Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 31, Decatur, Adams County, 5 February 1934 — Page 3
PsocTety:
W" entine party MU 1 "•' <l I hr V J "’ l,y ••! I’.l- -■ Valetl»ii > « i!1 *"• , "‘ l<l ■f.'.- ..... (iiiii'h. w.si v -i-hi in W" .. riins.. J.I • IM*. •.. ■< • | -' K,,a ■V''''.' M , rlv and Fanny W*.. . .. i...i i.i. i. .(u.i H 1...11a Th..la Tan .1 Tues lay night ( | " b will V* . George Lam..nt A ..dn.-s.lay m.-n K^. ( rn ' clock. ■ Im F and E, de. Glams County ’ ' ' !|pkl | K hl . hit!; hold in Decatur, | K, p,.. ; • \n invitation is ' a..men of Adams K,... )„r, a them in Hie has Kuuh I" •" served al 11 :> n aming. !>i-a ■' ms-lillK "f the Tri , ■ o': lock with Mrs. Brown planned ■iCOMMU’.iTY meeting 9 v -imiinit'y me..' ing K\. pi,| ~• the Monroe high , H, W Inesday eveK,. .. .. n thirty o'clock. A K t „... ."i of inilsi. hv
Children’s Colds Ba Yield quicker to ■V double action of I ? V*CKS ▼ Vapohub
F Rehind [M Me liinmc/>w r*DDnil Tona'a ha/lrnnm and Dart
■l, HARRISON CARROLL Hwir: > » K < Features S»nduai«. Inc. BOLLYWOOD, .—The ■lsepara'. n of Lupe Velez and ■tiny Weissmuller is officially ■r with must of the honors ap-
patently going to the peppery Mexican star. “We may kill each other some day but we will not get a divorce, ” was Lupe’s unique way of announcing a reconciliation yesterday. The fiery little actress says she is still determined to go on • that personal appearance tour, which ha< been a bone of
■ * **' n t I | Lupe I Velez
ttention between the pair for sevll weeks. ‘And it is not to buy more braces' either," explodes Lupe. “I nt to get enough money to pay income tax without going into ' savings.” Recording to Lupe, she and My probably will go on quaring forever “I am a night owl,” i says. “I never get sleepy until v* or four o’clock in the morn- ’• 1 don't like the daytime. 'Johnny, he gets up at fi A. M. Play golf. Then he plays hand--11 and some other game—l don't •w what kind of a game it must to make him so tired. But he doesn’t want to take me “eargue about that andeveryn 8 else. I love Johnny, he is y sweet, but he was trying to js me. No man can do that. I • to show him.” Marion Davies starts her new •Ute, ‘‘Operator 13,” under the ls t propitious circumstances. If daily sessions in the wardrobe •rtment seems tedious, she has • to think of the box office re~o m her musical vehicle. “Go- ° Hollywood,” which is now in its rona week here and doing sensa™»l business at Loew’s State Thethe same staff t i l ’ ne< l out this hit, is at work the Robert W. Chambers story. " “Iter Wanger, the pror; Raoul Walsh, the director, v Folsey, the cameraman the star so beau’n, ".Going Hollywood.” . “e music, too, in “Operain, n , a 't un t>l you hear the Brothers forsake their mod- . I 8 ? 2 rhythms and go back to e me lodies of Civil War times. their lives awaited i“ e wllyer and Stuart Erwin niiin V returned home from atly ball her'^ ent ooseve ' t ' B hirthith'iu ‘ the baby at home H.t n » urse an d’ when they drove f® un< * that the house had on “re during their absence
