Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 207, Decatur, Adams County, 1 September 1933 — Page 3
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■ “—’ ” - ~'h- party hi I ■ d“* . mirt V uno ■ ’<■ '■ u ’* 1 : •**■, wji a " k " s '’ harl mK in- l '' vl ' l ‘ ,k W , jtrt<-r-recital ■■' Un- First attend. pramato .!• partment of " lil holil an I ’ ■K a: - the v ' n o'clock. RICH PIANO RECITAL ]■ .1 :■ dIV afterHr' her ;.. ■ ■..'•llls ■ ’•'■ proM » • Sprunger. ■ - : : ■ - - Irone v V-ra Braun. k w V '- Ruth Ellen’ an " ■■i.y Hay. - will he hold in the I j: -■ • ■ o', lock. members at bridge )!--■ ■ Kiepper, " ' Helene Well- ; i! Fritzinger,' ■ oi-tnb-. ,| IP ]( „; ta T| lPta 5, ” r n ••lined with a M? party ::, the Elk's Home, i t.ic eight o'clock, sorority. ">'■ rooms were »' ■ <k.-ts of fall'gar- , |Bn-«''t- 'ear small tables ; ■ I for bridge, and 1
t SENSATIONAL VALUES For Friday and Saturday WHITEHOUSE MILK 3™, 17c ■ wiooo»«>a«t Unsweetened Evaporated ■ SOclock Coffee, Condor Coffee, th. tin 29c I ; 3 lb. bag 55c Potato (hips, ib. ... 39c ■ clock Coffee, Ib. 19c Bread. Grandmothers’s ■ Ked Circle Coffee. Ib. 21c lb. loaf 6c IbOKAR COFFEE Ib. 9Q n ■ new low price _ fciOu ■ SMOKED PICNICS Ib. ■MILO CURED - 0V ■FILLET OF HADDOCK 2 25c MACARONI Q ‘Kp OR SPAGHETTI. Sultana Tt>. carton "LrV/ I RURE C A a* (100 lb. bag $4.98) cream CHEESE 2 33 c CIGARETTES carton QQp olives 9 i PLAIN, ENCORE, 7 oz. . ... bottles FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES POTATOES 111 91 P I V S. No. 1 Grade AV u>s. OIV ORANGES dozen 1 Kz» : CALIFORNIA VALENCIAS, medium size AW YELLOW ONIONS 10 lbs. 25c NEW CABBAGE 2 tbs. 7c SWEET POTATOESS lbs. 23c PICKLING ONIONS 10 tbs. 29c WE PAY MARKET PRICES FOR FRESH EGGS.
CLUB CALENDAR Miss Mary Macy Phones 11M10 —1001 FRIDAY Pocahontas lodge. Red Mon«i Hall. 7:80 p. m. Psi lota XI sorority tea, Mrs. I Paul V. Edwards, 3 to 5 p. ni. Tueaaay ('. L. of C. regular meeting. K. of I C. Hall, 7:30 p. m. Weanecoay Woman’s Club Dramatic depart-' went. Mrs. Bryce Thomas, 7 p. m. | prizes were awarded to Mrs. J. 1,.! Ehler and Mrs. Harold Smith for! high scores among the members.l Mrs. Ray Poole of Chicago was presented the guest prize. Following the games a twocourse luncheon was served. The second course was ice cream molded in the shape of a diampnd i with the sorority insignia on it. i The color note of green and white was carried out in the appointments of the party. WOMAN KILLED BY IRON PIPE (CONTINUBD FROM PAGE ONE) men and five women must determmen and five women must determine how Allene died and the guilt or innocence of her husband. 0 Airplane Pilots Readv For Races — Chicago Sept. 1 —(UP) —The fastI est airplane .pilots of the United . Stat s and Europe assembled here ttxlay for the international air I races opening at Curtis Wright-Rey-l nolds airport. The historic Gordon Bennett bal-; loon race, with seven craft entered I 1 will be held tomorrow as the out-! i standing feature of the four day I ! speed program. Another feature i ] event is the scheduled clash be-! | tw-en two of the country's foremost | ■ racing pilots. Col. Roscoe Turner,! 1 and James R. Wedell. L. Six More Deaths From Epidemic j St. Louis, Sept. 1. -(U.R)- Six j I deaths here in the last twenty-four! Thours brought sleeping sickness fa- ; talities today to fifty-three in the i epidemic which science so far has ; been unable to check. City, county federal health! authorities had nothing new to re-1 I port in locating the carrier or per- j I fecting a serum to combat the en-, I cephalitis germ which has stricken i 400 persons here in one month. o Opening Penny Dance Sat. night. Also Penny dance Sunday. Sunset Park.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1933.
