Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 203, Decatur, Adams County, 27 August 1935 — Page 3

fcoCIETY rmik — — —

MARRIAGE t „ t tit- approach- . and, ' s i® >-< a pl * rl> s "" ,lay “ s „ held nt the Blom-| «e. ■'<■ pi'“> chl »; » r'- 1 ' s-i'P-nhaK'-n, IWU e<">rs<> luncheon' _FW* d The table wus decorat-1 white, yellow and blue over th" table. The v , ~,l?il plate. ME.; I t . • • ' >'>"-‘U»' r bell lied with yellow ribbons. The white bells, w.M.itmt announe.Uh “ b,,Ut ~"Wr. ■ « and White ..:^K. 'he . c11 ..e. 11 'he Miss, ‘ s gW E. nieier. Clagk yi.iiiiu Gertrude ' ■ l,na Doehr- | Him.k Mis Al Thiel" I. M.-< boro a • wil 1 an event s ,. |( at three .ji,. the PLANS FROLIC a ''lay. Sep jIKrC. ' Park, Belli . w ili furnish :he .nti- land of twelve, iut: Ll!| d P..i Belts f r $1.25. p r -i fl j «d M“. Urman Franz of l ntertained Sun- ' j,birtiiii Gat served. jZJ Royal \ - will It ...I a Jia' me :m. ' ■ It' ll Hur 'lull Ai: OF ENDEAVOR :MbS -tian Endeavor ■■ .ainta Will. I.a J-.r. Her, Pauline M lx an IP tty. Fay ■ Merriman. Harry RaudenErnevt and ' .. Burk -. V1,.. Murton .o | Alton Railing, r. i: I ■ 'in. Bob Brow ii, A:’ , Meyers. Rus-

Sdishly “Suited” for Fall | Wear the Coat | Separately Over tJI O/Z>er Frocks 'y g Ellen Worth ’.'. rOn Wans ? ’‘*^ e swa 88 er \ \ L 7o)il\ l\ °r a suit—here’s your i* \ \ nIA- ’\\ pattern includes dress and / ’’. '\[&' 1 /Au7-<\ '*«*«. sc brings this j.H- '•//£” dd) lhe reach of even I" fH W,ng ' Ther « ■’a sug- / <• 7■ • ■ *'t <\ / fulness m the pleat at | tfj'. J L 7 > L A,\ SOl ~ w eeti weave rust Uy/. ,» ' /., H " nag ' ne if l ' coat worn //■ ’' / • ■»*!S3 u ” ,d ■"" "■ r ’ ,0 ' ’' lel I * A ' **' 720 years. Size 16 /'A'-. |t vard ’ of M-inch mate- L_ ' //'" •’ 'J w^ vard .’ of 39 - inch co "- • sci; T;. ■• ; • </; '■ b "" i - / I.' .7'o BOOK io cent,. ■'] J-< W PA r^ RN is «»t» • M. ..y I|iX^ai 1 |iX^ ail r A(itireßg: N - Y. Pat. I[ / I irTT Wm cFu. at F “ tt < ’ enue> r/j H W-* | 354 \

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. i,| Mis» Mary Macy I Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesday Tri Kaippu sorority, postponed. Trt Kappi sorority. Miss Helen 1 Suttl u, S p. in. | Hoot Twp. Home Economics club i picnic, Monmouth community cen'l ter. i Kirkland Ladies Club picnic sup- ; per and program, Kirkland high school, 7: 3o p. in. Wednesday ' Pinochle Club, Mr. and Mrs. Bor- ' nard K t Iler, 7:30 p. m. , ' i Union towneh'i> WomanM Club. ■' Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Wherry. I Zion Junior Walther League outline, Lehman Park, Berne, meet at I I the Lutheran school at fi:3o p. in. •j Decatur Home Economics Club Itinnual ipicni ■, Hanna Xuttman Park, ; . 10:30 a. un. Thursday Zion Reformed laidiea Aid SocI ty garden Mrs. B n Schroyer, 5 to 7 p. nt. St. Mary's township Home Econo■'miCß Club, Mrs. Ered Hilton, 1:30 ■ s». m. Royal Neighbore, Bon Hur hall, ■7:30 ,p. m. Friday Unit d Brethren V. I. S. class, Naomi Ruth Frangklin, s p. in. I sell Ramsey, Hugh Eaton. Hugh :.■» ott. Dick Reidenback. Chester and I Dorothy F aeel and Mr. and Mrs. John Feasel. The V. I. S. clase of the United Prethr n Sunday echool will meet I with Naomi Ruth Franklin Friday i night at eight o'clock. Offic rs will be elected at this meeting. The meeting of the Tri Kappa I sorority which was to have been i held tonight has been postponed. The Pinochle Club will m et Wedi nesday night at eeven-thirty o'clock ■ w*lth Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Keller. LADIES AID SOCIETY TO HAVE GARDEN PARTY i Th-e Ladi s Aid Society of the Zion Reformed church will enter- ! tatin with a garden party at the home of Mrs. Ben Schroyer on North Third street. Thursday vening from five to seven o’clock. I The public is invited to attend the party and reservation may be made with any memb r of the organization for twenty five cents. In can? lof rain th-e ,party will be h. Id in the hurcLi parlors. Service Station Totally Destroyed II * • Fort Wayne. Ind.. Aug. 27 —(UP) -Fire late yest'-rday completely destroyed the Black and White filling station located four and onei half miles west of h re on state road 30. Datnags was estimated at > $4,500. 1 The building burned to the . ground hut firemen, although handi- ■ capped by la k of ready wat r «supI plies, succeed d in preventing the , flames from reaching the gasoline ■ pumps. , i Fire department officials said the , blaze appar. ntly started in a bpt ■ water heater. 4

