Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 15, Decatur, Adams County, 18 January 1932 — Page 3
■ 1 vT a*W z jamAy I >\ /gltß^aaTutm^Zl •s ■u - g] /, B | v jl \ U Miss Mary Mary /{/ hl I IT *" Miss, Margaret Haley K<s . ,[| I'Phones 1000—1001
Paris Styles By Mary Knight Press Staff Correspondent Jan IS (UP)— "The WinM - is one of the most ini romances ever written in ion air of the great French Its sport pages, the chap- I ifternoon troeks and (linnet , ;itie fabric poems on Robes i ur and versions of the j theme song all of these make this volume one of I it talked o. in many sea . cannot be bought but it can j in the salons of all Jhe | uturiers and along the Bou- ' out in the open country th in the snow-clad moun--1 the French Alps. it; from midnight mass on #'s Eve, two luxurious Eves | from the Madeline swathin ermine and the other in > 'heir coats were long, one [ traight lines ta the ankle— Ine cone—with a huge white B pe and great puff sleeves if:s over the elbows; the sable, overlapped at the ith a diagonal point. Its fell to the finger tips, away I hands, and were wide with haping finish. Io Cha Rea Club will meet > ,y night at eight o’clock at | le of Mrs. Hubert Schmitt I h Fourth street. ri Kappa Sorority will meet as Lee Anna Vance. Tuesning at eight o’clock. Mrs. inapp will be the assisting L R. Holthouse will be hos- ’ the members of her Bridge . I’jrsday night at six-thirty ' (omen’s Foreign Missionary ' of the Methodist Episcopal : will meet Thursday after-two-thirty o'clock with Mrs. I ower. ion Lutheran Ladies Aid So- I II Imeet Thursday evening to'ciock at the school house t TAIN Y GUESTS id Mrs. W P. Lose and faI as their dinner and supper Sunday, Miss Irene Schultz k Herick of Tiffin, O.;
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CLUB CALENDAR i Monday Christian Loyal Daughters Class Mary and Evelyn Kohls, 7:30 p, m. Monday Night Bridge Club. Mrs. Harry Helm 7 p. m. Monday Night Bridge Chib, Mrs. I Harry Helm. 7 p. m. i Art Department, Miss Velma Waij ters, 8 p. m. Dramatic Department study meet-j ing Miss Florence Magley 7:30 nm. 1 I p. m. Literature Section, Mrs. C. D. ' Teeple. 7:30 p. m. 7 uesday Girl Scouts, Central School 4 p.m. I Delta Theta Tau Business meet- I ing. Mrs. ,1. L. Ehler, 7:30 p. m. Tri Kappa Sorority, Miss Lee Am a Vance, 8 p. m. Research Club, Mrs Fred Fnichte, 2:30 p. m. Psi lota Xi. Miss Etna Lankenau j 8 p. m. C. L. of C. Pot-luck Supper, Catholic school hall, 6:30 p. m. Wednesday Presbyterian Mid-week service, ! Session in charge church 7 p. nt. Historical Club, Mrs. Myrtle Scott, at the C. C. Langston home. 2 p. m. Ladies Shakespeare Club. Mrs. Cha.les Teeple, 2:30 p. m. Thursday So Cha Rea Club. Mrs. Hubert I Schmitt, 8 p. nt. > W. O. M„ Moose Home 7:30 p. m. Presbyterian adies Aid Society, I Mrs. Bert -Haley 2:30 p. m. Bridge Club. Mrs. A. R. Holthouse 6:30 p. m. Methodist W. F. M. S. Mrs. M. E. Hower. 2:30 p. m. j Zion Lutheran Ladies Aid, school 1 house, 7 p. m. Friday i Better Homes Home Economics I Club Mrs. Ada Crist, 2 p. m. i Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Mathias of Fre- ! mont, O.; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mur- ‘ ray of Fort Wayne. — Mrs. J. L. Ehler will be hostess • I to the members of the Delta Theta ; Tau Sorot ity at her home, Tuesday j evening at seven-thirty o'clock at a business meeting. MANY ATTEND DANCE DEMONSTRATION The Knights of Columbus Hall’ was filled to capacity Sunday afternoon. when Miss Violet Reinwald. presented a number of her pupils, in a publie dance demonstration. A number of out-of-town persons ! also attended the afternoon dance program. Miss Patsy Fullenkamp of this I city, who will have charge, of the i School of the Dance which will open l here Saturday. January 23, appearled in several dance numbers, and others who participated were pupils
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1932.
