Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 177, Decatur, Adams County, 28 July 1937 — Page 3

felN SOCIETY

TO HAVE ft' yPPBR TOR GUESTS Nl ~ ... h,.p honm economics Mary's township will ui.nh H»PP‘’ r MHI> high «'" lM>l Fri ' KrX'b nmmb.-re and their ■ Al ‘. an . cordially invited to and erne for W’ „ing Supper s, ' ,vt * d will ' > nJo>«' after- ■ o.tZLNHEISER SHOAF Bidding solemnized B. wedding or Miss Edna Mae daughter Os Mr ' aDd < 0. of Berne, Ba Harold shoaf ' sO,! of Mr “” d B Chester Shoat of Bluffton, wat Saturday morning, July the parsonage of the First Batman church in this city. Br* Rp ' George O. Walton oftiBckl at the ceremony. Btvattendants were Mr. and Mrs. B e Eight, brother-in-law and BLr of the gaaom. The bride B/j tH-.oina.g navy blue mousseKdesoix lIrHSS wilh blUe y°_, After a short wedding trip ;lt '“'"‘P o ’ 110 SoMth street. ■ Mrs Shoaf is a graduate of the ; Bten high school and the Warner I Bllrge ot Beauty Suitlire. Fort I Krne. She is employed at Ruth's , Bn'ttty Shop in thie city. ■ Mr Stwf is a graduate of the’ a , ||r high school and is now I Kployed at the General Electric 1 Hrre. ■ Kale liby honored ( Kith surprise party ■ m.-s Peraita Lytle entertained a ' Ktuiber of friends honoring Dale ■hr The dining room was beauti- : Kir decorated in fink and white . Kith a center piece of the same 8',.-s on the dining table. ■ After a delicious lunch music and Kru- were enjoyed. The honor; Kest received many gifts. The i Kest* included: ■ p P te Martin. Louise Pearson, t Kye Manlier. Rosella Miller. liar- ■ Ki Lytle. Robert Helm. Lenora ' Kep>. Ralph Liby. Anne Leethy. Krrena Hieberwtein. William Thor- \ Kt. Norma Hellerstein, Bernice I Ke?h Lola Baumgardener, Eddy Kh4 ■ The Misses Betty Robinson of

Oehind die SceneiJr

■ By HARRISON CARROLL I Copyright, 1937. ■ Ki*s Fratuten Syndicate. Inc. I HOLLYWOOD—Hani luck con- ■ timifs for Michael Whalen, who

broke his nose when a clown pushed him ot a springboard. Doctors decided his profile wasn’t going to be right, so they've had to rebreak the nose and put on new splints. Seems as it is the third accident of the kind that has happened to the

L /■ Michael W halen

actor, and the first two were improperly cared for. Result is Whalen loses his vacation and will have to report to Twentieth Century-Fox as soon as he is looking handsome again. Sounds a little optimistic, but Robert Taylor hopes to take a two*eek motor vacation and dodge recognition by fans. He sets out « soon as "Broadway Melody” is finished and his wardrobe will consist chiefly of two pairs of blue ' ru ’s, a sleeping bag and hiking boots. He even plans to leave his at home. M. G. M.'s new operetta, "Fire- “ > should be the best of the •enes when tightened up after Mview reaction. Jeanette Macwnald will amaze with a newly quired warmth of personality. . 8 a fiery Spanish dance among °~’ ?r things. Studio shot this T ,Uence six days after her maraJe t 0 Gene Raymond. „^ Ve , of the Friml favorites rethe score, but the outnumber is a novelty "Donkey's Serenade”. Music “ w adaptation of the Friml song, and rhythm is h 8d ~ t,J e klop of a donkey's , Best thing of its kind since , L ““tsch train number in "The Parade". Inuc* 1 tor a puckish youngster his, Robert Spindola by name. in “Ramona" and several Ctures ' but Director Bob card gives him his big chance. juu«°4 get ready to welcome romf f. ones ln his proper spot as a singing g P r P He mperb in "Firefly”. badJ B ‘L Kbsr Eddie Po!o? He 18 bmn. m Ho “ywood visiting his ? am Pol °' of the MG - M »Reup department. Eddie also is 8 a reunion with Charles

