Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 58, Decatur, Adams County, 7 March 1934 — Page 3

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®^IrYSOCIE tv Z hull ' Soii’lV Uiel T , l .-Mlay atrl> ~;,.<■( ion of of ■*' *h’hl VI -'I <«ffi.rer- ■ ' no- ion ■r'i’""' 1 , .i..-r who was I ■ ■ fm another ■ niu lr a ” Eaister I B*-- 1,,.; . Match 31. PlanH I ■*'" ||( entertain the da - «" 11 meeting ' ' j;. t■-r r,c-'i > hitri'h. I , S( . ~1 •>.- meeting re I - •’ 'I i,y lh *‘ 1>OK " j ■Tv' i’"' l Mrs l Limenstoll,. ■Jr Kire h. ..ml M> <» <-• ■ . fnr |L . !-.. iota Xi niuslRfdl Will '' ,n at the R; Sun-lay .ifi'inoon at 3 15 ■”„,, pH,...; 25 cenu and R obtained in X u,w, ‘ Rhe »orority. ■ » 1 ■ -a:,; of the bridge] being held by the * ■* |( J'vthias lodge will he i ■ the K 1,1 >’ home Friday | ■1 al «,.veit thirty o'clock. ■ ■ otterlxin Guild Girls will; ■ Saturday afternoon at two ■a a t the home of Mioa Malo | Lt>.,ngdiia! Mission Band Let at the church, Saturday i bom at two o'clock. Miss BetL.M will be the leader. KAPPAS K INSPECTION h Maty Suttles was hostess] ( nemhers of the Tri Kappa . L at her hothe, Tuesday | U when a business meeting ; held. Ilans wi re made for in-I Jan to he held sometime in anj tentative plans were also: mi for a dinner bridge to j M sometime in .April. OF C. HOLDS MESS MEETING if, L of ('. met in the K. of C. | pwday evening after church (the regular business meeting Ltl. The next meeting, to lie I L first Tuesday in April, will I [business session. Iroited Brethren Young Peo-1 Hmir will meet at the church, j liiy evening at six-thirty j |l Belter Homes Home Econ-1 is Club will be hostesses to I • interested in Home Econ- ■ »work at a banquet to be held ; ?Monroe hall, Friday evening, I li at six thirty o'clock. Miss ! i Goddis, extension agent of hie. will be the principal speak-| HORTEROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS t

J J JI . llQr J'JW < a U a 9 9*l. * »- i * SELF |,I , \&sSS%Bss£bpj 7 \\ I ■ -7- \ • - . —...—■ WORN LINOLEUM...CONCRETE OR CEMENT Waterproof, easily washable, and long wearing, Kyanize Floor Enamel may be used indoors or out il.j’Ti ■ W basements. hgjAYGREts JEW . . .. Easy to apply, because it n seltsmoothing... dries thoroughly m fc y e to six hours with a rich, full lustre. Comes in ««tce Q solid covering colors... aU popular shades. [allow ||& llKohne

I I in-1-T.--IT- irwinri ji,.’’ i CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mlm Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 i , -—— Wednesday Monroe Community, Monroe 7:30. . Decatur .Ministerial Association, i Library room. <'outthouse, jh a.to. I Zion Reformed (Jiris Choir, i church, 7:30 p. nt. i Historical Chub, Mrs. Homer Is>w i ! er» 2:30 P. m. Janies Shakespeare Club, Mrs. A. I ] I). Suttles. 2:30 p. m. Methodist laidies Aid. Mrs. | Omer Merriman. 1:30 p, in. Thursday | Phoebe Bible Class, Mrs. Walter ' 1 Dellaeh, 7:30 p. nt. Eastern Star linitiatlon. Masonic I hall, 7:3<» p. nt. W. O. T. M. Pot-luck, Moose home | 7.30 p. m. Mrs. Mver’s class. Miss Fern Pass water, 7:45 p. m. Eastern Star. Masonic Hall. 7:30 p. nt. j Delta. Theta Tau. -Miss Flotilda i Harris. 6:30 p. m. 11. B. Young People's choir, | I church. 6:30 p. nt. Friday Bridge tourney, K. of P home, , 7:30 p. tn. Hen Hur Tirzah Club. Miss June ; ' Miller, 7:30 p. in. Saturday Otterbein Guild, Miss Madeline I Crider, 2 p. m. I Evangelical Mission Band, 'church, 2 p. m. M. E. latdiee Cafeteria supper,! I church, 5 to 7 p. m. Sunday Psi lota Xi mueicale. Mason Hall ■ 3:15 p. m. Monday ' Research Chib Guest Day. Mr,s. I O. L. Vance. er. Special music will be featured : during the program. Tickets may I be obtained for twenty-five cents from any of the club members of ■ ; County Agent L. E. Archbold. Those : > wanting to attend are asked to I make reservations early. PSI IOTA XI HAS BUSINESS MEETING I The P.si lota Xi Sorority met with j Miss Eloise Lewton. Tuesday even- ; ing for a business meeting. Plans I were completed tor the Musical to | be held Sunday afternoon at three i fifteen o’clock at the Masonic Hall. The public Is invited and tickets I may be obtained from any member ] of the sorority. !YOUNG MATRONS CLUB MET TUESDAY NIGHT The Young Matrons club met Tuesday night at the home of Mrs.] ] Ben Schroyer. w ith Mrs. Albert Miller the assisting hostesses. I The play. "Yeiu Lucy", was preI rented by the members of the club. The cast of characters follows: ; Lucy, a spinster and general newsi spreader—-Mrs. Charles Brodbeck. ] Frankie, her hen-pecked brother, ] Mis. Dallas Gokiner. Mrs. Jones, I the neigliiltorhood broadcaster otj gossip, Mrs. Irvin Miller. The! | Assessor, Mrs. Alva Lawson, Sec-j lond-hand man. a rough looking Jew | . Mrs. Tillman Gehrig. . The home was decorated with |

