Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 7, Decatur, Adams County, 8 January 1934 — Page 3

uSocTety.

■JY ■ , thus Club will meet , ~i Miss Bert >a Johns ■'Y at seven-thirty I ..v.,’ Ilorras ria sc of the Sunday School will g. ' -. niulit at seven thirty ■ k tl 11,,, ehitrcli parlors. The 3'Yes "ill l "‘ Meedames ■ Maj”. '1 at' Breiner and ■''Y.Yn Tbe meeting of the U \ i,.,m ed one week <>'•» ■Ym at revivHl rV,CW ■ , as . I. held next w.ek. All ■ n ,„. . . ked to take note of ■Yuniie mid 10 be present. H- \i umni of the EvangeH i. will meet Saturday , n a 1 o'clock in the ■ph .lane Graber will he the £■ ... afternoon end all ■ .... , a. d to be present. 3.. \bl Society of the ■ . . M Chur, h will meet ■. c Ice Rich ThnrsK afteri 'wo o'clock. 3 • ■ •'■ Missionary 3 ]p . v ~| 1,. \l tlmdist I- piMcoptil K' h u *»«P salp at the “ 3' morning. Persons 3' . ... „ asked to phone ky r||i "''' h - in'. ’ 1 "-.’i Guild of tbe I nit-3r-e’'llel I in Il will meet with 3.. 1,. Short street. 3r-d.iv a' seven t' irty <>’- Kk. 3m Frivoh'v Chill will meet! 3:n.rd,n night at seven-thirty, ■l,. k with Mt- William August. 3rite Missionary Society of the 3>n i.ttllmrmi ■' liun-h will meet ) 3 Ml.- I', ■'- I'mirad. Wednesday a, two si dock. B- .. \ • i noon Club will 3. *..1, v . I'.ti e Butler 'files--3r afmttmm. at two o'clock. Mac. .lane Zimmerman r

11 WOMAN’S MISERY ‘ I was teribly nervous, stand the least toSSL ’ ik ' tniv-r- ■_ tiled ’■ Mid Mis m|B i :.i " ; No J rd St. J ' :< Haute. Ind "But BB In ~|r ’ ,r * Favorite Tie-* BS : t.<>n iitvc me strength r* tl ji awful nerv<>u>ne*s '* ' • i‘: f•• -.('linn. Buffalo. N V. <1 «■ Large B -Ut Du Uur Lari.”

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By HARRISON CARROLL I CBpyntM- 1134. King Fututtt Syndicate. Inc I HOLLYWOOD, .—After lour years of building Colleen poore’s dollhouse, with its tiny fur- ! nishings from

|a 11 over the I world, is nearing i completion, and I the star will I send it on an exi hibition tour to I raise money for children’s hospitals. ' This U-room miniature house, a wish-fulfill-ment of Kathleen Morrison, the child, and long a hobby of Colleen Moore, the woman, is

I2kl t>. . I^ll S t o 1 Colleen Moore

>i. , , elaborate beyond dreams of the average young- ( 1 2 n „ the wa,:s of each room, some s painter will do a mural il“Strating a fairy tale. tv? rn ? ure and household equipha’e , been gathered from t» r , ,„^ nßland ’ Germany. HunFo7 over this country. ih« N^v’’J rle 1 I,dly m embers of til have h»°^ k r P n ICe , pawnsh °P de ' nn k evn s private telem.bcr and address. They irtiele ? 6 ! run across any “use p y tbln k she might be able »ep the,?!? 3 ° f < epartment stores when thpv °J ,€ . n f°. r star Hollvu’^ e ‘ r tr *P s abroad, tributed manv^r 113 also have con " Bebe n? y , thln S s t 0 the house. ‘ f ttuSafsX? l p ena r S V fan Tashm.? a ae ' From L>'in miriatur? « me a Bilver service •re in solid ™M On « e ? f -, tbe utensils bought one S' ,1 nd Tony Moreno the *»rld for the\Xe leSt bib ‘ eS in P ie s tVpalar? princess wh o occuM.neh±n WaS CarVed in ivor y ‘PlMinu“ r X e „ XpC p rts - She we »” it is tipped wi th n Ev , ery pron g of >n the cente- fl \ pearl and the star While Coll.» aß t es a diamond. on “Success st ba ? been w “ rk >nK basa’t had at RKO she but she win fiV’? 16 f or her hobby. Je *f and will w!d h t th ! bou - se this •ion of charity ** ° Ut on ‘ ts m ’ s " thi 4«?nto Ruth mnved her plow —tUe uni ?hatterton’s bunmarner lot-. ai !d fk UnKa i° w on tlle .top-spot ??? apparently to ?!ninine stars jf°n K k tbe Audio's

