Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 143, Decatur, Adams County, 16 June 1936 — Page 3

|IN SOCIETY"

■ZJnOEMAN MLg ceremony L ,, r! |.-- Lindeman, Fort I,e<aii)' 11"' ~r ' lr ■V', K< rtl. 12"2 Ito'iinwoii.l |MU- .. w.c. ■>••. soil ol Mr. an.l IHVo- R""- " r |,, ' ia " ir . K ( ', l the lunil.v Lu:l: |W (t lit I'aul Krause offiMV ' ■ which wax pie K. ■!> It ■ organ I", in.' K, Halpii Doctor. was utlcnd-d by Mi BE|/ .".ar ami Mr. Hornet Mm"' ' ht . o i v.l as best man. |V b , ld ,. wa. dfssed ill a lona \ Il.outsselint- lb|R".. a ~ioiild>T length Veil |K th,. a.I by a turban < a;. |H ... : walisoto;. 1..- ■...., lb ■ attendant ®E,ia: 2 '» :l 1,1 bink With a blue mat. limit blue <ipm i |H\ i"l •' ’’"li'ruet of llble .1. : ceremony, a w.il BBlhrtikfasl was served In the. |M \li.- Miller'* Engli |K V ... Th., collide will take a K- fic.eigii Ohio. Jv util, ky and ilium their re- ■ . . be at home al 722 RiverFort Wayne. party is FOR MRS. LOSE H bridge party w,. v nil.n • veiling hoiioi ’ IWho Will lea . Ms.: Ji;lv,u:ik-e. Wis . with Mt* ati'l 'lr*. Churlee 11.dl as bo !•■ at the homo latter. . • with a .profusion of Juno' H id;’, was enjoyed and were given to Mr*. Paul | Mrs Raymond Kohne and V: ■■ coil" chi - on of i 11.- . ude\ cabinet I'.mta Rioted to Mrs. Lose. - . iioon was nerved -J .;.'- A color combination - ell was rat t led uni '..<■■ de. P h .ilmiita* lodge will meet evening at seven-thirty o’Red Men's hall. \V| man's soei-ty will ■h.th Mrs <l. Palmer near (>-• :.r- The ladie* will lea'... about ten o'clock. At noon ■ 1 i.-k dinner will he served ' !■ afternoon a mi.-i-i.>n.i ■ Mlh conducted by Mrs. V. be enjoyed.

B - — BUTTON'S g JEWELRY with England Store ■* Door South Court House ■ITCHES - DIAMONDS I JEWELRY 9 Reasonable Prices 9 Expert Watch and 9 Jewelry Repairing I AU Work || Guaranteed.

Ipe Shoulders that Flatter s i TZie Slim and I Not-So-Slim -*4 ■v Ellen Worth J C 9 Ir'Tx tailored dress wraps .V -V “1- j', N. S*** in undreamed of slimness. <*/- |’;i\k \ I ’*/ L 'V shoulders besides being •• i « \ y"' /\ V y , ? c °ol. add a pretty fem- /'"''J Vh/'XA'xJjr S, / K* ■ay take printed or plain f / X*'f XvJ ' s,ll£ s (whki will tub if you \ \ Tji, ■LuZT 17 pa,e ’hade) or darker \ \ K JT / B.' lch ***’ only need cleaning \ \ /S'. .< V. Y I to time. \ \ / • ... . -\q 4 K'.®* s ' choose from the lovely \\ /■ I E>, ton voiles, and other dainty \ '*"l *i a ? P ru >ted muslin or batiste \ _| a '• j-awfe-K . ■<• •• i Blkl so ““art hi cotton shantung, I C' »' ,* ‘ A K., We * v cs, novelty seersuck- li •> •• 1 1 ■r "• «C. z<=>A A* T ''ll K ? * or c tailored effect the /j A11,2 \ ,11 ■u * Inay be omitted from //v—rJl'A *' • A 1 ■ ’ Il FT IVa'V- ,11 9L 0, ’779 is designed for sizes w I ’.i /' q*. y 4 I K u rs ' % 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46- I V A•? I 1 9 of U TO- S “ e 36 requires 4% II V >t, .. " .1 | ■of u- ‘‘"ch material with % I t u ! -v !■! ’ ■“J H-mch contrasting. / l| A ? £. •• P1 I BS »;n Strate d Home Dressmaking ill'A .U. /'•? A K. enable you to have smart L_JJ fJ’\ n’ I //' 111 ■, ’nd more of them for less , 1 H ■ ,k step ,n the making of a P >' A K>IA KSe a W r n w ‘*b illustrated dia- Lj. •' L<’ ■ . entl ’°r your copy today. / S r«< BOOK 10 cents. \| / Jp? e 's' r of p. at tern 15 cents (coin \ I j I ed). Wrap coin carefully. ) ' /I ' ■ Bureau, 1 1 i (\ x “ r aP" ,lz democrat |l\ 1 Vk \ ■ St * Sn,te 1110 11 *¥“\ «KW YORK. M. T. |7

