Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 187, Decatur, Adams County, 8 August 1932 — Page 3
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CLUB CALENDAR Monday Adairfs County Cho.al Society, Court R.om, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday ,- Rebekah Lodge, 1. O. O. F. Hall.: 17:30 p. m. Wednesday Zion Lutheran Missionary Society ' Mrs. Frank Braun, 2 p. ni. R >ot Township 4-H Club. Mon j mouth high school, 1:30 p. m. Thursday Better Homes Home Economics curb, Mrs. E. J. Frick?, postponed I I until August IS. Girl Scouts Troop No. 1. Central i. Sch 01. 4 p. m. Friday Zion Reformed W. M. S. and Mission Band Social, church lawn.' 4-10 p. tn. * Saturday Christian Corinthian Class. Reppert Auction sale. were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Wi’li-ini ; Lose he and daughter Bertha, Mr. | and Mrs. Ernest Hoyng and son Tctnp-.y, Mr. and Mrs. LaMon; . Hpyng, all of Co dwater. Ohio: M. and Mrs. A. J. Nesswald and dnugliter Mary Jane of F >rt Wayne. I PORTER REUNION HELD AT POKAGON PARK The annua! reunion of the Porter' family was held at I’okae.n State, Park, in northern ilndiana, Sunday with absut thi.ty-five relatives pr - . sent. Those from Dec tur included Mr. I and Mrs. C. O. Porter a.id family,' Mr. and Mrs. Giles Porter aind family. Mr. and Mrs. o. L. Vance and daught. r Lee Anna. M a’d Mrs. I O. L. Rrentlinger of Pleasant Mills Other relatives were present from I various pl.ee- in Ohio and Muncie.! The Zi n Lutheran Missionary! ■ Society will meet Wednesday after- j noon at two o’clock at the home of '.Mrs. Fiank Brann. The annual Kitson reunion will : be held Sunday. August 14 at the | I Luiiuu Memorial Park in Decatur | I instead of at Sun Set park as wa- | | previously announc-d. GUESTS HONORED WITH SUNDAY DINNER Mr. and Mrs. J hn D. Stults of i , Noith Fourth street entertained a i nfnnber of guests at th ir home. ] 1 Sunday with a dinner honoring Mrs. Charle- H. Baker. A pot-luck dinner w s served at 1 noon. Those present w re Mr. and I Mrs. Elijah H. Nidlinger of Warsaw; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Nidlinger and family Juanita. Helen and Gale f Monroe; Mr. and Mrs. James Sprague. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Mill r | Mr. and Mis. Liuren Miller, Gerald GPb-on cf Monroe, Mr. and Mrs. I I Stints and Mrs. Baker. ;
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, AUGUST 8,1932.
j — - Mlfflidl life %
By HARRISON CARROLL. | Cw>n«hl. ill:. Ku,, VHlura. >*„dl,itt In, Hollywood, cai., Aug. oo.— Now that the columnist has had his ' day, the Hollywood spotlight turns I on the publicity man. Lee Tracy, one of Broadway's better mimes. I
/ —M&‘ i Lee Tracy
goes o v e r. to R-K-0 to take the lead in Harry Reichenbach's colorful memoirs, "Phantom Fame." His feminine V- a vi- « II 1,,, the dynamic Lope Velez. Many are the legends about the sensational publicity stunts pulled by the late Harry Reichenbach. He smuggled a lion into an hotel.
