Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 172, Decatur, Adams County, 22 July 1931 — Page 5

.•’BiISH GOODS ' <OOO FRANCE R S ■ I’ m ■"‘' | ■K k<-.i> ~(' 'l ' MBSt x ■"" l l ' l ' llks ' ■“ iK 11 manur| claiiicr,ui::ci:t legislative Hh , year, since a royal I a gold duty J p. . n< h nni’orts in Spain, I ■R .■• her trade with I |H.,. unbalanced. I F'K, practically no I - ejith because of the . through in Sl’a< n E’jßnnh :.»»|S can now be ■■ i,. ■ h pric es. .

v u l g3W» —- ' 1-1108 tntlfl ’■tend our ift, w<||! sjtgidaire /■ubilee! I e phqH »< jMNIVERSARY Jgift OB Visitors TT U _ our dramatic Bnonstration of features 1 RHC OUT ABOUT OUR I 1 |Kcial Jubilee =■ Offer ■tSP » FRICIDAIRE M' is® lIBJ ANNIVERSARY Ulf JUBILEE i guest at the JubilcL in celebrat tioa of Frigidaire’s fifteen years of See our special demon-I I sttadon —howtheColdControlmakes a wide variety of delicious, desserts—how the Quickube j leeway enables you to remove ice at a time or a whole trayful I r '<'’islairc's one-way, steel-rail ni.ike it easy to put food in and without slopping or spilling. see us demonstrate the endur-i of Frigidaire Lifetime You will be amazed by the tests which show how s finish w ithstands hard scratches, dirt, grease, heat—*™W|re itself. Gifts for adult visitors, During the Jubilee u e uil. Frigidaire in your home Jor ■- $ 1O DOWN B~~ ‘he balance arranged Bfo s«/7 your convenience ■August Walters

wines of a corresponding quality I and strength, at the French vine- ] yards themselves, cost 16 to 18 | francs. The result is that sales of Spanish wines have mounted at J Perpignan from 25 to 50 tank-car loads a day. Spain has already shipped to France the entire lot of 2,000,000 hectoliters of wine which is ordinarily set aside tor sale during the year. The shipments have been so ■ great that last year's Spanish crop I of 16.000,000 hectoliters is sold out. The Spanish wines, strong in ' alcohol, are used to "cut” weaker ' but tastier French wines. * ~ MAGLEY NEWS There will be au ice cream so- • cial at J. J. Helmrick in Magley I I Thursday night July 23 everybody | welcome. Mrs, Charles Reppert and daughter visited Tuesday with Mis Lena Fruchte. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bloemker Mrs. Charles Reppert and daughter were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Hower of Bluffton Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rogers of Cleveland Ohio Mrs. Crist Borne. Mr. and Mrs. William Bracht, and , Mr. and Mrs. Israel Stoneburner and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Ves Venis and son, Mrs. Rose Acker; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McConnel of Decatur visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kolter and Mrs. James Hower the past week. Misses Emma and Elnor Hilgeman and Cordelia Worthman and Billy Woods were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Scherry and family Sunday. Mrs. Charles Reppert and*daughter visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward Reppert and family Thursday. Rev and %hs. Elmer Jaberg and family of Linton Mrs. Charles Reppert and datigh'er of Canada visited Mr. and Mrs. John Conrad and fa- | niily of Berne Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keller Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Fruchte of For’ Wayne were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Fruchte and family and Edward Scherry. Mr and Mrs. Peter Helmrich eni tertained for supper Sunday in honor of Mrs. Helmrich's Birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cable and family of Preble. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Smith and family. Mr. and Mrs Earl Wood ' and family. Mr. and Mrs. Earl I Straub and family, Mr. and Mrs. I Jesse Schlickman, Mr. and Mrs. IJ. J. Helmrich and family Harley I and Robert Anderson and Mr. and ] Mis. Peter Helmrich and family. Rev. and Mrs. Elmer Jaberg and j family were supper guests of Mrs. 'Martin Jaberg and family Sunday Miss Marie Scherry spent Sunday with Miss Helen Hildebrand. Mr. and Mis. Joseph Eckrote of I Linn Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Losier I Eckrote and Miss Marcella Scherry visited in Poi Hand Sunday. Mr. and Mrs- Aubust Krqetzman and family entertained for dinner Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bloemker Mrs. Alma Reppert and daughter Mr. and Mrs Walter Peck. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Peck and daughters Irene and Leona. Misses Tillie and I Selma Peteis and Irene Bloemker. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Worthman : and son Robert of Decatur were | guests Sunday evening of Mr. and I Mrs Milton Scherry and family. Miss Marie Hildebrand is spending a few days with Miss Ruth Irene Scherry of New Baveria Ohio Miss Mary Scherry is spending a few day:' with Helen Hildebrand. Mrs. Dettinger Mrs. G. F. Keil and children Phyllis and Iva spent Wednesday and Thursday with Mr. and Mrs-Alton Hower of Garret. Mi and Mrs. Ernest Dettinger and Mr. and Mrs. John Childs of i Detroit Michigan spent the week ■ en<F with Mg. and Mrs. Charles Dettinger. Mr. and Mrs Ed Hower were Sun-| i day afternoon guests of Mr. and , Mrs. Charles Dettinger. Rev. and Mrs. Elmer Jaberg and family of Linton who has been | visiting relatives the past week returned to their home Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Jaberg of Ki nosha Wisconsin Who has been visiting relatives for two weeks i returned to their home Sunday. — o I Harvey’s Party to Convene . Monte Ne. Ark.— (U.R) —W. H. “Coin" Harvey, advocate of "free silver” and imad of the recently termed “new politicaly party," announced recently the party would hold its convention for selection of a pr- sidential candidate here Aug. 25. He expects 10.000 to attend. o-48-Pound Salmon Caught Gronhogen, Gland, Sweden.—(U.R) i I —A salmon weighing 48 pounds has I been caught off Gronhogen in the i ' Baltic Sea. This place, located on ' the Swedish island of Gland, is a i favorite with fishermen. Last year I a sturgeon weighing 440 pounds was hauled up not far from Gronhogen. o Donkey Tourists In Italy Bolzano.—(U.R) —J. De Leeuwpool. a Dutchman who plans to travel around the world with his family in a donkey car, has arrived here. The party consists of De Leeuwpool and his wife, two boys and a threemonths old baby. The family has already traveled 18,000 miles with the assistance of two donkeys and one mule. I

