Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 47, Decatur, Adams County, 23 February 1935 — Page 5
HocT E T Y
WITH PA RTV gj |tiv avenins hebruai.v --• children- twnty-elght ■ . : U ,„ |( .,'d.-* idavedHU'l * 1 " v ~: . v 'W ; "yy »*•„. -vn.t M J'-nn Mr all ,t M > Julius *W‘"nn W ; ' M ■"•' Ml '- » m • .nl (.->»-'• mid |H r . - ■ ••■ 1 " “ :i ' " ■K ■"- ,|n ' : '- :,e at Eli m -'livT IS ev :’■ 1 I'' 1 - ;,r - I 11 1 j ? ‘' ell ' - WITH party ' ' ■R - r d t ■. ;>»-r • I^M..■ j 'min - \ . T . .e ic i<li?' ■ ' '''’ Shirt. - :: l li Mr. ami IIM’ 1 ■'■■ "'■ II in ■:>- Mr. ml ■ - M anil .Mrs. T... M. a: i| Mr-. I’. 11 of Fort W i.vne. M|e An !'■ .' ; 'rim"iit ~.f the Wu-
oitwVj
■ By HARRISON CARROLL Copunrjht, IHH, leQturis f-ijndicatc, Inc. PW J'"'.s -r, would have Gaynor's nerve. redheaded actress has just the late tleotcs Hill's beachV 'he one to which the di-ector, still unexextremity jaaMa M :.’. went to ' * Wl' ,<• Hnl very takers tor _j£ aV-wt M l * 1 :e in r *& ood. Jg|||| *■* iMKI ■ a-"'.iation, jt f.tr away A -jffirmT 1° 111 ( : H* 168 ■ nimer play. . ®? Dd ’ W* llt Janet Janet Gaynor ■»» t follow tile movie crowd. She Ke !t ~S in a lloUbo al0!, «f the »te stretch of beach. K,. , hCr ” , f >€rs «‘ions are few. Kure t l P ' ,t , On ' tor a Bhot 1,1 each Kwh'ii S '° e thaf she wore ln K “ ~H cav<' n ' ’' n,,t you needn't K'll nr Ju. arn,! ’ r Takes " Wife”. K probably do It In a cfoeeuf). fc*’ ° f °* Lyle Talbot f»” fro toe±" n ; L ° ng I,land ' wou,d ■lov al |j. o' 5 '. son,e «ort or record rth.iav tlle evening of Lyle's ’pw'th y Bave a big <iinn er and P ' CtUre u » in » This ~ ! ™ d of tbe 'able. Iv have’? ° f 7 rilest Partisans not * IU Vu.‘ rk Gi,ble ’ s ' they Lyk ’ s r,Bht,ul rr'ht'stories'' * S *" rried about ramen a “ Using her ot ’**«- tha raakins , ot ta't hold ' ~h h SiO3 ' B Bbc f>s »aa dv‘ d P t ProdU . Ct ' on Until a • oanieratnan sh. SUIt bcr ’ Tt wus ’“aldn't nlmt’ Bhe ,ays ' wh ° ruled “Pes nobody w raph weU ' And »be !r fciMndiJ*! dr 5 all that about le set ar.! ’ ' dre ssin< room on andeer,nß Jo - J' ramors oth' dn 1 pnnt any ” f '" e " and er raos ‘ |g 'o>al fan of then , a °'her, who h«„ Barthelmess' • vehjtnea o “ Co * ected more tba * l and stin t T ?s * clippins about « ha s made 1 „ 6Very Pl«ure "War 19l L Be « lD «ln< 1 'he Hays « S ' T ltb Nazimov*. ayR vffice okays It, ttere'll
CLUB CALENDAR Society De«dnn«, 11 A. M. Mlm Mary Macy Phono 1000—1001 Saturday Plrwchle club, Mrs. Price Koop, 7:30 p. m. Mission Hand, Reformed church, 2:30 p. tn.. Monday Art Department, Mies Kathreyn Kauffman, 7:30 p. ni. Unit Six of Ctathollc Action, Mlsb Bornadine Lengerieh, 7:30 p. ni. Literature Department, Mrs. F. L. Grandstaff, 7:30 p. m. Music Department, Woman's Club Mrs. Stella Coverdale. 7:30 p. ni Research Club, Mrs. Henry Heller 2:30 p. m. Pythian Needle Club, K. of P. home, after temple. Tuesday Carpe Diem Club, Mrs. George ilarding. 7:30 p. m. Rebekah Lodge Pot-luck supper, I. O. O. F. Hull, 0 p. m. "Phillip for Short". Junior class play, D. H. S. auditorium. 