Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 28 June 1930 — Page 5
■nj A I ■ n ' JBt \\ ta Bk -' 's ' • € ■ ■v < II jK ij ■ IxW , II MI »F Mary Macy ■ 77 Mlss Mar Wet Haley ■fXJ Phones 1000— 1001 ■pashion Admits To A Dark Brown Taste ■ NEW YORK, June 28—(U.P>-The Importance of brown as an early ■ color Is under lively dtecusslon and unless, with characteristic than impatience, the color is killed long before Its scheduled hour Kbute. we are,in for a fall season in which all shades of brown from ■ warmest coppery to dead leaf tones are worn. There is however so t brown in evidence now, especially with white, that one wonders ■ut its powers of endurance.
K| ril wn and white costume jewelarrived. This is presented and in wood, while ear((^■j an 6 and amber and such stones me ld with brown are well to the Suntan and even darker Kr'|.; continue to be worn. Hq,.,. emounters jewelry made of K , x :..,.,idmary materials these that the composition is imO:ie t» usual as conwith the effectiveness of jewelry and it continu.s ■ register on that score. Kfecklaces are longer atjd inm massive designs while ■Relets have assumed cuff-like ■jeweled dips remain in use ami ■j in brilliant Galliera designs Swell as in marcaseite. ■there naturally is considerable Herniation concerning the sue'■d' the several jeweled combs ■ K |i are not only ornamental but Hminel) useful in restraining hair. Hora barrone KrRIES FORT WAYNE MAN Hf:-<i Barrone, dauglffm o f yj rs> Goike of this city became, ■e lirid of Walter Bullerman. son Mr ami Mrs. Christ Bullerman ■ Fort Wayne, in an impressive ■remotiy which took place at the nt ih“ bride's brother-in-law ■d sister. Mr. and Mrs. William Klepper. 1315 West Wildwood ■mitt--. I’oit Wayne. Wednesday ■trrioon at four o’clock. The Rev. Dornseii. pastor of the FueD Mg Lath, ran Church of Decatur ofHua ed at the wedding, and read impressive double ring eer •' Hott;'JMFcrth' occasion the bride wore a of light blue chiffon trininu u tan silk lace, and a tan lace .vith -.cr accessories to mao Ml wore a wrist watch, a gift of the ■oom. and carried a shower bon- 1 ■et of pink roses and blue sweet ■ Miss Ida Gerke, a sister of the ■Hr. acted as bridesmaid and Fie.l ■oiicrnrm. a brother of the groom. Mrved as best man. ■ Th- bridesmaid wore an orchid Mon:- tte gown trimmed with i ■ ■ am Mee. fashioned with a flared skirt Md cape collar. Her hat was orMid to match her dress and she ■ore footwear of tan kid. She carMd a corsage of orchid sweet peas. ■ Following the ceremony, a w“dd■f supper was served at the homo ■ Mr. and Mrs. Klepper, and ThursMy morning, the couple left for a Medding trip to South Bend, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and lowa. ■On their return Mr. and Mrs. Bullwill make their home north Mrort Wayne where Mr-. Bullerman ■terates a dairy far m. Hocal young man ■0 BE MARRIED TODAY ■ Don Farr. son of Mr. ami .Mrs. B. ■•Farr of this city and Miss MildMd Kelly, daughter of Mr s. Lee Ivfl- ■ of Erankfort will be marri -d this ■ternoon at four o'clock at the Me ■odist Episcopal church. Frankfort. ■At noon today Mrs. Kelly and Mildred, entertained the Members of the bridal party and ■mediate families with a noon lun- •«'« at their Frankfort country ■jnie. Guests from this city includi ■ Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Farr and son. 1 ■>:>. and the four ushers, Leo Horman Myers, Ralph Gen■i. and Harry Knapp, together witn Meir wives. ■ For the past several weeks Miss! has been honored with a Mur.ber of parties and showers but': ■ Frankfort Indianapolis. ■ I- 8. CLASS ■lams to go to lake ■ Miss Wilma Case was hostess to ■« V. I. S. Class of the United ■tethren Sunday School last even■K at which meeting twenty-five H tnbets were present Following ■ e regular business meeting games ■d contests were enjoyed. ■ The class planned during th” ysiness session to go to Lake Ad ■ms over the week-end of July I■»d 13. ■FLEBRATES ■ ‘RTHDAY ANNIVERSARY ■ 1 Fiends and relatives of Walter ■ut-her gathered' at the Butcher ■ on >e last evening, to celebrate h:s ■’’enty-sixth birthday anniversary I Fhe evening was spent in playing ■‘'l ruihionnd games, after which ■ delicious two-course luncheon ■ lls served by Mrs. Butcher and ■ ’eral friends. ■ Those who enjoyed the affair in ■‘Wod Mr. and Mrs. Carl Noll. Mr B ll ' Mis. J, Doane, Mrs. Joe Cot ■e 1 and daughter Iris, Mr and Mr- ■ stay Chilcote and daughter, and
