Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 117, Decatur, Adams County, 17 May 1937 — Page 3
<IN SOCIETY '■•■.WE*’-"- — --" ■—'— ———
1 GENTIS HER CLUB hostess 1 " r '"' r bri<lg< ' ‘ lll,l «<-■ |,:,lna ' rii " i, ‘ r ° f il ;iI MarSaturday evening. ’ I °MK j VAlri> <-'■ ■' I,lV, ' ly • ll "' '"au'l tables celli|*~aT .-’n his of spring flowKiM 11 Tl "'"" r ,l, ‘ the k "Straw E" Ski.'’ bridge were en ■ |H were given HES,, iie>" one thirty INnAntiDECATUR GIRL "’BS SATURDAY , and Albert marriage :i:na ' VI p ; Father Allgier -- Khe brill > were a blue < repe suit ■ ofgsr ' J< After a few days ,* .Jbia®an- .'u>- the couple will ■jelaWort Wayne. KaiEßton is a daughter of Mr. ■ )(/«, William Elston of RichKtd/flmeily of Decatur. She .oj.j^EjßatJsunday from the St. JosT’.ouing school in For' io res (■Kiiuiary eocie-ty of the f Ctab'iaa church will meet at fl tome >’V re A I). Artman this |t seven-thirty o'clock. >t M. c®The lad “s' aid society of the x-iiaßat (Mftian church will serve . 'aOcM® supper in the church fa |®em«4 Saturday evening from toi .flttoW-u o'clock The public Ik flvd Attend. salt. Jh'' w May Section of the Presbyn siflisn flies' aid society will enfltaia at the church Thursday ■ternoea t two-thirty o’clock. ■Mr. ana Mrs M. J. Welker of 103 iidtflvta T«it!i street had as their Ife-IBMay pinner guests Mrs. Avilla >(laughter Edith of FindM M '"’ 01i ' 3 Roberts and Ils. ®s?htess Janet and Urdine of '"'kflha, Oil Frank Hammond of Mr. and Mrs. S. T. W ■elksrai route 6, Decatur; Mr. and ! II fln. Vera Welker and sons Gene li. Bud Jirntjiv of Fort Wayne. ■ The Root township Merry Maids Krill meet at the Monmouth school flaae fldu sday afternoon at un»
Ipehind the Scene J
i: 'fIHBARRISO.\ CARROLL Copyright, IBi, Ftatun-v Syndicate, Inc. -Must have been see the first scrcen test ■CtMmade. It was in 1933 at '"wsiUdßrtists. Taylor, clad in a toga, did a scene from the II I Robert You n g ErHk' Whl I’ art 111 "Runian , Scandal IKw M After seeing HIK H lht test ’ Samuel gEB Goldwyn to.d ■lfjgat I the future I screen ><101: I ' Go ~oine and IfißfijMFlhfcl P u 1 some weight on you ’,s.and maybe I ÜBTavlnr some day y° ull ■ be a movie I .’"B following week Taylor M G. M. for $35 a week. I saw the test until the | ■ when Girl Friend BarK® B ®* Jjfcnwyck, working for Gold lsn yn ß* stella Dallas”, dug U P the ran It oft for him. I Jo--Anderson is a house Hollywood of Mary SerI ■■Tl.y*'’ appearing in the screen "Dead End". To Broadthis will give a chuckle Servoss played the queen ELJff"’ Howard’s “Hamlet”, WgWSuss Anderson did the same I’J*,*J the Production of his arch MMHPhn Gielgud. ■ you hear about Ann 4 Th etr * bout with lhe hornets? ST. W» on location for R-K-O’s •uperl Sleuth” and brushed j a nest of the fiery insects. Thmig 1 ' 1 the lead t 0 a stream : J , ""LF i e jumped In clothes and collected four stings on tn h 23^ —considers herself lucky gotten off so easily. ’ Del Rio s P rize bulldog, of Slightly, is ill with 3F? la nlB a * 4 ’ ooo animal ”■ dies ’ wlu be the second ®«|BlosL Your Questions! ■!< hiSv .. nd ’ New York City: j Usd ly didn’t get to go to Ireall. She and her two
