Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 187, Decatur, Adams County, 8 August 1935 — Page 3
pYQOETY.
family reunion win ■■ I Y' a . <ux ; '' l-i'k " xl Sl,! “ lttv - (<■ ..tinir of tli" Pinochle Club ■ been held with Ku.-u-.-l Melchl has w-ck. M of '•><’’ K<a ral ‘ /rority will b» held at the 1 ' M ..-rvii Ar libold " n vi ii-thirty The 111 ! ‘ nx "hich wan to HH ~ ~.,.| ...th Mr<. Hubert a ■ and Donald Stump 1 ir-day evening has be n d. fi< , of the Zion Ke|H d clinr, ■ will nle *’ t at the Friday night r i|v '’’clock. .ting of the Psi Hir nt' w ill be held at the —« i Tuesday evening at eight \ attendance is r<- | lr importance - ■B,.r ■ v>j. , .11 guests of tleMl> ' J ' S ’ , ’ ,er ' this we k. a . a | m Clay Hall of New - M ' s - Hall’s l' ar ’ and Mt- -I'’ ll ' l Parrish. ■ Jr. and M: l: ’ • Jah " an(l **' n -| -Hl f 1’ . ■: W .iyne and Chari « |Mft... <i:y wer- guests : M•'■■■ Ada Martin. . Mr... and daughters.! B|l: ' Lima. Ohio r-.-.tina nd.- in Decatur this O ■l Bi IB IB FM ■Electrolux ] the GAS ■ IEFRIGERATOR B No other refrigerator has B »!! the advantages of the Gas refrigerator . . . it’s in »class by itself. There is a great deal more ■ • refrigerator than the first B cost you pay. Because Elec--9 irolux.theOas refrigerator, 9 as no moving pans there 9 15 nothing to wear out and 9 ’“'hingtomake noise. This M dom from wear and the 9 permanent silence of Elecfl ,ro ' ux eliminate costly reB an d to the B . s feG'tgerator’s operatB ln F economy. See the Elecjfl Mux models at our salest( k>m today. 9 Swuiii
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Thursday Pythian Sisters dinner and eupper K. of P. Hume. Friday I Zion Reformed choir practice, church, 7 p. tn. prompt. Monday F.ta Tau Sigma called meeting, i .Miss Katheryn Archbold. 7:30 p. m. Tuesday Evangelical Dutiful Daughters class, Mrs. Harry Knapp, 7:30 p. tn. Pdi Iqta Xi business meeting, city . hall. 11 >p. m. w ek. Dr. A. M. Ferguson of Fort Wayne visited In Decatur yesterday. Rev. J. M. Dawson, pastor of the First Christian Church, visited in Fort Wayne Wednesday. J. A. Hendricks and son El mor of route 1, Berne were visitors here t day. Mr. and Mns. Perry Huffman of Fort Wayne visited in this city Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs W S. Smith of M n- . ro? attended the street fair here .I W -dnesday night. M ieiS Lillian Warthman of Indianapjlis i« enjoying a month's vacation with her mother, Mrs. M. F. Worthman. Miss Mari - Bi’berstine of Berne is spending the week here with her broth r-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. William Lister. * Miss Helen Parejit of Fort 'Wayne is visiting with the Misses i Julia and Joan Parent. Mrs. Kelly and s n, of Frank- , fort, will arrive tomorrow for a visit at th- home of Mr. and Mrs. Don , Farr. Herman Wells of Undianapolis looked after business in Decatur to- ' day. Among the Pennsylvania Railroad ; officials in Decatur today to attend i Dairy Day were W. P. Viet. General iFr ight .Agent and W. R. Cox. Freight Traffic Manager, both of Chic-igo and F. G. Schoettier, Division Freight Agent and Norman Kirk. Traveling Freight Agent, both of Fort Wayne. Mrs. John Conglin, daughter Constance and Miss Eleanor Baker of Columbus, Ohio, return d to their homes this morning after a visit at the A. D. Suttles residence. Leo Kiiisch and Charles Cloud were D troit business visitors yesterday. Dr. and Mrs. Harold F. Zwick of IL hmoiiu are att ending the fair t©d'dP r ' z y jb<#Btausetr m ’ * Hoff-Brau M i always on tap £t | fl served at ■ , STALEY’S Em Coolest place in town. N! N STALEY’S I Confectionery lS Hi - Last Time Tonight - “SCHOOL FOR GIRLS” with ANN SHIRLEY, Star of “Ann of Green Gables” Sidnev Fox and Paul Kelly. COME IN and SEE What Goes On Behind the Walls of a GIRL'S REFORM SCHOOL! Added—A Vodvil Revue and “STRANGER THAN FICTION" 10c-15c Fri. & Sat. — “MEN WITHOUT | NAMES’’ with Fred Mac Murray, Madge Evans, Lynne Overman, David Jack Holt. Government Men Crack Down . . . their barking guns calling the role of Gangdom . . . the name of a Public Enemy on every bullet. 10c-15c. Sun. Mon. Tues.—“HOORAY FOR LOVE” with, Gene Raymond, Ann Southern, Pert Kelton, and BILL ROBINSON . . . The CHAMPIO-N TAP DANCER of the WORLD! f COME IN and ENJOY A GOOD I SHOW ... in PEACE AND | QUIET ... in an AIR CONDI- ! TIONED Theater . . where it |' | is ALWAYS COOL ANDI 1 COMFORTABLE! ♦ ’♦
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 193?.