CLUB CALENDAR 1 Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phone* 1000 — 1001 Wednesday Union Twp. Woman's Club, Mrs. Hugh Nidlinger, 1:30 p. m. St. Marys Township 4-H Club. Janice Feaael. Busy Bee 4-H Club Girls, Mtnroe School, 2 p. m. Presbyterian Young Peoples' Choir, Church, (1:45 p. m. Z'-.n Senior Walther League, Mr and Mrs. Herman Kruckeberg, 8 p. m. Pinochle Club, Mrs. Russell Melchi, 7:30 p. m. Thursday Women Os Moose, Home, S p. m. St. Paul Indies' Aid. Mrs. H. L. Smith, al) day meeting. St. Luke's ladles' Aid. Mrs. Emma Earhart, all day meeting. Friday Busy Bee Cub Picnic, Pleasant Mills High School, 7 p. m. Chicago, Robert Kolter, Mr. and Mrs. Orland Miller, Mr. and Mrs. ! Doyle Lytle, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Liby and children. Johnny, Martha and David. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence ; ' Miller and daughter Ardclla, Mr I and Mrs. Vai Sehnepp, Mr. and Mrs. 1 ' Arthur Lytle and the honor guest j 1 Dale Liby. — (WILLING WORKERS' CLASS HAS REGULAR MEETING | The Willing Workers' class of the I , Methodist Episcopal Sunday school ! : of Monroe met at the home of Mre. Freeman Walters Tuesday evening. I Fourteen members and seven visit- j I ars were present. Mrs. E. W. Busche, president, opened the meeting and led the de , votionals. After a short business session. Mrs James E. Hendricks | presented an interesting program. A delicious lunch of ice cream cake and coffee was served during ■ the social hour. The next meeting I will be held with Mrs. Frank Fui gate. — o Bird Fancier Retires 1 KANSAS CITYY. Kas. (U.R) For jls years Cecil Martin has been ( one of the largest breeders of 1 fancy birds in this section. But i now he has quit the business and is retiring to the Ozarks -all because of the neighbors' cats.

Grapewta, who used to be his partner years ago in an acrobatic act. j Answering Your Questions! Wanda Hinds, South Pasadena: The rumors about Corinne Griffith and her husband, George Marshall, were untrue. Fay Wray saw them at the Dallas exposition only recently. Hollywood nearly broke up another marriage—that of Jban Davis and Si Wills. They were a team in vaudeville, but a movie : scout saw her and, since then, she has had most of the success. Is playing the lead with the Ritz i Brothers now in "Life Begins at i College”. The other day, Wills decided he could take it no longer and moved out. After a day's separation, however, they decided they couldn’t get on without eacii other. Hope the happy ending sticks. Jane Withers is back from San Francisco with a cat, a box of lizards, six turtles and twe Chinese chickens. Which makes 64 pets for her in all. A not-so-appreciative neighbor recently filed a complaint about the ' menagerie, so the Withers family bought a earner lot next to their property an? t' . Twentieth Cen-tury-Fox stadet is keeping her ' pets there. Chatter. . . . Virginia Pine's daughter, Jean, buys things at the 5 and 10 cent stores and tells the clerks to charge them to George Raft. A chauffeur always gives

Cecilia Parker

the clerks the wink and pays for the articles. . . . Cecilia Parker was well enough from her operation to step out with Henry Willson at the Biltmore Bowl movie night. . . . Phyllis Fraser was there with Johnny Downs. Or maybe

Johnny was with Cecilia. It s hard to tell when Hollywood's younger set gets together. . . . Swellest ribbing act X«e« or ‘ b - v J‘ d d’Albrook. He had Nelson Eddy burnt to a crisp.... Binnle Barnes and Jean Negulesco were twoing it again at the Trocadero. . . . Ditto, Isabel Jewell and Owen Crump at Sardis. ... And our Catalina scouts report that Jan Garber has a lump that big on his head. Got it on a surf board. j

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1937.