of Miss Reinwald. Those from out of town who witnessed the program were Mrs. T. < Corbett and daughters Lucille jand Eileen, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Berghoff and children, Mr. and Mrs. H. Metcalf, Mr. and Mrs. L. Hodgins, all of Fort Wayne; Mr. and | Mrs. Jack Curran, and Mrs. Walter O'Brien of Lima, ().; and Mr. and Mrs. George Andrews and daughter of Huntington. The Loyal Daughters Class of the Christian Sunday school will meet |at the home of the Misses Mary I and Evelyn Kohls, at seven-thirty I j o'clock tonight. There will be an important meeting of the Girl Scouts at the Central School building. Tuesday afternoon j a' four o’clock. Initiation will be held tor several new members and all oil members are urged to be present. The session of the Pretibyterian i church will have charge of the mid- | week service at the church, Wedi nesday evening at 7 o’clock. INSANITY PLEA FOR MRS. JUDD i (CONTINUED eRo;.. PAGE ONKI j under the observation of many psychiatrists and alienists, most of them requested by the defense but several acting for the state. Two sealed packets, addressed to ■ the clerk of the court, have arrivled by mail from middle western I cities. Though their contents were j undisclosed, it was believed they I related to Mrs. Judd's girlhood in ' Indiana. It was thought not unlikely that her parents, the father an Indiana evangelist, would be placed on the stand to tell what they know of the "burlap abduction,” a sensational narrative of Mrs. Judd's adolescence, j • As the story was printed at the Time of her arrest three months -ago, Mrs. Judd, when she was 16, I allowed herself to be ’’found’’ in a barn clad only in burlap sack, and told a story of kidnaping and seduction that resulted in the arrest of a neighbor youth, a story she was said to have retracted later, with the confession that it was a fiction growing out of her passionate wish for a child. Mrs. Judd's behavior since her arrest ha-s been of the sort that would lend itself to the contention that she was insane. In the office [of the Los Angeles captain of defectives on the night she surrendered, she aroused some surprise by calmly announcing, when her husband told her he was fighting any attempt to take her back to Are ' zona. “Why, 1 want to go back to Arizona. that’s the only place for me." At her preliminary hearing, she 1 caused a courtroom stir when the 'man she hired to transport the luggage carrying the bodies of her i friends was on the stand. Upon i Ver whispered prompting, one of ■her attorneys asked the man: ’’Did she give you a tip?" when he replied, "she promised me one. but I never got it," Mrs. Judd laughjed loudly. It was considered likely that she also will plead self-defense which she protested when arrested —that \flss Samuelson fired upon her at the height of a quarrel and Mrs. Leroi advanced with an ironing board. ' ( HILI) WELFARE WEEK IS SET iCOKTINUuID FROM FAi’P ’Mti publication of the congress and as such is widely used throughout the country by parents and pari ent-teacher workers. During the week beginning Monday an earnest effort will be I made to acquaint everybody with its value in dealing with the prob--1 lems of children, mental, moral and physical. The most recognized authorities cn these subjects I are among the contributors to the magazine. Each state has a Child Welfare Magazine chairman and every - community has a local chairman. The chairman for Indiana is Mrs. I ! Logan G. Hughes. o Pair Shoot Same Deer i Boyne City. Mich.— (U.R) —Two [ I hunters here both have a deer, but [ each hasn’t a deer. N. J. Rovic and , : latuis Tooley were together when ■ they sighted a buck. Both fired and the animal fell Neither knowing who killed it, they decided to share the prey. __ o _ , 1 Chimes Heard 12 Miles Away Chapel Hill, 8. C.—<U.R)— Chimes of the SIOO,OOO Patterson-Morehead liell flower, dedicated at the University of North Carolina Thanksgiving Day, are audible in Durham, 112 miles away, according to residents of that city. o Court Ball Called Off Brussells. — (U.R) — The annual I court ball given by King Albert and Queen Elizabeth has been called i off for this year, due to hard times. The Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg also has made a Him-1 ilar decision.
