Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 101, Decatur, Adams County, 28 April 1933 — Page 3

PSocTety.

IJl’aris Styles ? MA H Kx1(! H T ) s ft ff correspondent, B i('l' 1 Madame Vdilinel, | is :'-sr when u new , gjF dHilasd. m when old . RS given a new-slim 11- j LfS FOR 30 ■. fc, THEN CEREAL RELIEF ■ -JjHh — ■ Endorses Allfor Constipation Me ■ |ru suffer from headaches, and energy or any (lie fiviuent effects of conM'l tins voluntary letter: ;'. ,r *®ytfr taking pills and tablets' thirty years for constiI started to take your All■tlhree times a day according Kjltions. Today I can eat •ity and that is binding, and mjuaflKly —Mr. Ed. For- ' d says All-Bran provides r tl if exercise the intestines, 11 further aid.reguHii blood-building iron. in All-Bran is tnuch i of leafy vegetables. Inside ~, forms a soft mass which Btll clears the intestines of pl pasan t “cereal way’’ .YWfc healthful than using pat'MSkßßl s<> °f ten I'tto'ftwo tablespoonfuls daily. * eases use with each meal, this way, see your , ts »a®w. ' l i“'red-and-green package at , 1 cer’s. Made by Kellogg ir

'■ ’ <- V ut r.n; mr nr ar. try trit,.njv Jbeer I y ■ You May Buy From Us One to E I Twenty-four Bottles for Home Use. B | We Can Also Serve You Beer and B‘ t ' a,l( i' v « hes At Our Place of Business. & ■ I B Clean and Sanitary | I Suman’s i ig 242 W. Madison St. | I NEXT DOOR TO GAS OFFICE. | !'■ ui \tuter- Zu Tlu AiE irtj: Yu I SALE£SEASON SPRING COATS AND SUITS 'fc Perfect As To Fit —Style and Quality IK| At the Lowest Prices in Years. B|f W COATS SUITS Cape Coats Tailored Models Furred Models Swagger Suits IH Swagger Coats Cape Suits 'pßg: si Tweeds & Polos Furred Styles Formerly to $19.50 awliWmSi J — Now — Ik NEW I)RESSES ,or stkeet and AFTERNOON 5 , K >1 Stunning frocks of crepe, sheers and piints. Dresses with fur trimmings—v wk! Jacket dresses — Tailored models —and I many other distinctive fashions. Large Sizes and Half Sizes Included | jjl $3-95 $5-95 SB-95 ' Mtßyi » jJiA Eor f" r:u ’ liat ' on an< * Parties IE beautiful collection of new frocks for the ‘big affair”. Ideal r dances, parties and semi-formal occasions. Many with pert iy* jackets. All the new (I»Q QK 0»K QK |W r 'ng shades .. _ BB^ I! LINERY— Let your costume look right with one of the i^g' ov -ly new hats we‘re showing. Turbans, Brims, Straws. ■ ■ a " o '”—charming models in (I*l QQ 18 411 the new shades ipl.OO 1 American"home shop, w..

CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Mary Phones 1000—looi FRIDAY Zion Reformed Girls Choir speriu meeting, church, 7 p. tn. prompt. Pocahontas lodge, Red Men’s | Hull, 7: 30 p. m. I United Brethren, V. I. S., Class Curtis Hill, 7:30 p. m. Christian Triangle class, Miss Ina And-rson 2 p. ni. Saturday Evangelical Loyal Dorcas class 1 plate supper, church basement, 5 to • 7 p. m. i Pleasant Mills High School alnmI ni banquet .school, 8:30 p. m. Monday i First Christian Ladies Aid May ! Day breakfast, church basement 5 to 8 a. m. Tuesday I Catholic Ladies of Columbia busij ness session, K. of C. Hall. 7 : :;o p. m. prompt. Zion Reformed Women's Missionary Society, church parlors, 2:30 I p. m. i Adams County Choral Socle:;., I above Brock Store, 7:30 p. m. FVptist Men's Broth- rhood, , rhnr. h 6:30 p. m. Wednesday Historical Club closing, Mrs. Del- ! ton Passwater, 1 p. m. ■ lant. has proveci with her 193?. collet lion that variety is the spic ■ of ' life. j Her hip-length coats of plain ■ fabrics, worn with checked wch>l land tweed skirts, strike the tailored note in h,-r conception of the I modern mode. She lengthens both ; the skirt and the waist-line—not i drastically, but sufficiently to convince you that both are longer than I last yi?ar. She has put much em- ’ phasis on sleeves and offered here, perhaps, her greatest bit of variety. I One sle?Ve, for instance, may be set into the shoulder line while the other forms of distinctive cape over the curve of the shoulder and arm to the elbow.

