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The Huntington Herald from Huntington, Indiana • Page 3

Location:
Huntington, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAWN' READY Leather," however, follows usual custom of beinq unfavorable OLD ORCHARD BEACH. Maine, Dyct' 13. (INS) A fierce wind ot al hnnaf mIa HIt Ara that tnrA Havti the New England coast this morning forced' postponement ot the scheduled takeoff ot Mrs. Frances Grayson tor Denmark, In her Sikor Iky amphibian plane, "The Dawn." Te plane, tied djwn with ropes and guarded throughout the night by a ipecial detail of' policemen, withstood the blow, although the wind swirled great quantities of sand About it. At 7 A.

the time previously set tor the takeoff, Mrs. Grayson and Wll mer L. Sultz and Brlce Goldsborough. who will go with definitely de cided not to nop Deiore low iiae eany A heavy rain accompanying the wind caused Mrs. Grayson to tear that it a low pressure area was encountered at sea, the water would Breeze and make "The Dawn" sag under the added load ot Ice.

The plane standi on the beach fueled, provisioned and Inspected to Its minutest detail all ready tor the take off for Denmark. Mrs. Grayson had planned to hop off yesterday between 3 and 5 P. but weather reports received from fifteen steamships at sea sh6wed the ap proach ot the storm that battered the New England coast early tnis morning and; which continued this fore boon, with prospects, however, ot a diminishing wind at low tide between I and 7 P.M. i Mrs.

Grayson and her flying part hers, as well as the wives ot the latter, expressed confidence of the success of the flight and all were impatient for the getaway. Weather reports showed good flying conditions outside the local storm area here. Mrs. Grayson said; "I think well be under way before Mrs. Ted Coburn and Mr.

and Mrs. JUohard Coburn and two sons, all of Chicago, have returned to that icity after a short visit with Mrs. jMary Wall and daughter Miss Flora Mr. and Mrs. Valance Slater were in Huntington Sunday evening Mr.

and Mrs. Delman Keller, of "Elko, were In Warren Sunday, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Oliver. Clarence Detamore, ot Cleveland, Ohio, Is visiting relatives here.

Everett Wamsley will move his family to the farm owned by Mrs. viara reraue next weea. Mr. and Mrs. Silas Neff, of Bluff ton, in Warren Sunday afternoon.

Mrs. William O. Sutton and Mr. and Mrs. Ora Lieurance visited William Sutton at the Grant County hospital in Marlon Sunday afternoon.

Miss Dorothy Ertslnger spent Monday evening with her Mr. and Mrs. Ertzinger of Huntington. Miss Bertha Kreigbaum, of Elkhart, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

George Kreigbaum. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawrence entertained at a family dinner Sunday at their home west of town. The guests were Mr.

and Mrs. John Shipley of I Warren, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thome 'and Mr. and Mrs.

Everett Lawrence and baby all of Kansas, Ware and family and Arlie and family, of Hunting iton and' Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence iSnaulding. of Marlon. I A flnfnrlaA rtartv hnnnrfnv Mm rw Hand Stocksdale was held at her horns cast of Huntington Sunday when twenty seven relatives gathered and enjoyed sumptuous dinner.

Those enjoying the affair were Mr. and Mrs. George Kreigbaum and four ot Richmond, Ind Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Day and' two children, of Huntington, Clarence Kreigbaum, R.

E. Kreigbaum and family Mf. and Mr. and Mrs. Leo Harrold and dau jgnier xois jauo were duiiuhjt Tiouur at ine noma 01 xar.

ana Mrs. con. Mr. and Mrs. Winfleld Sutton and Mrs.

Louisa Beard, of Huntington, and Miss Carrie Beard" of Muncie, were in Warren Sunday afternoon. Miss Lydla Logan, Mrs. Alfred tfefcatnaln. and Genrffn Gross, all of and Mrs. John Renshaw and "daugh ter.r Mamie and Margaret, and Mrs.

Gary Woods and daughters, Dorothy and Anne, of Kokomo, spent Sunday Mr. andMrs. Curtis Forf. 1 Mrs. John Wald and daughter Mar da are guests of Mr.

andMrs, Roe In TJniondale this week Sirs. Eva Bradford of Pontlac,) is vsiiting ner sister, Ruth Mr. and Mrs. Fred Groves, (Mrs. Ellen Meyer and.

Mrs. W. Fox spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fox.

Mr. and Mrs. Grant Williams were In Huntington, Saturday afternoon. Lloyd Dalrymple, of Indianapolis, and Gale Dalyrmple, pf Alabama, were guests 1 of the former's sister Mrs. E.

