Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 267, Decatur, Adams County, 10 November 1934 — Page 5

f IE • Mbeble news ’ BwWT - —* A BwKtl Mt"- Clarence Smith via.inl| Mrs. W. Smith nl J ■BBl'luu-sday-KsgSL Mrs Anthony Tumble- | ■ isited Mrs Charles H Ehß • l “' 1 <liUlKnte ‘" < ' Mrs Thurman .lavs v .siting Mr and , Ktihrman and daugli jMjgto. ari .hiker of Geneva is and Charles Siul I tor several weeks. Blain be Fugate visited BinaS-''.- I.urine and Erma K; ’rehW Sill " ,iiv fS|L ll,,rbell Foreman litrar Visit.-d Mr. and Mrs .-rnuin and daughter

purton’s’ Quality I Inner Spring I MATTRESS ' I 2 - St «•• ■ w r A;* \ I! iw: ‘■Qt-A w ‘ M- 5* y*. \ - s. l z**z - r*’ v *'* > ’ •' Kejitihr $25.00 Value | HEAVILY PADDED WITH NEW || Il LEAN COTTON — Securely Tutted. JMH Beautiful Extra Strong 1 N j Art Ticking Patterns. ||IB Very Little Down — A Little Each JI Month will buy one of these Innerspring J| Hattresses. II Furniture Dept. 2nd Floor. and HOME FURNISHINGS

r S» inlay. i Mr. aud Mrs. Fred Loßaeier of , Fort Wayne viaitid Mrs Kate Lin. . nimeler and son Rudolph Sunday. and Mrs. Douglas ICtzey spent Sunday at Decatur a* the lAteets of Mr. and Mrs. Deima El key and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Komeler of Fort Wayne visited Mrs. Will Lin--1 imeter and sou Herman Sunday. 1 Mrs. John Kirchner and daughters Irene. Erma and Mrs. June Shackley spent Wednesday at i Huntington. Mr. and Mrs. Ora Newhard of Griffith spent several days at 1 Preble. i, , 0 _____ z Grid Death Cancelled Games Deadwood. S. D,-<U.R>-Death of Bert Hedstrom, football player,

The Search for VALUES THE gold or silver miner does much work before his mine is on a paying basis. I hat s development work. He carries on in the hope that soon he will come to the pay-streak and will have his reward. Compare this miner to your reading of the advertisements. Not every thing you read is of vital interest to you at the moment. But many thousands of others are reading. One finds a well-recommended suit or overcoat at an attractive price. I hat’s a pay-streak for him. Another rejoifees to find a sales announcement of coal, or coke, or furniture. Another wants the latest automobile or radio, and is mightily pleased to find the advertisement that tells all about it. The advertisements carried in this newspaper are helpful in the business of living. They tell of equipment, appliances, things for personal and household needs. Take note of the things you now have in regular use. What first called them to your attention. It s likely that you first read about them in an advertisement Other good values await your choosing in the advertisements in this issue.

I. J. J . JL ■ »»l ■■ W ▼ I T f * ZrW» lB;' «

By HARRISON CARROLL Copprtpfit, J9JJ, ■King Features Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD . . . —lt's so simple you'd think the movies would hsve tried it before. Director Chuck Reisner has been worrying for days about the time he must lose working with a •’■ir-01-l babv In inning Ticket." Under the Call- K ?’ gwl tornia law. an Inrant, ot this age UMI ran appear be- K_’ ' 3s|| fore the camera only two boni s a f igljM day. Added to the normal dimcultiea of getting children to do a ■ •®Jn scene correctly. Chuck Riesner this often means that a week is spent on a small sequence. Then Chuck happened to drop In on the "David Copperfield" sot one day. There, he found Benny and Bobby Ponder, a pair of year-old twins, making their motion picture debut A light dawned upon Riesner. He rushed to the production office, where. Inside of an hour, Chuck’s idea became fact The Ponder twins, identical in appearance. will play a single role in "The Winning Ticket”. And. Instead of two hours a day. Chuck will now work four. Just as the cameras were nearly I ready to grind, the Max Bear pici ture, "Kids on the Cuff", has been postponed and the story goes back to the scenario department for ex- ; tensive revision—or perhaps to be abandoned entirely. According to Leo Morrison, Max’s diminutive agent, the champ has given Paramount a 60-day extension, and 30 more if they need it, on the starting I 'fate of Ids picture. Mrs. Wallace Beery Is not only well enough to dispense with her nurse, but she is preparing to write a book—all about Carol Ann Beery and the youngsters Bfe with her adopted parents. Wallle's love for Carol Ann is one of the flliu colony’s favorite topics ot conversation. The hard-boiled star could not be any more devoted to her if she was his own child. It is this affection, along with Rea's observations about youngsters, that will be put Into the book. Hollywood Is not to have it's flying elephant after all. A telegram was received the other day by William Anthony McGuire, announcing the death ot the tive-montb-old pocky.