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesday Delta Theta Tau. business meet-' Ing, Mrs. Ed Bosse, 7:30 p. m , Wednesday Zion Raformpd latdlt* *Airt. church, ,2:30 p. m. Girl Scout Troop 1 Central School( 4 pm. Phoebe Bible Claes, Mrs. H. B. Macy. 7:30 p. m. Decatur Home Ke Chib, Mrs. Ora MacAlhaney, 1:30 p. m. Thursday M. E. Woman's Foreign Missionary, Mrs. Charles Fletcher, 2 p.m. St. Paul ladies aid, Mrs. H. L. | Smith, all day. Ruralistlc Study Club, Mrs. Joe, Spangler, 8 p. in. Christian Ladies’ pie Sale, phone I order* to Mrs. William Kohls number 911. Presbyterian Ladies' Aid, Mrs. J. L. Kocher, 2:30 p. m. Magley Reformed church (public social, 7:30 p. m. Baptist Woman’s Society, Mrs. G. Palmer. 10 a. m. M. E. Standard Bearers. Mias' Donnabell Fennimore, 7 p. m. Frienedship Village Club, MJ's. A Den Wolf, 1:30 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Daughters, Mrs. George Sprague, 7:30 p. m. Friday Auxiliary Public Bingo Party, Legion Home, 8 ip. m. 1 Pocahontas Ixidge. Red Men's • Hull. 7:30 p.m. Sunday Accordlan Sacred Concert. Evangelical Church. 7:30 p.m. The Standard Bearers of the Methodist Episcopal Sunday school will meet with Miss Donnabell Fennimore Thursday evening at seven o’clock. All members are requested to be present. The Magley Reformed church will have a public, (ice < ixfam social Thursday evening and a number of vocal quartets will be present. There will also be a radio on the grounds. The public ie urged to attend. The Loyal Daughters class of the Evangelical Sunday school will meet with Mrs. George Sprague on Line street Thursday evening at seven-thirty o’clock- Mrs. Ed Sweigart and Mrs. Francis Eady will be i the assisting hostesses. The Friendship Village home ' economies club will meet with Mrs. I Allen Wolf on Thursday June 18 at ■ one-thirty o’clock. A number of Decatur ladies atI tended the garden ipartv of the i Wheel and Distaff, junior organiza- ! tionof the D. A. R., held at the Zahrt I residence in Fort Wayne yesterday. ! Mrs. Charles Keller in president of ! the organization and Mrs. George i Triplett, was chairman of the affair. : Both are former Decatur residents. The Pei lota Xi convention will ' be held Thursday and Friday of this I week at Jeffersonville. Ind.. Mrs. ' Alfred Beavers, president of the local delegation and Miss Marjorie , DeVoes, corresponding secretary, will go as delegates. Miss Mary Cowan will also attend the meetings

DECATTTW DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1936.

