Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 250, Decatur, Adams County, 23 October 1933 — Page 3

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liu E scouts ■LTmrPRISE hike T , enjoyed . i K; . rd Kohls and '"" "til Wkt* -J day and at , the in ■R I :.| . ol* j (i ■ home ~ s Schug ./■ X. V . :■ S ling «•! v „,.,.. ■ . to tin* trees , ■ th** fruit . i,.i- behind j, ;■. the th.* Adams County a-k'd to i*- S* hool building •• -n thirty o'clock i..'t":' ".•lieansal for the Legion of the Music Deof Woman's Club I'i.rt," • one week. X jii'l 11 , " ,> wil! ,n, “' t a ’ harles Maloney afternoon at two Lad • I Society of the '■; 1 n it will serve 'lie church evening from seven o'clock. '■ of tin* Wo c ■*■'■ * ill tie held FriNMpliiir evil-thirty o'clock, ■ trs—.-day night as was 'i is for Moose - urg- : ' A be served. V. Married Couples t M* 'hodi.st Episcopal School will meet at the M: .0 ! Mrs. Harry Crown

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' B E HINDA.ZZte L/eS-X *■ ’ I c_k ■/. --- > ■ ~

HARRISON CARROLL. ijj. King I'MturM Syndicate. Inc. WOOD, ... —Jesse dream of having the Junior help him select twenty-five girls to

o Jesse Lasky

BB<! an make ■■picture has t • League's ~.n . » in New c ■Bed the prop■jß'ion. agreehowever, to oppose members takit h conline of closed

HBhini. Producer Lasky is broad|^B> tin g an appeal for debutantes the ages of 16 to 19 to submit Ph< tos and connections to him chosen ones will be brought Hollywood, put under the chapof Alice Leone Moats and en a screen chance in the film, Out Party.” Anthony McGuire, as j^V 3t of you know, has had plenty exper nee with the production musicals. funniest, however, was with Hollywood studio head who the chorus of a number so that he ordered the staff to ve three reprisals of it in the ' ara „B?w’3 joy over finishing BEB»oopla" is somewhat dampened I* a i/ act oculists have orted her to wear glasses to cormarked astigmatism. The |^B fl .ead still is undecided what to W ’* l tn her vacation. One plan is |^F r her and Rex Bell to go to their IM 11 ™ on November 1. A second is I ■ trip to Honolulu at about the |M? rae hate. If Hawaii wins out, »i ex , pr °bably will remain in HollyOdd, how different people react jß® shocks. When Mary Boland was |K7 ln 8 ou t here recently from the the airplane struck an air and dropped several hun|Bred feet. Other passengers were frozen in i®heir Beats - lt ™ ar y gasped, exclaimed: ‘“The me bas come,’ the walrus said.” It s an ordinary story but rather Het e other day, Isabel Jewell H honed the publicity office at Uni-

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mine Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Monday Music Department meet ing, postponed one week. Dramatic Department meeting, Mrs. Charles Knapp, 7:30 p. tn. Literature Department postponed one week. Art Department study meeting, ; Miss Neva Brandy berry, 7:30 p. tn. | Research Club, Mrs. Ed Moses, I 1:30 p. m. Tuesday | Delta Theta Tait masquerade I party, Matt Harris home, 5:45 p m. j Super-Bridge Club, Mrs. Robert Freeby. 41:30 p. m. 'Adams County Choral Society, Central School building. 7:30 p. m. Young Matrons, Mrs. Albert Miller, 6 p. m. Tri Kappa business meeting. Mrs. J. G. Neptune, 8 p. m. Root Twp. Home Economies Club Mrs. C. D. Kunkel, 1:30 p. m. Wednesday N. and T. Club. Mrs. Charles Maloney, 2 p. m. St. Vincent de Paul Society, K. of C. Hall, 2 p. m. Historical Club, Mrs. Ed Ahr, 2:30 p. m. Thursday U. B. Brotherhood meeting, U. B. church. Eastern Stars stated meeting, ; Masonic Hall, 7:30 p. m. St. Mary's Twp. Home Economics Club, Mrs. William C. Johnson, 1 p. ni. Friday U. B. Missionary Institute, Decatur U- B. Church, all-day. I Ben Hur Lodge Halloween party | Ben Hur Hall, 7:30 p. m. W. O. T. M. Halloween party, i Moose Home, 7:30 p. m. Ladles Shakespeare Club. Mrs. E. I B. Adams. 2:30 p. m. Methodist Y. M. C. Class, Mr. and I Mrs. Harry Crownover, 7:30 p. m. Saturday Zion Reformed Ladies Aid cafeteria supper, church basement, 5 j to 7 P- m.