CLUB CALENDAR Saturday Rummage sale by W. F. M. S of M. E. church, church basement 1:30 p. m. M. E. Kings Heralds Society Ruth and Zulu Porter, 2:30 p. m. U. 11. Ladies Aid Society two cent supper, church parlors 5 to 7 p. ni Monday Pythian Sisters supper and entertainment, K. of p. Home, 6:30 p. m. * Tri Kappa benefit Bridge party, postponed indefinitely. Thursday C. L. of C„ K. of C. Hall, 7:30 pm. Kirkland toadies Club Ice Cream Social, Kirkland high school, 7:30 p.m. Delta Theta Tau, Miss Agnes Baker 6:30 p. m. the Misses Mary Straub, Bernice Sorg, Lulu Ogg. Mary Ginley. Rose at’.l Mary Coffee, Catherine Hebble, and Mrs. May Ketchuni, Mrs. Anna Tricker. Harry Coffelt all of this city; Wilbur Mclntosh of Monroeville; Miss Secil Edgell of Pleasant | Mills, and the honored guest Mr. | Mrs. Walter Butcher. ROOT TOWNSHIP 4-H CLUB POSTPONED The Root Township 4-H Chib will meet with the leader, Mrs. S. P. Kunkel, at Monmouth, Tuesday afternoon, July 8, at one o'clock instead of Tuesday, July 1, as previously scheduled. All members are requested to note this change. ENTERTAINS I WITH DINNER ; Mr. and Mrs. Martin Miller I entertained with dinner last even- ] fng for Mr. and Afrs. R. T. Deitsch 1 and daughter Ruth Eileen of De- ! troit, Michigan, wlfo have spent : the week visiting with Mr. and ' Mrs. Walter Deitsch, who were also at the dinner last evening. ADAMS COUNTY COUPLE MARRIED RECENTLY Miss Keturah Sours, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Sours and Ray ' Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jclm T1 r mas, of near Geneva were quietly married last Saturday. Both the bride and groom are well known in both Adams and Wells counties. HONORS GUESTS j WITH DINNER Mrs. Carrie* Ehinger entertained with dinner, Thursday, and covers were laid for Mrs. William Berlins and laughter Betty of Indianapolis; Air. and Mrs. Henry Schulte and I Mr. ; nd Mrs. L. H. Kleinhenz an 1 tamily. The Catholic Ladies of Columbia will hold their regular monthly meeting Tuesday evening at seventhirty o’clock at the K. of C. Hall. The Pythian Sisters will serve a pot-hick supper in the Pythian Home on Third street, Monday even'ing at six-thirty o'clqek for the memI be'S of the lodge, and their families, i During the evening a program will j take place and a mock wedding of I a very prominent couple will be I solemnized I All members of the organization j and their families are urged to attend, and the members are a'ked to bring food according to 'heir families. (BRIDAL PARTY HONORED with DINNER Mrs. O. P. Edwards of Leipsic. Ohio entertained with a dinner a' the Decatur Country Club last evening honoring h r niece. Miss Josephine Suttles and her fiance, Mt. John Conklin of Delaware. Ohio. Fifteen guests, including members of the bridal party and immediate families were in attendance. DECATUR YOUNG LA °Y IS married this afternoon Miss Josephine Suttles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Suttles. 122 South Fifth street, of this city, became the wife of John Brevaart Slin, son of Mr. and Mr. J r. Conklin. 174 Grjswald stiee■ , I Delaware, Ohio, in a pretty """" “? this afternoon at four ochx - at J' home of Mr. and Mrs. Suttles. She Rev B. H. Franklin pastor ol '"nXm™ iX tad with large baskets and ly Ue T o?ga den dowers of vaibuUquets of garde altar , before an alcove in the)
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1930.