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. MARCH 7. 1934.

rented plants nin cut flowers.. Five hundred wim played and club prizes were awiirdtsl to Mrs. Irene Rchafey Mrs Dave Campbell an! Mrs. Frank Crist. Guests prize< were won ,by Mrs. pen, Rirgcli. Miss Kila Mlltitehler, Mrs. Tillman Gerber. Kalheryn Schroyer sang a group I iof songs. Following the entertainment, a| deli, ioiH one-course luncheon was | . -orved at small table*:, ce-iterrsl | with crystal bud vases. Place cards . were placed at the tables. Guoets of the club were Mee-1 i dames Harokl Daniela, Lewis | i Frank, Harriet Mills. Wilbur RobI Inson, Effie S,' hug. Walter Miller, | Clara Smitley, Van Weldler. Verne ] Bauman, Fred Ahr. Pete Kirsch, i Tillman Gerber, Charles Miller and | , Rebecca Eady and Miss Ella j I Muischler. • ARRIVALS Mr. an ( | Mrs. George Harris are I : the parents of a boy baby, born this i morning at Rockford, Ohio. The I i hoy has been named Matthew I George. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Harris I of this city are grandparents. Mr. anil Mrs. Lawrence Wolpert, Bellmont Park, are the parents of a boy l>ahy la>rn at the Adams > County Memorial Hospital this ■ morning. Mrs. Wolpert wa- former-] jly Miss Dsxssie Mazelin. B.»t>l mo- • i ther ami baby are doing nicely. _ . | COMPROMISES EXPECTED ON WAGE PROGRAM I (CONTINUED FROM PA(IF. ONE) work out solutions for some of the problems raised by industry and the administration. Some industrialists were advanc- | ing cautious suggestions that they j might agree to an increase in wages I and let hours remain unchanged. ] i They said a shortage of skilled la-1 hor in several fields would impose! great hardship if hours were re- ‘ duced and would require them to, pay heavy overtime Despite much opposition voiced, I in the conference here. .Mr. Roose-; j velt felt the country-wide response; > to his appeal for higher wages and; | shorter hours was favorable. The President also indicated that, I lie expected to confer with con-i ; gressional leaders H-gardiug extension of his licensing powers tin-! i der the recovery act. Although the rest of the act re- , mains in force until June. 19", >, it.: ] terms specifically limited use the licensing powers to one year end ing this June. Congressional action would be; necessary to extend this power.

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Sy HARRISON CARROLL Cop>right i*34. King Fnaiurw S/ndlcai* Ids HOLLYWOOD, Calif., —Joan Crawford’s brother and his wife took their three-months-old baby in their arms for the first time recently. The weeks at anxious waiting,

parental yearnings long deferred. came to an end when the t'i n y mite reached the weight of six pounds and hospital doctors allowed her to be removed from the incubator and taken home. There, in a nursery which was the gift of her famous aunt, little Joan Crawford Le Sueur really made the ac-

