Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 113, Decatur, Adams County, 11 May 1936 — Page 3

felN SOCIETY

gfTMj A decolt a t dinner a, r !”■ ,- 111,(1 " 111 .' n |“““f ■llH'- |)u V - ■RS,, ,|.<! Mr. mid Mrs. "I' Findlay. Ohio. ■J*jL i Wiselim’i and g.S |., of envoy, Mr. v* 1 IK. . i> , x mid son Hilly. Ek«iß'Hi li' Bolt. SISTER EtHP*‘= TTy PARTY BL 11... n.'im'.wr • ■literEStfd, .-■•:■ I.orm- ■ /'■zi "'•>'•■ given Kw»Jii ■ :ri ' ! M ' ' towF k’"* 1 1,1 ,lonor ' mid ' ESoum very effective. Etajßreseiit were the Missett Hi!. Kren H' 1 ■'* a HedirKjK,.i.p Frieda Busick. AlKira t® ki-meyer. Joys so ir-h ■lib organized organized 4-H club for Ke toy* f Mnnnionth met Friday Kninglat the Monnvuth high - Keiiitßers and the leader, Jamee Emb. >e folio" mr. officers were Kea ek|nl ■FredK'nt"'! president; Ja-.k .■-pi••eiilent Herman Kant. Bi . |- vretarv-tr ; ■jy.d KJt- . press reporter. ■ Them* .-.• Jack. Lloyd and guiijß ll - f ' r, ' ( l Kunkel. Herman Kranz, (jsrar Bristol. Bob Spiegel ■riLtoy Kitson. ■The nexi tn eting will be held at ■he .tch® May 22. BTheTfrzah linli will meet at the this evening at eight ■ Mr and M-< Leland Smith enter■Mfh a Mother's Day dinner ■ffldayfttr Mr. ami Mrs. Lee Reffey, H.irrv Merriman and

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I By Harrison carroll e L!’• J9 -' e - Syndicate, Inc. K HOLD Void' Sime what hapHngJSthi Trocadero not so long t->iw ago. Betty

, Furness’ "vegeH table” hat has J become famous. ■ In a season of | absurd hats, this I one of Betty’s is I topa It is covI ered with imitation carrots, gourds and what have you. The s t a y . u p-laters went into hysJ terlcs when the star made her app ea rance at

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rendezvous wearing the C'lnsvr Rogers sent a r s table suggesting she E* *W ,h ‘ hat and Al Scott fola r-a. !r ,I egg. The f, )r hours. All Hollyasking: "Have you seen P‘‘ r Fli, ness' vegetable hat?" KT^^B s,a ire is burning over what may be a new filmland ■The R-K-0 star went out day to see how the conof his house was coming B|F a cameraman taking EK." 1 it. Under questioning. ■ said he wasn’t connected Publication but recently had n Chicago and knew where sell pictures of stars’ r 150 apieee. He ducked out talre could get any further )n ' '’ ut the star is watching and, if the picture the ■tart shows up, he is going to F L.^W S in the air, or else W C. ktar an I x” 8 . a lot better. The , 8 tailor were in session aftern <>on. Bill was ""’’lness • three s P° rt suits, four fa»t« K Ti’ tß ' seven fancy sport 1 4, |r 12 shirts. >. -On as "Poppy" | S finished, the to Soboba Hot Springs 'Ma l °yW k n d Me and Fm Telling You! *fSUtSb< Bu,ton ’ Minneapolis: The thmeJM 'n' 8 011 furiously, but our .of iK. V. hesl definition is that ifbeyW ~b ln “ d Ralph Rainger W it: Sweet Heat". Ur t'rmh' !P H ; a,her Angel sitting on K Porch these afternoons, it