8:15 p.m. Root township Home Economics club. Mrs. Sherman Kunkel. Young Matron's Guest Day, Mrs. Frank Criet, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Union Township Woman's Club, Mrs. Chauncey Clem, all day. Ghakeapeane Club, Mrs. A. D. i Suttles, 2:30 p. m. j Historical Club, Mru. Charles Langston, 2:30 p. m. St. Vincent de Paul, K. of C- Hall 2 p. in. Zin Junior Walther Lagtie. schoolhouse, 7:30 p. in. Thursday Pageant of Wedding Gown, Presi'byterian church » p. m. Methodist b.idiew Aid, Mrs. R. D. .Myers. 2:30 p. m. man’s Club will meet with Miss Kathcryn Kauffman, M nday evening at seven-thirty o’clock. CLARKS HONORED WITH FAREWELL PARTY Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur i Clark and children Clinton, Lou Ann. and Francis Leona, honored them with a farewell party at their home in Bobo. Thursday veiling. The affair w.is ak; Mr. Clark's birthday clebration. Contests were played and prizes were awarded to Hazel Brunner. Gene Beboat, Ditky Bebout, Louis. Bunner, Ethel Bunner. John Tlhitcher playe dtthe tamborine as accompaniment for group singing. A pot-luck luncheon w.s served _ ——,_——— — —■ _ .————_——M
|be stIH another change in the title of Dick’s latest It started out as “Smail Miracle', but Paramount , changed it to "Night Drama”. Now, they want to call it "Four Hours to Kill'. Some of Monroe Owsley’s friends arc going to hate him. He is calling up everybody inviting them to a big party to be given in the Cocoanut Grove on the night cf Feb. 29. Sure, there is no such date this year. But only about 25 per cent of the invited guests thought ot it in time for a comeback. What prominent feminine star, a blonde who earns thousands a week, would blush to know she was found out in a certain matter at the races? All afternoon, she screamed her bead oft when the odds went down on the horses she hud picked. But the cheeks she gave her boy friend to cash in were all for two dollars. HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE— Charles Butterworth's sudden trip from Palm Springs was to spend two , , hours in the doctor's oft'ce getting cactue ■ spines removed. He from his x t horse. . . . The Lederer tiff at R-K-O (when he walked out on Hl,jfljr "Break of ala|B&, Heart s') isn't ™- trying to borrow , hI in an d lie'll Charles likely bo loaned Lutterworth t(J ()np Wonder what becomes of the clothes ho was designing for himself to wear in the Hepburn picture? . . . 'Twas very funny, they say, when Jack Woody. Jr.. (Helen Tweh...vus young hopeful) came to the Ruggles kid party dressed as Tarzan with a padded club. But he cried when the merry-go-round started. And no wonder, poor kid. with all the excitement. . . . Olive Del Ruth wdil enter her English sheep dog, "Smoky” In the Pasadena show and has a good chance for prizes. . . . Jess Willard, not th* prize-fighter, has launched a badminton club here at the old Rcalart studio. Lots of celebs attend. . . . Bob Armstrong, has offers to do six weeks personal appearances in China. DID YOU KNOW— That Sally Eilers collects four -loaf clovers and has 63 ot them tuckod h4tw*»a th* pas«( of * *Wok of Browning's poems?