■PERSONAL Mrs. Phil Byron returned to her 'h. .tie in Peru Tuesday evening latter a several days visit with her | parents, Dr. and Mrs. Roy Archbold Miss Phyllis Krlek has returned home after a week's visit in Portland with Miss Jerry Waite. Mr. and Mis. Louis Mailand, son, | | Richard and daughter, Ellen have returned from a week's visit Ln Seward, Nebraska. Mr. and Mrs, Fred Schaub, of Cleveland, Ohio are the guests of M-las Bertha and Lawrence V<Mtlewede. Mrs. John Fisher, of Muncie. 1 I is also a house guest at the Voglewede home. •Mrs E. F. Gass, daughter Beatrice and Mr. and Mrs. William Case ; have returned from a western trip. I They also spent some time visiting ! Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gasu at Jefferson, Nebraska. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gass, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Borman and daughter Kay and Mrs Margaret Borman are upending this week at Long Lake. Mrs. Reuben Meyers of Monroe and Mrs. Kenneth Bowman of Na poleon. Mich., were visitors in D“catur yesterday. o Adams County Memorial Hospital I ♦— ♦ Dismissed yesterday: Mrs. Henry | Dehner. Monroeville; Jimmie Ehler 108 4th street. Dismissed this morning: Byron Beuchler. Monroeville; Betty Sims. ' route 3, Decatur. Admitted this morning: Mm. Elmer laiutenschleger, route 2, Deca- | tur. o - One Youth Killed, Another Injured Indianapolis, Ind.. July 28 —(UP) | Robert Smith, 19, was killed and Harry Hall. 17, was injured critically early today when an automobile driven without lights and at a high speed plunged off the road, overturned several times and then caught fire Both youths are from Indianapolis. o Escaped Reformatory Inmate Is Captured Connersvil'e, Ind.. July 28 —(UP) —Authorities today held Russel’ Clark, 18, escaped inmate of the state reformatory, after capturing him at h-Is home here las' night. Clark, who escaped from the reformatory June 19, had barricaded himself in the attic of his borne and officers were forced to crawl into the attic ti. get him. He offered no resistance. The youth was sentenced to the reformatory from Fayette county March 14. 1935. for petty larceny. He was released on parole but was returned later for violat-Icn of the parole. 1 Automobile Traffic Deaths On Increase Chicago, July 28. — (UP) Automobile traffic deaths for the first six months this year totaled 17.200, an increase of 2,040 compared to the 1936 period, the national safety i council reported today. June fatalities totaled 2.860, however, compared to 2.950 in 1936. | Automobile mileage was 2.000,000.I 000 miles greater in June this year. Reporting decreases in auto I deaths for the six months period ! were: Maine, 22 per cent; Kansas. '2l; Nevada, 19; Minnesota, 17; Washington. 14; South Dakota. 11; Arizona. 10; Missouri. 9: West Virginia. 7; Rhode Island. 7; New i Mexico, 6. — oRoosevelt Intruder Jailed POUGHKEEPSIE. N. Y. (U.R)i Charged with stealing boat models from the home of Mrs. Sara Delano Roosevelt, mother ot President Roosevelt, at Hyde Park, Samuel ■ MeWhinney pleaded guilty to unlawful entry and was sentenced to 11 months and 27 days in the ! county jail. . 0 — -— r Home Fishing Good NILES, O.(U.R)—Bill Kramer vjbll fish in his own back yard this ; year. He had planned a trip to Canada and had his fishing tackle out for its annual cleaning. His son. Ray, confiscated the equipment and went fishing In a nearby I creek where he caught a three < and pound bass So why, Kramer “tusked, go to Canada to fish? CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers are requested to give old and new address when ordering paper changed from one address to another. For example: If you change your address from Decatur R. R. 1 to Decatur R. R. 2, instruct us to change the paper from route one to route 1