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By HARRISON CARROLL. I«J2. Klug Feature* flyadlcata. lac. HOLLYWOOD.Jan. 00.—Comeback road is a hard one, but Marian Nixon has traveled it
Marian Nixon
and now has another longte r m contract almost within I her grrakp. Fox plans to sign her up, I understand, af-' ter she finishes I "Scott’s Val- ! i e y." opposite Warner Baxter. I This it an aylipiihent you haven’t heard about before,] and it it her third in a row at the Wes t-
wood studio. She started out in a "Charlie Chan" thriller and is just completing a role opposite Charlie Farrell For all her youth, Marian is a comparative old-timer in Hollywood. She is one of the many film stars who began their screen careers at Mack Sennett’s. Before that, she was a dancer Both Marian and her husband, Edward Hillman. Jr., are very ' popular among the film folk. Incidentally, he is one of the colony’s best polo players EVEN THE JUDGE LAUGHED. They were talking about amusing charges in recent divorce cases. It was Louis Brock who supplied the topper with his story of the colored man who asked to be freed because, on the day of his wedding, his father-in-law didn't have a permit to carry a gun. LATEST GOSSIP. Jack Oakie and tall, blond Virginia Bruce are going places together. But Jack has a fickle fancy and no inferences are in order.. Jimmy Durante found a polo ball, so now he’s pricing ponies . Hollywood is to have its endurance bridge game. Bob Vokel, the man who negotiated the sale of “Grand Hotel,” has bet Buster Keaton SIOO that he and his wife can defeat Buster and any partner over a period of three nights. Nobody told Vokel that BusUr is one of the colony’s crack players. . . Ramon Novarro is back from his New York vacation Bic Cortez has • squeamish job. He's watching major operations to get the proper technique for his
COURTHOUSE ■ „ Omer Peterson has filed suit for divorce against Vida Bell Pet- ’ erson. Summons returnable February 1. H. M. DeVoss is attor- ’ nev for plaintiff. Lucinda Quandt has filed suit ■ for divorce against Charles Quandt J Summons returnable February 1.1 1 H. M. DeVoss is attorney for plaintiff. After an all-day session Sattir--1 day, the closing day of Adams circuit court, it was agreed to continue the case of 26 depositors against the defunct Bank of Linn 1 Grove, et al. until February 13. Real Estate Transfers Rudolph Buuek et ux, 76 acres in ' Preble township to Albert Buuek j for $2.500.(X>. Rudolph Buuek et ux, 38 acres in Preble township to Louise Buuek ! for SI.OO. Joseph P. Brookhart, 20 acres in Blue Creek township to John M. j Myers for $1,000.00. Mary C. Ehinirer, In lot 94. .Decatur to Jeanette M. Ehinger for $3,000.00 First Joint S. L. B„ 80 acres in Washington township to Frances Metzger for SI.OO. o Farm Skeleton Believed That of Indian Chief Mattapoisett, Mass.. —(UP) — A skeleton unearthed in a sand pit on I the Manual Nunes’ farm recently is believed to he that of an Indian j Chief of the Algonquin tribe, which ' inhabited this area in Colonial days. The body had been buried in a sittng posture, facing East. Dr. Irving N. Tilden, trustee of Mattapoisett Library, began assembling the skeleton so It could be placed on exhibition. 0 Elephant Seeds Put Jumping Beans to Shame j i SAN FRANCISCO—(U.R>—Jumping Mexican beans have nothing 'on the “elephant” seeds, which' plant quarantine officer H. M. Armitage received for inspection. 1 He displayed the seeds here to-) day. Bach one is about the size I of a pea. hard shelled and glisten- j ing scarlet, with a large, black I helium. “Watch closely." said Armita c.! “The tip of a helium comes out.” And out came the black tip of the seed. But after it came the elephant — perfectly carved in ivory. Tlte seed was only a shell, long since scooped out. As curios smuggled into this country, the “seeds" may be worth as much as a dollar, Armitage said. —,— ——o A “taxicab" chariot, used in Rome bt-fore the time of Caesar. | | computed the fare by pebbles dropped into a howl. '
tsurgeon’a role in “Symphony of Six Million.”.. .Ivan Lebedeff is a patron of the arts. He is playing host at the exhibition of Carl Lindbom. specialist in international architecture. Mr. Lindbom is the designer of the famous I Bernheitner Gardens.. The surest j way to locate old favorites is to check up the cast of the Thalian ! comedies, which Bryan Fov is producing. in his latest are Kenneth ' Harlan. Viola Dana and Patsy Ruth Miller Hollywood is I mourning the death of J Grubb i Alexander, veteran scenarist, who , succumbed to pneumonia. The popular writer was so anxious to complete the script of “So Big" that he refused to take to his bed. .. Another tragedy that strikes home is the killing of Detective Lieutenant Hugh A. Crowley, who was shot down in a theatre holdup. Crowley was a “dress suit” i detective, and was a familiar figure at all the b'g premieres — ATTENTION. HUSBANDS. Listen to this, you husbands who neglect to write home when you go on trips. Edgar Wallace, i the novelist, has sent h's wife a :' 40,000 word diary covering his experiences in Hollywood. In addition, he calls her up in London every dav or «o. ARIANE’S NEW JOB Her honeymoon scarcely over, , Arline Judge must get on with her [ career as cinema home wrecker. She plays the feminine menace in “Veneer," a dance-hall romance, with Helen
1' we I ve t rees and Eric Linden as the Young Lovers. This i.s the much tossed about picture which has been anouneed and postponed several times h, as many wee fee. David Selznmk put it back on radio’s schedule when John Barrymore had
k w Jr x-. Arlene Judge.