M. Mossburg, Monday and Tuesday. James Colbert, of Delphos, Ohio, is visiting his mother; Mrs. Carroll. Miss TJiefkla Monroe wag In Wabash Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Meore were is Buren, Sunday with friends here. Mrs. 'Alice Thrift has' returned from visit, with her son Russell Overpack and family near Markle.

Louis Jones, who Is employed In Fort Wayne spent the week end with relatives here. Mr. and Emerson Couch and baby daughter ot Fort Wayne spent Sunday with Mrs. Mary Couch. MT.

and Mrs, Kenneth Andrew and Mrs. Gertrude Andrew motored to Newcastle Sunday where they spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Ell Ray. Mrs.

Charles Andrew, for many years a resident of Wasjren, is critical ill at the home of her daughter Mrs. Homer Bolenbaugh in New Castle. Mrs. Belle. Thorpe has returned to her home In Pontlac, after spending several' weeks in Warren.

Mrs. Curtis Huffman, of Hartford City Is visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. George Good. Mr.

and Mrs. Warren Oliver were In Huntington Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Thrift and baby of Shelbyville spent ther week end with Mr.

and Mrs. James Thrift. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kreigh and three sons of Huntington were guests ot Warren friends Saturday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Souers, ot Fort Wayne were week end of Mr. and Mrs. (Lewis Galser.

JeBse Elklns and family, of Bluff ton spent Saturday with friends here. Mrs. Earl Fisher, of Muncie, spent Saturday and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hollle Smith.

Ernest Fryback, of Huntington, was in Warren Saturday evening. and Mrs. C. H. Blackman and daughter Carolyn, of Bluffton were guests of Mr.

and L. S. Priddy Mr. and Mrs. Homer Jones, of Huntington spent Sunday with Mr.

and Mrt. William Jones. Mrs. Charles Frott waJTln Fort Wayne Saturday wHare ie visited. her daughter, Frock.

Roger Good ana miss zeraiai An? drew were in Huntington Sunday evening. Misses Margery McMullen and Opal Miner spent the week end with Miss Kathryn Irey in Pennville. 'Mrs. Anna Ash was hostess to the Queen Esther class ot the Christian church at the home of her daughter Mrs. Garl Shultz Thursday At the close of a business session refreshments were served.

Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Shultz and son Basil of Marlon were guests of relatives here Sunday, IS DEAD AT ANDREWS Dale Kahlenbeck, aged eight, pass ed away at 6:45 o'clock evening at the home of Ills parents on Pearl street at Andrews.

He naa been an invalid since birth, and had been seriously ill for two days. He was the son of William and Eva Kahlenbeck, and was born at Andrews on July 18, 1919. Funeral services will be. held at ten o'clock Friday morning at the family residence, with the Reverend Fred Knauer In charge. Burial will be made at Mt.

Etna cemetery. He is survived by the parents, and by the following half brothers and half sisters, William Weller, Mrs. Stella Harrold, Mrs. Mary Draper, Walter Weller, Homer Weller, Mrs. Opjal Stlneman, Mildred Weller La verne Henry Mrs.

M.innleiHpdk4rMrB.i Effle. De Haven, Glenn Mrs. Emma Shoemaker, and Ella NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF E8TATE In the matter ot the Estate cf James A. Thorn, Deceased. In the Huntington Circuit Court, September Term, 1927.

No. 3010. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, as Executrix of the estate of James A. Thorn, deceased, has pre sented and filed her account and Mrs. G.

D. Kreigbaum, all of Warren vouchers In final settlement of said Miss Bertha Kriegbaum, of Elkhart, estate and that the same will come Roland Stocksdale and sons, George up for the examination and action of Robert Jere, Phillip, and daughter said Circuit Court on the 29th day Virginia and the guest of honor. I of October, 1927, at which time all Mf. and Mrs. Thomas DePoy were persons interested in said' estate are in Marlon Monday afternoon.

required to 'appear in said court and Bert Harrold is in" Elwood 'this i show cause, if any there be, why aaid account and vouchers should not be approved. And the heirs of said es tate, and others therein, are also hereby required, at the time and "place aforesaid, to appear and make proof of heirship or claim to any part of said estate. Done October 5, 1927. MAUSSA WITNESS, the Clerk and seal of said Huntington Circuit Court at 'Fairfield, were guests of Mr. Huntington, Indiana, this 5th day of and Mrs.

Curtis Fox the first of the October, 1927. veelt, DESSIE WRIGHT, Clerk. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Lines, Mr.

