Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 1, Decatur, Adams County, 2 January 1960 — Page 3

SATURDAY. JANUARY 1. IMO

S O CIETY

MB. AND MBA. HABNUH CELEBRATE «TH WEDDING Mr. and Mr*. ’Pierce Harnish, route 1, Bluffton, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Sunday with a dinner and an afternoon reception. Mr. and Mrs Hamish are par<;ift of Mrs Fred Corah. Umberloet Trail. After the meal, at the Toll Gate Restaurant. Bluffton, the family reminisced for Mr. and Mrs. Harnish. Each of the six brothers and sisters told of n time they had done something they thought their parents weren't aware of, and later each of the sons and daughters-in-law told of amusing incidents that had happend after they had become members of the family. At the reception al the Murray Methodist church, movies and snapshots were taken and wedding pictures of the Harnishes Were shown. On the serving tabid was a tiered white, and gold wedding cake flanked by silver candelabra. Gold mints and sheet cake decoratd with gold bells carried out the gold and white theme set in a banner, above the seat of honor, white with in gold. Holly surrounded the punch bowl, and holly, leaves decorated the ice. The grandchildren served the 150 guests. After the reception. Mr. and Mrs. Harnish left with Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Harnish for Phoenix, Ariz.J where the honored couple will spend the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Harnish plan to return to Indiana after a two-week stay in Arizona. / The honored couple were wed December 30. 1909, in. Bluffton. They have six sons and daughters and 17 grandchildren. The sons and daughters and their spouses are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harnish, route one. Bluffton: Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Harnish, Scotts. Mich.. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Harnish, route two, Bluffton; Mr. and Mrs. Pierce Harnish, Jr., route one. Bluffton, Mr. and Mrs. Eldie Vickrey, Dayton, 0., and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Corah, Limberlost Trail. Decatur. COURT HOUSE EMPLOYES HAVE NEW YEAR’S PARTY Fifty-eight employes, wives, and guests of the Adams county court house held their annual New Year's party at the court house Thursday noon. On the, last day of each, year jthe • court house closes at 11 a.m. and the employes of one or two of the offices prepare a .dinner which is served cafeteria fashion in the first-floor hallway. This year the recorder’s and abstractor’s offices were in charge. After the dinner, Ed Jaberg, county auditor, presented Roland J. Miller, county commisioner, and Robert S. Anderson, county attorney, presents decorated humorously. Both office holders left the court house January 1, after having served three years and two years respectively. Following short talks in which each expressed his feelings as having enjoyed working with the other court house employes, the dinner was adjourned. The menu was Swiss steak, corn casserole, scalloped potatoes, salad with choice of dressing, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin pie for dessert. Mim ** TURS BOWER JEWELRY STORE Decatur Indiana