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy • Phones 1000 — 1001 Monday Christian Missionary Society, ' Mrs. A. D. Artman. 7:30 p. m. Tuesday C. L. of C. Guest Meeting and PotLuck Supper, K of C. Home 6:30. Decatur Flower Garden Club. Mrs. Sam Ilutler, 2:30 p. tn. Adams County Nurses, Miss Eleanor Daehnke, Monroeville, 8 p, m. Kum-Join-Us Class, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ellsworth, 7:30 p. m. Mary and Martha Class, Mrs John Bright, 7:30 p. m. Tri Kappa Business Meeting, Elks Home. 8 p. ns. Claes No. 7 of Pleasant Mills M. E Harry Crownover. Wednesday Root Twp. Merry Maids, Monmouth School, 1 p. m. Decatur Home Economics Club, Mrs. Russell Acker. 1:30 p. tn. Psi lota Xi Guest Dinner, Masonic Hall, 6:30 p. m. St. Mary's Twp. Busy Fingers 4-H Club, Francis Ray Home, 1:30 p. m. Thursday Presbyterian Ladies' Aid, Church 2:30 p. m. Phoebe Bible Class, Zion Reformed Church, 7:30 p. m. Friendship Village Home Economics Club, Mrs. Rolla Raudebush, 1:30 p. m. Saturday Chicken Supper. Christian Church Basement. 5 to 7 p. m. o’clock. Claes No. 7 of the Methodist Episcopal Sunday school of Pleasant Mills will meet at the Harry Crownover home Tuesday evening. ■PERSONALS Wo-sley Hoffman, chief of the right-of-way department of the state highway commission, visited here a short time Sunday evening en route back to Indianapolis from a visit • in Fort Wayne. Messrs- Rinehold and Walker . have returned here to complete j . their work of purchasing right-of I ways on route 27 between hens and ' Monroe. Specifications have been . slightly changed causing a few days I delay. . Dr. G. F. Eichhorn went to Indj ianapolis today to attend to business. ; Mrs. Walter Lister, Mrs- Dorphus I Drum, Mr. ana Mrs. Noah Frye and > Fred Majors attended tine meeting
roommates. Wilma Cox and Dorothy Justin, are motoring to New York via New Orleans. In an open letter to the graduating class of the Black-Foxe Military academy, Errol Flynn expounded some typical Flynn philosophy—urged the boys to seize adventure from life before settling down to careers. The star is now embarrassed, trying to think up informative or tactfully discouraging answers to 24 members of the class, who have written him, demanding details on how to do it La Harlow is lending an ear to a French offer for a six-week personal appearance tour this summer. She is cabling back what would be acceptable terms and. if they are met, and, if she can get the time off after "Saratoga", the deal may go through. It would be the blonde star’s first trip to Europe. Chatter. . . . Now that she and Owen Crump have called it a day, Isabel Jewell is touring the Hollywood late spots with Gregson Bautzer, the attorney. ... Dr. Frank “Santa Claus” Nolan bought dinners for four of the Wanger models at Trocadero, where they don’t exactly give the food away. . * . Anita Louise is very much on Buddy Adler's mind these ’ / Ibl da vs. . . . Abt m dulla Abd a3 ‘ who used io be Victor McLagKk 3*lo lens P‘cturesque man FriW r ' l i - v - ,s worklng A, for R-K-O now. y; Sb- ' ' • • • Irene Hcr * _ vey’s Mother’s w ® * a »y glft t 0 r'W ” <— HER mother Irene Hervey was a trip back east. . . • Edward Stevenson, R-K-O designer, can’t make up his mind between Gertrude Michael and Barbara Pepper . . . Mrs. Chester Morris is up and around again after too long a siege of illness. .. • " the Hollywood personal escort services will now furnish you an expert fourth hand at bridge.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 17, 1937.
