Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 49, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1935 — Page 5

liffl is I: IN CHINA Are BeKed i” Havc * J l '" Kmui Mi-ona.) W " .. IM a *U' '' —’ :iary ■ st Os the la>-' i - !1 "”, |HL ■■: NW<i»*> '>•»' 111 .*’ V|,lli"llltn v - UK- 1 r •’ r '"•'■ L ' l,l " jH . . '• M"l ■ -

I Make 0 ■happiness ■ a Habit ML-Wr'i -ou ,h '’ IBMHioienjo' l """ " - r! |K pi.' knxk <‘f k.-. |>'W hl >» j mailer 4 i-udir halal-. ni.i' I"' hampered ■ ■ ■ !o |^L, ; nt“bulk" in !" ur nie.il-. Mfeid wi know lh" v..ur sr.>f.T miu-.il irrc.il f‘""i obi. ii corI^Kilfii.".ndilii"'' K«-ll<»cz - AuKvox regular!-. applies “bulk." • i B -bulk” ill \iT-f-: J -’’'Uh4.'for iiTni.il iii'in idual-. than die “liiilk” in •■ 1 i"i I"' -<k Kn within the body. IR ire ii-ii-.glKwc. Chrono ..i->-. with - w y. w dortor. |Hk'i 4i- ' "noil f I mii' h Lotlaki'ic rn di< into »a- a cereal with milk or or u-c in rookinc. Get Ke|. Atl-Bm al 'eur grorer's. product,. -y«< S^ i: ' ■ ALEJRAH £ I Beep on the Sunny Side of Life

| The Home Grocery | g JOHN B. STULTS I MID-WEEK SPEC IA L S I I Potatoes-- ~ I “«? 55 ..45c So 2 a ib.box crs ..l7c I l*X. 19c 5c I SUGAR 10 lbs 47c ■ Wc want your mid-week order. wBuy these Specials. ppecials For Wednesday ! resh,y Ground Beef 2 lbs. 25c M Beef to Stew Ib. 10c v resh Creamery Butter 2 lbs. 83c Veal Steak 2 lbs. 45c *eetheart Oleomargerine Ib. 15c aac J * rankforts, Bologna Sut’f r' apCoffee Ib - 20t * “ red Picnic Hanis ?b - 17c Whom Cream Cheese lb. 23c Oysters - Cottage Cheese Home Made Noodles Va ? s of x Apricots or Peaches with meat order 2 cans 29c •tahler’s Meat Market L»l. 11,11 w ™ Free Delivery

said that Mrs. Froncham had been slain. The Frenehams were married a year ago In Hanchung. Shensi province, and on their wedding i trip went to Ningchao to open u mission for the China Island mission. . Shensi province is several hundred mih* west of Anhwei province, where late last year bun • dlls captured and publicly executed the Rev. and Mrs. John Stain. American mission workers. Other foreign missionaries in Shensi were reported to have fled to cities protected by government troops. Miss Ruby Thompson of iowa wrote friends in Shanghai that she and several others, including Miss Alma Artibey of Chicago, had reached safety. Arnold Strange, his wife and two children, of Montreal, were with the Thompson Artibey party. Shanghai reported that Miss E. M Parr, an Australian, had reach ed Sian, capital of Shensi, from Yanghsien, the provincial town from which Miss Thompson and her companions fled. Another group of British missionaries was reported, without confirmation, to have assembled at Ankang in their flight from Nancheng.

DR. VIZARD IS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE r and Elisabeth Ratledge Vizard, i Following his common school edu- ■ cation. Dr. Vizard attended the , Fort Wayne schools, the Middle- , point Normal school. Middlepoint. Ohio, and the Holbrook National i Normal school, Lebanon. I In fraternal affiliations, Dr. Vizj ard was a members of Decatur lodge No. 65 of the Knights of Pythias. Surviving besides the widow are four children, Miss Ruth Vizard, ■ teacher at the Riley building, this I city; Gerald Vizard, teacher at Pleasant Mills; Paris of Galesburg. Illinois, and Gordon Vizard of Los I Angeles. Funeral arrangements will not ibe made until word is received ! from the son in Los Angeles and I pending his arrival here. Music Program At Monroe March 8 The music department of Monrce high school will present a varied program :f music at 8 o’clock. Friday evening. March 8. in the auditorium above the Model Hatchery. The program will be I sponsored by toe high school music ' club’ Proceeds will 'be uwed by the , club to buy music and other equip ment. The groups taking part will include the girls’ glee club, the boys, glee club, a girls’ sextet, a boys’ quarttet, and th? mixed chorus. in (addition to instrumental group and I solo numbers.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1935. *

|W in .

By HARRISON CARROLL Copyright, 103 S, Kino Feature* Syndicate, Ine. HOLLYWOOD—Women, aayu Bela Lugosi, are more morbid than men. The erstwhile star of "Dracula”, now engsged Ln making a movie called "The Vampires of Prague",

Bela Lugosi

offera evidence to prevt his point During the run of “Dracula", bo recalls, the women in the aud I e nee outnum b e red the : men 5 to 1. “Or exam In e . the courtroom at any sensational I murder tr I a 1,” says the Hungar Ia n actor. I “You will And it

•rowded with women.” To Lugosi, this is all very natural. “A woman is psychologically bigh•frung.” he exidains. “1 suppose she Hkes shocks to her nervous system as a sort of counter-irritant to her mental tension." Tod Browning, who is directing “The Vampires of Prague” forMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer, goes Lugosi one better. “I know several charming women." he calmly observes, “who go to the morgue to see victims of sensational murders.” Among Hollywood’s stranger night life phenomena are an elderly man and woman, who appear to suffer from an exhibitionism complex. They turn up at regular intervals in the dance spots and always offer to do a solo number. Usually, they have their way, if they are forced to be the first on the floor and to se.ze the attention of the crowd. Their dancing is so bad it either embarrasses you, or you laugh at it. Most people laugh. But the gray haired eouple love it. Perhaps they are a plant to amuse the customers. Night club managers vigorously deny it. Anyway, I hope I don't see them again. Jerry Horwln has a swel' story for you. The mother of a certain Hollywood executive is a nice old lady who has always lived in the Gronx. She came to Hollywood recently on a visit and brought her son a wire-haired terrier as a gift. As the family were having dinner tn Beverly Hills, the dog disappeared. The son went outside and called repeatedly, “Here. Alfred—here, Alfred”. But the dog didn’t come. The mother was disturbed. "Did

"HELL WEEK" IS TURMOIL CAUSE i‘Cruel Barbarities’ at lowa University Causing Furore lowa City, la., Feb. 26. —(U.K) — , The "cruel barbarities" of hell I week on the University of lowa j I campus threatened today to split the university faculty into a house divided against itself. Prof. E. B. Reuter, head of the sociology department, betrayed the beginning of a breach in an open letter to the Daily lowan, student newspaper, challenging the veracity of statements by Lonzo P. Jones, assistant dean of men, and describing initiation ceremonies of fraternities as “sadistic tortures. At the same time university officials said a meeting of the interfraternity council to investigate charges of an unnamed mother that her son was “beaten until his eyes ■ were shrunken and bloodshot and his back a mass of blisters" might Ibe held today. It originally was scheduled for tomorrow. The anonymous mother whose letter to President Eugene A. Gilmore roused the tempest said her son and other boys were "given large doses of castor oil and sent - on impossible errands to inconvenient places" and “kept without sleep for several days.’’ Campus rumors said she is the I wife of a faculty member. Dr. Gilmore refused to discuss her idenII tty. Reuter took ireful issue with Jones statement that “these incidents occurred in relatively few of ; the houses and where they occitrr-l cd only a few men were involved." ■ | “Mr. Jones’ statement is so at j ifiriance with the facts.” he wrote, “that one wonders if the assistant; dean has been correctly quoted, j I am loath Io believe he is either i stupid or dishonest. "I challenge him to mime one| fraternity house where regulations! have not been violated. May we I not have a statement from him • I that will clear him of suspicion of being a party to the sadistics pracI tices which for years have made ! hell week a gross outrage to ipub- | lie decency?’’ Henry Recd. of Cresco, la., presi- ; dent of the inter-fraternity council. said the council is “squarely behind the dean " Ho characterized the investigation as "a tempest in a teapot.’’ STATE LIQUOR (CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE) be taken up in the special ses- 1 siou. He intimated that any legisla- ’ tion left pending in the regular