THE KIDDIE SHOP WILL Oom MONDAY To Prepare For ter January Clearance

CLUB INSTALLS OFFICERS AT HOLIDAY PARTY When the Kirkland Ladies club ! met Tuesday evening at Adams Central school for a holiday potluck supper, officers for 1980 were installed. Mrs. Harold Henschen. president. opened the meeting, and group singing of Christmas carols followed. Mrs. Joe Baumgartner ' offered devotions. Mrs. Walter Eg- ’ ley presented a reading, the story of "The Llttlest Angel." I Mrs. Noah Habegger installed I the new officers for 1980. After ' the installation, the group ex- | changed gifts and secret pals were revealed. Table decorations centered ■ around the holiday theme Hostesses for the.evening were Mrs. Harold Barger. Mrs. Floyd Arnold, and I Mrs. Joe Baumgartner. 1 ] At 10 a m. Thursday the Zion ' Lutheran Needle club will begin] I its all-day meeting at the Parish i hall of the Zion Lutheran church, | I Each person is to bring sandwich-1 es. and the hostess will provide j the dessert. i The Ladies’ Shakespeare club will meet with Lois Black at 2:30 Wednesday. Monday's meeting of the Drai matic section of the Decatur WomI an’s club has been postponed unl til the following Monday, January H. Tri Kappa business meeting will ] convene at 7:45 Tuesday evening I at the Youth and Community Center. Sancta Marie study club will meet at 8 p.m. Monday with Mrs. Walter Kessen. Miss Helen Wellman will be host- . ess when Eta Tau Sigma meets Tuesday at 8 p.m. Hostesses for Thursday’s all-day meeting of the Magley Ladies Aid will be Mrs. H. E. Settlage and i Miss Amanda Worthman. The meeting will be in the church basement. | ' / ■' Locals ' Mrr and Mrs. Clyde Vandertook and sons Donnie and Tommie left New Year's day to make their home in Lincoln. Neb. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ickes, Polk, 0., were dinner guests New Year's i day of Mrs. Clara Meyers, j Among New Years’ parties held locally were by the Misses Linda and Lila Kruetzman, Monmouth; Miss Bobbie Kalver, Indiana street; and Miss Deanna Small. Indiana street, -for Decatur high school graduates of 1959. Miss Sue Petrie returned Wednesday afternoon from Chicago. She had left Decatur Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Deane T. Dorwin and Mrs. Margaret Freeby returned from Chicago Tuesday evening. Fred V. Mills, former Decatur grocer and businessman, wrote from Cloverdale, Ind., where he is now living with his daughter, that he has been a subscriber to the Decatur Daily Democrat for 57 years, since it began as a daily in 1903. Arthur Muselman, of Berne, suffered two broken toes Wednesday when a heavy machine was accidently dropped on his foot at the Economy Printing Concern, of that city. , John Dorwin spent the New Year’s weekend visiting friends and relatives in Cleveland, O. Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Beehler and children spent New Year’s in Decatur with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Beehler. Edwin Bean, of Chicago, 111., a student at I n d i a n a University, spent the holidays with Mr. and Mrs.- Deane T. Dorwin, of Decatur. Auto Window Broken New Year's Morning City police reported a case of minor vandalism at 3:50 a.m. New Year’s Day when Robert Hess, of 909 N. Fifth street, told police that a vandal had broken the window on his car. which was parked at Third and Madison. Police are investigating.

fchibs Calendar items tor today’s publication must be phoned in by 11 a.m. (Saturday •:»>. Phone 3-2121 Bae Estill v MONDAY Dramatic section of the Woman's chib, postponed until January IL Sancta Marla Study club, Mrs. Waiter Kessen. 8 p.m. Adams county home demonstration club chorus, Monroe Farm Bureau building. 7:30 p. m. Our Lady of Fatima Study club, Ethel JQeinhenz. 8 p. m. Firemen’s Auxiliary. Mrs. Roy Steele, 8 p. m. Junior Women’s club, Mrs. Robert Sittier. 7:45 p.m. Civic department of the Decatur Woman's club, Methodist church lounge, 7:30 p.m. V.F.W. 6238, post home downstairs; Ladies Auxiliary, upstairs, both at 8 p.m. Juniors of the American Legion auxiliary, American Legion home, | 4 p.m. TUESDAY Eta Tau Sigma, Miss Helen Wellman, 8 p.m. Associated Churches of Deca--1 tur, Zion Evangelical and Re-' formed church, 7 p. m. Dutiful Daughters, Bethany church, Mrs. Clarence Brunne-’ graft 321 North Eighth street. Catholic Ladies of Columbia, C. L. of C. hall, 6:30 p. m. Happy Homemakers Home demonstration club of Washington township, Mrs. Earl Harmon, 7:30 p.m. Sacred Heart study club, Mrs. John Braun, 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY Ladies* Shakespeare club, Lois Black, 2:30 p.m. Historical club, Mrs. Henry ' Adler, 2 p. m. THURSDAY Zion Lutheran Needle club. Parish hall, all-day meeting, 10 a m. Magley Ladies Aid, Magley church basement, all-day meeting. - Hospital Admitted Mrs. Everett Schug, Berne; Baby Cheryl Marbach, Decatur; Robert Spichiger, Linn Grove. Dismissed Master Dale Uhrick, Berne; Mrs. Norman Andrews and baby boy, Decatur; Mrs. Daniel May and baby boy, Berne; Mrs. Robert C. Nelson and baby boy, Decatur; Mrs. Darrell Brod beck and baby girt, Decatur; Mrs. Charles D. Rhoades and baby girl, Decatur; Harry Roth, Bluffton, Mrs. LaVerne Hartman and baby girl, Berne. Births A baby girl, Jo Ellen, was born to Robert and Evelyn Luginbill, Hoagland, December 21 at the Otis hospital in Celina, O. The grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hamrick, of Willshire, 0., and Mrs. Theo Luginbill, of Berne. At the Adams county memorial hospital: The first baby of 1960 is a boy born at 7:44 a.m. New Year’s Day to Allen and Sondra Lee Brown Lehman, 358 South Third street. Decatur. The new arrival weighed seven pounds, one-half ounce. James and Norma Lammert Helm, 1027 Marshall street, became the parents of a baby girl weighing 7 pounds, B*4 ounces, at 5:05 p.m. Thursday. At 5:05 p.m. Thursday, a baby boy was born to Gene and Elnora Morrison Bebout, Monroeville. He weighed 6 pounds, 9*4 ounces. Wine, Liquor Stolen From Local Tavern A local tavwn was broken into and robbed between 2 and 6:30 a.m. New Year’s Day, according to a city police report, showing two cases of wine and one case of, liquor stolen from the premises. The Fullenkamp Lunch Room, (Frickles) at 13$ S. Second street, was broken into by , thieves by knocking down a door at the alley entrance. The culprits also took $2.55 from the cash register, and $1 in pennies from the counter. The police, assisted by state police detectives, are investigating. SUN. & MON. Centinnous Son. from 1:15 One of the Year’s 18 Best! fIM uh coin ALSO — Shorts 25e - 88e —O-G-— TODAY "Die Big Operator" Mickey Bonney, Mantle Van Doran B “Beat Generation” Craaeee!