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. m. Mi»e Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Monday Dramatic Department program Woman’s Club. D. 11. S. auditorium. 7:45 p. nt. Research Club. Mrs. L. a. Graham. 2:30 p. m. chrisfian Corinthian Class, Mrs. Herman Kruft. 7:30 p. m. Tuesday Tri Kappa btiainMs meeting, Mr»t. W. Qtty Drown. 8 p, m. Delta Theta Tan. Mise Agnes Baker, 7:30 p. m. Pal lota XI Business meeting. Zwick Furniture Store. 7:30 p. tn. Young Matron's Club. Mrs. Alva Uiwson. 7:30 p. in. C. L. of <’. Pot-hick supper, K. of C. Hall, 6:30 p. tn. Zion Reformed Missionary Society. church parlors, 2:30 p. m. Adams County Choral Society, club rooms. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Decatur Ministers meeting, 1 County Library room, in Court 1 House, 10 a. m. Alpha Zeta Club, Mrs. George I Umrent, 7:30 p. m. I Ladies Shakespeare Club, Mrs. Harry Moltz. 2:30 p. nt. Monroe Community meeting M. 11. S., 7:30 p. m. Historical Chili. Mrs. Harl Hollingsworth. 2;30 p. m. Phoebe Bible class annual banquet. Reformed church 6:15 o'clock. K. of C Family Dance. K. of C. Hall. Zion Walther League, schoolhouse, 8 p. m. Thursday Five Hundred Club, Mrs. A. R. I Asbbaucher, Eastern Star. Masonic Hall. 7:30. Methodist Foreign Missionary Society pie and cookie gale. Mrs. ft. D. Myer's class. Miss Charlotte Elzey. 7:45 p. m. j the Alams County Choral Society will be presented. An address will be given by a state speaker and following the piogram refreshments will be served. The entire community is invited to attend this meeting.
and that June s bedroom ana pan of the roof had been burned. For a moment, both June and Stu 'fere in a panic. They soon discovered, however, that the baby was safe and that the house was no* greatly damaged. . Ironically enough, June had just spent three weeks having her bedroom redecorated. Back from New York and Miami, Travis Banton, Paramount fashion designer, dennes the new mode , thusly: “Clothes will be like the ‘X ictory . of Samothrace,’ or, if you will, the woman’s figure on the radiator , caps. There will be an impression . of motion, as of garments flying be- • hind." , Like other well known film style arbiters, Banton refuses to give the details of his own new ideas. He ( says, however: “I’ll never make another puffed sleeve and I won’t try to mak* women hide their bodies. The natui ral silhouette will be the thing. ’ — i QUICK GLIMPSES: Since this column printed a Aery about Richard Dix giving a youthful fan a job on his ranch, the star has been swamped with letters from other would-be workers. Four boys have stopped the star at the R-k-O studio gate and two even found their way to his Beverly Hills home. Unfortunately, there are no more vacancies. Come summer and Adolphe Menjou will build a new home for his intended bride. Why, Verree Tea*, i dale, of course.... Ruby Keeler has
I y Jean Parker
moved in with 1 her mama at To--1 ima Lake dur- • ing Al Jolson’s absence. . . • George White, ■ who loves the i horses and who ' has not always ■ been successful i in picking them, • came away ■ S2O 0 0 winner ; from a 10-day ■ stay at Agua - Caliente. . . . Harry Brun- ’ dige, the St. : Louis news- . paper man who - exposed the , medical diploma i mill and who has ■ been working as
a publicity .... rr«iiw • writer at Fox, is quitting Holly- > wood and is off to China on spe- . cial assignments. . . • Now, Jean > Parker will go to Europe before she does that tour with a modem balu.t ... And Helen Mack says the . most startling sight she sawrm Palm Springs was Ernst Lubitsch crad in 1 a pair of blue bathing-trunks. ■ did you KNOW — > That the comie, Nat Pendleton, i was one-time Olympic champion in 1 the heavyweight wrestling class. > He won 360 out of 364 bouts.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5,1934.
