Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 17, Decatur, Adams County, 20 January 1933 — Page 3
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Baris Styles ■ ( ~rre:ponde>.t ywherel ■ Yi.m theatrical | h .. night Alice Till-; .... fl’■ skin which wan' „ Wide hands of from j h ;i white pique: h bride, married just beK ■ . for H.,.' .. bi: of simple draplrp< .-kirt to & >- anacjied. Her ...,. .■. ton ■ , ,j...-., crepe Willi ami tissue is con-j now .. . . : |\ around the New York. ■ Band of Hie Zion li will meet in the! lock. Ml ' I ■R'AINS B CINNER . . mined r. Thursday honor:-a her father ami plies Melihi bin I:day an K- are events of this' wire laid at the table for ■j:- and sou Harold :. ". Mr. aid Mrs. and children, Sephus. and Jimmy. SOCIETY ■: ■:.■■ . t Episi opal ■ Trifle With Coughs Ba! them get a strangle hold. k.. Ueumulsion com- * best helps known to modern but harmless. Pleasant 3y ,J 11 Jr A our druggist will nmn.-r if any cough or cold " n ' A <.. .. standing is not retreommsrou. (adv.)
I CORT THEATRE [■SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY 9 Matinee Sunday 2P. M. 10c-25c Evening 6:30 10c-35c | A Talkie Classic You'll Enjov ‘WILD GIRL” I with a wonder cast headed by I JOAN BENNETT — CHARLES FARRELL | It’s a different kind of a drama that is as thrilling I as it is entertaining. Bubbling over with tense E ere tement and romance. I Tonight - - Tomorrow — Bick .Jones in a thrilling story of the Northwestern ■ounted Police. “MAC KENNA of the MOUNTED." ■ ADDED—A ( lever Comedy with .James Gleason and Cartoon. 10c -25 c | ADAMS THEATRE I SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY ■ Sunday Matinee at 10c-2Ec — Sunday evening ICc-35c IMadame Butterfly” I'i’h SYLVIA SIDNEY. CARY GRANT, CHARLIE RUGGLES. IRVING PICHEL. T r, J i * s love-contract meant “Forever!".. .but to him it I ntil My Ship Sails!” One of the Word's Mugniti■Hontances of a Great Unselfish Love! Played to the ■ ! " the Matchless Passion of Svlvia Sidnev's Greatest ■nuance. ADDED—An “Our Gang” Comedy and Organlogue with Jesse Crawford. — — Friday and Saturday [“UNDERCOVER MAN” with GEORGE RAFT, NANCY CARROLL. Roscoe Karns, Lew Cody, David Landau. ■-v ’ with * smart dame at his side. He plays his ' to a whirlwind finish. DYNAMIC RAFT smashes the raid I the “ De ««lllr»e” of Wall Street. «DD£D—Opening Chapter "HURRICANE EXPRESS" •nd Betty Boop Cartoon. 10c-25c
CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Friday Pocahontas lodge, Red Men’s ■ Hall, 7:30 p. m. Baptist Philathae class, Mrs. Dora Akey, 7:30 p. tn. f United Brethren D. V. B. class, i Mrs. Gaylie Hoagland, 7:30 p. tn. Saturday Zion Reformed Mission Band, church parlors, 2:30 p. m. Monday Bona Tents Club, Mrs. Frank Schmitz, 7:30. I Research Club. Mrs. J. T. MerI rytnan. 2:30 p. nt. Dramatic Department, Mrs Rd. ! Coffee, 7:30 p. m. Literature Department meeting, Mrs. Fred Fruvhte, 7:30 p. m. Music Department. Mrs. W. A. Klepper, 7:30 p. m. Ait Department meeting, Mis A. I). Suttles, 7:30 p, tn. Pythian Sister Installation. K. I of P. Home, 5:30 p. m. Tuesday B. P. O. Elks Dance. Elks Home. Christian Ladies Aid food sale, I church basement. | Root Township Home Economics Club, Mrs. John Houck, 10 a. m. Wednesday Ladies Shakespeare Chib Guest Day, Mrs. C. A. Dugan, 2:30 p. m. |Church met in the church parlors. I after the afternoon service Thurs- 1 : day for a short business meeting. I Mrs. William Little the president i 'had charge of the meeting during! I which plans were made for a candy! sale to be held in connection with I .the Ladies Aiil supper on January 28. A vegetable ami noodle soup! sale will also be held in the church i basement on February 9. j Mrs. C. O. Porter gave the lesson study from the study book,! ■"Lady Fourth Daughter of China.’ I The topic of the chapter was Sharing in the Family. Eleven members and two visitors attended the meeting which was 'closed by repeating David's prayer. — The Bona Terns Club will meet j Monday night at seven-thirty o'-! j clock with Mrs. Frank Schmitz. REGULAR MEETING OF MISSIONARY SOCIETY The Women s Society of the Bap-: tist Church met with Mrs. S. E. Shamp at her home on Metier avenue, Thursday afternoon, for the regular business meeting. The devotional services were con-1 ducted by Mrs. Will Winnes, after, which the fourth chapter of the study book, prepared by Mrs. G. |
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JANUARY 20. 1933.