M Today the sport of fencing puts flk S jMflkffii much the same value on healthy jLfff g and unfailing alertness as $Lb $ “ did the deadly duels of long ago. raalitO f HK <,-- jff jT~ all t,ll ‘ brilliance of Joanna de Tuscan's k Mt darting sword play. Attack —parry —riposn U - r | W i jig happen too quick!) (or the eye to follow In W&ffiWlHSy f F a Mm B Joanna de Tuscan's own words: "A person HY i ** 5 Tu sc* ,, *'“ ! ‘' arKt"*' BSEaS ' ' - g who didn't have nerve control would never s llnC jo.n- u .». Bii ’ ’ stand out in fencing. Mv No. ! reason lor ‘‘ 3,’ M S Pf e»en“ n ‘’ ,ttrac‘* ve ' of TH* v smokmg Camels is —they never jangle my |t sSj ft —'aglwu. TwE|Hr s*~ nerves. < amel is the cigarette that 1 hud pel- '&* vk ' At>l _ - aS often as I please. It's MEe < amels forme Tor digestion's sake'too. I hey're - OTgjf make tbro.it harsh i? 8.'.. fWlftli iiiii w >■ ■*'« j DOROTHY KILO ALLEN, girl re- gO _ ’ k ■ porter, was assigned to break HE BROKE the world's WRESTLINGACEJoseph “JACK OAKIE’S the women s globe-circling rec- fifllr indoor record in the h'M Green, absorbs plen- *j J COLLEGE” ord. She did—in 24%'days! "I aMfegitF ? ! 440-yard dash twice I Hfl ty of punishment jto Jack Oakie runs the "col- B"", was glad to have Camels with ■ OML in one day. Ray Ellin- | 3 competing in his fa- FL W me, "shesays. T know they Jon t ■ fIT > wood says: "Jittery g voritesport.'A long- I frazzle the nerves—ever! nerves are a big bug- sb drawn-out training comedum! Judy O— _ ' y cWU aboo to a track man. BH RnnJ P“‘» » strain SfW““f; 18 '’‘ ,ak “ ’ f -mg Camels | on nerves, say s Joe. Vfl Jh pm ES T -o c„> 3Kf . *>&. X. -4 K f-'lk''" never jangles my L'Z3 lenjoyCamelsoften it>s r. .'sopmC.S T.. nerves. I find that r . —they help to ease BMMHBWI <• 30 pm M.S T.. 550 pm JY JS® i. A ' ; ’’’ '• 1 can enjoy Camels B tension and never |fMES]g!y|k P. S. T.w AB< c.BS. without stint." . . jangle my nerves. vKH§9|EJ l viv ‘ Vi ■ BISjW | cosn/£R I I 7OMCCOS | 1 Camels are mad* from finer, MORE smoke ’em all I have a mind EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS—Turkish and A ' ”/▼ ** to, day in and day out! Camels Domestic— than any other popular brand I J I £ ■ don't get on my nerves." /' Copyright. B J Bey a old. loiapaar. Winatoo-Salem. j-
of District No. 31 of the Rebekah Lodge held at Hartford City Friday evening. District 31 inc'udes the counties of Adante, Wells and Blackford. Mr. and Mrs. William Gas« and ’ son Steve, Mrs. Addie Gase and daughter Beatrice, Miss Rone Fullenkamp and Herb Fullenkanip spent Sunday in Findlay, Ohio, ae the gueste of Mr- and Mrs. Ed Weisling and family. The women attendee the C. L. of C. initiation and banquet during the afternoon and evening. Dr. E. P. Fields is attending the state dental association meeting being held In Indianapolis today, Tuesday and Wednesday. Mrs. Lawrence Linn and daughter Dianne left Friday for Bronson, Mich., for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. David Hensley and son- They were joined over the week-end by Mr. Linn. Miss Sally Hower and Mns. H. H. Myers returned to Indianapolis Sunday after a week-end visit with their respective families. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McMillen and daughter of Van Wert visited in Decatur Sunday evening. Tom Allwein motored to Shelby. Ohio, Saturday. He returned Sun-
day evening accompanied by his mother, Mrs. Grace Allwein, who spent the past week visiting her daughter, Mrs. Dick Shaw. Mr. and Mrs. T. L. (Becker and daughter Arlene have returned from Anderson where they attended the graduation of Miss Helen Becker from nurses’ training schoolMiss Bicker, who was valediictorian of her class, was presented with a gold cross with her name and date inscribed on it, by the Sisters of Holy Cross. Miss Betty Jean Tricker, of Muncie is visiting with relatives here today. —o — Adams County Memorial Hospital J Admitted: Miss Evelyn Flaln, Fort Wayne route four; Mrs. Emma I Hirschey, Berne-; William Glinn, Decatur route one; Leland D. Sheets, Wren, Ohio. Dismissed: Mrs. Carl L. Mann j and baby, Joseph Bierly Mann, OsI sian, route two. Wed on 1931 License Flint, Mich. (U.R) — A marriage license issued five years ago was used the other day by Mrs. Pauline Kowalczyk, 42, and Alexander B Danialczyk, 31. Two Probate Court employees witnessed the ceremony performed with the license issued Nov. 28, 1931. Illness and other complications, not faint heart,” caused the long delay.