Imnkml with gr<sm..ry , eoreopsla. interwoven with ferns At each side of the alcove stood a tall wrought Iron candle holder decorated with evergreens and a bouquet of garden Howers, and bearing a large white lighted taper, which ffurnishod a dim light during the service, Preceeding the wedding ceremony, Dal* Bartholomew of New York, a friend of the bride and groom presided at the piano and Played "Lieliestrauin'' by E| ZB t. Mrs. O. P. Edwards, aunt of the bride sang “Calm As The Night" by Bohn, and "At Dawning" by < adman after which Mr. Bartholomew, who accompanied Mrs. Edwards at the piano, played the strains of the Lohengrin Wedding March and the bridal party entered the room. Little Miss Mary Betty Hoffman, niece of the groom, wearing a dainty pink dress, proceeded the bridal party into the room, carrying a basket tilled with sweet peas, wh.ch had been carried at the wedding ceremony of the bride’s grandmother. Mrs. John Niblick, fifty-four years ago. The basket was tied with a pink maline bow. The bride was lovely in a gown of white organdie fashioned with a tight bodice and very full ruffled skirt reaching the floor. The Liers of the ruffles were arranged with small white grosgrain ribbons and the white ribbon also formed a blt about her waiste. A deep ruffle of the white organdie formed tiny sleeves for the gown and extended down the back of the dress in the form of a cape. White footwear and hose completed her costume. She carried a shower bouquet of sweet peas and roses. Miss Mary Suttles attended her sister as maid of honor and wore a yellow organdie gown, fashioned with a double white collar and a large lavendar sash and bow at the side. She wore lavendar shoes and carried a bouquet of yellow roses and delphinium. Dr. Frank Hoffman attended the groom as best man. Immediately following the marriage ceremony, a reception was held at the home of the bride for fifty invit’d guests. The large dining table was centered with lovely floral decorations in the center of ' wh ch stood a tall three tiered wedding cake. The newly married couple will make their home in Dayton, Ohio, where Mr. Conklin is associated in , the offices of the Ohio Hardware Association. Out of town guests at the wedd ing included: Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Edwards and daughter Harriet, of Leips c. Ohio; Mrs. H. H. Stoner md son John, of Cleveland, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Conklin, Ben Smart, Eidney Bartholomew, of Del aware, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. John Kramer, Paul Willis, Mr. and Mrs. J. B, Carson. Miss Mildred Carson, of Dayton, Ohio; James Smith, of Middletown; Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Dickerman. of Indianapolis; Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Hoffman and Mary Betty Hoffman, of Mansfield; Mr. Geoige Miller, of Cleveland, Ohio. o TWO THEORIES ARE WORKED ON (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) iction in the matter. In working out the first theory,' investigators pointed out that the police department had clamped a id on gambling and liquor, the two chief sources of revenue for George ‘‘Bugs" Moran and Joe Aiello, the millionaire gang leader. The Capone mob apparently was getting off more lightly at the hands of the police, the investigators said, and the Moranites may have blamed Lingle inasmuch as he was a personal friend of Russell. By murdering him in a publicplace, the gangsters believed the resulting indignation would cause the ouster of Russell and Stege, according to the theory. The theory fits the facts in the murder and lays the crime at the doorstep of the north side gangsters, one of whom. James “Red" Forsythe, has been named as the killer by the ‘ clearing house” Investigators. The other theory— that Lingle failed to "fix" the dog tracks for Capone-was almost opposite to the first. ‘‘Scarface” Al, enemy of Moran and Aiello, had about $1,000,000 in vested in dog tracks that furnished much revenue to his gang. Though a long series of court actions they were forbidden to op rate and the decision upheld in the state supreme court, which decided that uarl-mutual betting applied only to horse racing. According to the theory it was Lingle’s job to see that they ran. The board of strategy investlgating Lingle's financial declings with several public officials and gamblers had promised that a complete |( . l)O rt will be made public Monday, imhuling transactions wlth Maj. Carlos Ames, head ot the civil service commission; Aiderman burt Cronson and Capt. Dan Gilbert, Loop police officer. o w A Lower and Paul Graham: ina(Je a’business trip to Indlanapo-1 j lis this morning.