- _ ——— I over, one and one fourth rude east ' of the St. Paul church. Friday even- ' ing at seven-thirty o’clock for a I j masquerade Halloween party. Mr. ! ' and Mrs. Dee Fryhaek will assist in entertaining. All members are requested to be present at the meet-1 ing and are to be masked. i

versal and asked to see the proofs of her gallery pictures taken for • “Counselor at Law.” She was told * - it was against the rules. > So the publicity man took the proofs over to the actress in her dressing-room. With her was her father, Dr. Lee Jewell, Wyoming I surgeon. The father took the pic- , tures and looked at them for a long time. Then he handed them back. Accompanying the publicity man to the door, Isabel said: “You see, my father goes to the hospital tomorrow for an operation on his eyes. They will be bandaged for four months. I wanted him to carry a nice image of me.” Interesting to see how Hollywood appeared to Philip Nunurook, one*f of the natives brought down here for*the final shots of “Eskimo." Nunurook, noted as an ivory carver among his race, has gone back to Alaska. There, he’ll carve a saga of Hollywood in Walrus tusks. . Some subjects he picked are W. S. Van Dyke. Clark Gable, Jean Harlow and, of all things, Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. He’ll pass them ! around from tribe to tribe to illustrate the stories of the strange land of the studios. QUICK GLIMPSES: Lyle Talbot is scheduled to leave the Cedars of Lebanon Hospital today. Report is he received more wires from more different girls than any patient the hospital ever had. . One of the major studios is spending SIOOO on the teeth of a screen newcomer who draws only SSO a week salary. Nearly every new player, you know, spends the first week at the dentist. . . . Ida Lupino was squired to Elsie Janis’ dinner by Jack La Rue. Wonder what’s happened between Jack and Margaret Lucille? . . . Jimmy Dunn

can’t make up his mind about “ Claire Trevor : and Lona An- j dre.... Lee Shubert wants Sidney Blackmer to i come East for an A. E. Thomas production but one of two movie offers may hold the actor here. Or maybe he doesn’t want to I leave Mae Clarke. . . . Lilyan Tashman

