Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 282, Decatur, Adams County, 27 November 1934 — Page 3
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KBDu Hl H A R 0 U G HIA ®Sp |santly surpriseo ■ .art' !' L' t'V.ning whin I her with . homo of ln r par- . ■,| Mr.- Glonn Ronghia. K- a >om wr ,|. , :.t!l flowers and the in games j|H|. , •,]•. Roiigbla arisistod by "■ W V. ' «' :: '* rVI 11 ;l ’ Into ■ 1 ' Ml ' 1 1- hh. . Mat ! I- -I "fl \.|| i'ow < H“'irL:ia , ••• D- : h!e. Man-oil p.in BBt ' ■’ Tri< - anil flfl Itoiis-hio a.:,| < club fl f>u 4 FOR DINNER K"B . ||. .ill \'oi ilia ('lll I 111- ' in Pythias on fl Monday night with B tUg. • niboiH ipresont. Dur ... mooting it >^^fl|.., hav-’ a Thanksgiving a-! fhoir families at tno 'fl W " n Thanksgiving day. A ■*3 ami oxohango will - n \ ■ a.-nty file cent exchange ■ -r- hers were .lining r oin where Mrs. I!. fl & f M- \ In-: t Mutsi-hl- r ami .1 ... Hirilg served refreshBunco was played ami Mrs. i ‘ Mrs. Delton MADE MARRIAGE SHi ami Mrs. Ed L. Johnson anfl noti ■ marriage of t heir ei b-st I ‘w 1 ’ ’ Miss Lucille Johnson to I I’. Rumple of Decatur, si n I. F. Rumple of San Diego. fl ill November 24. fl •■ ring ceremony was perby Rev. L. R. Berry, pastor ■ of tL First Baptist church in Fort ; g '#()•:. For the occasion the bride I wo- a tunic frock of blue crepe I HUSKY THROATS I] Overtaxed by < J 1 S^W aking,slng ‘ \ smoking | K_~2c\Z^7^riSb^TL^. ■ f j tSv ALWAYS ON TAP M I Me? ” at_ i 1 p STALEY’S ; g CONFECTIONERY 'J i u Good Beer J I E Served Right. fl-
Cute for Growing Girls | v'-'" ' • ■ I I ;.! £S>I \a > ' •' •• • -h l b®O' a ? . r~\ - ,- : • I T I- EB!* ••' A / ' 1 ■ ■•••:• Sfe ® \ / ■';■’• :••' t '•■•] :•• A V 1 | Ellen Worth pattern of individual two-piece school dress. Style No. 842 cuts in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years, Stze 8 requires 1% yards of 39-inch material for skirt, collar and bow, and yard of lining, with 1H yards of 39-tnch contrasting fo> blouse. The Fall and Winter BOOK OF FASHIONS is 10 cents. Price of PATTERN 15 cents in stamps or coin (Coin Is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. Sbecatur Dally Democrat, "Fashion Center’, Times s ’“" e , P. O. Box *|7o, New York, N. Y. (Editor's note—Do not mail orders to Decatur,
CLUB CALENDAR t Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mlm Mary Macy ( Phonea 1000—1001 i _ Tuesday Kirkland Ladles Club, Kirkland high school, 1:30 p. m. , Root Township Home E-onomlcs I Club Guest Day. Monmouth Comr munlty building, 1:30 p. m . Rebekah lodge, .j. o. O. F. Hall 7:30 p. m. . Tues lay Afternoon Club, Mrs. Walter Deitsch, 2 p. m. N. and T. Club, Mrs. Charles Maloney, 2 p. m. ; Beulah Chapel btdies Aid and Girls Guild pr Thanksgiving cafe- ' teria supper, Kirkland high school, 5:30 to 9 ip. m. Decatur Home Economics Club, Mrs. H. A. Thomas, 1:30 p. ni. Zion Walther Senior League banquet, Lutheran school hill, 6:30 1 p.m. 1 Carpe Diem Chib, Mrs. Chester 1 Mclntosh, 7:30 p. m. Young Matrons Chib, Mrs. Bon 1 S’hroyer, 7:30 p. in. Wednesday 1 Elks Thanksgiving Dunce, Elks Home. Union Chapel Ladies Aid Thanks--1 giving market , Charles Brock store. 10 a. m. Frivolity Chib, postponed one week. Thursday Phil Delta Kappa annual Turkey , Trot dance, Decatur Country Club, 9:30 p in. Friday • I Ren Hur degree team practice, Ben Hur Hall, 7:30 p. m. Zion Reformed Girls choir cantata practice, chur 11 6:45 ip. m. Mt. Pleasant Lidies Aid Society, Mrs. Merle Sheets, 2 p. m. Saturday U. B. laulies Aid Society supper, i 5 to 7 ip. m. Monday Research Club. Mrs. J. T. Merryman, 2:30 p. m. with black suede .ircessories. The bride was graduated from the I Decatur high school and the groom l is a graduate of the Rockford high i school, Rockford, -Ohio. Mre. Rum- | pie is employed at the Lone's Restlaurant und the groom is employed at the laiiFountaine Handle company They will reside in Decatur. I , . The Young Matrons Club will mit with Mrs. Ben Schroyer tonight at seven-thirty o'clock. ■ .* 4 The Mt. Pleasant Lidies Aid Society will meet Friday afternoon at two o'clock with Mrs. Merle Sheets. This will be the Christmas meeting nJ exchange and every member is | requested to be present. MR. AND MRS FISHER SURPRISED WITH PARTY A surprise party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller recently in honor of the newlyweds. Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Fisher. Mrs. Fisher was formerly Miss Pauline Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Fisher are nicking their home with the groom s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fisher, for the ipresent. They were present-