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECA FUR. INDIANA

Margaret Sullavan Dies Friday Night NEW HAVEN. Conn. <UP!» — A southern debutante joined a group of college boys and girls In a Cape Cod theater in IMI against i the wishes of her parents She was winsome, alight and I very young. In the 31 summers since the University Players began. Margaret Sullavan had become one of America’s finest stage and movie , actresses. She died Friday night at 48. a few hours before the fifth performance of a new play. "£weet Love Remirpber'd." she was trying out here and bringing to Broadway. The strain of a new role had taxed the strength of the slight actress with the husky voice. She had been treated Friday by a doctor for nervous exhaustion. To Perform Autopsy Her death was believed caused by sleeping pills, but an autopsy was to be performed to make sure. New Haven County Coroner James J. Corrigan said he did not I believe it was suicide. She was found unconscious by ■her husband. Kenneth Wagg, and .the play’s co-producer, Henry M. ' Margolis, in her room shortly before 6 p.m. She was dead on ar- ' rival at Grace-New Havqn HosI pital. When Miss Sullavan first appeared with the University Players, she had roles opposite Henry ' Fonda. They were married in 1930, i but the marriage lasted less than a year. ’ She made her Broadway debut in 1931 in "A Modern Virgin" produced by Lee Shubert who hired her for the role because of her husky voice. Goes To Hollywood Her appearance subsequently in “Dinner At Eight” caught the attention of Hollywood. In 1933, she made the film “Only Yesterday." ' and remained in Hollywood until 1943. She married director Wiliam Wyler, but they later were divorced. In 1938 she married producer Leland Hayward and had three chrikiren during their 10 year marriage. They are-Brooke, 22; Bridget, 20; and William, 18. Miss Sullavan made her greatest stage triumph in "The Voice of the Turtle” which ran on Broadway for two years and she took it to London in 1947 She and Hayward were divorced in 1948. She and Wagg, a British bust- ' nessman lived in Greenwich, I Conn., where she delighted in running a home for her three children and his four boys by a previous marriage.. Minor Accidents Reported By Police Two minor car accidents occurred on New Year’s Eve and Day, but no one wal injured in one of the quietest holiday weekends of last year. City police reported that a car turning into an alley at 232 Madison street was forced to stop by a car being parked in the alley with no lights, resulting in another westbound vehicle to strike the car in the rear. Chester W. Beer, 25, route 5, Decatur, was the driver of the turning car, which sustained SIOO in damages, while Richard A. Baumann, 20, of 821 N. 11th street, was the driver of the other westbound car on Madison. Damages to his car were S2OO. At 704 Cleveland street, Friday at 8:10 p. m., a car driven by James M. Rennels, 24, of 639 Cleveland street, backed out of a driveway and struck a parked car. It was owned by Thomas E. Lengerich, 34, of 316 N. 11th street. Damages were S2O to the Rennels car and $25 to the Lengerich vehicle. . Jl. New Albany Man Is Found Dead In Tank NEW ALBANY, Ind. (UPD — Amzia Crayden, 51f New Albany, was found dead Friday, floating in a minnow tank at his live bait house. Authorities indicated Crayden fell accidentally into the tank and drowned. Celebrants Tough On Police In New York NEW YORK (UPD — Police totaled up the score today and i found at least seven patrolmen had been beaten up in New York by New Year’s celebrants. “I think that the trend today is toward fighting cops,” said Deputy Police Commissioner Waiter Arfn. "People seem a little more inclined to tangle with us these days than they used to.” FEATURING r “BROASTED” GOLDEN BROWN CHICKEN AT SHAFFER’S i RESTAURANT M 4 N. 13th St Fkrat 3-3857

