Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 152, Decatur, Adams County, 27 June 1935 — Page 3
BocTety
honored W>' t y picnic i'XH' ~ Sm • I P»rk Tuesday lhe nil'll clever 1 in ll "' f,,rm " f a " ,l,<k \ 1,,ml shower was Mi Jr', Ini' marriage was hahi'l Hower. The gifts 111 »|„. >1 «‘| ' :i gift of till1..... meeting was eon,.:,i , aiitioutn -il that , ■ in ' HUH lll'.' Illolli V '.- ■|J I . V M l". Suttles eeifjoll ■HF |. «.!. ib i nleil t<> i oiiilin I '..u<i liming the fair ■J. -into s. holar-hie SK. ... i i .ntlv aniiomii iil ■Hp hoi bn'iili'eii fifty dollar; . p i id been awarded to ,^K, mi lHa <’fty girl. Farther HL<. h ihi leek book w<Te ala was decided to ask ■ to fur the book. r « . seven thirty o'. I n k I M. ■:'- ball Ail i| t > be prewent. — .ia t'- Shepherd of Baton :>. ■ for two month.; with Mr. and Mrs. .1 ha ...1 word W dne-ila'. ' Shepherd at rd and e.ei It • ' and were >1 to t’ineinnati. Ohio Bright. of the Women'l 'lv of the Zion It* 1 sibeiliib'd for r.. ">!''.■!> ba - l>. "it i" •:■■■■■ \V- dnesday Htt..:! o'clock in t'l. . h'l■ hostesses will b" I Do you e easily ? ish, overworked blood ikes you feel weak — ntally dull. Tonic brings vitality me to the whole body. 1Y WEAKNESS is only one the many symptoms of a low xl-cell count. Loss of appetite, | 1 right, nervousness and like i ills are often due to this ■deriving cause. eddilood-cells must be up to and vigorous to keep the tis- . -<• and to help supply tin body fresh oxygen-energy in its i the entire body of over 200 daily. 3B&S.S Tunic, in the absence of any disease, should help p«i get vital red-blood-cells back ip to It wi|] make you enjin your M*>anil help your digestion, too. It medicine. IOS years of Just try it and you. too. may like yourself again." Insist 5 -S.S. Tonic in the blood red eelw rapped package The larger is sufficient for two weeks' treatan<l i, more economical, too. Drug Stores. cs.s.s co.
I Double - Duty Dress W So Lovely to Look J At as Well as So | Practical to Wear IBy Ellen Worth /j/A'R] delightful little jacket IJp. '’I'll" A you’re needing something 'A a ? • . Ill' . \ iJ and tubbable for warm days. VJtt ex • \ K A '«>’ pretty effect is the plain shantung bodice against the ''l J £//' • < ’.,l’ '*4 K” dotted sky-blue shantung as \l/ // ‘' . • , , JJiyrK ■toed. j. ’ . , TA I jacket dress is equally at- Z_ '• .// ~ ”\ I ve carried out in sheer cotton ' ,’ / ’T ■ \ I * s, Pastel tub silks, linen, etc. B? e 'y models could be simpler than '' ' •r • J s with its sleeveless dress and ' ' ./• ./ ®* an sleeved jacket. ‘r ' ' 'J ■ s 'yle No. 938 is designed for sizes ' ■ i ‘ • /’./ y 6 ' 18 years, 36. 38 and 40-inches I S:ze 16 requires 4 yards of 39- • I ' »l, 71 BP 11 material with 1 yard of 39-inch • | ‘ • fl J ■tasting. 11 j' " •/7 j $ Jp / B/wuitner Fashion Book contains I, # j/'l niore smart, cool vacation | I ( ■ ?r '« of BOOK 10 cents. /’•/. 1 ■?”« of PATTERN 15 cents in /•,’/' * ' K® Ps or coin (coin is preferred). A.f’ •’ ’ . / 5 ■"’P coin carefully. . fjW, *, • fry Vj Matt Address: N. Y. Pat - \ I \C. Bureau (Decatur D»"v Demo■i 1 23rd St at Fift’ '’«nue. < ’ . I Cl,v /q Lu | 038 $
(TUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. i Min Mary Macy Phonea 1000 — 1001 Thursday , Royol Neighbors, Hen Hur Hall, , 7 ..Il p. in. W. '<). T. M. party, Mo ,<a Home , I 7 1> m. J Evangelical Loyal Daughters jclasn. Mrs. Charles Maloney 7;30 , j P- m. i A.iierl an Legion Auxiliary execui five committee called meeting, Mtn. | Chari, s Weber, 7:30 ip. m. M. E. I.adie.s Aid Society, Mrs. , L ota Beery, 2130 p. m. . St. Marys Twp. Homo Economics Club, Mm. Laura Davis, 1:30 ip. m. St. Paul Ladies Aid Society, Mrs. i John Hirschy, all day Eastern Star regular stated i meeting. Masonic Hall, 7130 p.m. Friday American L gion Auxiliary, LeI gion hall, 7:30 p. m. Ben Hur lodge, B-*n Hur hall, 8 p. m. Master Mason degree, M sonic ' Hall, 7:30 p. tn. Evangelical church picnic. Butler i gr ve, afternoon and evening. Methodist Y. M. c. class picnic. I Legion Memorial Park. 6:30 ip.m. ! Baptist Philo class Alice Lake, j 7:30 p. im I Posahontau lodge, Red Men’s hall 7:30 p. m. Saturday Pythian Sisters plate supper, K. of p. Horne, 5 to 7 p. m. Sunday Zion Junior Walther League, Lutiberan school, 6:45 a. m. Wednesday Zion Reformed W. M. S.. church parlors. 2:30 p. m. Tuesday Evangelical Dutiful Daughters] [Class, Mrs. Dwight Sheets, 7:30] p. m. Mrs. Ed Miller. Mrs. Fred Heuer. Mrs. Ralph Yager and Miss Matilda Sellemeyer. The program com-1 mittee will include Mrs. David I Adams and Mrs. LeMoylle Fogle. Th? Ben hur lodge will meh Friday night at eight o’clock in the Ben Hur hull. A good attendance Is desired an important business will' be discussed. The Dutiful Daughters class of the Evangelical Sunday School will meet Tuesday night at seventhirty o’clock with Mrs. Dwight Sheets. The assisting hostesses will be Mr.s. Russel Melchi and Mrs. Howard Myers. The program committee will include Mrs. Ralph Gentis, Mrs. Arnos Graber and Mrs. Homer Maloney. Th? American Legion Auxiliary will r.eet Friday night at eeventhirty o’clock at th? Legion hill. L'very member is asked to attend. NEW MEMBERS JOIN ECONOMICS CLUB The Friendship Village Home Economics Club met with Mrs. Lulu Vance recently with Mrs. Etta Wolf the assisting hostess. Twenty three members, fourteen children and several visitors were present. T[ n - .. new members were added to the club: Mrs. Ollie DeArmond, Mrs. Chauncey Jones. Mrs. Clair Kelsey. Visitors at the j — — * ■ -
PECATL R DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 27,1935.