fooled the public and became »i e highest-priced exploitation mar, on the White Way Some of these famous tricks will j be converted into celluloid and oth ers will be invented to make "Phan ! tom Fame" an amusing lowdown on ' the ballyhoo racket. Casey Robinson will direct this one and he expects to have the cameras grinding by September 5. It actually hanpened. Eddie Can- ' tor says, in a Hollywood restaurant One of the swankier leading men came in. studied the menu and or dered pate-de-foie-gras. When it was put before him he took a bite I and shouted for the waiter “Here, take this away.” he directed. "Didn’t you order pate-de-foie-gras?” inquired the waiter. i “Yes,” said the actor, “but this is goose-liver.” BOULEVARD TALK. That little ex-stenographer. Dor- ' othy Wilson, received a salary of only SSO a week for playing a lead- | ing role in “The Age of Consent." > Since she made a hit. there'll un- I doubtedly be an adjustment. What with the Olympic visitors and with her popularity in her home town, Mary Pickford was greeted by a crowd of 3.000 people when she stepped off an air liner* the other evening. Returning on the samel
ZION REFORMED CHURCH SOCIETIES TO GIVE SOCIAL The Womens Missionary Society and the Mission Band of the' Zion Reformed church will sponsor | a social. Friday afternoon and ' evening from fonr to ten o’clock , on the church lawn. Special musical numbers will l>e presented^Jw- ( an orchestra and several Individ- | ual musicians. I The menu of foods which will Ibe sold include chicken noodle. I soup, sandwiches, pie. cake, ice I cream, coffee, home made candy. | r and popcycles. Pies. cake, and | noodles may he purchased by | patrons and taken away from the| social. In case of rain the affair will be held in the church dining room The public is c rdially invited. The Corinthian Class of thej Christian church will sponsor a, cake sale. Saturday night. The auctioneers from the Reppert Atici tion school will conduct the sale. — iBERNE COUPLE ' TO BE MARRIED The^pproidling marriage of Miss , I Edith Felber to Emmett Lehman I | both cf Berne, was announced from ; the pulpit of the Mefnnonite church I in B -r.e, Sunday morning. The ’ wedding will take place the latter part . f the week. Th St v■ nr• mth annual 1.. lm-> enstoll-Martin reunion will be hel I ( at the home of Mrs. George Martin. Sunday. August 21. The ninth annual reunion of the Durbin family will be held Sunday. August 14. at Legion Memorial Park. Decatur. The Daily-Niblick reunion will be held Sunday. August 21, at| I Washington Park, Bluffton. In ' case of rain the event will take; place in the Community building. 1 ° r_ Grain Is Infested Lafayette. Ind... Aug. 9—(UP)—' Infestation of newly stored grain I iin southwestern Indiana eoutie-i with insects was reported to the Purdue university d partnient of ' entomology. Cleaning of all grain refuse from bins net in use ind fumigation of bins in which grain is Infe-ted was • urged by department heads. One | pound o fcarb. n, bisulphide should be used for 80 bushels of grain in fumigation, it was announced. —_ o Service Stations Lead Indianapolis. Aug. B—(UP) —Automobile service stations led in the number of new business ventures started in Indiana during July, ac-, cording to a survey by the Business : ■Digest. New ventures during the I month t tailed 256. i Ten businesses were expanded. 1 S 3 charged locations and 65 changI ed ownership.
I plane was the Countess de Frasso. I'he greeting party included Dougla Fan-banks, Gary Cooper, Amelia Earhart, Charlie Chaplin (with Paulette Goddard on his arm) and Prince Chakratong Tongyai of Siam. The prince, who is seeing Hollywood under the Fairbanks wing, was very much upset when San Francisco scribes wrote of him as the heir to the throne "Quickly. I had to cable my mother to square that with the crown prince,” he said. This 20-year-old scion of royalty is on his way to study entomology at Cornell. When he completes the course he will be chief government expert on the subject. Phyllis Haver and Bill Seeman
Haver
are getting the glad-hand from I j old friends in the film colony. I I Buddy D? Sylva j 'threw a party for them before he left for B roadway and jhat Lawrence i Schwab musical. Somebody j committed a n , amusing oversight at that banquet to the “Bird of Paradise” company the other eve- ' ning. Instead of
a bird of paradise carved in ice, the waiters trundled in a fine, glistening horse. Maybe you didn’t see that cable story that nine people were taken to the hospital after the rush to see Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in Glasgow the other day. These comedians are just as popular abroad as they are in this country. Which brings me to the fact that they will make another feature comedy on the : r return to the Hal Roach studio. This ought tc be in the middle of ■ next month. Since Stan and Oliver signed with Roach in September, 1926, they 1 have turned out over 40 pictures. Two of these were feature-length. DID YOU KNOW — That Adolphe Meujou commanded an American ambulance unit in i Italy during the war?
