Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 179, Decatur, Adams County, 30 July 1935 — Page 3

'■kT"ruth williams Raised ON BIRTHDAY Kuili Williams. superlntenChristian Eml-’a-ciiinsl Brethren churcn 3 surprised at h r ’ ine.mlr-rv of the ' W>’ 3 v ., mv afterno ti. the oc- . •irtlid> y , large lawn of Mr. I y, ■ Late in the after1 -upp rw> s rved " »:n of the William* , was pr pared by j who will be pro-1 tills eiv.al a number years sub*< ripM. A. ,, other than the ■R. I'hri-stf n End avor \p I’anl Johnson atjd ~ iM-'iie. Eileen and Paul. . nd Hel n Williams. y ■ Sunday S< hoei and

|IcSQU|pES I Ia L- *s k K I f’opyriyht 1*35, Baldwin : . Saegertown, T‘a.

L • Rehinp< <%e /O K « Hollywood

By HARRISON CARROLL ConifTiffV, 1935. King leatureg Syndicate, Inc. BOLLYWOOD—Even after a year, oliywocJ has not recovered from e shock of Russ Colombo’s passing, amer Brothers are remembering cither hundreds ~ AftjWl of old firearms K 10 ~se<* * n K v James Cagney’s V 1 picture, “The X 4H Fr!sco Kid” ond ** fl 1 “ "Captain fl Hlood". A sweep’s Jfl Ing order has |y|L ~ v been Issued by ! Jack Warner ,f every- «eapon be examined The late before it reaches Russ Columba a set. It was aforgotten large of powder In a Civil war pistol >at sent a leaden ball crashing trough Colombo's forehead. Hollyood wants no repetition of its most MUstlc tragedy. A cable from London, canceling etie Markey's trip there, left Joan er.nctt with a big golng-away party tier hands and nobody to bid faree ' As I’s Invitations were out 1 all arrangements made. Joan did ®e quick thinking. Result—the air Was switched into a staylng•home party for Gene and everyf had just as good a time. On by letters from fans 1 by Paramount's entreaties, Dixie and Bing Crosby have agreed to m I ' ICtUrc ,oset her on one condition rie won t play the love interest. ’ ttay or may not jam up the ans for “Anything Goes". Dixie , 3 K tbel Merman part In the w. but it may be treated more Omantlcally In the film. •bcidentally. the situation of a _“'‘'<l pair making love In a plc- ■ . but not to each other. Is not ‘‘bather Angel and Ralph lu S kete"s" d °' nS “ " The Three ’r,° U w^ ked Mc and rm Telling You: iirsi ‘t’ Koarfa . Pittsburgh: The ttM > ne !? y whlc *> Spencer Tracy's r . y heard spoken words for the lroueh n «u in hi ’ ~f® ' may be had anv Sh c the Welrtc ™ Electric comim.,' Spenc< T and his wife were We-erVJ ts ” pub!ici ty- but so many o ilium .7 >m deafness have written. »«it ~ h ey are now hap p y Their lad Improves, too. ‘hrgot ct.> many Eng,ish players, if Hollvi ‘il me has bcon won o ' er *"maner• °2 d an<l wi! * make her »on on a ,| h ° mß hfcre ' Sha leaves Be PU-nos. trlp t 0 England. • of which la to bring back

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 ' »■■■, ..mm ■■■, Tuesday Zion Reforme,] W. M. S. church oarlors, 2:31) p. nt. Decatur Improvement 4-H Club , exhibit, I) cautr high school, 7:30 p. m. Tri K' ppa sorority, mayor’s courtroom . 8 p. m. North St. Mary’s Twp. Willing I Workers 4-11 Club, Robo liool, 1 p. m. Sal m bidiea Aid Society, Mrs. Addl Kahnert, Si?. m. Pythian Sister quilting, K. of P. Home, all-d' y. Wednesday Mt. Pleasant Bible class. Mrs. Peter Vitz, 8 p. m. Root Twp. Hoppy Homemakers ' Club, Mt. Pleasant school. 1:30 p. m. Thursday M. E. Ever Riady class, ‘Legion Memorli 1 Park, 6 p. m. prompt. , I’. iB. latdies Aid Society, Mrs. Ilirl Crider, 2 p. m. Decatur Home Economics Club called meeting, Mrs. Delma Elzey 7:30 p. m. Friday Methodist W. F. M. S. annual I August tea, church, 2:39 to 4 p. m. Calvary Ev ngelical church ice cream social, church lawn, 8 p. m. their families are caked to meet at the Legion M mortal Park Thursday evening for a pot-luck eupper. The supper will be served promptly at six o'clock. In case of rain, the ! pi nic will ba held in the church parlors. The Feaeel Ruby reunion will bo held at the I. gion Mem rial P rk on Winchester street, Sunday. August 11. Th Archbold reunion will be held Sunday, August 4 at the Archbold ,otag - at Blue Lake. The Mt. Pleasant Bible class will m et with Mrs. Peter Vitz at Bellmont park Wednesday night at i eight o'clock. Every member is requested to be present. PINOCHLE CLUB HOLDS MEETING Mr. and Mrs. Francis Eady entertained the membens of the Pinochle Club at their home Monday evening. Prizes in th- gprnes were w n byMr. and Mrs. Russel Melchi, Mrs. Francis Eady and -Bernard Keller

her mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Grahame, from has been separated for the first time since she was a little girl. It seems pretty ’ definite now that there is a rift 1 between her and her husband, ’ Francis Lister. It seems altogether too warm for 5 it, but Lynn Acker (formerly Kay ’ Linaker) makes a practice of walking ‘ from the Chateau Elysee in Holly- ’ wood to the Warner Brothers-First i National studio in Burbank. George ‘ Arliss used to hike It in the old days. 1 And he always was furious when people fried to give him a lift ’ George M. Cohan also walked to work when he was in Hollywood. And Joseph M. Schenck still does—though he may give it up now that 1 20th Century is moving to West wood. i - ■ What star’s boy friend would be surprised to know that, when he walks out of her beach house, a rival frequently walks In? HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE-— One of the bellboys at the Hotel Roosevelt here needed money to visit his dying mother. The man who gave it to him was Mack Sen nett, who Is not the richest man in the industry these days. . . . Harry Rich* man, who is staying with Joseph M. Schenck, was persuaded to go out on floor and do one song at the Clover club. Ten p. ———■———i minutes of applause could not wheedle out anfT Wx;. Other. . . . Renee - Torres, who is | very popular H raft with all of Holiy wood's young I 8./W” bloods, is seen about quite f 1 these nights with Jack Gilbert. . . . F July 19 WftS Wvilo&j Isabel Jewell’s F Renee Torres birthday and her present from Nelson Eddy was a box at the Hollywood bowl. . . . “Keystone Hotel”, Ralph Staub's two-recler with all the old Sennett favorites, drew a bigger preview crow<l, than many features. The chase scenes and the pie-throwing episode had the crowd In hysterics. . • Noel Madison, the screen heavy. Is the proprietor of a new health establishment on Sunset boulevard. . . . And Edna Ferber, meeting Eddie Cantor for the first time, admired his blue shirt. He sent It to her, all neatly done up in a package. DID YOU KNOW — That Bobby Breen, the seven-year-old boy tenor whom Sol Lesser has signed up. lived in the same block in Toronto, Canada, where Mary B.ckford was born?

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. JULY 30, 1935.