meeting were Mrs. Davis. Mildred ’ tired Wolf. White “ nd Ml >- J h( ’ meeting was opened with l«b song after whl( . h Gran(| . " U lllvls l,ff ‘ re(l Prayer. The P'esdent conducted n business L i 7 l ion «>'" ">< lesson on the bidden value, in small equipment was given by the leaders. Mrs. Thurman Wolf entertained with accordion music ami a song was sung by the group. The lord’s prayer was repeated In unison. Refreshments were servI, ed by Mrs. Vance and Mrs. Wolf. 'he next meeting will be held , with Mrs. Harrison Miller and | Mrs. B. F. Tickle will he the leads er. ')! j kitchen furnishings TOPIC OF CLUB MEETING i Mrs. Drusilla Fuhrman was hostess to the members of the Root , township Home Economics Club at her home Tuesday afternoon. , The lesson on kitchen furnishings and testing and care of cutlery was given by Mrs. Albert Johnson. j The members responded to the roll cal) by mentioning interesting facts of prominent people of today The entertainment committee for the afternoon included Mrs. Fiank Kitson and Mrs. Sloat. Myers. The assisting hostesses. Mrs. Iva Fuhrman and Mrs. Virgil Draper served refreshments of [• ice cream and cake. o ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Winans, 339 ' Line street, are the pinents of a nine pound boy baby born Wednesday, June 36. This is the fifth child ■ in the family. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Zener of Merger avenue are the parents of a ■ bey baby born at Che Adams counI ty me.nori 1 h opital at 5:40 o’< lock ' i this morning, June 27. The baby ] ‘iweighid about eight nounds and] twelve ounces. MASONIC M eter Mason degree Friday i evening at 7:30 o’clock in the Masonic hall. Lunch and cigars will be s. rved after degree work. o Senate Will Extend Nuisance Tax 2 Years I 1 Washington, June 27—-(UP) —The 1 senate tucked down on its amend-1 r ment : utting the continuation of the nuisance tax s to one year today and adopted a conference rert extending the taxes for two years beginning July 1. The r-eport will now go to tllve [ house where its immediate jppro-
JWa Hf^YWOC© 'SzBZ
By HARIHS®N CARROLL Copyright, 1935, K°ing features Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD—What's the use of being cautious. argues Spencer I'racy. His team needed him tor a polo game at
polo “*• the Riviera, but Spence bowed out ’•«' cause he ha J , promised Cl. M. not to play [until “The Murild e r Ma n ” is finished. Instead, he and Les White,* the cameraman, went riding on the bridal-paths. Two blocks
Spencer Tracy
X W V . w - -- — from the stable, Spence's horse stumbled and threw him. The actor is working, but with a cut on his back and a sprained arm. The strange thing is Spencer has never once been injured during a polo game. Evanston’s famous foundling home, •■The Cradle”, can’t get babies fast enough to supply Hollywood's adoption demands. Mrs. Jack Haley, wife of the comedian, returned here from a fruitless quest for a boy between 10 and 12 months old. She was offered one of four months and another of 16 months, but Jack wants the other age. The Haleys have two children of their own, Jack. Jr., aged 18 months; and Gloria, aged 10 years. Ann Dvorak and Leslie Fenton haven't enough to do running their 40-acre walnut grove. They will go east this summer to rehabilitate the 80-acre farm Ann's father gave her during his recent visit to Hollywood. The land" is located in New York, not fir from Syracuse, and Is In a rundown condition. Ann plans to remodel the stone house howc ™ r ’ ‘™ J oa t the eround in shape for cultivation She and Leslie, will spend nart of their two months’ vacation •supervising this ami then will put In a tenant farmer to carry on the work. 1 What big-time studto executive is believed by Hollywood to be interred m a young actress but may surprise the gossips soon by marrying someone else entirely. ’ The nine pa a neled C °and mmmlslu wems strange without the prints that used to greet tho eye •on e«"y hand. There is only one picture in the room now. • copy ot
