Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 117, Decatur, Adams County, 16 May 1932 — Page 3
rw Mtax •tW oat'\ fer^ ta "-'“ w ißr /* ' t /y Ml " 11 Mary Mttc » |E Lr ' Miss .Murgatel Haley 4J 4J Phones lOutl -HUH
' » r * s styi es ■ ' i Ml i ■ m ■ ' ne» " '■'"' ' !li " ‘ k " ,KS ■, bom ErnV - 1 ' <!• ''’“’P*'! a .. • 1" 1 ■Qlv,- tilings ■Sir materials do. K o{ , .:,d. with a few do ito<l an Em tl illy tie- <lll the ’» '’’jffstjr ' " n, ' ing all " f ”"'■ K|t ft ■' combiua-, I ’-X®KeMliu.i 1 II Club will meet E hoß’ 'I ' Doris Durbin. <• - K pot-|' |,K s|| i>p pr an *i ( ’ ar '' be postEtu3; veiling. .May 24. At 1 affair H,j i '..th.iiie high »e ■ —
KuSuf, faknam's Vegetable Compound . HSb -• jl mill worn out again ‘.J Kfki. . she has the same old '! *'" li ' ,c * , es . . . and blues. ’JEttSt ■ • Lvdia E. Pinkham's '’’"THi«Wc 'v.pound in tablet form.
"Insist on a proper fitting of your foot. It iseasy to be "■"■ W misfitted without realizJuR y ing it at the moment,’’says W* W’ Alwyn Bach sW radio’s most popular voice, and winner of the Gold Medal award for perfect diction, when he anHk HmHMI nouncesthc Coast-to-Cea-t » SWffiT*raW6fc»Mßi Broadcast of I Ilina Jettick Melodies I Blery Sunday Night at 8 o’clock E.S.T. I I over WJZ and associated N. B. C. stations. He also says—'lS) SHOES FOR WOMEN Are manufactured in a wide range of I sizes and widths i&AAA to EEE—Sizes Ito 12 I Enabling Enna Jettick Dealers to fit any normal perfectly und stylishly, at moderate cost MiiM I » our Style, Your Size, Your Width in Our Stocks 1 CHARLIE VOGLEWEDE I Fits Your Feet.
CLUB CALENDAR , 1 leitlay Pythian Needle club, K of p. Home. 2:30 p. m. i M. E. Mary and Martha clans. ■ | Mrs. E. A. Beavers, 7:30 p. m. Kekionga 4 If Club, Miss Doris Durbin. 1:30 p. m. Evangelical Dorcas class. Mrs. Elmer AnspauUh, postponed one week. Wednesday Delta Theta Tau business meeting, Miss Jeanette Clark, 7:30 p.m. C. L. of CT postponed. Monroe Twp. 4-H Club, Monroe High School, 1:30 p. m. N. and T. Club, Mrs. C.lias. Maloney. 2 p. mm. Thursday Baptist W. M. S.. Mrs. Ira Bodie j 2:30 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Dau’liters, class, Mrs. T. L. Becker, 7:30 p. m. building. Members are requested | to note this change in date. ENTERTAINS DINNER GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. Albert Beery entertained at dinner. Sunday noon at their home on Winchester street. I Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. 1 Homer Phillips and Mr. and Mrs. I Robert Fowler of Fort Wayne; Mr. and Mrs. Paris Beery of Toledo. I Ohio, George and Addie Barnett, Mrs. Delota Engle and sons Hugh and George of Monroe and Mr. and Mrs. Beery and family. Afternoon guests included Mr. and Mrs. John Stoneburner and Mrs. Joe Andrews of Monroe and Jerry Barnett of St. Louis. Mo. The Monroe Township 4-H Club will meet Wednesday afternoon at one-thirty o’clock in the Manroe high school building. The N. and T. Club will meet with Mrs. Charles Maloney, Wednesday afternoon at two o’clock. BERNE MAN MARRIED SUNDAY Lester Nussbaum, son of Mr and Mrs. Sam Nussbaum of Berne and | Miss Hazel Garber of Columbus. O„ | were married Sunday afternoon at I twelve thiity o’clock in the MemoI rial Baptist Church in Columbus. I The Rev. H. F. Dudley officiated. Miss Martha Garber acted as i bridesmaid for her sister, and
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 16, 1932