f Type-Appeal 9 ' the Real "It” Says Noted Artist * * ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ McClelland Barclay Asserts None of Our Film Stars Come Up to His Specifications of Beauty. Envisions Ideal as Composite of Several Reigning Queens. 4JFW 1 <>7 ~~flt .. jvsKh BBF wws » r " toS i *' 'ww IKb bl mKBI A -tmt F dk \ W I ■: 'X Ml 4 ? ill. 4 A | i B ' ’w k ,J BiOt- -li wjMBI 1 jBBI » ’ W I PW Y’~ '■ ■ ■ I iljH sww / JBS® " ’^ aK( h ■■.lwUsli h 'lw YiWibfcr - Y IMwii ■ H. Marlene Dietrich L ~ .... ■7 i Miriam Hopkins. Carole Lombard Declaring that none of the preaent crop of film queens ■■> Hollywood fulfills his ideals of beauty, McClelland Barclay, noted artist and sculptor, advances the theory that the certain something that attracts us to our particular screen favorite is not beauty, or sex appeal, but "type-appeal.” Elaborating, he selects his list of the most “type-appealing " women in the film capital. Claudette Colbert appeals to the man of the world; Joan Crawford, to the collegians; Marlene Dietrich, to the business man; Kay Francis to the society man. Ann Harding to the family man; Katherine Hepburn, to the professional man; Miriam Hopkins, to the caveman, l.lissa Landi, to the student-scientist, and Myrna Loy, to the adventurer. Barclay’s own dream girl would be a composite of several film queens. She would possess the legs of Marlene Dietrich: the hips of Carole Lombard; the chest of Miriam Hopkins, and the lips of Helen Twelvetrees. However, the artist admits that facial beauty is strictly a matter of personal opinion, which is another way of putting the maxim that beauty is io the eye of the beholder.
I Parmer, was read by Mrs. Hina Buhj per. The fifth chapter was given by: Mrs. S. E. Hite. A social hour followed the bust-1 ness meeting and Mrs Shamp serv-: ed a delicious luncheon. She was assisted in serving by her sister, Mrs. Hite. The Ladies Aid Society of the Christian Church will hold % sale of j bread, doughnut twisters and fried: cakes for fifteen cents a dozen next i Tuesday. The food will be delivered or persons may call at the church basement for them. A chicken and noodle soup sale will also be held. ’ ’ | Soup will be delivered in quart , • jars for twenty cents a quart. MEETING OF PROGRESSIVE WORKERS ' I The members of the Progressive '(Workers class of the United Breth- ■ jren Sunday School met at the home • of Mr. ami Mrs. Edward Deitsch, , Thursday night fora short business i ‘ meeting. Following the meeting contests, -were enjoyed and refreshments! I were served. Rev. and Mrs. C. J. .Roberts and Miss Edwina Deitsch .were guests at the meeting. ENCERTAINS SO CHA REA CLUB Mrs. V. J. Bormann entertained the members of the So Cha Roa I Club at her home Thursday night. Games of bridge were played and Mrs Andrew Appleman and Miss .Regina Murtaugh received the high I score prizes. | A short bubsiness meeting was held. Followi g the bridge games, j the small tables were laid w ith table covers of rainbow hues. A .delicious luncheon was served. GLADYS WHITRIGHT WEDS RAYMOND JOHNSON j Mr. and Mrs. Ed Whitright of West Mo..roe street, nnounce the imarriage of their daughter, Miss Gladys Whitright, to Raymond 'Johnson of Seventh street. The marriage took plm e I Peru. •Saturday, January 14. in the United, ’ Brethren Church parsonage. The I I Rev. L. E. Eaton, pastor of the church, officiated. The bride w s graduated from lliu' Decatur High School with the 1930! class. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson will' m ,ke their home for the present at 921 West Monroe street. ! ENTERTAINS CLUB MEETING The Alpha Zeta Bridge Club met | Wednesday with Mis. Andrew, Appleman. As a result of the games : of bridge. Mrs. Gordon Acheson and ! r Mrs. Harry Stults received the, prizes. , Mrs. .Appleman served a delicioustwo course luncheon at the close lot' the evening. The next meetingof the club will be held in two, weeks with Mrs. George Laurent. o , Named President Fort Wayne, Ind.. Jan. 20. —(U.R) Leonard E. Pranger. Fort Wayne, was elected president of the Indi-j ana City Clerks' Association at the annual convention here yesterday. Herman A. Collins, Terre Haute, v was named first vice president, ■ Mrs. Florence S. Ellis, Wabash, second vice president, Miss Gladys M. Monroe. South Bend, secretary, and Ray E. Norman. Marlon, treasI urer.
