Mrs. Joe Le.se was hostess to the memb im of the Five Hundred Club at her home Wednesday evening. Prizes in the games were won by Mrs. 'Herman Gillig and Mrs. Lose A. luncheon was served following the games. Mrs. A. R. Ashbaucher will .entertain the • luh members at a meeting in two weeks. PLAN TO PRESENT PLAY A soci .1 meeting of the Zion Junior Walther L, ague was h id Wednesday nip'it in the Lutheran school. Eighteen members. Mrs. Paul Schultz, and two senior advisors, Rev. Schultz and Karl Krudop. I were present. Games wore played during the evening. It w. s decided tn present •i pl :y and play books were distributed to ten prospective members of the cast. The name of the play is ‘‘Sound Y’our Horn” by Howard Reed. Refreshments were served by the
tommlttoo, Walter Hollo, George, Hunter and VI In Hunt r. A business mooting will be hold February ! 1.3, Tlie Literature Department of the Woman's Club will moot with Mrs. John Tyndall Monday night ut zev-en-thlrty o'clock. ECONOMICS CLUB HEARS DELEGATES Mrs. Ll.iyd Bryan assisted by Mrs. Alber: Johnson and lire !.<• F’cm ing entertained the members of the Hoot township Horne Economics Club Tuesday afternoon. A report of the short course at Purdue was given by Mis. Wiidu Rice and Mrs. Frank Kil.son, delegates. Following a so ial hour re-: freahments were served. ENTERTAINS BRIDGE CLUB Miss M>iry Ann L ,:e ent rtainod the members of her Bridge Club Wednesday night at he rhome. Miss , Thelma Cook r- reived the high] score <prize In the games. Mtys Lose, assisted by Miss Margaret Lo-e served a delicious two course luncheon. The next meeting will be held with Miss Lu- ill. Miller in two weeks. o McNutt Commutes Death Sentence Indianspolis, Ind., Jan. 24—(UPl —A 1 ist minute reprieve by Gov. Paul V. McNutt will save John Skora, Gary mill worker, from d nth in tlie electric chair at the Indiana state prison tomorrow night. Acting on recommendation of the 1 trial judge and prosecutor, the Governor commuted Skera’s sentence to life imprisonment. , Skora was convicted of killing his landlady. Mrs. Theresa Markovich. Cl, n Park, mother of six child-1 ren, during a • ard game. He testified that he was drunk, having consumed four quarts of wine just prior to the shooting. o County Agents At Ft. Wayne Meeting Fort Wayne, Ind., Jan. 24 —(UP) Four members of the faculty of Purdue University will address al meeting of county agents which will be held here today at the Y. M. i C. A. Agents from Grant, Wabash, Ad-amms.De-K lb. Huntington. Whitley Wells, Noble, and Allen Counties will be pr.sent. — o Get the Habit — Trade at Home 1
CATHOLIC PLAY i OUTLINE GIVEN Junior ('lass Will Present Cornedv At Auditorium Sunday The outline of the, play "Oh, Professor!" to be given by the junior cktss of the De atur Catholic hlghi school was announced today. The | play will fie given by special ar-i rangetntmt with th ■ Dra.r.atic Publishing Comt. any, Sunday evening in the Decal ur Catholic high school I auditorium. Tlie pkiy will be a farce, in tlirm-i a'ts. The cast will he made up of members of tlie junior < laws. The play deals witia the difficulties arising when an American atI tempts ta talk French and his conI vernation is misconstrued by a French actress. The wealthy Mi hgel Pemberton has followed Patricia Patterson fiom one European capital to anobar. He loses track of her and has nothing to do but return forlornly to America. He is In turned f Bowed home .by Fifi. a determined little Frencth actress, who has construed a casual remark made in Michael’s impossible French into a proposal of marrkite. Fleeing. Michael runs into Professor Per.ival Courtright, who is on his way to substitute for Dr. Aristotle at a girls’ summer school. They decide to swap their problems. Percival returns to the hotel to try to cope with Fifi while Michael, armed with Percival’s credentials, presents uimself at the school. But no sooner has Miciwel started in playing professor than up bobs Jimmy Anderson, who, in ! order to get out of the jam he’s in. tries to pass himself eff as a girl. Then in breezes Patricia Patterson. followed by the temperamental Fifi. The alwuys glia' ked Miss Frederica. mistress of the school, does her best to make everyone (behave properly; but it’s as ihupeless as to try to bring order into a roo.n full of feathers. — n