MARCEIL LEATHERMAN HONORED WITH PARTY The Misses Mary Kuy Tyndall ami Ferrel Fenlmore unit'd in entertaining with a farewell party Saturday evening for Miss Mart ell Leatherman, who will make her homo in f.ima, Ohio. The party was in the form of a bridge party and wan held at the home of Miss Tyndall. Six small tables were arranged for bridge and as a result of the games Harold Strickler, Misses Cor-oh-ne Towns end and Man-oil la-a-therm.rn received the prizes. A dainty luncheon of Valentino appointments was served by the hostesses. The guest list for the party included the Misses Marceil Leather man, Corolene Townsend. Pauline Affolder, Katheryn Hower. Dorothy Little. Margaret Campbell. Martha Elizabeth Cailand, Marjorie Johnson. Ixniise Haubold, Ferrol F*nimore and Mary Kay Tyndall, and Marjorie Templin of Bluffion, the Messrs. Bud Townsend, Harold Strickler, Gerald Strickler, David I Heller, Dick Sheets. Glen Dickerson Dick Sutton, Vance and Ron Fenimore, Bob Heller. Jack Gibbs, and El Ixise. Mrs. R. D. Myer's class of the Methodist Sunday School will meet with Miss Charlotte Elzey Thursday niht at seven forty-five o’clock. ENTERTAINS DINNER GUESTS Mr. ami Mrs. Harry M. Michaels of near Monroe entertained with a delicious six o'clock dinner Sunday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Marion Michaels. Mr. and Mrs. Will Michaels, Jr., Miss Edna Hediugton, James Michaels and Mr. and I Mrs. Harry Ml'.diaels. • o — Chicago Gangster Slain By Gunmen Chicago, Feb. 5. — (U.K) —lnternal! feuds among remnants of the Al I phone (Scarface Al) Capone gang! were blamed today for the shoot-1 ing to death of Ernest Rossi. 37. public enemy and bank robber and , kidnaping suspect. Rossi was killed by two men 1 who waited under the back stairway to the apartment of “Dago latwrence" Mangano. Rossi's broth-er-in-law ami a powerful gang leader. Two shotgun charges struck I the victim. Rossi was to have appeared Feb. I 21 with a writ of habeas corpus by which, he sought to avoid extradition to Holland, Michigan, where he was charged with the robbery i of a bank.
76934-0 jl. lon buy Chesterfield cigarettes every day. Sp" You may buy them one place today and \ ■ another place tomorrow —or you may buy ||||| ? them the same place every day. \ It is estimated that there are this day jMK Jl \ 769,340 places in this country where SB.- jg\ Chesterfields art* on sale all the time. Jg« jV : wW th , A To make Chesterfield Cigarettes <i T S • we get the best tobacco and the jflF w K best materials that money can buy. aMKaMF Be " B ' IMI We make them just as good as ISMwf cigarettes can be made. A- - pack them and wrap them f z so that they reach you just as if J you came by the factory door. You can buy Chesterfields in 769,340 places in the United States ««-1• 1 - and in 80 foreign countries. f / ! I : '■ I package of Chesterfield mWM Cheaterfiehh f 'I-w the cigarette that tastes better ® 1 ?M. HGCITT A Myim To.acco Co. Q
-- ■■■— - - - ■ - — e—l- • ■ FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS By EIXEN WORTH J* »' A Mans Dressing Gown for Women /V> Jr No longer do smart women have us I I '■ to borrow their husbands’ dressing i gowns when they want something I \ \_ J well-tailored for lounging. They I \ A can make a copy, designed to fit a I / / woman’s figure, which retains all j / of the endearing, comfortable lines / ® / of the original. Here it is, complete I a! #c to patch pockets, double-breasted L. . Br j’y closing and fringed sash. S| gw / Make it in plain and dotted “ Bn ,< linen or terry cloth for the beach: E* of soft cashmere woolen and tie- \ H silk for the house. Size 16 requires I 19 I \ 4% yards 31-inch material, l s » yard 39-inch contrasting material I I '-f? to trim. I ® 1 Pattern No. 5449 is designed for I : ,p 1 ; sizes 14. 16. 18. 20 years. 32. 34 36, I ' 1 I 38. 40. 42. 44, 43 bust. I 'I • 1 » ISM. Vn««1 Fexture Syndicate Inc. I I I i \ No, 5449 size I ' Pr'ce *or Pattern 15 Cents. name \ | : Street eddnss } j i \ city state H? Our new Fashion Rook U out! Send for it. AG Ch.’ck here [J and enclose 10c extra for book Address orders to New York Pattern Bureau the Decatur Dallv Democrat I Suite 110, 220 East 4snd St. New York City. (fcXiitor’s note—do not 1 mail orders to Decatur, Indiana.)