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1935.

Jasue Mann, truut e of Wabash township and city attorney, Henman Myers are in indiank'polis on buzlnesa today. Miss Anna Jane Tyndall is the I gueot of her aunt and unde, Mr. I and Mrs. Ralph Tyndall of Bluffton. Fr d S.hurger was in Indianapolis on business today. Mrs. Martha B av ru and daug'it -r, Muxln •, of Beßrne, sons, Robert and lames of Decatur, and Mis*. Glennis Bagley of Fort Wayns, are ep n ling this week at Wawaue*. Mr. and Mrs. Clarenes Bell attended th“ wedding Sunday morning of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Schuler of Huntington. Mr. and Mrs. Chari s H. Stump left this morning for their home at Cody, Wyoming after a several day's visit with Mr. Stump's sister. Mrs. William Kohls. Mr. Stump is a son of Georg l Stump and a brother of Don Stump of thia city. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Livors and childr n have left for their home at Boz. man, Montana after visiting j here with Mrs. Livers' parenis. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fuhrman. They were accompanied to J’ozman by Mrs. E. M. Si-hnitz. and to Decatur, Illinois by Mrs. H rbert Fuhrman. Tony Brugge i an. Fort Wayne attorney, was a business visitor in this ity today. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Lawson and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Crist witnessed the passion play. “Chrlstuass ipre- .«< nted under the direction of Hom- - r R. deh -av.r at Winona Saturday night. There were 100 m mb a rs in the cast and 500 in the chorus. Seventy fiv • hundr d persons witnessed th ? presentation. Mrs. Fred King, daughter Kath-i cryn and s n Di k and Mrs. King's motier. Mrs. Anna Hous r of Fort Wayns visited ovc-r th? week-end with Mrs. King's sister, Mrs. Etta Peake at her cottage at Edgewater park. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Updike of this .ity were guests of relatives and friends in Huntington over Sunday. Miss Mildr d Tees; le and Norman Whits have return d from Elmira. N w York where they visited with Mr. and Mrs. William Klepper. Bill Lister, Jo? Elzey, M. A. FrisInger. Merrill Peterson and Jerome Omlor attend.d a baseball game in Chicago Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Meyers and chl'dren Virginia, Julia Ann and Bob, and Phyllis Lose, visited :n Van AVert Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Prill. Jesse Niblick is spending two werks in Chicago as the guesi of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Niblick of Miller Beach. Dunes Park. Mrs. Margaret Stratton and daughter. Mrs. Harry Trimmer and children, of Lansing, Michigan, visit d here with Mrs. Emma Pennington • nroute to Portland where ; they will be the gusts of Mi's. Lig? Bailey. MLss Mildred Niblick and Harold Niblick were Fort Wayne business visitors this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hunter, daught:ra B tty and Phyllis and son Bobby, have returned from Indianapolis where they attended tie American Legion Convention. Sunday th y visitted in Brown County. Mr. and Mrs. H. 'B. Mary were Indianapolis visitors yesterday. Mrs. Bernardine Smith of 134 south Fifth street has been seriously ill for the past ten days. She was slightly improved this morning. Rev. and Mrs. Tillman Habegger i are spending several days with the latter's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Noah Lug nbill of Berne. Rev. Habegger is past ir of the Eastlawn Missionary church of Detroit. Frank Simon of Berne was in Decatur on business yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bauman of east of th? city spent yesterday in Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. John Wilhelm visited in Fort Wayn ■ this morning. Mrs. Della Harruff has returned from Webster where she spent the past week visiting her borther. Russell, and family. Mm. Hoyt Hartman and Mrs. Jesse Williamson of Bluffton enjoyed a game cf golf at tf.ie Decatur Country Club this afternoon. Thad Hoffman, Hollis Bonifas and Bob Klep... r are spending several days camping near Preble. Mrs. Welsey Hoffman of Fort Wayn*e and Mrs. Ollie Heller of Bern were guests yesterday of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Adams. Mrs. Hoff-' man will return to her home in Fort Wayne this evening. Federal Attorney Is Killed In Fall Chicago, .Aug. 27 - (UP)—John H. Thames, 39-year old attorney for th>e federal trade commission, either leaped or fell to his death today from a sixth floor window of his hotel. < His body struck a cement areaway at the side of the building and •he di?d a few minutes after being taken to a hospital by Milford Clark and John Mulvey, also commission attorneys. Clark told police that Thames returned from a theater and stopped in his room for “a chat and a few drinks." Thames entered the bath-

