Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 21 May 1936 — Page 3
BIN SOCIETY _
If ARCHBOLD ESS AT DINNER u Archbold entertained IPr and bridge party W -d--->nlng honoring her duughMrs. Richard T. Archwer< > laid for twelve the dining table, whit'll (•lively center'd with a UP ; of the valley with iers in cryatal holders on Wedding ring place ked th • place ,t each ivc three course dinner ips w if* pnwnted t»? the] guest, Mrs. Archbold. Mrs. Chamberlain, Mrs. Charleu and Mrs. I. W. Macy. [uesta included Mr.s. BreinClwinber’ain. Mrs, Macy, hlliain Hell, Mrs. Frank Palmer Eicher, Mrs. i . lie ii I W j vi-ar round you can enBjoy th.- (i- . >u« combination. geUen Kellogg's Corn ■ P4' - -In nl bananas, and milk Bseteam' The oven-fresh goodKellogg's brings out the and adds wholesome for quality and value. ■ NiHiing lakes the place of I CORN FLAKES
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sHvHARRiSON CARROLL ■ (Jopyriuht, 1936, What other Hollyjtv. I wonder, would have Hr ♦oL'nn ♦ l-i c» ti-rritl.lxk
taken the trouble that Bette Davis just did so that a 1 4-y ea r-o 1 d Tacoma boy could win a five dollar bet? For two hours, the star sat on the floor of Perc West more’s office going through dozens of old fan magazines. She was looking for a certain picture of
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herself that was | '* lo Warner Brothers studio E3r n t'b‘liy, Bette exclaimed with She had found the picK‘3» anil ■' proved to be one taken ,>ho,n syndicate. reason for all this bother was ei from a Tacoma school boj». in his town had printed a and captioned tt: “Princess of Denmark”. The boy was it was Bette Davis and had Hfcr het'' S ■ iuilgmPnt with “ flve of ! 'ih W '° ,e Rettp asking for a copy ' ' p ’ c,ure - The winner of last st»rf S \i, ara< ' emy “ward for acting P better P“ rt of an afternoon ' Mt nc it for him I»IU ™ ol ' n g friendship between tell and .Mack Gray has E nr" 1 ' a A na * b an £’ an< l th® Wh. o now downing at each other it i nro^o fneet - l s Hollywood hears the new headman in dare » ae “lay b ® Broderick CrawpK nywa X. they are going to together. coincidence, the casting P®eer"in' S m?*™ to play an aviation sKrnJ Wai- ners' “China Clipper" K." 8 t 0 lhe Hetl ,he uctor fife; h a oiiPPing book revealing ®ts Wn 'u^ S once “d'ance man for ■S v ■' , Brothers in promoting ■toL' 1 . P meets and exhibitions. I . m] aimß to have persuaded b®. e0(i °re Roosevelt to take ■la in T 90 P 9 ane rlde< H was ln St * to actor, when "Bu^iv l "" 1 ° f the machine ’ he *t® didn’t ask to go up again. Mp and rm Telling You! ■kann ? , eeler ’ Highland Park: No. ■hhardc USt publicit X “bout Max , 8 ® n thußiasm over Mickey Midsummer Night's Mickey J, JIOW studying
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mrs. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Thursday St. Paul ladles' Aid, all day meeting. Mrs. Charlie Shoaf Evangelical Loyal Daughters, chur. ii, 7: JO p. m So Cha Rea Club, Miss V'rginila Ehinger, 6:30 p. ni. Ruralistic Study Club. Mrs. Victor I Ulman, 8 p. m. Eta Tau Sigma. Miss Betty Trick- | er 7:30 p. mFriendship Village, Mm. Omer | Merriman. 1:30 p. m. W. M. F. Society, M E. Church, 2:30 p. m. D Y. B. Class, Mrs. Frank Father, 7:30 p. m. Baptist women's society, Mrs., Louise Brumley, 2:30 p. ni. , Women of Moose, called meeting and pot luck supper, Moose Home I 7 p. ni. Friday Auxiliary Pot Luck Supper, legion Home, 6 p. m. Pocah.'ntas Lodge , Red Men's Hall. 7:30 p. in Saturday Plate Supper, 25c Methodist . church, 5 to 7 p. tn. Delta Theta Tau Four V. Club, D. H. S. 2 p. m. i, Monday Musi.al, Mrs. Dora lAkey's Claes . Christian church, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday Musical. Mrs. Dora Akey’s Class. Christian Church, 7:30 p. in. Rebekah Lodge. 1. O O. F. Hall 17:30 p. ni I In the Red Men's hall Friday even- | Ing at seven-thirty o'clock. — JOHN NEADSTINE IS HONORED WITH PARTY John Neadstiqe celebrated liis' fiftieth birthday anniversary Sun-j day with a numb r of his friends I and relatives assisting him. A delij clous basket dinner was served at noon after which pictures were • taken and a social time enjoyed. Mr. N adstine was presented with a number of beautiful gifts. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. 1 Adrian Wells and son. Mrs. Kate; Bremnierman. Muskegan, Mich-, i Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wells, Newcastle, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Riff and . sous. Waynesfield, 011$?, Mr- and i Mrs. Roy Hook and children. Mon-; roe, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Neadstine, Decatur. Mr. and Mrs Ed Neadstine