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1935.
to the following: John W. Thatcher, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Chronister and children Dcllie, Marjorie and KenneHi, Mrs. Fred Teeple and sons Maurice and James, Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Hwliout and children Gene. Dick. Bonnie Lou, Annabelle, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ross and sons Billy J smog, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ross i and sons Kenny, Sonny and H»illy Jane, Mr. and Mrs. Human Brunner and sons Lester, Joe, and Billy, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Daniela and daughters Florence and Clarabell?. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Elzey, Mr. und Mrs. Gifford Bunner, Clarence Gilpen, Junior Hill. Glendorie Brunner, Ethel Bunner, Dale Death, Bertha Death, Betty Death, Myrtle Death, Maxine Clinton, Irene Cottrell, Ida Mae Cottrell, Hugh Death, George Daniels, Manahall Hilpert, Clifford Death Jr., Jack Death, Mr. and Mrs. John Waltke and son Johnny George. AUXILIARY HOLDS REGULAR MEETING The American legion Auxiliary U)et at the honreef Mrs. Albert Miller, Friday evening for the regular meeting. During tiHe business session plans were made for a joint meeting with the American Legion in March. A quilt was given away, and Mrs. Tillman Gehrig was the fortunate peiyon. Games of bridge and hearts were played with prizes being awarded to Mrs. Leo Ehinger, bridge, and Mrs- Frank Linniger. hearts. A luncheon was served by the hostesses, Mrs. Miller, Mrs. T. J. Metzler, Mrs. Harry Miller, and Mrs. Albert Mutschler. BAPTIST Y. M. C. CLASS HAS MEETING The Young P< .pie's Class of the Baptist Sunday School met at the heme of Miss Min* Wynn, Friday evening. Following a pot-luck dinner, games weer play.'d , with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young, Miss Ida Potts, and Patricia Faughn receiving prizes. A new name, Philo, was s leeted. Those present were th? Missea Ida Potts. Irene Brazier, Bonita Baughn Mina Wynn, Mrs. Frank Lough, Mary Jounson, Loder J hnson. Mr. und Mrs. Kreisiier and family, Mr. and Mrs. Value Madd >x and family. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Biughn >ind family, and Mr. and Mrs. H. Wynn. The Pythian No.dl ‘club will meet at the K of P. Home, M !>d <y evening after temple- The hostesses will be Mrs. Tilhnan Gehrig. Mrs. Charles Beineke, and Mrs. Joe Hunter.
Propose Way To Clean Up Law Enforcement ■ Cleveland— (UP) A method of | “divorcing Riw enforcement from p litical rack teereing'’ wan sug-1 gested by Attorney General John W. Bricker, of Ohio, in an address i here. (Bricker urged a s-tat® council of public sifety. with a members.iipi to include the gov rn'r. attorney-; general .chief justice ot' the state . supreme court, ,tlir> president ot the Buckeye Stat’ sheriff's association and the chairman of the i prosecutor’s section of the Ohio j Bar Association. The council should eetabliali a i bureau of crlminxl Identification, I Investigation and statistics. Bricker, said. o If you wish to meet the dashing young Phillip, come to 1). H. S. auditorium lues-, day at S:l.~i.
"Dreatn Child’s” Mother Sues I-M' „ ' - s -- /fH ' Wr ' /W « /Jkf I’ I — It B . ; _ >■ w- w ■>xcdbj. 5 iMs Fno-innd’x most sensational divorce action has taken new twist as Mrs Christabel Russell, “dream child” mother, sues John Hugo Russell (insert) ion of Lord Amptill. In divorce action in 1922 he disclaimed narentage of boy born to Mr». Russell. She replied that son was hej •dream child,” legitimately conceived. House of Lords took action and denied Russell’s suit.