S v IS Joan Crawford

quaintance of her father and mother. The confining wails of the incubator were gone and she lay in a bassinet like any normal baby. She felt the touch of her mother’s hand and she cried without having the echoes carom back against her ears. According to doctors, little Joan suffered no ill effects from being prematurely born December 2, and has every chance of growing up to be as sturdy as Harold Lloyd, Jr., filmdom’s most famous incubator baby. Pat Patterson, English actress, who surprised Hollywood by eloping to Yuma with Charles Boyer, is contradictory about her superstitions. She went without a qualm to spend her honeymoon in the John McCormack house where the marriage of Janet Gaynor and Lydell Peck tame to grief, but she emphatically refused to occupy a dressing-room at the Fox studio, which gossips whisper is a jinx to romance. Among the previous occupants of the dressing-room were Marian Nixon, who divorced Eddie Hillman; Boots Mallory, who had lovetroubles with the musician husband; Sally Eilers, who gained freedom from Hoot Gibson and Miriam Jordan, who has just completed a trip through the divorce courts. We who write of Hollywood, and preview audiences alike, have been universally impressed by George Arlise’ new picture. “The House of Rothschild.” it has all the finesse of “Disraeli” and twice its passion. There is no doubt hut what this film will he potent propaganda in favor of the Jewish race, but it will be a fanatic indeed who will deny the

an* • ————————aw— ■T- -ru I FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS My ELLEN WORTH A IVif/i <1 Touch of Alice in Wonderland \ Alice in Wonderland’s enchant- // ’ I \\ \ ing frocks had sleeves like these, I ; \\ \ and little round collars close to I_ her neck. And we have found that t 'l /■ ". • • ,-.••• f.’rTVvJ? little girls like this frock as much ( * 5 as they like Alice herself. It’s made y a—’ of dotted swlss with organdie for /] ,11 \ the triple collars, bound in the f7iV!'P'| | \ color of the dots. The scalloped (W j | yoke fits it well about the shoul- 1 I II ders. and the shirred skirt gives u’ I I all the freedom a little girl wants. \ I I \ You may make it with long sleeves I I if you prefer. Size 4 requires 1% I I I II ) yard 38-!nch material. % yard i] \ / ) / contrast. L*/ Pattern No. 5495 is designed for 54-9‘i aizes 2,4, and 6 years. CvpvriKht. t»3«. by United Fratur, Syndicate. Inc. No. 5495 Size Price for Pattern 15 Cents. name street address :ity 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. ZZo East (and St. New York City. (HMltor’s note—do not melt or,term to Decatur, Indiana.)

I w hich never has been used so far : l>ui which was put in the act as a! | last-resort means of enforcing comi i liaiu-i- with codes. : tinder the licensing section, the | President after hearings could re-; quire each member of an industry to adhere to terms of a code on penalty of extremely heavy tines and jail sentences. Similar licensing powers under the agricultural adjustment act have been used in the dairy industry. The code conference today was I featured by complaints of some industries that \hey were being de, ' stroyed by foreign competition and I by disclosure of NRA that hereaf- | ter it would permit local compliance agencies to publicize comI plaints in an effort to obtain better ; etii’orcehient. Wage increases under NRA have raised prices in the I’nited States! and opened American markets to destructive foreign competition, delegates complained. Says Conference Were “Improper’’ i Washington. Mar. 7. —(U.R) —Former Postmaster General Walter F. Brown's conferences with air line I I operators in May. 1930. were “improper.’’ t’ol. Jaul H. Henderson,

picture an outstanding place for its entertainment and artistic values as well. In fact, out of 200 preview cards returned at one showing, only one criticized the film from a propaganda standpoint. And this waa signed with a Nazi swastika Oddly enough, few directly concerned with the production are of the Jewish race. The producer was j Darryl Zanuck, the writer, Nunnally Johnson and the director. Al Werker. In any event, creed has no place j in the judgment of this picture. | Here is a real cinema achievement, something for Hollywood to cheer about. It is not a new story, perhaps, \ but one that is perennially surprising. . During the time that Buster Crabbe was a life-guard on the beach at Waikiki, he saved the lives , of twenty-five people. Fifteen of these were sailors from the United States Navy. In a few days, Ramon Novarro returns to Hollywood to piek up a few things, gather a company and j depart for a concert tour that will take him through South America, Mexico and Europe. His good friends know and regret that the star leaves here more than a little disillusioned with motion pictures. Ramon is sensitive and easily of- I fended. In nursing his grievances, he loses sight of

the long favoi he has enjoyed I and of the real I contribution i that his film as- I sociates and em- I ployers have I made towards I his success. I As matters I stand, the star I expects to be I away from Hol- I lywood for near- I ly a year. Many I have heard him I say that hr| doesn’t care if he ever makes another picture

? I Hr n Ramon Novarro

No doubt, he is sincere for the moment. His intimates do not believe, however, that he will become a permanent exile, like his friend Rex Ingram. Those who have grown up with the films often go away for a while, but few have been able to resist the powerful nostalgia that sooner or Inter nag’s at them to come back to this erazy and glamorous Hollywood. DID YOU KNOW— That Gertrude Michael, nex Paramount player, was a law student at the aee of 15?

