Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 6, Decatur, Adams County, 7 January 1935 — Page 3
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'^^■7oßlN$ pE:CTION STERN STAR CHAPTER .1 ( , :il i -*w* ~! „ He- dining, >n "■»J| .| • '>• n-'/t >* iir w;l1 ~| T . worthy matron.' Ml. M--'lwor ti. -i.-v . ■ h.iv < ~ . IBMII, ’"V Mr - S - M K '! Kgj . Ear! Adans will!; ... .lir:n.-r ati-1 ar-i SL;.:-. i. H-'- "'■*•'• b * l ,ur ’*' K,‘ . ..,,, mmittee In | M ' r ■ I '' r l,lk < ar ‘ ■ 1 K|- .1.., , I.' . '■> "■ Mr*. n,,| -| m|b DELORES BOOK X S ELDON habegger K,. ;1:1 ...;n. made of t.’ie nf Mi- Delorea Book. 1 i’ 3'im M ami Mrs. Janies | us i;i<-n:niue. Ohi and Eldon - Dav .1 H.(bagger | county. which t..ok 1 H „ n x..w Year's Pay at th? M,. „f th., bride'? arento. The I M . ... nmized at four i k in the afternoon. ■. .I M ;' ■ '.a Merriman! K ...a mein . Follow ing <u?per was served] |3 ■ i”' l ' l ■■ !i ini *- Tb *‘ i W - :i1 ■ " ar n,i . . M M| ~ Ze”. It-' . med < bur. h will Tuesday afternoon at two i at the church. a Missionary Society Hirl to Woman NO need for girls i to suiter every ; month from period- I I W pains, headache | W-* * I or sideache. In girl- ! M i hood Dr. I’ierce's , I .ivorite Prescrip■SKL. tion is a very bene- < '•"? licial tonic. This 8, ,W” ’ 1 what Miss Hazel * J .- - Moore of 114*2 " • MB 4th St., Michigan ' -1 I 1 became thin and puny. Monthly EESI: ■ and cramps were so severe 1 would be • a week or more —could hardly hold up I head i ha.l hardly finished the second . .1 Dr Pierce s Favorite Prescription I gamed in weight and all my suffering , disappeared. 1 have never le-en troubled way since. ’ New size, tablets SO CIS. Dr Pierce’s Clinic, buffalo, N. Y.. tree medical advice.
By HARRISON CARROLL i'fa Copyright, 1935, I- 4 King Features Syndicate, Inc. I HOLLYWOOD, .. . —The most [■homesick girl in Hollywood Is Merle M Oberon. Just as soon as she flnisbes her role in “Holies Bergere de ■ Paris”, she 11 take the first train to
New York and the fastest boat to London. Will she ever return? "Maybe for one picture like this." satd the actress, “but never to stay. I miss my friends tn London too much." The little Oberon — she Is much more petite than her
fed! ■ I IjyeJ I yb' IS, Merle Oberon
I Pictures Would lead you to believe—- | Holty? 1 * awe< * by the efficiency of I ru.l an open secret that Twen- ! ~C entul> Pictures took one look M the wardrobe she brought over m England and ordered the dressmakers to get busy. What with a ot makeup tests and other sd/mT.'.? 1 ”’ ,he rom t' an y probably b“ l ,S o'ooo grooming the English actress tor her first Hollywood picTbs results, however, are said to “• ve, y good. rec R eiv^ r ‘ Wrslst ,hat Mae Wea ‘ h “ any rJ “T* thfeaten l>'B letters. At visitor? ’ ?' r ,et ls now c10,e,! ’o the dl«tr?l th * , "° detectives from taken at,ornev ’ 8 office have guard n ?, ,helr V| K*l again. The until the 'last Wi " rela * com r ,le,el y robbery „ * member of the Jewel > gang is convicted and In jail. Rankin. 15 * ’ Well laugh froßl Bill »wdmov’i h . ear about tha Hol|y•kyrocket an t ar , h ’' ho Went up like a iown? k a d then h* 3l tha stick Mlosyncrasi?' 5 ’ * tars ’ hav ® their Under contract Cilarlcs Kenyon, likes to wLrk‘l ° Warner Brothers. 1B “‘a back vard 0 *. r . evolvlng «W •iructure Is a “ «’t«onal Windows J 2 feet ln diameter *«mhe. h a ?,°" al! el « h ‘ aides. 6a ’ had It built on an a»is.