ROCHAS STYLE SHOW OFFERED ORIGINALITY Hats Varied In Type, Styles And Shapes For Every Woman Paris, — (UP) — Marcel R .chats put on his act at the biannual fash- ’ ion theatricals here with nil the : dignity he has exhibited In the past I but before Ire was through several : of the audience were nearly overj comq by tha originality of his new designs. For fear there might be someone with definite aversion to any one hat design. M. Roelns offered at least ten different sizes, shapes and fabrics with which to make them — I the huge ten-gallon affair with brin. I turned up all the way ar und; the coolie hat with the point cut off I so that the hair either piles through in ringlets, or shows in a smooth surface over whioii a band of I'D* bon or straw holds it somewhere near the crown of the head; the polk brunet with Salvation Army I brim and little curls poking out in i back; variations of the beret with jut-outs in front or sideways; Russian hats and fezes squeezed in at the top and flattened into almost a straight line; and ah odd model with the cr wn fitted to the head ' like a baby bonnet but with a mami moth brim that would easily protect ! the shoulders if work in the- sun. Skirt lengths probably vary more : here tha ntbey will anywhere else. Rochas offers t.be up-in-front and down-in-back models of several years ago, and further irregulaiiz?s the hems by cutting them into deep scallops or saw-tooth points. Sometimes the heme are faced with contrasting maferval, or a flaming <• lor which hides the seams which would otherwise shew when the gown wus in motionHis three-piece ensembles show ! a plain skirt, a printed blouse, a plain cape or jacket lin'd with the print of the blouse; or plain skirt printed jacket and printed bion s' but the jacket being rather informal and the blouse formal. Other i comblnati ns show a tailored jacket an dskirt with quite a frivolous i:ttl’? blouse baneath; cr the tailor’d I blouse is hidden under a vet., fem- ! inine coat. Accessories feature mainly belte , and buckles and gloves.
Grover ('. Hoffman, former De- ■ catur man. writes from Tampa. Fla , where he and Mrs. Hoffman ■ are enjoying a few days on a trip 1 which will take them entirely i around the United States. At ■ Miami they stopped with Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Helm and were surprised and delighted to learn how well they are progressing and how high Mr. Helm stands in the hotel busi- ■ ness in the south. Mr. Hoffman i says they will return home by the i last of March byway of the west- ' ern coast. Miss Bertha Heller of Indianapolis is visiting over the week end i at the Tyndall home. Judge Huber M. DeVc ss attended I to business in Portland today. Helen Voglew de, a student at j St. Joseph college at Cincinnati, Ohio, is vieiting her pirents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Voglewede of this city. Ed Higgins of Fort Wayne was a visitor in thia city Friday night. Marlon Feasel, a student at Bill Teacibers College, is spending the week-end in Decatur visiting friends. William Bell and Earl Moser ar ■ leaving for the east with several car loads of cattle to be sold in audio nsales there. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Vr.glewede attended a school d‘<noe at Cincinnati. Thursday evening. Attorney N. C. Nelson has returned from a business trip to Indianapolis. The sleet Friday evening made driving very dangerous. It covered the. wind shield and the only way one could drive was by looking from the window and if you don't think thats something, just try it. Mrs. 1. W. Macy will arrive from Indianapolis this afternoon for tihe week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Ehinger, Mrs. Mary C. Ehinger, and Mrs. L. | H. Kleinhenz motored to Minister. [ Ohio today to attend-the funeral | of John Eiting. Henry B. Heller wae attending to legal business in Portland today. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Voglewede are moving into the home formerly occupied by the Dewey Van Lear family on Adams street. Miss Glendola Reffey Isis returned from Terre Haute where she epent the past w -ek visiting with her borblier-in-law and sistetr, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Brandyberry. Corl Gass, former Commodores basketball star, 1h now a well kn'wn referee in lowa. Carl will referee a state tournament at Dubuque, iowa, Marcfi 11 and 12, and another tournament the 25, 26, and 27. the winner to compete at the national tournament at Chicago. He lias been refereeing games throughout iowa and Wisconsin during the past few months. Due to tiie icy pavements, fifteen memb'i's of the Adams County Democratic W men's Club fix in Bern; and Geneva, who had made reservations for the hinquet ibeld at the Rice Hotel, Friday evening, were unable to attend.