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mrs. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Monday Tirzali Club, B>n Hur Hall, 8 p. m. Eastern Star Initiation, Maacnlc Hall, 7:30 p. ni. Tuesday 1.-.yal Dorcas Class, Evangelical Church, 7:30 p. m. Zion Reformed Girl’s Guild, Church, 7:30 p. m. Missionary Society and Otterbein Guild Mother-Daughter Party, United Brethren Church, 6:30 p. tn. W. C T. U. Mrs. T. J. Dague, 2:15 p. m. Rebekah Lodge, I. O. O. F. Hall 7:30 p. in. Zion Junior Walther League, sclvvo! house, 7:30 p. m. Five Hundred club will meet with Mrs. E. W. Lankeau Tuesday evening at eight o’clock. Wednesday Reformed Ladies' Aid, church, 2:30 p. m. Zion Lutheran Missionary Society, Mrs Paul Busse. 2 p. m. Beulah Capel Ladies' Aid. Mrs. Willard Mcßride, all day meeting. Thursday Eastern Star, regular stated meeting, Masonic Hall, 7:30 p. m. Christian Indies’ Aid, church 2 •p. m. Union Chapel C. I. C„ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burrell, 7:30 p. im. Union Chapel Ladies’ Aid and the Missionary Society.- churcti 1:30 p. m. Mt. Pleasant Ladies’ Aid. Mrs. Clarence Whitridge, 2 p. m. Friday Zion Lutheran Missionary card party, ech<i?.l, 8 'P. m. Saturday Rummage Sale, Tri Kappa, Hensley Building, 9 A M. son Philip and Mr. and Mrs. Jamee Baker. The Ladies’ Aid of the Zion Reformed church will meet at the church Wednesday afternoon at two-thirty o’clock. Mrs Fred Fruchte will be the leader and the Meedames Henry Graber. Ernst Schlickmann. Carl Baumgartner and Cletus Miller, hostesses. The Mt. Pleasant Ladies’ aid will meet with Mrs. Clarence Whitridge Thursday afternoon at two o’clock. The Missionary society of tho Zion Lutheran church will give a card party at the echool Friday evening at eight o’clock. Bridge pin-

is not just to enjoy the air. The star's Dalmatian coach dog was struck down by a motorist who sped on. Heather put the dog in her car and gave chase, but the hit-and-runner escaped. She thinks she will recognize the car. however, and is keeping a watch hoping it will pass her house again. It's a silly story, but struck us as funny. On the “Texas Rangers" location. Paramount is using an "army’’ of Indians. Jack Oakie came upon one of them. Crazy Horse by name, looking very dejected. "What’s the matter, Crazy Horse?" asked Jack. The Indian made as if to walk away but changed his mind. “Ump," he grunted. "Me tired of playing Indian.” News jottings of the day: Janet Gaynor did a sneak-out of Hollywood and is motor-touring somewhere in Mexico with her mother. They wore headed towards Mexico City and were going to drive as far as they could get in 10 days. . . . Just saw the preview of "Under Two Flags" and it's a honey. Darryl Zanuck had a

Claudette Colbert

tough time finding a star to play “Cigaret", but Claudette Colbert was worth waiting for. Wait until you see her love scene with Ronald Colman on the desert. . . - Juno Brewster's colored maid has been hitting her regularly for raises and now

June finds that the girl has to go to New York to straighten out her 1934 income tax. The maid owns an interest In' flv ’ e Harlem beauty shops. . . . Ruth < hatterton Is home ill with Hie flit and the "Girls Dormitory" troupe had to shoot around her. . . . The Assistance League is staging six nightly’revues, a la Major Bowes, at the W ilshire Ebell theater beginning May n. They are to be called "Discoveries of 1936" and are to feature amateurs from southern California cities, with movie stars acting as judges. TODAY’S PUZZLE— What recently divorced cameraman is receiving long distance telephone calls from a famous and glamorous foreign star now on location.

