Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 201, Decatur, Adams County, 25 August 1931 — Page 5

iiki i.koi '' fl <|'\RTS WORK ■...-mkp na-M 3NE. ' van ' l S’ "■ gfl, ~ . is known B’"! , fl 1 :". r,,li, : f ” fl'to fl 1 . - ,i,an lhe fl". " nh ' r K ■ compos. "1 of thve fljr .... in.!- - ■ ■ I'o-oiitiu ivos of s!1 ‘ 11 as i.'lice toS . . oinpris.s 11 State fl/' ir.nr:-'. These will be fl,„,t sl'irih The third fl/ " the hl prominfl'Ls.n- "•'■•• '"vited by t- w days ago fl/.o Ciffool These will be fl" ' ' udividualty fl | 1 1 r.,, 1d , snb -onimittoes. ■L quiet-spoken big business ■ _ reV , " If as a pracfla 50 rt of " :i 'l ''l the task flnmf: oi.’- as so "’ e ' fl,, „f a Tber He was fl;,, b , . the amount of that ’ he needed this flier all ovi r 'he country. fl/ throuali predicting." he fl. .. lnl tProidli predicting fl~ ]t „ - ..Iso. 1 believe Kjd make son ;■ in dictions." fl .. .. — ■ope-fascist ■ TROI BI.ESENDS fIOSTINThI' FiHIM PAGE ONE) flop, nine " in 'tlations with flsolini for fin'll settlement flt7confertii cs with the Rev. fltchi V'rturi. .!• -nit priest, who flpar..', de '■ Halo-Vatican flotation culminating in the flteran treaty. The Pope deloflr,l Venturi as his Liaison offifl to neuotial' with Mussolini. I ■ Difficulties w. r. rapidly smooth-! fl out in the ensuing week of flferonci s. whi. li were entered fl ly Count Cesare de Vecchi, I fl™ ambassador to the Vatican, fl Cardinal Pa< • Hi. papal secrefly of state. ■ Tli.' settlement involved certain flicessions by the government to fl activities, purely in the reflmis field, of Azione Cnttolica, fl Catholic laynun's organization flhi.h was at the root of the fl The dispute began when fl government disbanded Azione flanizations throughout the county, charging them with engaging i political activity, in violation; if the Lateran accord. I — o — XNNON WIRES NEW PROTEST rONTINv'ED FROM PAGE ONE) (present, d a "purely personal BtiSmith campaign expenditures talk by vindictive Virginia. tanocrats." fawns cable was as follows: i “Dear Senator Nye: 11 hereby protest against con-' ■ atioa of senate committee. (earing at this time and respect-!

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. [•> Maud the Stenqtak

*| By HARRISON CARROLL. ' I <'•if'jrrlght, 1931. Premier Svndlrate. lue. •I HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Aug. 00. J —Hollywood casting directors still ! can take lessons from that master picker, Florenz Ziegfeld. Last year, the producer came , out to Holly- ■ wood - and bore ■ away with him three girls | ■ .-whom he jthought worthy ■' -W i of gl orif ic a- ■ ™ il tio n. All had Vy 5 done extra work, but were . Wy s’ ■ unable tog e t \ < 1 any further in K k , pl 'E\..k. > however, Holly- p. o ’ wood repaired 7 its oversight by Z,egfeld ' taking back one o,f the girls. She ! is Virginia Bruce, and she has a I i brand new contract with Metro-1 Goldwyn-Mayer calling for parts instead of extra work. Irving ‘ Thalberg himself signed the agreement. As soon as the ink was dry, Virginia boarded a train to pay New York a final visit. She is due hack here Sept. 1 to start the hazardous climb to stardom. ISN'T IT THE TRUTH? Take it from Edgar Allan Woolf, the fate of the motion picture comedy hangs in the balance. ■'What use are they,” he inquires, “when we get so many laughs in our serious pictures?” LATEST GOSSIP. Clarke Gable has gone to the ; desert for a rest. That ought to make for record temperatures down there. . .It will be a month yet before Marie Dressier is well enough to report for work of “Emma.” . . . Joan Blondell is ill, too. Nothing serious. . . . What difference a few years make! Walter Fritzche, war-time engineer on the | German submarine U-39, will act as technical director on the U-boat scenes in “Suicide Fleet.” While hostilities were on, Fritzche saw 108,000 tons of Allied shipping go to the bottom. Today he is a member of the U. S. submarine service. . . Incidentally, the “Suicide Fleet” company has been harassed by many sharks off the Coronados Islands When Navy men expressed the doubt that sharks would eat actor . Harry Bannister wasn’t convinced. “Even in this depresssian?”_ he inquired dubiously. . . .

htfly request that protest be re-1 corded, first, because application, 1 for prohibitory writ has been apI pealed to higher court; second, because committee knows official church duties require presence in Europe. - “Reason* assigned for hearing I now that statute of limitations requires immediate action is inconsistent with facts contradicting plea committee's attorney bej fore court that remedial legisla- , tion is purpose investigation i whereas evidently purpose of in- | vestigation is not remedial legis- ! lation but criminal prosecution I before statute of limitations prei vents. “Jameson contributions were

DECATUR DA

•■Preparations for the Negri film still move slowly. Pathe explains ' the picture was not promised on this year’s program, so they can take their time and get the story right. . . . Ken Maynard is flying East to the air show in Cleveland. He pilots his seventh plane. No, none of the others cracked up. . . . Although set musicians are rarely used now, Charlie Chaplin is said to pay his orchestra a regular retainer to be sure of getting them when he is ready to go to work. ROSCOE ATES WOULD GET RICH. i They were asking Eddie Cantor i about an article he wrote for a magazine. “They paid me $1 a word,” replied Cantor. "And did I stutter!’* EASY FOR SOME. ‘ With all of Broadway making ' eyes at the talkies, Alexander Kirklafid fell into a job without even trying. Tlte Theatre Guild actor has been signed by Fox to play the lead in William K. Howard’s next picture, “Surrender.” Rumor once gave the part to Leslie Howard. Kirkland’s experience is enough to excite the envy of his less fortunate brethren. Under contract for two years to the Guild, he played with Nazimova in “A Month in the Country” and later was loaned to Gilbert Miller for “Marseillaise.” He has made but one picture, Talullah Bankhead’s ill-starred “Tarnished Lady.” Some time 11 ago, the actor BL, ", WM came out to ' ' «■ Pasadena for a ” ’W rest. Through / Ruben Mamou- f T* 1 lian, he was in- ; troduced to film ; circles, where I h e eventually 1 met William K. Howard. An in- "wHjpF vitation to make ~ a test for “Sur- 'N. e *’ nd ' r render” imme- Kirkland, diately followed. Now the Fox Company is offering him a longterm contract DID YOU KNOW 'I That Seth Parker, the radio star who is making his first picture, was, at one time, the youngest high school principal in Maine? He held this office at the age of 21.

—— . , 1 made inHSeptenrt>er. October. De- ■ eember, January, Riving ample I : time for prosecution. Further-j l more, Jameson contributions were I all used to defeat Smith presi-; I dentlal electors, therefore not ; under jurisdiction of congress as \ \ presidential electors ’ are state ■ officials. "Glass resolution was not preI sented to enable senate to adopt ; remedial legislation but is purely I personal attack liy vindictive Virj ginia Democrat and Boston con- ■ gressman under Catholic I domination. "I have never objected to inI vestigation by federal grand jury I j or trial before properly constitut-| :ed court, but cannot agree thati, ; senate committee operating under I :no restrictions has right to con-, duct investigation concerning defi-j nite complaints of criminal con-| I duct." Senator Glass (Dem., Va.) introi duced in the senate a resolution I authorizing the Nye committee to' ■ determine whether the federal! ' corrupt practices act was violated! I during the 1928 campaign. Repre-| •tentative Tirsham (Rep., Mass.) I has been the principal critic of 1 Cannon in the house. E. C. Jameson. New York capitalist, ' contributed to Cannon approxi-1 1 I mat sly $65,000 during the cam- 1 I paign. Cannon has accounted in,' I detail for about $17,000 of this |' sum. The committee seeks top I learn what disposition was made ; of the remaining $48,000. —o— NEW LUTHERAN TEACHER NAMED CONTINUED '’ROM PAGE ONE! I ...J.—V,I i the Lutheran churches, for the past i I year and was re-elected to this of ', I (ice last summer. | , The Lutheran people of this city, feel fortunate in obtaining the set-1 ■ vices of Mr. Werling who comes! : highly recommended. School Opens September 8 The Zion Lutheran school will I open on Tuesday. September 8, i Rev. Schultz announced, and the I installation services for Mr. Werling will he held sometime before the opening of the fall term. Eight grades will be offered this ■ year, the eighth grade having been! added to the original seven grades. ■ so; ty-seven children are expected ! to enroll in 'he fall team of School. Native Dance to Be Given Milwaukee. Wis.— (U.R) —Songs' and dances of their respective fatherlands will be presented by 400 Milwaukeans in conjuncti'.n with la pageant to be presented each night of the Wisconsin State fair. lAugust 29 to Sept. 4. Among conn [tries to be represented by these sons and daughters of European heritage are Germany, Italy, Poland. Switzerland. Czecho-Slovakia. Sweden, Norway and Denmark.

iLY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1931.