vice-president of the United Aircraft and Transport Co., teatifiod , today before the senate airmail in ! vesllgntillg committee. Henderson was the first witness as the committee resumed its hearings after several days' recess. Ready to testify was Col. L. H. Brittin. former vice-president of Northwest Airways, who recently was freed from the district jail after serving In days for contempt of the senate. Henderson said he attempted to persuade former Assistant Secretary of Commerce William P. Mac-Cnft-ken. Jr., chairman of the alleged ‘‘spoils conference." to adjourn the meetings, but was told: "You’re crazy as hell!”. Two Coal Miners Found Not Guilty Sullivan, Ind.. Mar. 7.—tU.RX - Two Sullivan county coal miners charg j ed with rioting in connection with I disturbances at the Starburn tninc ‘ last October were acquittefl today I by a Sullivan circuit court jury. Those tried were Dennis Ter hune. Sullivan, and Charles God frey. Shellntrn The jury deliberated 30 minutes

* 3 the nation. Join in / I * the parade. f ■1 —and a most alluring ‘ showing of the newest sSSSBEgBL j| - COATS ■ fl -SUITS - -*»■-< H -DRESSES 1■ I SPRING fashions are singing a new tune this year. There's a sparkle, and zest and a gay lilt to them. The dresses make 1h e |w| most of your figure. The coats give you a new kind of swing, and 1® the suits set you strutting at a smart pace. They are fashions that have caught the enthusiasm of the new deal, and among their many virtues is their low price. Stop in today and see what we have to offer. Our stock is complete in every detail and we know you’ll find just the garment IT i you want. * Or, if you prefer, select your Coat, Suit or Dress now and with a small deposit we will gladly hold if until you are ready for it. $ LANKENAU’S

'College Student Shot By Officer Charleston, 111.. Mnruh 7 -(UP)A coroner's liHptest today called witnesses of the shooting to death of llornchol George Polly, 19, of Clarekiont, un,| student at the, toacnera' collar® here. Petty was killed lasi nli'.ht when . deputy slu ritf Bal Kelly fired a I shot at the autnaioblle In which the ] youth was riding. Kelly said he mis ! look the automobile for one no had ; followed lor five miles. Kelly was in pursuit of vandals ; ■ who burglarized and set fir to a ■ i barn. The officer said he fired at . a tire on the automobile ami that i | the bullet must have glanced on-1. i ward. I I t “ ° ’ ; Woman Is Named As U. S. Judge | Washington. Mar. 7. ,U.P Presl- 1 I dent Roosevelt today smashed pre-; | cedent by nominating Florence E. I i Allen of Ch veland. (>., to be I’nit- I led States circuit court judge for I the sixth circuit. Miss Allen now , is on the supreme bench of Ohio. — - -O — Get the Habit — Trade at Home —

Wgy 1 I SMOKE PLENTY OF CAMELS... MORNING, NOON, AND NIGHT. J y 7 SO I THINK I’M QUALIFIED TO SAY THIS THEY NEVER W| ’ JANGLE THE NERVES. ' ■■Rml- 3SHS. WgSisSft R Bli” if I S ® I 11 11 II! V i M f |L*|j -I J g JM| HR c? »•I i S Urn H H It *sis 8■ ® 2ss *i y 1 www' I<4 (j ? s.

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Mrs. Roltert Frltzlnger and I | daughter .Mary Jam* spent Tuesday | in Fori Wayne as the guests of Mr. 1 and Mrs. William Davison. Mrs. Sim Burk was a visitor in ; Fort Wayne, today. Miss Belen Gerther, Miss Frehht , Ileyerly, un i Mrs. Orville Rhodes I were htiwiness visitors tn Fort ' Wayne this morning. A letter from Miss Mary Macy I who has been vielting in Florida | the past tliH-e weeks, says she w'll return home Sunday. Jeff Llechty of Herne wa< a call- ; ler here today. j There are still a number of ell- I IgibloH In the county who 'have not 1 registered. You must do so or you cannot vote at the primary. ! Herman Myers a-ted as special ' I judge in a divorce cash In circuit ' I court this morning and looked and ‘ i did the duty like a veteran. J. H. Heller returned last even- ; ing from Terra Haute and M'tiich , | where bids were received for pro- [ posed training school and art hall, t

Page Three

Ibut the bids were so high it was neewsury to reject all of then) The projects will bo rea«lvertiseil and now bids received (April 9th at Ind Inn.ipolls, HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Otto Kiefer, 118 South Elglitth street, underwent a major operation at the Adams County Memorial Hospital. Doyt HavermLn. Ohio City, Ohio, ; Route 2 submitted »o a major operaItlon at the'lKlams County Memorial i Hospital. Mrs. Heber Feasel Decatur, I Route 7. underwent a minor operaI Hon at the local hospital | Maurice McClure. 924 Win-'hosier I street, submitted to a tonsillectomy joperatio nat the local hospital. Vjluabi* ‘Budd/ A Mb!® rnarkrd rabbit fur. valuad at was shown as sn Interna dnna! «h»iw In London