Meredith Stewart who has be n I recuperating from an illness at Dayton, Ohio the past several we- kr. visited here Sundty. He is much "improv d in health. His wife and ; his mother. Mrs. J. 11. Stewart will leave Newark. New Jersey, next i Saturday and motor to .Dayton for a two weeks visit there and here. I 'Hansel Foley, is here fr in Conneisville for a visit. Harl Hollingsworth and family I are home from a tpleasant visit at i Bloomington, (Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Tyndall and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tyndall have returned from a week at Lake James. Mrs. E. B. Macy, son Christian and daughter. Miss Mary, left Saturday astern >on for Cleveland. Ohio wh re they were joined by Dick L ng and the four are enjoying a ' trip through the east, where they . will visit relatives at Marshfield. . Vt., Cumberland. Maine, and Bos- ' ton. Mass. Miss Mayme Deinlnger left todiy for Chicago where she will buy milinary goods for the fall trade. Charles Breiner has accepted a position in Chicago. Miss Fl rence Magley visited in Fort Wayne over the week-end. i Mr. and Mrs. Geoige Th ms will *move to the Maynard residence on Winchester street next week. Frank E. Frrnc? who has been ill several weeks continues to show improvement. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. France and gi andchildrenj, Hannah and Dick France, of Gary visited here over Sunday. They all returned home today excepting Hannah who will ! visit with Mirtha Macy for a week, i The Felix Holth use business | block was offered at auction SaturI day failed to sell. Only one bid. i $5,750, was received and the owner refused to accept that. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Helm and ! daughter Miss Marjory and Mrs. | Toothill motored here from Fort i Wayne list evening for a visit. Dick Heller returned t Indianapolis last evening where he will conclude his duties as chief clerk of the house in the special session, which must conclude not later than a we k from today. Mrs. (Heller and children who have visited at Renssalear are expected home Wednesd ly. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bell, and C. J. Lutz spent Sunday at Potawatomi Inn at Lake l James. Miss Etta Malonnee of Scranton Pa., who has been visiting with relatives and friends near this city, returned to her home today. Rev. and Mrs. E. B. Uhl left to- | day for Springfield, Ohio, where i they will make their home. Memj bers of the family will leave this week. For the ,past year Rev. Uhl and family have made their home with Mrs. Catherine Christen on
North Second street. Rev. Uh! Is a retired minister of the Lutheran church. Mrs. Carrie Zirkle and d iiighterx Mary June and Murtha ami son George of Ossian were Sunday sup per guests of Mr. and Mrs. M mley Foreman and family. Mrs. Hugh Hite and daughter Jane left Sunday for their home in Chicago after spending several days in this city witli relatives ami friends. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Haley ami daughters Dorothy and Miriam, the Messrs. Sherman Koos and Robert Gay. and Mr. and Mrs. Orville Rhodes were-Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. 11. L. Pence und tumlly of near Huntington. Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Quinn of Ouk Park, HI., spent the weekend with Judge and Mrs. J. T. Merryman. Mrs. Robert Merryman and son i Janres, who have been spending the summer here, and Avon Burk and family accompanied the Quinns to their home where they will spend several days before going to Delhi, I rtuisana. Mr. and Mrs. David Adams and daughter Marjorie were called to Lafotitalne, Sunday, because of the death of Mr. Adams' aunt. Mrs. David Troyer. Her death occurred Friday night.