decatur daily democrat Monday, may 11,193 6

RrDtgertion’fsafe HKcS... smoAe '• I i'l* Busy Americans Find Smoking Camels a Pleasant Aid That Helps '' L Digestion to Proceed Smoothly— Increases Alkalinity 1 T\ Many annoyance* of our daily lives— gestion, increases the flow of digestive k rush,worry,noise, mental strain —slow fluids...alkaline digestive fluids. ? ~~'v £fc A lv Ut 1- down the flow of the digestive fluids from f amel's costlier tobaccos you Vs. y VV Wfck so necessary to good digestion. get unequalcd mildness. Smoke Camels \ zjaSk Jjk. AuM Science and common experience agree for s comforting///r—for well-being—- \ t ' ,at <n,ok ' n R a Camel stimulates di- f',r u'tyi >lir,n t wit! 1 hey •< f y uii right! / 'L-S-- Ts ~ '"fit** ' £ - *%■ * ■> 1 ■""‘VWwWWWc.?’ \ W A UrMBB g y LIGHTNING SPEED ~ x TWtjMg ; *W sKI Lthel Arnold depends greatly on digestion. "I smoke Camels with r y ugg -AzM* and after meals, ’ says Mrs. Arnold. Iw 4’lhi''sr '.- ' ; ’ sBHIrSE. pH i' lift * O. D. GLADWELL describes operating a pneumatic ffi, at JsjL St ’ ~ * x -< <»■ drill. Ilus baturing r.iu is tough <m the digestion,” "IgaflßHßHt R ißlßtl?ijnfe% t&fi ;i * 1 just smoke Camels, and ( amels set me right.” K ISrS WgHMIL ■• aw^yja—i • BF a,«K ■Fmw » Whwc 4JK, 5J RM* ■ IJBLMggi. liftr ; MlKk “ Ww - :>.■>,. 18 664 JUMPS — the record of Joe yft :<SWS«fMp M Crane fuAoteJ. He says: "Camels set AT THE MAYFAIR ROOM of the Book-Cadillac Hotel in Detroit, me right! It’s just natural for me to Camels are a natural complement to perfect dining. Paul Fischer turn to Camels tor digestion's sake.” (rigbi) says: "A glance around our tables proves that those who I ' , /■OjMWjM appreciate quality have made Camel cigarettes their first choice.” i 1 ~x « METHOD USED. The evidence obtained by scientists defi- _ nitely establishes the fact that smoking a Camel increases W TW J the flow of the digestive fluids. The importance of this in g J B g B *<zst>t» facilitating digestion is a matter of common knowledge. J B B B B * Camels are made from finer, MOkE ■ .Bd B Si ri ST X EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS... Turkish and BB' B gB 'gjß C. s'gjßg9 s Domestic...than any other popular brand.

ochle and bunco will be .played. Tickets are on -sale for twentyfive cento. The public is invited to attend. The Loyal Dorcas class of the Evangelical Sunday school will meet at the church Tuesday evening at seven-thirty o'clock. The C I. C. class of the Union Chael Sunday school will meet with Mr. and Mis. Charles Burrell Thursday evening at seven-thirty o’clock. The Ladies aid and the Missionary scoiety of Union chapel will meet at the church Tuesday afternoon at one-thirty o'clock. FORMER LOCAL YOUNG MAN TO BE MARRIED Detroit, May 11—(Special)—Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Martin of 790 University Place, Groese Pointe, announce the approaching wedding of their daughter, lAnna Ruth Martin to Bernard J- Wenthoff, son of Mr. and Mrs- George Wetnhoff of Decatur, Ind. The wedding will take place, Saturday, June 20 in St. Paul's Catholic church, Grosse Pointe. Mr. Wetnhoff is a graduate cf Decatur Catholic high school. He| entered Detroit University and was I graduated from that institution

THIS WEEK • ONLY! a Guaranteed $2.00 iRgSF ' —J OIL WAVE ° NLV 81.50 Complete Any Style. This wave has more ringlets that are easy to care for yourself—Get Yours THIS WEEK. Savings On All Prices. COZY Beauty Shoppe Phone 266 K-C Bldg.