NOTES FROM AFTER THIRTY RANTA OF ALL TRADES Santa Claus has to take care of the wants and needs of small cbil--1 dren in more ways than one An Adams Central bus sported a Santa ■ on the way borne before Chrlst- ■ I mas vacation Santa was busy 'I handing out treats to tbe small-fry. I and everyone was having a grand I time. After the treats had been ' distributed. Mr. Claus went up towj ard the front of the bus and con- | versed with the driver, probably j inquiring If he had been a good boy this year. Suddenly the jov was shattered by the wail of a I damsel in distress. The bus came to a whoa and the driver and Santa I checked the source of sound, it | was a young lady in pain. Her i neighbor had received a mechaniI cal wind-up toy from a Christmas exchange at school, and the mechanical monster Was currently | firmly entangled in the hair of the | young lady. Another girl on the | bus hatl a pair of manicure scisI sors handy, and with a little care I and tugging and cutting, Santa and | his helper dislodged the toy from the tresses. Soon the bus was on I its way again, with a load of happy I children. ANIMALS IN REVOLT Dr. R E. Allison, local veterinarian, will be glad to see the end of 1959, or at least this last week of I it. Some of his bovino customers have been very unfriendly for the past few days. Last week Dr. Allison was ministering the needs of a cow, and the animal decided to lean against the side of her stall. The fact that the doctor’s hand was in between the cow and the wall didn't seem to cause the cow the least bit of discomfort, but the same couldn't be said for Doc. Then this week, another cow got considerably more obvious in showing her disapproval in medical ministrations. This one just up and ■ kicked the doctor in the leg. Luckily, neither of the injuries was serious, just uncomfortable. And, after all, every profession has its , hazards. — 30 GOOD MOTOR Quite a while back, a local merchant got a little forgetful. He ' pulled up close to his place of ’ business in the company truck to j, run into the office and left the mo- ’ tor running and the jtruck double parked. He Was in a hurry because he wanted to go to another nearby city on business. While he was in the office, a friend called and asked if he wanted to ride along to this same city. This worked out fine with our hero, as he could take care of his business and have the company of his friend on the trip. He hurried over to the friend's business, they got in the ' car, and away they went. As the ' pair arrived in the town, the passenger remembered he should call back to Decatur. He called his own business and asked one of the employes to run out and un-double park the truck and please turn the motor off. LEARNING THE HARD WAY Rudy Meyer, currently back at his old familiar stand as a clerk in the Schafer hardware had an interesting experience while with the state department of conservation. Most of Rudy’s calls for talks were on the subject of wildlife conservation, or saving the natural resources of the state. This time, though, he had a call from the principal of the Rushville high school calling for a particular film and speech on gun handling and safety. When Rudy arrived, everything was ready, the film was shown and the talk given. Durin gthe program, he noticed a conspicuous empty chair. It turned out that the chair had a definite purpose. One of the students of the school had been killed by carelessness with a gun, and the empty chair was his. Rudy said the kids weren’t the only ones who realized the effectiveness of the empty chair. It follows that a boy and a gun are natural companions, and should be. If you thought enough of your son or grandson to giv» him a gun for Christmas, please think enough of him to teach how to use it. *' 4 ‘— Spent an interesting evening at i the movies last Monday viewing . the very fine show with the same ] as this column. It dealt with ‘ newspaper folks and their job, and ] while the paper involved was quite a bit larger than the Democrat, it ’ brought home to us the good fortune we have in being in this crazy ’ business. There’s none other like , it. We who are In it will rant and rave and swear we’d quit in a minute, but we know that despite all the headaches, we’d be back knocking on the door of some newspaper in three months. It’s a frustrating business, in that we strive for perfection in a field that, due to the human element ami the daily deadline, is impossible. No-body-is-more aware of the mistakes in a stoty than those of us directly involved. And no one is more disgusted with them. But that's part of the business. Why we stay at it is an unanswerable ujuestkxi. The money isn’t any better or any worse than a lot of oth-