1 Mine Guard Found Guilty Os Murder Terrp Haute, Ind., Feb. 5.—<U.R) —John “Rip'’ CateUey, mine guard found guilty by a jury Saturday i night on second degree murder jcharges in connection with the killling of Samnel White, will be senI lenced to life imprisonment Feb. i 12. the first day of the new term of the Vigo county Circuit Court, Judge John W. Gerdink announced today. Caveney shot White during a disturbance at the Bunsen No. 4 mine, near Universal, Aug. 7, 1933, and the victim died in a Ideal hospital' that night. The jury composed of 11 men and one woman, was given the case
.* 5:30 p. m. Saturday and deliberation continued until 11:15 p. m. Decatur Boy Sets Attendance Mark Bloomington, Ind., Feb. 5 — (Speitial)— Robert Holthouse of Decatur student attending Indiana university was announced here today by Colonel W. R. Standiford, head of the I. U. military department. as being neither absent nor tartly for a single R. O. T. C. class or drill during the first semester. .! A total of 340 freshman and sopbo- ' more R. O. T. C. students finished the semester with this record. Each of these students will receive a 1 grate of “A” in his military work.
-JAMES J. REED TO AID STATE Former Missouri Senator Aids In Fij»ht On Kidnapers Chicago, Fob. 5 KU.RF—JinnoH A. R»-««l, formur Minsourl mmutor. today nought to aid th.- suite’s attorney's olTico in Its fight to .‘onvict Roger Touhy, f'lticugo gangster, and two euiimpanion- oft death penalty kldnuping charge Reed flew here from ills home ki Kansas City yesterday and im mediately departed for Washington. Hi- will seek In. prevent the arrest of John (Juke the Batb -i l Factor by federal authorities. Factor has been allowed comparative freedom as u state’s witness, He identified Touhy. Gustav Schaeffer and Albert Kator as members of n kidnaping guug which In-Id him for ransom last summer. As a result of :i jury disagreement, tile three gangsters will lie retried lieglnniug -Fell. 13. Federal authorities have been asked by the British government to place Factor under arrest, i Reed and State's Attorney Thomas J. Courtney believed this act would harm I lie slate’s case. Reed said his entry into tin case was motivated by his hatred of kidnapers. Mrs. Nell Donnelly. Kansas City manufacturer, was held by kidnapers before her marriage to Reed. — o — Kendallville Banker Facing Second Trial Angola, Ind.. Feb. s.—<U.R>—Presentation of evidence in the second ' trial of Milton K. .Jacobs, former' Kendallville banker, on charges of | embezzlement, began today in Steu- , ; lien Circuit Court. In his opening statement Satur- , day. Howard Mount, defense attor- ’ . ney, charged the Noble county j Bank and Trust Compatiy bad lost 'more money for depositors under j the receivership of Vernon Finley, ’ Kendallville attorney, than It did through closing. Jacobs' first trial ended in a jury 1 disagreement. ■ ■ o Market's ‘‘Hard Spot” Strength in a portion of the stock market as a result of considerable • buying is called a “hard spot”
T 1 f j \ I /\ I I