. with high honors He entered the newspaper field > and was employed for a few years on the Detroit Free Press, receiving several promotions, including that ■ I of night and Sunday editor. He is I. row employed by Variety, a ntaga- . zine of national reputation and cirj oulation. — 1 | AU 4-H girls of Root township 1 are asked to meet at the Monmouth high school Thursday afternoon at • 2 o'clock. Any girl wishing to join the.organization is also asked to at- • tend. I o Personals Mre. George Flanders and Mrs. Gladys Chamberlain were guests of Mr. and Mre. Fred Smith at Hamil- , ton Lake over the week-end-Mrs. Dick Archbold spent the week-end at Coldwater, Michigan. Pierce Flanders of Fort Wayne I visited relatives in Decatur yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Tyndall and ■ Mr. and Mns. Leigh Bowen spent yesterday at Lake Webster. j Miss Sally Hower of Indianapolis | was the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hower over Sunday. • Mr. and Mrs. Don Lutes visited in F.ert Wayne Saturday evening. Miss Bertha Heller of Indianapolis is spending this week with her mother, Mre. D. D. Heller. Mr. ■ Heller, who wae seriously ill several days ago, is much improvedMr. and Mns. Ralph Tyndall and daughter Joyce Os Bluffton visited in Decatur yesterday. Mrs. Vida Kaough of Fort Wayne ‘ visited her mother, Mrs. John Bowers Sunday. Mrs- Jessie Burdge of Decatur and Mrs. Merle Kist of Portland were Fort Wayne visitors yesterday. Mrs. Samuel Merwin, Jr., and s“.n Mather of New York City arrived in Decatur Saturday for a two week's visit with Mrs. Merwin’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Vance of North Second .streetMrs. George Louden and daughters Alice Ann and Dotty Lou and I Mrs. L’oyd Cline and daughter Mar-' tha of Bluffton visited in Decatur Sunday aiterncon. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. McMillen of Fort Wayne visited in Decatur Sun- [ day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. E. iB. Macy and Mr. and Mrs. H- B. Macy visited with Mrs. Sadie Scherer at Wren dayMr. and Mrs. II- Bernstein visited in Fort Wayne Sunday evening. Bart Shraluka spent the week-

I end in Decatur. |i I Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Porter of I . Muncie visited with Mr. and Mrs. I ; Orval Brentlinger of Pleasant Mills ■ t yesterday. > Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Christen and I • children of Fowler, visited over i - Sunday with the former's parents, | i Mr. and Mrs. Ed Christian, north of 1 ■ the city. > Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sprang, who ' , have been seriously ill with influt enza at their residence on North ii Second street, are some better to- ' . day. Miss Kate Flickinger ie a patient at the Adams county memorial hos- i pital suffering with a fratcured hip. The Tri Kappa sorority will have a rummage eale Saturday in the Hensley bui-ldit.g. The sale will com- i ' mence at nine o’clock. A large quan-: ' tity of summer apparel will Ibe ofL sered at reasonable pricesCarl Miller, 13 wear old s»n of' Mr. and Mrs. Albert Miller, who has : j ‘ been seriously ill, is some better j. today. The lad has been suffering . ’ .from a healing in his ear. | ( '* Mrs. Clara Myers and son Cletus ; and Mr- and Mrs. Paul Meyers and children spent the week-end in Indianapolis with Dr. R. J. Meyers and ( family. They also attended the j 1 first communion of Joan Clare Meyers- j Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sprague of , Bluffton spent Sunday evening in , Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peterson ( • and daughter Joyce of Detroit visit- ( ed in Decatur several .hours yester- ] ! day before continuing to Fort Wayne, where they visited with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Keller and son. Miss (Bernice DeVoss of South Bend was the guest of her parents, Judge an-d Mrs. Huber DeVoss and family over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Borman and I Ncrbert Holtl.'use visited with Mr. t and Mrs. Matt Leach in Indianapolis I Sunday. 0 j * i Adams County Memorial Hospital Mrs. Charles Gage, route 1, ad- , mitted yesterday. Beeman J. Frederick, C-oldwater, Michigan admitted yesterday. Mrs. Robert Gerber, Ge- , I neva, admitted Sunday. ARRIVALS • I Mr. and Mrs. Paul Henry of Chi-[ I cago are the parents of a daughter, i. [Diane Marie, born May 4 at 12:35, i A. M. The baby weighed seven., ponunds and ten ounces. Mrs. Hen- [ ry was formerly Charlotte Niblick I of this city. - Trade in a Good Town — Decatur .