, er racket*. The hour* are a tot worse. if you happen to be in the editorial department. br»lde» the daily beat, there are all the evening meeting* and ball gantcs plug the stories to write afterward* It you work in the mechanical department. you spend counties* evening* patching aged machine* bark together *o you can print another paper tomorrow. Then there * the preaaure tor everyone of a deadline every day. That la probably) the secret ot the whole thing. The' fact that no matter what happen*, you're never thinking or working in the past. It's alway* the preseht j and the future. There * a laying in the trade that you never see an) old newspaperman. Maybe chrono) logically the person might be aging. but not mentally. The mindi ha* to be looking ahead, alert for' another deadline. At least that'* what we console ourselves with.) So. we'll be at it again next year.] Trying to please the greatest and 1 most critical audience in the world 1 —the American public OH. TO BE A BOY AGAIN Received an interesting newspa-) per clipping from the Kankakee | Dally Journal of Kankakee. 111., I of an article featuring a picture ot a Decatur girl. The young lady is Miss Lois Suman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Wilbur Suman. route three. The story deals with the many ingenious new methods aspiring teachers arc taught in order that they more effectively get arithmetic across to their students. At least these new methods are used in Olivet College, where Miss Suman, a graduate of Decatur high school, is a senior. The kids are > snuck up on by the arithmetic i teachers through such disreputable means as a trip to the train station, measuring ceiling tiles, trip ing the program, he noticed a construction of a home made abacus (the Chinese say those things really work.) It all goes to make arithmetic a lot more interesting and a lot easier and quicker for the young minds of our future scientists to absorb. The young, attractive teachers that grace the classrooms these days ought to be • enough to make school interesting Isn't it strange how one’s point of 1 view changes? Cub Pack 3063 To Meet Monday Night Cub Pack 3063 will meet Mons day at 7:30 p.m. at Northwest , school. Ulis will be the regular . monthly meeting. For Girls On-the-Go Zu / / iKTiVtt Ii 1 Ayl 9469 /jMMK sizes /HMMI 6-14 J" Ruffled-front charmer for school or Sunday. The bolero tops a one-piece dress that combines check 'n' plain so smartly. Printed Pattern 9469: Girls’ Sizes 6. 8, 10, 12, 14. Size 10 dress, bolero take 3*4 yards, 35inch; % yard for contrast bodice top of dress. Send Thirty-five cents (coms) for this patteiw—add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11. Ns Y. Print plainly NAME. ADDRESS with ZONK, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER 9 to 11 PJN. Special! STEAK FRIES - SALAD $1.25 FAIRWAY

Religious Activity Resurgence In U.S.

