Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 190, Decatur, Adams County, 11 August 1936 — Page 3

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ULARMfETING K A ” y-' >W ■%.. .un! u - Mlr.an W*’ w;.r<l.-'l Hl*'-''' l Mcichl l''.itn >« - : ‘dy. ■ ’I ' ■** ■L Mi -■ Hu* ll,l 1 <"’‘*°‘ an ■*..,, • dir. h par- ■ ■.... 11 ■ " l " 1 ' W ''' 1 ’ ■ .M.-n-tlnriy SB Tau Sigma sorority will jips Bernadine Kolter at Kitertinf- ■ tne»-t tbu-<"i ;»a:'."’s Thursday ~ two 0 Jack. The Aug- """"""""" Bio SURPRISE TO ME KtKELLCGGS lead ■(WORLD LOOK AT J THE value they you I t/ ! flakes Wi II Sr Irxi/ ■millions of people enjoy Corn F lakes every ■ fin ? Be. .I.l'o the women ■rrica have found that no ■corn flakes give them such ■. crispness and quality—■ah value for such small ■lopg's are ready to eat, ■ailk or cream. < onvenient. ■rcical. Serve them often. ■ your grocer for Kellogg’s ■1 Flakes. Made by Kellogg ■tie Creek. Never sold unKay other brand. ■king fakes the place of |ORN FLAKES

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|h HARRISON CARROLL I, JW"rt'. 19, «. B“M Feature# Fyndicate, Ine. ■UYWOO!' Hollywood takes I* its own. The 18-year-old ■* the late Alan Crosland has Bpren a job at Warner where his director father ■ft the middle of a picture ■"» tragic automobile accident ■tat his career. He has a ■“Job, but one that puts him jFyt with all departments of f* on - It is his ambition P toy to be a director like his Ptas birthday means work r* Postmaster. Robert Taylor, f.” celebrated his anniversary, I"® sacks of mail, including P from 37 states, a large P* from Europe, two from and one from t" la - Not to mention many ■ do not send gifts of ■ the stars. Fear of cranks "Mios to destroy them all. I®” alternative would be to 1 ft'dstufff chemiat * to anaiy 2 ® Sample of how much waste ( from this practice of the rt i„ a magazine article . • Olivia de Havilland menrait cake as one of her ft.. deli( facies. To date, trothers have had to r lO lar « e cakes. itl,.? oUdt of fruit, candy and b«.^, su ® ers the same fate in each week would stock i! Mc rm Telling l W»n " H- Crippen, Newark: toy Tt Ce ? eer y- 1 am happy tot»n». muc " improved from her ■t ih. rn^ nt ’ So much s°> in fact, *3 ..I s now K r ' n g to gym iurino- .L° p Pounds she put ,|or ? illnes/ OrC€<l lnacUvity °f get so much apthe critl cB, but the making money and jean

CLUB CALENDAR — 11 Society Dead'fn*, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 , Tuesday Tri Kappa, Elks Home, 7:30 p. m. 1 Delta Theta Tuu buafnMß meeting ( Mrs. Chas. Holt house, 7:30 p. m. 1 Zion Junior Walther Izague, ' I School House, 7:30 p. m. Rebekah Lodge, 7:30 p. m. ( G. M. (1., Zion Reformed Church, | 1 7:30 p. in. EDTS Class, Miss Betty Mel< hi, , 1 7:30 p. m. ' Wednesday Zion Senior Walther League. Karl ( ■ Krudop. 7:30 p. m. ( Zion Reformed Ladies' Aid, j Church Parlors. 2:30 p. m. Zion Reformed (tirin' Choir, church 7 p. m. . Thursday A. B. C. dans of Union Chapel. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bryan. | • Christian Ladies’ Aid. Church , Parlors, 2 p m. Eta au Sigma, Miss Bernadlne ( Kolter, 7:30 p. tn. Evangelical Missionary Society, ( Church Parlors, 2 p. m. ( Salem Ladies’ Aid, Mrs. Alta * 1 Burke. 1:30 p. m. ( (’. L. of C. Business Meeting. K. ( of C. Hall. 7:30 p. m. 1 Monroe Better Homes and Busy , Bee 4-H Club, Lehman Park, 7 p. m. j Mount Pleasant Aid Picnic, Han-na-Nuttman Park. Pleasant Dale Ladies' Aid. Sylvia i Miller, all day meeting. j Friday American Legion Auxiliary, Legion Home 7:45 p. m. I Pokahontas Lodge 7:30 p. m. ust group, with Mrs. Dick Mct'on- ' nell as chairman, will have charge of the interesting program, which , Includes special music. The report j of the convention held at Oakwood Park. Lake Wawasee July 3 to Aug- j ust 2 will be given at this time. The girls' missionary guild of the ' Zion Reformed church will meet in , the church parlors this evening at seven-thirty o’clock. , I The EDTS class of the Evangels- , cal Sunday school will meet with Mies Betty Melchi this evenjjtg at seven-thirty o'clock. The American Legion auxiliary will meet at Legion home for a busi- , ness meeting Friday at seven fortyfive o'clock. | The A. B. C. class of Union Chap- j el will meet with Mr. and Mrs.'j Lloyd Bryan on Mercer avenue , Thursday evening for the regular class party. All members are invit- . ed to attend. . 1 The Mount Pleasant ladies' aid which was to have met Thursday, . August 13, will be postponed until ' I Wednesday August 19. at which

Haflow like* it well enough to fly a print over to Catalina to show to her mother. It was her way of spending a half day off from “Libelled Lady”. She chartered a plane for the trip. — Speaking of flying, Herbert , Marshall s trip to England may set a record. As soon as “The Portrait of a Rebel” is finished, he plans to fly east and take passage on the Hindenburg, which would put him in Croydon five days after he leaves the screen capital. Then, after a five-day stay in England, . he hopes to return the same route. ’ A swell trick if he does it. I It will mean he could be back in Hollywood within 15 days. Here and There in Hollywood.... j The Ann Sothem-Roger Pryor marriage is expected any time, but she was at the Vendome | recently with Jacques Thiery, who used to be attentive to Julie I Haydon. .. . Clark Gable’s white , Ford (the one Carole Lombard gave him) got to be so well known he has had to give it a coat of black paint. . . . The Charles Grapewins celebrated their fortieth | wedding anniversary recently. ... She was Anna Chance, a stage and vtludeville well-known... .Eleanore Whitney lost seven pounds during ; her recent illness and now is too I slender even for a size 10 dress. I . . . Fred Mac Murray, on the other hand, has gained seven or eight | pounds. Marriage agrees with him. .. . Eddie Cantor and Bobby ’ Breen did final rehearsals for their . San Francisco personal appearance ' engagement over a short wave ( hbokup. Cantor was in Hollywood > and Bobby was in a boy’s camp in the High Sierras. .. . Patricia Ellis | has joined the Malibu colony for < the summer. ... And Paramount are paying Ida Luplno a nice compliment by redecorating her dressing room. Today's Puzzle: What wellknown star Included 16 dozen pairs of false eyelashes among her luggage on a recent trip T

•“ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. AUGUST 11, 1936. -

time a picnic dinner will be enjoyed at Hanna-Nutttnan park at noon. The Girls Choir of the Reformed church will practice at the church Wednesday evening at seven o'clock. ELEVENTH MARTZ REUNION HELD The eleventh annual reunion or the Martz families was held at the I Lehman park in Berne Sunday with sixty members present. George Martz 84. has the honor of being the oldest member present and Shirley Ann Buchanan, aged five weeks, the youngest. A basket dinner was served at noon and ice cream was enjoyed later in the day. Officers for this year are llarve Sells, .president; Coy Martz, vicepresident; Mies Ruth .Martz of Ossian, secretary and treasurer. The reunion next year will be held the scond Sunday in August at Legion park in Decatur. The Pleasant Dale ladles’ aid society will meet with Sylvia Miller Thursday for an all day meeting. ENTERTAINS GUESTS AT SUNDAY DINNER T. U Fairchild entertained with dinner Sunday for the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. Enoch Fairchild and sons Miles, Richard, Robert and Harold; Miss Dora Fairchild; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Crowfulled and Miss Irene Bennett, all of South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Fairchild and daughter Mona Lee, Tom Fairchild and family Hefen.-Ireta. Catherine, Richard, Walter and Dora May. Callers in the afternoon were Miss Virginia Taylor and W. H. Patterson. Personals Mr. and Mrs. Ruesell Acker spent Sunday at Crawfordsville, where they attended the birthday'party for John C. Snyder, president of the Ben Hur Life Association. Mrs. John Heller left this afternoon for Klinger I-ake, where she will spend the remainder of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bushman and children of Dayton, Ohio were the, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Myers over the week-end. The Misses Evelyn and Flora Belle Kohls are spending this week in Dayton as the guests of Miss Nedra Glancy. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Eyanson and children. Leo, Tommy, Jimmie. Joan. Kathleen. Mary Lou, Glenn have returned to thier home in Ne-' vada lowa, after a week’s visit with his mother. Mrs. Joe Eyanson and 'brothers. Raymond and Dallas Eyanson and families. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. King and sons | are spending this week in Sullivan as guests of the Charles Baxter family. Vance Fenniniroe, Charles McGill and Cal Magley are spending several days at Lake Manitou. Mies Mary Hunter will leave for her home in Cleveland Wednesday after a visit with her cousin. Miss Eleanor Pumphrey who will return with her for a week’s visit. They will be accompanied as far as Akron by Mrs. Alfred 'Beavers, son Jimmy and Miss Bernice Kreieher who will remain there for a week’3 visit. Blob Engeler is spending this week at Oliver Lake where he is playing the saxaphone in the Wainright band during its final week of activity. Mr. and Mrs. Bohn Ice returned to \ their home in Mount Summit after spending last week with Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Beavers. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Engeler and son ■ Bob spent Sunday with Mr. and 1 L : 11 i 1 I ■ 1 I I id i d 1 i■■ 11 I*■ ■ <

time a picnic dinner will be enjoyed ut Hanna-Nuttman park at noon.

One sure way to tell the real thing from an arm-chair gk pilot... put the stick in his hand and give him a job to do Wy J, — _ and one sure way to tell a real cigarette k msP'' \ is to smoke it- Use The claim is one thing. The Chesterfields are milder. e proof is another. Chesterfields have made Ji It’s the taste of mild, ripe good with smokers because 1 tobaccos...that’s why Chest- they have the character and erfields taste better. quality to back up everyIt’s the mildness of mild, thing Liggett & Myers says ripe tobaccos ... that’s why about them. , , Twice a Week Chesterfields are made to Satisfy 45 -piece Dance Orche»tro • . ,1 . 7 . ANDRE KOSTEL4HETZ- CONDUCTOR ... that S their business with ray Thompson and ray heatherton 7,7. . AND THE RHYTHM SINGERS ■,.. that ’s their reputation w „ 7rM(C sT _ rai „ e , M . (C s . T l . 1 , COLUMBIA NETWORK ... they live up to it. © 1956. Liocrrr * Mrxxs Tobacco Co. ——————A—————

Mrs. George E. Beugnot of AuburnThey also visited the Limberloet camp at Lake Oliver and heard Wainright’s band. Miss Connie Falk left for Bluffton Sunday after a week's visit with Miss Jeanette Clark. She was accompanied to Bluffton by Mies Clark and Mrs. J. L. Ehler. While there she will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt HartmanGeorge Brock, and daughter, Mrs Virginia Stafford, of Cleveland. Ohio returned home after a two days’ visit with J. Charles Brock, and other relatives. Lucy Colehin and Robert Langenhorst left for Toledo to be guests at a house party given by Mrs. C. A. McHatten and Mrs. A. J. Langenhorst. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller, Mrs. Agnes Courtney and Walter Fargo of Akron, Ohio were sie guests of Alva Nichols and other relatives Sunday. Mrs. E. L. Harlacher is the guest of her daughter Mrs- W. Coat in Greenville. Col. Paul Thrine. of California and Col. Harold .Andrees of Lebanon. graduates of the Reppert School of Auctioneering in 1935. attended a recent session of the school and visited with Col. Fred Reppert. Miss Gloria DeFord has returned to her home in Leesburg after spending Centennial week with Miss Betty Zinsmaster. J. Walter Bockman and Cal Yost are spending the day in Indianapolis looking after business. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Pillars left this morning for Lincoln. Neb., before returning to their home in The Dalles, Oregon, They visited three weeks with friends and relatives here and enjoyed the Centennial. Miss Elizabeth Cramer, teacher of the Dent school in Root township, left recently with Jeanette, Katheryn, Lester and Charles Kurtz of Kokomo for an extensive trip through the west. Points of interest they expect to visit are the Bad Lands, the Black Hills of South Dakota. Yellowstone National Park San Francisco, the Grand Canyon. Pikes Peak and Hot Springs. They will visit Mias Cramer's uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Simon and son of Albany, Oregon, former residents of Decatur.

POWER SOURCE AT POLE SEEN Cambridge. England. — (U.P) —If the day ever comes when power is sent around the globe by radio transmission instead of high tension lines, the South Pole may become one of the world’s great pow-er-generating stations. This “fantasy’’ is the dream of Prof. Frank Debenham, who was a member of the ill-fated Antarctic expedition of Capt. Robert Scott and wh onow heads the Scott Polar Research Institute here. Each year 100 or more adventurous young men pass through the institute, learning the job that lies ahead of them as polar explorers. Discussing possible development of the great uninhabited continent at the "bottom of the world" — nearly 5.000,000 square miles of it —Debenham said there is an immeasurable source of power in the constant gales that rage across the icy wastes. Vast Power Compared “For instance,” he said, “over the ridge of Adelie Land a river of air 50 miles wide blows constantly at gale force and forms a cataract greater than any water force in the world. “All around the continent terrific winds blow from the high plateau and some day these may be harnessed by wind-driven generators. But we must wait until we have radio transmission of power before this inexhaustible source of energy can be connected with the rest of the world.” This is because no human or animal life exists in the Antarctic, not only because of the climate colder than the North Pole, but the utter absence of any plant life. "Yet it is the healthiest place in the world,” Debenham, a tall rugged man with ruddy cheeks, explained. “No germs can survive there and the health-giving ultraviolet rays of the sun beat down upon thp territory for six and in some places eight months of the year. “It is the perfect sanitorium. i Even when we were shut up for

'four months in a hut at the camp ft base of the Scott expedition we v were perfectly comfortable and I j ■ healthy. It is noticeable in polar explorers. I believe, that always I later in life they tend to be burly —not fat but muscular and heavyboned.” r He said, in response to a ques- n ’ tion, that he believed it would be c > impossible ever to build a civiliza- a ■ tion on the surface at the Ant- v ■ arctic. "They would have to be subterranean cities where everything was E man-made,” he said. i The Scott Polar Research Insti- c • tute is a memorial to the expedi- e t tion of Captain Scott, who went to I • the South Pole with a hardy band “ of men only to find the flag of - Amundsen there —planted a month] i before. Glass Jug Sets Fire Woodland, Cal. —(VP) —Official : investigation of the burning of a : truck here developed that it was due to a glas jug of water left lying : on a eack in the truck. The sun. - shining through the glues jug set ‘ fire to the sack. ' yourompa o Alaska Intrigues Broadway Juneau, A’aska — (UP) — Don Skuse returned here and declared ' he was stopped by every traffic cop on Broadway and Fifth Avenue, New Yor, 'but not for infractions. The policemen spotted his Alaska license plates and wanted to learn 1 something about the Territory. o Mails Shame Time Watertwno, N. Y- —(UP) —A let- ' ter postmarked July 18 at a Cali- , tornia postoffice was delivered to a local insurance man July 17. The recipient of the letter was amazed at the speed of modern mail service . facilities. . o Aboriginal Twins Born Brisbane —(UP) —The pride tot| the Weipa Mission Station, on the . Gulf of Carpentaria, are the “Coco- i , nut twins." These to black babies ! . are the first full-blooded aboriginal! i twins to be born in Australia for ; many years. I i o Code on Eggs Hunted . j lodi, Cal. —(UP)—M. A. Ruger is ■.looking on an astrologer or some

on© verse in sign©. He has a hen which lays eggs with pecular markings which he is convinced contain a message in code. o Experts Fail; Boys Succeed Toledo —(UP)—A truant Rhesus monkey that outwitted Toledo zoo I officia's for five days fell victim to a trap laid by three children and was captured. Speed Shown At Reno Reno —(UP) —Charles F. Marks, carpenter of Fresno, Cal., is believed t ohave speeded up Reno records He was married just three minutes

Cunning Pointed Yokes and Sleeves That Puff at the Shoulders 1 for School Girl By Ellen Wop th A navy blue pique, for now and back-to-school wear, made this /Vx4/ smart frock. I f y The attractively shaped collar and cuffs of pink cotton broad- /\ N/ r\j] cloth had navy rickrack braid. / \ jri White pearl buttons accented the v > JI pointed bodice and skirt yokes. 'y'j —jpg g | Note the important and smart J '1 skirt pleat. '/ \l Os course percale print could r~—. vO/l be used equally well. Wine with I \/ 1 white pit) dots, for instance, I 1 would be adorable with white I 11 lawn collar edged with Irish I I \ pitot / LA The pattern is so easy to follow. / Ik Style No. 1828 is designed for / I sizes 6 7,8, 9, 10 and 12 years. / I Size 8 requires 3 yards of 39-inch / I W N material with 4J4 yards of rick- I W Jv rack braid. « — - Our Illustrated Home Dress- I I £* J making Book contains the latest I I fishions together with dressmak- ll II ing lessons and the fundamental I I I I principles of sewing. Whether I I / / J you are an experienced sewer or I I / ' just a beginner, you will find this I It |s Li book helpful indeed in making I | vour summer clothes. It is just |A✓. (j ' I I full of .deas to enhance your ’ own looks. You simply cant JIM h.A afford to miss it! Send for your lUUX copy today. KJ NEW YORK PATTERN BUREAU, Decatur Dally Democrat, 220 East 42nd Street, Suite, 1110, NEW YORK, N. Y.

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' after he obtained hie divorce to Miss Jessie Howard, also of Fresno. 0 Bargain’s Not a Bargain Los Angeles —(UP) —A Balbonl l id in 630 pairs of army shoes for sls for the lot. When he got them all provided to be size 14. His own I size is 814. 0 . . Courthouse Bars Spooners Bowling Green. O. —(UP) —Wood ’ County commissioners, irritated by reports that the 42-year-old court house was the favorite place for spooners, ordered the building closed at 5 P. M. instead of midnight. o Trade In a Good Town — Decatur