COMMISSION GETS BLAME Now York, June 28.—((j,R)—Before sailing*’for Germany last night aboard th’e S. S. Bremen, Mux Sohinellng. heavyweight champion, laid responsibility for the current epidemic of fights which end in fouls squarely at the door of the New York state athletic commission. 'When a commission protects a fighter as Jack Sharkey was protected, when it fails to punish him in any way after he has hit foul, when it makes it possible for him to fight again for the world championship within three months, is it any wonder there are so many fouls’" asked Schniellng. Schmeling said he was planning to return to meet Sltarkey in a return bout in September. He said it with a touch of bitterness in his usually good-natured, modulated voice. "If I had the misfortune to foul Sharkey, although 1 never fouled a man in my life, where would I be?" demand'd Max. "Would they have called me, as Commisisotier Muldoon called Sharkey, ’the most unhappy man In the world?' Would they have insisted that Sharkey defend the title against me in the fall?" Schmeling proposed drastic punshment for the fighter committing the foul, loss of his purse, loss of his license for six months, perhaps. But as to requiring a boxer who has been hit low to continue, Max could not agree to that. “If it is just a little low blow, a blow that does not really hurt, a blow on the leg then the fighter should go on. if he is a real man, he will do so," Schmeling said. "But yon cannot force a man disabled by a blow below the protector to fight when he cannot even stand. ''Personally, I cannot understand wliy and how a trained boxer, with such experience as the topnotch fighters have, could possibly strike such a blow as Sharkey landed on me.” o ROTARY BRINGS PEACE MESSAGE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) he said. Representatives of nations in continental Europe, the Near East, Far East, the Antipodes and Latin America afterwards discussed ways in which Rotary was helping various parts of the world to achieve international goodwill and understanding. Rotary International's next convention will be held at Vienna, Austria. As a token of appreciation for thte work of M. Eugene Newsome, Durham, N. C., retiring president, the delegates presented him with a check for the building of a seashore home for his family. Q PRESIDENT TO APPEAL DIRECT (CONTINUEdT'ROM PAGE ONE) Johnson, Repn., Calif., McKallar, Dem., Tenn., and Robinson, Repn., Ind. The week-end found the administration momentarily on the Defensive in connection with publication of a letter written by Assistant Secretary of Navy Jahncke which was interpreted by some senators to .n an matters relating to a league >f nations army and navy were disussed at the London conference. Stimson and secretary of Navy ..Jams emphatically disclaimed responsibility for a paper on the subiect now reposing in Navy departnent files, Adams asciibed the paper to the Wilson administration. Stimson obtained a report from Adams and wrote chairman Borah of th * Senate foreign relations committee that the paper was dated Nov. 11, 1918 and that its existenc • vas not even known to the American delegates to the London con ference. Greetings from Sky London —(UP) — Sky greetings .nil enliven London’s surnnte ■ nights when th- Travel Association of Great. Britain and Ireland projects on the clouds "London Weiotnes Its Visitors" in English. Fiench, German, and other lan guages. o — Last Lee Officer Mathews Court House Va. (UP) _Rpv, Giles B. Cooke, who celebrated his 92nd birthday here recently, is the last surviving member of Gen ral Robert E. Lee’s famous staff of officers. — o —■; Sand and Beer Diet Caldosta, Ga„ —(UP) The doctor ordered him to drink homo-brow and eat sand for his health, plead ed G. B. Moore. Judge Cranford said he was sorry. The prescription, Moore added, was three bottles of home Brew, a day and a handful of clean sand. Sometimes he did accomodate a friend by letting him have a few bottles at "cost, though, Moore concluded. Mr. and Mrs. Felix Graber spent Hast evening in Fort Wayne.
f jTown Talk
Mrs. Floyd Arnold, who under-1 went a major operation at the Ad j ams County Memorial Hospital some time ago, was removed to her liome ut 424 ('loss street, Thursday evening, and is reported to be resting nicely. Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Rice left tor Rome City where they will enjoy two weeks vacation. Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Deitsch and daughter Ruth Eileen of Detroit, Michigan who have spent the week visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Deitsch and son Robert, left this tflornlng for Celina, Ohio, where they will visit with relatives, before returning to their home in Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Yager left today for Frankfort where they will attend the wedding of Miss Mildred Kelly and Don Farr, this afternoon. Waite. Bockman of Kokomo is spending the week-end in this city. The great mistake most folks make who git ahead o’ ther story is that they don’t stay aliead). There’ll be an election o’ officers o’ the Col onial Bridge Club at the home o' Mrs. Tipton Bud this afternoon. M s. Leghorn Tharp will shake an’ pour. . —Abe Martin, Indianapolis News Mrs. William Berling and daughter Betty are spending a week visiting with Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Kleinhenz and family. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Buettel and daughter Idella, will leave in the morning for Tiffon, Ohio, where they will spend the day with Mrs. Beutell’s brother and friends. Mrs. L. H. Kleinhenz and daughters Ethel and Jane will return home with Mrs. William Berling and daughter Betty to Indianapolis to spend a several weeks visit. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yost of Fort Wayne were callers last evening. Mr. Frank Cutschall of the Old National Bank of Fort Wayne was i business caller here this morning. Herbert D. Carper of Chico, California who has been visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Car per of west of the city, will return to Chico Tuesday. Enroute to California he will stop at Chicago where he will visit his brother. Robert Carper. and will also visit witli another brother. Maurice V. Carper at San Francisco. California. Miss Mary Madeline Coverdale returned today from Shelby, Ohio where she spent the past week visiting with friends. Bob Heidrich of Fort Wayne was looking after business in this city today. Bob Gass of Fort Wayne is spending the week end in this city with his parents, Mr .and Mrs. E. F. Gass. Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Perner and family of Omaha, Nebraska are spending an extended vacation in this city with the H. H. Lammiman and Roy Runyon families and other relatives. Air. and Mrs. R. J. Myers of Monroe will leave this evening for Chicago where they will visit with Dr. and Mrs. Allen Miller, former residents of this city. J. D. Lammiman of Bay City, Michigan is visiting with his brother, Harvey Lammiman and sister, Mrs. Roy Runyon for a few days. Mrs. Hugh Hite and daughter Jane of Detroit, Michigan who have been visiting with relatives and friends at South Bend and Fort Wayne arrived in this city today to spend a few days with Henry Hite and daughter Madge, and other relatives here. The Lammiman families of this city and Adams County will hold a family reunion at Lehman’s Park, Berne, tomorrow. Miss Annette Moses left today for Winona Lake where she will spend two weeks at the Mission Home. Miss Margaret Kern of Fort I Wayne is spending the week-end in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Lew'Schwartz, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morton, and Mr. and 'Mrs. Ed Borgenstiie of Fort. Wayne were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lose last evening. o HOOVER SEEKS PRIVATE FUND (CONTINUEDThom PAGE ONE) justice department and the other I increases appropriations for Federal prisons. In bls statement issued soon after the senate voted 35 to 30 to cut the commission appropriation. Mr. Hoover stressed the necessity for investigating matters other than prohibition law violations. "There can be no doubt that the more vigorous enforcement of tlr laws has had sum I thing to do with the federal situation," Mr. Hoover continued. "With growing crimes of all kind and witli insistent recommendations from every liar association and pulflic body concerned that we should have an accurate (study ot th'’ reforms necessary in 'our whole judicial and administra- . i five machinery, that we should , have some constructive program for decrease and control of crime as a whole. 1 cannot abandon the question for one moment, or allow : the work of this commission to cease.”