>d many beautiful gifts. Th .se present were Effie Case. Forest Roop, Glorlne Gaskill, Harold Kelly, Mary and Lena Miller, Effie Lunner, Lucile Kelley, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Whltrlght, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Howell and son Billy, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Johnson and son Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. William Kelly and children, Mr. und Mrs. larry Miller all of Da'«tnr, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kelly and daughter Virginia. L wis Kelly, Mrs. Alice Quinlan of Monroeville, and Mr. end Mrs. Co Irlc Fisher. ART DEPARTMENT HOLDS MEETING The Art Department of the Woman's Club met Mond-ty night at the home of Mrs. R. A. Stuckey on North Second street. Miss Glennys Elzey was the leader for the evening and the committee also Included Mrs. J. T. Myers and Miss Neva Brandyberry. int'-reetlng papers were read by the committee on “Middle Period of American Art. 1825 to 1878.” During the business meeting plans were mode for the public meeting of which the Art Department will have charge next Monday night at the Decatur library. Plans were also made for a Christmas purty to be h. Id at the next regular meeting of the department. The party will be in the form of a pot luck suipper and toys will be taken to the meeting for the Good Fellows Club. At the close of the meeting the committee members served a luncheon. ENTERTAINS BRIDGE CLUB Mrs. Francis Howell w».is hostese to the members of the Bridge Club Monday night at her home on West Monroe street. Mrs. Gerald Smith and Mrs. A. D. Crist were guests. Following the games of bridge Miss Mary Macy and Mrs. Orville Rhodes re: eived the high score prizes and the guests were presented with gifts. A business session was held following the meeting and luncheon was served. FRANZ SCHUBERT SUBJECT OF MUSIC PROGRAM The Music deportment of the Woman's Club held a study meeting at the home of Mrs. Ben Schroyer Monday night, at which time an interesting paper on "Franz Schubert” was read by Miss Della Sellemeyer, the leader. The regular business session was followed with the study program. Mrs. L. A. Holthouse sang a group of songs. A luncheon was served by Mrs. Schroyer, Miss Lulu Gerber and Mrs. Dallas Gcldner. The Girls choir of the Zion Reformed church will meet at the church Friday night at six fortyfive o’clock for cantata ,pra-tice instead of Wednesday night. STUDY PROGRAM OF LITERATURE DEPARTMENT The regular study meeting of the Literature department of the Woman’s Club was held Monday night with Mrs, C. D. Lewton. The committee in charge of the meeting included Mrs. Lewton, Mrs. F. V. Mills, Mrs. Carol Burkholder and Miss Eloise Lewton. The regular business meeting was conducted after which the study program was given, including the study of two American poets, Robert Frost and Edwin Arlington Robinson. . . , An introduction of the period “Voices of the New America" to which these poets belonged was given and a biography of the men was reviewed. A comparison of their rank and types of work was related and illustrations of various volumes were rend and intenpretations given. Robinson is considered the greatest living American poet and Frost is second. Following the study meeting refreshments were served. The Adams County Democratic Woman's Club will hold the regular December meeting at Berne on Thursday evening, December 20. The meeting will be in the form of a supper meeting and the program (o-nmittee is arranging a Chrismas program. MEETING OF COLOR WHEEL CLUB Miss Hilda Blakey was hostess to the members of the Color Wheel Chib at her home Sunday afternoon. The afternoon was spent in games after which a business meetinc was held. A two course luncheon was served at tour o'clock. The guests were seated at a long table laid with linens. The Ladies Aid Society of the United Brethren church will serve a twenty five cent supper in the chur,th Saturday evening from five to seven o’clock. — — “TAPESTRIES” SUBJECT OF CLUB PAPER Mrs. Nellie Haney was hostess to the members of the Research Club at her home Monday afternoon. Mrs. C. C. Pumphrey had the paiper on “Tapestries" and told about the various weavings of the nation wide industry and how tapestries were used in religious services of the ancient Jews. She stated that the Vatican set is one of the most famous of tapes-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1934.