A Flowery Welcome T ' 49e** tf *T*?**** ■ J Janet Gaynor, movie favorite. 1 displays a great, big smile as she , is decorated with the native floral ■ garland on her arrival at Honolulu where she was welcomed by local dignitaries Miss Gaynor, who recently separated from her husband. Lydell Peck, maintains a home at Oahu. Hawaii. Blocks Agreement Washington, Jan. 20 — (UP) — Senator Smoot. Republica i of I tah blocked agreement in th>j senate today for consideration of au eighteen th amendment repeal resolution next Monday. Senator Blaine, Republican cf Wisconsin, give notice he would ask for a short down vote on the <1 uost ion.
Overtaken by Past —Parted - .-■•>■ • ~■.■■■-. - S/Xy Jgw k J@!SI J&-*' 'w ■ Br r J F Je« <** JSS3S ®l' x - JH J9* gfl i VB ■■• •"•Ws >•< x I hl __ A touching scene in a Denver, Col., hospital a* Glenn Smeeman took leave of his sick wife before giving himself up as a fugitive from justice. Smeeman, who escaped from a Colorado prison road gang fifteen years ago while serving a three-year sentence for an auto theft, built up a successful music publishing business in Cleveland, 0., as Harry Stanley. He has appealed to Governor Ed. C. Johnson for a pardon.
SHORT NEWS ♦- Cellophane covered berry boxes (have been designed to keep their i contents cleaner and more sanii tary. — I Poland's population has increas- | ed 13 per cent in ten years, seven ; principal cities gaining 22 per cent. Light produced by magnetic in I duction lamps have been found the (safest and most efficient for coal , mining. When a new electric fuse blows out it ejects an Indicator, making it easy to locate the f"se among a number of them. Mechanism contained in a new card table shuffles a pack of cards and delivers them one at a time to four players in turn. ' The world’s largest passenger ship, having luxurious accommodations for 2.132 pisesngeru, was : launched in France recently. New sleeve protectors that are held in place by rubber bands are transparent so that wrist watches can be read through them. Poland is estimated to have more than 78,000,000 acres of arable land, or more than two acres for each member of its population, A new meter to be fastened to an automobile steering post shows how many miles a car is traveling lor each gallon of gasoline used. . — Petroleum has been obtained in Indi i for neary 100 years, first being taken from hand dug pits. ’ some of which still are producing. — • A California carpenter has constructed an inlaid table from more
(than 10,000 small pieces of wood I ! eolleT-lod over a period of 30 years. I — Tiny electric lamps mounted on ! I the backs of seats have been in-1 ■stalled in a London theater to en- ] table patrons to read programs in' i the dark. — Wireless telephone outfits that | 'operate with current supplied by I 'l2 volt storage batteries have been developed in England to en-j able small costal craft to coinmun-■ I icate with shore stations. New highways will he constructed from Genoa to Milan and Turin, | Italy, to accommodate the heaviest! types of motor trucks and their! trailers, all grade crossings between terminals being eliminated. . Elaliorate apparatus has been installed in a Pittsburgh laboratory < to test t|te air leaking Ihcough' walls of various kinds of buildings to help solve some of the problems of heating and ventilation. , Although about 3,000,000 pairs of I wooden shoes are made in the Neth-1 erlands each year the production is not sufficient to supply the demand I and nearly as many more are im-[ ported, chiefly from Belgium. Bee ruse persons generally wash! their hands before looking for towels a machine has been invented for public places that allows payInient to be made after a towel has been withdrawn and the hands dried. — The Rumanian government has planned the erection of 20,000 | houses for its officials and employes] chiefly in Bucharest and other' cities. — I To enable dishes to be picked j ! out of hot water without scalding ■ the hands an inventor has mounted a rubber suction cup on a wooden | handle.