RUSSIA HAS WOMAN LEADERS By Eugene Dyons, UP. Staff Correspondent Samarkand, Soviet Republic of Uzbekistan, Ussr. (By Mall)—(U.R) —Some years before the revolution a comely olive skinned girl child of 12 brought up In a primitive Moslem home, was sold into marriage to a man four or five times her age. She entered his wellstocked harem as Murth wife, assumed the sign of bondage—the shapeless paranja which blots out a woman's face and form. But she did not settle down to humble and long-suffering wifehood. In the depths of her heart and mind were undefined stirrings and vague questionings, as there must have been in the hearts and minds of a million young women sold into polygamous wife-slavery. For two years she endured her bondage. Then she ran away to Tashkent No mere schoolgirl escapade was that. She knew well enough that if caught she was fated to death at the hands of her husband, his family or even her own relatives. Their honor had been offended and th<>re was nothing in law or in custom to stop them from wiping out the insult in blood. Several years she shifted for herself in the old city of Tashkent, homeless, outcast, on the thin edge of starvation—yet learning somehow to read and to write and steeping herself in new ideas. Then came the revolution, bringing her opportunity. Her passion for freedom dowered into an exceptional power of oratory and her knockabout life hail hardened her courage and practical abilities. She rose quickly in the communist party, making herself idolized by the Uzbek women and hated witli a deathly hate by the old conaeivative classes. Her hair clipped man-style, a cigarette in her mouth, a military coat over her trim girlish figure—she became the symbol incarnate ot the new woman in a country where woman was a chattel of her male owners. And now —in her early thirties, still good-looking, the flame of her peisonality undimmed — this woman. Comrade Abidova, is vtce-presi dent of the Soviet republic of Uzbekistan. It was she who greetid our trainload of western men and worn n when we reached Samai kand. The story of Abidova is not isolated. Tens of thousands of women have been drawn into active political careers. They sit in the Soviets, they direct women’s propaganda. And every one of them, in ome form, can tell a like tale oi revolt and sacrifice. The suffragette an d women’s ights movements of the west are amusing parlor games compared with the grim struggle of emancipated women here. D ath and torture are their daily rewards. The young Communist girl who goes into a village to speak to women is a soldier going to the front, witli an even chance of survival or death. Sometimes such girls are sent back to. the city cut into small hits. “There's your women’s freedom” was the inscription on the sack containing the dismembered body of one agitator. The full weight of the governm nt is on their side. Legally woman is man’s absolute equal. Marriage by sale and marriage of children is forbidden. Those interfering with women who remove their horsehair veils are often treated as counter-revolutionaries and shot. But the law must contend with forces equally strong, and in the r mote sections far stronger. It must meet the weight of a thousand yeais of tradition and of ingrained religious convictions under which woman is regarded as a
Notice MILK TICKETS sold on or after July Ist will be 5c per pint and 10c per quart, the same price store customers have been paying for this milk for the past three weeks. W. E. Faurote