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1931.

HOLLYWOOD 11 By Ronald W. Wagoner I tilted press Staff Correspondent t Hollywood, Calif. - (UP)—Sumi mer gossip along Hollywood Boule- -. vard—j i 'Gary Cooper and Lupe Velez have > | been secretly married for more than > a year. I Gaiy Cooper and Lupe Velez nevt er will be married. r Take your choice. Adolphe Menjou carries a silver clgaret case engraved: "To Menjou • from his greatest admirer." The case was presented by Menjou to > himself. -1 Officials of a certain studio were | extremely wrathy when it was suggested that the brother of a handjsome star was paid $1(10,000 to "keep out of .pictures." However, i in more than a year, the brother ■ has not appeartWl in a film. > One of Hollywood's leading woj men writers and one of the most ! radiant of the current crop of starf ; lets have not spoken since publica- ! tlon of one of the writer's recent j | articles. 1 , ( If Jim Tully, the hobo-writer and I John Gilbert, actor, should meet in . a case, let us say tonight, there . would not be another fight. They no J longer have a mad on” after their l now-famous tilt in the Brown Derby. 1 Ina Claire, Jack's estranged wife, I admits she "had all she could do to keep from laughing" when she witnessed the Tully-Gilbert mix. A better and bigger fight fhan that recently came off in an exI elusive night club. Two Hollywood beauties, one with a flair for imitations. She "imitated" the other beauty and “smack" the battle was ! on. The manager of the night club and all principals were “out of town" for several days thereafter and refused to confirm rumors of the disturbance. o OBITUARY Louis F. Lobenstein, son of John Henry and Fredericka Lobenstein, was born in Saxony, Germany, I August 21, 1849, and passed away .' at Monroe, Ind., June 22, 1931, at | the age of 81 years, 10 months and [: 1 day. On October 14, 1871, at the age of 22 years, he was united in marriage to Margaret Louise Martin of Van Wert, Ohio. To this union were born 10 children: five girls and five boys. Five of said children preceding their father and mother in death. The mother passed away Septemlier 4. 1915. Since which time Mr. Lobenstein has made his home with his son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Otho Lobenstein. Surviving are following children. ! Bertha Hendricks of Monroe; Lawrence Lobenstein of Fort ' Wayne; E. W. Lobens’tein of Grand Rapids, Mich.; Otho Lobenstein of Monroe, and Walter Lobenstein of Detroit. Mich. | Three grandchildren also sur- ; 1 Kessler of Fort Wayne; and Louis ■ Hendricks of Monroe. Also six 1 great grandchildren: Dorwan Kess- ' ler, Maxine, Viginia, Ruby. Betty ‘ and Bobby Hendricks, all of Fort Wayne. A sister. Mrs. Caroline May an 1 i brother. Ed Lobenstein of Piqua, 1 Ohio; several nieces and nephews and a host of friends, also survive. For tne past 3? years Mr. Lobenstein has been a resident of Mon roe township, of which 27 years were spent in the city of Monroe, where he has been greatly interested in both civic and public affairs, having served as councilman for the town of Monroe for 12 years. He was a member of St. Pauls Evangelical Lutheran church of , Piqua, Ohio. I "j "• ° Sandwich And Gullane To Be Golfinjj Sites lOYDON — (U.R) — Sandwic’.i. Kent, and Gullane, Scotland, will Im the golf centers of the 1932 British season. Thsee two seaside towns replace Carnoustie and Westward Ho. The Op n will be played over the Princes course nt Sandwich, 'in ! amateurs will compete for 'the crown now held by Eric Smith at Mulrfield. Both courses are simi ilar in that they are located ,n famous golf country, are seaside courses and have great length. Princes, oddly enough, will en-