Roaming''Romanoff ’’at Sea Rut He Has Nowhere to Go ♦ * * ♦ ♦ ♦ Pants-Presser “Prince,” Deported by Uncle Sam, Is Headed for More Grief in La Belle France. His Lurid Career Recalled. B l -- rl 18l n A, >/ B■■EL ' 1 ■l B v- I : n >1 ■ b <jß % j -;U t f ' ft' IS fe t' - l od /f-q.' -.c Dcpow-Ted im Liners Brig -v; .kfr) 0 " v 4 O *ft?jMctMiCHAEV Romanoff* ~ Deported by the United State* and on hist way to France in the brig of the liner De Gras«e, “Prince Michael Romanoff,” known to hi* parent* at Hillsboro, 111., as Harry Gerguton, former de-wiinkier of maltreated pant*, may find himself bobbing about the seven seas indefinitely, for France may also refuse him admittance. However, if “Prince Mike is allowed to enter France, he will do so a* a prisoner and will probably be awarded a year or so in prison for hist little escapade of stowing away on the lie de France, in which he made his unsuccessful attempt to enter the U S. The deportation of the Romanoff-who-iin’t followed his recapture after he had escaped from Ellis Island by acting as host to hi* guard on a tour of New York speakeasies. He escaped from the immigration authorities once before by swimming to the New Jersey shore. On that occasion, in 1923, he was aided by information about tide* and current* which had been supplied him on request by the United State* Coast and Geodetic Survey Department at Washington. “Prince Mike” has been in the court spotlight of America and Europe on many occasions, but hi* most notable appearance was when he was named as corespondent in the divorce action of Edward B. Gould of New York against his wife. Mrs. Gould charged that Romanoff drugged her and framed the evidence given al lb. hearing of the suit.
New York. May ., —As the liner | De Grasse sails blithely over the bounding main towards the coast of I France, hi s evasive Highness, "Prince Michael Romanoff," finds himself in the unenviable position ' of being between his satanic majesty and the deep, blue sea, tor the 1 former pants-presser, who claims to have azure gore in his veins, has not tlie remotest idea as to how he will be, greeted in La Belle France. "Prince Mike," as he is known to his dupes, has been in innumerable sei apes before and wriggled out, but this time it appears that he’ll wish he'had retained the identity •given him by his humble parents at Hillsboro, 111., and was content to be just plain, red-bloodfd Harry Fergus n. Deported by Uncle Sam after he I liad led immigration authorities a I merry dance through the labyrinth Ipt New York speakeasies, the l "Prince'' will have to face charges ' in France for having stowed away ion the He de France on her last [journey to the United States. These ; charges may result in the "royal" : pants-presser spending a year or so lo.i a rock-pile making little ones out lof big ones for the glory of the : Republic. But when his period of ■ purgatory is at an end and !• ranee I tells him its equivalent of the Am[erican "scram.” the impersonator of Czarist nobility will find himself | a man without a country. For he ' has been kicked out by Uncle Sam, ; whose nephew he claims to be. and if a man can't get into his own 1 country it is very unlikely that he'll !be able to gain admittance to another. I However, one can never be sure lot what the Romanoff-who-isn't will ' do. He has an agile brain and a plentiful supply of what is variously called nerve, brass, front or c heek. His last escapade, when he was allowed to leave Ellis Island, under guard, on the protext of doling some business in New York, | proves that he is a man of resource. "Prince Mike,” knowing the frailRobert Ei win was best man. For (the o.casi.n the bride wore a pile blue satin frock, fashioned with la long full skiit, and short puff | sleeves. She wore white moire footI wear and a white silk hat. Blue ; lace mitts completed her costume. | She carried a corsage of gardenias I and sweet peas. The bridesmaid, wore a pale blue I satin dress, with hat, footwear and mitts of white. Following the ceremony a luncheon was served for fifteen guests at the home of the bride's mother. Mr. and Mrs. Nnssibaum will I make their home in Berne in the Nusszbaum addition. Mr. Nussibaum I is employed at the Nussbaum Noveli ty company. I SECRET MARRIAGE 1 ANNOUNCED SUNDAY Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Kunkel 'entertained with a twelve o’clock ! dinner Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. Roy Runyon and son Kenneth, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Kunkel, and Frank I McConnell.