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By HARRISON CARROLL CowriPhf, 1934. King Fcaturrj Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD. . . .—ls Willard Mack had lived three days longer, it would have coat an Insurance company (50.000 The author-actor-dlrector had a tricky heart for years, but less W UKo i' uss “' l i ’ ,iy kleal tests that enabled the studio to take 0,11 a (50.000 polfl J| Icy covering his Bk k fl possible death tiy, Vg fl| during the filiu- “ e ° r t>ie Co ‘ lurohla pi. tine. ' L 1,1 wn j»« t. Th * company Willard Mack was planning to buy a similar policy on his new picture. “Glmpy’ - . which was to have started three days after he died. It present hopes are realized. Sheila Manners (Ernst Lubitsch's most constant feminine companion) will be the last of Mack's series of “discoveries". In tus time, the versatile showman gave many stars their first big chance. Some now In Hollywood Include Barbara Stanwyck, Mae Clarke and Jean Parker. It was Mack who gave Jean her first leading role In "What Price innocence?" Ths Broadway and Hollywood veteran had the same hopes for Sheila Manners. He picked her for “Call to Arms" and. as a result of her work in this picture, she now Is to do a Columbia lead. Never were there radio listeners more avid than the small group which gathered In the R-K-O studio the other night Over a private wl.-e from New York, an orchestra was broadcasting the new key tune which Jerome Kern has composed tor "Roberta". As in “The Gay Divorcee", the studio plans to use very little of the original music from "P-oberta”. The hold-overs may be limited to the single tune. "'Smoke Gets In Your Eyes" But the broadcast was of double Import The studio not only heard Kern’s new tune for the first time, but Fred Astaire got his first chance to know what he must dance to in the picture. “Roberta” is scheduled to go Into production soon. To let Astaire get under way. the R-K-O technical staff made a wax recording of the broadcast. The new picture. “Private Worlds”, deals with the mentally afflicted, and local wags find it Ironical that Dr. Samuel M. Marcus, the psychiatrist, has been engaged to tell Hollywood how crazy people act.
tries. Subtopics were given by Mrs. W. Guy Brown who told about The Manuscript, the Goeblin tapestry which was given to Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth and which has been loaned to the Cincinnati museum; Mrs. L. A. Graham told about the tapestry of the Bridal Chamber of Hurst which has- been loaned to the Metropolitan museum. Mrs. O. L. Vance told about the tapestry, the Story of Man, which in 1910 sold for six thousand six hundred francs. Mrs. Henry Heller told about the Story of the Apocalypse, and Mrs. William Schrock told about chair backs in which the eitne patterns are usually woven through the tapestry. 'The next meeting of the club will be held with Mrs. J. T. Merryman Monday afternoon and Mrs. C. O. Porter will have the paper. Degree team practice of the Ben Hur lodge will be held in the Ben Hur hall Friday night at seventhirty o’clock and every member of the staff is requested to be present. The lodge is preparing for a large class of initiates on December 21, and special representative J. A. Horn and Mrs. Horn of Fort Wayne will be present at the meeting rriuay nignt to assist in the preparations for the initiatory work. Two foxes were "aught in the hunt held Saturday near Linn Grove in Wells county. A crowd of about 1500 participated in the hunt. Grant Smith and Abie Teeter of Berne
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It was Producer Walter Wanger, himself, who wleecracked ft best He picked up the phone the other . day to consult his aide "Sorry, elr." said the switchboard girl, "but he's gone to the insane asylum.” “What?" shouted Wanger. “Al- * ready I” ’ The Wesley Ruggles (Arllne Judge) move Into their new 22-room ' home around Christmas and the dlrector comes ini to possession of ttie most unusual study In the film colony. One en’StT ’ ters by a secret wtv4 panel and. w hen 'fl ’ , ' l ' sn!l I” ,0 - a| l fl noises of the ™ "W. fl® outside world. ' I ' even of the >; houeehold Itself. ■ <■ are rut T,le t ' , j room is insulated to soundArline Judge stage efficiency. > f What Hollywood play-boy (he has a habit of doing it) took a sock at . an Important studio executive In a , late spot the other midnight to give . filmland Its newest one-punch bat- I , tie? > , KNICK-KNACKS— The latest and most hilarious development in the Max Baer-Mike i Cantwell feud comes from Cantwell > who Is telling it around Hollywood : that he used to write Max's love leti ters. The ex-tralner says that the champ’s manager, Ancll Hoffmgn. also is a “literary Lilliputian" . . . i Here’s news. “College Rhythm" did i the largest gross in the last five i years at Ute Paramount theater here s the other day. . . . Carl Brisson toured i the dance spots the other night in | i further search for a partner for his picture. "All the King's Horses". . . . ■ Mrs. Eddie Welch (he's the scenario : writer) is leaving for Johns Hopkins i to spend two weeks under observai tlon. She has been so ill and the ■ doctors can't agree on the cause. . . . Dick Berlin. Hearst executive, at the i Clover club In a party with Gene I Dennis, the mental marvel. ... A , lot of other parties there. Archie i Mayo. Howard Hughes, Eddie Mannix and others playing host. . . . The Screen Writers’ Guild is giving Its first annual dinner dance Thursday. Dec. 20, at the Trocadero. ... And Is Bing Crosby disconsolate. After raising a mustache and sideburns for slz ■ weeks to wear in "Mississippi", he has to shave them off for added scenes on "Here Is My Heart". DID YOU KNOW— That Ann Sothern captained a lacrosse team at the University of Washington?
