Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 259, Decatur, Adams County, 31 October 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE — Michigan applM. Grimes Golden, Johnathens, McIntosh, Bawldins. Price 60 rente and up. S. E. Haggard, tnile north. 3% east of Monroe. 255-ktitx FOR SALE—Short horn bull, coming two year old. Eular Hill. Wren, 0., route 1. 257-Stx FOR SAuE — Received new shipment. 3.pc. Living room suite, S4B. Bed room suite. *35. Mattress, 65.50. Double deck coil spring. $6. Lounging chair with ottoman. $14.90. Breakfast set. sl3. Oil stoves. $4.50. Heating circulating stoves, medium size, $39: large size, $49. Kitchen ranges. $lB up. Stucky and Co., Monroe, Ind FOR SALE—Registered Guernsey heifers and young Registered bulls. Best Breeding at Farmer's Prices. Write, Shoemaker’s Guernsey Fbrtn, Keystone, Ind. 259t3x FOR SALE —Good heating stove. 6 dining chairs, like new. Hand picked pears. 50 cents bushel. 1127 West Monroe St. 258-s2tx FOR SALE —Used Furniture. One dining room table with 5 chairs. 1 Davenport. 2 Hard coal stoves. 1 Oil Stare. Stucky and Co., Monroe. Ind «57-6 t FOR SALE — Three cows, fart Guernsey, one fresh, others fresh poon. Ray Smith, phone 5621. 257-3tx WANTED WANTED — American Citizen: Male, no criminal record. 21-45; who wish to qualify at once for a $175 a month government job. Write for personal Interview. Box 16 r l Daily Democrat. 259-gltx MAN WANTED for service station. $35 weekly to start. Experience not required. SBSO cash deposit required on equipment. Manufacturer. 214-61-1563 Wesley St., Wheaton. 111. 25?.6tx WANTED —Quilting to do. Phone 396. Mrs. Herman Hoffman. North 11th St. 257-3tx WANTED — For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service. Millar Radio Service, 226 N. 7th st. 251 ts WANTED — Sorrel Belgian Yearling mare. Address, Shoemaker's Guernsey Farm. Keystone, ' Ind. 2593tx FOR RENI FOR RENT—Two rooms for light housekeeping, unfurnished. Call 522 St. Mary's St. 257-3 t LOST AND FOUND LOST. STRAYED or STOLEN — Tan and white rabbit hound. Answers to name of Jerry. Phone 905 or 232. 259-g3t LOST—Five dollar bill in A. and P. store, Saturday night. Reward Melvin Baumgartner. Phone 796 258-k2tx MOTOR MASTER ® SPARK PLUGS 1* — set of I ... 51.25 S. set of 6 ... SI.BB set of 8 ... $2.49 I ; ENGLAND’S S AUTO PARTS Wholesale and Retail B Ist Door So. of Court House Phone 282 I TRUCK TIRES and TUBES -All Sizes—Lowest Prices. Porter Tire Co. Dist. 341 Winchester st. Phone 1289. Card of Thanks We wish in this manner to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to the and friends Father Seimetz and Father Hen'•nes fqr their consoling words and , .all those who so kindly assisted during the illness and death of our wife J and mother. Camiel Colpaert Julia and Paltnyre Colpaert 259 gltx .. 4 « Adams County I Memorial Hospital , Mrs. Woodson Ogg. 940 Winchester street, major operation this *. m ruing. 'Frieda Cliug;npeel. 1203 W. Monroe street, major operation, this morning.

