Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 138, Decatur, Adams County, 11 June 1931 — Page 5
I SCHOOLS ICEIVE HONOR - (UP)— Nine uniS lave been admitted and S-ed from the membership tSI \ iation of American according to an anKa't from the office of the K ni (lie Interior DppartKji,. rsities' Association adK*. colleges which are acKgj, s containing a sufficientKng curriculum to bring (K tl , (he standard of the us-
I Our BIDAY and SATURDAY | SPECIAL for FORDS and CHEVROLETS - on - JRDUROY FIRST QUALITY TURES 29-4.40 29-4.50 30-4.50 28-4.75 $5.61 $5.94 $6.25 $6.81 Zorduroy Brogan 29-4.40 29-1.50 30-4.50 28-4.75 $4-33 $4.90 $4-99 $5.80 Elberson Service Station
I $5,000 for $lO |S IF YOU were one of the million or more persons who are |K injured in automobile accidents in this country every year, U you would welcome the liberal payments of an Aetna ■ Special Automobile Accident Policy. I AETNA SPECIAL AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT POLICY I PAYMENTS PAYS PAYMENTS lor I for loss of H you are injured loss of time and ■8 medical expense (a) while operating, driving, . ...... $5,000 demonstrating, adjusting. Total Disability cranking or repairing a $25 per week, not exceedEyes, Both private passenger auto- in g 26 weeks; .■■Hands, Both Feet 5,000 mobile; Partial Disability and 5 000 (b) while riding in a public $12.50 per week, not exand Foot 5,000 or private automobile; ceeding 4 weeks; :Mand or Foot and Eye 5,000 (O consequence of the ex- Hospital and Graduate Nurse ’ plosion or burning of an Benefits or Leg 3,000 automobile; sls per week, not exceed(d) by being sruck or run 4 weeks; or Foot ... 2,500 down by an automobile. N on-Disabling Kjuries of One Eve 1 500 (Does not cover chauffeurs. $lO for surgeon’s fee ■ One Eye 1,500 , mechanics antl eenain ifjoatjon |ndemnity ifcThumb and Index other persons while cn„a„e<l MH Finger 500 in their occupation) ■■" annual PREMIUM $lO- i APPLK 'AJ KAPPLIc a T I () N What is ycur full name? * Middle Last ■<i>? Residence Address? . citv State ■■ Street and No. y ■- Date of Birth? - Height? Weight’ ■ Month Day Year ln ’ ■■- What is your occupation? Address? By whom employed? ■■ Relationship? Beneficiary? H- Are you in whole and sound condition mental y and physically? ■ 193 . ■ Policy applied for this '- 1 ,y ■ Signature of Applicant R Mail To ■The Suttles Edwards Co. "... I . K Am-.CAT.ON
ual American institution of higher | The nine universities and colleges 1 1 whose names have been added are: George Washington University, I Washington D. ('.; Incarnate Word < oilego. San Antonio, Texas; Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss.;’ Montana State College, Bozeman. Mont Oklahoma College for Women. Chit kasha, Okla.; St. Olaf College ‘ Northfield Minn.; United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Mil ; 1 Ursinus College, Collegeville, Pa.; Wheaton College. Wheaton, 111. The University of Mississippi, ■ Miss., has been dropped. ' o— Hap Mt Kinley and Pete McGreve : of Portland visited in this city Wednesday evening.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1931.
SUMMER OPERA IS PLANNED TO AID CHILDREN Cleveland Newspaper, Starts Move for First Season Cleveland, June 11. KU.R) Peep 1 arations are being made for the presentation of Cleveland's first summer opera season, July 28 to August 3, by the Cleveland Civic Summer Opera Company, recently formed. Production will be under the management of Guy Goiterman. I who founded the St. Louis Municipal Open Air Theatre in 1917 and followed with a series of summer i open-air grand opera which gave the theater international promi--1 nence. The company was founded by I the Cleveland Press, and the proceeds will be distributed to the Jieedy children's fund, but the purpose is not to support the fund but to produce opera at popular prices. | Choruses, orchestra and other personnel will be recruited and I train?!" by Metropolitan and Chi- ; t ago Civic opera company directors. The orchestra will be built ; around members of the Cleveland i Symphony Orchestra and the 'chorus- will comprise 300 voices. The chorus will be trained by Giacomo Spadoni, or 15 years assistant conductor and choral director of the Chicago Civic and .itetvina opera companies. The bali let will he directed by Rita De Le j Porte, premier danseuse of the Metropolitan. I A stage 300 by 125 feet, the largest outdoor stand, will be erected, and will be a series of three platGet Up Nights? Get This 25c Test Box of BU-KETS (5 grain) the ' bladder psysi", from your druggist, i After four days, if not relieved of i getting up nights go back and get your money. BU-KETS containing b'uchu leaves, juniper oil, etc., acts on the bladder as castor oil on the towels. Drives out impurities and excess acids dial cause irritation, burning and frequent desire. If you are bothered with backache or I leg pains coming from biadder dis- \ orders you are bound to feel better after this cleansing and you get your regular sleep. i Sold at Holthouse Drug Co
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By HARRISON CARROLL. HOLLYWOOD, Cal.. May 00.— Jackie Cooper, a young actor whose name is on everybody’s tongue in Hollywood these days, will work in the future for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. His contract has been bought from Ha! Roach, and he now will he a fellow star with Marion Davies, Joan Crawford. Norma Shearer. Greta Garbo, Jack Gilbert, William Haines and many of filmdom’s magic names. It is a great honor for a boy not yet seven years old, but few will deny Jackie the right after his heart-warming performance in “Skippy.” He reached the heights in this film. Orders already have gone out for the writing staff at M. G. M to prepare an original story for Jackie’s first starring picture. In the meanwhile, he still has to do “Sooky” for Paramount. The most gifted child actor of them all was born Sept. 16, 1924. He entered pictures three years ago in a Lloyd
Ik A *0 , Lloyd I Hamilton.
Hamilton comedy. Later he played in the “Fox Movietone Follies” and in * ‘ S u n n y s ide Up.” Then he joined ‘‘Our Gang’’ at Roach’s studio. Jackie’s father is dead. His mother used to do a vaudeville act with the wife of Norman Taurog, who directed “Skippy.”
THE PACE THAT KILLS. A group was discussing the many studio shake-ups of the last few months. Up.spoke Bert Ruby to remark you don't say “Hello" to anybody on his lot any more. You say “goodbye” and nine times out of ten, you’re correct. LATEST GOSSIP. Among those departing their present studio jobs will be Ona Munson, the musical comedy star, who was brought out here by First National, and Myrna Loy. whose exotic beauty has been seen in many Fox pictures . . presumably, they will free-lance . . . the recent consolidation of thd-working forces of Warners and First National is said to have effected a cut of more than 50 per cent in overhead . . .how Daryll Zanuck and his two associates, Lucien Hubbard and Hal Wallis, expect to handle the enormous production duties of the two companies is another thing
lorms in three levels. < The festival will open with the I product!© nos "Aida." < BRICKS TO TELL ' HISTORY OF UR London, June 10. — <U.R) — Four j , thousand yours ago in the desert uoar Bagdad nourished the great city of Ur of the tJhaldees, with its ; shops, schools and manners of life• that have formed the basis of mod-1 ' [ern civilization. Now, experts are to take a cen-I ' sub of this eastern metropolis, I which like many .mother capital.; 1 declined and fell to bo left ' ,o relictj in the burning desert. In the cellars ot the British mu-I seum workmen are unpacking 39 large cases which Leonard Wool-1 ley, the archaeologist, has brought back from Ur. They are full, most-' ly, of clay bricks inscribed with! cuneiform writings which tell of i ordinary happenings in Ur 1,009 years ago. “There are schoolbooks, tradesmen's accounts, love-letters, and all kinds of writings," Woolley said. “From them 1 hope to find who lived in each house, what they did for a living, and, in fact, to make ; a complete directory of the city, | dating from about the time of its t final desertion 2,000 B. C. “In an old school kept by a priest I we found 2,000 inscribed tablets, largely schoolbooks which the mas-' ter had kept by him." In another house Woolley found ■ that the owner was a grain mer-b chant. a money lender and a dealer In ready-made clothing. o Keeps Suicides Secret As i “Humane” Thing To Doi Youngstown, 0.. June 10.—U.R;* i Coroner M. E. Hayes of Mahoning ( county has kept 'quite a number" ; of suicides secret because it is “humane" to shield the victims' family from notoriety. This practice, which his critics i claim is a violation of city laws, came to light witll the recent discovery that James A. McAleer, former major league manager, killed himself Previously the death had been reported due Io natural cans" cs and no reports had been made to police. “Sure, I've covered up quite a number of suicides." Hayes replied readily to Ills interrogators, "Furthermore, I'm going to continue to do it. I believe it is the humane I thing to do."