O. W. HOLMES IS SERIOUSLY ILL I I FORM PAGE ONE) | 29th year on the Supreme court bench last December. The following March he celebrated his 90th birthday. The President who appointed j him. and ail members of the highest court at that time, and many since, have passed on. Although a survivor of the generation that is gone, I he is considered a leader in mod- j ern thought. The commanding, though stooped figure unaided up the steps daily to the court’s high bench during its last session. He rivalled the most active of his colleagues in work done, cases decided. He was unexcelled by any of them in wit and humor. Retired from public life except for the conflicts of the law and its accompanying clashes of ideas, Justice Holmes lias shunned interviews. During his spare time he reads Plato, detective stories and risque novels in French. Rumors of his impending resignation during the last session oi the court were irritating to the jurist. “Work keeps mo young," he said i once. “If 1 should -i would die!” In a letter to a friend in Massachusetts he said he would work “as long as my health lasts and my brain continues to do its work." His opinions over the last 30 years literally trace the trend of I progressive and liberal thought. He I is famous for his dissenting opinlions, in which lie usually was found lopposing the so-called conservative group. Justice Holmes, who bears three Civil War wounds and rose from a lieutenancy to become a colonel before he was mustered out was first to declare from the bench that strikers have a right to, picket. 1 o z LINDBERGHS VISIT NEMURO — | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I wife across thousands of miles of J Canadian and Alaskan wilds and 1 then cross vast expanses of peril- ' ous, fogbound islands. The native radio operators of the Ochiishi station, who aided the Lindberghs on their troubled flight from Nome, Alaska, to Nemuro last week, were visited by the couple and thanked. Col. Lindbergh, preparing to take off early tomorrow for Kasumigaura airdome, near Tokio. carefully checked the motor of his plane to guard against another failure such as forced them down in a desolate section of the Kurile Islands. He also directed refueling operations. The Lindberghs hoped to complete the 600-mile flight, the last stretch of their journey, about noon Wednesday (about 7:30 p. m. PST). Tokio. Aug. 26.—(U.R) —The Japanese naval ministry and other high goverhmetnt authorities issued a series of statements today express ling regret that reports had been 'published abritad indicating Col. jaffd Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh were | “suspected” of flying across terri- ' tory banned to foreigners. The naval ministry characterized | I the rumors as “too absurd to merit | | a denial,” pointing out that Japan | “unqualifiably welcomes the Lind ! bergh- and has never questioned | their forced landings or the route I they followed over the Kurile Is- | lands." —: o _j Tuberculosis Toll Cut Chicago. (U.R) — Tuberculosis I causes more than 91.000 deaths anI nually in the United States, less l than two-thirds of the number causi ed by the disease 30 years ago, according to a bulletin of the Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium.

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TLa /■ PATH ■ >lOl to the -Fy PhW|l p DOOR s i JJS, ‘ 7. of the Better MOUSE-TRAP BUILDER is 111 Producing a Crop of ||| WEEDS! 11l QUEEN MARY of England herself recently told a charity organization in which she >\as interested, “Adver - tise! It pays to advertise.” Indeed times have changed. Vv hen Queen Marj must tala ol advertising, what must the pooi mouse-trap builder do? No longer will tlie v Oi id mal.e a beaten path to his door, however wont der iid his mouse-trap. Because his competitors are out telling the world about their products in advertising. The world is listening. And buying! For Best Values Read the Democrat 111 There s the situation, sad as it may be to some. The 111 u.om direct, elective, time-tested, economical way of leaching the public is through the medium of a daily newspaper, in Decatur, the buying public reads the DAILY DEMOCRAT and uses its advertising columns as a shopping guide. Therefore, if you are trying to sell what the public needs and wants, be it a better mousetrap or a better pound of cheese, let the home newspaper be your salesman. I - i.l -iiiTr.r'.TM 9\ llu.(i 1 .tatim b i iwrFi iq'f 111 Decatur Daily Democrat |||

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