A & P Offers a Great FEED and FLOUR SALE Food (M) Stores les* / DAILY EGG BRAND POULTRY FEED Based on Scientific Formulas and Absolutely Uniform at all times. SCRATCH FEED 25 lb. bag 27c 100 lb. bag... 89c GROWING MASH 25 lb. bag 35s 100 lb. bag $1.29 ( HICK STARTER 25 lb. bag 39c 100 lb. bag $1.49 FINE CHICK FEED 25 lb. bag 33c 100 Ib. bag $1.19 OYSTER SHELLS 100 tb. bag... 85c > Ft tt n Wad* JPk IONA BRAND G O L D M EDA L , For All Baking Purposes or ‘ILLSBURY’S 21% ib. "J / O 24% m. nnfl Bag uI b ** uub 19 Ib. bag.. ,73c Lay in a Supp'y Now! Sunnyfie’d Flour, 49 Ib. bag 85c 24% Ib. bag .. 43c IW") ts T'T''TH Eta'll De'icious Creamery—Freshly Churned Fresh 4> A ) | I |> Silverbrook Print, tb. carton 23c Cut Tub, tb. 8 ()\ luck Coffee “T-r- 3 8 '. b . 55 c I NEC TAR TEA Ib. pkg. -22 c PURE LARD lb. • - 4m: BR E \ ( » Grandmother’s Sliced or Whole Ib. loaf 4c Florida Oranges Full of Juice 2 doz 23c Grapefruit Florida Juicy 4 for 15c He-’d Lettuce, Fresh and Crisp 2 for 15c Carrots, Fresh, crisp bunches ea. 5c Greening Apples 5 lbs. 19c Sweet Potatoes 5 tbs. 10c Winesap Apples I lbs. 25c THE POULTRY PRIMER gives complete and detailed information on the care and raising of poultry flocks. Send for free copy to the GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO., 504 Hodgson Bldg., Minneapolis. Minn. A» & P* Food Stores
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W. R. Hall traveling passenger: jagent for the Pennsylvania railroad! i was here today, looking for persons ; desiring to attend the Roosevelt' I inauguration. A special train will! j leave Fort Wayne at 7 p. m. ThursIday, March 2nd and return the following Monday, with trips of . interjest to various places at the capitol, .The fare including all expenses is ;sst. The Allen county Democratic (organization is in charge. Mrs. C. (’. Pumphrey and Mrs. L. A. Cowens visited in Fort Wayne. Dr. and Mrs. Fred Patterson acicomp’.nied Miss Marion Balch to Muncie on her way to her home in the south part of the state. John Brown and Dick Hobrock I have returned from Indianapolis i where they attended the annual meeting of the State Banker's Association. Dick Heller will return from Ind» lianapolls this evening. Arthur Voglewede is attending to I business in Indianapolis today, j E. E Zimmerman of North SecJond street, who has been a patient at the Adorns County Memorial ; Hospital for almost 10 weeks, following an automobile accident on state road 27. south of Decatur, was removed to his home Thursday. Joseph Geimer of route 4 was a | shopper in this city today. Earl and Charles Kolter went to Indianapolis today to attend a lumbermen's convention. i —i -.— o Found Guilty I New Albany, Ind., Jan. 20. —<U.R) : —Kenneth Courtney, 34, soft drink parlor operator, was found guilty jon charges of first degree murder ' late yesterday by a jury in Floyd I
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! Circuit court. The jury recommended life hn- ] prisonment. Courtney was accused of shoot ! ing Elmer Bossier, his brother-in-law, during a quarrel over dumu.s tic trouble last August. His was the first conviction on a murder charge in Floyd county for 18 years. SHIPWRECK IS CAUSE OF FOUR DEATHS TODAY CONTINTTED FHOM PAGE ONE man of the American Merchanlt as he brought his rescue ship close to the scene. Captain Stedman reported to his home office that he was standing by some 650 miles off St. Johns, Newfoundland, and about 1,575 miles from New York. “The weather is unfavorable," |he said. "There is a strong westerly gale, high seas, rain and hail.”
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