B< • ails.- of other employment, Al- | la rt (’o)ehlii, has resigned n fore ! m in on the St. Mary’s river project. I The work is being don- 1 under the , CWA an I Miles Roop was named : foreman of the gang In charge of clearing t ie river banks. Miss Leah Colter of Kendiillville Is -pending several days with Mr. and Mix Earl Colter. COURTHOUSE Court Opens The February term of the Ad-, ams circuit court opened this rnorn- | ing after a two-week's vacation. New Case First Joint Stock Lan I Bank of i Fort Wayne vs. Jacob M. Neuenschwan ler etal. mite foreclosure and j appointment of red iver, C. L. Wai ' teri, attorney. Set For Trial First Joint Stock Land Bank of Fort Wayne vs. FMward Luginbill . and Aldine Luginbill, note, foreclosure an t appointment'of receiver, set for trial February 21. Esakis D. Dally vs. R.E. Liiitzenhlieiser. Roy E. I-autzenheiser and Aaron Lautzenheiser, note, set for trial March 10. Cl o E. Miller, administratrix of | tlie estate of Ray Miller, vs Clyde! Monet and the Portland Drain Tile I - (impati'V. damages, set for trial February 13. Cate Vended Bertha Lillian. vs. Harl I Smith, -divorce, case venued to ' Wells circuit court. Cause Dismissed C. Walters as executor of the exI tate of Hattie Sells vs C. W. R., |Schwartz and David Schwartz, note, jt-ause dismissed and costs paid. File Appearances i Muriel Bell vs. Clinton Bell, di- ' voice. Nathan C. Nelson appeared i for defendant. By agreement of parities, defendant to pay $8 weekly support money and SSO attorney fee. LoweTl L. Newman vs. Le-wls A. * Graham, note, C. J. Lutz- for defen-i-dant. First Joint Stock Land Bank of i Fort Wayne vs. William L. Gander et al, note and fore losure, appearI ance by Herman Myeru for special ■ representative of financial institu- j tions. and Fruchte and Litterer tor j
Page Three
i William L. and Aimed# Gunder. Receiver Discharged Union Central Life 'lnsurance lompiny vs. William G. VawderJcar let nl, note and foreclosure of mortgage, final report of receiver approved and receiver discharged. Real Estate Transfers Amos Z. Smith to Herman F. Ehiiiger <-t ux. land in Washington township for SI.OO. William F. Belneke et al to Charles Reineke, land in Preble town ship for SI.OO. William F. Belneke to John Beineke et al. inlot 18S in Decatur for SI.OO. Marriage License Walter Welberry, farmer. Millford, Michigan und Isabelle Stowe, j Milford. Michigan. — _ o . Over 3,00(1 Loans For Home Owners l.ff Indianapolis, Ind., Feb. 5.--(U.R)— ■ More than 3,000 loans aggregating $7,0.35,631 have been made tz> home owners in Indiana by the Home Owners Loan Corporation since last August, it was announced here today. E. Kirk McKinney, state manager of the corporation, said that during the last week in January over sl,mio,oou in loans were made in | the slate. About $3,500,000 in loans were authorized during the entire month. The loans average $2,500, he stated. There have been 3,008 loans since the corporation was formed last August. O ' House Passes Bill For Crop Production Washngton, Feb. S—(UP5 —(UP) —The ihouse today pasoefi the crop producItion bill, appropriating $35,000,000 I tor loans to farmers.
FEMININE WEAKNESS Mrs. Mary I. Dewry of . sas. 828 W. Superior St., Fort Wayne, Ind., said: “Dur- . j n g middle life I was run* agH down and anemic, was aw fully nervous, lost jB weight and suffered from tLa*.* feminine weakness—would ” get hot and cold flushes. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription helped me in every way. I regained my normal weight anti i had no further trouble." New size, tablets 50 cts., liquid sl.on. I.arg, size, tabs, or liquid, $1.35. “We Ou Our Part.* j
