Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 174, Decatur, Adams County, 24 July 1935 — Page 3
koCl ETY.
Ka^HipV'i- LAGe H’Jcs club meets t* Friendship Village Hom* , | llh Ul .t rwently with „ Mill-r with twenty ,„ one children .! Mrs. Mary TutnbleTumblveon. Helen 'W '■. . i’■•"• Mrs - Tl,un,,! ’’ , "lid Mildred EdIVI by Mrs Lula ( . . -ul.-nt ..inducted .. .all with patrioproject story of ».<«• re. n by Mrc. ,K 'bna M ::i he.son on canning .„ ill. Dwight Hauden\l . M. rriman. The club W, riv.-n by Mrs. Miller. M itdii - woe a f.ature of and Miss Miller - M ... .lA.irds acted as and groom. in B ” rlle Tues - : : The meetwill. in- Lord's prayer. ~^8.......v s.rved by Mrs. , 1 M •" Haudviibush. COMICS CLUB |m n was hostess a.Hi.bre of the Root townat her .ifwrnoon. During s.t.-ion plans were ; ' in the Dairy Dey -treshm- nts. ' n- Pinochle Club i^B| n i f- r Friday night at the - Mrs Francis Eady has Saturday p„ ah lodge Will meet Men's Hall. of the Bap- - *Bwa.- promptly at seven ' - L-gion Memorial ’ Women of the Mooee will at . igh- o', lock 'in the : ember Ls re-
ga
HARRISON CARROLL Copyright, 1935, j Features Syndicate, Inc. LYWOOD—Some of our stars ike a hint from Gary Cooper, is approved plans for a sixouae on his two and one-half ot avocados in Brentwood, he will be neighbor to Franchot Tone. W. S. 'i Van Dyke, Henry Fonda and many other bright ■ lights of the cinema village, k Gary's modest T,. est a b lishment, | with only two i. bedrooms, will be IT in sharp contrast ■ / V to the hotel-like K mansions of ;j| some other film folk. What with 7 Cooper ai Jolson also building a small It looks like a new trend s simplicity In Hollywood. <e ot interest. The trouble on tter Ibbetson" script Is Ironed i all la harmony between Gary, iardmg, Ernst Lubitsch and ne concerned. hottest rumor of the week was ae West is the real author of ta Desir, the play that Jim f snd Boris I’etroff will stage •wllytown theater next month. w under investigation. The ! simllisr to some of Mae’s old offerings, but is being -_»d by Petroft from a story • Stanley. 1 tophat and diamond opera crowd (or is there A , !ake the news ‘hat Lily p i? a * lotc^la dance number K_K.O-Radio picture. “Dove ' Hollywood Is bending over ““ to get away from the old Mtatic methods in presenting fan.’ 0 ' 6B ° f ‘ h ® WOrid t 0 the Pons - by the way. Is hand at clowning. Not to . who «&w the Author's snow | n New York )ast biV, hen L,ly - Q!a dys Swarthlooche*r n JePS ° n Bane " Minn,e »c t S Wn?\ and rm Telling You: ’inn, Hollywood, Cal.: The ‘ Paper writer to interview Mordaunt Mall L editor »t the New York iUr'. durin 8 the filming o! ■ r. u sllent Picture, "The ht«h„ . Wae 80 upset ‘hey the X t*°* ne that day wnti wilt was over. r »MM C ° ntiaul,sr on • Barban w<) “ld seem to be tame work
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. i Mins Mary Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 i ' • Wednesday Zion Walther League, lawn party, i Miss Florence Reldenbach, 7 p. m. Delta Theta Till sorority, Miss . Agnes Baker, 7:30 p. hi. Union township Woman’s Club, Mrs. Frank Oleckler, 1 -p. in. Zion Junior Walther League lawn party, Lutheran school, 7:30 p. m. Decntur Home Economics Club, Mrs. Charles Hammond, postponed. Thursday Baptist W -men’s Society, Mrs. J. C. Strickler. 2:30 ip. m. Pleasant Grove Missionary Society, Mrs. Fred Bittner, 1:30 p m. M. E. Ladies Aid Society, Mrs. B. J. Rice home, 2:30 .p. m. •St. Luke Ladles Aid Society. Mrs. Andrew Brewster, all-duy. Evangelical Loyal Daughters class, Mrs. Francis Eady, 7:30 p. m. First Christian Indies Aid, Mrs. Jamm Anderson, 2 p. m. Zion Reformed W. M. S., church parions, 2:30 p. m. W. O. T. M. regular meeting, Moose home. 8 p. m. Friday Baptist Philatbae class, Legion Memorial Park, 7 p. m. (prompt. Zion Reformed Mission Band, j church parlors, 2 p. m. Pocahontas lodge. Red Men’s Hill 7:30 p. tn. American Legion Auxiliary, Leg- ; ion Hall. 7:30 p. m. United Brethren V. I. S. class, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Hill, 7:30 p. m. St. Mary's township Home EeonoI mics Club annual picnic, Pleasant Mills school, 7:30 ip. m. Saturday Pinochle Club, Mrs. Francis Body 7:30 p. m. — i averted to bring a (basket for the i poor and also old magazines. The Zion Reformed Mission Band ' will meet in the church parlors Friday afternoon at two o’clock. o Wrong Righted on Canvas Fremont, 0., —(UP)—For years I the water in a picture at the city I hall depicting a scene of the War of 1812 ran up hill. The city council, tired of jibes, recently authorI izezd the retouching of the painting to correct the stream’s condition.