HOTEL MUSEUM IN MICHIGAN IS ODD COLLECTION I _ 50,000 Unusual Articles Gathered During Life Os Inn Owner — Saginaw, Mich,, —(UP)—John P. I Sehuch is more Interested In his ' I historical museum of 50,000 articles than he Is in his hotel. He has turned over the main I dining room of the Hotel Sehuch ! here to a permant nt display room | for his efforts. Non- of tlje curios is for sale, but the public can browse around hfs collection of old I Bibles, theatrical programs, turn!I lure and the hundreds of other obI } cts without charge. Ten years as an advance agent for theatrical troupes brought Sehuch his collection of mote than 10,000 theater many commemorating historical “first nights." Seven thousand books he ha-s picked up during his travels in- 1 clutf- 500 first 'ditions. He has 3,-1 000 photographs, many of them of; staga celebrities. War service enhanced Schlich’s interest in weapons. His collection • Includes spears from Africa and the ! South Seas. European and Asiatic swords, guns and revolvers of all I kinds and size. The connoisseur of fine glass-I ware will find much to fhterest himj There is much to interest the anti-
' mHOLLYWOOD g W,.I
By HARRISON CARROLL. | CtptrUM. I*3l. bl King gMlutM Srndlcatg. Ing HOLLYWOOD, -Only a ‘ few of Lilyan Tashman’s friends ! realize how serious was the illness that sent her to the hospital ri - ’ I Yesterday site . I received her sec J&sfc ’ ’ ond blood transfusion. Fearing flßif ■ i to excite her, the -ji doctors didn’t i even tell her • about the first. Ai.- ; They gave it to / her while she x* . was under an anaesthetic. . v 1 » These trans- \ fusions don’t ._a l -I mean that the star is in a criti- Lilyan cal condition, Ta.hman but she is very ; weak. As one of Hollywood’s busiest socialites, Lilyan has led a strenuous life. Her deep sun-tan has ! given her the appearance of health i and her slenderness has been attributed to fashion’s dictate. The star’s room at the Good Samaritan Hospital is banked with flowers. A bowl of lillies of the valley and pink rose-buds, just the size to fit the bedside table, is from Ed Lowe. He calls every afternoon long distance and sends a wire every morning. He’ll probably be back in Hollywood in a few days. A certain assistant director dresses foppishly and those who don’t know him are apt to mistake him for a sissy. The other night at a Hollywood late spot, Chester Morris was trying to straighten a fellow out on the subject “You mean to say he tough?” •sked the doubter. “Tough!" exclaimed Chester. "Why, he’d fight at the drop of a beret!” Some who think it is bad policy for husband and wife to play in the same picture have been criticizing Ruth Chatterton for demanding George Brent as her leading man. The lowdown on Ruth’s attitude is not that she objects to other leading men, but that she wants her husband and herself to wjrk at the same time so they’ll be sTde to vacation together. The star registered strong objections when Warners
| Notice | • TO MY CUSTOMERS: • • j 9 Due to an extended illness. I have a ® been forced to close the CITY CASH a • MEAT MARKET and the same will reO main closed until such a time when I am A again able to take active management. • ! 0 I want to thank my customers for a their past patronage and hope I may be W able to serve them soon. ! • • CHARLIE PENNINGTON, Mgr. • : Cash Meat Market • A 150 South Second Street. W : •
i que furniture collector. The collec- | | Don of old Biblex is beaded by a f-atin Bible printed in 1556 and said I io be the second old»at Bible in the United States. “Ye Old Muese" is recognized by i the Library of Congress and has i be ii visited by people from all over the coun’ry. —- o ■ ■ , ( Investigate Death Os Logansport Man Logansport. Ind., Sept. I—(UP) — ' Police today were Investigating the ! death of Charles Harry Diamond. I 37. found on the outskirts of Logansport last night shot through the heart. Diamond's rifle lay nearby, indicating the gun had been accidentally discharged as Diamond crossed a fence. - A o Mission Festival At Malley Sunday The annual Mission Festival of I the Magley Reformed church will be held Sunday, September 3. Ser-! vices at lo a. m . 2 and 7:30 p. in. Arthur K. Belsheim of Huffton.' Ohio, and Rev. C. M. Prugh of Del catur will be tip; special speakers. There will be special music at all 1 ! services. o— Churches Gave 38 Million Philadelphia —(UP) — The an-j | nual statistics of the Presbyterian ! J Church in the U. S. for the fiscal ! I y ar ending March 31 indicated a I total of $3X.4j34.203 in contributions 1 1 from local chart hes, it was an- 1 j nounced at the General Assembly I office here.