caused cancellatiou of Deadwood high school's remaining games this season, H. S. Berger, superintendent of schools, announced. Hed- | strom was fatally injured in Deadi wood's game with Edgemontn- He | would have graduated this year, j o J Dynna-mite Mixed With Coal ■ ' Cheyenne, Wyo.-(U.R>—Luck was

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1934.

derm, which was on It’s way out here to play a part in Universal’s production of "The Great Ziegfeld." , As a stunt, the elephant was put , on a plane In Chicago to make the trip to the coast by air. It became ill en route and the ; plane droped down in St. Louis to ’ rush tt's charge to the zoo. But the rarefied ozone had been too much for I the country’s first flying elephant i It died of pneumonia. i From the plans that Jack Warner has for Marion Davies, you can look I to see tho star turn out her finest pictures when she starts her new contract after the first of the year. Marion’s Initial C o s ci o p olitan ; r >. - I sine to be one <>t lllms of 1935. I&jSF sys Naturally the star Is happy BfX: FM ( about her fine MLi-jIRSWaBBM ; new contract, but 1 die leaves Metro- ' I ; Goldwyn - Mayer fcj|kd|BW ; with the frlendllest of feelings for . the lot and for Marion Davies ' the people with ’ whom she has worked during the ‘ last few years. ’ What two Important stars, who I once worked for Charlie Chaplin. r have ngreed tn come back and appear in a sequence of the comedian's new picture? KNICK-KNACKS—- , One of the reasons poor Lou Telle- . gen feared he was losing his mind . was his inability to remember dia- . logue lines in his last picture. He , told the whole story to Wera Engels , a few days before he committed sui- , cide. . . . Here’s one for the book. ! Bill Powell will have custody of . Carole Lombard’s daschund. Brownie, over the Thanksgiving holidays. . Just received the following cable from London: “Married one year today’. Having grand time second honeymoon—Adrienne and Bruce.” 1 . . And so I guess Hollywood can forget those rumors of trouble In the ’ Cabot family. . . . Francis Lederer anil Jean Muir appeared together 1 again at the preview of Warner 1 Brothers’ “Flirtation Waltz". . . . And Bert Kalmar, the song-writer, ! made all the eyes pop when be tore ■ a telephone book In half at the William Anthony McGuire party *3 the Beverly Wilshire. DID YOU KNOW— That Ralph Bellamy ran away > from home at the age of 15 to become a bell-hop in a Long Beach I hotel?

with Austin Trumbull when he started to fire his furnace tor one of the season's first cold spells. As he prepared to throw a shovel full of coal in the tire he noticed a ■ stick of dynnaniite in the fuel. ,F ur tiler investigation disclosed three sticks of the explosive. o Get the Habit — Tre ere »i Home

f>3s“*l/ncls CMARItr w CHMUY ORANT , Seems like the more poppiu' off a politician does th' better he gits on. Yep. if a feller subtracts from his desires he kin add to his plei'. sure. Better t' have a warm heart titan a hot head. Playin’ th’ ponies sure sends a lot o’ fellers t’ th dogs. Some o’ these oily birds are kindda crude. A dull driver kin sure bring a car io a fine finish. o Girl Sets Hospital Record Boston. —(U,R> —Betty Mark, seven, has broken all records at City Hospital for the number of times as a patient. Betty, for the 10th time in four years, was in the hospital for a leg fracture. Because of undernourishment while a baby, her bones have become brittle- A bump against a chair or a quick jump usually ti’eans a crack or break. Farms to Plant T r ee Belts Fort Coilins, ('olo.-(U.R) Twentysix farms in 17 Colorado counties' will be planted with experimental belts of trees under directiod of