German, so he can appear under Reinhardt’s direction at a tuture Salzburg festival. The most sought after reel of film ' on the K-K-O lot is a patchedtogether print of all the dance nuni--1 bers that Ginger Rogers and Fred ' Astaire have done since they became 1 a team. I’an Berman had the reel ' put together, so it could be checked to avoid duplication of costumes, sets or routines in the numbers for ’ “Never Gonna’ Dance". Now, how--1 ever, everybody on the lot wants to ' see the film. It contains 'TTte ’ Carioca", "The Continental’’, "The ' Plccollno", "Cheek to Cheek", all the 1 famous dances created by the pair. ‘ Released as a short, it would make , J thousands for the studio. 1 Just heard a funny story about ’ Ralph and Frank Morgan. On ■ Broadway, Ralph was the big shot, . 1 but Frank has stepped by him in the films. The other day, Ralph was playing golf and made a hole in The next morning, he was leading , 1 one of the trade papers and let out a yelp. , . i “Can you imagine it!” he px--1 claimed. ”The only important thing ' I've done in Hollywood is to make a 1 hole in one, und now they have credited it to Frank." Here and there in Hollywood: After owning a car tor eight years. ’ Claudette Colbert is just getting around to taking
I driving lessons. : ... June Lang, the pretty blonde in “The Country . Doctor”, is going about these evenings with Vic Orsatti.. . - You’d never believe it looking at her. hut it turns out that June used to dance in the chorus. She was a night club entertainer, too.
■ 19 *1 LSl. —i B June Lang
Paula Stone is leaving Warners ! to free-lance. But first she’ll take a . trip to New York on the new streamline train to see her mother. . . . i Francis Lederer is breaking tradition I by his party for the crew on hta new picture on the first day of shooting. Usually, It is the last. . . • Gertrude Michael has a new dachshund to replace 'he one killed several months aeo . . . And our idea of the height of precaution is the sign on the Incinerator at Twentieth CenturyFox. It reads: “Keep Out , TODAY’S PUZZLE— The sister and brother of what i feminine star have just had their faces remodeled T
DECATTm DATLY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1936
and family, Mr, and Mrs. Jake Itolcli and non, Mr. and Mrs. Jesuo Huy and children, William Rjff, Mies Laura Kuhn. Chattanooga. 0., Mrs. John Neadstine and the honored guest. DELTA THETA TAU BUSINESS MEETING At the business meeting of Delta Theta Tau held Tuesday evening at the home of Miss Mary Margaret \oglewede. Centennial plans were made Officers for the new year were installed and the program committee appointed. An invitation was read to the ■ liapt-r to attend the circus breeakfast In Peru June 1. Mebmers of the Delta Theta Tau 4-11 club will meet at the Decatur high school Saturday afternoon at two o’clock. After the regular meeting a picnic will be enjoyed. Th’ students of Mrs. Dora Akey’s musical c'asses will present a program at the Christian church cn Monday and Tuesday nights at 7:30 p. tn. The program includes piano, violin, banjo, guitar, mandolin, accocrdion and vocal selections- The public is cordially invitedThe St Marys township home economics club, which was to have met May 28 with Mrs. Ben Colter has been postpones! until June 4. Members are asked to please take note. Tile place of meeting of the Evangelical Loyal Daughters class has been changed from the horn-* of Mrs Ear 1 Fuhrman to the Evangelical church basement. The meeting will be held this evening at seventhirty o'clock. U. S. TO FLOAT NEW BONO ISSUE U. S. Treasury To Float Billion Dollar Issue June 1 Washington, May 21 —(UP) — The U. S. Treasury will float a bond issue.