Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 192, Decatur, Adams County, 13 August 1936 — Page 3
fIN SOCIETY -.--
LEIGH K', Mr ,„ul Mrs . number <>t M fli " V.c ,!.,•• uH.Tnoon ■si, :n ■£ w ion ” ,nk .“" ,i ■ ‘‘L add. <1 small di' -'*■ Refresh- ", , ■ad "*■" V , !<■ J " 1 ■ S ‘ S '"- K'Ld HOFFMAN Bor guest at party Tv . V! • 'taine'l a ■ • ' l: ‘> Mi* Mar.' Hoffman ■L.'wh.i i.a- visiting two ' v *'eks. ■ Ar "' Kggntber .» enjoyed. a“Uld'd I'’ vliss Palsy t'as.l Mi.* Manlyn BoniK was t-fi’\>'d at the ISVER ■sPECT CAUSE (BACKACHES ■ Thu Old Treatment Often ■ te. Happy Relief Os Paia KTs’j'Prers r- lieve nagging k;v ■ " th-y discover Kfereal ..i'j* cf their trouble Kfe tired kidneys. ..re one of Nature’s Ki" of taking the acids and the blood. If they don't day at d so get rid of ■jttanJp-'unds ~f waste matter, Ks miles us k.d.-.ey tubes may 1.--■pg ■...- tro :l vI th frequent ■ft.-.. n-yatno-mt smart and burn, the 15 •.■,■■• - i y m-ed flush■itThis danger signal may ba ■ kfi'. i'g . f t >gu'i „- ba. k.iche, ■fix. loss of r • .nd energy, getHfa Eights. sv.<; ::.g puffiness unKteer'elre.: 1 dizziness, fur s-r; >u« trouble. Ask ■ iruggist for Doan's Pills — have been used successfully ■k They give happy relief and ■teip flush out the 15 miles of ■f tubes. Get Duan's Pills.
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‘■|> HARRISON < \KROI.L BM Copyright, 19SS, Inc I-alur>-> >yn<li<-ate, Inc. i ini ‘ T’ •■ John Jacob (■rill had < :.lv to express the the studios in Hollywere after them to come out
r fip' 1 t_...l A L..J John Jacob Astor
s - • • M?: |Mrs~ . of EB to tews U*t.v w a y and i t t
the lots and, at Metro- <>< < urred an inciSB**’°rth recording in these devoted to chatter. social registerites had met ■“Harlow and several other of the "Libelled Ladv" and were on their way to stage when one of the two cars conveying the party 'his inopportune time to 1 hat tire. explanations were KT? aside by Mr. Astor who ■\l° k lhe ma< hine and started the chauffeur make the ■J? Or ' it could be completed, the K. 2\ came u p and h * was ■"«wed to enter. but the socialite dy P rovided several gosr S * :; tras with an item to ■•around the sets. ■Ja l> m"fh OUt ° £ an a ‘ r P' ane here Kn Davis 6 r° ther mornin 8' young Kind u Jr ’’ got into a waiting Ke of hed breakfas tless to the • bis Shirle y. No. 1 girl ■•eves -htions and, Hollywood K v h.,', S future bride - The film Kmt in T ectedthe meetin S K Dai . th e announcement of ■»^eto gag T ent ’ but they ■kr w, t 0 u words. I ‘ ks tell a different story. B^ t tato te th° Ur favorite aakln K f !v moVles - Only a K Studio ta thl Won a visit t 0 ■* nnt k W th 8 manner, and Kic they made a ■tried st ’ but because they Kienee with mte Went correB'hod of Hr? th a star ovcr a long K ,fel P»rsona^ d the P,ayer greW ■kn. 1 r " or, ally acquainted with I r ‘flg lhe Utae