By LOl’W CABBEIA United Pre** IMern*ti«n*l The year just ended wa*. on the whole, a good one for America’!] i churches. The resurgence of rellgtou* ac-1 I tivlty, which ha* been one of the i ) mini striking phenomena of American lift* since. Work! War , 11. seemed to continue unabated throughout 1959 Government re-) port* show that expenditure* for i ■ new church building* climbed to I i an all-time high of nearly one bil- . lion dollar*. I Statistic* on membership growth. Sunday school enrollment and giving are compiled by the ) churches themselves, and it will Ibe some months yet before the ' 1969 figures are available But it appear* likely that they also win set new records. z jf . If any churchman l*/tempted to ’complacency by all tius evidence] lof institutional prosperity, he may ' find it a sobering antidote to took ' ahead* at some ot/the fonndable problems which t confront .--the churches in 1960. / - Space permits the Rating of only a few of the more important ones: A Combatting Religion* Bigotry The inevitable frictions may be magnified in 1960 if one or both major poltical parties should nominate a Catholic candidate for i President or Vice President. Although Catholic - Protestant relations have Improved considerably in recent years, as the recent birth control controversy demonstrated, there still are a number of issues on which they disagree, and on which each side ' feels conscience-bound to uphold its position vigorously. gJHany churchmen feel that this problem cannot be solved by try. ing to declare a moratorium on public discussion of the real and important questions that divide Christians. They feel the only soMother Os Decatur Teacher Buried Today 1 Funeral services were held this morning at St. Mary’s Catholic church at Defiance, 0., for Mrs. Anna Westrick, 80, of that city, who died in Defiance City hospital Wednesday night after a month's ? illness. Mrs. Westrick is survived by five sons, QSlfitin R., John, Vincent and Bernard, all of Defiance, and Francis of Ney, O.; five daughters. Mrs. O. E. Bott, Mrs. Edmund Ryan and Mrs. Irvin Kime, all of Defiance. Sr. M. Francis de Sales, teacher in the St. Joseph grade school in Decatur, and Mrs. Charles SWary of New Bavaria, O.; 53 grandchildren, and two.sisters. JHB Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint are co-starred in- "North by Northwest,’’ the mystery thriller playing Sunday and Monday at the Adams theater. Directed and produced by the master of suspense, Alfred Hitchcock, the picture is photographed in Technicolor. James Mason also has a prominent role. "North by Northwest" was, recently selected as one of the 10 best pictures of 1959.

Every Family Can Afford Distinctive Tribute! Our lower priced services, like oar costliest, are equally noted for unusual details of beauty 1 “'■' • ■?• , X- - —\l and helpfulness. The use of our large chapel is available to alt No steps or stairs at Gillig A Doan’s . . . all eu one floor. Gillig & Doan FUNERAL HOME . . 312 Marshall St. Phone 33314 ' • »■

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aMMa*BMW**>*s>M*ii*a*****wM*MMMw**MM*foiaMi*wMaMMH**aHa*a*>i**M**i*M M I luton is to air these question* i with full remembrance on both side* that Christ's first commandI ment to hl* follower* wa* to love 'one another. Converting Their Own Meaiber* Clergymen are increasingly conscious that the postwar revival has brought into their congregation* many new member* who [are sincerely interested in InvestiI gating the relevance of religion to their lve«, but who are not yet, Iby any menn*, commtted be- ! liever*. It was this situation that prompted one minister to say recently that "the biggest task the church faees today i* converting : it* own members." In many cases, conversion must be preceded, or at least accompanied, by an adult education program. Survey* indicate that millions of church members have extremely vague idea* about the I central affirmation* of the faith [they have embraced on trial. Oie California pastor, for example, was profoundly shocked recently by the discovery that not a single adult member of his Congregation could make a passing grade oh a test composed of 20 simple questions about the Bible. The Clergy Shortage Virtually every denomination is suffering from a growing shortage of trained clergymen. The Methodist Church, for example, needs at least 2.800 new ministers each year to replace those who have died or retired or to take charge of new congregations. But its seminaries are graduating only 900 a year. The National Council of Churches estimates the total clergy shortage in all Protestant bodies at more than 25.000. Despite some increases in recent years, clergymen still are paid far Idss than any other professional group, Including teachers, and in many case*, their compensation is substantially below that of factory workers, truck drivers and building trades mechanics. ‘ I NOTICE My Office Will Be CLOSED JANUARY 7 through t JANUARY 14 1 Call 3-2517 j for Appointment* Dr. H.R. Frey • liMßWMMeHmea*meßameff WAR ON COLDS Amazing Fast Relief from Miseries of Virus, Colds, Flu, Sinus Congestion j USE SUPER j]**- : ANAHIST . . - - • . >KOHNE DRUG STORE