DECATVR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933.

jDORCAS CLASS I TO SERVE supper I . The Loyal Dorcas c lass of the Evangelical Sunday School will' serve a fifteen cent plate supp. r in ; : tb- church basement, Saturday' i night from five to seven o'clock. ; Tlie menu fd r thp sllpper will ()|| . I 'sist of baked h'.,m with dressing. I I foushed potatoes with gravy, salad 1 , bread, butter, coffee, pickles and jelly. Pie will be s-rved for five I i cents extra. | All members aae usl - d to have I food ut the church not later than . jone o'clock Saturday afternoon. •The public is invited to attend the supper. I . — The Adams County Choral Society will meet above the Brock Store, Tuesday night vt seve.iiI thirty o- lock. A new opera will tie lelie,irsed aid very niemlw-r is urgeal to be prese.it, MEETING OF BRIDGE CLUB I Mrs. Nlok Braun was hostess to •the m. inkers of the Monday Night Bridge Club at her home Thursday levelling. Five games of bridge were . played and Mrs. Harry Helm and • Mrs. Deny Thomas reeelv-d the I prizes. Mrs. Br.iun presented Mrs. Walter <ll alfelder. a guest with a i Kitt. Following the games a luncheon i was served. —— ADAMS COUNTY COUPLE WEDS Miss Velma R. Ixibsiger. daug.h- • ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Lobsiger ' of Moi roe and Bryce A. Daniels, son of Ml. and Mrs. Harry Daniels if Pleasant Mills w- re m.irried Saturday evening a< nine o'clock in tire parsonage of the United Brethren Chinch at Willshire. Ohio. Rev. R. W. Rash performed the single ri g ceremony, which was ' witnessed by Mr. and Mrs. Edward • Lobsiger, brother and sister-in-law of tlie bride. The bride wore a j,i t ine crepe dress with gr y accessories. , Mrs. Lobsiger wore a grey dress and beige aeoesoriqs. i A wedding dinner was served I Sunday at the home of the brid's ' parents for members of the imme- . diate family. Mr. .nd Mrs. Daniels will reside m e mile west of PleaI suit Mills. HELEN LYTLE j WEDS FRED EMLICK The manage of Miss Helen Ly- ’ tie, daughter of Mr. ai d Mrs. Harley Lytle and Fred Emlick, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Emlick of Fort Wayne came as a pie sant surprise to the friends of Hi • young people. Th ceremony was performed Wednesday by Rev. P. W. Banker, pastor evangelist of Decatur Gospel Temple t the home of A. W. Lytle in this city. The bride and groom were att nded by Harold Lytle and Miss Agnes Fuhrman of this city. Mrs Emlick is well known in this community. The young couple plan to in eke their future home in Rome, New York. The Baptist Brotherhood will meet in the church Tuesday night t six thirty o'clock. Members are asked to note the change of the date from Monday to Tuesday Ev ry m n of the church is requested to lie present. MEETING OF C. M. B. CLASS The members of the C. M. B. ■ Class of tlie First Christian Sunday School were entertained at tlie home of Dorphus Drum on Forn 1 . x street Thursday ev* niiig. The president. AJr. Clase, had charge of the business session timing which plans wore made for the next m eting which will be in the form of a fried chi ken supper in tile Chun 11 b scmciit. A social hour wan. enjoyed and jig saw puzzles nil checkers were played. Delicious r. freshinents were served. A specl.ll mec-tin# c.f the Girls Choir of the Zion Reformed Chtirt h will be held promptly ut sev n o' clock tonight. Tlie Worn n's Missio ary Society of the Zion Reformed Church will meet in the church parlors, Tuesday afteriHiuii al two thirty o'clock. The Catholic Ladies of Columbia will me t in the K. of C. Hall, for a short business sei&ion, Tuesday night promptly at seve.-thirty o'clock. The May section of the Ladies Aid Society of the Presbyterian church will serve a chick n supper in the church b senient, Saturday evening, May 13. IC NICK CLUB HAS POT-LUCK SUPPER The mamlbers of the Ic-NicHt Club motored to the home of Mrs. Walter Myers near Berne, where they pleasantly surprised Mrs. Myesu- • former members of the club. Mrs. Myers before her ma triage was Miss Nola Banter. A pot-luck supper was enjoyed liter which games of bunco were played Miss Inis Heller received the high score prize and Mrs. ■ Myers was awarded Hit consolation I prize. Those present ut the party were