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phon** 1000 — 1001 I — Thursday 1 IT. B. Work and Win Cla«i, Mra. F. E. Hitchcock, 7:30 p. m. 1 A. B. C. class of Union Chapel, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bryan. Christian Ladies' Aid, Church Parlors, 2 p- m. Eta au Sigma. Mice Bernadlne Kolter, 7:30 p. in. Evangelical Missionary Society, Church Parlors, 2 p. in. Salem Ladien' Aid, Mrs. Alta Burke. 1:30 p. m. | C. L. of C. Business .Meeting, K. i of C- Hall. 7:30 p. m. Monroe Better Homes and Busy Bee 4-H Club, Lehman Park, 7 p. m. Mount Pleasant Aid Picnic, Han-na-Nuttman Park. Pleasant Dale Ladies' Aid. Sylvia . Miller, all day meeting. Friday American Legion Auxiliary. Legion Home 7:45 .p. m. I Pokahontas Lodge 7:30 p. m. U. B. Golden Gleaners. Miss Evelyn Burnett, 7 p. m. Tuesday Psi lota Xi Picnic, Bluffton Pool, 7 p. m. close of the games. Dancing and other games were enjoyed afterwards. Those present were: The Mimes Alice Yost. Mary Franks, Kathryn Schroyer. Dixie Miller, Marjorie Miller. Ruth Hammond. Betty Melchi. Marylin Bonifas, Margaret Handier, Margaret Mosee. Katy Fryback, Phyllis Hunter. Patsy McConnell. Annie Mae Merriman, the gueet of honor, Mary Jo Hoffman, and the hoatetK. Martha Macy. ZION REFORMED SOCIETY HAS INTERESTING MEETING The ladies' aid society of the Zion Reformed church met in the church parlors Wednesday afternoon. In the absence of the leader. Mrs. Otto Kirsch, her daughter Miss Helen, presided. The meeting opened with Mrs. Ben Schroyer playing a group of hymns followed by the society singing “Jesus Calls Us.”, Miss Aldine Annen had the devotionals. The subject for the afternoon was “Spirit of Cooperation" concerning which Miss Kirsch read a very interesting paper. A business meeting followed dur- ' ing which plans were made for the
been under contract to Paramount, Gary Cooper has issued only two such invitations, Claudette Colbert one, Bing Crosby one and George Raft one. You Asked Me and I’m Telling You! Tom C. Peterson, Los I Angeles: The last I heard, James | Cagney was living in Martha's I Vineyard, an island off the coast of 1 Massachusetts, where he has I bought an estate. I don’t know when he is returning to Hollywood. Emil E. Dlestel, acting head of | the American Academy of Drai matic Arts, met his former pupil. 1 William Powell, at M. G. M. recently, and sent the set into hysterics when he reminisced to Bill: “I remember you when you arrived. You had a very irritating provincial drawl.” The James Dunn entry Into the coming Ruth Chatterton air derby is in earnest. He left Detroit the other morning in a new Stinson plane to fly to Cleveland and make a test trip over the route that the racers will travel to Los Angeles. With him is his instructor, Bob Blair. Here and There in Movieland.... Martha Raye is still so young that her Paramount contract has to be approved by the court. . . . Shirley Temple’s white
rabbits are in the movies now. She gets a $lO check for letting Twentieth Centu r y-F o x use them in "Ladies in Love”. . . . The Lois Janu-ary-Craig Reynolds twosome is enduring. They were playing all the games at the beach mid-
wk J® 1 L ij Shirley Temple
ways the other night. . . . And came back loaded with dolls. . . • Scenarist Charles Furthmann is still in the Cedars of Lebanon hospital. A major operation was again called off by the doctors... • And Katharine Hepburn is to spend two weeks in New York and return here to start “Quality Street”. Today’s Puzzle: What wellknown director got swacko the other night and took a taxi to the Hollywood Bowl where he paid the driver to sit as an audience of one while he mounted the plaform and sang “The Gang’s All Here" 1
~ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, AUGUST 13. 1936.