.'al la anticipated. The conference agreement was adopted with hardly a handful of senators on the floor. The two year extension wus provident ill the house bill. • — Memorial Hospital Adams County Mrs. Albert Coblentz route 2, Geneva, dismissid Wednesday. Mis. Mary Frances High, Ohio , City, Ohio, major operation, Wednesday morning. Mrs. Vesta Glthens, Wren, Ohio, minor operation Wednesday mornI ing Mbs P.uline D rlckson, Geneva major operation, Wednesday night. Mis. Hurry G. Schulte, Decatur, major operation, Thursday morning o A very unusual fish or reptile wue swimming in the city fish pond at Geneva Wednesday, t was a dog fish about 10 inch a I .ng caught by Vernon Pontius. It had small legs and made a peculiar noise while being carried to the pond. It wus caught with a hook and line. Ship Subsidy Bill Passed By House Washington. June 27 — (UP) — The house passed the CopelandBland ship subsidy bill after a stiff fight today, clearing the way for action on another “must” measure, the holding compiny legislation. The vote was 194 to 186. As passed by the house, the bill weatlhend all but a few of more than 40 amendments. It provid'-s for direct construction and operation of subsidies based on the difference between cost [here and abroad. It also set up a fedler 1 maritime autberity to super- ; vise subsidies and with virtually unI limited power t) extend funds for I shipping rehabilitation (purposes. q Indiana Breweries Guilty Os Violation Indiana.polis, June 27 -- (UP) — The ndi na Breweries, Inc., of Indianapolis, today pleaded guilty to a technical violation -of the state liquor law in a tieaering before the Indiana alccliolic beverages commission. The brewery was charged with ] selling a truck I ad of beer to Oner. Chesterfield was fined SIOO and •Sr. Chesterfield weas fined slbO and costs in city court yesterday on a i charge of transporting beer with- ' out a state excise license. The case against the brewery company was taken under i.dvlsbment.
a mnascape by Vaa uogn, tne outcn painter who died a madman. The stuffed eagle has disappeared, too, , along with other trophies. But five antelope heads remain, a relic ol Gary's hunting trip in Africa. It Clark Gable carries out his summer plans, the M. G. M. studio Is due for a case of jitters. For Clark is mapping out a hectic travel itinerary for his month's vacation after he finishes "The Mutiny on the Bounty". lie would fly to Rio Da Janeiro, take the Grat-Zeppelin to Europe, return via the Normandie and airplane it to Hollywood. What's more, he says he isn't kidding. HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE— Mrs. Bernard Hynes ("Peaches" Browning to you) tells the world she Is not trying to crash the movies, but, staying with her at the Hollywood Roosevelt hotel, is Dorothy Quintan. who used to pressagent Harry Richman in Chicago. . . . Arline Judge and the Ruggles heir are on their way to Connecticut where Arline will attend the wedding of her cousin. Winifred Maher. Even the baby's nurse was left at home. . . . Carmen Considine's youngster has its first tooth and tae family is plenty excited about it. . . . Dorothy Ates hears that her stuttering stepfather Is flying to Hollywood in his own plane. . . . Toby Wing is
signing again at Paramount, and that Is fine, for some of us would like to see her get a real chance in a picture. . . . Charles Furthmann, the scenarist. is in the Cedars of Lebanon ho s pital for a stomach operation. Dr. Maur Ice Kahn will perform the
Jt r, .v-SS - I I Toby Wing
! surgery. ... London may see Nelson Eddy be.ors ! he does another picture. The studio , is combing scripts to find a successor to "Naughty Marietta". . . . Mn« Murray bad a wrestler practically thrown in her lap at the Hollywood matches the other evening. Maxis . Rosenbloom sat in the next seat to ' her, as usual these days. did you know—- , That Carl Brisson was boxing in a Stockholm stadium , the day war was declared in 1914? The whois 3 audience got up and walked out 3 after the announcement, leaving f Brtsgsn glans with bis opponent.
Ready—Go!’—To Stratosphere ■/ I 11 pF i oSS® 7 "' <£ . . it V I :' ROilk W i ...r ; ..-£g . . Courtesy National Gcoorophic Scientific equipment of the latest design was installed in the gondola as the Army-National Geographic expedition prepared for stratosphere flight from the expedition’s camp near Rapid City, S. D.