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| joy its first championship play | next June just as its predecessor, Carnoustie, did in June. Tommy Armour will defend his title over a course measuring some 7,060 yards. Princes is situated magnifieenty on the very edge of the sea. Huge bunkers, tall sandhills, tighty guarded greens and sporting holes are characteristics of Princes. Mulrfield has been the scene for five amateur and six open championships. The course is a noble one full of big hills, varied shaped hunkers and little nestling hollows. The greens are among tile finest in Britain. The course runs down to the very edge of the sea and combines many or the' features well known to British seaside courses. Two Petitions Seek Dry Repeal SALEM. Ore. —(U.R) — Two preliminary petitions for an initiative measure seeking repeal of the state prohibition laws have been filed with the Secretary of State. Completed petitions require at least 17,088 signatures of voters before July 3, 1932, to insure the measure being placed on the ballot. ■ o Swedish Destroyer Launched Malmo, Sweden.—(U.R) —The latest addition to the Swedish navy, the destrqyer "Kias Horn", has been launched here at the Kockutn yard. Named for a famoUs Swedish naval hero of the 16th Century, tlie vessel has a displacement of about 1,000 tons. It is armed with three 12-centimeter guns, two 40-millimet-er automatic guns and three triple torpedoes.

IS YOUR HOME A ♦ * TESTING GROUND/UNTRIED PRODUCTS ? # V I' -J CAN anyone gain by buying ■' ’ ’ unknown products? Ancl why should anyone buy them, when y° u can always be safe by asking for brands A tof recognized quality? <• The lure of unknown products is often a t ' r JT 1 * “bargain price.” The clerk may say they Th Ft A are “just as good” as the popular advertised F brands. I f JTiM frw*' But isn’t the approval of m/7/fons of people THE ANSWER TO / F worth more than the word of one? SUBSTITUTION Advertising can not create character for a product. But it does place established IS ALWAYS..., character on trial. f/k ■ Mi The advertised product has a reputation 4V - at stake. ■ - K . It must make good to hold your confidence, ffi : : :< One false claim would be fatal. ■ yiN?' Th e substitute product is an unknown HI j/ brand, with nothing to lose. / I In appearance, it may imitate the product you know. Over the counter, any claim may be made 1 I fa for it. Only by sad experience can you prove that Bk ? j B JBa ; claim untrue! | —Hmi*** Bo Think of this the next time anyone tries to sell you something “just as good.” ? Such “just as good” products are urged upon -W IFi | y° u for . onl y one reason. There is mo.-o profit in selling them. ME/ - - merchant who permits and encourages : substitution is looking at today’s sales slips. X' Not at tomorrow’s loyal customers. • These facts are published by this newspaper ; ' ~ to protect its readers. Whenever you shop, ask for standard advertised products. Insist on getting them. - Be warned by the words “just as good” that there is something better. Decatur Daily Democrat