— o gPERSONALSi Mrs. Floyd Arnold .ind son Donald of 424 Class street, are confined to their hcnie with illness. Mancil Longshore, 75, a resident f Wells county for 60 years, died Wednesday at the R. L. Longshore
fnrm in Union township, where he lived with the tenant. James Plck-| oring, following a two weeks Illness from uremic poisoning. J. G. Kerr, who is emi, loyod ut the Indiana State hopsltal at Easthovcn, was a visitor In this city today. Mrs. A. N. Pursley ond daughter Evelyn of Hartford City were guests ; Wednesday at the homo of Mr. and, Mrs. A. C. Kohne and family. Mort McAfee of Bluffton was a , business visitor In Decatur Wedms-i i day. Mrs. Charles Cole has returned to her ii'omo at Richmond after visiting her perent.'i, Mr. and Mn . A. C. Kohne. L. C. Southing of route 3, Bemidgi, Minn, mall <1 in Ills subscription today for another year to the D nioerat. Congrc« u m in Finley ’I. Gray, will broadcast a talk on the qu stion of j repealing the 'lndiana primary law, I from station WLW at 10:3(1 o’'lock. 1 t night. Mr. Gray will speak from Washington. L. S. Shilling. L ’ing e st of Decatur was a visitor .':i tiiis city yes- 1 terdoy. Min. Herman Heuer, residingwest of Decatur, fell at her home Wednesday evening and broke her I right arm. Mrs. Heuer was prepar-1 ing the evening meal, and fell us she w nt down the Isisement steps. 1 The county commissioners. Phil! Sauer. Frank Martin, and Moses
Clean Out Kidney Poisons Wash Out Your 15 Milea Os Kidney Tubes If kidneys don’t pass 3 pints a day that contain nearly 4 pounds of waste matter, the 15 miles of kidney tubes and filters become clogged with poisonous waste products and the danger of acid poisoning is greatly increased. Bladder passages are difficult . . . which often smart and burn like scalding water and cause discomfort. This acid condition, brought about by poor kidney functions is a danger signal , and may be the beginning of nagging back- . ache, leg pains, loss of pep and vitality. I getting up nights, lumbago, swollen feet! and ankles, rheumatic pains and dizziness. ; Most people watch their bowels which . contain only 27 feet of intestines but neglect the kidneys which contain 15 miles oi | tiny tubes and filters. If these tubes or | filters become clogged with poisons, it may knock you out and lay you up for many ; months. Don’t run any risk. Make sure your ! kidneys empty 3 p nts a day. Ask your druggist for DOAN’S PILLS, an old prescription, which hes been used ' successfully by millions of kidney sufferers for over 40 years. They give quick relief I and will help to wash out the 15 miles of . kidney tubes. ! But don’t take chances with strong drugs or so-called “kidney cures” that claim to ; fix you up in 15 minutes. Treatments of this ' nature may seriously injure and irritate : delicate tissues. Insist on DOAN’S PILLS | . . . the old reliable relief that contains no ; “dope” or habit-forming drugs. Be sure you get DOAN'S PILLS at your druggist. I © 1934. Foster-Milburn r*o.
Page Three
Atigshurgor. and county road superintendant Walter Gllliom uro attnndinc the road swpervtaor* school ut I'liniiiv 'JL'ver.ilty. Andrew F.mn, «ho Injured lil.m hand Monday ut the Water Works plant has rctumes to work. Judge Huber M DeVonx i spendj ing « voml weeks vkiltlng Ills - brother Harky D'‘Voss, in lion, ton, i Texas. 0 , Get the Habit — Trade at Hom-
Mothers ! In treating children’* colds, don’t take chances..use KERFS \ SIMPLE WAY TO RELIEVE A COLD TWICE AS QUICKLY . . . REMEMBER the old fashioned rubbing treatment that got such good results? Here's the modern way to use it when you want quicker, easier relief for your cold. Get a jar of RexMentho. the chest rub, and use it according to directions. Rex-Mentho is a scientifically selected group of oils that are absoroed into the chest by i the action of the body's heat—to relieve the "tight feeling" of congestion due to inflammation. It is sold only nt Rexall Drug j Stores. Hill »> I i REX-MENTHO 25c B. J. SMITH DRUG CO. uv.’f.iC •*»’'jy i it z: ’ Fvi