MARKETREPORTS I DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET Decatur Berne Cralgville Hoagland Corrected October 31 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. 250 to 300 lbs $5.10 200 to 250 lbs „ $5.00 160 to 200 tbs $4.75 300 to 350 lbs $4.80 140 to 160 lbs. $3.85 120 to 140 lbs $2 80 100 to 120 lbs $2.55 Roughs ..... ... $4.00 Stage $2.00 down Vealera _ $6.75 Ewe and wether larnbe $5.60 Buck lambs .... $4.50 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. May July Wheat, old ... .95% .94% .87% Wheat, new .95% Corn, old .76% 56% .76% Corn, new 75% Oats, old .47% .43 Oats, new .49% FOTR WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind., Oct. 31. —(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs steady to 15c higher; 250300 lbs., $5.50; 225-250 lbs.. $5.30; 200.225 lbs., $5.20; 180-200 lbs., $5; 160-180 lbs.. $4.85; 300-350 lbs.. $5; 150-160 lbs., $4.40; 140-150 lbs. $4.15; 130-140 lbs, $3.65; 120-130 lbs., $3.15; 100-120 lbs., $2.65; roughs. $4.50; stags. $2.75 Calves, $7; lambs. $6.25. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y„ Oct. 31 —-(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 1.200; weights above 220 lbs., scarce, strong; lighter averages slow, bidding 10c lower; desirable 220-250 lbs., $5.90$6: 180-210 lbs., quoted $5-50-55.75; 150 lbs., $4.65; packing sows. $5$5.25. Cattle receipts, commercial, 550; grass steers fairy active, steady; tieshy offerings 1.000-1,150 lbs., $5$5.50; common kinds, $3 75-$4.50; cows unchanged; low cutter and cutters. sl-$2.25. Calves receipts, commercial 150; vealers rather slow, steady, SB.OO down. Sheep, receipts. 700: lambs generally' steady; ewes and wethers. $6.75; mixed offerings, $6.25-$650; meTUTTrft lUhds at weights 100 lbs., up, $5.50-$6. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected October 31 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better -86 c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 85c Oats 32 lbs. test _ 47c Oats. 30 lbs. tast 46c Soy Beans, bushel 68c-75c White or mixed corn -95 c First Class Yellow Corn SI.OO —■ is— NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Notice is uereny given that Mon<lav, November 5, 1934 will be the last day to pay your Fall inetallment of taxes. The county tieaaur-| er's office will be open from S A. M. to 4 p. m. during the tax payin'! | son. All taxes not paid by that time i will become delinquent and a 3% I penalty will be added. Also interestat the rate of 8% will be charged from the date of delinquency until | paid. Those who have bought or sold property and wish a division of) taxes are asked to come in at once. | Call on the Auditor for errors and nny reductions. The Treasurer can make no corrections. The Treasurer will not lie responsible for the penalty of delinquent taxes resulting from the ommission of tax-payers to state definitely on what property, they desire to pay, in whose name it may lie found, in what township or corporation It is situated. Persons owing delinquent taxes should pay them at once, the law is such that there is no option left for the Treasurer but enforce the collection of delinquent taxes. The annual sale of delinquent lands and lots will take pla- e on the second Monday in February 1935 at 1 (>-90 A. M. County orders will not paid to anyone owing delinquent taxes. All persons are warned against th*m. No receipts or cheeks will be held after expiration of time, as the new depository law requires the Treasurer to make dally deposit. Particular attention. If you pay taxes In more than one township mention the fact to the Treasurer,: also see that your receipts call for ail your real estate and personal property. In making inquiries of the Ireasurer regarding taxes to insure reply do not fail to Include return postJOHN WECHTEIt Treasurer Adams County, Indiana 11 t.' l Nov. d For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 314 101 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glaaaes Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:80 12:30 to 6.00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. tn. Telephone JZS.

4 4 Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten quer'ons? Turn to page Four for the answers. • — » 1. Thru which two states Joes the I An lroaeoggin River flow? 2. Near the entrance to what Gulf lx Tape Breton island? 3. Name the beat song in the second canto of Scott’s "Lady of the Lake’’ now frequently played on public occasions to announce the ', approach of a person of prominence. 4. Must the Prince of Wales

(fcHIRJL IN THE FAMILY" f BY BEAT FLICE BUR-TON *

CHAPTER XXXI Downstairs the doorbell rang shrilly through the house. "You’ll have to answer that, too, Susan.” she added, looking down at her bathrobe and her slippers. “I’ll go and tell Edna to get into bed.” It was Wallace who had rung the doorbell. He stood on the rubber mat on the front porch, holding his hat and a gray pasteboard florist’s box. As Susan stared at him he stepped up into the vestibule and kicked off his rubbers. Then he came into the hall and hung his overcoat on the hat tree. "You can’t keep a good man down, you see, Susan!” he said humorously. He was smiling, plainly pleased with himself for taking her by storm in this fashion. There was about him the swagger of the conquering male as he walked up to her and handed her the box. “Peace offering,” he explained and tried to put an arm around her. Susan laid the box on the marble topped table. "Wallace,” she said, “you can’t stay. Uncle Worthy’s terribly sick. He’s just had a stroke of some kind and I’ve got to go back upstairs and sit with him. The doctor's just ready to leave—Dr. Kendall.” As she spoke Dr. Kendall’s name it flashed across her mind that Dr. Kendall would have been Wallace’s father-in-law if Eleanor had kept the diamond and sapphire ring. She wondered if Wallace were thinking it too. “Is that so, Susan?” His good looking face was all sympathy. “Gosh, but I'm sorry for you! There 1 must be something I can do to help. I’ll just wait until he comes downstairs and see if there is anything. You don’t mind, do you?” “There isn’t anything you can do, 1 Wallace. The drugstore is just down the street and we can telephone for anything we need. I know you’d rather not stay.” “I hope you don't think that it embarrasses me to meet Doc Kendall,” he said. “No, indeed! I’ve hardly thought of the Kendall tribe since I met you. That whole affair is so far away that it’s something that never happened, as far as I’m concerned—and you’ve got to forget it, too.” He walked into the parlor and stood looking down at the pink coals that glowed in the grate, drumming his fingers on the mantel shelf. “Come here a minute, and let me talk sense to you.” he called softly to Sjusan after a minute or two. In the midst of cickness and trouble he was not taking his mind from the thing that was uppermost in it. That was why he would always get along in the world, thought Susan dully. He was a man of one idea at a time, and he stuck to that one idea through thick and thin—and then when he had carried it through to the finish, he went on to something else. Just as he had put Eleanor Kendall out of his niind and had put Susan Broderick into the place left empty by her. Susan looked at him through the doorway and slowly shook her head. Then suddenly she turned her face toward the door at the back of the hall. From the back of the house came the sound of a key turning in a lock, the sound of a door swinging on hinges that squeaked, and Allen came into the front hall, carrying his two empty suitcases. He gave Susan a quick searching glance and came close to her, dropping his cases on the bottom step of the stairs. “What’s the matter with you?” He put his hand under her chin, turning her face to the light. “You been crying?” “No.” “Well, you look as if you had— Listen to me, Susan! What’s the use of all this misery? Let’s get out of here ana get married tonight— You can eome back here tomorrow and take care of these people until they’re well. But let’s settle everything now.” Susan took his hand away from her face. Holding it tightly in both of hers, she told him ire an undertone what had happened to Unele Worthy; and all the time she was telling it she could see Wallace’s face, a pale blur, turned toward her from the shadows of the firelit parlor. If only, only he would stay there! Before she had finished her story

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“A CHEERFUL GIVER” BY SEGA# HERE'S A HUNERO THOOSing BUCKS FOR YA- IVAM~\ p l OFFERED PoPE'Vt \ |F|'M DISAPPOINTED IN \ J VjE LL. I GIVED AUJ aVT KahOY, MISTER HELPIN' POOR UJIDERS uJICH AIN'T GOT NO HUSBiNS-J A MILLION DOLLARS AS I VOPEYE-I DIDN'T THINK J 1 THE FIVE MILLION AN' \ KIN YA LEMME VTt * > BUV vA A HOME -At V SPINACH for VER KIDS- GIVE y ‘ A REWARD FOR SAVING J HE WAS HOGGISH — r—' All OF ME OWN PERSNAL A DIME :’l NEEDS‘>O* em lots a buttermilk on account of jT my daughter's life 6 i don't mind the \ money-but thas okay ) smokin' KEEP THEIR f AND HE SAID ITIUASNT \ MONEY A BIT-BUT J ON ACCOUNT OFthEVs/ For ME PiPE (W INTESTIMINESj ENOUGH AND ASKED FORJ Hls i^ncb t 1 A , W>V (x/ a\ i W r '> havegiven/Uu W —Tn a wnw^k4Hffi' ei W M K-M '(OlfeEi sat. xN- w wt 'wTWjPR gok 7W Wsi rfw sea |J / King Fexum Srndtcate. Inc., Grew Bptun nfha reserved { ( ( / Ire 12— ■■Jl— 23 Q ( V'A 10-311 ©L—

’’• DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1931.

marry in order to inherit the; Throne? 5. What Is the name for supernormal early development iff the ' mental functions? 6. Name the author of “Bleak House ” 7. For what purpose its the instru-, 1 ment calle ! anemometer used? 8. Who was Vice-President dur- 1 Ing the Wilson Administration? i 1 9. m which country is the Pro- 11 vince of Hainuult? I 1 10. Name the largest city In South-, ern California. ( O Dance Tonight Sunset.

Wallace came walking out into the hall slowly and deliberately, his hands in his pockets, very much at home, thoroughly at ease. He halted at the table and began to untie the gray gauze around his box of flowers. “Better put these in water before they wilt, Susan,” he said, lifting them out, a spray of gardenias with petals as smooth and thick as leather, and laying them in her hands. “How do you do? I’m Wallace Steffen,” he said politely, pleasantly, to Allen when Susan made no effort to introduce them but simply stood with the flowers in her hands looking down at them as if she were blind to everything else around her. “How do you do.” she heard Allen answer. He stopped, picked up his dropped suitcases and went upstairs Wallace watched him until he rounded the turn at the landing. "So that’s the guy,” he said as if he were informing himself of the fact. “Who is he?” "Y’ou must have seen him before. He’s been rooming here,” Susan replied, her lips so stiff that it was hard for her to form the words. “You didn't know that we kept roomers, did you? Well, we do. We ha'.-e to—We's lost almost everything we have, Wallace. You’re really very lucky to lose me. I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if my husband had to keep all the Brodericks in this house.” Wallace said angrily that he wasn’t thinking about money but about her. Then he added that he knew all about the family's affairs anyhow—more than Susan knew, in all probability. The bank held the mortgages on both the house and The Broderick Arms, and Un-

cle Worthy had tried to make a large loan only the day before. Susan shook her head and said that she didn't know anything about their affairs really, beyond the fact that they seemed to be dreadfully poor these days. And when Wallace had put on his things, exclaiming, “In love with the roomer! Gosh, that’s good!” and had left the house, she discovered that she was so tired that she could hardly drag herself up the stairs. The door of Alien’s room stood open and he was kneeling on the floor fitting his law books into one of the bags. She stood in the hall outside and spoke to him. “You couldn’t possibly think that I asked Wallace here tonight?—because I didn’t,” she said. “He just popped in.” He snapped his suitcase shut and got up. “You call me up tomorrow,” he said shortly. His eyes were not on her but on the flowers that she had forgotten to lay down on the hall table. He went out of the room and out of the house. • • • All night long Susan sat in her uncle’s room in an armchair covered with wine-colored wrap. She had put on a sweater and a fur coat, and laid a comforter over her knees, but she was so cold and so frightened that she could not sleep. Uncle Worthy’* bread figure, outlined by the candle-wick bedspread, never moved. The hoarse bubbling sound of his breath never stopped. At eight in the morning when Aunt Edna came limping in to take her place. Susan was so stiff and aching with fatigue that pains ran through her like the stabs of a dagger when she moved. She went into her own room and slept until noon as if she had been drugged. There was thick white frost on the lower panes of her windows when she awoke, and she could see her own breath on the cold air of the bedroom. Evidently Lutie and Aunt Edna had let the furnace go out. She looked in at her uncle on her way downstairs. He was lying just as he had lain the night before in the middle of his big bed with its pineapple-topped posters. His breathing was still terrifyingly loud and his flushed face was preatly swollen. No one was with him. Lutie’s bed had not been made . up, Susan saw as she passed her . doorway, and in the downstairs hall the gray cardboard box and the . piece of gauze still lay on the mar-ble-topped table. There was a coal fire in the par-

Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE ♦ ■■ 1 ♦ Q. When at the theater, and the play Is In progress, should one rise to *>ermit’a latecomer to |>aee to hie seat ? * A. It is better to remain seated if there is sufficient space for Hie person to pass, as this disturbs fewer of the (people. Q. Is a man exsfected to lift his hat while a funeral cortege passes? A. Yes, if he is watching the funeral procession he must remove it entirely. Q. Is it ever permissible tor a din-

> lor grate. Lutie and Aunt Edna i were sitting as close to it as they : could get, and as Susan came into ■ the room she had a swift conviction ■ that nothing—not even flood or ' earthquake or sudden death—could oust them from those old red plush « chairs The chairs were part of : them: she couldn’t think of them i without thinking of the chairs any i more than she could visualize the ■ gold fish without their little glass bowl. “Well, we’ve been struggling with the furnace all morning but > it’s gone out three times.” was Lu- ’ tie’s greeting to her. "The wind ; seems to be in the wrong direction, i or else the new grate that the fur- . nace man put in isn’t the right i kind. Maybe you can make it : work.” She was dressed in a flowered challis wrapper that she had I called her “tea gown” for more . years than Susan could clearly re- ' member, and around her neck was ■ a flannel band yellow with camphorated oil. Aunt Edna had the hot water bottle on her bad knee, and the two women were a picture of I misery. Susan went down to the base- ; ment and made up the fire in the i furnace. There was not very much coal in the bin and she wondered if ! she ought not to speak to Aunt Edna about getting some house- ■ keeping money from Uncle Wor- ■ thy’s wallet. Up in the kitchen two stacks of i dirty dishes showed that Lutie and Aunt Edna had breakfasted, and on i the stove was a little stew pan in ; which last night’s meat had been . warmed over. There was a bowl of I prunes on the kitchen table and be- ; side it lay the heel of a loaf of rye • bread.

When she had put the room in order she went back to the two women in the parlor. “We’ll have to have some money for groceries. There isn't any butter left in the crock, and there’s no fruit for tomorrow morning," she told them, rolling down the sleeves of the blue flannel dress over wrists that were chapped and slightly gray from the coal dust that seemed to have worked into her skin during the days since Anna’s departure. Aunt Edna with a groan reached for her handbag that was tucked down between the cushions of her chair. “I took all the money that was in your uncle’s clothes this morning.” She took a handful of bills from the purse and handed Susan three dollars. “There wasn’t much in them. Only nine dollars and a few cents. We’ll have to do something about getting a little money out of his account at ths bank I thought perhaps Wallaee could tell us just now to go about it.” She put one of her hands, with its rings of “dirty” minecut diamonds, to her eyes. "I can’t get used to your unele lying there—not knowing anything, not being able to advise us and help us. Susan, you’ll have to telephone Wallaee or run down to see him. I can’t go, and Lutie certainly can’t—and we must have a little money to turn round with.” Susan said that, she would take care of it. There was nothing else for her to say. “Dr. Kendall was here at nine o’clock,” her aunt’s voice went on drearily. “He says that unless Worthy has another stroke he’ll get over this. That is. he’ll regain nis ' consciousness but he’ll never be able to walk again or use his left side. It’s completely paralysed.” Susan remembered then that it ’ was the left side of her uncle’s face 1 that had worn that purplish flush 1 the day before. , “He’ll probably spend the rest of his life in a wheel chair—and he . may live like that for twenty years. Dr. Kendal) says.” Aunt Edna had , put her hand down in her lap, and ’ her face was bloated with crying, ’ her eyebrows twisted up high on . her forehead in a look of dismay , and astonishment at the blow life ' had dealt her “It’s going to be tersible for him—and it’s going to be 2 much more terrible for me. having r to take care of a helpless cripple 1 al! the rest of my days. Susan, have e you telegraphed your father and - John?” (To Be Continued) CopmchL »31. W Kiac tMtorw Syndicate. Isc

ner guest 4o Intimate that the fool is not satifttetory? A. Never; this would be the height of rudeness. ©cSfeSy Spotted characters end up with striped suits. When a feller lacks GRIT his name is soon mud. I— ■ I Clean politicians don't have to soft soap. Law takes its course with some fellers and its curse with others. Nope, temporary permanents never leave lastin’ Impressions. Nation in grip of a drouth, and it just recently voted wet. - ~ -.. Gospel Tabernacle Seventh and Marshall Sts. The revival services which started Sunday night will continue all week. Rev. Noah Klopfenstine will deliver the message each night and Mr. and Mrs. Fields Os Anderson will have charge of the music. Special numbers will be presented each night. The meeting is growing in Interest. We are now located in our new tabernacle building. Seventh and Marshall streets. Don't fail to hear Rev. Klopfenstine and the Fields each night. Welcome to all. -4—... ■ - NOTH*; or VOT4N« I’I.MHS FOH the reyehai. elkatioy Notice is hereby given that the board of county commissioners of Adams county, state of Indians, has fixed and designated the following voting places for general elections, to be held on November 6. 1934. I’reelnet: Voting Pln<-e: East Union—Brmtheik School House West Union—Ruhr School House East Root— Aber School House West Hoot—Monmouth Softool North PtTble—Friedheim School House South Preble—School 1 ml. north of Preble North Kirkland—Petereon School House South Kirkland—Store building SW corner of setion 26 North Wbsftlirgton- Benj. Eitlng'V Residence South Washington—Reinker School House North St. Marys—Bobo School House South St. Marya—Acker Bros, store North Blue 'reck —School House IMst. No. 3 South Blue Creek—School Ho use Dist. N». 1. North Monroe —Town Hall. Monroe Middle Monroe —Election School House Berne "A” —East Main Street Filling Station Berne "B”—'.uditorium. Herne "C" —Town Hall . , French Township-—-Election School House North Hartford—Linn Grove School House South Hartford— Perryville Store North Wabash—School House 8W Corner Sec. :> Ceylon—Ceylon School House Geneva A"—Cross Building, iaeneva "B"—lfown Hall West Jefferson—Centra! High School East Jefferson—Theo. Teeters Garage at NW Corner of Sen. 22 City of Becntur First Ward "A”—Fred Linn Garage First Ward B — Decatur Hoop Co. • Office. Second Wkrd “A”—Public LibrarySecond Ward “B”—Ben Shrank Residence, 10th St. Third Ward "A"—Adams C. Garage First St. Third Ward "B "—R. A. Stucky Coal yard 722 W. Monroe Street. Given by order of the Board of Commissioners. Dennis Striker F. O. Martin Phil Sauer Board of Commlaaionera John W. Tyndall. County auditor October 31, 1934 Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer P. L. & T. Co. BL Phonea 104 At? x and 1022 - ’ < Claim your date n I - 1 8611 ’ every day. SALE CALENDAR Nov. B—Henry R. Anspaugh, 2 miles east and 3 miles north of Decatur or 3 miles north of Dent school. Closing out sale. Nov. 9—Decatur Riverside Sales at Sale Barn. Nov. 7—John Cross. 4 miles east and 1 mile north of Barns, or 3 miles north and 8 miles west of Chattanooga, Ohio, viosing out sale. Nov. 15. Theodore Luginbill, 8 miles south and % mile weet of Willshire 6n the old Austin Evans farm. Closing out sale.

i WZnnOLCfWOOD'LwI:

By HARRISON CARROLL • Coppriphf, J.'iJ) King Fcaturei Syndicate, Ine. HOLLYWOOD.. . .—Won’t Hollywood bs surprised to leurn that Claudette Colbert's brother has been working as an assistant director at the Paramount E studio under the name of Charles Wendling? Many of the star's friends don't even know übe has a brother. The young man -chose anonymity, because he wants to get along on his own merits. People on the cuudetie coioen , T)ne Hour Lata ., set didn't even know his relationship to Claudette until Douglas Blackley, a member of the cart, recognized him. Blackley' knew Wendling back east. The Change of name Is no recent thing for Wendling. Goes clear back to the war. In fact, when he served with the American army in France You see. the family name. Chaucholn (that's Claudette's real moniker. | too), was difficult to say and. even when you got it out, sounded like : the French word for hot dog. As soon as the war was over. > young Chaucholn changed it to Wendling. If your palate is jaded, try thew recipes of George Lamazc, old-time ! pal of Wilson Misner and now di -1 rector of cuisine at the Clover club, de luxe Hollywood late spot . . . melon cocktail, with a flavoring of green creme-de-menthe . . . orange and grapefruit cocktail topped with 'strawberries and flavored with Grand Marnier (orange cognac) ... or, the best dish of its kind you ever ate. eggs Lainaze —eggs scrambled with mushroom*, julienne of tongue, julienne of turkey and truffles. Between J. P. McEvoy, the writer, and Jack Raymond, there is such a resemblance that they are frequently being mistaken for each other. Raymond, who bears tbe brunt of it was walking toward the Paramount commissary when someone gave him a tremendous whack on the back. “How are you, J. P.?” came a loud greeting. After gathering himself together, Raymond whirled around and testily announced his own identity. "And why should you even want to bit J. P. McEvoy like that?” he demanded. But the stranger was a fast thinker. “Listen," he said. “If you are not J, P, McEvoy, what <s> you

Drop Titles for Commoner Rolm 4I 23|g 11 . Ci I "JI I dWK&/ ■ WfcWfcQlw&fe ®klS ! • WIPIRr * v yl iSwgKslp '■'■ • MraMKU| ■ * ’V' ■ W * 1 «/ * Prince.. Xenia Princes. Julia Cant.cuMi* ■ America's "royalty” appears to be beating a . ■' >,,, .• JsS I of nobility. Princess Julia Cantacuseno, wi'.o "'- Dent Grant in the White House during the r n ° rrandfather, General U. S. Grant, is resuming her Cb- n ; ,| After her forthcoming divorce in Florida from 1 I nobleman husband, she plans to vote G. 0. P■’ , '., I Princess Xenia of Greece, who married playboy '■ ''” |r I millionaire tin-plate heir, is seeking legal pern- I royal title aince her divorce a few yean . o .1

care "!ut 1 '777*/*®® Tl‘< :> I.' a . v , y I've alway, u Pll , !frrt ■ Hollyue,,,! t ni|) . t..e ncrie t„ make tiir w n . Here is hoa l le lowdown w 1,:,s n ! »Lh L7W guest. The eras) rr. Imp»wa>,|, rings the <1 G( takes his I. lt , J asks about , down the street. ‘ w What comedTT?, nos his estranged w,f, the himself v. as moving uaviearth to g,-t a year ’ fl reason Is I , , n ,>, hai ( to save her from th. <Lfl whom she I. ls fauen in W KNICKKNACKS- I ■ Mrs. Ler ,l: '"I that he e,v a sa’eri ably will |. k.nOTt. ~jfl ene fortl»|( Fa*4tK' 3, ’~ ~ ’'-J cl'loom tn t e san* h, J ly Hills 1 a <1 resstr | ■ T] thry'vj 1 up I IflL ■ Man / course, i; to stave di I k . ■ _ , ‘ iA Ureal of Maxie Rosenblum " es -•■ - J t w 0 ttij montH h Nonn.in <P ■ > ML- • v gd the Goo Is ■ ■ hospital that knee , injury. Anjsbt, be there for :■ : le time tocoae., The whole l ov. r club took t| when Nat i, '.stone gate Laemnile a g.,,u.ar away potyj handed tin -...arg Unhengjs ducer a no.den ake t 00.,! Adela Rogers lie land at tk g with Enzo Fiermonte. .. , 9 Sally Blane witii a tall Lata N named Romero. They teal gether like e,,ch number «»e hearsed. . . . Ma k Grsr in, too. with th.- blonde Lodbß . . . And here's good news tea Harding. Cecil B De Mille resitM she was loi-kir f r a lucky o«g feather and l as invite.! her nm pick one from any of the tc49 raises. DID YOU KNOW— That a graduating elw nkt Monica high ollie put ona;Uy< both Gloria Htuart and .’onIM in the east '’ ;