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mist Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Monday Bona Terns Club, Miss Bertha Johns. 7:80 p. m. Christian Corinthian class, Mrs. Bob August, 7:30 p. in. : Research Clnh. Mrs. Charles 'I Prugh. 2:80 p. tn. i Woman's Club meeting, Art De- , partment In charge, Library Hall, 7:45 p. m. Tuesday Tuesday Afternoon Club Mrs. J Brice Butler. 2 p. 111. U. B. Otterbein Guild. Mise Lois ! So vine. 7:30 p. nt. Evangelical Loyal Dorcas class, I church parlors, 7:30 p. m. 1 Woman's Christian Temperance | Union, Mrs. C. E. Hocker 2:30 pm. Delta Theta Tau business meeting. Miss Patsy Teeple, 7:30 p. ni. Rebekah Lodge Auditing committee. Odd Fellows "all, 6:30 p. m. Rebekah laidge installation. Odd Fellows Hall, 7:30 p. m Zion Reformed G. M. G„ Mrs. Charles Prugh, 7:30 p. m. American Legion Auxiliary, Legion Hall, 7:30 p, in. Adams County Choral Society, above Brock Store, 7:30 p. m. Tri Kappa business meeting. Mrs. Bryce Thomas, 8 p. tn. Five Hundred Club, Mrs. Charles Lose. 7: list p. m. Weanesaay Zion Lutheran Missionary Society Mrs. Paul Conrad, 2 p. m. Frivolity Club, Mrs. Wm. August I 7:30 p. ni. , Ladies Shakespeare Club. Mrs. J. I H. Heller. 2:30 p. m. Thursday Monroe M. E. Ladies Aid. Mrs. Joe Rich, 2 p. m Methodist W F. M. S., soup sale church. Young Matrons Club, Mrs. Charles Brodbeck. ti p. ni. Mrs. Myers class of the Methodist Sunday School, Mrs. Gerald Smith, 7:45 p. m. Eastern Stars skated meeting Masonic Hall. 7:30 p. m. Saturday Evanglical Mission Band, church i 2 P- inturned Sunday afternoon to Earlham College. Richmond, after spending the Christmas vacation , with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Zimmerman. She was accompanied to Richmond by Miss Florence I Long, dean of Earlham hall and I Lewis Leiffert.

ness between her and Ruth Chatterton. The reason? Well, it goes back to New York and there is no use dragging it up here. And, lest any of you readers have a long memory, yes there originally were two bungalow dressing rooms on the lot—one for Colleen Moore and one for Corinne Griffith. But the second is now a steam-room and bathhouse for studio officials. It wasn't until the big rainstorm was over that Dolores del Rio got her worst fright. She was just entering her Santa Monica canyon home—it was late at night—when there came a series of crashes that shook the building. When the star and her household staff recovered sufficiently from the shock they discovered that three tall pines, transplanted by the landscape gardener, had come to earth. One had torn off part of a balcony and broken a number of windows. QUICK GLIMPSES: The chap Sally Rand has been visiting so often at the Hollywood Hospital is Charles Mann, one of her business representatives. He has had a major operation. . . . Now Christine Lee and Ricardo Cortez have postponed their wedding until he does another picture. “Hit Me Again.” . . . Spencer Tracy, who usually hits the late spots, is bragging that he took Loretta Young to a picture show and went home at 9:40 P. M. ... An old injury, suffered when she fell from a horse several months ago, is bothering Alice White and she may go to the hospital for an operation. . . .

4 ■ X - I?" r ' ■ Mae Clarke

Clarence Brown dug into his jeans to buy Alice Joyce a big square cut diamond. . . . The storm almost marooned Mary Carlisle. Her car was the last one the Rangers allowed over the ridge route. . . . Hollywood’s new brewery boasts a fountain that runs beer. . . . And Mae C 1a r k e’s new

pearl ring, which some people are wondering about, is a present from Fanny Brice. DID ' OU KNOW— That a Crossman is so opposed to , 1 ■ (•r of animals that she won’t eat meat or wear furs?

DECATI’R DAII.Y DEMOCRAT Monday, January 8,1934.

FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS —-By ELLEN WORTH Raglan Shoulders f Give This Chic N 9 Smart women have always pre- . »Y ferred the raglan shoulder be- ,V s Aj/ cause of its becoming line, and "> now that shoulders have . ' \ -X’* tmooihed out once more, after the V / bizarre fashions of last season, * y the raglan line is an indication of , ’. * up-to-the-minute chic. Here it gives added charm to sleeves * A which are already novel. • ' This youthful model features, , > * A also, such important details as the „ • '*'/ pointed blouse seaming, a pleated » •Y I Y* front panel in the skirt, a simple << , . ' IYY'" 1 turn-back collar and narrow belt. # Y It's just the frock to pack in your -1R Ip t O * cruise wardrobe if you make it of /' « J <■ 11 cotton or linen, and it's grand in / - * i T\ dusty pastel silks under your win- /, •‘ < wX. ” ‘ ~ ter coat in town. Just a touch of T* * l-Y > contrast makes it that much 1 \\ smarter. Every sewing detail is ’ll easy, even for the beginner. Size / 1 fr 16 requires 3'/a yards 36-inch ma- [A <1 terial, ’ 8 yard 36-inch contrast- v ing. Width about 1% yards. -i~ ■ Pattern No. 5436 is designed for / sizes 12. 14. 16. 18, 20 years, 30, 32, j u . 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 bust. 5434, L J Copyright. 1934. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. No. 5436 Size Price for Pattern 15 Centsname 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 Dally Democrat Suite 110, 22V East 4snd St. New York City. (Editor's note—do not mail orders to Decatur. Indiana.)

* A AUCTION SCHOOL NOTES Marvin Hitchcox, Secretary t • Saturday morning Col. Roy Johnson took the class to the dairy farm of Dale Moses where | he instructed the students on | judging and selling dairy cattle. We can readily see why Col. Johnson is recognized as one of the[ best dairy cattle salesmen in America. He knows his dairy] cow ami pedigrees. Mr. Moses j treated the class to a bottle of real niilk and home made doughnuts. We certainly appreciate his] hospitality. The boys expect to visit the Pete Lehman dairy farm i

It adds something I B I to the Taste and i I Sit ’ -1 Hu rllllM i makes them Milder — ... : \i IB >! • ’UHfflEflF ' If H? V ' “"-. t I EUROPEAN t _ n JF WINECELLAR Jiff I Jr iJoMETHING like the method yW Off* I jr of ageing fine wines is used in ageg||dn| ing ami mellowing the tobaccos for Chesterfield cigarettes. "v v ' -HK2 ** The picture you see here was taken .. \ 'tfFinside one of our modern storage warehouses where the tobaccos for Chetter> w field are put away. .. x ■- YiMF* w—y,. / - There are about four and one-half -- - x s \ • ■ S v A /V 'miles of these Liggett & Myers ware- .' ' houses filled with thousands of casks of Domestic and Turkish tobaccos, most <ijr ' f of it lying there ageing and mellowing '' , for Chesterfield cigarettes. dern storage warehouse It takes ju st about three years to age r Chesterfield l— , tobacco for your Chesterfields. Everything that money can buy K I I I • I I u,t se^nce knows about that | I can ma kf a cigarette that’s mildjJ J | II fl ■ U I er, a cigarette that tastes better, I | g. 111 I m making Chesterfields. the cigarette thats MILDER • the cigarette that TASTES better O a? © 1954, Liggbtt & Myek» Tobacco Co.

this week. It is certainly mighty bice to have their cooperation and we express our thanks for Col. Reppert, the instructors and the entire class for this service. Col. Jack Brunton, the tobacco auction instructor, gave a fine demonstration of the tobacco auction sales, also jewelry and other auctions. He lias a pleasing personality and certainly knows the auction game. The boys are rehearsing the program they wlil give over 2:45. Tune in and we may have WOWO tomorrow afternoon at i the liuck fever. Will see you at the auction toi night.