'o remain at M. G. M. to play the baron in “Grand Hotel.” As soon as this is finished, John and Helen will be seen together in “State’s Attorney.’’ DID YOU KNOW That William S. Hart is chairman of the Board of Directors us a California bank?
Relief Bill Favored Washington, Jan. 18—(UP) —The 1 Lafollette Costigan unemployment relie’ bill, which would appropriate $375,000,000 for direct relief out of ■the Federal treasury, was approved today by a senate subcommittee. I, The sub-committee voted to rei hill immediately to the lull mantii facturers committee. —o Appropriation Is Cut Washington, Jan. 18 —(UP)—The house appropriations committee today set congress an example of concrete economy by reporting favorably on an agriculture departI ment annual appropriation bill $60.I 600,0 0 under funds allowed for the I present fiscal year, and $10,799,591 less than President Hoover's budI get estimates. o ENTERTAINERS HERE TUESDAY < UNJ’IMJH HOM PAGE ONE) ders, and have pleasing voices. Their program will be of interest to all lovers of music and an evenng of enjayaijle entertainment. I Single admission tickets may l>e i secured at the door. o YOUTHFUL GIRL MESSENGER IS THEFT VICTIM I ICCN' INUED FROM PAGE ONE) man wore a neat tan topcoat anti ' tan fedora. Neither the brakeman nor the conductor was in the car when the holdup occurred. # They ran into the car and quieted the excited commuters as the robbers leaped I off. Fire Captain Janies Collins w-as I among the riders. He was on his way home after a night's dutv. ' Others among the passengers included a sports writer for a news--1 paper, also homeward bound after i working all night, and several i workmen. o Motion Is Overruled I St. Sterling. Ky„ Jan 18.—(U.R) — Judge H R. Prewitt of Montgomery circuit court today overruled motions for new trials on behalf of William Hightower and W. B. Jones. Evarts, Ky„ mine union officials convicted on charges of conspiracy to murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. — .. —o Mr. and Mrs. John S. Peterson, Mis. Clara Anderson, and S. W. i Hale were Sunday afternoon guests lot Mr. and Mrs. David Smith of I Fort Wayne.
* Library Book List * Mls.s Annette Moses, city librarian, and the members of the board of trustees of the Library have selected the following non-fiction books which are at the disposal of the reading public at any time. 'These books include some of the latest and best nonfiction books written and were recently purchased by 'he board. Sullivan, “Our Times.” Cheney, “The Theatre." Overstreet. "The Enduring | Quest." Pioneer-Lyman, "John Marsh." Magonigle, “The Nature, Practice and History of Art.” Wade, "The New International Year Book for 1931.” Lew, "The 20th Century Book of Toasts." Malin, "Indiana School Laws and Supremo Court Decisions." Lticcock, “Jesus and the American Mind.” Burch, “American Eeonoivii Life.” James, Sam Houston, ’ The Raven.” Miehl, “Symphonies of the Soli-' tudes.” Grayson, "Adventures iu Contentment.” Priscilla Pub. Co . "Modern Priscilla Cook Book." Shaw, “The Road to Culture," i Goss, "Beeth iven-Master Musician.” Sweetzer, “Famous Girls of ih.> White House.” Legislative Bureau, "Indiana Year Book." Matkins. "American Literature" DeFoucault, “A Chateau at the Front." Simonds. “A Boy with Edison" Miln, “The Vintage of Yon Yee", Indiana Extension Division Art | Guide to Indiana, Vol. 1, No. 8 1931. Historical Bureau. Indiana History Bulletin, Vols. 7-8. Greenlaw-Stratton. Literature and Life, book 2 Maurois, Life of Lord Byron. Frontier Press, Lincoln Li’Drarv of Essential Information, Revised 1931, 2 vols. Helen Keller. Midstream, Story of Mv I .at er Life. Warshow. Alexander Hamilton - First Business Man of America. Harper, Around the Hearth Fir". Cunningham. Everything Yo” Want to Know About the Presidents, 1931. Moriarity. Story of the Olympic Games. 1931. O'Brien, The Best Short Stories of 1931. Goudiss. Eating Vitamii.es, Bailey, Plays for the Children’s Hour. Crowther, How to Write Letters. 1931. Untermeyer, Modern British Poetry. Manual of Examination for Government Positions. 1931. Edgerton. A Speech tor Every Occasion. 