Add Zest to this Joyful Holiday with New Dining Room Furniture! Not only this Thanksgiving, but many Thanksgivings to come will be made happier because of such a purcha.se now! Karely, if ever, will you find these values duplicated ... it is prudent to buy now! Well Styled , I ft | 1 Htt DINING SUITE I I Table. Arm Chair and live f K ’■ ~I ~ #*’*! s Diners comprise this well itag styled suite . . its graceful- T ness of design is accented E C by rich walnut veneering. g NF MODERN SHERATON DINETTE SUITE $ F 1 fe - -wp:- x qT*<P Buffet, Table I 4 a,, "' h,urs TO 1 J| Beautiful Diamond Figured Veneering You'll enthuse over this Suite and you will want it for • g io I your own h° me ' No illustration or description can do ■ ■ ’ justice to its “modern” beauty of line. WALNUT DINETTE SUITE > $27.50 tfefe Five Pieces ... sketched at right * I 1 JI 1 ! Marie for long service’ Extension table, forty eight g a "sbr inches long, with two 6 inch leaves. Four chairs. In ® walnut veneer and gumwood. YOUR DOFzLARS GET Bit; VALUES TODAY IN OUR STORE. ALL FURNITURE VALUES AND COSTS ARE SO LOW. A SMALL DOWN PAYMENT WILL CLOSE ANY FURNITURE DEAL WITH US. HARDWARES HOME FURNISHINGS

CHICAGO STOCK SHOW TO BE HELD HERE | ’ ~’M' ' New Home of International Live Stock Exposition

The 3Sth anniversary of the International Live Stock Exposition will be held in this mammoth new building at the Chicago Stock Yards December 1 to 8. It is the finest structure devoted to such uses in the world. Over suO feet in length and 300 feet in width, it has exhibit space of 252,210 square feet, and the amphitheatre will seat nearly double the number who could be accommodated in the old building which was destroyed in the Chicago Stock Yard fire last May. The finest herds and flocks from ■early every state in the Union and province of Canada will contest the continental championships of their kind at the 1934 Exposition. According to the management, entries closing on November Ist were

the Colorado Agricultural College Exteusiou Service- Planting of the : trees will determine what trees are best for this purpose, college officials said. o New Arrivals at Colorado Zoo Colorado Springs, Col. — (U.R) — I New arrivals at the Cheyenne Mountnain Zoo include a spotted -

the biggest in the history of this largest of the continent’s agricultural shows where over 12.000 head of live stock were exhibited last year. Farm boys and girls from every sectton of the country will take part in tho 13th annual 4-H Club , Congress to be held in connection with the International Live Stock ’ Show. The Congress will be quar--1 tered in a handsome new building ’ on the Exposition grounds that will ' replace the former 4-H building ■ whieh was also consumed in the fire. i Farmers throughout the United I States and Canada are now send- : lug in entries for the International Grain and Hay Show, the largest competitive crops contest in the ■ world. Closing date for entering i thia division of the Exposition is

laughing hyena and a barbo sheep, both from Africa. The barbo sheep, unlike the domestic anipial, has no wool. It has hair like that of a deer. Plans Temperance Course Augusta. Me. —(UP) —A temperar.es coarse will be inaugurated in all schools in Maine. Bertram E.

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i November 20th. Premiums will ■ total over $5,000 and entries are I accepted free of charge. Thrilling riding and driving events will be included in the brll- ’ llant Horse Shows that will be held ■ every evening and on four afteri noons throughout the eight big 1 days of the Exposition. The lead- : ing stables in the land are listing ■ entries of saddle horses, fancy har- ; ness horses and ponies, and hunters I and jumpers that will appear on ; each Horse Show program. Stunt i riding and driving, polo, six-horse team exhibitions, sheep dog trials. I and parades of prize winning live ■ stock will also be featured. I All railroads are granting greatly : reduced round-trip fares to Chicago > during the first week of December ; for this leading event on the 19*4 i agricultural show calendar.

, J Packard. Connnissioiier of Educa- . tion, announced that the coursejs 1 to b- compulsory and will teach temperance and moderation in all things. —o ■- Jet the Habit — Trade at Home 0 “Million Dollar Butler" D. H. S.. Nov. 14-15. sat-tue