summoned Brent from the mountains to lake a part in “From Headt quarters.” A perfect example of Holly- | wood’s friendly - though - separated i couples are Esther Ralston and George Webb. The only night Esther has been out since the newspapers carried the announcement of her marital rift was with Webb and her publicity man. The blonde star als<f lets her husband take care of her non-studio business affairs. HOLLYWOOD PARADE. You’ll get a chuckle out of thia. Toby and Pat Wing have a number of aviator boy-friends, so they have had a large letter W painted on the roof of their Beverly Hills heme. ' . . . Joby Ralston showed such an improvement from her stay on the Arlen yacht that doctors may relent about her taking an extended • rest in the mountains. . . . Funny, . some of our American stars seem i to be having the time of their life i in London while Leslie Howard, a . born Englishman, writes of being terribly homesick for Hollywood, I California sunshine and his friends i in the film colony. The European trip of Loretta > Young is oflfiI — , cial, y called off ws unt ‘* *f ter s l’ e t’® finishes her first 1 picture for Darj ryl Zanuck arid BMfr ; j Joseph M. I Schenck. Sally w a ÜBlaneU Blane and Polly .vy- t /JM Ann Young, who .. '-aL JCF jag have been hang'n? around Euro,,e f° r mon, l’ s ' waiting for Lorct£a W 'H come i ;.,l on home. ... Saw Gail PatLoretta rick and Ernst Young Fegtee (he’s a Paramount artdireetor) taking in the show at the Hollywood Barn. Incidentally, Earl Dancer and his colored performers give the fastest-stepping revue in town. The team of Rutledge and Taylor is sensational. DID YOU KNOW— That when Joan Crawford made an entrance for her first screen test, she fell fiat on her face in front of the camera ?
FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS By ELLEN WORTH Wear Ribbed Fabrics For Slenderness > Perhaps you’ve noticed that ribbed fabrics are high In fashion’s ' • f favor this season. Aside from the / ! i 1 usual corduroy and ribbed wool we 1 L A And ribbed satin, ribbed crepes, /• w I 1 corded sheers and cottons. These ' ’>* Jj ribs look new and exciting—and they're flattering to the woman ISf who is not slender. The woman’s frock sketched MEI' here would be stunning in ribbed / ’ 7 « '-Z . crepe with plain, and it has the ' added virtue of being a youthful r~ style. Those pointed seams are / / slenderizing. The oval vestee and sailor-like collar are chic details. | % | And the slender skirt will be ap- I J preciated by women who feel \ u® dressed-up in flares. v—2 Perforations provide for contln- ’ « ■ uing the contrast half-way down • the back, if desired. This is an / Easy-to-Make design! For other smart and becoming styles for the family, consult our new Fall \ v 1 Fashion Book. It will help you to ' j choose the right fall colors and /Jf V fabrics, too. ’ y 1 Pattern No. 5347 is designed for T,. 7 sizes 34, 36, 38, 40. 42. 44, 46, 48, 9 50 bust. Copyright, 1833, by United Feature Syndicate. Inc. No. 5347 Size Price for Pattern 15 Cents name street address • city state Our New Fashion Book Is out! Send for it—put check here and enclose 10 cents extra for bock. j Address orders to New York Pattern Bureau the Decatur Daily Democrat I i Suite 110, 220 East 4snd St. New York City. (Editor’s note—do not j mail orders to Decatur. Indiana.)
