Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 285, Decatur, Adams County, 2 December 1936 — Page 7
fiat NEWS M ii,. i:< ■■■•■ '* “" ,l ~ fa , ~ . H tiller, Ml. .SIB ■ .l..:iuht.->-w Sf it'i-w-el "f m. i, ' ,,,| ‘- ||B .'i i' * -■ ■K.. \l., " Lmiso ■< <•< ■« CAUSES ehlspsy? K TH CRE a curb? famcu- * be t t < r re !?r r T) a lgg| D--435
J PUB LIC SaTfT ■ undersigned will sell al Public Auction I IM ij ( . West Mills, oil ■ TUESDAY, December 8,1936 H Commencing at 12:30 P. M. S 25—Head of Cattle—2s Mjußed Cow to freshen Feb. 7; 1 Jersey Cow dviii" 1 Jersey Cow 1 yr. old. good ||<ik ( ,| ■n March 13; 1 Jersey Cow I yr. old. to freshen bv dav 1 Jersey Cow 1 yr. old, to freshen bv d uv ol s ile■rnsey Cow 3 yr. old giving good flow.’to freshen in ■i; I Brindle Heifer with big calf by side; 1 Roan’ with calf by side; 1 Guernsey Heifer to freshen; I K Beiler to freshen by day of sale; 3 Jersey Heifers old. bred; 1 Roan Heifer, IS nio. old. bred; | R O ;m ■urge enough for service; 1 Roan Bull call C> mo. old: Heifer Calves 9 mo. old; 1 Heifer Calves 7 mo. ol<|; Face Heifers. ■ H—HEAD. OF HOGS— II Brood Sowa, 2nd & 3rd litters to farrow in F.-b; i w; u i ■ &>«. bred; 1 White Male Hog; 20 Shouts, wt. 100 lbs.; 14 i weight 50 to <0 pounds. ■ GRAHAM and ABBOTT Auctioneer Lower—Clerk.
' IWII. » tidies fees* i a'. II Xgznk.g~a - I HW 9ss M f ~~- f B 1 f jfejrFscrigr A I Zflw 'TA'Abv m /.£»■ SNOW ' I®BBb OnkwßaX K Bi wiCZ Women's |w| mHWhw ww t g a losh e s J®! iHfe Wiki Slack or Brown » t»\ -Of • • Al! heel heijMs -j Jr Jm Gracefully styled ■ : I wit* sn- warmondcoe-' - and this | 1 /f Quality year, with fleece 1 f* ' lining! ' sr/f - " b W* S ® Xix \ Children's Sturdy // * linings . Jgh > J UGHT WEIGHT &\ W /DRESS ARCTICS M»\' \. Women's rs ?' iMX f/ " ,4 'e /_ j* qq ijEffes M C / \ / \l Boy's (VI «s~» - JI Sizes £uW/B sl - 4 ’zw> Z ? W Men's LijM-wwtjM No Anti-Fee eie ‘'jM fl Jwtx X. Dreis Rubbers Necessary witn I ,ix these ; ZwQI 00* ArcticsiW QMf Service Wcie** wwr 4411 H i rtf W? I 142 N. 2nd St. - '■ ’** ’■ *
1 parents, Mr. and Mis. j| m A . HenUricks and Mr. and Mrs. W. S Smith. [ J. F Hocker and daughter. Mrg R J. Meers, spent Monday | n Pwt Wayne. Mr and Mrs. Palll | !ull ,. t . r [ the week-end at Foil Waym, the gUMte of Mr. and Mrs. Ford Snij|)) Jason Essex and Mrs. Donald Essex and children of DeWitt irkan-l ««-< »'■ *- few days. h( D f o 1 n, Rayl Os n<>c *htr visited I his father. T. J. R ayl Sund Mr. and Mm. Dick Harvard enter-' Honed at dinner Tuesday M,„ w, va Haggard of Sturgis. Michigan I Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Ha lr ,i * ’• and son Auburn of bort Wayne. After din ner the guests motored to Grand' Rapids. Michigan, to Bpend a f,. w dayo with friend* ami will attend Vai, u ,K n '" SH Walter Hertell at Fraud Rapid*' Thanksgiving Day. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Xoffsinrer of' visni.d lih parents. Mr. j
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1936.