Hollywood',

By HARRISON CARROLL Copi/rtf/he. ts3a, King I eaturr 3 Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD With Die downright nesM that has her father important hi tbe movie worhl. Katherine DeMille srot tired of the type she was playing on the screen and decided to do eomething about it. She has just

returned from a month vacation. During that time she changed her face" and figure. She has lost 15 pounds and by a new rn ake - up and coltYure looks entirely different from that sultry type she placed for “The Crusades". “! got tired of nlay 1 ng shady

it? Katherine DeMilk

ladies." she said. *‘l decided to change my personality and .figure so I could wear mo<lern gowns and play modern, sympathetic roles." First results of her transformation was just such a role with Carole Lombard in "Hands Across the Table". But before she starts on this new I'aramount job, Katherine is busy stocking a complete new wardrobe to i match her new personality. Trying to hold on to your help in the show business is a tough task. Hugh O’Connel has discovered. A few weeks ago. liu,:li lost his cook, who left his kitchen to follow a radio career in New York. Now he’s lost ids nurse. In his last picture. O’Connel Injured his back and hired a nurse to j help him get about. When Hugh ' appeared at the studio with her to see About his next role, they asked the nurse to take a test and she quit her job to follow pictures. Helen Gahagnn is singing three hours a day. preparing for her concert tour. Unless studio calls prevent it. she plans to open the tour in San Francisco in September. When the troupe of ‘‘From Little Acorns" on location in Sonora. Cal . called on the local C. C. C. boys to help them fake a forest fire, they didn’t know the sequel would be so strenuous. Two days after shooting scenes for the phoney conflagration. Joe Mortison. Paul Kelly an I Eddie C’.ine ! I room and af w minute later Clark I and Mulvey hear a crash. They told police they -knew of no 1 reason for Thames to »commit suicide. 1 Start Model Homes Construction Soon | LafayetL., Ind.. ,Aug. 27 —(UP) — ■ Aetna! construction of model homes

—a New Schafef Record for , ls IgSfee (2®ix3Ol) ■KL. s t «| ■"'77' B < aned J ■ Corners ■ IjM Frames Sol Each. Complete siuH.t -s with Frame Beautifully processed to look like a real oil *■ painting. 12 interest!.: • subjects, reproduction TA ' °* °l ( * rias * ers . ii't ludir.t, landscapes, marines jf Irf-jmfr ‘ W l " ( * f ,,rals - d'” ur »°t ph »toi<raphed). W 1 Kr x fel ? v■ Tr Order by number: No. 1. Poppie . and Larkspur. No. 6. A Wt k J JE|MT Vi: j i On ,h, ‘ R ' '<■ ’■ No - '• ° l<s IronS'dfS- No. lit. Motner yff R - ' jf 't Love. No. 15. Caval.e. Ped Coat. No. 26. Yosem te W Valley. N . 23. Oriental Traders oi Vcn.ce. No. 29. rtaiffry'WiHl.V 1 Awaiting the Call. I W■ V 1 - - -. jjh wwwn~ -i » IMHUk WE SpEiwßww mWs ' iMMwtiiJr lit -' - 'WBt $ -~ |ii f I*l ' ~ MR?SL«!&XX; <r l ’nt"" —- I HARD WARE mid HOME FURNISHINGS