(Jas Tax Collections Increase For Month I Indianapolis, Sept. 1 — (UP) — 1 | Gasoline tax collections in Indiana 1 I during August totalled $1,585,111. i an increase of $102,288 over the' same month of last year, Floyd O. Williamson, state auditor, reported, today. The tax was paid on a July consumption of 39.613.670 gallons this year, as compared to 37,114,995 sold ; in July 1932. o Robbers Ransack General Store Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 1—(PlRobbers backed a truck up to the ; door of Miller's g neral store. Belle ville, and removed everything hut the counters and shelves, state police reported today. Fingerprints left in the store I
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1 were to be examined today by I I Claud • tiozier of the criminal buri eau in an effort to learn identity of I the thieves. The robbery occurred , last night. , o Worcester Getc British Bugle Worcester. England — (U.R) — A : bllg’e used by the eighth batta'ion. i Worcestershire Regiment on Ar- ' mistice Day. 1918, has been presented by Worcester to the sister ’ city of Worcester, Mass., to sound j the Last Post and Reveille at the dedication of 'he municipal audi- ' torium in memory of the city's World War dead in Septeml>er. o State Wars on Insects Augusta. Me (U.R) —Maine has declared war on insect racketeers. ; Fish and game authorities will !ib- ' erate 4.500 phaasants in southern ! sections of the state so they can ! prey on cutworms, locusts, grassj hoppers and other produce destroyI ers.
~ ~ - ■ , - ,w |.|TownTalk | Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Graliker land daughter Betty have returned ’ from a three-day visit to the World s Fair at Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Myers will leave Saturday morning for Chicago to attend the world’s fair. Mr. Bb-eke of Decatur will go to Monroe to act as Standard Oil agent during the absence of Mr. Myer. , Mr. and Mrs. John Hoi k, r will returrt Sulurduy from Mackinaw. Michigan, where they have spent several weeks. James Cowen has returned from a business trip to Chicago. Judge H. M. DeVoss and family have returned from a three months outing at Rome City where they occupied the C. D. Teeple cottage for the season. Rev. M. W. Sunderman and fam-' ily returned Igst night from a three I weeks’ tour In New England. | where they visited the K. I). 1 Boucher family in Boston. His I daughter, K. I). Boucher, and ' son, Kent Allen, returned with | them and will spend several I | weeks visiting in Decatur ami Ft. I j Wayne. John Edris. Bluffton attorney, I attended to business in this city I today. Mrs. Jennie Rainier and Mrs. | Agnes Andrews visited with relatives and friends in Monroe Thursday evening. James Elberson transacted business in Fort Wayne yesterday. J. L. Ehler has returned from a i i business trip to Indianapolis. Arthur Voglewsde is a visitor in | I Indianapolis today. Chester D. Steinbarger of Fort | 1 Wayne, visited here last evening I , and accompanied by James Gaskill, j local landscape gardener, visited i I the grounds of the Adams County Memorial hospital. Mr. Steinbarger I compliment d Mr. Gaskill on the flower bed arrangements and the I g neral plan of landscaping the grounds. Mr. Steinbarger at one I ' time was employed as tree surgeon j j by Mrs. Gene Stratton-Porter at her j estate at Rome city and also was i | employed by the state entomology I I ds partment several years ago. o Unique Tangle Can Puzzle Sociologists ' Provo Utah —(CPl—Here’s a pro- | , I blem for sociologists with a twist. | Dela Ir ne Peterson married Tru- 1 ; man G. lAtwood. whose sister. Mrs Mary A. Stinger, married Francis T. Peterson, father of Miss PeterI son. 51 The problem Is. what relation is I Peterson to himself. o i Little Hail Insurance Carried i Salem. Ore. —(UP) —Hail appar--1 ently does little damage in Oregon. Only $96,482 wortli of hailstone in- i surance is carried in the state. I
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r* ' mhT ■ -mi 1 FEAR MOB MAY STORM JAIL TO (JET PRISONERS . (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Weldon, 90, fanner who was tortured and attacked with his sister and her daughter at their farm home near here Tuesday, were denied today by Dr. Robert A. Krlglit. physician attending the mini. “The patient was alive and showed some Improvements today." Dr. Wright said, shortly after noon. He nttrihuted reports of Weldon's death to lenders of a mob surrounding a jail at Robinson, 111., where three suspects are held in connection with the robbery and attack. The rumor was circulated in an effort to further incite high feeling against the prisoners, the doctor believes. Loose Prairie Wolf Worried Police i Cleveland — (U.R) Mischlef-mak-I ers caused police some anxious , hours h re recently when they reI leased a dangerous prairie wolf ' from its pen at Brookside Park. I City Dog Warden Manuel Sevii our managed to track the animal i and shoot it before any damage was caused. H ’ found the wolf on the edge of a densely populated residential district. The animal was released from its cage during the night by vandals who pried large holes into I the heavy mesh wire around the 1 wolf pen. The female of the wolf : pair escaped, and zoo keepers j arrived only in time to keep the ! male from escaping, also. I—- '' ' ' ■" Eat to feel FIT! LM’JI