•>'d M >W Ban Xoflinger Sunday. ■ ■■ and Mrs. C. E. Hocker of Dejeatur visited Mr. Hocker's mother, ■*' destine Hooker Sunday afternoon. >'r M. F. Parrish of Sturgis, Mich- . san called on relatives and friends in Monroe Sunday. 'j ■ Mr - and Mrs. Forest Andrews and Ague* Andrews of Decatur Arnes Andrews of Decatur spent the week-end at Laming, Michigan, the guests of relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Babcock and daughter Virginia of Grand Rapids, I Michigan, spent the week-end with Mm. Babcock's mother, Mrs. Ida . Bollinger. J. D. Lammimau of Bay City, Michigan, visited his sister, Mrs. Raymond Crist aii d family Wednes- | day evening. George Hahnert spent the weekend at Hartford City, the guest of his brother, Donald Hahnert and faj mily. Mies Louise Busche of Elkhart [spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ,’i W. Busche. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Foster are vie-, | iHng relative* at East Allis, Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Forest Ray and i daughters Helen and Dorothy spent I the week-end at Upland, the guests I lof Mrs. Ray's .parents, Er. and Mrs.. Fred Watkins. Mr. and Mrs. Joh t Crist visited Mr. and Mrs. Ros dallonee at Decatur Sunday af' .noon, Mr. and Mr Jim A. Hendricks WAKc UP YOUR LEVER BILEWithout Calomel—And You'll Jump Out of Bed in * the Morning Rarin’ to Go Thw iiver should pour out two pounds of liquid bite into your bowels daily. If this bile I is not flowing freely, your food doesn’t digest. 1 It iust decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up you*- stomach. You get constipated. Your whole system is poisoned and you feel sour, I sunk and the world looks punk. Laxatives are only makeshifts. A mere I bowel movement doesn't get at the cause. It takes those good, old Carter's Little Liver 1 Pills to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel "up and up". Harm* less, gentle, yet amazing in making bile flow freely. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by name. Stubbornly refuse anything else. 3bc.
npent Saturday in Fort Wayne. I Wilbur Fricke of Dayton, Ohio,] spent the week-end with hie par- [ ents, Mr. and Mra. E. J. Fricke. Mr. and Mrs. Arvai Owtemnan of Vevay, spent the week-end with! Mrs. Philip Heffner and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Dehi.l, Mr. and Mra. William Dehil and daugh-: ter Sylvia, of Elkhart, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. John I Floyd. Mrs. Otto tongenberger spent the ! week at Dayton. Ohio, the guest of i her sister, Mrs. Clarence Davie and ' family, Mr. and Mns. Raymond Crist and sons Quentin and Kermit spent Sunday at Bluffton, the guests of Mre. Crist's niece, Mrs. James Hedges and family. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Anlrews and daughter of Marshall. Michigan, visited Mr. Andrews parents, Mr. and Mns. James Andrews. Mrs. Wilford Ray and sons Bobby and Carl of Grabril.', visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Johnson. Mr. Johnson is ill. o — OBITUARY I John Henry Bauer was born April 25, 1872 and passed from this life November ?6, 1936 at the homS of his son, Francis C. Bauer, near Van Wert. Ohio. Mr. Bauer was the eldest son of the Itae Peter and Elizabeth Snurr i Bauer of Ashland County. Ohio. In early childhood Mr. Bauer moved with his parents from their former home in Ohio to Magley, Indiana. Mr. Bauer was united in marriage to Miss Dora Shady. To this I union was born three children, Hattie, Francis C. and Roscoe. Mrs. Bauer and one son, Roscoe, preceded- Mr. Bauer in death. While yet a young man Mr. I Bauer united with the Pleasant [ Valley M. E. church. Throughout his life Mr. Bauer was known for his fine spirit of helpfulness. Mr. Bauer leaves to survice him a daughter, Mrs. Earnest Worthi man of Preble township, Indiana; I one son, Francis C. of Van Wert | County. Ohio; one sister, Mrs. I Blanch Likely of Akron, Ohio; one i brother, Harry Bauer of Preble, Indiana, and ten grand-children.