I ties of human nature, took his guard on a tour of New York : "speaks,’’ having a few drinks in each, until the man whose duty it I was to keep tabs on him was so ■ full of anti-Volsteadian brew that when his “royal" qharge quietly faded away he never missed him. Incidentally one of the "Princes” last inquiries before his ignominous departure from these shores was about his guard, his highness expressing the hope that he wouldn't be hardly dealt with and admitting he had played him a "dirty trick,” That wasn't Mike's first dirty i trick on Ellis Island authorities. Back in 1923. the bogus Prince escaped from the immigration limbo iby swimming to the New Jersey shore. On that occasion he was 'aided by the United States Coast land Geodetic Survey Department at Washington, which supplied him with data pertaining to winds and 1 tides about the island, after he had written requesting the information. The phony Romanoff has been in I , the court spotlight on many occas'ions both in the United States and ’ Europe. It was only last year that be was convicted of stealing a checkbook from a wealthy Amer- ‘ iean woman in Cannes, France. He was sentenced to seven years on I Devil’s Island, but somehow wig- , gled out of it. , i In Hollywood, the arch impostor —posing as the last of the Romani uft's or as Rockwell Kent, artist — , just as the tide took him -made an 1 excellent living and was widely entertained until he made the misHake of handing out a two-way , I check. When it bounced back, ( Mike bounced from the film capital. I The pseudo prince's most notable • scrape, however, was that when he i appeared as correspondent in the , divorce action of Edward B. Gould - | against his wife. Mrs. Gould charg- , 'ed that Romanoff drugged her and framed the evidence given at the - hearing of the suit. • i At the close < f the dinner, Mr. • ' and Mrs. Sherman Kunkel announci ed the marriage of their daughter t Mary Jane to Kenneth H. Runyon, -1 son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Runyon • of this city. The c uple were mirried Ma ch i 4 at four o’clock in the afternoon | at Garrett. The ceremony was per- , formed by the Rev. H. J. Jordan, I ; pastor of the First Presbyterian : Church of that city. The sii.lje ring ceremony was used. | ' Mr. and Mrs. Runyon will in all I i robability make their home in this I city where Mr. Runyon is associated 1 in the garage business with his ' father. L'lter in the summer they 1 will take an extensive wedding trip through the southwest. RICHARD ALLEN ROTH HONORED ON BIRTHDAY Mr. and Mrs. Menno Roth of 1 1 Monroe entertained with a chick- : I en dinner, Sunday noon, in honor .■ of their son. Richard Allen, the . occasion hieing his first birthday : I anniversary. The centerpiece of the dining
table was two large birthday cakes, and the rooms were decorated with lilacs and tulips. Covers were laid for Mr. amt Mrs. H. E.I Klopfenstilie of Bluffton; Mr. and 1 Mrs. Ransom Barkley and daughters Evelyn and June of Decatur; i Mr and Mrs. Floyd Llby, Mr. and. Mrs. John McKean and daughter' Alice, and Mr. and Mrs. Roth and son. Richard Allen received a number of birthday gifts. The meeting of the Dorcas Class of the Evangelical Sunday Sihool which w’ih scheduled for Tuesday night at the home of Mis. Elmer Anspaugli. hits been postponed one week. The Women's Mlssl nary Society of the Baptist church will meet with Mrs. ira Bodie Thursday after, noon at two-thirty o’clock. The Loyal Daughters class if ] the Evangelical Sunday School will • meet Thursday night tit seventhirty o'clo k with Mrs. T. L. Beck er on Adams street. The assisting hostesses will be Mrs. Adolph Koiter and Mrs. Frank Lynch. MANY ATTEND CLASS PLAY j CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) protector of Jean, furnished the audience with amusement. The part of Acey is played by .lii'ics Baker. Other students who took part in the annual production were Mary Wertzberger, Frances Lengerich. Geraldine Wait, Naomi Faurote, Germaine Faurote. James Brennan, Mary Colchin, Gathering Schumaeker, Ambrose Spangler. Carl Lose, Salome Schmitz, Robert Klelnhenz. Joseph Voglewede, Barbara Jane Keller, James Fisher, Charles Omlor, Mary Miller, George Schultz, and Edwin Hess. o .lames Burk Honored At Rotary Banquet : Bloomington. Ind., May 16 James M. Burk, son of Rotarian Avon Burk of Decatur, was guest of hon >r at a Imnqnet by Bloomington Rotarians for Rotarians' sons and daughters attending Indiana University. Miss Jane Beeson, daughter of Dr. John H. Beeson and student at I. U. had a place o’ honor at the speaker’s table. U. H. Smith, bur sar of the university and president of Rotary, presided. President William Ixiwe Bryan of the univer-
HELEURUCKNEWS! fife a sJF - CHASSIS WITH 136" WHEELBASE AT *795 ’’ \ 15 " , CHASSIS WITH 165" WHEELBASE AT *825 HERE’S news for any one who moves goods. A standard Here’s a fast, flexible, easy-riding 2-ton-and the price is 2-ton Dodge Truck chassis with 136-inch wheelbase at right at bottom. See it today. Compare it with any other $795 ... 165-inch wheelbase at $825, f. o. b. factory, Detroit. 2-ton chassis built. 73 horsepower, five-speed transmission, hydraulic brakes, The Dodge Truck line iia complete line. Before you buy any truck fin any 700 x2O duals, helper springs .. . but let your Dodge purpose see the Dodge dealer. The M-ton chassis at $375 and the 1 l /rton dealer tell you the many, many value features. chassis at $525, f.o. b. factory, Detroit, are right down in the lowest-price Now you can Stop overloading your ton-and-a-half truck. field. Dodge Heary-Duty Trucksare built for gross capacities up to 7'/r ton,. I TUNE IN on Chryaler Motor, Radio Program "Ziegfeld Radio Show" personally .ondiK-li-J by 110 Zii gs. ld Columbia Coa.t lo l ...'l N.tworl , •-un.l.iv evrmny SAYLORS MOTOR i O. r 213 NORTH FIRST STREET
slty was the speaker. "It won’t hurt you younig people Ito go through hard times before I you ie.ich success,” Dr. Bryan uald i ■ to the sons and daughters of Ro tartans, "I say to you, jump out in- i I to the sea and swim.” Discuaslng present economic con illtloiis, Dr. Bryan culled attention [to the dangers ahead for young ; e Iple who h ive never experienced hardship of any kind. He reminded those, p esent of his own boyhood experience of riding I' .-tluiek tj 1 mill with half u bushel of con ' be ground. "Hurd time- are ahead.'’ Dr. Bryan said, "but remember your par ents had them. The e Is real danger ; in m mey handed over to you i by your father. In times like these you begin to learn that there are 1100 cents in a dollar.” Q •W. B. GUTELIUS ENDS OWN LIFE n’ONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE' right temple with a 38 calibre revolver. He fired one shot which came out tfie left temple. Gutellus was prominent in social! and church activities. He was aj ; member of the board of the cities' i largest Methodist Church. He was [ ' a 33rd degree Mason. The deceased formerly resided i In Bluffton where lie was engaged: for many years in the lumber ' business. He moved from Bluffton to Fort Wayne. Surviving is the widow, and the following brothers and sisters: I Mrs. Huttie Gable, of Marion; Mrs Hazel Gossette. Fort Wayne; ’* Nettie Gutellus of Marion, and * Harry Gutelius of Kendallville. Will Elect Warden ’ Indianapolis, May 16.- (U.R) —Election of a wardan to the Indiana assembly. Rebekah lodge, will be held tomorrow.’with advancement of all I < thers officers. [I Mrs. Iva E. Herriott, Franklin. lis retiring president, and will be t succeeded by Mrs. Revali Pressler, I Crown Point, vice president. Other • officers to advance will be Mrs. ■i Grace E. Child. Indianapolis, seere- ■ tary; Mrs. Margaret E. Miller. . | Huntington. treasurer, and Mrs. . ; May Heshman, Crpwn Point, ward- . | en. , I (, -I Mr. and Mrs. Howard Graver of : i Indianap >lis tient tlie week-end - ' in this city with Rev. and Mrs. C. - R. Lanman.