The girl will leave Thursday morning. Mrs. William Bell will ho hostess to the dinner bridge dub Thursday June 25 al six-thirty o’clock. o—■ PERSONALS William Angelbeck, Sr., and Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Hardie from Durand, Michigan attended the funeral of Mrs. Henry Schulte here this morni Ing. Albert Hunn. of Hammond, is visiting with the Rev. H- W. Frank-! lin. Mr. Hann, who was a former' ! employer of the local minister be-! fore he entered the ministry, had not seen him for over 20 years. Miss Margaret Confer of Fort Wayne ie spending several days in Decatur visiting Mr. ami Mrs. Harry Fritzinger. Barney Moore of Portland attended to bueinese in Decatur yesterday. ' Miss Ida Mae Steele and Miss Roselyn Foreman and Raymond Beer and Maurice Studkey of Berne -sent Sunday visiting at Sturgis, Coldwater and Lake James. Mists Mina Collier left this morning for Indianapolis; where she will I enter Butler college for a eix week’s couree. Miss Collier will again teach in the Imgansport high ' school when school reopens this 1 fall. | Alex Wilhelm and Leo -Kirsch I fished at Hamilton Lake for several hours early this morning. Mr. and Mrs. J. Ward Calland have returned from Granville, ()-, < They were accompanied by their daughter Mies Martha Calland, who has completed her freshman year, In Denison Univeresity, and will spend the summer vacation with her parents. Mrs. Elizazbeth Markel who has spent the past several weeks visiting with friends and relatives in i Columbus and Dayton has returned ' home. She was accompanied by her son Jay Markel of Dayton. o ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Vance Maddox are' 1 the parents of a boy baby born June | 11 at Ball Hospital, Muncie. The | baby has .been named John William ! Mrs. Maddox ie a daughter of Mr.' and Mrs. C. W. Moser. q M. CLIF TOWNSEND COXTINVED FKOM PAGE OXFD , distribute to local schools for i teachers' salaries all money collected from the gross income tax ' up to an amount that will guarantee S6OO per teaching unit. Th® controversial tax measure, now in its fourth year of operation. has broadened the tax base and hav; helped materially to reduce property taxes, it was claim- | ed. Repeal of the gross income tax and enactment of a net income tax was proposed in the platform adopted by the Republican state convention. Contending the savings in property taxes accomplished during the last four years have been due in a marked degree to the law limiting the tax rate to SI.OO for rural areas and $1.50 for municipalities. the party declared the emergency clause cannot be entirely eliminated, as proposed by the Re-

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publicans. "The emergency clause cannot now be entirely eliminated without making impossible the payment of valid obligations of certain taxing units, and without the sacrlflee of certain essential functions of their government," lhe platform declared. Commending the development of the state highway system, the platform proposed a further extension of the existing moratorium on all law providing for local tax levies and bond issues for road building, maintenance and repair. Although favoring such changes in the state alcoholic beverages I control act as “practical experience j and the common good may die- ; tate," the platform attacked Republlcan challenges to the law us "ambiguous, straddling, and failing to meet tho question." The party re-aflirmed its belief in home rule and local self-govern-ment. -— o Judge John Mack To Nominate Roosevelt Poughkeepsie, N. Y., June 16. — (U.R>—President Roosevelt will be nominated for a second term at I the Democratic national convention in Philadelphia by Judge John E. Mack, of Poughkeepsie, it was ' learned today. Mack, a life-long friend of Mr. i Rooeevelt. who started the presi--1 dent on his political career when ihe nominated him for the state senate, will discuss the noininatI ing speech with the chief executive at Washington Wednesday. Judge Mack nominated President Roosevelt at (he Chicago convention in 1932. o President Signs Commodity Bill Washington, June 16.—<U.R) —The White House today announced that President Roosevelt has signed the new commodity exchange control bill. The measure extends to commodity markets, with the exception of cotton, supervision powers roughly similar to those now exercised over securities exchanges by ! the securities and exchange comI mission. o Ed Ellsworth Buys Fonner Farm Monday Ed Ellsworth purchased the Fonner farm north of Monmouth in . Root township for $1,55'1 from I Clark J. Lutz, special representative in charge of the liquidation of ' the Old Adams County Bank, Mon|day evening. The farm contains 5714 acres an ( ] is improved Roy Johnson cried the sale. o Rev. Smith Appears At Townsend Meeting Chicago June 16 — (UP) — The Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith, self styled inheritor of Huey Long's share-the- 5 wealth movement, appeared with half a hundred bustling Townsend workers today to imply that a California doctor and a Detroit priest may combine to elect a president. Within tlie next 12 days he said !an important announcement may be expected. 0 China Starts Silk Drive Shanghai.—(U.R)—ln a drastic es-