► entirely. If I reinember correctly, the sister studious announced seventy-six pictures on their new program . . . influenza has claimed I'ifi Dorsay as it’s victim. This will make no difference in her plans to go East, however, sos she hadn't intended to start until
■■ w < h A} 3 Lilyan Tashman.
June 11 Lilyan Taohman has a collection of art objects all of which have the human hand as a motif . . Mother Couiycr, the wardrobe mistress at M. G. M., occupied the same job in the old Weber & Fields Music Hall Company. • She and Marie Dressier were girlhood friends.
WHAT DID THEIR WIVES SAY. Back in New York, Eddie Cantor and George Jessel met for din- i ner one night at a hotel. Both of their wives were along and the plans were to spend the evening at cards. In the midst of the meal, Jessel said he had to go across the street for a few minutes and appear at a benefit. He invited Cantor to work with him. They went on together and their five-minute act panicked the crowd. It was so good in fact that Jessel proposed to go to another benefit not far away. This time the act was enlarged to ten minutes. Again, it was a scream. By then, both the players were highly enthusiastic. They went to a third and a fourth benefit, and it was midnight before one of them remembered the wives. What happened then is unrecorded. — DARK CLOUD GATHERS. Hollywood is to see more ci “The Two Black Crows.” They have signed to appear in a feature length comedy for Mack Sennett. I The producer is writing it himself and also will direct. The famous black-face team disappeared from the film horizon after making two I pictures for Paramount. Their i first, “The Two Black Crows,” was a big success, but the second didn't do anything sensational. About ! this time the two partners split up, and Mack hired a new Moran. According to Sennett officials, | George Searcy the original Moran, I will appear in the new comedy. DID YOU KNOW— That Adolph Zukor once invented a clasp for fur neckpieces that brought him in a tidy sum? Copy right, ifill Premier Syndicate Ito.
* PREBLE NEWS ♦ ♦ Mr. and Mi's. Clyde Elzey, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Elzey of Fort Wayne spent the week-end visiting Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Elzey. Mr. ami Mrs. Walter Shady and daughter spent the week-end visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert shady. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Heller and family had as their guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Gust Yake. Mr. and Mrs. John Fetters, and daughters and Mrs. Henry Decker of Geneva visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sullivan and daughters Sunday. Mrs. John iSknith and son. Lawrence and daughter Lucille of Fort Wayne called on Mr. and Mrs. George Bultemier and daughters Saturday. Mrs. E. A. Goldner and Mrs. Irvin Goldner called on Mr. ami Mrs. Fred Goldner Sunday evening. Mrs. Charles Fuhrman and son Thurman and daughter Mary, Mrs. Orie Newhard and son John spent Tuesday in Fort Wayne. Mis Agnes Rupert of Fort Wayne spent tlie week-end visiting Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hoffman and family. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Goldner and family of Decatur called on Mr. and Mrs. Eli Goldner Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bresick and daughter Susan Ellen and son Bobby had as their guests for dintier Friday evening Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Grandstaff. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Grandstaff and daughter I Donna Ethol. Mrs. John Kirchner and daughter Lorin©, Mrs. Jufie Shackley ami son Darrell Eugene spoilt the we kI end visiting Mr. ami Mrs. Otto Niggli of Sturgis. Mich, and Fred i Wordelman of Centerville. Midi Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bultemier and family were the guests of Mr. land Mrs. George Bultemier and| I daughters Thursday evening. ' Mr. and Mrs. All rt Shady and 1 son Larwell and daughter Ethel | had as their guests for dinner Friday \ hing. Rev. and Mrs. A. R. I FledderJjohaiin and daughters, of i Decatut . Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Grandstaif. Mr. and Mis. Gerald Graudstaft nml daughter Donna Ethel, left Sunday on a motor trip to Santa B.irbar.i, California, where they will spend an eight weeks vacation. Enroute to California they D. A. GILLIOM Technician, Piano. Organ, talking machines, sewing machines repaired or rebuilt and 1 piat.o tuning. Office and shop at I home. Write, no phone. 1(14 E. Jefferson St. Decatur, Ind.
- . will visit the Black Hills in South Dakota, Oregon and Washington. Mr. aim Mrs. Milton Hoffman, Mrs. Douglas Elzey, Mrs. Albert
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Shady and Miss Mary Steele attended the funeral of Mrs. Mary Niblick Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Ben iShroyer and daughter
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i Catherine. Mrs. Peter Kirsch and ’ grandson of Decatur called on Mrs. John Kirchner and daughters ■ Tuesday afternoon.