A luncheon was nerved at the close of the. evening. The next meeting will be held in two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Melchi. BUSINESS MEETING OF DELTA THETA TAU A business meeting of the Delta Theta Tan sorer, ity was he'd Mon day night at the home of Miss Jeiiji-tte Clark. Plans were made to sell an occasional chair and chest of handkerchiefs during the street fair. The sale will terminate the last day of the fair. The articles will be on display In the windows of the Schafer Store. PUBLIC INVITED TO CLUB EXHIBIT The public and members of the Woman's flub are especially invited to attend the exhibit to be shown by the Decatur 4-H Improvement C.’ub In Vie Decatur high school building tonight at seventhirty o’clock. All projects completed by the girls during the year will be shown. Tie Decatur Home Economics Club will hold a called meeting at the home of Mrs. D.kna Elzey on North Tenth street, Thursday night at seven-thirty o’clock. This is an important meeting end every member is asked to be present. o Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ulm and eons Arthur and Eddie of East Chicago visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Alherding and family Sunday and Monday. Eddie is a talented musician and is .beard on weekly broadcaats over the Hammond, Indiana, radio elation. Judge Drvid E. Smith cf Fort Wayne attended the funeral here of C. A. Dugan today. Dr. and Mrs. Ben Duke and j daugb er have gone to Nashv '.lie, Tenn., where Dr. Duke will take , post-graduate work at Vanderbilt I university. They will spend a week at Crab Orchard, Ky., before returning home on Labor Day. A committee meeting of the council will be held a: the city hall this evening. Dr. J. C. Grandstaff of Preble was a. business visitor here today. Sam Baumgartner, janitor at the city hall is laking a one-day vacation this week. Mr. and Mrs. John Rickard have return, d from a w ek’s motor trip through tie East, visiting at VVi ehington D. C., Mt. Vernon, and the ho.ntß of their ancestors at Lancaster and Johnnton. Pennsylvania. Enroute h me they stopped nt Niagara Falls and returned through Canada. They were accompanied by their grand child, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Farm r of Greenville, Ohio. Mrs. Fl rrner was formerly. Miss Beatrice Keller, daughter of Bert and Laura K Iler, formerly of Monroe. Mrs. Albert Muts.hler and son Robert and Miss Alice K os have r turned from Lake James where they spent the past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Meyer of Monroe will leave Thursd y for northern Michigan. R. M. Bleeke of Decatur will be t-ie agent for the Standard Oil company ut Monroe during Mr. Meyer's absence. Mrs. W. P. Lose and daughters Mary Ann and Margaret returned M tiday evening from a week’s motor trip to Cedar Point, Catawabi Island, Camp Perry and Fremont, Ohio. Jack Chittenden and John Dunn of Chicago were guests of the Miss: * Patsy Fullenkamp and Pauline Affold r in this city Sunday. Miss Clarissa Hahn has returned to her home in Waterloo, lowa, after spending two months with her mother Mrs. R. A. Donnel in this city. She was accompanied heme by Deroy Markham and Mr. and Mrs. William Burbank of Waterloo. Abi'int Simmons and D. H. Swaim of Bluffton attended funeral services for Charles A. Dugan here today. The three attended school togeth- r 50 years ago at the old Methodist college in Fort Wayne. A scarlet fever quarantine has been removed from the Harold lEaughn residence on Eleventh street. Miss Bonita Baughn is reported entirely recovered from the disease. Mi-?s Fl rence Anderson was nurse during Miss Baughu's illness. — o GERMANY RESENTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE authorities there had warned officials of the German shipping line of the danger of demonstrations by crowds who resented the Nazi campaigns against Jews and Catholics and had advised the line to permit only passengers to board the vessel. Officials of the line disregarded this advice, it was stated, and the flag incident followed. Police were said to have done ail that, reasonably could have been expected. Meanwhile, it’ was disclosed that the state department has prepared a letter in answer to the recent appeals of a delegation which protested alleged Nazi excesses against Jews in Germany. Continue Campaign Berlin, July 30.—(U.R> —Authorities are considering forbidding any more Jews to take up residence in Berlin as the next step'

Take me along f)rn VCbt i ■ 9an ’ Stiuken m whats a pknic ■ m F ' ’ WITHOUT LUCKIES ? M r — - ■ v>- ■„ x .<4 ■F ' I wM||| lb ' Fa/ \ me along, i'm OBh YOUR BEST FRIEND,! AM I Orhi-flr / YOUR LUCKY STRIKE. IT’S THE TOBACCO THAT COUNTS There are no finer tobaccos than those used in Luckies Copplvbl 1935. Tbe America Tobwco Company.

i in the anti-semit'.c campaign, wellinformed sources said today. i Official stattistics show that in ? the last two years 20,000 Jews j camo to Berlin from the provinces and only 2.000 left the capital, Jewish migration to Berlin is - understandable, as Jews are less - conspicuous in a big city and es- • cape manifestations of anti-semit- . ism notoriously strong in provincial towns. i Authoritie Nazi sources ridicul--1 ed reports that the anti-Jewish - campaign is over. It is evident i thtat in future the party itself will , handle the campaign, as announced on Saturday, to prevent unconi tro'lable demonstrations such as ■ those which occurred in the Kuer- . furstendamm in Berlin. o i Evangelistic, Singer To Conduct Contest Fort Wayne, July 30 — Homer Rodehnver. Winona Lake, well- ' known evangelist singer, will conduct a summer choir contest at the 1 Fort Wayne Gospel temple from August 6 to 11, inclusive, it was announced here today by Rev. Paul Ratter, dine: tor-evangflfet of the t-’mple. Any choir, chorus, group of men or w men of northeastern Ind- ’ iana and Ohio has been invited to complete in the contest. The pro--1 grams will he broadcast over radio station WOWO. Fort Wayne. Mr. ' Redehaver will give religious music 1 instruction to the contestants during the week. Rev. Rader will preach throughout the week. II ? will also speak Sunday. August 4, at the Founder's Day program at Winona Lake in. pli 13 of Evangelist William (Billy) . A. Sunday, who is recovering from a , recent illness on the west const. , o ' Seven Killed In Automobile Crash J Flagstaff, Ariz.. July 30 —(UP) — , SeVt n persons were killed near here last night when their a ,>m bile , plunged over an 80-foot precipice. I Robert Bischoff. 3. was the only survivor of the party. The accident occurred in HouseI rock Valley, presumably when the car got out of control. All the dead . were members of the Tucson poet of the Latter Day Saints church. The dead: Reaburn E. Bischoff and his wife, their children, Jo - Anna. 7. and Reaburn. Jr., 3. Mrs. ; Howard Bischoff Martineau, Madge Martineau, 18 months, and Mrs. i' Frank Webb.