KIRKLAND CLASS WILL GIVE PLAY Kirkland Junior Class Will Present Playlet Wednesday j | The Junior class of tlm Kirkland j Itigh school will present a play, “The MfddlcHome Maid" at tie Kirkland undltorlum Wednesday . night. January 10. at X o'clock. i Edna, a meddlesome maid, InI forms her mistress. Mrs. Winthrop, lot events which lead to excitement. It seems that Sam, the Winthrop ! chauffeur, lea widower with n ten i months oi l daughter, Dolly, the knowledge of whom 'lie is keeping from Edna. j t'harles Winthrop buys a motor lioat, "Tlie Dolly", and Bob buys a i roadster for Dolly Darling. All three j surprises are hidden in the garage ■ until the meddlesome maid learns <»f them. The cast of characters in the order of their appearance are as foli lows: Margaret Winthrop, bride of a I year -Anna Wullhnann. Edna Powell, the meddlesome , maid Reinviard l Mrs. Fraser, who has I.ept the ■ baby—Lucille Longenbarger. ' Sam Bryant, chauffeur—Dale Ad- ■ Jer. Charles Winthrop. Margaret's ; I husband Hale Augshurger. Robert White, his friend Harry Wuilimanu. Carlyle Howard, a salesman —' Thomas Adler. Richard O'Neil, a plainclothesman —Loyd Roth. Mrs. Rita Griffin, a young wife— Velma Spade. Admission will be fifteen and twenty five cents. The public is invited to witness this presentation. Modoc Bank Robhed Os SSOO By Bandit c Modoc. Ind., Jan. 8 (UP)—One ■ man obtained SSOU from the Modoc ■ branch of the Peoples Loan and Trust company today, the frst bank ■ robbery of 1934 in Indiana. I He was the same bandit who held . up the bank and obtained S4OO last ■ October 28. Boyden Jordan, assist- ■ ant <ashier and victim of both holdt ups, said. The bandit escaped in a car re- • ported to have lieen driven by another man.

At Brilliant Opening of Metropolitan Opera »- 4 IrMnS >”Yj • v .TiJi liOm, > hT 9 a WK, tU’TI W

A aection of the famous “Diamond Horseshoe" in the Metropolitan Opera House, New York, on the opening night of the new season. For the first time in half a century, the season opened with an American opera, “Peter Ibbetson," by Deems Taylor. At left, Mrs.

Jaw*.’*- »wwwai>iiwiii'iMs 3 Robert Carper. Chico, California, who has been visiting his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Carper, west of Decatur, for the past three months, will leave for his home Tuesday evening. While visiting here. Mr. Carper also attended A i Century of Progress at Chicago. Congressman Farley writes that i lie cun furnish a number of bulletins from the agricultural, law. 'public health and other depart- ' ments and will be glad to put the 'name of any one interested on the ■ list so they will obtain them. A letter from Mrs. Eva Boyers. Tucson, Arizona, renewing her subscription to the Daily Demoi erat says she is pleased to learn of Decatur's fine spirit of cooper- . ation in its fight to overcome the depression. "Os course she will win," she adds. Mrs. Boyers says ■ she expects to spend March and • part of April witli her son. Dr. Luther Boyers in California and

i Cornelius Vanderbilt, uncrowned queen of American ’ opera-goers, as she arrived; right, John Jacob Astor, i and his fiancee, Miss Eileen Gillespie, who were the , cynosure of all eyes at the brilliant premiere. They . are to be married early in the Spring.

11 lien visit at Champaign, 111. It R. Seliug, liquidating agent i for Hie Peoples Bank of Berne at1 tended to business here today. ' Mr. an I Mrs. Harry Poling and ■ son Arthur and Mr. and Mrs. Ran- • some Barkley and daughters Evelyn and Jean spent Sunday after- ’ noon and evenng in Fort Wayne. Mr. a<l Mrs. Leo Andrews of Cin- : innati, Ohio, spent Sunday witli Mr. .Andrews brother, George L. An- ! drews and family. Dr. L. E. Somers returned to De- ■ icatnr Sunday from Texas, before ; leaving for Indianapolis to take a ' several month's course in medicine jan.l surgt-rv. Two School Girls Killed By Train ■ i * 1 Bassfield, Miss, Jan. B—;U.R> Two school girls were killed inst- *. antly today when a Mississippi 1 Central passenger train crashed ini to a school bus at the station here. I : About 15 others were injured, . six seriously. The injured were I I taken to Hospitals at Columbia

Page Three

| and Hattiesburg. The dead were Itasca Rateion, 9, and Alice Aultman, 16. Ernest Williamson, driver of the I school bus, escaped injury. 0 -I Chicago—(UP)—Marion Mercer, director of the diamond exhibit at - A Century of Progress Exposition, i ! has announced that he will attempt - jto obtain three worid-famous dia- , monds for exhibition at next sum- ' mer's show. ■ . Mercer said that he could not i 1 announce the names and present - owners of the stones he has in mind betause advance notice of his intentions might jeopardize negotiations. He will negotiate witli the owners in Europe.

I ■-- . c ,..ENDS a Cold Sooner PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS ii — — — —