£o» Palsy Huth Miller, who once knocked at the door of stardom, but she has an interesting theory. “I could have worked a couple of more years In the quickies.'' she said, "but. at the end of this time. I would have been completely out ot the Hollywood picture. I wanted to change to writing and the time to do it was before I was forgotten. That Is the trouble with most girls In pictures. They wait too late to try to find a ,place for themselves in another branch of the Industry." What associate producer got In a terrific word battle with a visiting San Francisco society girl at a party recently? Insults were traded freely and, to make it more exciting, the producer's girl friend took up the quarrel later on when she and the Bay City deb went upstairs to powder their noses. HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE-SI Bartlett, one of the film colony’s smoothest dancing partners. Is going about these days with Jane Frances Mullin, local socialite, . . . Hollywood didn't even raise an eyebrow when Adrienne Ames and Bruce Cabot dined together at the Brown Derby. Nobody believes these . ■ lnteresting to see Marlene Dietrich Jg and Brian Ahern renewing an old friendship at a '’Kg M nearby table. . . MK ' Vith llttle Maria along for com(PP’' vJjKggl pany. .. . Some i silly is reviving > . * the old gelatin l I gag at parties, r Marlene Dietrich Some fun! .Just s slip up Into your r host’s bathroom, draw half a tub of 1 hot water and drop in 10 packages ot » gelling powder. . . . Lyle Talbot is 8 planning a fishing trip with Peter Smallwood, his dramatic coach at the 8 University of Nebraska. ... That was o Paulette Goddard, lunching with 8 King Vidor and Betty Hill at Sardis. ‘ These three and Chaplin are insep- - arables. . . . Bill Powell's kid (he's e 10 years old) Is off with a group of schoolmates on a slx-month bus tour of the national parks. . - • And : Vilma Ebsen, the dancer, has played e so much tennis her racket arm (the K right) has become overdeveloped. 1. Bill Fields used to have ths same k trouble, but not from tennis, if y DID YOU KNOW—iI That Charlie Chaplin once made * two-reeler. “One A. M.”. in which he was the only actor except a taxi y driver who exited after a brief apk pearance at the start sf the picture.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1935.
■ -W -x - *'*« '•> '''K. \\ x . r * -XL jb Wliik .. \ ■*** x r i K*’ ’ IwK MCWKltog *'"■ ••’ wm K a ■-. 4 . - <sr|| ‘ * - * s ’ &xs3fSf wMBBr - M H g / /)/)*/ujCf Lhe testimonials you hear ,VtL W W( . f • a m When you hear friends telling JjyJr friends that they like Chesterfields because they are milder—or because 7 / X there’s something different about the taste that appeals to them — that means a lot more © 1935. tiocrrr & Mms Tobacco Co. ’v-hWrrrMW-'
E<l Zwiok, trustee of Preble township transacted business in thin city Tuesday. Tom Ehinger, who has been confined to his home on West Monroe street for* tihe past month, is feeling somewhat better. The Misses Neva May Glancy and Dorothy Farrand of Bronson, Michigan, the Misses Bernice and Marjorie DeVoss of this city left Tues day morning on a motor trip through the east. They will visit at Atlantic City. Baltimore. Washington. D. C.. New York City, In North Carolina and ether points ot interest. Ruda Keisse. Maynard Butcher, IBudd Hoffman and Don August left tor an extended trip through the East. They will visit at Columbus, Ohio with G. R. Reason and at Gettsyburg. to view the battlefield. Other places of interest they will visit will include Washington D. C, New York City and Niagara Falls. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Sims of Frankfort have returned to their homes Don Pablo and his Orchestra Edgewater PARK CELINA, OHIO SUNDAY JULY 28 10c Admission Park Plan.