Six Young Men Are Sentenced To Death — New York. May 11 —(UP) —Conn-1 ty Judge Peter J. Brancato, in Brooklyn court, today sentenced six men to die for a single nnurder. The mass death sentences were said to be the greatest number ever impoe-| ed in this country for one slaying.' The six, all youths between 18 ‘ and 23 years old, were ordered; executed at Sing Sing penetentiary I the week of June 22. They were convicted of the hold up murder of Edwin Eepoeito. a col-' lector for the Brooklyn-Manhattan transit system. o Pope Pius Attacks Communism Today Vatican City, May 11 — (UP) — Pope Pius today attacked communism as a “common enemy" that “has already damaged family life.” lAddressing Hungarian pilgrims escorted to the Vatican by Cardinal Seredi, primate of Hungary, the' pontiff said: “A common enemy threatens i everyone and everything today. It has already damaged family life” Churchmen considered the Pope’s remarks as his strongest recent denunciation of communistic propaganda. “By the common enemy we mean communism which is spreading through deceit and imposture," the pontiff said. o Quadruplets Taken From Whisky Diet Passaic, N. J.. May 11—(UP) — The Kaspar quadruplets were taken from a whisky and sugar diet today and fed mother’s milk for the first time. Physicians decided on the move in an effort to build the strength of Frances, Felix, Frank and Ferdinand, born Saturday to Mrs. Emil Kaspar. Arrangements to bring the milk here from Boston by airplane and from New York by automobile were made by Mayor Benjamin Turner, who views the quads with considerable civic pride. o Storks Solve Locust Problem Cape Town.—4U.RI —Storks, cotn-j ling from Europe in great flocks, 1 are solving South Africa's locust i problems. The storks have acquired a taste for locusts, and this • season they have destroyed so many that the Government's annual locust campaign—costing $lO,000,000 a year—has been suspender.

Picnic Stove Heats Quickly Chicago.— (U.R) —A boon to lovlers of the outdoors is an ingenious I new picnic stove introduced in the Merchandise Mart here. The top is of a new aluminus alloy called i “magnalite” and is so extremely sensitive to heat that a fire made of a single newspaper sheet is sufI ficient to bring it to cooking templerature.. I Q High Water Is Blessing j Yakima, Wash. — (U.R) — Flood water usually is a menace, but Mrs. ; Bessie George is thankful for high water.. When her house near here caught fire, 20 farmers formed a bucket brigade and extinguished the blaze, using the water from a swollen irrigation ditch. The ditch is usually dry at this season. o U. S. Court Building To Rise Philadelphia (U.R) —Construction of a new federal court building on the present site of the old postoffice is expected to begin this summer. The new structure will house the entire Circuit Court of

Daughter “Suited” In Sports Chic For Town, Country, Camb or the Shore By Ellen Worth • • She is just at the age to appreciate -— s sports'suit that is so cute to look A . /\ at and so adorable to wear. / 1 The bolero jacket has real pockets. . | fgSS* The shorts arc cut on fashionable j culotte lines. The shirt has a new S type sailor collar. j_ PR* xT White linen-like weave cotton with J I A navy and white striped cotton blouse I I and navy buttons is altogether dar- A 1 ling for this little suit. I \i I I It is so easy to make and will cost II \ ■ext to nothing. II I Other cottons as percale, cham- y 11 bray, shantung, gingham, pique, etc., \ \ / — are also smart and practical. \ I gCuS Style No. 1732 is designed for sizes r • > . ry/fs 4,6, 8 and 10 years. Size 8 requires I I 1% yards of 35-inch material with I I (A ° 1 yard of 35-inch contrasting. /U |f\ \ I \pns3fx Our Illustrated Home Dressmak- \ I ’ I ing Spring Book will enable you to | I \ <- 1 -j have smart clothes and more of them >ll \ I 1 for less money. Each step in the " "TT )_ y ’[ making of a dress is shown with [I illustrated diagrams. Send for your -I L (”it T a copy today. (J y I / J 2 , Price of BOOK 10 cents. 1 Price of PATTERN 15 cents (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. NEW YORK PATTERN BUREAU, Decatur Dally Democrat, 220 East 42nd Street, Suite, 1110, NEW YORK, N. Y.

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Appeals and district tribunal as - well as various federal offices. t o Secrets in Adobe Bricks ’ iPerkeley, Cal. —(UP) — Adobo I bricks taken from the old adobe ’ houses, are enabling professors of ' Ute University of California to de- ’ termine which were the original native flowers, fruits, field crops, weeds and even plant diseases of California, and which have since been imported. The seeds embedII ded in the adobe bricks furnish the . i necessary clue. o Students Pick Heroes I Ashtabula, O, —(UP)— A poll I among high school students on I I “Whom would you rather be other ; than yourself?" showed that Amelia Earhart Putnam and Abraham Linc.o'n were most popula- among i young men and women of Ashtai bula. Others were Betsy Roes, Flor- . ence Nightingale. Mickey Cochrane, i Gene Sarazen and Daniel Boone. 11 o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur