Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 21 October 1933 — Page 5

Web plans ’MURE HUNT dfe OAK ISLAND >ttL n Method- Used to |Kk Inca Jewels And K Cold -'u.p’ i|K.... - . wraith, a S, ,„i ■ ■ ■ , \ Nixon. Pill I-"'"- lai" this tall, <>■' to stave one ol expedition island lit mil lot' all th" ■^H ( tal< 1 HjHj , Imlnms. Known : - M M. • MSsIM I - HK-. ' .!•■!• I unn.-l nm KSfl ;,. v .<:.’.• <>. can I 18,'■ r ■""■ ,! " I IB"' 11 IBM . 171'.'. l>> Hit"" Ify n M a .. ':• ■■ on th. -I .10l IflK Tlu-y nn. artli I^K pi 11l have sunk , tin ■ ■ - .ill were tm i. .1 : • barkinn and si .. «>. . I ■•||, .1 tlv'ir shafts . belief that thrt r ■H - mad. - , to i.-nding t<> ptotr . pisipl. on. ■ Ila' oak trees and a all ills, r'.bed iphorrd cluiractbE| Traaes Solved Problem x itlda, — (U.R) — When

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K By Harrison carroll i Hint Kuurw U»dln:e HOLLYWOOD. .—Traffic are bad enough, but Greta tMBa^ 0 "* d take * ltr slx 'y ear ’°W iKI. limousine an y

day in preference to the stage coach used by Queen Christina of her native Sweden. The star just had a narrow escape from injury when a replica of the royal coach, in which she and Elizabeth Young were riding, ■ suddenly broke loose from the horsesand rolled back down a 40

! It'; j IF ’ jjj lEH Greta InH Garbo

incline covered with slippery (movie snow). accident occurred on MG.M’s 2 as cameras were grinding the coach making an entrance the courtyard of the royal Defective harness snapped the heavy vehicle estarted to tight stalwart extras, playing rs of the royal guard, quickly fictional roles into reality M®” they leaped after the runcoach, with the aid of the which also rushed to the resthey managed to halt the vebefore it overturned. ■ ta Garbo calmly descended but s,a ff was mopping its brows for Mlt> minutes. Smartest colored boy in HollyM*ood is Max Baer’s valet and ■ C'lacffcur. Yesterday he approached tß*r * ! Kbter and asked for the loan two collars. ■ 3 u?‘ lat for?” asked Max. ■la '' ant t° p -° down on Central and brag about you,” was ■ ■the cash-winniag reply. 18. Will Hollywood be surprised to ■ | “ 51 >r that the latest heavy romance !B I” ,ae ."• rn colony is between Bar I B tvm " eeks and Guinn “Big Boy” I ■ 'Villiams? Heretofore too much iniß f ’. sted •» Polo to have an eye for ■ I lemiPlneI emi P lne beauty, Guinn recently II m ,cfn escor ting Barbara to the ■ I B, ng Crosby-Richard Arlen party ■ar t 0 var| ous other places. There’s ■ I ,5 lnite talk of elopement between R"l s m and don’t be surprised if it ■ ■ n*ppens soon. Iln printing of that story about Alice ■ I ytady receiving .an offer of kidnap ■ ■ insurance brings cautious but apI I P are utly authentic tips that a num- | I Per of such policies already are held I I by prominent film folk. Premiums ■ I Bre . sk y'iiigh and the policies are I I o' automatically voided the g 3 My the star admits having them. I | i oted biographer Emil Ludwig i I is not devoting his entire time to .

"Black!*" Smith, tenant farmer, father of J 2 hungry children had no way to market his cotton he re verted to the ways of his ancestors Blackie owned one steer, traded three bushels of sweet potatoes tor another, and bartered two gallons |of Norgluim for n warm. | |,,. | made his crop with the oxen, and will haul it to market on the wagon for which he traded sorghum. I' SCHOOL BOOKS STOP “PRESSES" • | Chevy Chase. Md. (U.R) The I Thornapple Street News published! ! i its last edition — the reason, too' . t much prosperity. | Larry Williams, to, editor and . I publisher, has met his second I stumbling block, and ft has spelled the end of his journalistic career. , Last February there came an addition to the Williams family. A lbby girl. Mrs. Williams stepped in and said the roar of the presses (an electric mimeograph machine) I kept the new addition awake. The j presses stopped. 1 When the newcomer outgrew the jcry-baby age. the Thornapple Street ‘News began again. Circulation mounted from lia) to 1.000. Two ; extra pages had to be added for advertisers. Business became so I good I-arry and his staff of eleven reporters bad to sit up half the night to keep the books straight. This meant the school books didn't get their deserved attention. Agpln 1 Mrs. Williams stepped in. and the I Thornapple Street News said I “thirty" for the last time. o Hubby to Wed Wife In Every State of Union — . I New York — (UP) — George | Shute. New York newspaperman, ' I considers himself so lucky to have J Dorothy Morrison, Broadway actress, as his bride that he is going '! to marry her iu every state in the Union, he announced today. “In spite of the local ceremony, ‘II feel insecure every time a hand‘some fellow looks at Dorothy," | Shute said. ' So I’ve gotten a leave ; of absence and we're going to say 1 ! '.! do’ in every state from the rock- ! ribbed coast of Mane to the sunny ■j slopes of California." Chute said he and Miss Morrison 'I would leave within a month on I their maritpl marathon. o I Get the Habit — Trade a«- Home

I writing for the movies and to attending dinners. Almost every morning, he takes a dancing lesson. Three months of trial separation find Gloria Stuart an enthusiastic exponent of this cure for incompatibility. “Blair and I are lovers again! Instead of being staid old married people, we are back already to our courting days of five years ago,” exclaims the blonde Universal actress. By maintaining separate homes, she says she and her sculptor husband no longer have a clash of temperament when she comes home late from the studio in no fit mood for company. Moreover he now can have his sculpturing classes without fear of disturbing her o.t her days of rest. The two will give the marital vacation plan a full year’s test before deciding upon definite action. QUICK GLIMPSES The biggest basket of flower* in Lyle Talbot’s hospital room is from the Countess di Frasso. He had just taken her home from a party before that auto accident . . • Lawrence Tibbett in “The Emperor Jones” is the first opera in 16 years to have an advance sell-out in this city . . . Marguerite Churchill and George O’Brien got Colonel Roscoe Turner to fly them north at 3 in the morning upon receiving news of the death of George's father in San Francisco. Marguerite left in the middle of a picture for Charles R. Rogers. Shooting schedules were re-arranged to allow her to remain for the funeral. Harold Grayson’s orchestra enthused Embassy Club first nighters with an arrangement of “W ho s

afraid of the big bad wolf?” . ■ . This smart new spot drew many film folk. Ralph Forbes sat ringside with Jean O’Shea, S. F. Socialite... Gene Raypiond had a large party to hear his song, “Brief Moment” played for the first time. He danced often with Mary Brian . . . Peanuts Byron (remember her?).

st J Dolores Del Rio

was with Barney Bernard . . . Dolores Del Rio left a trail of fragrance from a lei of tube-roses around her neck. DID YOU KNOW— That although Rochelle Hudson was born in Will Rogers’ home town, Claremore, Okla, she never met the comedian until she played a part with him in Dr. bkitch.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21,1933.

Como ro ©Burch Simba#

O N THEIR WAY

T ' i I !• SL I Xrwd J &Mk 'luOl!|OHu r Ifii

When John Mark had deserted Paul and Barnabas. they continued on their way until they came to Antioch. This was a Roman city, the center of civil and military administration of the district. Standing on the hillside, strongly fortified. with low gateways in its extensive walls, it was one of the noted places of the old world. There Paul preached the word in the synagogue.

YELLOWSTONE TRAVELBOOMS * ! Yellowstone Park, Wyo.— (U.R) — I ’ After three consecutive years of decreased travel to Yellowstone , Park. 1933 brought an increase of ’ 4.1.14 visitors over the preceding year. Superintendent Roger W. Toll has reported. ' The 1933 increase picked up the line of ever-growing attendance in the park where it was dropped in * 1930. To 1930 increases had been noted each year since 1919. i* the number of park visitors, reaching a peak of 260,697 in 1929. i Travel from Pacific Coast states to the park increased 52 per cent 1 in 1933 over 1932. while travel from those ■states nearest the park— Wyoming, Montana. Idaho and i Utah —Increased 20 per cent over • the previous year. A total of 161,938 visitors entered the park in 1933, a figure comparable to that of 1925, when 154,282' visitors came to the park. By far the greater number of the park visitors entered by automobile, the , number thus coming to the vast playground totaling 134,419. , ( Railway travelers to the park came from every state in the Un-, ion, Alaska, Canal Zone. Hawaii, the Philippine Islands, and 30 foreign countries. California sent the , tnoftt automobile visitors to the park, with Montana, Utah and, Idaho following in the order nam cd.

LACK OF JOBS FILLS SCHOOLS Harrisburg, Pa.— (U.R) —Pennsyl-1 vania youths, unable to find employment in the industrial world, are taxing facilities of the public t ! school system. Dr. James N. Rule. 1 Superintendent of Public Instruction, said today. , | 1 At the same time, educators have s found it necessary to expand edu cation programs to care for the, needs of the increasing enrollment, j In addition to those under 16 • I years of age, who are not allowed ! to work in the industries, school- t men of the slate find that many 1 former workers .n the'l6 to 20-year t age group have returned unexpect- t edly to high school. Dr. Rule said. - “A high percentage of these f ir- f mer young workers are taking advantage of the trade courses offer- a ed in the public schools." Dr. Rule ; r asserted. "The schools now offer 69 1 different trade courses, and in prac- t: ticaliy every course the enrollment' d taxes the capacity of the facilities. J ( There is immediate need for ex- r tending these trade offerings to nd- - ditional fields. c “it seems wise that pupils in our j r secondary schools interested in v trade education should be given as I broad a training as possible in a t basic trade op vocation. It would make them more adaptable, ad- I justable and versatile. This is par I tkularly desirable, as invention i makes operations, jobs, and even f trades obsolete in relatively short t periods of time." i< o —— | i Rare Birds Species Added t .Chicago.—(U.R)—A series of rare s birds, i'ncluding gorgeous birds of s paradise, has been added to the ornithological collection of the Is Field Museum of Natural History t here. Many'ot' them are specimens t obtained by the Cornelius Crane I Pacific Expedition, the William V., t Kelley-Roosevelts expedition to 1 eastern Asia, and the Suydam Cutt- < ing Sikkim expedition. jt

Paul's outspoken speeches arovsed the anger of the bigoted Jews, and soon after, the two missionaries continued on their way to Isonium and thence to Lystra. The latter city boasted no, synagogue but Paul, as he walked along the street, healed a cribpie who sat by the roadside. When the man stood and walked, the superstitious citizens hailed the missionaries as gods.

Zion Lutheran Church Paul W. Schultz, pastor. Divine services in English, 10:45 a. m. Divine services in German, 9 a m. Sunday School and Bible class, 10 a. m. o Zion Reformed Church Charles M. Prugh, Minister Sunday School, 9:15 a. m. M. F. Worthman. Superintendent. Morning worship, 10:30 a. m. I Sermon: “The Master’s Tears.” ; The Boy's choir will sing. Christian Endeavor, 6 p. m. Evening worship, 7 p. nt. Sermon : “The Announcement of the Kingdom.’’ — Mark 1:15. Mrs. Henry Nei relter will sing. oPresbyterian George O. Walton, Minister 9:30 Sunday School. Mr. Roy Andress Superintendent. Our Sunday School is growing in attendance. We have well organized classes for all ages. We are pleased to note the growing interest in the Word of ' God, the Sunday School offers a wonderful opportunity for you to | get acquainted with the Hook that has stood the test of ages and is in more demand today than any other liook in the world, it is a Book of Life. 1(1:30 Morning worship sermon "The Way. the Truth and the Lite.” 6:00 P. M Union Young Peoples and adult worship and address will I be given by the pastor. Mid week service Wednesday evening 7:15. This will be followed by choir practice. ■o * First United Brethren Church Charles J. Roberts, D.D., pastor. Sunday School, 9:15 a. m N. N. Abbott, superintendent. We had 244 in Sunday School last Sunday, i let us make it 300 next Sunday. Preaching, 10:30 a. m. Next Sun day we will have "Harvest Home" services. The church will be dec- 1 TEMPERANCE By Harlowe R. Hoyt Today we consider the sin of intemperance. E’er that purpose, we have been cited Paul's Epistle to the Romans, wherein he preached the joys of temperance and the great good which results there-' from. We have come in this day and age to look upon temperance as renunciation of the use of liquor. Paul gave the word a far wider meaning.. He lived in an age when) dissoluteness was on every hand. Gaming, gluttony, incontinence, i ribald revelried, bacchanalian feasts ! - all joined to mark the age as one of the most notorious for its lax morals. Little wonder, then, that when Paul urged temperance he I held it to mean “temperance in all' things." x The warning of Paul is as pertinent today as it was when he first penned it nearly 2,000 years ago. For we have found a world of mad extravagance and lax morals in the years which have followed up- j on the ending of the great war. It is a condition which, history shows us, always follows a great war: and because this conflict was‘the: greatest in the history of mankind., so is the aftermath the greater. | Then, as a conclusion, there is I greater need for temperance today than at any other time in the history of the world. Saneness of i living may best describe it. A re-| turn to tlie simple standards of life as inculcated by Jesus would do much to bring it to a realization in all its fullness.

SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON FOR OCTOBER 29, 1933 Romans 13:12-15:3.

J orated for the occasion. The pastor will bring an appropriate ser- , mon. Subject, “The Grace of GratiI tude." The four Christian Endeavor societies will have their meetings at 6 p. tn. Tlie pastor and Rev. V. H. All- ‘ man of Van Wert, Ohio, will exchange pulpits on Sunday evening. ' Service at 7 o’clock. ’ Let us give Rev. Allman a large congregation. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock. Choir practice : following prayer meeting. The Otterbein Brotherhood will ■: have their meeting Thursday eve- J ' ning at 7 o'clock. Rev. A. S. Elzey ;I of Ossian will give the address. All men and boys invited. Refreshments will be served. On Friday of this week the Wo- ‘ men's Missionary Association of tlie Fort Wayne group will have • an all-day institute in our church. Sessions morning, afternoon and evening. Dinner will be served in the dining room of the church at the noon hour. Rev. Walter Schutz, a returned missionary from Africa will be here and give three addresses. Other important ad- ’ dresses and exercises will be given. The public is invited to at- , tend. o First Methodist Church C. P. Gibbs, pastor. Church School, 9:30 a. ni. We invite you to attend Sunday School. We will be glad to greet you. The morning service at 10:30 o’clock will be vital and worth while. The music will please you. The sermon subject will be, "The ' i Grace of Continuance.” A big service is planned for the evening at 7:30 o’clock. The special music and the singing of the old songs will make you glad. The sermon subject will he, “The Pioneer." Last Sunday a large audience was present. We are expecti ing a great audience this Sunday evening. We cordially invite you and your friends. o First Baptist Church A B. Brown, pastor. Sunday School, 9:15 a. m. Ralph Kenworthy, superintendent. Morning service. 10:15 a m j Sermon theme, “Keeping In Tune | With God." B. Y. P. U.. 6 p. m. Miss Louiae . , Johnson will give the message. Evening service, 7 o'clock. Miss j .Johnson, a successful Christian worker among the Jews of the middle west will sing and speak. You will enjoy her message. You ' are welcome. Prayer meeting. Wednesday evening. 7 o'clock. o St. Marys Church First Moss 7:00 j Childrens Mass .... 8:30 High Mass 9:45 Prayer hour and Benediction 2:00, —o— I I First Evangelical Church M. W. Sundt .ma-nn, minister .Sunday will be "Indiana Conferfence Day" in the unified program of the Indiana conference. First | j Church will be right in line with the full program. The services will open at 9:15, with a worship services will open at 9:15, with a wor- j f ship service in every department i of the church school. There will Ire classes in Bible i Study for all ages. The pastor's | message will be: "The Path Findi er.” E. L. C. E. at 6:15 Topic: "How j Christ has changed life in Mission-1 ary Countries." Leader Dick Sheets. The evening service will be spirI itual, a scriptural message upon; I "Saints Glorified on 'Earth." I " In connection with the prayer meeting on Wednesday night, the pastor will give the second of a ! series of Bible Studies upon: “The, j Book of Revelation."

Barnabas, they believed, was Jqpiter and Paul they hailed as Mercury. The priest of Jupiter came to their lodgings to offer sacrifices and not • until then did the two realize what was happening. They declared themselves to be mere men in vain. But at this time. Jews from Antioch and Iconium arrived in Lystra and charged the two with interfering with the worship of native gods.