Funeral services were held for Mr. Bauer on Sunday, November ! 29, at the Black Funeral Home, De- ; catur, Indina, at 2 p. m., the Rev. | Harry W. Thompson, minister of j Central Church of Chrfct, Fort Wayne, officiating. Interment was made in the Shady cemetery, near Magley. o CARD OF THANKS We wish in this way to thank the and friends who assisted us during the illness and I death of our father and also to thank the Rev. Harry W. Thompson for his comforting words. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Worthman Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bauer. o F. D. R. LEAVES fCqNTINUED by his special gangplank. An Argentine band played and I ships in the harbor sounded their sirens as the Indianapolis moved from the dock. Argentina’s last official act was a 21-gun presidential salute to Mr. Roosevelt tired by the river squadron as he sailed down the river Plate toward Uruguay. In mid-morning. President Roosevelt and other dignitaries attended brief funeral services at the U. S. embassy for Augustus Adolph Gennerich, his personal bodyguard and friend, who fell dead in a restaurant yesterday morning. Later Mr. Roosevelt gave a luncheon for President and Mrs. Justo at the embassy, from which they motored to the dock and he left. CHARITY BALL (CONTINUED FROM PAmt <>NK> co-chairmen of the genera! commitI tee. Other chairm n named from the two sororities are: the Misses Betty Macklin and Margaret Lauby, irche-itra; Mias Irene Holthouse and Mrs. Robert Freeby. tickets; Mrs. \1 Schneider and Mrs. Chaiiner Deßolt, decorations. Cooperating committees will be named by the chairmen and plans furthered to make the event enjoyable and entertaining to all. Proceeds from the Christmas ball are used by ths sororities for charitable I-urposes. Japan Recognizes Italian Conquest Rome, Dec. 2— (UF)—Japan has recognized Italy’s conquest of Ethiopia, it was announced officially today. .Japan's action in recognizing the Italian conquest forced one more 1 link in the Germa. i-.lapane-m-ltal-1 ian front recently presented to the , world. Germany already has recognized the empire set up in Ethiopia by ! the Italian armies. Under the accord announced today Italy guarantees that Japanese interests in ( Ethiopia will be protected--o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur I
• Roosevelt’s Grandson to Wed Roosevelt betrothals seem to be popular these days. The engagement of Kermit Roosevelt, Jr., grandson of the late President Theodore Roosevelt, and Mary Lowe Gaddis, daughter of Mrs. Avery Gaddis of Milton, Mass., has been announced. Roosevelt will be graduated from Harvard in June. Miss Gaddis, a sophomore at Radcliffe college, made her debut last winter. Their announcement follows that of Franklin D Roosevelt, Jr., and Miss Ethel du Pont, made recently.
» ».. • V-< ~ > ■ m **'A 12W R « m W W .<*?.- ’* i R 1 J M- ■ ? pOMSMBg^'t —-rr,—„■ h, W 7-■ DURING the next four years Washington will be the news as well as the national rapltol of these United Stages, Mows, vitally affecting the lives of millions of , z Americans, will originate there. TAXFS! THE NEW BUDGET! / Z SOCIAL SECURITY! THE SUPREME COURT! / ?he United Press Washington bureau again is ready to cover the capital thoroughly, comprehensively, impartlaJiy. Directed by Lyle C. Wilson, bureau manager, the news ? s gathered and written by expert observers of government activities. Men who xjet the "story behind the story". Trained newspapermen capable of dictating and writing fa»f breaking stories with traditional United Press Accuracy and Speed. UNITED PRESS ( the DOMINANT NEWS SEBVICE FOR DOMINANT NEWSPAPiRS Decatur Daily Democrat
, Black Cat Still Bad Luck Fitchburg, Maus. — (UP) A [ li'iuck cul scampering aero** his feet j I Mused Wilfred l/'g r, 35, to *hoot ! himself through the right index | finger as he who target shooting In 111* back yard. Salty Shrimp Thrive Salt Lake City (UP) -The salt shrimp is the only known form of marine life that i* able to survive in tho brlmy water of Great Sal’
/ Z; • *- oo ° A Message to our depositors in the Savings Department. Interest in this department is due and payable December 1. All savings depositors are requested to present pass book and have the interest credited to their account. Now is the ideal time to open an account in our Savings Department. First State Bank
PAGE SEVEN
[Lake. It Is a rare form of life Bl iiidiod | by selentluts. —- o —— Heart as Pump Disputed San Francisco —(UP)—-The heart [ In a tank and not a pump, according lo Dr. Katsuae Niehl, famoti* Japanese Mcientlst, who has in the Uniled States to make his j theories known. Ho believes that , even it life only begins at 40, the normal *pan should lie at least 120,