Schafer's 61st Anniversary Sale You Can Save the New BARTON | It makes ■ .< MmC liKr play days B. JjgF Wash Days” I •- “ 0N THE PURCH ASE ™CE OF THE B(W F i RST SHIPMENT OF THE W- BIG NEW \| _ BARTON I -.Jfji A New Member Os An Old Washing Machine Family mb, n extra large, heavy machine in all respects. Double ® insulated tub. extra large size. Rubber mounted. IW/ * li 1,1,11 balloon wringer rolls. A new safety wringer that W Blf/ 41 meets a long felt want. Fully enclosed gears. Drain and clutch easy to reach. SALE NOW ON! ——————————————— ———— We will allow $25.00 trade-in value for any make or any old washing machine c -<■ you may have. Come in and get full y particulars. / z z f Machinesnow = It doesn’t make any difference how old I on Display. i r I Come isl for a I 7 ■ your washing machine may be. We will V Demonstration. 1 / actually allow you $25.00 trade-in value. X. '* After this sale is over we jviil give a useful house- XtXZ I /I f” I** ~ * hold item to the person who had the oldest washing W I machine - H ARDWARE and HOME FUR NTSH i'nGS
BOOK NOTES By Ruth Winnes “THROUGH SPACE AND TIME” By Sir James Jeans Tiie book "Through space and time” should appeal to a great many people, for It is written In a more popular style and it presents a broader picture than most books of this type—A picture of life on earth millions of years ago, as well as the stars millions of miles away. it takes the readers on a journey si far through space that our earth looks like less than the tiniest of notes in a sunTiea.m and so far through time that the whole of human history shrinks to a tick of the clock and a man’s whole ■ life to something less than the twinkling of an eye. As a tiny incident in a great drama, we watch one inconspicuous grain of sand — I our sun —being broken up in a great turmoil, and finally producing a family of planets. We watch one of the smallest of these planets coming into being as a globe of hot gas which gradually cools and ultimately becomes a suitable abode for life. We see'life appearing, and finally man surveying with astonishment tiie strange universe in which his life is cast, and looking wonderingly and perhaps anxiously and fearfully into the future. o Husband Finds He’s One Os Two Extra Husbands Cleveland —(UP) — Gardner Gilson Ruland, recruiting ■officer here I for the U. S. Navy, came Into comI mon pleas, court here tn straighten out a little matt?r of polyandry—a .situation in which a wife his too many husbands. Ruland lias discovered he was one of two excess husbands when his wife, Mrs. Lola E. Ruland, of Everett, Mass., admitted she ihad neglected to divorce two previous busbands. Ruland filed a petition f ir divorce on the ground that his wife was married to two other men at tbs
Urge Plan to Save Resources It PjuXc tAf, ° 15- * fIiHHaHiA \ iß.9y.cnop USES OF LAND IN UNITED STATES AS OF 1930 M.A.*MILLION ACRES a [~ r ~\FQPE3T AND WOODLAND @ GRAZING land non-agricultural. non-forest President Roosevelt’s $4,880,000,000 public works program is planned as the first step in a far-reaching plan to conserve and develop our national resources. United States has an abundance of natural resources if this wealth is properly used. An expenditure of $105,000,000,000, to be spent for this purpose over a period of 20 years, is urged by the Mississippi Valley commission and National Resources board whose joint investigation and report will be the basis for much of the public works program. Within the nation’* boundaries arc 1,903,000,000 acres of land, our greatest natural resource. Waste through erosion and failure to properly use this natural wealth will be corrected by a national conservation program m which the federal government and states will co-operate. ® ——
time she married him. The cere- ■ mony, his petition said, was in New York in 1931. Tiie Rulands have no children. Movies Show Infants Growtth New Haven. Conn. (U.R) Years of patient study of the growth and '
Page Five
■development of infants was shown lin 12 motion picture reels exhibited by Yale child hygienists for the benefit of New Haven mothers. They were taken under the direction of Dr. Arnold Gessel, internationally known child development authority and author of the ' “Atlas of Infant Behavior.”