annual lawn party at the Ben Schroyer residence on North Third street. Thursday. August 20 at sev en-thirty o’clock. The public, both men and women, are cordially In • vlted to attend and tickets are on sulo for twenty-five cents. Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. A. R. Ashbaucher or Mrs. Bon Schroyer. Plans were also made for a cafeteria supper to bt served Sat urday, Septmber 19. Refreshments were served at the close of the afternoon by the host-! esses, the Mesdames Mary Keller, Charles Relneke, Fred Braun and Noah Roth. j Miss Peggy Morton of Chicago entertained a number of her friends at bridge last evening at the home of her grandmother, Mrs. C. A. Dugan of West Monroe street. Members of the Psi lota XI sorority will motor to Bluffton Tuesday evening for a box lunch at the Psi lota Xi swimming pool , ax seven o’clock. Anyone not I having transportation is asked to I call Mrs. Charles Hite. MISS DIANNE LINN HAS BIRTHDAY PARTY Mrs. Lawrence Linn entertained with a party Wednesday afternoon from three-thirty to five-thirty o' clock in honor of her daughter Dianne's third ibirthday anniversary. Gaily-colored balloons and crepe paper streamers were hung in the foliage about the rock garden, which formed a beautiful setting for the happy crowd of youngsters. Games were enjoyed after which the little guests were seated at along table for refreshmntß of ice cream, cake and circus candy. A color scheme of pink and white was used. Balloons and Mickey mouses, cleverly fashioned from gumdrope. were given as favons. The little guest of honor received many pretty gifts. Those who assisted Mrs. Linn were the Meedamee Fred Linn. A. 1 M. Anker. Leonard Saylors, C. C. Burkholder. G. J. Kohne, Herman Myers. Bryce Thomas and Dick Linn. Present were Kathryn Ann and Patty Edwards. Barbara Burkholder, Philip and Danny Thomas, John Myers. Nancy and Billy Bell, Libby Macy, "Faris Franz. Mary Ann Swearingen. Marjorie Linn. Bobby, and Harriet Christen. Betty Jane., Barbara and Clarice Ruth Ans-1 paugh, Sheldon Daniels. Alice Langston. Jimmy Ehler. Dorothy Kohne. 1 Sally Smith. Greta Gehrig, Dorie Jean Prugh, Donna Lee and Kay Farr. Roger and David Cole and the honored guest, Dianne Linn. o
Personals Miss Frances Dugan has as her guest this week Miss Valeria Cnapp of Boston. Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Vega returned to Chicago yesterday after a ten days' visit with the latter's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thomas. W. Guy Brown and Hugh Andrews returned today from Bloomington where they were attending teachers school. Melvin Collier returned home last evening after spending his vacation with relatives in Cave Springs, Arkansas. Mrs. William Gass and daughter and Miss Rosemary Holthouse visited in Fort Wayne Wednesday. Mrs. Richard Straschewski and son John will return to Green Bay Wisconsin, this evening, after spending Centennial week with her sister, Mrs. M. W. Berber. A number of women from Decatur motored to Lima this morning wi.ere they were the guests of Mrs. Glenn Neptune, those who went were Mrs. Barry Knapp. Mrs. William Bell. Mrs. Herman Myers. Mrs Gladys Chamberlain. Mrs. Chalmer Porter, Mrs. I-awrence Linn and Mrs. Ward Calland. Mr. and Mrs. L- C. Helm have returned from a trip to southern Michigan where they assisted the former’s sister. Mrs. Eva Halloway in celebrating her 86th birthday anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Don Farr will leave the last of the week for a trip through Canada and the northern states. Miss Margaret Vesey and Mrs. Kathryn Kamtpe stopped in Decatur yesterday enroute from Clear Lake to Fort Wayne D. W. McMillen and Harry Offut of Fort Wayne were business visitors in Decatur for several hours today. —o Asks Farmers’ Aid In Safety Campaign Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 13—(UP> Farmers toda were asked by the state highway commission to co-j operate in the state-wide highway ( safdty camjpaign iby cutting tall ( weeds or corn which obstructs the i vision of motorists at highway interseettions. Several accidents in which motorists have been killed, have resulted at these "blind” intersections recently, James D. Adams, chairman of the state highwa commission, said in asking the farmers’ help in campaign.
* • ■ . ' ■ i».X 7 I iJSSsA i-’V'*’ * ! 1 1 1 Ik ’ 1 Buy me some peanuts jff and cracker jack I don’t care if I WHL 1 never get back Wjo w j Buy me some Chesterfields . < 7jF f t00..0il MY / A TheyVe got what it takes to , ; MT ' / C 1916, Liggett A- Myers Tobacco Co.
“Triplet” Fathers Claim Parentage Os 10-Months Old Boys 1 * West Palm Beach, Fla., Aug. 13 — 1 (UP) —Triplet boys born 10 months 1 ago to Mrs. Louis Miller had ’’triplet" fathers todayLouis J. Pierre of Miami and T. . J. Miller of West Palm Beach., , whom Mrs. Miller married after the triplets’ birth, have been advanct ing rival claims to parentage for i weeks. Today Audrey K. Johnson, . Mrs. Miller’s divorced husband, said he was the father. •I Judge E. C. Chillingworth, who
Shakamak State Park To Be Scene Os Second Annual A. A. U. Mid-States Swimming Meet Aug. 15-16 _., , - i, 'y.’’ ‘ X-X-. 2L;w. - W « p -- f a d * • t ‘ > ■ * •" • •• ’" . ’< 1 '* •- !
I Swimming and diving stars from Indiana and neighboring states will participate in the 1936 A.A.U. MidStates swimming championships to :he held at Shakamak State park, near Jasonville, on August 15-16. Besides drawing a number of the outstanding aquatic stars, the meet |is expected to attract thousands, of spectators and special parking spaces are being arranged. A regulation course for the swimming events is being completed in front of the wide beach and the bluff on which the bathing pavilion is located. The events of the two days will be run under A. A. U. regulations and supervision, making any records eligible for official recognition. DepartI ment of Conservation officials are
had found Solomon's problem too much for judicial powers when only two men claimed the children, threw up his hands at the advent of a third and advised Johnson to 1 institute proper proceedings.” Mrs. Miller still was Johnson's ' wife at the time the triplets were | born, but they weer not living to-' gether. After Mrs. Miller obtained divorce from Johnson she married 't Miller, who said the boys were his. I Then Pierre instituted suit for the - triplets' custody, asserting he was the father. Judge Chillingworth refused to decide which man was the father but remanded the boys to custody of
cooperating with the Jasonville In dustrial Bureau in arranging the meet. Shakamak state park is located on roads 48 and 159, two miles west of Jasonville, 12 miles north of Linton and 30 miles southeast of Terre Haute. One of the major I attractions of the park is the 55 acre artificial lake in which the meet will be staged. The lake is well-stocked with game fish and a number of large bass have been taken there this season. Picnic and camping areas are located in attractive wooded sections of the park and have shelter houses, convenient water supplies and sani tai%- facilities for visitors. A second artificial lake has been completed recently and a series of
i their mother. Yesterday Johnson wrote to Chillingworth: "I am writing you in regard to > the triplets who were born to Mrs. Lois Johnson, who was my wit>*r the time for she hadn't obtained a .divorce from me. And am thanking you very much for the decision you made afvout the children for I consider they are mine and I am claiming them." UohtMvn hadn’t decided today whether to make his claim a more i formal one. “Fresh Air” Pupils Form Band Toledo —(UP)— Twenty-five 'pu-
i- hatchery ponds built. These ponds p will provide game fish for stocking the two park lakes. Well-fenced corrals hold buffalo, deer and el'k d while an aviary is stocked with s game birds and waterfowl. Many h visitors enjoy a trip into the coal it mine where they can see the layr ers of coal in the ground. One of >■ the most attractive hiking trails e in the park encircles the lake while s park drives take the motorist to a all points of interest. n Partially furnished cottages on a c wooded bluff bordering the lake n are popular settings for vacations e while meals and refreshments are i- available at the pavilion. i- Shakamak state park was established in 1929 on land given by n Clay. Greene and Sullivan conn if ties and has an area of 1,021 acres.
pils of the Lucas County Hospital’s • fresh air school have formed an i orchestra. I | o Liberate 7,000 Birds In Southern Counties Indianapolis. Ind., Aug. 13 —(UP) —The state conservation department "planting" of 40.000 pheasants . in Indiana was near the halt-way mark today with liberation of ap-i proximately 7.000 birds in 49 southern and central counties. Stocking of the remaining 43 (counties, chiefly in the northern, section of the state will take place; later, according to Virgil M. Sim-! i mens, conservation commissioner. In addition to these birds, Sim-!
Cool Colton Batiste—Cuts to Size 54! Has Such Flattering Features as ]abot i ~~ Revers and Capelets ' By Ellen Worth W This season it doesn't seem to matter much whether you have a sleeve or not. There is always \ some sort of frill willing to ZcLLyM g shoulder the responsibility for pE ZjYZ ',T< jS \ you. Cool capelets shoulder it 1 f-lJ ( ■5® _I ‘ A charmingly in this model. It also v*y ”v$ -Ztf* iSjZ Aw? boasts a flattering jabot neck and ~ I F* W Jt Ik S' slender paneled skirt. x vAV’tS*feJTe, » \ An English cotton batiste print I \ \ so fashionable this season made 1 / , the original. / / You'll find it so inexpensive to I / / ..copy it and such fun to sew. The I Ixs y / front and back cut in one piece I f 'Y Y/a/ from neck to hem. You've only I > tlTrwl to join the side skirt sections and ‘I V ' the main part of the dress is finished. Then, only jabot revers .-J and capelets to add. Think of it! | Style No. 1811 is designed for I-yoL * sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 0, *&&&/ Ufl 52 and 54 inches bust. Size Jo requires 3’4 yards of 39-ineh ma- aBK‘- '/fljanSk J V ||/T- ■ terial with 1 yard of 3-inch lace. I|sp e fJ|p| In Our Illustrated Home Dress- i aGni sJ I Ith tnak-ng Book contains the latert A J. 'I >1 fashions together with dressmak- |rV’a 1 ‘ I I i.tg kssons and the fundamental 'iCl ■ I principles of sewing. Wh««h*>' 1 1 11 you are an experienced sewtr o.- M I I I just a beginner, you will find tMc «■ IjCf'-i t 7l/ I I>ook helpful indeed in making | l your summer clothes. It is jtuf ? <3) full of ideas to enhance your owti bJe_<"• (1 looks. You simply can’t afford to iniss it I Send for your copy y \ \ I / today- \'| / Price of BOOK 10 cents, \ '* I Price of PATTERN 15 cents lAII )7 1 (coin is preferred). Wrap coin / / <> carefully. , _ n New York Pattern Bnrenu, trflfek Decatur Dally Democrat 830 Kaat 42nd Mt, Matte Ilia NEW YOHK. N. Y. IKBslS*'-
PAGE THREE
i mons said, the division of fish and i game will hold several thousand pheasants, mostly henn, at the Jas-per-Pulaski ntate game farm as breeding stock to produce eggs for ; the 1937 hatch. Liberation of the pheasants is being done with the co-oiperation of local conservation clubs in each couni fyLawrence Hoeltje Is Returned To Prison Fort Wayne, Ind., Aug.. 13 —(UP) !—Lawrence F. Hoeltje, former assessor convicted of bribery, returned to state >prison at Michigan City | early today whe nhis six-day iparoie I expired.