day. They will return to Richmond Friday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Livers and eone Carlos and Jimmy of Bozeman, Montana, arrived liere Wednesday night to spend several weeks with Mrs. Livers’ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fuhrman. Mrs. Livers will be - rem mbered here us Mary Fuhrman. o *. # Memorial Hospital I Adams County | Miss Agnes Whitney, Monroe- • v-llle, admitted Tuesday. Paul Roehm, Jr., Willshire, Ohio, admitted Tuesday. Mrs. Flo E. Workinger, route 6, . Decutur, admitted Tuesday. Richard Allen Roth, son of Mr. Jand Mrs. Menno Rffui of Monroe, admitted Wednesday. Leo Wolf, Berne, dismissed Wed- , nesday. Mrs. Otto Bernfhg and baby, Hoagland, dismissed Tuesday. Mrs. A'bert Mutschler, 632 North , Third street, medical patient. o MRS. NUSSBAUM l DIES AT BERNE — Mrs. John Nussbaum Dies This Morning After Extended Illness Mrs. Virginia Nusttluuim. S 9. wid- . ow of the late John Nussbaum died at her home in Berne at 7 o’clock this morning. Death was du-e to infirmities of old age. She had been , bedfast for the last five years. Mrs. Nuaabaum was born in MonI roe township on October 15, 1845. She was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mazelin. Her marriage to John Nussbaum took place February 6, 1866, and he preceded -her in d ath on February 17, 1934. Surviving are the children: Levi and Sam Nussbaum and Mrs. Sarah Wyss of Berne; William Nussbaum of Monroe township; Peter Nussbaum of Columbia; John Nussbaum of San Die go, California. The husband, three daughters, one son, three bothers and two sisters are deceased. T n grandchildren •ind 13 great grandchildren survive. Mrs. Nussbaum was a member of the Mennonite church at Berne. Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon at 1:45 o’clock at the horn? and at 2 o'clock at the M- nnonite church. Burial will be in the M. R. E. cemetery. PLAN TO END CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE plained their .move -by saying: “Every state except 14 has sent j works progress projects plans to ' Administrator Harry L. Hopkins for approval. “The routine for making work money available ha.s been speeded up. As soon as a state receives funds to put its employable needy ! on jobs. FERA will refuse to carry ' it any further. | “There will be 3,500,000 men working under the program ,by ! November 1. There will be no more doles after that date. We will close the door to direct relief i and refuse to open it, even an NOT A TOUCH I OF INDIGESTION | IN WHOLE YEAR Well-Known Indiana Lady Was A Long-Time Sufferer Before Indo-Vin Brought Her COMPLETE Relief “Indigestion hasn’t bothered me for over a year, since I took IndoVin that long ago,” said Mrs. Ella
i KjL ■' 1 i HP MRS.