I Ito***

By HARRISON CARROLL > I | CepprlphC, I»SC, Xing t'eaturei Syndicate, Inci HOLLY WOOD—It may still be In I vain but Clarence Brown’s courage in carrying on is

the talk of the town. Despite a triple fracture of hlg elbow, the I director reported to 'The Gorgeous Hussy" set and supervised scenes from a couch with an improvised arm rest. He wore a 2&pound cast, was In great pain, but Insisted he will not give up

1 Clarence Brow n

the picture unless It becomes absolutely necessary. Doctors don't know If he will be able to make it or not Brown’s Injury came when he fell while trying to stop a fight between tho buglo hounds he bought from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer after they c.ad been used In a picture. Buying animals used In Hirns is one of the director's bobbies. Besides the dogs, be now has on his 365-acre ranch two bullocks and a Utter of pigs from ’’The Good Earth", some chickens and pigeons from "The Gorgeous Hussy" and the deer that appeared with Norma Shearer In "Romeo and Juliet". It will be a long time though before the director Is able to stop any more dog fights or do any active work with his Injured arm. The cast may have to stay on for four or five mo n tbs. Now, whom may Olivia de Havllland mean by this? In an Interview, the youthful Warner Brothers star confessed that she "could fall In love" with one of the leading men she has liad In pictures. She Insisted ft was theoretical, but Hollywood Immediately began to count the lads over on Its fingers. They consist of five. The first was Dick Powell in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”. The rest have been James Cagney, In "The Irish In Us"; Joe E. Brown, in “Alibi Ike”; Errol Flynn. In "Captain Blood" and “The Charge of the Light Brigade" and Fredric March, in “Anthony Adverse". Even If she is just theorizing, Hollywood would like to know which Is Olivia's “type”. The subject of love was upon the lips of another pretty film star—none other than the screen's dancing sensation, Eleanor Powell. “If 1 should marry before I retire.”

fort to capture the world silk market for China, the ministery of in-] dustry will soon establish selling agents in key cities of the world as well as providing for Tile standardization of the price and quality of Chinese sik. o One Cast; Two Fish Tiffin, O. (U.R>—A single toss of the line caught two fish for Earl Etaib. He pulled in a 30-inch, six and one-half pound pike that had swallowed an 8-inch bass. o Robbed Twice in One Day Pasadena, Cal. (U.R)—Mrs. Martha E. Egger has a record of being robbed twice in the same day. On a Sunday morning.

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confided the queen of taps, think he should be a hoofer (Eleanor prefers the word to “dancer''). I'm so a Interested In dancing myself that I e feel It would be a mistake to marry s anyone without the same enthus slasrn.” s The gossips will probably wonder p It Eleanor wouldn't compromise on p an actor. And they might even give j you his Initials. I You Asked Me and I'm Telling Youl s Gwen Forbes, Los Angeles: Ginger ’ Kogers Is even now working on a song to follow “I Can't Understand Why You Can't Understand Me". She writes l»th the lyrics and the ( music. Astaire writes the music for his songs. J I've made no check, but I’U wager that George Raft Is the only star In Hollywood who doesn't see his plc- , turvs on the screen. The last one he looked at was "Dancers In the I Dark ". That was more than three L yaars ago. He doesn't even see the ! rushes on “Yours tor the Asking", I his current picture. Says: “Il's too late to Improve my work by the time a picture reaches the theater screens. In the projection ’ room, the director Is boss, anyway." r Here and There In Movleland. .. . Elcanore Whitney. Olympe Bralna and Grace Brad-