caught one of the foxes. Mr. Teeten ■ was bit on the hand by one of the foxes. The animals were sold fur , $14.75 and the money donated to the Red Cross. The hunt started on the Higgins farm in Wells county. Della May Zuercher, of Portland, charges cruel and inhuman treatment in her complaint against Elmer P. Zuercher of Berne. The couple married September 11. 1934. Mrs. Zuercher asks $2 a week support money during pendency of the trial, attorney fees of $35 and alimony of SSOO. T. M. Reid of Fort Wayne was a business visitor in this city today. Dr. and Mrs. W. Cullen Squier and son Billy of Richmond were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George . Squier and family Sunday evening.' Mrs. Daniel Erwin of Fort Wayne was a business visitor in this city. Daniel Costello of Fort Wayne 1 visited here with his mother over the week-end and attended the St. Joseph’s school festival last evening. A new cement sidewalk is being constructed in front of the H- B. i ‘ Macy residence on North second; street. Carl Kirchoff, of the Majestic furnace company and Walther Gardner cf Huntington visited here today, being guests of A. R. Ashbaw her. They visited the 'Homestead site, where Mr. Ash'baucher has the coni tract to install 48 furnaces. I Miss Lydia Lehrmun has accepted a (position to replace Evelyn Mili 1 ler as secretary to the Decatur Sub- . i sistence Homesteads board. Miss Miller expect to spend the winter in i Florida.
I J k T* i 1 !I i IQ ive y° ur t Q ki e new c^arm JMmllllHllllll When they all come home fo r ThanksY” giving—the most important dinner of the yearl IN Wil JU ||| How much you want to please them. The food vll lil 111 wi ‘ l b e exactly right of course. The table, too, should have a fresh appearance. Why not IkwlnLlUlulLlfl ma^e 9' eam *he beauty of new silver! MN -l usf aew we " c^osen P' eces do it—and I you II be surprised how little it will cost. 11l Consult us now about what you need, and 11 I 1111! 1 iihOIII about matching the pieces you already have. t Pumphrey Jewelry Store , GRUENI K WWATCHZS <■ n I” M EMBER I'X, S"\ GUI I. D jgflfl G RUE N W.A'l'C anMMBUBIBR Nil i cr , f BEAUTIFUL PLAID BLANKETS. £- .Double Fold-Large Sizes. Rich Colors, Deep. Soft Nap, Heavy! Re-outfit every bed now. Select several pair of these Warm, Fluffy Soft Blankets! Compare Quality and Prices-We Can and Do Save You Money. 70x80 Part Wool 72x84 Cotton Double Blankets 72x90 Part Wool Double Blankets Our Sale Price Double Blankets Our Sale Price I! nown O f ■r fl flfl Peep Under This Extra _ H gO® wfl g ■« ,g» Long, Warm Blanket. g | Sateen Bound. Pair Our Sale Price Pair While They Last —— 70x80 Cotton Pair _ 72 \ B f P ® r } W l ° o ’ Double Blankets am Double Blankets Our Sale Price ■ ■ ■ ■ ff Our Sale Price $1.19 s£.□/ $2.68 Pair * Pair 72x99 Fine Warm White Sheet Blankets, each $1.29 70x80 Beautiful Part Wool Reversible Single Blankets,. $2.25 72x84 Ex. Heavy Guaranteed 25 r r Wool Double Blkts., pr. $3.95 70x80 Heavy Plaid Warm Cotton Double Blankets, each $1.69 Fancy Indian Blankets, Ideal for a Davenport ... $2.25 to $3.95 TRY OUR LIBERAL XMAS LAYAWAY PLAN! Why Not Give Blankets for Christmas? Just pay a small deposit down and we will hold the blankets as long as you wish. Every blanket you select will be wrapped, tagged with your name in readiness for delivery. Join Our Christmas Layaway Club Today. HARDWARE HOME FURNISHINGS
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