-f $1,000,000,000 (B) or more on June 1. secretary of the treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr., revealed today. Formal announcement of the issue will be made on June 1 and the I bonds will be dated June 15I Morgeuthau declined to reveal the, exact amount of the new financing, i but it is known that $686,616,416 of 1H per cent treasury notes ma- ' ture on that date and that amount ; ,-f new money required to meet payments of soldiers bonus bonds soon after June 15 is expected to bring the new bond issue well above sl,000.000.000. An additional $264,138,000 of short-term treasury notes mature on Aug 15, but Morgenthau declined to say whether these would be refinanced on June 15-? r later. He said there has been no change in the treasury's plans to float SIOO,000,000 of treasury bills each week. Treasury experts now are working out details of the new financing which will be announced on June 1. These Include plans for preventing "padding" of subscription offers for the bonds. akkjvals Helen Joan is the name of the seven and one quarter pound daughter bcm to Mr- and Mie- Ray Johnson of North Tenth street at the Ed Whitright residence on route 2, southwest of Decatur. The baby was born at 10:35 Wednesday evening and is the second child and first daughter in the family. Mrs. Johnson was formerly Miss Gladys Whitright. —o PERSONALS Ervin Miller, local baker, is ill at his home on Fifth street. The Family restaurant on south Second street has installed a new Neon sign. Miss Marlon Neprud, community manager of the Homesteads, left yesterday afternoon for Champaign, 111 . to look after business in the' general office of the resettlement administration. Mrs. Lawrence Linn and daughter Dianne visited in Fort Wayne Wednesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Carroll of 252 North Second street are in Chicago, where they have been called by the serious illness of their daughter, Mrs. Dan Vail. Mrs. Samuel Merwin spent Wednesday in Fort Wayne. Mrs. William Bell is visiting in Fort Wayne today. Mrs. Stella Coverdale and daughter Mary of Fort Wayne will visit in Decatur this evening. Herman Ehinger made a .business trip to Fort Wayne this morning. James Ehinger, whe underwent an operation for the removal of his appendix at the Adame county hospital recently, is improving rapidly and expects to be moved to his home on West Madison street the last of the week. iA- J. Smith left this morning for Chicago where he will transact bttsi-
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■ t nesa. .Miss Elizabeth Schrock arrived I last evening fr.ni ilndianapolis for an extended visit with Mr. and Mre. 1 W. P. Schrock and family. Mrs. Charles Holthouse, Mns R. E Daniels, Mrs. Margaret Ixtae and Mrs. Al -Schmitt are spending the day at Wawasee • j •. Adams County I Memorial Hospital £ - . . .. — ♦ Adolphus Macy, route 4, admitted yesterday. Mrs. Charlie Gage, route 1, diemissed yesterday. o TOWSAYS iCOX’i ) IE ONE) Sullivan asked. “I knew nothing of this,” Townsend said. The "Townsend gram," signed by Robert E. Clements, resigned Townsend official, and Randall said: "Further contributions to con-
H —— ———— Darling Front Buttoned Princess Dress i
Encourages "Self-Help” and Makes Daughter More Self-Dependent By Ellen Worth Here’s a dress that offers a marvelous opportunity for "self-help" training for small daughter. And won’t she love to dress herself unaided in this darling princess dress? A child can pu» v on and button it so easily. Cunning too, are the brief puffed sleeves. Isn’t the collar smart? Peter Pan at the front and sailor at the back. Mummy will like this model, because it opens out flat for pressing after its repeated visits to the wash tub. It is as smart as it is quaint in yellow and white calico print with plain white collar. This easy to make dress is also fascinating in rose-bud dimity print, dotted swiss, pastel organdie, gingham, percale prints, etc, are other nice mediums. Style No. 1776 is designed for sires 4,6, 8 and 10 years. Size 8 requires 2 yards of 35-inch material with H yard of 35-inch contrasting •nd yard of 1-inch ribbon for bow. Our illustrated Home Dressmaking Book will enable you to have smart clothes and more of them for less money. Each step in the making of a dress is shown with illustrated diagrams. Send for your copy today.