I Crace Bradley

' ley wear stripes painted up the backs of their legs to look like stockings tn "T hr e e Cheers for Love". . . . Saves wear and tear In the hot dance numbers for this epic of swing music. . . The old perfume racket Is being worked on Hollywood's starlets

Gag Is to send an expensive bottle of perfume, apparently a gift. When the actress writes her thanks, she Is sent a bill. . . . Marjorie Weaver, of the Warner cuties. Is telling the world she'll never bite again. . . . When Jean Parker tells you her husband Is a writer, she means, particularly, a letter writer. His persuasive letters were one of the reasons he won her. ... In his bed at the Doctor's hospital back east, Samuel Goldwyn listened for an hour to his picture, “Dodsworth" going Into production on a Hollywood sound stage. It was a oneway hookup, so all the talking waa done from this endWhat Hollywood stylist leaves his bedroom window open so that a flock of pigeons can fly in and out?

• thieves opened her sedan car and j took what money she had in her : I purse. She replenished her cur1 rency, and later in the day thieves (again opened the car ami took her I money and two valuable rings. —o — Ozark Forests Burr Wesit Plains. Mo. <U.R) — Forest | fires, uncommon in Missouri, have I destroyed $15,000 wOrth of limber I in the Ozark hills this year. o lowan Finds 35,000 Kin Humboldt, la -(UP) — Harry Breed, local electrician, like* to . trace his relatives. Thun far he has ' found 35,000. Breed lia*s -spent a > dozen years tracing ins ancesiore , and living relatives. He has found

Today 's Vote For Queen

'Frolda Scherer 1,442,760 Mildred Teeple 1,060,05" Ruth Elzey 821,150 ' Patricia Fullonkunip . 697,450 ! Kathryn Engeler 697,000 ' Gladys Harvey 694.500 Hernioce Clos.i 501,250 loubelle Odle 496,400 :

thein In every stat® In the Union, and traces his family ba- k to 1575. o . Crates Made Into Desks SAN BERNARDINO, Cui. (U P) Tho city school management has attained lhe high peak in economies. 'ranchers' desks are nuuio at $22 each from packing crates us against the factory produced article at S3O. The desks are serviceable, money is saved and employment given to local cabinet i maker*. | o Immigrant Year Old Vancouver. B. C. - (U.P) — The world's youngest "Immigrant" has just settled down In his new home here. He is one-yar-old David lan I Bland. The child's mother died re

A VITAL MESSAGE TO PAINT USERS Demonstration of Pittsburg Waterspar Paint - Enamel - Varnish AT OUR STORE Wednesday - Thursday A factory representative will be at our store to help you with your paint problems. This Coupon will save you money Good for 25c allowance on the purchase of one-pint or more of Waterspar Varnish or Enamel ... or one quart or more of any other Pittsburgh Paint Product. NAME . STREET CITY STATE EVERYBODY WELCOME! Lee Hardware Co

PAGE THREE

Rosemary Holthonse . 403.T00 (Phyllis Krick 338,800 .Kathryn Hower 238,050 Betty Macklin 120,300 Rosemary Miller 107,650 Marjorie Carroll 98,300 Evelyn Kohls 95,200

~ ccntly In Liverpool, England, and he wus adopted hy an uncle living In Vancouver. He made the journey alone. o — School Patrols Efficient Marqquerette, Mich. — (UP) — Two hundred Upper Michigan schools where safety patro's are maintained have not had a single fatality or Injury during the present school year. Ralph M. Sheehan, chief traffic officer for the MichiJ gan etate police, reports. o As un amusement device an Englishman has Invented a five-ton rocket car that carries 18 passengers ut a speed of 35 miles an hour * around u wall built at an agle of 65 degrees.