Auorneys 1W X3 ZU Enjoy THE HUNTINGTON HERALD HOME ECONOMICS CLUBS TO HEAR PROMINENT SPEAKERS TO HAVE EXHIBITS According 7 to an announcement made Wednesday night by Mrs. Ernest Stults, publicity chairman of the Huntington county home economics clubs, plans are well under way for the associated clubs' meetings, and Achievement Day program, which are to be held in the Huntington county court house, on October 20 and 21, on which days the clubs be honored with the presence of Miss Lela Gaddia and Miss Aneta Beadle, experts of Purdue university nutrition extension work. By the plans that are being laid for the Achievement Day program on October 21, each of the five county clubs, which include the Huntington Township Home Economics club, the Lancaster Township Home Economics club, the Clear Creek Home Economics club, the Rock Creek Township Economics club, and the Neighborhood Home Economics club will demonstrate and exhibit one phase of the work studied by their respective club during the past year. Judges, not as yet chosen, will be from outside of this county. The Judging Is to begin at ten o'clock on the morning of October 21, and according to the plans will be over by eleven o'clock, and is to be followed by a pot luck dinner, to be served on the second floor of the east wing of the courthouse.

During the afternoon each club Is to be allqwed one half hour for de monstrating their exhibit, and presenting a short program. A feature of the day wil be a talk by Miss Gaddls who In addition to being at the head of Purdue extension work, is widely known as vice president of ther. national Altruaa. clubs. Miss Beadle is.

scheduled to appear on the program also. Mrs. Bessie Snyder, of Clear Creek township and president of the clubs of this county, Is chairman of the program committee. WHILE YOU DINE 6:00 p. m.

WLW (42g) Zoo rfnncn mnatf '1 I WMAQ (448) Chfcago. Jack Cnap mans. POPULAR PROGRAMS 6:30 p. m. Red Network: Comfort Hour, from WEAF.

7:00 m. Blue Network: Radio trons, from WJZ, WEBH. WLW (428) Cinci. Mandolin quar tet 7:30 p. m.

Red Network: Hoover Sentinels, to WEAF WHAS. WMAQ (448) Chicago. Commercial program. i WSAI (361) Clnci. Accordlan solos.

8:30 p. m. Blue Network: Spotlight hour, from WJZ, KYW. 9:00 p. m.

Red Network: Smith Brothers, Trade and Mark, from WEAF, WWJ. 9:30 p. m. WTMJ (294) Milwaukee. Organ classics.

10:45 p. m. WSB (476) Atlanta. Organ. Dr.

Charles Shedlon. 12 mid WJBT (389) Chicago. Popular. CLASSICAL CONCERTS 7:00 p. m.

Red Network: Half hour with famous composers, from WEAF and others. 7:30 p. m. WLS (345) Chicago. Sup ertone hour.

FEATURE TALKS 6:00 P. m. Blue Network: Bill Whipple of Sweet Meadows, from WJZ, WRC. 6:50 p. m.

WSAI (326) Clnci. Better Business Bureau. 7:00 p. m. WSAI (361) Cincl.

talk. 8:45 p. m. WORD (280) Batavia, 111 Poultry talk. Stop That 1 1lJ Mertho Laxepg ActaQuidb TitmGood The quick, sure way stop a cough Take.

a. tew drops at. Mentho Laxene the safe remedy i that always brings relief. Every bottle guaranteed to break up colds or relieve coughing almost ln stantly. Night coughs, stubborn coughs, head colds all respond quickly.

Mentho Laxene pure contains no opiates, and is universally recommended, for children. Get Mentho Laxene today! Sold by druggists everywhere, your food as it noarishe your body If yow appetite not keen yen owe It to yourself to take regularly before each' In these days of fast competition, only full blooded, robust, healthy people can keep to the front, ana success comes to those who have the snap, vigor and magnetism that go with a wholesome, healthy Ufa, Dont despair: because other forge ahead of yoiL Start right now to regain the health which will help yon progress. A hearty appetite will restore your energy, bulla you ttn eiTtl rfvA VArl Taw Thousands have benefited them. It will give yon a good 'appetite. repair by occasionally taking a' course of S.S.S.

It helps Nature build up red and it improves the processes by which the body la nourished. S.SJ3. ii time tried and reliable. It 'is made from, the roots of fresh herbs and plant and is prepared in a scientific way In a modern labor atory. S.S.S.

is sold at all mod drug stores in two sixes. The larger, size mora eoonoaicaU CALL RUTH ELDER 'FLAPPER FLYER NEW YORK; Oct. 12 (INS) The "Flapper somebody hag called her. Ruth Elder, 23 year old arlatrix, somewhere out over the Atlantic today roaring along In her monoplane, "American uirr tor is, a matter for the student of modern feminine phychology. A flapper with her penciled eyebrows, rouged cheeks and Jaunty knickers, but also a sober young woman wh'o probably is thjs minute at the controls of the flam ing orange ship, drawing on the tech nical Knowledge mat won ner a pilot's license.