POPE SUFFERS J NEW RELAPSE I . Pope’s Physician Orders All Audiences Cancelled Castel Gandolfo. Italy, May 17 — ', It was learned authoritatively today ; that Prof. Aminta Milani, personal I I physician to Pope Pius XI, had or- : dered the Pontiff to cancel all aud- ' iences until Wednesday "at least" i and take a “much needed rest-" '! The Pcipe. who will be 80 on May ’' 31, was reported to have suffered a • recurrence of difficulty from van- !; cose veins in both legs and a flut•jtery heart which complicated oth- | er ailments. • | The Pucci (Catholic) news ser- ' i vice reported: "Although there are 1 : no new or alarming symptoms there 1 is no doubt but that the genera! conI dition of the pontiff gives cause I I for preoccupation. , "The principal manifestations of ’ the Pape's present condition are dif- ' ficult breathing and speech, and
’ I copious perspiration. ” ’ l The Pope spent the morning in the art gallery at ills summer place ! here. He was wheeled into the room by his private secretary, Monsignor , Confalonieri. He spent an hour in ’ the gallery but stood up only infrequently to get a good view of some particular painting. o — ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Lester Dusick, De- ■ catur route three, are the parents i of a baby boy born at the Adams county memorial hospital Sunday morning at 10:37 o’clock. The boy weighed eight pounds and three i ounces at birth and has not been I named. | o — Club To Meet At Geneva Tuesday An important meeting of the Teens and Twenties club will be i held in the assembly room of the Geneva high school Tuesday evening at 7:30. The speaker for the evening will be a recreational director of the farm bureau and the ■ program promises to be an especi tally valuable one. Following the • address the entire group will be • led in games by the recreational i director. All young people in the > county between the ages of 16 and - 30 are invited to attend this i meeting. t The club has recently adopted a constitution and made a definite
membership roll. Young people who have not yet enrolled are urged to be present and join at this i meeting. Nominal dues of 25c a year have been agreed upon by i the club. The purpose of the club is to provide social, educational, and recreational activities for the ' young people of the county. o Father Ehinger Visits Decatur Rev. Father Vincent Ehinger, Pas--1 sionist missionary, stopped in De- ■ catur over Sunday on his way to ■ Albuquerque, New Mexico, and said ’ mass at St. Mary's Catholic church Sunday morning. Father Vincent was recently commissioned a chaplain in the U. S. Army with rank of lirst lieutenant ' and visited the C. C. Camps In the ■ west and southwest. IHe delivered the sermon at the • 8:30 o’clock mass, speaking on the ‘ feast of Pentecost as the birthday ' of the Catholic church. Father Vln- ' cent also urged members of the con- ' gregation to send to him copies of I Catholic magazines and newspapers tor distribution among missions in Mexico, where he is serving. o —
i Local Doctor Takes Post-Graduate Course i i l Indianapolis, May 17 —Dr. 11. F. 1 Zwick of Decatur registered here for the annual postgraduate medii cal course held during the past 1 week under auspices of the Indi--1 ana University School of Medicine j and the Indiana State Medical ! I Association. . 1 The five-day course provided i clinical demonstrations of a wide i variety of surgical and medical , treatments in the hospitals and . laboratories of the Indiana Uni- / versify Medical Center. Visiting ( specialists from medical schools ‘ at the University of Minnesota, Western Reserve University. University of Rochester, Rush Medi-
cal College. Harvard University. ’ University of Chicago, Northwestern University and Johns Hopkins . University assisted in the post- . graduate courses attended by 489 - Indiana physicians and surgeons. o - Tuskless Elephants In India i Bombay <U.R> — The trend of ev- ■ olution appears to indicate the de- ■ velopment of a tuskless elephant iI in India, declared C. C. Morris In I . a paper read to the Bombay Nai J tural History Society. Already such I a condition had been established i in Ceylon. A similar tendency among Indian elephants was revealI ed in the number of males which i failed to develop tusks.