'gressional action, fund greatly I needed immediately stop disastrous I : to our cause if compelled to with-1 i draw’ our forces from Washington, | i D. C. stop consult your president j and please secure favorable and | prompt action for this fund from | your club stop our records do not j show any contributions for this' congressional fund from your club j yet stop strategy committee sug-1 jgestedt quota fifteen cents per| . member as minimum stop appro- i j ciate your sending amount avail-' able within one week stop several! [notable victories reported fori . Townsend cause this week." Sullivan brought out that the i telegram went to 5.000 clubs, laj beled with such expressions as "hurry," “don't delay” and "to-: morrow never comes." Sullivan said $11.4110 was collect-1 ed within a week although $21,000 of the original fund still was available.. “You did not know your headquarters used the mails to defraud?” Sullivan asked. "I don’t think there was any l fraud,” Townsend replied. |
Wiw > w /«./« ?"+’ \ Z J /a ’•» „ \ u 6 1 3 - ft. a 1776 Price of BOOK 10 cents. Price of PATTERN 15 cents (cola is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. New York Pattern Hiirean, Decatur Dally Democrat S2O Ea«t 42nd St, Suite 1110 NEW YORK. N. Y.
ORCHESTRA TO I LEAVE FRIDAY — ;Gene Johnson And Orchestra To Leave For Michigan Stay — Gene Johnson and his 11 piece . orchestra of this city will leave I Friday night for Cadillac. Michigan, j where they will start a tour of northern Michigan until June ". This orchestra has been organized for about a year and has made rapid progress in the musical field. They have playefl at several of i the prominent dances in this vicinity since their organization and I just recently returned from a Bev■eral day tour in southern Michigan. They have also played at the Sun set pavilion since the opening on Easter Sunday. The band consists of live local young men, including the leader, 'Gene Johnson. They are: Bob Ashbaucher, Jimmy Harkless, El- ‘ lis Squier and Ed kjichhorn. Those | 'from out of town are: Lee Owens, Convoy, Ohio; Dale DeArmond, Willshire, Ohio; Jack Fenstermak ‘er, Geneva; Vestil Chausse, Clay Brown, Monroeville; Harold Stevens. Fort Wayne. The orchestra has several engagements for the coining summer I season including a two weeks booking at the Erie pavilion at Toledo, Ohio. o GRADUATE 55 I .CO.NI !M. Banker, Jr.. Russel T. Butler, Junior J. Drake, Robert D. Fuhrman, Gladys Harvey, Clarence H. Hitchcock, Marlowe Hoagland, Dale E. Hoffman, Leßoy C. Huffman, Forest A. Kenworthy, Ralph iC. Peterson, Ruth Irene RaudenI bush, Helen Juanita Richards, Donald Reynolds, Ralph Richard Ritter, Charles W. Whitman. Elma I June Wynn, Deloris Audrey Miller. Academic Francis Andrews, Richard William Andrews, Lucinda A. Borne, i Madeline Crider, Frances Maxine Drake, Robert D. Engeler, Naomi Ruth Franklin. Lttella Frohnapfel, Harriet Ellen Fruchte, Marie Greth- ! er, Mary Rosemond Hart. Herald R. Hitchcock, Marilyn Hoffman, j Abigail Eileen Jackson. Robert E. Johnson, Albert J. F. Keller, Mildred Katherine Koldewey, Phyllis Paxson Krick, Della E. Marbaugh, Elizabetn Meihls, Wilma Ireta Miller, Harry J. Moy- , er, Dale Myers, Agnes L. Nelson, Illah June O'Donnell, Ruth. R. Port- \ er, William Charles Schafer, William P. Schrock, Jr., Keith J. j Smitley, E'lis Squier, James William Tutewiler, Clarence F. Wai I
| tlier, and Ruth E. Worthman. Commercial i Romaine lantha Raudenbnsh. | o Horsewoman 71 Years Old Sydney —(UP) — A special prize | was awarded in the main event of the Granville Horse Show here tr | Mrs- Richard Newell, a greatgrandI mother. She is 71 years old and has
Roy H. Andress D.C. LICENSED C HIRO P R ACTOR HOURS — DAILY Btolla. m. 12 to sp. m. (> to 9p. m. Sunday by appointment. Phone 1193 I MAKE HOUSE CALLS Massage — Light Treatment 315 N. 4 st. Decatur, Ind. gmnnasraaBSBHMnMDMaMMaaHMaBK SMART NEW FOOTWEAR j They’re Here! Another shipment of Summer Footwear — Whites and Colors —arrived today! All smart new numbers in Ties, Sandals, Straps and Oxfords. This is the last shipment of Whites we will receive so we urge you to shop NOW! $1.50.«54.95 Good selection Mens White ; Footwear selling at $3.0 $5 Nichols Shoe Store
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been riding at shows for 4S years, j losing nene of her skill. 0 Hawaiian Language Retained Honolulu.— (U.R) —There is only one Hawaiian language newspaper published in Honolulu. It is the “Ke Alakai o Hawaii" (Leader of Hawaii). The publisher is a uku- ! lee manufacturer.