B f.|Town Talk
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fuhrman and idaughter Betty, Eurl Geotve Fuhrttfiti of this city and Rev. W. M. [ Rauch of Charlevoix, Michigan, left i Satti day for Greentown where they j were with Mr. and Mrs. T. C. DeWitt und family. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Heeter and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lautxenhei er of [North Manchester were Sunday vis- ' itors at the William Kltson home. M s. J. C. Relder and sons of Jickson, Mo., are visiting with Mrs. Relder’s fither, J. S. McCrory land sister. Mis- Blanche McCrory. Mr, and Mrs. Willi im O’Brien and I family of St. Marys, 04)10, visited in Decatur Satuiday night at the Inrme of Mr. and M s. Ferd O’Brien. I Mrs. Clara Anderson and S. W. I Hale visited with friends in Jefferson township, Sunday ,'ftemoon. I Clay Hall of Indianapolis spent the week end with friends in Eds Hcity. Mrs. Kannle Fristoe and son True , , visited with Mrs. Alice Orndorff at I b r h >me in Jefferson townI ship Sunday. Harold Zwiek, a sludent at the J 1. U. Medical school in Indianapolis, . i spent the week-end in tills city with j his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. i Zwiek and family. The Misses Afibel Staley. Rutn l Engle, Geraldine Smith and Mrs. Ervitn Go'olner motored to For' I : Wayne, Sunday afterninn and saw ‘ the movie, "Grand Hotel." Eli Bterie, furniture dealer and -undertaker of Berne, was taken to ' bite Lutheran IHospital in Fort l Wayne 'Sunday afte noon where his condition is rep uted t > he criti.al. . [ Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Vega return- | ! ed to Chicago this morning after 1 | a week here. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tyndall of Bluffton visited here Sunday. .J H. L. Conter. treasurer of Ixike , : county, was a visitor here today, i , attending to business and casing on old friends. - 1 J. W. Tyndall, who lias been ill | for the past two or tfiree weeks, I was improved today and able tc I- [ sit up a part of tlie day. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Aughenbaugli [ and children of Fort Wayne were f \ over Sunday visitors here. I Mrs. Helen Blossom of West Monroe street, observed her nine tietli birthday Saturday. She re
PAGE THREE
eelved many curds und messages of congratulations und enjoyed the i occasion very much. F. E. France who has been 111 since his return from Florida three wi eks ago, is reported somewhat ( improved. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond B andyberry of Terre Haute visited with , relatives in this city Sunday. Miss Nellie Lauinuu of Birdseye, arrived in this city Saturday to visit with her brother and sister-in-law. Rev. find Mrs. C R. Lanman. Mis. Amy Aughenbaulth of Portland, Mrs. Jess Burnette of Latty, ().. ind Daniel P. Tayl ir if Detroit, Ml higan, visited In this city Sun day and attended tlie baccalaureate services held in tlie Reformed C’tnrch Sunday night. Mis. Relbecca Eady of Fort Wayne is visitine with Mrs. Carl , i Schafer in this city. ———o — Operation Failed To Rid Him Os Stomach Troub’e • I "I have had stomach trouble for 1 25 years and have been going to doctors all that time. 1 have been in the hospital three times ami i > finally had an operation which did . [ me no good. Now I nm glad to say 1 feel perfectly well. I have not • been bothered with stomach tro > i ble since tile third day I used th< 1 Udca Treatment." > ! Udga Tablets are a simple harm t • less preparation that is praised by s i thousands for Hie treatment of gas i pains, stomach ulcers, excess acid i-1 belching, bloating, pains after eat r i Ing. sour stomach, constipation ! heartburn, poor digestion, dysnen fisia, gastritis and other conditions | caused by hyperacidity or fault • e ' diet. •. | And now all sufferers can tr' gj 'his splendid treatment withou : risk. Just go to The Houthotis. 11l Drug Store and secure a $1 pack 1.1 age of Udga Tablets. Use the en o tire box and then if you are no [ positive they have done more so li your sick stomach than anythin'-, e I you have ever used, return the i empty box and get your dolla it i back. Try Udga today and sei e- what a real treatment can do so e- your si< k stomach. —Adv.