And beside her she car ries her mother's bible. Five hours before her take off from Roosevelt field, Ruth was the quick tongued, sprightly young girls Whose mother had found her "willful" and Her title, the "Flapper Flyer," suited her well. Thirty minutes before she soared into the air with her co pllot, Capt. George Haldeman, she was a solemn faced girl who found it necessary to tax her nerve to the utmost. No more did she laugh.

There were no "wisecracks." The hour for levity had passed. It was a serious business now, pitching headlong out into the darkness in a single motored airplane, over an uncharted air course, while beneath her rolled the vast fathoms of blackness that had swallowed up others who had tried and failed. Although Ruth said she had slept eleven hours the night before, her face plainly exhibited the nervous strain that the final moments had accentuated. She smiled once, as a huge spray of roses was laid in her arms, but it was an effort. There was no smile in her thoughts.

She tried to busy herself about the plane, but it seined that every detail had been looked after. Had they taken off at one o'clock as planned, the spectators would have remembered Ruth as. the "Flapper Flyer." But the three hour delay obviously wore away the maBk ot galeyt and, the crucial moment found her face drawn and white. After all, Ruth was, very much a young girl. And alone.

No members of her family were there to see her off. Her mother, in Annls ton, was telegraphed Just after the take off. Her husband, Lyle Wo mack, a Lakeland, salesman, probably was selling, "as far as she IS According to James X. Crosbie, contractor, the Murphy bridge work Is getting well under way. The old bridge abutments will be dynamited yet week, and the work of plac Ing steel on the new bridge will be continued next week.

One tor bridge number sixteen, over Loon Creek at Andrews has already been built and the work of pouring the other has Steel from the old Murphy bridge, brought from Jefferson township f) used in building the slxtj'foot span over Loon Creek at Andrews. The contractor hopes to have this bridge completed in about two more weeks. UNDERGOES OPERATION James of Goblesvllle. was removed early Wednesday morning to the Huntington county hospital tor an emergency operation. Report from the hospital late Wednesday were, that the patient is recovering.

AT Mrs. Rosa Tierney fifty five, died at 8:15 o'clock Wednesday night at Richmond, after several years Illness. The body will be brought to this city Thursday morning and taken to the home of a Bister, Mrs. Ed Kramer, at 1340 east State street. Mrs.

Tierney was born September 18, 1S72 In Dallas township of this county, and was the daughter fit John and Ellen Harris Her marriage was to John Tierney on May 18, 1891. No children were born to this union. iyJuv PAQI THftll ill The husband died February ,18, 1913. 1 Harris, address unknown, and by on She is. survived by two' sisters, half sister, Mrs.

Willy Scheer, of Fort Mrs. Ed Kramer, of this city, and Wayne. Mrs. Milt Strine, of LeRoy, Mlchi Pending word from the brother in gan, by two brothers, John Harris, Oklahoma, no funeral arrangements of Henrietta, Oklahoma, and Jesse have been made. Without These You Can't Live If you take from your food entirely, Calcium; Photphoru.

Iron, Mtf netium you wither and die. It educe the amount your body and brain should have ana you soon become afflicted with nerve trouble, gland trouble, anemia, weakness, digestive disorders, infected teeth. Weak Run Do wn Condition Denotes Need of Cadomene headache, low ered vitality, fatigue, a tend ency to have colds frequently and a conoral debilitated state of the system. Your system is Modern methods of preparing food has robbed you of certain necessary elements, and all you may need to do is Get back your It is absolutely essential to supply the needed elements if you wish to enjoy the best of health. For fifteen years, physicians have prescribed the elements contained in Cadomene Tablets.

The ingredients are printed on the label. Using Cadomene, the improvement is prompt Within a week, appetite, digestion, sounder sleep, calmer nerves, increased strength, all assure the user that needed elements of health are daily being supplied to the system. A few weeks' Use of Cadomene Tablets is time enough to produce a delightful buoyancy and reserve, strength. Cadomene is not a cheap 'catch penny tonic" but an efficient enricher of the blood and a potent strength inducing agent Dnifglita varjwhm Mil CsdoDMa oa a iwutN or oaiicbtf ul Muafacaoo or i Mck. MOTORCYCLE HILL CLIMB Two Miles North of Andrews Sunday, Oct.

16th 2:00 P.M. Spills and Thrills and Chills FREE PARKING A niiimiiaV tJ svi. 'Jiuiii 4JOCITT a MYIU TOBACCO CO. i i I 1.

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About The Huntington Herald Archive

Pages Available:
74,031
Years Available:
1903-1929