Sunday School ? QUESTIONS ? ON THEIR WAY QUESTIONS 1. What is the purpose of today's lesson? > 2. What portion of the Bible is taken for reading? 3. What happened to Paul and I Barnabas as they travelled through Lystra? I 4. What did the inhabitants I think of this? ' : 5. Why were they influenced I in this opinion? 6. What action was taken by ■ the priesthood? * i 7. What was the upshot of ail I I this? > i 8. How was Paul treated? 9. Did he survive? ’ 10. Where did he then go? i . ANSWERS 1. To teach the truth and need i 1 of temperance in all things. ■ ■ 2. Paul’s letters to the Ro-, ■ mans Romans 13-14-15 — is the ' basis for the material considered. 3. Paul and Barnabas came to j Lystra. As they travelled through ’ the city, they saw a cripple by the j roadside. Paul healed him and made him well. 4. The inhabitants declared that Barnabas and Paul were gods | —hailing the former as Jupiter and the latter as Mercury. 5. Baucis and Philemon, an old couple of nearby Phrygia, were said to have received these two ' gods when they came to earth and were rewarded by the dieties. The Lystrank remembered this legend and were influenced by it. 6. The priest of Jupiter came to the lodgings where the missionaries were staying and sacrificed a bull to them outside their homo. 7. Paul and Barnabas denied I that they were other than men. ■ Jews from Antioch and Iconium ~ arrived. Recognizing the pair. , they denounced thenw as attempting to undermine the old pagan 1 religion. 8. Paul was taken without the ■ I city gates and stoned. 9. Luckily. Paul was not badly , I injured and the ncx» morning, he ’ was enabled to depart, having been smuggled away by his fol j lowers 10. Paul and Barnabas then i went to Dorbe, and from thence [ ■ continued on their way. Q Entered Apprentice degree at : the Masonic hall. Tuesday evening ; i at 7:30 o'clock. Bab Helm, W. M. o Traveled Two Million Miles Yakima. Wash., —(UP) —Travel- i I ing 2.000,000 miles over a stretch , of railroad approximately 160 miles long is the record of J. A. Patchette I railroad engineer. For 45 years he operated between Spokane and Elensburg. Wash., never going be- I yon nd them. o Four Nations Send Students Columbia. Mo., —(UP) —Students ; from 31) states and from thiee dis ttant lands, Japan, Chiua and Hawaii. have registered in the School I of Journalism at the University of | Missouri. There are two students i from Japan and China, and one ' from Hawaii. ——o

Attend Huntington-Decatur football game Sunday. D. H. S. j Athletic Field.

Enraged at what they termed trickery, the I >strlans seized Paul and took him without the gates of the city where they stoned him and left him for dead. But Paul survived the ordeal. He was rescued by his friends and on the followiing day, he set forth again upon his travels. With Barnabas, he continued on to Derbe, and journeyed still further, helping to found the Christian church.

A Domino Costume For Hallowe’en BU ml 5194 V W Os course you'll want to look mys- • terious —and just a bit spooky — though you may shudder at the traditional witches and ghosts. So wear a domino costume of black, dark brown or dark red cambric, adjust tliat high pointed hood at an intriguing angle, put on your mask, and there you are. Your very I best friends will be baffled—which is half the fun of a masquerado party. . The domino is a slim, straight coat, with hip length cape and h ad , attached at the neckline. It’s one of the easiest costumes to make, and throughly in keeping with the i spirit of All Hallow's Eve. You can run it up in a few minutes, so

Spellbound His Kidnapers s .jot 1 j x IL j W/ " /it I f / 1 \ Ur jA .<B9B \tr - x*/la* ■ *9a\ \ fa A xw' i ■ i Jr 9k * i wl Apparently little the worst for his ordeal, William Walton Hall, Chicagc law student, is pictured with his wife, Julia, following his retur# b nm< after dramatic escape from kidnapers. “Snatched” while law school, Hall was held for $5,000 ransom, but- he talked i an K< left to guard him, into letting hiln eteayv a 1 1

Page Five

By HARLOWE R. HOYT WALTER SCOTT

don’t bo worried, even if th© invitation is lata. Size 36 requires 7 1-8 yards 36-inch material. See the Fall Fashion Book for costumes for all daytime- and evening occasions, and for news of color and fabrics. Pattern No. 5194 is designed for sizes 36, 40 an d 44. o Voodoo Money Unprofitable EL PASO, Tex. (U.R) — Mexicans i in the smelter district have decidI ed the money they paid out to a : Negro "witch doctor" to keep away voodoo spirits was unprofit- : able and have asked officers to reI turn it. Maria Arias, chief com- | plainant. doesn't think she got sl2 worth of protection. Q 1921 Record Twin Year HARRISBURG. Pa. (U.R) — A re--1 cent study of statistics showed that 1921 was the record year for the birth of twins in Pennsylvania. in that year, 2.614 sets of twins were horn in the state. Since then, a steady decline has been reported, until in 1931 less than 2,00(1 sets of twins were born. —o Farm Boys Study Agriculture HARRISBURG. Pa. (U.R) — A to- ‘ tai of 6,800 Pennsylvania farm boys now are enrolled in vocational agriculture schools in 230 rural centers, according to reports of -' the Department of Public Instruc- . | tion. They conduct farm projects | on their home farms as a part of ( : their school work, and last year i earned a net profit of more than ' * $182,000 through marketing their ' produce. e Aerial Search to Find Ruins Tucson, Ariz.— (U.R) Arthur i j Woodward, curator of history at 1 1 the Los Angeles museum, plans to find ancient Indian ruins, undis- : cernitle to persons on the ground. I i by conducting an extensive aerial i I survey in the Southwest. —°- Ask for a demonstration of i ',the new G.M.C. I'/z ton truck. ’ Phil Macklin Co.