. "THEY RE MILDER- ’ - they taste better" ' ' ; Ew If Wt-' ■v. : , ss-s.-r* 1 ■ k' jHRI/ iy\ I Ski r" ', Wit t ■ JMBk r 1 Ik?? Ifcr T ?-■ ■■'’Law?' G ft •■"at UK - . I o - <■ -K ••.A f k\' 4 v ft ■?" W TTTHEREVER you buy CHESTERFIELDS on land or ' ou sca , y OU get them just as fresh as if you came by our factory door—have one if you will. I think you will find that they are milder—that they taste better. i I have noticed that CHESTERFIELDS are made right—not hard and soft; no flabby cigarettes—each one well-filled. They are the right size to smoke cool and comfortable. G7 v- Z Z/w tedtcmcla © 1932, Licwn • Mm* Tobacco Co,
• i Mr. and Mrs. Ed Franke of Fort i Wayne visitisl with relatives here Saturday evening. Mr. und Mrs. Will I’resdort ami i (laughter Bernice and son Boh of LaGrange, Mrs. William Golden of , Fort Wuyue wen- guests of Mr. mid Mrs. David Adams. and daughter] i Marjorie. Saturday evening. i Gilbert Glendenning. Geneva] 1 young man, left Saturday for New: I ] York where he will sail with Prof. John Geiger of the Indiana Unlver- 1 I j.-lty School of Music. Glendenning ; will be among a group of music i I students who will study In the var- ■ ]ious centers of musical culture in] < l-Jurope. i II Mrs. Leota Beery (,n>i ;wo non? I : visited Miss Jeanette Beery at the 1 Lutheran Hospital. Fort Wayne. 1 jesterday. Miss Beery underwent. ■ and operation a week ;:go and is! l i reported to be getting a’.mig nicely. Albert Hur ow. county auditor, I 1 ! who was confined to his home In 1 Geneva for the past few days suffer I '(ing with intestinal flu. was able to I • j be at his office today., | Pierce David Flanders of Fort I Wayne is visiting his grandp:r-, > cuts, Mr. and Mrs. G -bi-ge Flanders, v Dick Johnson, son of Mr. and . Mrs. Charles Johnson of north of: I Decatur, is confine-1 to his liome| 'with illness. J Jjl
Miss Surah and Mr. James Put- ■ ter.son. of Marmaduke, j who have visited li . and Mrs. Fred I 'Patterson tin- past two weeks, left today for their home. They are the son und daughter of Mr. and Mrs.' lirilee I’litjei syli. I Charles Lose, well known Jiarber j I if, thl,s city is still confined io his j home suffering from a sinus Infer|tlou. He has been ill for several! Mr. and Mrs. Roller- Garnrd andl t daughter Patsy, were guests ,f Mr. and Mrs. Marlon Warner and i family of McGill, Olijo, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hibbs'of! i Fort Whyne ami Mrs. Luettai i Brown of Connecticut were Sun-1 • day guests of Mr. and .Mrs. Sam ! Acker. Miss Alice Gladieux of Fort Wayne, Floyd Barnin and Nelson | Gladieux of Toledo, Ohio, spent Saturday evening in this city with friends. George Roop, Lloyd Ahr and Fred Aiir left at noon today . for Columbus. Mississippi witli a truck’ load of household goods formerly ! belonging to the late L. C. Waring. The goods were delive'red to W. D. Saunders. o 1 Get the Habit — Trad* ar M o »ne
PAGE THREE
Greta Garbo Returns' To Her Native Sweden Gothenberg, Sweden, Aug. 8 — (UP) Greta Garbo returned to liee native Sweden in triumph today; ' to be greeted!) by 10.000 peoifil'and i a horde of m wspapermen. "1 uni not returning to the United Slut, in tile near future." she told the pr. sg. "I hope for rest and quiet s mewliere in Sweden." ■ ... She denied a report that sin- was j Iniying the lite Ivar Kreuger's residence as a studio. Miss Garbo surprised Newspaper men by receiving them in the smokj lug room of the liner Gripsholm; ' Sie ai ided questions about her future plans explaining: ■ll am on a holiday and I Just wanted a few weeks of complete rest and seclusion Lobenstein Parlors Are Opened Saturday About 350 p rsons registered at the Lobenstein Funeral Parlors at Monroe last Saturday. Prizes- were awarded to tiie following people: Eliza Hahnert, ireti Longenberger Beulah G aliam, Lcren Burkhead, B-rt Hendricks, Ben Martin, and ' Ruby Rupert.