you call him by nune'.’” sbs asked. The son reassured her that he'd , called Alfred until the neighbore ( commenced to look out their < windows. The little Jewish mother suddenly ' smiled. "Veil, I nave a confession to make.” ! she said. "Until today, when I got ' to Beverly Hills, I called the dog Izxle. Maybe you’d better try that.” Where was Minna Gombell the other day whet, the nerviest of all autograph aeekers found her out and passed her a book to sign? LATE FLASHES— Ena Gregory t» dancing at the Clover club these evenings with a gent named Sax. He's in the drug i business. . . . And Nick Stuart has ; been floor-tabling it at the same spot with Ann Strauss from Chicago. . . . This rendezvous became very gay again with Frankie Masters' band and with Marcel Lamaze in charge of the cuisine. . What's this 1 between Lyda Robertl and Bob Ernst? . . . Ann Sothern’s two sisters like it so well here they keep delaying their return to New York. . . . And Ann’s dad is now headed from Seattle for Hollywood. . . . Vince Barnett now takes Sammy Stein the wrestler on ribbing tours of the night spots. But Tommy Lyman talked back fast at Marcell’s Inn. . . . New- ! comers at Warners will sing you the praises of Ann Dvorak. She is always willing to make a test with the novice, who

is plenty scared in that first trip before the camera. . . . Ben Silvey, of “The Cardinal Riche ■ lieu” company, is the first assistant d*=-ect«>r to get Klieg eyes. . . . Maureen O’Sullivan ha’ that spring moving fever again. It's three times now in a

Maureen O'Sullivan

month. . . Wonder -zt>»t happened to Lila Lee's reported trip nut here to rejoin Jack Peine Workers on | the “Midsummer Night's Dream” set I address Herr Reinhardt as “Profesor". . . . And Dorothy Jordan is studying tap danerng in case they want her to work in a musical. —-v DID YOU KNOW—That Tullio Carminattl ran away from home when he was 15 to go on the stage and was promptly disinherited by his father, the law Count Carminattl di Brambilla?

| meeting can be completed legally | I when the extra session is called. | The Woodward hill to abolish j I capital punishment in Indiana was I advanced to second reading in the I house today. It was reported out of the I committee on organization of (.courts without recommendation. Two bills were killed on recomi niendation of house committees. 1 One would have prevented the ' playing of music in places selling I liquor and the other would have prevented solicitation of political funds from state employes. The latter measure was introduced by Rep. H. H. Evans, RNewcastle, and was aimed at the Democratic administration’s two per cent club. Church Class To Give One-Act Play The D. Y. B. Class of th? United Brethren church will present a one act pluy, “The Minister’s New Car.” at the U. B. church, Friday ev ning. The public is invited. • L «i County Agent Notes < 4 Indiana alfalfa seed production of 13,0110 bushels as reported in crop estimates, will provide muclh of the seed needed for 1935 planting in the I state according to agronomists of 1 Purdue University, for at the rate of ten to twelve pounds per acre this supply would e adeiiunte to sow I more than 65.000 acres in alfulfa. ilt is pointed out, however, that | I while home grown alfalfa seed | ordinarily germinates satisfactorily I every lot of seed should -be given u germinati n lest before it is sown. One hundred seed placed between xoist blotting papers laid on one ; plat' and covered by another in I a home made gei minator, will proI vide a Hatistactory-gerinination test, lor a soil box m<iy be used. Fre- | quint moistening is necessary in either case. Grimm s d hirvtwled in Indiana is just as salMaclary as western Grimm, declare th Purdue agronomists. and comm n seed is as good gin of toe Fgt 4np ETA SH E E as the seed from th ; state of origin of the original seed u ■ <1 However, home-grown seed should ibe thoroughly recleaned t> ovoid the spr ad of buckhorn, dodd r, and other objectionable weeds, for growers who neglect thorough recleaning are frequently diJippoiuted by weedy fields and poor stands of alfalfa. The supply :f Indiana grown alfalfa seed this year justifies ninny j tarmerw in using a mixture of alfalfa and red clover this spring in tilicir rotations, th ■ Pit rd u ’ report advises, for the alt'alfii has more drought resistance anj higher jieiding ability then red clover alone. On sweet soils, or limed soils .they declare, this mixture will be found |