LaPaz Bank Robber Convicted By Jury Plymouth, Ind.. June 27—(UP) — George Kolokas, 34. cf’i rged with aiding in the $35(10 robbery of the Farmers State IPank ■ f LaPaz last December, wae found guilty by a circuit court jury here today. The jury recommended Halt Kolokas be sentenced to the penitentiary for 35 years. Sentence will be pronounc'd July 1. Four men and a woman have alr ady been convicted and sentenced for participation in the crime. ———.—_— o Indianapolis Man Is Given Sentence Kokomo, Cnd., June 27 —(UP) — Robert Glenn, 27, Indianapolis, was under sentence of 1 to 10 years
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todny following his conviction on a forgery c harge in Howard circuit court. Glenn was released on bond following trial on similar cdiarges in Mai lon Circuit court. He was arrested hew for f. rg ri s in Tipton, Shelbybilla, Noblesville <md Kokomo. o Farmer Ltsos All In Mishap MONROE CITY. Mo. (U.R) — Ray Young is this county's candidate for any prize that is posted for the season's costliest and most thrilling accident. Attempting to ford a stream, Young lost one horse, all of a farm wagon except two wheels and a wallet containing S3OO. Q— Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
FORT PECK DAM RICH IN GOLD Fort Peck, Mont.—(U.R) -■ Literally millions of dollars tn gold is be[lng poured Into the gigantic Fort i Peck Dam here. ] When completed, the dam will [contain a deposit of ajioul |5,00U,ouo in tree gold. That is the estimate made recently by engineers. The engineers. however, hastened to add tha; there is no reason for a gold rush, it is a small amount, when one considers that it is contajned in about 100,000,000 cubic yards of l sand and gravel. They explained that for years gold has been carried down the Missouri River from the main range of tile Rockies, the Little Rockies and other mountaJn ranges in the district. Because of the pounding it has received in its travels down turbu- | lent mountain streams to the “Big | Muddy." it has been reduced to a [ tine flake or flour gold, almost im--1 possible to remove. First Monument Built In Dakota For Sioux (’bimberlain. S D. —(UP) —The first monument ever erected over the grave of a Sioux Indian chief so far as the history of South Dakota I reveaki, st nde on Medicine Creek across the Missouri River from here' It tnarke th- grave of Iron Nation, head of the Lower Brule, hereditary ■nemits of the Fuwnees, Gross Ventr a, Poncae and Crows. Iron Nation was a prominent figure in the tribe for 6J years, the e. rly ones being epent as a war chlJf. During this latter years he wan a firm friend of the whites.
ALWAYS ON TAP R i STALEY’S I] Confectionery E], m| We Deliver Ju H Phone 205 II
PAGE THREE
Traveling Rotarian Never Misses Meeting Shanghai <UP) An unbroken ' record of 13 yeutv attendance at Rotary International uneetlngu is b’lnx maint ii.ed by Mr. I M. Knopxynder, of Colton. Cal., during a seven-month rouml-th world crulfie, Knopaynder has t > date attended me-tings in Honolulu, tx»«ka, Ja pan. and Shanghai. He plans to attend meeting In Hongkong, Manila, India, Egypt and Europe. Knopsynder, uc< ,>mpankd by hk> wife and daughter, arrived in Shanghai this spring. They iplan to reach home in Sept<mber. Carson City (U.R) Whisky-once regarded as a sure cur» for such injuries—has gone out of fashion for snakebi es. state health officers explained today, to be succeeded by serum.
WINNES END OF THE MONTH SALE THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY Special on Fabric Oxfords Women's White, Rubber Sole Oxfords, priced to sell at $1.50. Now VOL Women’s White Silk Novelty Weave, Black stitched Priced to sell 1 QQ at $3.00. Now tPl** 70 Lot of Sport and White Punched Oxfords, values $3.50 and SI.OO. 00 Savings in all of our Men’s Work Shoes sl-6» 10 $3-49 Values In All Lines. WINNES STORE