Dunnington, of N. College | ■Ave., Bloomington, Bind. “My meals Is'.niply wouldn’t 1 ■digest at all,” I ■continued Mrs. ■Dunnington, “but iwould lay there, in my stomach and sour and turn : to gas and put me into an awful state of pain and misery. 1 tried everything under
DUNNINGTON the sun, hut nothing seemed ot help me until I got Indo-Vin. This remarkable medicine has done me more good than everything else PUT TOGETHER. It went right to work on me and 1 drove the awful gas and sourness I out of my stomach, and now my meals are digesting perfectly and j I have ten times the energy I had ! before. It certainly is a real medicine for anyone to take, and I can’t help but praise It to ALL WHO SUFFER, for it has been a year since I took Indo-Vin and my trouble never returned.’’ Indo-Vin is now being sold here in Decatur by the Holthouse drug store. Also ' being so’d by every good druggist , throughout this section.
Wm
By HARRISON CARROLL Copvrloht, 1535, King Fcaturet Syndicate, Inc, HOLLYWOOD—If you hear any .tumors about Tom Brown getting married. It 1* just the Hollywood match-maker* having their fun. There I* a very good reason why this
Tom Brown
young actor shouldn't take a wife for the next three years It's a piece of paper tucked away in a safe deposit box. A financial agreement, to be exact. On bis twentysecond birthday (lost January 6) Tom entered into a contract to set aside 1100 from
every week's salary until he Is 25. If he Is unmarried at that time, the trust fund the estimates It will be 110.000) goes to him. But. If he has a wife, bls mother gets It. And. lest there be any misunderstanding, the whole thing was Tom's Idea. James Cagney must have con- : guered seasickness, for he and his . alfe are planning a 1.500 mile cruise •n their yacht, the Martha. For a long time, Jimmy's squeamlshness was a favorite subject for ribbing among hl* unfeeling fi lends, almost all of whom had used the boat mote than the star himself. The whole movie parade will be reviewed In Harry Carey’s autobiography which he Is writing under ; the appropriate title of “Twenty ' Five Years Under the Big Hat". . Harry wore a 10-gallon topper In 1000 when he made his first picture . with Lionel Barrymore and Lillian | and Dorothy Gish. He Is using one ’ today in "Barbary Coast” and he has never worn any other kind of headgear in a picture. Even In “Trader I Horn”, you remember, it was a big I black hat. The custom has crept Into his private life. He won’t drive a car without the hat. He may not be wearing IL but It will be in the rumble seat. , Interesting that the star’s 13-year-old daughter. Cappy, is his collaborator on the book, i F You Asked Me and I'm Telling You! Sam Galotti, New York City: Hollywood’s favorite drinks are about as . elsewhere. The bartenders at the late spots tel! me they sell more martinis, manhattans, old-fashions ' and whiskey sours than any other mixed drinks. Scotch is preferred . among the whiskeys and champagne , among the wines. The showiest drinks to be had around the fllmlanu
inch.” The works progress administration program will entail more than 400.000 projects in a'most every ’ county Zn the country. Work will range from constructing reservoir dams to organizing symphony or- ' chestras. I Hopkins will be in complete . charge of all this work, even to I setting up his own staff of investi- . gators -In 15 branch offices to , check charges of graft a.nd incom- . petence. His statistical bureau, under Corrington Gill, will chart the . .progress of every project as to em- , ployment to keep the program on ~ schedule. o DEATH CLAIMS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Saturday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock, standard t-lme, at the home, and at 2 o’clock at the Magley Reformed churcfl. Rev. David Grether,