creature without a soul and without human rights. Enormous progress has been achieved. In 1924, the writer was told, there were only a dozen or so unveiled women in this city. Now one sees in Tashkent, Samarkand, even in hold Bokhara, as many unveiled women as veiled ones. The veiled are still in u majority but since they stay at home more, they are not so much in evidence. In the House of Eastern Women, the largest women's club in Tashkent, the writer came accidentally upon a trial which dramatized the whole embittered struggle. An 86-year-old hey or landlord, HaulenBeck, robust and impressive looking for all his age, was on trial for the murder of Fatima Sadlkova, a girl Communist. Three younger men were tried wfth him. It appeared that despite 10 years of revolution, Maulen-Bek had retained his patriarchal authority over the village Klyas, not far from Tashkent. Several years ago his son and heir-apparent had been executed by the G. I’. U. as a count-’i-revohitioiiist for murdering a farmhand who had been too insistent on enforcing the Soviet agrarian reforms. Even that shock did not wrench the reins ot village power from the old man's hands. Lash March, the secretary of the regional committee of the Communist youth, tills Fatima Sadikova, arrived in Klyas to preach new ideas to the local women. On
THE CORT Sunday, Monday, Tuesday MATINEE SUNDAY at 2:30 P.M.—loc-35c EVENING SHOWS at 7 and 9 P.M.—2oc--40c “SO THIS IS LONDON” A Clever All-Talkie Comedy Scream with WILL ROGERS and a cast of other notables. The ever wise-cracking Will Rogers in a clever comedy skit that will prove most entertaining. ADDED—"WESTERN KNIGHTS” talking comedy and Movietone News. TONIGHT—Jack Mulhall and good cast in “THE FALL GUY.” Also-The last chapter of "THE JADE BOX.” Also-Cartoon Comedy. 15c —35 c
THE ADAMS THEATRE Cool and Comfortable SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Matinee SUNDAY at 2:3o—at 10c-35c FIRST Sunday Evening Show at 7:oo—at 20c-10c “THE VAGABOND KING” With Dennis King, Jeanette MacDonald, (). P. Heggie, Warner (Hand and Lillian Roth More gorgeous than anything you ever hoped to SEE and IIF.AB! The immortal love-story as only the perfect ALL COLON Talking Screen could bring Io you! I'nfolded in 'Thrilling Action, in Glorious Song! No Color Picture You’ve Ever Seen Before Can Compare Witli This! Added-“THE WIZARD'S APPRENTICE” TONIGHT-ZANE GREY’S TALKING OUTDOOR-ACTION-THRILLER "THE LIGHT OF WESTERN STARS.” witli HIGH ABD ABI.F.N, MANY BRIAN, Harry Green. Fred Kohler and Regis loomey. Rousing Entertainment! Added-An ALL TALKING Comedy, and FIRST Chapter of our New ALL SOUND and TALKING Serial —“KING OF THE ( ONGO.” 15c 35c
VALtT SERVICE H.R.H YOURSELF needn't envy the most |Bhußl\W Li lol ' dl y Londoner lolling I JMR 11 pZi at east in his club. Fo- ■tßaM ly If our Valet service and 4 iXI cleaning methods will ilv B * <ee P your wardrobe I—4 JhS|| 'll faultlessly cleaned and ww! pressed at very little c ’ Myui(~~~ Gme or expense. ■■ PHONE we’il call for and PHONE 134 deliver. 134 The most delicate of Frocks can be easily cleaned and made to look like new. Decatur Laundry 4 “THE FARR WAY” Phone 131
PAGE FIVE
March 8, International Women’s Day, she spoke so eloquently at a meeting that six women tore the paranja from their faces. Next day Fatima was found dead. The G. P. U. finally arrested the throe men who had murdered her. Under grilling they confessed that they had done it at the bidding of Maulen-Bek who rewarded them with 2.IHH) rubles. Now all four were on trial in a women’s club, before women judges and a crowded audience of women. Only fata age is likely to save the bey from the death penalty. These bloody social dramas are enacted again and again. They are no longer "news” in Soviet central Asia. That club showed the extent to which women are taking over the functions ot teaching and Jawenforcers. It contained school rooms, hospital sections, mother-and-child consultations, even a bureau for establishing the pubescence of girls about to be married. You Worry About It London, —(UP)— An art critic who was congiatulated for eolning tlie word "nudlque” for "nude” explained that "Nudlquel’i rilas" was a misprint for "Nmlfique Veritas”. o- — Old Greek Celebration* To celebrnte a victory the ancient Greeks placed laurel wreaths on the brow of the victors and erected small wlngeu figures called Victories to commemorate some great event.