wsre called out with the troupe to help the C. C. C. fV ht a real ti,e You Asked Me and I’m Telling You’ . Dorothy San Francisco: There have l»etn numerous successful , pictures with unhappy endings. ’ about "All Quiet on Hie Western Front”? It coht I’nlversnl 11.S00 000 an«l grossed somewhere around 15.000.000. Helen Broderick, who came out to | do •‘Top Hat" for II K-O-Radio 11 sterna to be succumbing to the lure I She m bought two saddle horses ar.J a ranch hi San Fernado valley. Forgetting the “hard cash" track- | tlons of northern California. PHncipaie Productions had to arrange tn ship a. consignment es hard, remind silver dollars up into the mother lode I country for the ••Thunder .Mountain" troupe. Gvorge O’Brien. BarbaiLa Frituhie and Frances Grant found they couldn’t spend their money. The old timers, and their descendants. man\ of them from the days oi 19. fought shy of anything but “’art wheel" dollars. What loading man was a lot more serious about the girl who married someone else than folk suspect? HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE— Katharine Hepburn is practicing her driving on the ni : ;’..t golf ranges

. . . Wendie Barrie took a few days off’ for her regular semiannual vacation in Mexico. . Sir Guy Standing has just painted a picture of the sailing ship on w hich he made his first trip to America . . . Clark Gable is getting over a gash he

p'W' TWMMfTWL. .'J* ! ■ i Mg Wendy Barrie

got on his leg climbing a ladder out of the sea. . . . Car! Laemmle, Jr., and Louise Henry lunching at the studio and recalling the days when Carl, in knee pants, carried Louise’s school books . . . Herbert Mundin’s mother has a room in her English home papered with photographs of her good looking son. DID YOU KNOW— Helen Gahagan has never played an> thing professional on the stage or screen but leading roles? '. 11 ■ ■ i n the Pur-due University research campus will be started within a few w ks. Frank Watson, project director. tsaid today. The first home to be constructed will be designed by J. Andre Fouilhoux, prominent New York •architect and winn r of first place in a I. I w ouuing project conducted by I the American inntitut ? of architects. . [ o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

YOUNG PEOPLE TO GIVE PLAY Pleasant Dale Church To Present Play Wednesday Night , , Tli young people of the Pleasant , IDal« thurch will pr sent L'i ? piuy, i I "Nancy Ann Brown's Folk.-," at the 1 Kirkland xymnaHlum Wedn nday 1 I id; lit at X o'clock. Admi will be , hi and 20 < nt,<. Ths public in Invit- ( ' > d to attend and wltn s.? this pi > l nentatlon. Ths cunt :« an foil iwh: Pte -Stag l carpenter at Mirand Theater Wai:-r Zimm rmun I Dave—Pre; erty .nan at the Grand, II rman Yake I Pa Brown Nancy'a father from the j country Roy Olwln IMa Brown Nancy's mother Mary R inhard ■ N i k Mil s * Stag" director at the Grand Le. ter Adler Roderic Quinton (Rod) -- M nib r of troi _>e, playing villains parts; Harold Henaehen; ■ Connie Stair — Who plays ing line par:a Ali e Reinhard Vai Vine.nt Who plays com dy pir'. i. Dale Adler j I Juliet Sanl (July) - Who plays character parts Margaret Geloel :D nny Saul H?r nusban l. charac- 1 ter actor Clifford Mann | Inez Clinton (I) Wiio playa ad ' ntur -u parlti Mabie Stoneburner . arry Raniond The leading Man Robfrt Ehrinan ; | Willa Dean Th? I ading lady'a maid Alice Baumgartner Hi ■ .a'.iml Ray lor-T i • 1 ading lady Mildr d H nschen ITALIAN ARMY CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE I memorandum outlining national civilian defense against ah' raids. Panama— Troop movements from British West Indies to Mediterran- ! ean reported. Mussolini To Speak ! (Copyright 1935 By United Press) i Aug. 27 — <U.R) -Ready for a. “war" with the Italian army. Bolzano. i cabinet meeting tomorrow. PremI ier Benito. Mussolini was reported ; today to plan a pub'ic speec h Fri- ! day or Saturday which may make ‘ ! world history. I' I The speech. It was said, will be v made from the steps of the victory mounument at Bolzano, at the climax of the gigantic army maneuvil era, involving in all 500,000 men, I- which Mussolini is supervising on i I the nor horn “front.” a 1 It was on Aug. 34, 1931. at the y climax of last summer’s maneuvi. ers, that Mussolini in a speech at j Bologna, now historic, sajd: r “We must become a military na-