to be tbs (factory for hay, pasture, and fertility purposes. Other recommendi tlon;’ on alfalfa seed follows: Supplies of northern grown alfalfa seed are leas than usual, while corn belt statba liuve materially increated production. Kansan, Idaho, Nebraska, and Arizona led in production thin year In tilie west. iAr!-'

61st Anniversary of Schafer’s Furniture Savings Lounge Chair - Ottoman $50.00 VALUE Ju ’ ■ WiRM Out “ ta I ndi 7 Va 1 1 ." e ; A1 nr A great big beautiful I | ■ I I well built lounge chair I B K i JIK and large size Ottoman BKt .IRK to match. K f MEt Gorgeous color combina- # LB| b - Hiffh Grade trim ' | stilus mings - i UNFINISHED BREAKFAST TABLES Made 01 White Pine. Can be stained or paint- $3-95 Beautiful Kitchen Cabinets A Sensational Value! 40 inches wide, 67 inches X B a high. Here is an unusual val- W -F ! I - ue in a low priced Cabinet. BH B —J 1 *' Made of hardwood through- BB lull “ arjit j Xe’i.S' 8h ' d ln hish w w ■ liIWRWi Big. Roomy base, with three drawers including bread ■ J 1 - ”i''i-I"* 1 feX—drawer, roll curtain, sugar ; bowl, sliding stainless porce- ‘ lain top and large capacity a U «. W- “X”' |, !!I| , IIIIIIUI metal flour bin. Green and X/"’ jyX-T X O=SB Ivory Enamel finish. “ 4 X r~T~>' w BUY _ C NOW / j an d I* ~ ’jy SAVE L J $79.00 KROEHLER LIVING ROOM SUITES \ „ o —“TV $2.75 Drum Top $1.50 Beautiful a Beautiful Big Kroehier ft I" Tables Magazine Racks Built Davenport and Chair. 8 k assorted colors in splendid \ s Each Each quality coverings. Mot h- B| -gw « y-v* proof. Kroehier Guaranteed jjO Sag gl A Beautiful Walnut finish jh £ a, J| SKS J? Dining Room Suite. Con- Jf B R * sists of large table, large B| i ■ g BBSs buffet and 6 chairs. Beauti- Sy’ tßc S ■jp’ Sb fully upholstered. A won- v derful Special Hill f ’ | ]| SPECIAL K I SAVINGS Kl in this SALE $75.00 Value 4 Pc. BED ROOM SUITE $09.00 8-Pc. DINING ROOM SUITES A big heavy well made Bed Room Suite. Walnut finish.. A BEAUTIILL XX ALM 1 I'INISH DINING ROOM ~ , ~ ... . .... ~, . SUITE — consists of large table, large buffet, and 6 Bed, Vanity, Chest ot Diaweis and Bench. chairs. Beautifully upholstered. A Wonderful Special. $39.50 $59.00 HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS

, zona anil California seed unfortun- < •itely winter kills badly in Indi'ana an dshould not be used. Coni.non alfalfa seed from Nebraska and Idaho is ms wall adapted to Indian» conditions a« «ny common seed teeter at the Purdue University ex- ' periment (station. Common seed from Kansas and Utah has been 1 'some what variable in its perform-

ance. Seed from Michigan and other nearby statee U acceptable for Indiana planting. Growers wishing to 'be sure of the state ot origin of their alfalfa ee;d should puy particular attention to seed tags and should take advantage of "verified origin" seed wherever possible as laid additional protection. Supplies of Grimm seed are short

Page Five

| this year, and growers liking this variety who are forced to substitute other seed may turn to Michigan Hardlgan ue a very acceptable substitute, or to Common alfalfa from the north we«t with reasonable good results for permssi nt stands. In rotations, common ulfalfa from Kunsas or states farther north will be satisfactory.