1 after visiting with the James F. Halberstadt family at Pleasant Mills. 1 . Arthur Sundermann returned to 1 his home in this city Tuesday . ftcr a two weeks visit at Charleston, W. Va. He was accompanied home by Robert Smith, one of his boyhood friends at Indianapolis, who now ’ 1 resides in Charleston. Phil Sauers made a business trip to Chicago Tuesday. Rufus Case, Ed Colchin and Fred Schurger made a business trip to Fort Wayne this morning. Charles Losehe, small son of Mr. and Mis. Bernard Losehe of north Fourth street, who lias been ill for . toe past two weeks was able to ocme up town today. William Bell made >a business trip to Chicago today. The Schug insurance agency of Berne, county managers for the . Peoples Life insurance company recently paid the life insurance claim [of the late Charles W. Hitchcock of this city for the policy held by i him in the insurance company. The . insurance was payable tq Mrs. F-an- . nie E. Hitohcock .wife and benefic- ■ iary. G. O. Stauffer, special reprei sentative for the insurance oom- ; pany had charge of the details of the settlement. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hurst, Miss Josephine Hill and Virgil Andrews 1 have returned from a motor trip to southern Indiana, Kentucky. Ohio ' and Illinois over the week-end. . Among the points of interest they i visited were Cincinnati,, Ohi >, LexI ington. Bradestown, Stephen FostI er’s Old Kentucky Home Hagenville j and and Abraham Lincoln's birthI place, Fort Knox, wihere they saw | the large CCC camp and army train- ; ing camp and Louisville, Kentucky. They crossed the Kentucky river inI to indiana and visited wito the Ollia Leßrun family at Terre Haute, and . stopped at Turkey Run enroute I home. Mrs. S. N. Farson, and sons Gene and David of Oakland. California, , left Tuesday for their home after ! spending the past few months with (•Mrs. Dora Cook in this city. J. S. Mills and daughter, Mrs. , Liliih Grimm motored to Decatur 1 from Chicago today and will visit I with F. V. Mills and family. J. S. l Mills is a brother of F. V. Mills. They will all attend the Mills family reunion near Mt Vernon, Ohio, July 28. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Macklin left for Evansville after spending a week here with Mr. Macklin’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Macklin.
■♦ ; ♦ Memorial Hospital j , Adams County .. ♦ ♦ Ruth Tumble-son, daughter of Mr. nd Mrs. Harley Tumbleson, Route I 2, Geneva, dismissed today. Mrs. Hattie Lehman Beßrne, major operation. Wednesday morning. Raymond D. L Brun. Wren, Ohio 1 medical patient. Helen Manley. D- cutur, medical 1 p tient. > | o RELATES STORY 1 : ' ■ CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE 1 Texas power officials cost $1,467.- > 87 ' The witness said that while he was in Washington he conferred ' also with S. R. Inch, president of . the Electric Bond & Share Co. Carpenter said he saw other i congressmen and also Senators : Morris Sheppard and Tom Coni' nally of Texas at various times >, before and after the utilities -1 vote. . o FOUR JURORS r CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ously. ' j The first panel of four jurors sworn in include: Karl Hausman, ’ j bartender; James AV. Belcher, en- ’ gineer; Ed Holtsman, repair man; ’ i and Charles Boyser, unemployed cordage maker.. ABYSSINIA IS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ■ of possible collaboration between . Great Britain and She United ■ States to avert war between Italy ■ and Ethiopia was given ‘ln the I house of commons today by Sir > Samuel Hoare, foreign secretary. Sir Samuel, replying 'to a quess tion of Brig. Gen. Edward L. Spears on Whether Britain was trying to .’ achieve a joint policy w-ith the , United States, revealed that he already had expressed to Ambassador Robert N. Bingham Britain’s ' “satisfaction with the recent utterances of Secretary Hull about the ' obligations taken by all signatijries ' of the Kellogg pact.” Sir Samuel assured thfc house that the government “is always ready to co-operate with the United states government to preserve : peace.” i The foreign secretary refused to ■ commit Britain in advance on what action she would take if hostilities