1931. Finley, Old Patchwork Quilts and Who Made Them. Ritter, Washington as a Business Man. 1931. Sadler. Dr. W. S„ Piloting Modern Youth, 1931. Arlitt, Psychology of Infancy and Early Childhood. Thom, Everyday Problems of the Everyday Child-1931. Parker, Minute Biographies-1931 Steffens, Lincoln, Autobiography 1931. Rockne. Knute, Autobiography--1931. Wells, Pelouhet’s Select Notes on Sunday School Lessons-1932. Rohrbough. Games We Like the Best. Snowden's. Select Notes on Sunday School Lessons-1932. Hagedorn. The Book of Courage. Winkler, Incredible Carnegie His Life—lß3s to 1919 Dorsey. Man’s Own Show; Civilization. Jones, E. Stanley. The Christ of the Mount. Byrd. Richard. Skyward -His Life and Flights. U. S. Govt., Report of the librarian of Congress for 1931. o Gillian Trial Starts Albion, Ind., Jan. 18 (UP)—Walter A. Gillian, Kendallville, went on trial in Noible circuit court here today charged with embezzlement, as the result of the falure of the No.ile County Bank and Trust Company. Kendallville, of which he was vice ' president. Special Judge William P. Endicott, Auburn, presided. Milton K. Jacobs .also vice president of the defunct bank, will be tried January 25 on similar charges. Both were indicted at the Octciber term of the Noble County grand jury. The bank was closed in Januarv 1931. B. E. Gates, Columbia City, assisted in the prosecution. — o Recess Is Announced Washington, Jan. ’B—(UP) -\A three-week recess of the supreme court beginning after a noonday decision session next Monday was announced today. The court will reconvene Feb. 15. 11 ■ "■■ 1 ■ ■ O 11 — ~ Try Brown Bobbies. They are Delicious. Call phone 1293.
fyown Talk
Briant Secrest of Fort Wayne visited in this city Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Yager and daughter Kathryn Ixiuise visited in ; Fort Wayne Sunday evening. Dick Stoneburner and J. W. I Beery visited with friends in Bluffion Sunday evening. j Mrs. William Sehumaeher and daughter Miss Maifcaret and Miss Myrtle June Aughenbaugh motored Fort Wayne Sunday where Mrs. Schumacher and daughter visited with Mis. Schumacher's nephew. Ixionard Budd at the Methodist Hospital and Miss Aughenbaugh i visited witli her brother, Dan Augh- , enbaugh and family. Mrs. Margaret Elzey visited with 'relatives in Rockford. 0., Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Harve Kltson have returned from six week’s motor trip I to Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Heller and Mr. land Mrs. I. W. Macy visited in Fort Wayne last evening. Norbert Holthouse and Jim Staley al tended to business for the | Cloverleaf Creameries, Ine., at Hun-j | tington today. Claude Harvey of Monroe was a business caller here today. Dr. Glen Neptune is receovering from his recent illness, having improved quite rapidly the past fewdays. ——— o Card of Thanks We wish in this manner to exI press our appreciation to the neighI bins and triends and all those who ' so kindly assisted during the illness and death of our husband and fathI er. Mrs. Paul Miller and family o Actress Is Held Up Hollywood, Cal.,, Jan. 18—(UP) i Carmel Meyers, motion picture ac- | tress was robbed of jewels valued I at $20,000 today when she returned | home and found two unmasked bandits hiding in her apartment. Miss Meyers and her maid. Mrs. Anna Moore, were backed against a wall where one of the gunmen 1 held the n at bay while his companion rifled the apartment. o Man Falls To Death Chicago, Jan. 18. (U.R) —For five i minutes Clarence E. Brinckerhoff, ' 38. advertising agency head, clung | by his fingers to a window ledge 14 stories from the ground then as aid arrived his grip' failed and he fell 1 to his death. Police believed Brinckerhoff planned suicide but changed his mind after climbing out the window high . above the exclusive Lakeshore
$750.00 Cash Offered For Name of Movie Actress
Reward Will Be Paid Everyone W ho Submits Most Suitable Name From Hollywood comes an extra i ordinary announcement. A movie '! actress is in need of a name, and J $750.00 in cash will be paid for [ the ihst suggestion. You can give her yours, or any other name you think of, it may mean $750.00 to ! you. This movie actress, whom you j have probably seen on the screen of your favorite motion picture theatre, is the beautiful Helen j Mann. Like most of the stars, she j | prefers to use a name other than ' her own, and in order to help her [ obtain it, $750.00 in cash is offered I to anyone who is quick in sending in the name selected. Miss Manu s publicity director says, “Most any j name may win." It may be your! very own, a name of a friend or I I relatives, or a coined name made i up by you. Readers of this an-[ nouncement are urged to send! [their suggestions for a name at once, because $250.00 extra will be given the winner if name is mailed and postmarked before January 1 24. 1932. Just make it easy to pronounce and easy to remember. But send it right away, or you may he late for (he promptness prize.