Smart and Kindly Too! // Yoh Are a Wee Bit Heavy! 5 7 7—' By Ellen Worth *- A/siX /'y*> X ; | — Here’s a charming dress for the / '*.]"/ Ir7fvwill' lovely new looking sheer cottons. L•;J I / I\A ■L—A X u. V_ M \A -x/tt It is especially interesting since I•/ lX’‘yvA'iT\ Iso much attention has been paid to ft »A , ri-4-. "/ ViC* \ I its every detail to slenderize the /fj «(. TlXk - t’| “>’X J figure. The narrow panel from the | * .LA y / / becoming V-neck to the hem of the I f/j * eJX*. /./ > dress sees to that. Sleeve frills flat- I I L|£ ,'y Z' 'ter the plump arms. \ \ L • rr Aj I The lilac and white sheer cotton \ \ J\* tfl *' / ■ batiste print sketched, used plain \ \ \ • lilac for its jabot frill. Besides be- \ \ j-., . 1 Ing smart, it will prove very prac- \ \ , ~ "»» i tical as well. 1 ' , $ | Style Nc. 825 is designed for sizes |Z 5 '.’ V ,•« 136. 3S. 40, 42, 44 and 46-inches bust. .zfM '** ‘ ‘ Size 36 requires 3% yards of 39-inch ... ' • material with ii yard of 35-inch con- K / lib ’. trasting for jabot. flt\p, ' . ‘ Summer Fashion Book contains \Zr V ‘, I, •’« many more smart, cool vacation ' * “ , .J clothes. Order Your Copy Today I jl | Price of BOOK 10 cents. I ' » I Price of PATTERN 15 cents. /j. f\ r. ' . 1 (coin preferred). Wrap coin care- | V j > A, 1 fully. 'f ’ 1 Pattern Mall Address: N. Y. Pat- I ‘ aJ # 3 \ tern Bureau (Decatur Daily Demo- I j I erat) 23rd St. at bW '’«uue, Il 1 L- ' ' New York Citv II / I 7I / 1 W. 825
rendezvous fur the thirsty aie the mint Juleps and the planter's punches at the Brown Derbies, which come in tall glasses encased with an Inch- , thick jacket of ice. The airlines will be interested to know that Bette Davis has conquered her fear of planes at last. She finally got up the courage to fly i down from San Francisco. Husband ' Hannon O. Nelson came along just I In case Bette got frightened, but she didn’t. Since it was printed here that Warren William was going treasure hunting, the star has received dozens of letters. Everybody in the world seems to know where there Is burled bullion and a new device to locate it. The letters have served one purpose. however—they have convinced William there Is no use trying the Cocos islands. What young male singing star and what well-known scenarist are very much In tune? HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE— Grace Bradley's engagement ring from Frank Prince was once worn by his mother. . . . Mildred Lloyd tells it on Harold and he Is very much embarrassed. Seems as he haa to do a lot of fighting in “The Milky Way” and the role was so much on his mind the other night that he swung on her In Ids sleep. . . . That was Barbara Whitney with Busby Berkeley at Sardis. . . . Unless he changes bls mind Bing Crosby won't get closer to Broadway than Saratoga on his trip east. He hasn't been in
nr iiaoit i tyt-rii in i i Claire Windsor
on >llO nip X-CXZM. New York since he left there to start bls screen career early In 1938. . . . Claire Windsor is going about with Billy Sanchez. At the Case Lamaze the other night Van Smith made it a threesome. . . . Dan Mainwaring. former Los Ange les newspaper man and now a Warner
now a w arner Brothers press agent, has authored a mystery novel. "The Man Who Murdered Himself’, which comes out In the fall. He wrote It in tlire* weeks. . . . Mary Healy, chosen “Miss New Orleans” in a recent contest. Is In Hollywood to see it her luck Is ' as good as that of Dorothy Dell, a previous winner. DID YOU KNOW— That Paul Kelly, when elr.b’ years old, played in the first two-reel picture ever made?
pastor of the church, will officiate - and buriaj will be in the church t cemetery. The body will be removed to the I home in Kirkland township from • the S. E. Black funeral home this • evening. — -—n Alonzo Archbold Dies At Bluffton Alonzo Archbold. 68, died at 1:50 i o’clock this morning at ,hi« home ■ in Bluffton after an extended illness. Surviving are the widow and. six children. Mrs. Devon,! Kleink- | night. Bluffton; Mrs. Esther Easter Glass, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Pauline Lantz. Berne; Lotus and Brooks and Russell, all at home. Five brothers and sisters also survive. Funeral services will be held at ! 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon at the home in charge of Rev. P. B. Smith pastor of the First Methodist Epis- ‘ copal church. Burial will be in the Markle cemetery.