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mlee Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Monday Pythian Sister Initiation anti in-1 stallatlon, K. of P. Hume, 7p. m. j Aaron Fox firemen's auxiliary, I Mrs. Herman Dierkes, 7 p. m. Woman's Club, Music department' In ch irge p wtponej one week. Delta Theta Tau business meet I Ing, Ml.** Cathoryn Frltzlnger, 7:301 T ueaday Christian Corinthian class. Mi*. Bo > August, 7:3 ) p. m. Tue.sd iy Afternoon Club. Mrs. Carl Smith, 2 p. tn. Rebekah 1-odge, I. o. (). F. Hail, 7:30 p. rn. Zion Reformer! W. M. S„ (hurt hi 2 p. m. W. C. T. U. meeting, Mrs. W. N.I Wicks, 2:30 p. m. De atur Home E< - nomi s /Tub, postpone 1 two wet-ks. Psi lota Xi business meeting, mayor’s courtroom, 7:30 p. m. Evangelical Dutiful Daughters class. Mrs. Harry Coffelt, 7:30 p. ni. Wednesday Zion Walther Junior League, school house. 7:30 p. in. United Brethren W. M. S., Mrs. Bertha Hakey, 2 P m. N. and T. Club. Mrs. Gregg M - Farland, 2 ip. m. Beulah Chai el Isidies Aid, Mrs. Willard Mcßride, all-duy. Zion I.iithenin W. M. S„ Mrs. Henry Krueckeberg. 2 p. m. Histern Star inspection and dinner. Masonic Hall, 6 p. m Frivolity Club. Mrs. Bernard Braun, 7:30 p. m. Thursday Better Homes Club. Mrs. Ervin Stuckey, 1:45 -p- m. Eastern Star regukir etated meeting, Masonic Hall. 7:30 p. m. Mt. Pleasant Ladies Aid 'Society, Mrs. Sam Fuhrman, all-day-Christian Ladies Aid Society, Mrs. Sum Fuhrman, all-day. Christian Ladiis Aid Society, Mrs. Fred Collier. 2 C- m. Friday Happy Home Club for Mothers, United (Brethren chur h, 2 p. m. Saturday M. E. Ladies Aid cafeteria supper church iparlors. 5 to 7 p. m. of the United Brethren church will meet Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock with Mrs. Bertha Hakey on Ninth street. A good attendance is desired. The Rebekah Lodge will meet Tuesday night at seven-thirty o'clock in the Odd Fellows Hall. Mrs. Bernard Braun will entertain the members of the Frivolity
so he can get out and shove his study around to get the benefit of the sun at all times. Leo Carrillo, the Mexican star, goes In for the unusual with an outdoor sleeping porch built, like a child's playhouse. In the branches of a large oak tree. The screened-in room Is 11 feet square and. If he should get the notion. Carrillo can leap from the door Into his swimming pool below. Last year, Katharine De Mille 1 • surprised Holly-
wood by turning down a role In her father's picture, “Cleop“tra”. She took the stand that her success, it any, must be won without any suspicion of nep- > o 11s m. Since then, she has worked steadily tor various studies. Her position now estab- 1
' Im Katharine De Mille
listed, she Is willing to act In a Cecil B. De Mille picture. Will do so. in fact, In "The Crusades". KNICK-KNACKS— Evelyn Venable and Hal Mohr attended the preview of the new Will Rogers picture, “County Chairman", and turned out to be just as eager I to talk as they were unwilling In the past. The pair are typical honeymooners. Evelyn admits she giggles every time anyone calls her Mrs. Mohr. When he finishes photo- , graphing "A Midsummer Night s i ' Dream", the newlyweds hope to i take a trip to Tahiti. Or, failing in this, to visit Broadway and see all ( the shows. . . . Paul Whiteman, Jr., now 10 years old and showing promise of being a heavyweight tike his dad, will enter the Black- I'oxe i Military academy here. His mother, the former Vanda Hoff, and his stepfather, Milton Unger, are In town ] to see him started on the new term. . . . Don't be surprised if Frank Lloyd does a picture on Jean Laflte, | ■ the pirate. Charles Furthmann Is , writing the story on Lloyd’s suggestion. DID YOU KNOW— That ZaSu Pitts has bated jewelry since childhood? She won't even ( wear « ring, _j i -
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1935.
