Transcript
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    CHURCHES TO UNITE

    TONIGHT

    .ELMIKA STAK-GAZETTE. .WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1988.

    SCOTTS SCRAPBOOK By K» J* Copyright. 1933. »7 Central Press Assocution, lot.

    — — •

    thanksgiving Service Planned at Mon-tour Falls Metho-dist Church

    Montour Falls- -Union Thanks-gtflng services will be conducted at th* Methodist Church today at 1:30 p. m. The principal address will be gtfen by the Rev. John Maxwell of the Baptist Church, Special music has been arranged.

    Auxiliary Has Meeting The Schuyler County American

    Legion Auxiliary met at the Village Hail Monday evening with the countv chairman. Mrs. Roy Confer, presiding. Sixteen were present from the Montour Falls and Odessa auxiliaries. Following the business meeting cards were enjoyed and refreshments were served.

    Death Claims Infant Charles Richard, the 4-day-old

    soli, of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Calla-han of Montour Falls, died unex-pectedly Monday night.

    Discussion Group Meets The discussion group met at the

    Memorial Library Monday evening. Professor Rundell of Cook" Academy gave an especially interesting 'ex-planation and talk'concerning Vo-cational Guidance and its relation to new methods of education. The next' meeting will be held Tuesday evening, Dec. 12..

    To Distribute $6,000. Approximately $6,000 will be paid

    Dec. 1 by the Montour -National Bank to Christmas Club members.

    Guild Meets Tuesday S t Paul's Guild will meet next

    Tuesday with Mrs. Claude Cronk The assisting hostesses will be Mrs. Frank Wharton and Mrs. William .Purple.

    Society Meets Friday The Women's Missionary Society

    of .the Baptist. Church will meet Friday at 3 p. m. with Mrs. Robert T. Fudge,. Assisting hostesses will be Mrs. Warren .Denaon 'and Mrs. Emil Kivela. The topic for discus-sion ' Is. "Modern Trends Toward Paganism," with Mrs. Henry Dill discussion leader.

    Patterson—Greek Mrs. Ruth Patterson and Frank

    Greek, both of Montour Falls, 'were married at Binghamton Saturday. They will make their home in En-dieott. Mrs. Greek is the daughter Iof Frank Conkright of Montour Falls.

    Hosts At Supper Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Hedges enter-

    tained at a picnic supper Saturday evening in honor of the birthday of Mrs. Charles Irish of • Cortland. Guests were: Mrs. Irish, Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson and. daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huff of Mon-tour Falls, 'Mr. and Mrs. Louis | Catlin, Mr. and Mrs, Hibbard Paine and Mrs. Clifford Bloom, all of Odessa.

    Hostess At .Shower l i t*. Frank Emmick and Mrs.

    Ernest Oust entertained 25 guests at a shower for Mrs. Dudley Wil-liams at the home of Mrs. Emmick Monday evening.

    The Montour 'Triangle, Daugh-ters of the Evening 'Star, gave a shower for Mrs. Williams at their rooms Tuesday evening

    Personal Mention Mr. and' Mrs. Lester Corhin en-

    V/Uft fJEMBUR^,$o.qERMANYi S A V E D H I £ < O W N F R O M

    BEJNq S A C K E D AND THE LIVES o*

    HIMSELF AND Hl$ PELLOW COUNCIL-

    MEN BY DRINKING 3 QUARTS

    OF WINE, IN O N E

    DRAFT—

    ILLY /f&E COr40.U£*-IN4 GENERAL HAD PROMISED MEPX^ \P

    ONE oP THE CrtfZENS PERFORM 'THETRICIC

    tertained three tables of cards Fri-day evening.—Members of the Ep* worth League attended a group meeting at Reynoldsville Monday evening.—Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Frost and daughter, Sue Ann, of Buffalo, will be guests for Thanks-giving of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Frost.

    Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huff Thurs-day will entertain Miss Kathryn Lee of Cooperstown, Mrs. George Lee, G. M. Lee and Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Timms and two children of Montour Falls.—Miss Eleanor Smith of Cornell University is home for the Thanksgiving recess.

    Mrs. Frances James Is spending the winter in Painted Post with her daughter, Mrs. Claude Terry.—The Rev. and Mrs. J. H Herendeen will entertain for Thanksgiving Day and the weekend: Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T. Odell and two chjk dren. Edith and Teddy, of Geneva, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Clark of Mt. Kisco.—Miss Evelyn Schlick entertained the Sewing Club Mon-day evening.—Mrs. Augusta Corwin will entertain the WRC Saturday afternoon. The occasion will also celebrate the birthday anniversary of the hostess.—Miss Gertrude Wood, of Waverly. spent Sunday with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Wood—Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Stoddard will spend Thanksgiving Day with Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hern in Endicott—Mr. and Mrs. Roger Lynch and sonst were guests of Miss Kathryn Poising In Elmira Sunday.—Miss Nora Van Duzer en-tertained at dinner Sunday Mrs. Dora La Tourette, Mr. and Mrs. James Fletcher, Mrs. Mabel Mack and daughters and E. W. Hibbard.