DEATH CLAIMS : J. FRANK MOCK Native Os Decatur Dies Sunday At Hospital In Fort Wayne J. Frank Mock. 76, native of this | city and well known retired farm-1 . I er. died Sunday morning at 2:20 I , o’clock at the Fort Wayne Luther-1 I an hospital. Death was caused by i !; complications. ! The deceased was born in this city February 10, 18G1, the son of i Jacob and Charlotte Eister Mock, both deceased. He was a member of the I. O. O. F. lodge of this city . ! • and of the Anthony Boulevard 1 ! Presbyterian church of Fort ! : Wayne. ! : His wife, Nora, preceded him in ' ' death seven years ago. Surviving ■ ’ are the following children: Mrs. I ‘ Webster Martz, of South Webster; f Clyde, George, and Mrs. J. J. Led--1 ford, all of Fort Wayne. A sister, 'I Mrs. Emma C. Longhenry, of Chi-' cago and a brother, Lloyd Mock, 'of Monroeville, also survive.
The body was taken from the Mungovan and Sons funeral parlors to the home Sunday afternoon and may be viewed until time for the funeral. Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home, 3010 Euclid avenue with the Rev. A. P. Bourns officiating. Burial will be made in the I. O. O. F. cemetery at New Haven. o Erlenbach Funeral Services Tuesday Funeral services for Mrs. George Erlenbach, former Adams county lay, who died Saturday in Muncie, will be held at the St. Lawrenco Catholic church in that city Tues-
day morning at 9 o’clock. Burial will; be made in the Tricker cemetery near Salem, south of this city. Churches Os Christ In Annual Meeting — Fort Wayne, May 17.—<U.R>—Ad-.-dresses by two eminent church . | leaders will be features of the 98th • annual state convention of Church!l es of Christ, which will open here . tonight and be In session through i Wednesday. 1 1 Dr. Edgar Dewitt Jones, pastor . of the Central Woodward Chris- . tian church in Detroit and presii dent of the Federal Council of I Churches in Chrß? in America, I ‘ 1
will speak tomorrow morning on "Palestine —in the footsteps of the Master,” and again tomorrow evening. Dr. Hugh Thompson Kerr of Pittsburgh, Pa., formerly moderator of the Presbyterian general assembly, will deliver an address at the closing session Wednesday night. | -- o Hudson Auto Workers Stage New Sit-Down Detroit, May 17 —(UP) —Workers ! in the paint shop of the Hudson Motor Car Company eat down today I protesting new wage rates and forc--1 ing an estimated 500 employes into Idleness. Hudson officials characterized the eit-down as a violation of the peace agreement negotiated April 8. _________ o — Republican Party Head Buried Today — Winchester, Ind., May 17—(UP) —Funeral services were conducted here today for Jesse Tarleton Moor-
It Pays to Use MAYFLOWER Wallpapers They last longer because they are precoated, which makes them fast to light. When you buy MAYFLOWER papers you are sure they are correct in style. Patterns As Ca Per Low As Jv Roll Kohne Drug Store On East side of the street.
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man. leader in the party in Indiana for nearly half a century, who died in Indianapolis Saturday. James E. Watson former U. S. Senator and c.'oee friend of Moorman, was a speaker for the services. Tree Strangely Deformed Fremont, O. <U.R> — Howard and John Stokes have a "tree and a half” growing on their farm. More than 30 years ago a black hickory was blown down by a storm. The top of the tree decayed, but the root kept growing. An Illusion is created whereby one tr »e seems to grow out of the ground in an arch and another sprouts from the top of this arch. Phone SIM) ISIS W. Adams