COURT HOUSE Expenses Allowed A petition for the allowances of expenses amounting to $46.34 was; allowed for the special representative in the matter of the liquidation of the People S'ate Bank of, Berne. Ask Dismissal A suit for the collection of a l bond filed by the First and Tri ■ State Nationa’ Bank and Trust' company of Fort Wayne .against | Guy Colerick and others of Fort ; Wayne was asked dismissed by the ' plaintiff. Suit Begun A suit for the collection of a I note has been filed by the department of financial institutions of Indiana for the Peoples Loan and Trust company agarnst Joseph J. Lower and Helen A. Lower. Case Venued Here A suit for the collection of a note filed by the Fort Wayne Morris Plan company against Fleming McKinnie and others has been venued here from Allen county. Will Probated The wi.'l of Sarah E. Baker has been probated. The will asks that all property, bo h real and personal be given to her sister, Elizabeth Stults, in fee simple if she survives. In case of the sister's death before Mrs. Baker, the property was to have been given to Elija Nidlinger. a brother of Warsaw, and Earl Nidlinger, a nephew of Fort C. L. Walters was nominated as executor. Real Estate Transfers Caroline Lehman et al to Noah j M> Lehman in’ots 339 and 340 in * Berne for SI.OO. o Veteran .Journalism Instructor Is Dead Columbia, Mo., July 30—(UP)— Dr. Walter Williams, who founded the first university school of journalism and sent.hundreds of newspapermen and w men to important posts throug’iout the world, died last night. Dr. Williams, who began work as a printer's devil at 75 cents a week, and who never attended college as a student, retired from the presidency of the University of Missouri a month ago. 11l for mere than a year. Dr. Williams submitted his reslgnati m last year, but it was not until June 30 that a successor was named. He was 71. When he retired from the Univer-

sity presidency Dr. Williams retain'd th? rank of dean emeritus of the school of journalism. It wan in t :is department that he centered his greatest interest, and it was wih extreme reluctance that he left it in 1930 to assume charge of the j univ nsity. — o Willshire To Hold Homecoming Sunday The annual homecoming observ-: ano ■ will be held at Willshire, Ohio .Sunday, August 4. both morning and afternoon. There will be no formal i ddress thin year. Former Willshire residents and the general pu>bli are invit dto attend. Religious services will be held in the morning, with a basket dinner at the noon hour. An hour’s ■ pr gram will be presented during the i fternoon. o Veteran Circus Owner Is Dead Cincinnati, 0., July 30—(UP)-r John G. Robinson, internationally known circus owner, died early today at his home here. Robinson had been ill for several months, suffering from a throat uilm. nt. Infuriated Mob Lynches Negro Hend rson, N. C. July 30 —(UP) —“Sweet” Ward, u negro who decapitated a white man near here, was lynched today by a imob of infuriated whit? men. Ho was accused of hacking to death with an axe Charles Stokes, 86 year old farmer. Ward hacked off Stokes’ head with an ax. o Des Moines Fears General Strike D s Moines. lowa, July 30—(UP) ; Threat of a general strike, involving , from 15.000 to 20.000 union laborers in D-'ct Moines wae sounded today as the 19 day old strike of union bakery employ.s remained deadlocked. Heads of several trade unions assembled at labor headquarters diecussing the posaiibility of the general trike with J. C. Lewis, state federation president. "The eentiment for such action io strong among the various union groups because of the refusal of

bakery owners to arbitrate the closed shop issue with the baikery employees, ' Lewis told the United Press. o Parachute Jumper Drowns In Lake Erie Monroe, Mich., July 30—(UP)— Paul McLeod, 21-year-old student parachute jiunber, with the applause of 12.000 spectators ringing ; in his ears stripped gracefully from the wing of an airplane yesterday and plummeted 2,(M0 feet to his death in Lak ■ Erie. Wind carried the youthful jumper almost a imile past the row boat which had waited to pick him up. When the ibait finally reached the ■

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■ I whit ■ -speck that had been his (parachute McLeod had disappeared beI neat’.i the water. A coast guard cutter called from Trenton to aid the r scue arrived : without grappling irons. Four houiu later grappling hooka were borrow- ' rd from the M nroe fire department and the body was recovered. o Borglum Carving to Proceed KEYSTONE, S. D. <U.R) — Re--1 sumption of work on Mt. Rushmore carvings is expected soor.. Lincoln Borglum, son of Gutzon Borglum. has returned to Keystone and tlie chief sculptor him*>elf is expected shortly. Workmen will return to the face of Thomas Jefferson.