    Blossburg

    i

    OR . f t - " * ! P INS 0RMA1I0N OS

    MWMf DISPOSai PUNTS i f t W l C I « * » '

    UARD PUBLIC HEALTH BY BUILDING A SEWAGE DISPOSAL P L A N T - / V W /

    HOME LABOR NEEDS A JOB

    THE CITY NEEDS THE IMPROVEMENT

    Get the work going with Federal Funds

    PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 347 Madison Av•., Now York City, N. T.

    THANKSGIVING DINNER

    All Day Thursday One Dollar

    MARK TWAIN HOTEL

    Finest Scranton

    Anthracite ^Sf • * • • » S t o v e . » . «• ,.••

    "ui » • • • « . W i • • • » • ' Buck * . • • • Coke . . . . .

    • :

    U, 6:30; per meet-

    Christ at 10:30 ,ev. Levi Sunday 2 p. m. Metho-

    |with ser-jiles; Sun-Epworth

    lice. 7:30; 17:30.

    IDEE negotiat-

    [itle bout ice Dun-few Eng-

    Dec. 8.

    National Whirligig

    (Continued From Page 1.)

    LIQUOR—Prospective liquor dis-pensers in New York—especially the hotels—are much annoyed at the State Liquor Control Board.

    The board has announced that no licenses will be mailed out until Dec 5 and that anyone who is caught serving liquor before receiv-ing a license will have the license suspended for two years. The result is that liquor cannot legally be sold until Dec. 6 and purveyors with large investments cannot afford to take a chance.

    All of which dumps the repeal night celebration squarely into the lap of the speakeasies. Suspicions of undue favoritism are freely voiced off the record.

    FRANCE—Confidential informa-tion from high financial sources in-dicates that France is prepared to depreciate the franc about one-third to the four-cent level as soon as the dollar is stabilized. The purpose is to keep it at 25 to the dollar. The setup will be sweet if the present campaign can pusn the dollar to 75 cents. There's billions in it!

    The same sources say that the French government of concentra-tion to be formed after Dec. 15 will turn toward Germany and Russia rather than toward England—al-though not publicly—and will be modelled on the principle of the corporative state effective in those countries. The recent British with-

    Lawrenceville Lawreneevllle — The following

    visited in Corning Saturday: Mrs. Marco Mannino and daughter, Louisa Mannino; Mrs. Walter Hurd and daughter, Helen Hurd; Mrs. Frank Ryan, Mrs. Lewis Darling, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Farr and Jerome Shellman.—Miss Lucy Baldwin was called to Philadelphia, Pa., by the illness of her sister, Dr. Kate Bald-win.—Edward and Robert Shoe-maker, formerly of this place, have removed to Pittsburgh, Pa., to live. —The New York Central Railroad will continue service on the Cow-anesque branch between Lawrence-ville and Westfield.

    Miss Kathern Camp of this place met with an automobile accident last Thursday evening at Mechanic and Franklin Streets when a large truck collided with her car. Miss Camp was not injured but her car was badly damaged.—Robert Eaton attended the banquet of Associated Stores, held in Binghamton Tues-day evening, the guest of Andrew Maltby of Corning.—Mrs. Buell Baker is spending several days in the Arnot-Ogden Hospital in El-mira where she is undergoing treat-ment.—Rev. Thomas Withey, rec-tor of the Church of the Redeemer of Addison, N. Y., was in town on Thursady calling on the parish-ioners of St. John's Church.

    drawal of gold from France severs ties which cannot be renewed.

    S\\ ITZERLAND— Switzerland is due to face a serious crisis when she has to follow France off gold. Her tourist industry has been sho! for some time and now her League of Nations industry is practically out of business. Her budget is in bad shape. Banking difficulties are probable.

    Librarians Weekly Chat

    "Trumpets of Jubilee!" This rather astounding title makes one wonder what it is all about. You pick up the book thinking perhaps it relates the story of some great celebration, the Jubilee of a Na-tion, the acclaiming of some great event in history. Not so at all.

    The author is Constance Mayfield Rourke and through the lives of five characters she reveals the so-cial history of an epoch and uncov-ers the roots from which sprang many important elements of the present American scene. Lyman Beecher, Harriet Beecher Stowe* Henry Ward Beecher, Horace Greeley, P. T. Barnum—these are the characters that live in her pages. With Lyman Beecher the book turns back to the earlier years of the Republic. In the characters of the two most famous of Lyman Beecher's 11 children. Henry Ward Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe, appear many novel and sur-prising aspects of the struggle for liberty.

    The many-sided life of the mid-century is dramatized in the Uto-pian dreams and the practical poli-tics of Horace Greeley. Barnum's extraordinary progress along wide-ly different yet often parallel road3 completes the picture.

    Each of the biographies stands alone; but with many common scenes, enthusiasms, struggles, and a common background they are knit together to form a panorama of the times.

    Kate Deane Andrew.

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