HELEN MANLEY DIES TODAY Mrs. Harry Manley Dies At Hospital After Six Weeks’ Illness Mis. Helen E. Manley, 29. wife of Harry Mauley of two and one half mil s s uth of Peterson, died at the Adamri county memorial hospital i at 9:35 o'clock this morning follow- | ing a six week’ illness. Mre. Manh y had been a patient at the local hospital since July 24. She spent practiotlly her ntire life in Adams county. She was a member of the St. Luke’u church in Kirkland township. Mru. Manley was born June 16, 1906 at Mari n, a daughter of Wiliam and Al ta Roop-Noll. Her marriage to Harry Manley took place in De atur on November 27 1937. Surviving besides the husband and a son, Donald Leßoy, 7. are the parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Noll of near Pleasant Mills, the grandfather, Janies Roop, and the following brothers and sisters: Gerald Noll, Fort Wayne; Istwrence Noll, Linn Grove; Mi's. Arthur Rawley, Berne; Mrs. Ruth Anspaugh, Wren, Ohio; Miss Genevieve Noll, Fort Wayne; Lowell Noll. Pleasant Neills Vivian. Max, Maxine, Betty J an, Thelma, Kathleen and Marylin, all at home. An infant brother is deceased. Funeral services will be held Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock at the Zion church in Kirkland township with Rev. H. H. Meckstroth of Vera Cruz, pastor of St. Lukes church. I and Rev. H nry Day of Bluffton, officiating. Burial will be made in i
B 1 yj ■ H Ul i J i 1 i W fi Rj| *<i I| g | iljj j lAy “Os course, the Ford V-B’s have all-steel \ | bodies—as rugged, as well engineered 1 * 1 C O • * no ■ and as safe as the famous Ford steel 11 chassis. When Henry Ford does a thing, \ \ he does it right. This policy of doing a \ thing right is again borne out in this \ ° 1 Ford V-8 engine, and in these modern * AN too?’ 4 * o '"* 1 Ford brakes. Power to go and power to stop —like that—is always at the tip of I * Mt>^m° r >•" Co ' u \ your toe! A lot of people do not realize \ 30 <C ’ s’- 400 * the importance of brakes, until an emer- I gency comes. If you drive a Ford V-8, you face few emergencies, because these dependable brakes put the responsibility of safety on you — never on the car. Another grand thing about this Ford V-8, it’s as easy on your pocketbook as the brakes are on your t.oei”
the Zion church cetneUry. The body will be removed to the Manley horn In Kirkland township Friday afternoon from the Jahn fun- 1 • em! home in Bluffton. WILL MUZZLE GERMAN PRESS Newspapers To Be Completely Muzzled By Nazi Forces B rlin, Aug. 8 (UP)-- A demand' for unqu stioning support of Nazism even if it means financial loss has been ii.nde in German .übllsh?r<3 by Max Mann, president of the R ich Press chamb r. it was learned today. This development in an unprecedented drive toward complete Nazification of nil activities and groups for tli mom nt oversliadowed other phases that concerped Jews, Free Masons and War Veterans. Aman, head ,f the German press, mud liis <l. mand in an article. Only a press that was “Passionately fighting for National Socialism.’’ he said. Jtad the right to exist. He enumerated a long list of deft iencies which would •iutomatically deprive newspapers and their publishers and editors of tlie right to “cooperate”—to be active in the German ,pr. ss. The demand was aimed particularly at the remmnts cf ’he Liberal and R .niau Catholic press. “Publshers who tail to propagate National Socialist philosophy in its entirety for fear of financial loss s are unworthy of being G rman ipubiLshers,” Amann said. The drive toward “t tality” made apparent when the government took
PAGE THREE
..ver the Pewish problem itself, was revealed us being extended to Nazis i tli imselVM who did not »xFjid toI tality to approv'd ideas. Rud.lpb Meso, Adolf HltWs’official deputy In the Nazi ptu£y. Forbade the designation i I'.aniZntion’’ to th. “body I party functlonari»e.‘” • wJiUh ~is i known for its radical leaninjd. ~ o— —— — Bicycle Ratio 1 to X Marinette, W-!s- (U.R) A .Tiesnse , system for bicycles reve&ls that l Marinette now has one for ■ every 15 Inhabitants. I CORT - Last Time Tonight - KARLOFF In His Biggest Thriller Since Frankenstein—‘THE BLACK ROOM’ Catherine Demille • Robt. Allen ’ Plus - • Shemp Howard - Oaphine Pollard “HIS FIRST FLAME" and All Color Cartoon. ALL FOR 10c-16c NOTE: Be one of the first to see this marvelous picture, as It is one of the first Indiana showings. Saturday Only Buck Jones "OUTLAW GUNS” Plus-Cartoon, Comedy and Chapter 6 of “TARZAN.” ALL FOR 10c-15c Sun. Mon. Tues. John Boles - Jean Muir - Chas. Butterworth "ORCHIDS TO YOU”