v. Lilyan Tashman

flewtoSan ... j Francisco to make a radio broadcast on styles. DID YOU KNOW— That Katharine Hepburn has 200 . of those tricky hats.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER 23. 1933.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS I HELD AT CLUB MEETING i The Friendship Village Home ! Economics Club of Blue Creek I township met at the home of Mrs. ■ Rollie Raudenbush recently, at | which time the election of officers was held. Tlte meeting was opened with the singing of the club song and reading of the creed. Mrs. Joe Huhnert I 'conducted the devotionala, reading! the hundredth Psalm, followed with! prayer by Mrs. Shelby Vance. The roll call was responded to) by naming a favorite breakfast I food. Fourteen members were pre-1 1 sent. Mrs. Raudenbush was selected president; Mrs. Earl Sipe, vicepresident; Mrs. I.eland Ripley, secretary; Mrs. Vance, treasurer and' Mrs. Huhnert, reporter. Mrs. Glen j Workinger and Mrs. Hiram Wittwer; will be the leaders. Those present were the Mmdame.s Dan Roop. Don Raudenbush and daughter, Rollie Raudenbush, Shelby Vance, Ben Tickle. Hiram Wittwer and son, Earl Sipe and daughter. Leland Ripley aud children. Omer Merriman an children. Delmar Douglas, Joe Hahnert, Glen Workinger. Will Neadstine and ter, Jess Lautzenheizer, Dwight daughter. Ollie Fellers and daughRaudenbush and daughter, Lizzie Davis, Nellie Sims, Alspaugh, and i the Misses Helen and Glennie Roop 1 and Phyllift Roller. ENTERTAIN SUNDAY GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Teeple of | North Second street entertained at dinner Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. ' John Stevenson and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Parker of Harrod, Ohio; Mr. ' and Mrs. Eugene Klingler and ; 'laughter of Lima. Ohio; Mr. and Mts. Charles Teeple of North Second street. Afternoon callers were Mr. and * Mrs. Ted Flanigan and son Charles and daughter Evelyn of Lima. j Ohio. The St. Mary's Township Home | Economics Club will meet at the : home of Mrs. William C. Johnson | Thursday afternoon at one o’clock , The fruit drive in the township for 1 the county hospital will be complet- | ed at this meeting and members i who have not been solicited are ■ asked to bring their vanned fruits and vegetables to the meeting. I Empty cans will be returned to those wishing to donate. Election of officers will be held and every member is urged to attend. I The Ben Hur lodge will enter- ; tain with a Halloween party FriI day night at seven-thirty o’clock in the Ben Hur Hall. A large delegaj tion of Ben Hur members from the ■ Fort Wayne lodge will attend, and * all members in Decatur, their families and friends are invited. j Members of the Root Township i Home Economics Club who wish i to donate canned fruit and vege- . tables to the Adams County Memo- ! rial Hospital are asked to bring the I donations to the meeting at the | home of Mrs. C. D. Kunkel Tuesday j afternoon at one-thirty o’clock. The Delta Theta Tau sorority ! will meet at the Matt Harris home I Tuesday evening at five forty-five | o'clock for a masquefade party. All , members are asked to attend the meetng masked. Mrs. Robert Freeby will be hostess to the members of the Sup- , per Bridge Club at her home Tuesday evening at six-thirty o’clock. o— Many Relatives At Funeral Services A number of out of town rela- ! fives and friends attended the I funeral services held Saturday afternoon for Mrs. Elizabeth Mo.’I risen and great grandchild. RichI ard Beatty. Rev. G. O. Walton ' officiated at the double funeral ■ service. Burial was made in the ' Decatur cemetery. Relatives and friends from out of the city were Mrs. Ellen Dailey 'of Toledo, Ohio; Mrs. Kathryn Katnpe. Mrs. A'len Vesey. Mr. and , Mrs. David Vesey. Miss Jane I Vesey. Mrs. A. L. Randall. Mrs. i George Beers, Mrs. W. T. McKay and Miss Mary Sihray of Fort ; Wayne: Mrs. B.« F. Delhi. Mary ’ Lou and David Studebaker of Goshen; Mrs. Florence Goldthwaite and Miss Minnie Day of Marion; Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Ed- ■ wards of Leiosic. Ohio; Mrs. H. H. Stoner of Cleveland, Ohio; Mr. i and Mrs. L. M. Wallace of Newcastle. Pennsylvania: Mr. and Mrs. | Ernst Weicklr.g. Mrs. Herman : Weicking of Bluffton; Mrs. Hermina Colson of Anderson and : Mr. and Mrs. Haggard of Monroe. o Dice of Asiatic Origin? It is not known how and in what manner dice actually originated Wherever dice have been found in ' the tombs of ' ancient Egypt, in . Greece, or In the Far East, they differ In no material respect from 1 those In use today They were prob i ably evolved from knuckle-bones. It I is certain that dice games were | played In times prior to those of . which we have any written record, j The fact that dice have been used throughout the Orient from time iWiemorlal seems to Indicate an Asl* I atlc origin.

i FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS ‘ By ELLEN WORTH

Plaid Flannel Scores A Hit Plaid flannel is one of the really big things in school fashions. And this plaid flannel has many claims to fame —its tailored pique collar, its skirt fulness concealed In pleats, its patent leather belt and its general air of jaunty trimness. Any smart young thing who knows her fashions will call it by endearing terms for it is the gayest school frock in town. And she can make it herself. It has very few pieces and they almost put themselves together. Don’t hesitate to let her try it, even if she has never made a thing before. She can't possibly make a mistake with Illis. And size 12 requires only 1 3 4 yard 54-lnch material, Vi yard 36-inch contrasting material for collar. Send for our Fall fashion Book. It contains the very latest fashions for every member of the family as well as dressmaking instructions and complete directions for a crocheted sweater and sports gloves. Pattern No. 5278 is designed for sizes 8. 10, 12, 14, 16 years.

Copyright, 1933, by United Feature Syndicate Inc. No. 5278 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 book. • Address orders to New York Pattern Bureau the Decatur Daily Democrat Suite 110, 220 East 4snd St. New York City. (Editor’s note—do not mail orders to Decatur. Indiana.)

Graf Zeppelin Lands At Miami Miami.. Fla., 23—(UP) —ILs huge motors purring leisurely, the Graf j Zeppelin. Germany’s Giant dirigible I landed at Miami at 8:30 A. M., to-1 day. The big ship was enroute to: Chicago to visit the Century of Pro-1 gress exposition. o Judge Dismisses Contempt Cases Noblesville, Ind . Oct. 23 —(L'P) | —Contempt of Court proceedings * filed in Hamilton circuit court re-1 cently against Charles E. Cox, former judge of the Indiana Supreme | '■hurt and Leo X. Smith, state sen- 1 ator, were dismissed by Judge Fred E. Hines. The complaint was filed by Wil-1 liam V. Rooker, Indianapolis, and; dismissal was ordered by Judge Hines in support of a efense con-1 tention that contempt proceedings may be instituted only by prosecu-

■ « V fiMMaaEWEMh J ■ ■MI i // "’* VOi R I , W ! W TKST No - 5 Jangled nerves can make r it J married life miserable h* I In so many cases it’s not the big, im- The more alive you are, the more high- W / y' portant things that make married life strung, the more carefully you must i 1 / / unhappy. It’s the little sharp words... watch yourself. g f‘*W j the bickering... the nagging. . . the Get your full amount of sleep every j Sgj jangled nerves. night. Eat regularly and sensibly. Find 1 And the dangerous thing is that we time for recreation. And smoke Camels g I ® - frequently don’t even realize that our ...for Camel’s costlier tobaccos never |'/ 4' ■■ nerves are upset until it is too late. get on your nerves. I ® Places S 81 1 as,na H c om on the barker , I H F approximately at the iXo k C |, Spreadfin^r - COSTLIER TOBACCOS Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE theni m one of your firet tobaccos than any other popular brand of cigarettes! ° f Mail ■ NEVER GET JfflVW W rOhfy ON YOUR NERVES!

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tor of the court in question. Rooker charged that Cox and i Smith had used the name of Judge l Hines in a supreme court case with- ; out permission of the circuit court judge. o Sawed Off His Limb Dallas, Tex. — (U.R) —Henry Dan- | iels was out on a limb until he saw;ed it off. He fell 15 feet when he unwittingly cut the limb on which I lie was resting while prunning a I tree here. o Washtub Use Worries Laundry ■ Salta Lake dlty, Utah. — (U.R) —! i Wholesale return to the washtub by ! Utah women has brought worry ! onto the brows of laundry men. A 160 per cent reduction in the launidrv business was reported at a code i hearing by F. E. Dole, laundry muu- | ager. i Trained Owl Rides Tladiator , Magna. Utah. —(U.R) —Lowell Jensen is the owner of an owl which I not only perches on his front porch, but also rides on the radiator of bis car. ‘

SIXTEEN GIRLS | | IN LOCAL SHOW Decatur Girls Will Appear In (’horns Numbers Os Legion Show Sixteen Decatur girls will appear ! In the chorus numbers of the LeI gion show. "Tile World's AU j Right". These girls will wear spe- * cial coeturnM for each number and | I will add color and spivo to the i I show. The names of some of the chorus | Inumbers to be used are: Whistle! land blow your blues away, You're! 'in style when you're wearing a ! smile. Old fashioned garden. Wait i | till the cows come home and Dark j town strutters ball. The gills who will appear in this I i number are and Misses Dorothy Little, Martha E. Calland. Eloise ! and Delores Leonard, Marjorie | ! Johnson, Genevieve Ripliergir, Mar- i tba Erma Butler. Helena Rayl, I Mary Klepper, Eva Kohls, Ruth . Voglewede, Loretta Rose Lose, Le : Ila Palmer, Alice Baker, Pauline I Affolder and Madeline Crider. Five-Weeks Trial Comes To An End — Monticello, Ind., Oct. 23- <UPb— ' i A five-weeks trial, the longest on i record in White County circuit 1 I court, had ended today with a jury | verdict in favor of Mrs. Daisy Tug-1 ; gle, Brazil, the plaintiff. Mrs. brought the suit in ' i contest of a will by which her father, Orrin Elijah, wealthy New i ' ton county farmer, left most of his ftOfl acres of farm land and $12,000 in personal property to his son, Arch Elijah. lowan Has Jefferson's Gun lowa Falls, la. — (U.R) — Included! |in the collectkin of firearms mainitained by M. M. Kickels here is a ! gun once owned by Joseph JefferIson, famous actor. The gun is said ' to have been used by the actor in the play, "The Rivals." Kickels; possesses one of the finest gun colI lections in the middle west. Birthmonth ci Famous Men Among the prominent people who were born during the month of September are Eugene Field, James Gordon Bennelt. Prince Ito, Cardinal Richelieu, Marquis de La.'ay- ■ ette, Jane Addams. yueen Elizabeth . William the Conqueror. Dr. Waltet Reed. Gsneral Pershing, James Ffiiimore Cooper, William Howard i Ta.’t, Louis XIV. James J. Hill, Samuel Johnson, Savonarola, Chief Just’-e Marshall, Zachary Taylor Frances Willard, Clemenceau, Ad i tniral Nelson, Sheridan (dramatist), Sud.'rmnnn and Lord Robert (Bobs)

OCA 14

( lurk J. Lutz, Mr. and Mrs. Fred I Smith ami sons Clark Wil'iam and l Lewis, David Kunkel, Mr. and Mrs. j I Elmer Chase and Mr. and Mrs. i Charles Holthouse visited at Hamil- : ton Lake Sunday. Mr. Lutz lias ! purchased the Harve Kitson cot- | tage at the lake. Mr. and Mrs. 'Avon Burk visited I iover Saturday and Sunday at De-! | Pauw University, Greencastle with I their daughter, Mies Eileen Burk. I Miss Cecelia Refer of Fort Wayne ; , formerly of Decatur, spent several days at a Century of Progress, Chi ' ago. Miss Refer Is a niece of Mrs. : Ervin Zimmerman of near Monroe. ’ Mrs. Zk O. Lewellen and daugliI ter Miss Marguerite, of Monro'*, I visited in Decatur Saturday after-1 nobn. i Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Smith visit ; ed Sunday in West Lafayette with | ' Dr and Mrs. Lowell <’. Smith ami • ; family. Paul Felber, Berne business i I man and a member of tile town 1 j council in that is critically i ill with double pneumonia. Mr. and Mrs. John Beck of I Cleveland. Ohio, were the Thurs-) ■ day dinner guests of Mr. and Mi -i. i I Sam Acker in this city. Mr. Beck ; who is a nephew of Mrs. Acker. I I was recently married to Miss ! I Ardella Berner. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schroyer, ! daughter Katheryn and son Fred i ! visited in Bellefontaine, Ohio, Sun- , I day. with relatives. Lew Armstrong of Fort Wayne was a caller here Saturday ev**n- ; ing. ■ I Ferd t’hristen of Fort Wayne I ! was a week-end visitor here. Paul Schulte of Chicago *s , attending to business here. Billy Klepper who is attending I Purdue University spent the week I end with his parents here. Mr. and Mrs. I. A. Kalver will ; attend the Century of Progress lin Chicago this week and help I j their son Roy and wife celebrate their first wedding anniversary. Howard Burdg of Los Angeles visited old friends here over Sun-, day. He is spending a week or , i two witli his aged mother at Fort I ; Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Don Gade and i i children Jackie and Greta, and | j Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Harb anti ; children Billy and Jean of Alban". New York are spending the week I ; ip this city with Mr. and Mrs. | Miles Roop. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Merriman • and son Junior. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. ! Graber and daughter Jane return-[ led from Chicago Sunday after, ' visiting a Century of Progress. | Mrs. Bess Andrews and dattgh , ter Miss Wilma of Preble have i 'returned home after visiting for ; several days with Mr. and Mrs.

Page Three

I Arthur Pence of near Sturgis. Michigan and Mr. and Mrs. Claude | Coton and daughter Miss Volga ' of LaGrange, W. J. Kuhnle of the Standard Oil Company attended to business in I Grand Rapids, Michigan, Saturday ; and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Belter ll'imbarger ; and family of Huntington spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. : W. J. Kuhnle and family in this j cityFall Didn’t Delay Wedding Cumberland, R. I --(U.R) Although 1 Francis L. Greene, milkman, fell I downstairs And injured his back so I tliat lie was confined to his Ited. It I did not interfere with his plans to I marry Miss Frances Morrissey. The ceremony was performed at the j bedside. Seeds Long Dormant When Some forests which are so dense that nothing cun grow under the trees, are cleared, a marvelous crop of white clover appears. This ; has occurred so many times that there can lie no possibility of the seeds being curried by the wind. The i seeds have lain dormant for centuries, to spring into life with the appearance of the sun and the rain. —o Talkie I lin Court During a trial in Melbourne, Australia, a Judge of the Supreme court listened to a reproduction by a talking picture machine of the noise tn a dairy, which neighbors oad charged was a nuisance. The “evidence" was so realistic that the idea probably wi! be used hi other tria w In Austral i.

Beware the Cough or I Cold that Hangs On Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now j with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a new medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth Os all known drugs, creosote is recognized by high medical authorities as one i of the greatest healing agencies for persistent coughs and colds and other forma of throat troubles.Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to I the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, and attacks the seat of the trouble. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory 1 in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Your own druggist is authorized to refund your money on the 1 spot if your cough or cold is not relieved by Creomulsion. (adv.)