( lab at her home Wednesday night ut seven thirty o’clock. MEETING OF MISSIONARY SOCIETY The \\ num's Mkialonary Society of the Evangelical church met in the chiii- h parlors Thursday afternoon with twenty four member* and tw > vUltoru present. Mrs. Frank Lynch led the devotions mid Mrs. ,y Martz read Back to Beetch." Luncheon study . from th ■ book, "Japanese Women Speik.” Mrs. John Fuhrman !:ud | charge of the current event*. Mrs. Fuhrman's section had i charg • f tiie program and .so Ini . hour and refioehmenta were .served. Mrs. Carl Smith will entertain ! the Tuesday aft rnoon club at her I home Tuesday, afternoon at two o'- lock. The Corinthian class of the Christian Sunday School will meet with Mr.s. Bib August Tuesday night at ueven-thirty o’clock. The Ladles Aid Society of the Methodist church will eerve a afeterii eiipper in the church parlor.s I Saturday night fr n five t.) seven o’dock. The latdie.s Aid Society of the Christian church will meet with Mrs. Fred Collier Thursday afternoon at two o'clock. Mrs. Elmer Darwachter will be the aisslsting hootess. The N. and T. Club will meet witi Mrs. Gregg McFarland Wednesday afternoon at two o’clockTlie Ladies Aid Society of the Mt. Pie .sunt church will hold an allday meeting Thursday with Mrs. Sam Fuhrman. A p t luck dinner will be .served at noon. The regular stated meeting of the Eastern Star lodge will be held in the Masonic Hall Thursday night at .seven-thirty o'clock. A dinner and supper will be served to the public at the First Christian church Saturday, January 26. The Happy Home Club for Moth- < r.s will meet Fridny afterno n at two o’clock at the United Brethren church. Mrs- Eddie Deitwch will lie the leaders and Mrs. Franklin ansi Mrs. Beatrice Gilpen will be the hostesses. All members are urged to be present. The Zion Walther Junior league will meet Wednesday evening at seven thirty o’clock in the school house. o PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Alex Sutton and daughter Nancy of Crown Point, and Murray Sutton and daughter Patsy of IvOtiisville, Kentucky, visited with the J. C. Suttcn family over the week-end. Among the subscribers who renewed their subscription to the Democrat this morning were C. D. Lewton of this city. Will O’Brien of St. M-irys. Ohio. Mrs. J.M. Street, Ro’ k ferd Ohio. F. W. Holthouse. Louis-1 ville. Kentucky and A. L. Colc'.iin of Chesterton. Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. A. J.. Metzler visited with relatives at Garret over Sunday. (Phil Sauer. Decatur contractor, has just completed the construction of a three car garage abutting the north side of the General Electric building. The outside of the ganage is covered with galvanized iron. It contains a • ement floor and is heated. Harry McDermott of route 5 was a shopper in this city Saturdaynight and stopped in and renewed his paper for another yotr. Mart Boese of route 1, Ricuard Bleeke of route 5. A. A. Drummend of route 3 and Amos 'Valters of route 5 were shoppers in this city ‘Saturday and stopped in and renewed their subscription to the Democrat for another year. The Mount Pleasant Bible class will meet Wednesday evening with Mr. and Mt*. Will Jones at 7:30 o’clock. , 'Walter Thieme of route 5, Jvlin r Carson of Munroe, Gordon Burkhart of route 2. Monroe and Mrs. Amos Fisher of Fort Wayne renewed their subscription to the Demo--rat Saturday. Sloan Myers of rente 7 and Emil christener were in Saturday and renewed their -papers for (.mother ye pearl Laisure of route 7. Bernard Braun and Mrs. Hart Hollingsworth of this city renewed tbe >; R " bsCriP ' tions to the Democrat Saturday. Miss Betty Jean Young, two, year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank ««,, a sold "'' d * ' " r “2 contest conducted by the Seans amt Roebuck --omiiany in connecßon wWt' the Century of Progress. Her mother was formerly Mabel Gould
BREAK VP THAT cold with Corax Cold Tablets 25c per box KOHNE DRUG STORE
.. J n-% OMPffikiia JI f' i /i vkXttjl v -Sggg /Wk ~ tiifw Bc/orr closing this pleasant evening. . . ivhich bas been held in the interests of f ami brevity... may i say.. . wl - "xB Long speeches have been made about this and that, but when it | comes to a good cigarette, you can say it all in just a few words ... / /. /- — they’re / they MILDER / TASTE BETTER © 1935. Ligcbtt & Myers Tobacco Co.
jof near Monroe. Alphons Kohne of thia city, a constant reader of the Daily Democrat ever since it has been printed was in today and renewed his paper for another year. Dr. F. L. Grandataff of this city and Walter Hoffman of route 1, Decatur were in this morning and renewed their suits riptions .for another year. o — SEE BOOST IN TAXmENTS Gross Income Tax Payments By Faarmers Are Expected This Month Increases in prices of farm products, together with the distribution of millions of dollars to farmers by the federal government, iare expected io add many thousands of Indiana farmers to the list of gross income taxpayers filing annual returns this month. Dee Fryback. auto license branch manager, said today. Mr. Fryback jointed out that government contracts with farmers have been divided into two classes for gross income tax purposes. Income from the first class, including wheat contracts and other crop reduction plans, ’s taxable under the gross income tax, he said. Income from livestock contracis, however, is not taxable. Crop reduction jilans. Mr. Fryback said, are considered rental contracts, under which the government rents the land from the owner and takes it out of production. Rent money received from the federal government is not exempt under the gross income tax law. Receipts from livestock contracts, however, he said, are considered benefit papments ae the sales price of livestock. Since j direct sales to the federal government are exempt under the gross income tax law, income from livestock contracts is exempt. o BABE’S NURSE CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ■ .1— . I, I I with Edward J. Reilly, her cross-I examiner, admitted she had been given $650 and her passage from Scotland to return and testify — but she said she did it to aid
justice. Justice Thomas W. Trenchard t ordered that phrase stricken from i the record, but the girl’s declara- • tion, made through scornful lij>s and with flashing eyes, made its • impression. Two sensations were provided I early in her cross-examination. ‘ i The first was when Reilly, as he had promised, began to explore her relationship with Henry (Red) Johnson, the sailor who was her sweetheart, and who was himself held in jail for weeks until he I could prove that he had no con-: hnection with the kidnaping. ) The second was when the name of Violet Sharpe, maid in the I household of .Mrs. Dwight W. | Morrow, Mrs. Lindbergh’s mother.; was brought into the case. Violet was the young woman who, rather than face an inquisition of the New Jersey state police, committ- ■ ed -suicide by taking cyanide of ■ potassium. c DEATH CLAIMS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE . I | tery at Ohio City. Rev. Weihl, i : pastor of the Lutheran church at i Ohio City, will officiate. The body will be removed to the . home this evening from the S. E. ,: Black funeral home and may be viewed after 7 o'clock. BANK BANDITS i - CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE and is being held here awaiting trial on a charge of conspiracy. John Ftflk, farmer west of Bluffton, was absolved of any implication in the alleged plot to rob the bank and was released. The gang was taken into cus- . tody following a raid on a down- , town apartment here Saturday by ' city, county and state police followJing a "tip” that the bank was to jbe robbed Saturday morning. They I were taken to the Huntington I county jail immediately after be- ., ing captured for safekeeping. , I The arrest of the gang cleared .; up several small robberies which ! have been staged in this territory .I in the past few months. o Knights Os Pythias Plan Dance Tuesday The Knights of Pythias will hold a dance in the ledge room Tuesday I evening at nine o'clock. Hal Teeters orchestra will furnish hire music. A special invitation has been extended to high school students. Not admission will be charged.
FORMER COUNTY RESIDENT DIES Mrs. Rhoda Gearnand Dies Sunday After Extended Illness Mrs. Rhoda Gearnand. 65, widow ■of Jasper Geirnand. and a former ; Adams • ounty resident, died at (her : home at Reiffsburg Sunday mornI ing at 4 o'clock following a year's I illness cf heart trouble. Mrs. Gearnand was born DecentI her 10, 1869 in French township, j Adams County, a daughter cf j George F. and Phoebe Lion rdKing. Her marriage to Mr. Gearnand took place in 'Bluffton on December 11, 1892. Her husband preceded her in death in 1933 (Surviving are two daughters, | Miss Verna at home; Mrs. Floosie i Tschannan of Nottingham township ■ a brother, S latuel King of Portland, and two sisters, Mrs. Newton Tutwilier cf Fort Wayne and Mrs. Albert Johnson of Muncie. One son and a daughter ore deceased. 'Funeral services will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o’clock at ti e Reiffeburg Methodist churih with Rev. H irold Neal officiating. Burial will be made in the Gearnand cemetery. Friends are asked to omit flowers. FOUR BILLION CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ance except for expenditures to I create work for the jobless. Tlie trend of net recovery and relief expenditures is downward for the next fiscal year compared with the one which will end June 30, 1935, and regular federal expenses are increasing. Mr. Roocevelt foresees overall expenditures of $8,520,000,000 in the next fiscal year, slightly more than half of it for recovery and relief. The administration is convinced this rising rate of expenditure does not in any way require currency inflation. Profits on gold seizure -- $2 - 811,000,000 —have not been tapped so far for regular or emergency government expenditure. That hoard is regarded as a .comfortable backlog of ready cash for the use in unforeseen and unprecedented emergency. Treasury statements indicate, however, *hat some profits from the minting of silver have been spent. For national defense Mr. Roosevelt proposes an unparalleled k
| peace time outlay of $590.948.035 l of which approximately $103,i 000.000 is a carryover from the . ‘ present fiscal yvar. The remainder i<s “new money 1 ' for the defense I of the nation. Regular expenditures in the I' fiscal year 1934 aggregated $2.462,000,000; in 1935 $2,748,000,000 based on estimates for the remaining months; end in 1936 $3.I 302,000,000. Recovery and relief i expenditures: 1934. $3,930,000,000; i 1935, $4,671,000,000; and 1936., ■, $4,012,000,000. Total expenditures 'exclusive of debt retirement: 1934 ; I $6,392,000,000; 1935, $7,419,000,000: ! and 1936, $7,314,000,000. The net deficit: 1934: $3,629,-
Butcher Type Apron - T" 7 I I \ \ \ e* • 9 \ \ ; H\i I >’• vJzv \\ V, 1 ! natty—.2' '7' 7 * • <JF r : • -A./ - ' Z * * * ’ 1 nr—• *■ • » • 7/'.-■■l . J HWW' *** * ****-\ * A- -• 7’J \ if L . 821 r _J Ellen Worth Style No. 821 of easy to wear and to males apron, needs no introduction. Designed for sues 36 to 46 bust I Size 36 requires 2 yards of 39-inch material Our BOOK CF FASHIONS is 10 cents. Price of PAI FERN IS cents in stamps or coin (coin is pre'erred). Wrap coin carefully. Decatur Daily Democrat, “Fashion Center’, Times Square, P. O. Box 170, New York, N. Y. (Editor s note —Do not mall urden to Decatur, 'Pdlana.) . .....
Page Three
000.000; 1935, $4,25u,000,600; 1936, $3,892,000,000. Mr. Roosevelt expressed the hope as he submitted his message to congress that diminishing figures for recovery and relief and for total expenditures represented tlie beginning of a series of annual reductions leading ultimately to an absolntely balanced budget. He expressed no opinion when the budget might be balanced. Attendants of a local ccnfe tioni ery stated today that two boys purporting to bq “Siamese twins” stopped there Sunday noon. The twins said they were from Porto Rico and were accompanied by a party of tDree.