Itlon, even a militaristic one—even, ' I might say. a warlike one.” i Mussolini lias macle no extensive ■ ' public speec h since he went Io Sardinia early In June, before the I Ethiopia.!! crisis involved ull Europe. j Tomorrow's cabinet meeting will • bv held at 4 p m. (Io a. m. EST) nt the government palace at Bolzano, where Mussolini is making ’ his headquarters during the man- , I euvers. Air Defense J (Copyright 1935 By United Press) London, Aug. 27 <U.R> The government extended defense metesures to (he British Isles today with a memorandum giving complete InI st ructions for civilian defense aI gainst enemy air raids. I i An official home office memorandum ou lined the organization of 'units for t.eating air raid victims and suggested formation through- . out the coun ry of first aud squads equipped with gas masks and protective clothing to be used in event first aid men had to enter gas . fi'led areas to rescue victims. . I Reports of similar measures per- ■ sisted from all areas likely to be . affected by the ItaJlan-L hiopian i crisis. Eight days fwm the meeting of the League of Nations council at Geneva, the last slim hope of a- ; verting an Italian attack on Ethiopia which statesmen feaxed might spread into Europe, there seemed a complete diplomatic •.mpa'-se. Today, reliable sources said the British government intended for.'.•iltle to resist if laly attempted a direct naval b'oekade of northeastern Africa and search of British and other neutral ships for contraband des ined for Ethiopia. -— •—1 Adams County | Memorial Hospital Mrs. John Bleeke, Route 5. Decatur; Nancy Daniels, 221 Nor h Sixth street: Keith Hammond, Bellmont Road. Lu e Ila Worthman. ('raigvill:; Katheryn Lu'se Yager, First s'reete Betty Vitz, New Bremen, Ohio, dismissed today. ' | Albert I). Coppess, Monroe, medical patient. Gloria Diffendorfer, Geneva, minor operation. Tuesday morning. Lester Essex, son of Mr. and 1 Mrs. Clifford Essex, Monroe, minor operation. Tuesday morning. Mrs. Minnie Watson. Geneva, minor opera ion. Tuesday mornB ■ ingo— — P. W. SMITH J „ CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE lluisinciss th re. He iraa widely e known in this section of the stat 1 . r -1 Besides th? brother in this city, tla brother Henry Smith, age 93 of I Whitely county and a naught r. i- Mrs. Florence Leeds of Richmond

PAGE THREE

also survive. Mrs. Smith tlted last ! March. The body will be taken to Ri'.'hI mood and funeral servicee Will be I held toere Tiinrsday. o ——— ' ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Suntan of |<'ust of Decatur an? the parents of an eight pound girl baby born Friuay. August 23. The .baby bos been ; named Lois Bell. This is the. second •child and the second daught r in jthe family. Sharon Marlene is ths nan? of tth • nine pound girl baby born to Mr. ami Mrs. Homer Fisher Saturday, ! August 17. o — Senator VanNuys Home From Capital — Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 2T — (UP) 1 S n. Fr deri k Van Nuys, returnled to Indianapolis today "to forget , politico and rest from congressional . worries." T). sena.or said he would stay I here for a few days for visits with i fri nd < fore going to Northern i Michigan for a two-weeks vacation.

WE’VE NEVER HOPPED MAKING THEM BETTER Our company introduced the ; original Corn Flakes 29 years ago. If you tried them then, you remember how delicious that new flavor of toasted corn tasted. , l But if we had been satisfied with them as they were, Kellogg's Corn Flakes would never have become 1 I the world’s largest-selling ready-to-eat cereal. Year by year we found ' new methods of manufacture to improve the flavor, and to make the flakes crisper, more appetizing. Today, as always, Kellogg’s Com Flakes are the best made. Their tempting goodness and fresh crispness can’t be successfully imitated. No other corn flakes have the heatsealed waxtite inner wrapper that I keeps Kellogg’s oven-fresh and flavor-perfect. When you eat this nourishing, economical food, remember that the Kellogg Company has developed a huge new market for farm products. Grains, milk, fruit and honey to the amount of many millions of dollars are consumed annually with Kellogg Cereals. When substitutes are offered, it is seldom in a spirit of service. Buy Kellogg’s and be sure of quality. OF BATTLE CREEB 4.