the Misses' Frieda Schaerer, M iritZes r, I. ji and Inis Heller and the Mesdamee Walter Myers, George Stults, Arthur Biker and Leo ' Teeple. CHRISTOAN LADIES AID PLANS MAY DAY r rr 'KFAST The Ladies Aid Society of the i First Christian Church, will s rve I the annual May Day breakfast, Monday, Muy 1, ft„m live to eight o’clock in the morning. The breakfast will be served in : lie church basement and will consist of two ;me.us: pancakes, sausage, fruit and coff e, -.nil bacon, eggs, bread butter and coffee. The public is invited to attend. Tlie breakfast will be served for fifteen cents. ——-—- o — Ameritio Sapphire Fields Thtue are two iiolahle sapphire •leliis In rLe United Stales. ‘)ne. dinong the ureal ••ortindiitn deposits >f M;.c«»n c«iuni> North Carolina, has yielded sump ver\ yood tionis. I'he ottiet is hi the 4‘»I«L boa ring, sandj region ntr Helena Mont.Gas Logie 0 F;»b From th- Skier A shower fish was vouched N, by scientists in Enemnd In z ( S. when a sl.oal 0 < sninß Ask wn? caught in a waterspout ano carried up into the a’r and a strong wind swept t*.e pho ln’:*nd. to drop them »n the mrto Extreme tn Patience •hiinistii a religion of India, so strongly stresses the dm-trine of non-injury to all Jiving things that a (leVrMir rollowet ot the «ett will I not kill or even disturb rhe insects which lie finds fading on his hotly. 1 Food for Thought •From seven to eight years are required to grow orchids,” writes a florist. VAy can’t we do this with spinach' 7 —io —i* ' Pleads Guilty Delphi. Ind., April 2?—(UP) Herold E. Kiel, 18, of Indianapolis confessed participant in seven Indi- na bank holdups pleaded guilty in Carroll Circuit Court today ,on charges of robbery while ; ,rmed. Judge E. E. Pruitt withheld sentence pending pleas of John Stroh,

n - ' ■mw »w, TT. T r ‘ ——iii.i I every minute f Each tray of CHESTERFIELDS from A Y J tli<‘ cigarette-making machines passes & JB under tin xvatchful eyes of inspectors, . trained by long practice to see flaws such Y' , ■ as an end of torn paper, or a poorlj filled Y- Y ! cigarette. - \there's still another safeguard ...two"electric detectives"on ea< h pa< kaS’nS machine. Electric lingers "feel" : g out every imperfect package. Open your pack of Chesterfields, and Y M look at them. It's no accident that every cigarette is round, firm and full. Sometw body’s been on the job every minute to BB give you what you want ... a cigarette that’s made right in every way and that's I milder uud tastes belter. g. w < ' J* ''"'y y ' JWaWWwHFvrWr Ch es Tc SyJJwLffifl ‘ /Wherever you buy \ ■ ' 1 (Chesterfields.yougetl f'?/ ,/ S I them just at Inth as Until?' ’ifif I JF Iff you came by our/ End-on, this tray-full of fresh-made Chesterfield* look* like a L \ factory door / huge honeycomb. Inspectors, expert from long practice, remove \ .. , with tweezers each torn or imperfect cigarette. . .„ j B - (g) 1933, Liugitt & Myiu Tobacco Co. t

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By HARRISON CARROLL Copyright. 1933, Ring Feature! Syndicate. Inc. HOLLYWOOD .—Trust Merian C. Cooper, an exfwar flier himself, to snatch up an aviation

i yarn that has been lying under the noses of Hollywood producers for several years. This is Norman Si Hall's novel, “The Balloon Buster." ‘.‘The Balloon Buster” first ran as a serial in a national maga-zineandß-K-O’s decision to make the picture will be good news to thousands of air enthusiasts who

B Merian C. Cooper

read it. It is the factual account of the life of Frank Luke, Jr., ace warflier from Arizona, who was killed in combat at the age of 21, after destroying 18 enemy balloons and five planes in rapid succession. i Production Manager Cooper is j looking for the right adaptor to turn this thrilling story into screenable material. He plans to make of it ■ film glorifying the American war ace. With his own background vividly mixed in with war flying— Merian C. Cooper was shot down, wounded and escaped from a German prison camp—he will give the production special attention. It is likely the role of hero Luke will be played by either Bruce I Cabot or Joel McCrea, although the film is far from the casting stage. Credit Sime Silverman, of Variety, with this agile flick of the whip-snapper: They were telling him about so-and-so. He is better known on Broadway for the flops he turned out. Now he has an egg-ranch out in the valley here and is cashing in on the heavy duty of his hens. “Why not,” said Sime, “he used to lay plenty of them in the show I” 38, former Indian' ppli t po-ticeman I and Jxuiis R. Reece, 26, of India' a-i

HOLLYWOOD PARADE: Among the smarter Easter affairs was the birthday party of Lily, 3-year-old daughter of John Lodge, of the Boston’s. Guests were Johnny Mack Browne’s daughter. Miriam Hopkins’ adopted boy, Elissa Landi’s two little cousins, and Richard Rodgers’ little girl. Miss Lodge entertained with a Mickey Mouse reel. Lilyan Tashman hostessed a large party at Gus Arnheim’s Gold Room over the week-end. Her Easter outfit was a blue taffeta dress with a plaid taffeta coat. Real summery is Peggy Hopkins Joyce’s I new outfit. The dress is of pale yel- ! low chiffon. It goes with a large, j floppy of the same hue. I Add to the stranger offerings of ’ Hollywood’s notaries the box Rich- i aid Arlen gels every now and thea ; from an anonymous fan. It contains a collection of burnt matches, j strings and unrelated newspaper i clippings. Hollywood’s rival to Rodin, Richard Cromwell, has turned out a mask for Sylvia Sidney. Sylvia ! likes nicknames, too. Some of them are Sinny and Funnyface. Her favorite is Brat. With the silver nail polish fad run- I

9 ■■■■■ I 0.. WF Dorothea Wieck

ning riot, Mae West goes back ' to red polish. ... I Henry Garat sails from New York on April 23. On the same boat goes Sc reen Magazinist Dorothy Catlhoun | with family to meet husband in France. ... Dorothea Wieck, who left a husband of seven months in Berlin, arrived panting for letters from him. Fifty-seven pieces of mail

awaiting her arrival were from U. S. fans already. . . . Claudette Colbert is taking singing lessons for “The Torch Song.” DID YOU KNOW— That Joan Crawford can get cp a real dark suntan in only three ri allo? polls, implicated in ;.- si the holdups Ivy Ki 1.

Report Earthquake Shocks In Alaska Anchorage lAianka, April 28 I UP) Earth shocks of increasing frequency and iiihmisity rocked the coast of Al'iski early today'after reports had been received that Augustine Island had disappeared into the sea. Mure than o-ie imndrert iih-ikuh hive been reported since Wednesday afternoon hut so far as could he learned no casualties resulted. A terrific temblor shook tlie vicinity of Cook Inlet, separating the Ke ai and Alask i Penuinsulas, late last night. Reports form other sections of the coast told of increasing strong shocks. ———-—o ( hicaffo Teachers Aided By Measure ■— .A. Springfield, 111., (April 28 —(UP)— Meeting in midnight session, the Illinois general assembly today opened a legislative path for payment of the $30,900,060 owed Chicago school teachers in back salaries. The 9: mite passed, 44 to 2, a bill which airtlmriz.es county collectors to act a,s receivers for delinquent tax property. Governor Henry Horner affixed his signature a few minutes lat r. The mheasure, although effective throughout the state, is designed specifictlly for Cook county and was sponsored by Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago, who was present at its naetnient. It was estimated that the bill will loose $250,000,000 now tied up in delinquent taxes. o Three Wounded By Machine Gun Fire Madison, Minn., April 28—(UP) —Three persons were wounded liy machine gun fire todiy in a foray j witlt four bandits who riided the Klei- National bank and escaped witli $1,500. The gun battle started when a I burglar alarm accidentally was set off. o Grapes. Concord. Niagara, Dela-; ware and Moorco Early, Big ■ footed two year old. While they | last, 10c, on sale tomorrow, Sat. I Only. Schafer Store. lx |

Page Three

PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Glen Warner of Chicago Illinois, former teachers of Decatur visited 'at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Light and family. W. A. Klepper is attending to , btisiniess in Chicago. Dale Riley of Monroe was a caller here today. Mayor George Krick is looking after business in •Indianapolis. Chet Brandyiberry is t visitor in I Indianapolis today. Dance, Sunday. Sunset.

!■ ~ ~ — | I S YOU R BEA UT Y | costing fflir-'’ you twice what it jMj should? ■ V SMART women in cities and small towns alike, have discovered Jonteel . . . marvelous, modern toiletries that point the thrifty way to loveliness. For they cost half what you often pay. See the NEW, modernizi ed Jonteel line at your Rexall Drug Store. Jonteel TOILETRIES The B. .1. Smith Drug Co. Phone 82 i