OVER STOCKED SALE THURSDAY. JANUARY 21. 1932 11 O'clock Faetern Standard Time At the farm 4 miles south of Rockford, Ohio, then 1 mile west, »/.. | mile south and ’f> mile west; or 6 tpiles southeast of Chattanooga O | or ft mites northwest of Celina, Ohio. 22 head Registered Holstein cattle; 13 head Horses. If weather is had. sale will be held under cover. Lunch on ground. (. E. HAWK & SON Roy Johnson. Decatur. Ind., uuct. o. L. Disher, , Walter Gaywood, Rockford. Ohio. uuct. Marion Potid, clerks
PAGE THREE
• | Drive. I The advertising man, who ha.s been under treatment for a tier i vous ailment, had locked himself in the bathroom. His wife heard him . scream for help and unSTde Io open the door called Robert Graham, manager of the apartment house. I As Graham and Mrs. Brlnckeii hoff broke in they saw the man’s purple fingers relax their grip. IL- . was killed Instantly. -— — o ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hesher, 716 West Marshall street, arc the parents of a boy baby born at 6 o’clock Sunday morning. The baby has been named Neil Richard. Mrs. Hesher was formerly Miss Florence Gearhart of Wells County. Both mother and baby are doing nicely. — o. — — Entered Apprentice degree I Tuesday night at 7:30 o’clock. D. H. Tyndall, W M. Faces Murder Trial Princeton, Ind„ Jap. IS, —.U.R) ■ William Wedding. Evansville, went on trial in Gibson circuit court today on a charge of murdering Have McGarrah during a holdup last No- ‘ veniber 13. Wedding, recovering from a bullet wound suffered in a l gun battie with police as lie sought to evade arrest, wa:t asssted into the courtroom. Wedding was arrested in a trap police laid for chicken thieves. Homer Phelps, who also was arrested, will be tried after Wedding. As Wedding went on trial, he inI sisted lie was tlie victim of a frame- ■ j l 'PAirplanes Drop Food San Jose, Calif.. Jan. 18 —(UP) — 1 Three men snowbound in the Mount Hamilton range near here thwarted starvation today when food was dropped to them from airplanes. (Sterling Dean, marooned caretaker. was brought a sack of tool ? by his employer, Dr. L. L. Szekers, , | amateur aviator. He dropped the Z food at Dean’s cabin. 4 Stanley Stonier and George Ledit; eit both 19 who have been on a I long trapping exclusion, received food from a plane piloted by James - Stonier brother of Stanley. The 1 Ledeit youth's father had been i bringing them food each week but s deep snows halted his trips.
■ ’ ] i i J W* .Jowl Suaß Ail entries must be sent to the Publicity Director’s office, E. A. ' Williams. Studio AA3BO, 1023 N. ! Sycamore Ave., Hollywood, CaliI fornia. Only one suggestion for a ! name should be submitted I'y each j contestant. Everyone is invited ' to submit a name, and in case of ties, duplicate awards will be given. Officials say that any name may win the $750.00, even if submitted on a post card or scrap of paper. If you can use $750.(M1, here is an opportunity to get it. Send your suggestion at once.— Adv.