Oklahoma Drought Is Menace To Crops Oklahoma City, —(UP)—Drought has alreadj’ menaced the corn and wheat crop of northern Oklahoma and unless there is an appreciable tain fall within the next few days there is a possibility that the erop will be badly damaged, Harry B. Cordell, president of the state board of agriculture, has announced. “The corn crop in the nor'hern part of*the state has already been hurt, but it wil Ibe saved if we have rain soon." he said. The corn erop in the southwest is hanging in the balance as the result of the continued heat wave. o — Taxi Jaunt Cost S4OO London.— (U.R) Delighted with the comfort found In a short trip by taxi, Mrs. A. M. Plant, of Manchester, decided to spend her holiday in a taxi jaunt. Five weeks after she had stepped up to a rank and en-l gaged J. F. Child, taxi driver, the pair returned to London. The car covered a distance of more than 1,800 miles and the trip cost Mrs. Plant about S4OO. o Huge Peach Grown Camden, Ark.— (U.R) —A peach weighing more than half a pound was raised by J.S. Morgan, farmer.’ near here. ■ o Royal Weapons on Display Paris. —(U.R) —An array of weapons carried by famous kings and warriors is now on display in the Salle Louis XHI in the Hotel des, Invalides. This unusual collection [ I includes swords, daggers and broad-1

swords, arquebuses, bows and cross I bows, arrows, shields, battle axes and spears. Many of these articles are valuable works of art, having been decorated by master jewelers, smiths and artists of Italy, Spain, 1 Germany, France, Holland and 1 Fla u de re. 1 oCovered Wagon Heads West Brockton, Mass.—(U.R)—With Oregon as its destination, a moderniz- > ed “covered wagon" left here recently to cover the 100-year-old trail i of John Mason Peck, pioneer Baptist missionary. The trip, to lie I ' made under auspices of the Baptist Home Missionary society, is sched- ’ tiled to be completed in the fall of 1932. Q„ — — Tourist Contest Cancelled 1 Rome — (U.R) —The Italian State Tourist Department has cancelled ' the 1930 foreign literary contest be1 cause of the poor material submitted. Annually the Tourist Department has offered 5,000 lire to the ' best article on Italy in a non-Ital-ian magazine or newspaper. After examining the 1930 applications, the committee decided to withhold the award. Next year the prize also Will be open to books on Italy. oWatch for These | FORT COLLINS, Colo.—(U.R)—-Al I coral snake was found in Poudre j i Canyon near here recently. It .] was 10 inches long. The coral's I 1 bite is almost as fatal as that of I I a rattiesnake. The reptile has a I . flat three-cornered head, and ‘ . about its body are rings of orange, i cream, black and white colors. o Get the Habit—Trade at Home. 1

Rat Snake Ate Canary, But Feast Was Fatal Savannah, Ga —(Ut l )—The cat that ate the canary probably looked less quilty and a lot less silly than the rat snake that ate the canary in this case. The reptile entered the home of Mrs. Q. C. Hendrix here and consumed her songbird, "Sonny Boy.” But, after tho meal the snake's slim walsteline had become a bulge which prevented P from escaping from the bird's cage and led ultimately to its own death. It measured two feet In length. Ford Gets Old. Coach Norwalk, O. (U.R)’ —A pre-Civil War coach. oWned by the late James Gardiner, of Norwalk, was presented to Henry Ford for his Dearborn Museum. The ancient

THE ADAMS THEATRE Delightfully COOL and COMFORTABLE THURSDAY 1 , FRIDAY, SATURDAY-15-35e BIG DOUBLE BILL — TWO BIG HITS! Wm. Haines Bebe Daniels in in “JUST A GIGOLO” “The Maltest Falcon” A HAINES comedy mixed with a; with RICARDO CORTEZ, poignant drama of the modern A Thrill-Packed Action Story of a 9 e! Baffling Mystery and Intrigue! THIS THFATRE WILL BE CLOSED TONIGHT (WEDNESDAY) " ' ■■■"! i —ii i. i -

PAGE FIVE

vehicle is still in running order. It I was built by the Lawrence CMttlhge Works in New York almost 100 years agn. w

t I =*‘"' " ■ " .=5 — THE CORT — ” Tonight-Tomorrow BIG DOUBLE BILL s SCMMtLINb-S t HIBLING Fight i picture. Round by Round. ■- Last ; round in alow motion. Better than . at the ringside. ALSO—“THE PERFECT ALIBI." Thrillingl Gripping! Sensational! ALSO—NEWS REEL. 15c-35c, Friday & Saturday—“THE UGHTI NING EXPRESS.” ■ Sunday, Monday, Tuesday—i “WHITE SHOULDERS-” < _ - , ..... t ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■l