k i break out. Asked whether the I great powers would carry out their I obligations under the Kellogg pact, I which binds the signatories to drop ’ war as a national policy, he said: "The matter is to be determined : in the sight of the circumstances of this particular ca.se and such ■ provisions of the covenant, as are • applicable to it.” > The cabinet was understood to have decided, contrary to expectaI tions, to refrain at present from independent British action on the shipment of arms to Ethiopia. It a'so decided do raise the whole’ question of the shipment of munitions before the league council. . j o Strikers’ Wives Join In Picketing I I ' ’ Camden, N. J.. July 24 —(UP) — Wives, mothers and sweethearts of ■ 4.600 striking employes ot the New i York shipbuilding corporation join- . ed mass picketing at the plant toi day. i The women formed their own line across the street from the shipyards. Several of the. marchers carried babies. They shouted encouragement to the men. Union officials claimed that tiheir pioket strength was larger today ' than when the company made an attempt yesterday to reopen. John ’' Green, secretary of the Marine workers, arrested "There were S9OO in line.” I — ——o Lima Suffers First Strike In History Li na, Ohio., July 24 -(UP) —The first strike in the history of this i town was called today at the plant 1 of the Mersman corporation, manu- ' fiictur ’r.s of furniture, when more i than 500 men and women walked ' out. The strike followed the dismissal . of eight workers Monday after a i mass meeting with an organizor of > the carpenters’ union of Cleveland > t Griehop Grove on Grand I-ake - near here, last Tuesday. Many of • those discharged have worked at i tiie i;lant 15 and 20 years. SPEED RELIEF i CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE i created 103,000 new jobs. Works progress administrator > Harry L. Hopkins said the $134,851,837 recommended by the allot- > ment board would start the prot i gram in 13 states by August 15. i j Men will be put 'to work, he
5 said, at an average cost of less r than S7OO. . , Hopkins backed relief directors > of wheat belt states who announced that any person who re1 fused employment in the harvest ’ fields would be shut off from re--1 lief. Aid already has been with- ! ' drawn from 19,000 family heads in South Dakota. ’ The PWA bonds to be purchas- ’ ed by the RFC will go into administrator Harold L. Ickes’ revolving fund. The money- will be '0 loaned at 4 per cent to states, counties and municipalities to cover 55 per cent of any approved construction project. PWA will make an outright grant of the other 45 per cent. f I ——o . Trade in a Good Town — Decatur i
Raglan Sleeved Swagger Coat For Smart All-Occasion J \ Daytime Wear By Ellen Worth 1 Here s a simple to sew swagger 1 1 f \ i coat that finds an important place in iTvYW / /VoZaEUU\ ■ every smart summer wardrobe. HH ioaays pattern also provides for lUimv iT-U seven-eighths length as seen in the taJIZJu I'TTh~Tv<Sf small back view. i Lightweight wool in vivid colour- - ing as emerald green, red, purple, etc., is very smart over dark sheer j=4-lr7j . frocks. l=FMjfal/ > ’ / 7/ leSs i White, navy, or pastel linens are td t enchantingly lovely for town or re- / F?' JJ sort wear. y njHI / iH It’s made at a verv moderate cost. Style No. 312 is designed for sizes : / 14. 16. 18 and 20 years. Size 16 re- J quires 2% yards of 54-inch material | / /I jJLXA 1 with 2% yards of 39-inch lining. / / /jl rtl [I Summer Fashion Book contains IJLII /B ? ill , | many more smart, cool vacation /nO| / MiTTII , clothes. Order Your Copy Today! I "*<J l I Price of BOOK 10 cents. I i j 1 Price of PATTERN IS cents, I / I i (coin preferred). Wrap coin care- I | / ' fU,ly " * I Pattern Mail Address: N. Y. Pat- I i 111 ern Bureau (Decatur Daily Demo- I I / I 111 erat) 23rd St. at Fiftk Avenue, I / I r 'Jew York Citv. I k I I I 312
PAGE THREE
Old “Black Maria” Retired Quebec, Que. —(UP) —Quebec's old-fashioned (‘Black Maria," a familiar eigiht on the city etreete for a century, ie to ibe scraptped. The City Council has decided to give the department a motorized patrol to transport tipsy citizens to jail. o Women Anglers Form Club BOWLING GREEN, O. (U.Rb-It’s the women here that are telling the fish stories. Housewives have formed an organization to record large catches immediately. Mrs. Irene Warren landed a nine-pound pickerel. She’s the record-holder j at present.