BILIOPPOSED BY VANDENBERG Michigan Senator Opens Senate Drive On Wages, Hours Bill Washington, July 28 HU.R) Sen. I Arthur H. Vundunborg, R.. Mich., today opened a senate drive against the administration wages and hours bill by asserting that he ) doubted "If congress was ever asked to delegate a larger, wider and more potentially dangerous power to a bureaucracy.” Vandenberg's speech was the first address against the bill in the two days during which It has I befii under consideration in the I upper chamber. “It can build up one section ot an Industry to the disadvantage of another section," he charged, "and it can build up one section of the j country to (he destruction of another section." He said there were three prln- 1 cipal questions which should bo borne in mind in considering the measure: 1. "Does the bill do what it pretends Io do?" 2. “Will it not create more ; problems than it will solve?” 3. "Does It not involve bureaucratic practices which threaten a ! tyrannical dictatorship over Indus- : try?" I "It can hurt quite as easily as it can heal," he added, “it can hurt labor itself." He complimented the senate education and labor committee on : the “prudent statesmanship" he credited them with using in drawing up the drastically revised : draft of the original bill, and adI ded that "I emphatically concur ; in the notable objectives to which the Dili is addressed." "But." he added, “the bill recognizes its own menace in its own , text in these words: “ ‘it is impossible to achieve such results arbitrarily by an abrupt change so drastic that it might do serious injury to American industry and American workers, and it is therefore necessary to achieve such results cautiously, carefully, and without disturbance and dislocation of business :nd industry'.” o WAR RAGES FIERCELY /pnNTTNrr.T, niQM Ptnt one) 38th Chinese division at Matsun. 2'-.- miles south of Yungtimen. which is just outside the Peiping Walls. The Chinese centra! news agency said that the Japanese had recaptured Fengta-I, just southwest o f Peiping, after heavy fighting. Earlier in the day it had been taken by the Chinese, who drove out the remnants of tlie Japanese garrison. Tile agency said the Chinese retreated three miles from Fengtai where the fighting still was in progress late t.-day. The Jajianese also counter-attacked at I.anfang, south- > east of Peiping, where there also was heavy fighting. Guerilla warfare went on all durt ing the evening within a few hundred yards of Peiping’s walls- > In Tientsin, the French conces- ’ sion ordered shops in the vicinity of the Japanese concession to close at ■ 9 a. m. The fighting at Taku apparently was related to Japanese charges ’ that the Chinese turned trench ni 'rtors on the steamer Choan Maru ’ as it neared the port. The ship was 1 not damaged. Chinese Rejoice Shanghai, July 28 — (UP) — China’s great cities went wild with rejoinc'ng today on receipt of re- ’ ports-that Chinese troops were hurl'ing back Japanese attackers in the Peiping area. A military spokesman at Nanking , asserted that Chinese troops captured 300 grated Japanese war planes at Fengtai, Japanese base south of Peiping, and that Chinese stormed and captured the i’.wn of Yangtsun, , 16 miles north ot Tientsin, where Japanese were in occupation. Jubilation increased when the foreign office at Nanking announced that Sadao Miyazaki, a Japanese navy seaman whose alleged "kidnaping" brought Japanese bluejackets into Shanghai Saturday had been found near Shangchai—disguised as a Chinese coolie. The shame and helpless rage that I Wish To Announce -- I am moving out of the city and want to thank everyone for their past patronage. Vivian White My Beauty Shop will remain open and be operated by my operator, Juaneva Rupel and Mrs. Helen Howell, formerly of the O. K. Beauty Shop starting Monday, Aug. 2.

I China had endured for yea is under lhe persistent pressure of ambitious .In pun were succeeded by Jubilation ihat sent thousands out Into the streets of such c'lies as Shunghui and Nanking, exploding fireworks and shouting praises of the 29th Chinese army. It Is the 29th that is doing the' fighting ul Peiping against, the trained masses of the Japanese. It l<..iked us It the 29th would Hake its place along with the historic 19lh route army which to the astonishment of the world gave courageous resistance to the Japanlese at Shanghai in 1932. Tire China Evening News hero blazoned headlines that the 29th had sent its own ultimatum to the ultimatum-sending Japanese and had ordered them U.'evacuate North China within 48 hours or the 29th would "blast them out." News of Japanese seaman Mlyazuka's discovery was almost equally Important, in Chinese eyes, with the fighting. The news, if true, apparently meant that there had been

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i no kidnaping, an<| that the aeaman'* dlsnppt'aranco liad been voluntary. The foreign office «aid Mlya Akl was discovered alien he tried to u.'imnil nuicide In the Yangtze because he was ashamed to return to headquarter* after having vlaited a brother unapproved by the navy on *anltary ground*. Close Watch Washington, July 28 (U.R) . Paeeiilenl Roosevelt Is "keeping clone watcb” on the Chinese-Japan-ese situation with special interest | on safety of Americans marooned , In Peiping, the White House said, today. Second in the president's inter-1 est, It was learned, was the possi-| billty of developments in the fight which would require action Invoking the U. S. neutrality act. Mr. Roosevelt received telephonic reports on the Chinese-Japanese lighting from the state department last night and again early this morning. I There was a possibility, aides said, that the president would can-

cel plans for his usual week-end cruise u boa rd the presidential yacht, to maintain his watch on developments In the Vur East. AMENDMENT TO CONTINUED FKOK rAOlt QNK) the provision in the substitute bill for a direct appeal from the lower I courts to the Supreme court." i Minton said he believed there [ was a "fairly good" chance to atI tai h Illa ipropoaed amendment to .the bill. It lias been advocated it: somewhat similar form in the past by several senators. Including Sen. j George W Norris, 1., Nebr, who urged that "more than two-thirds mapor'ty" be required to declare an tact of congivsis unconstitutional. Minton, wh.'. visited the White House yesterday, eaid that he had not discilsued his proposal with tho President. | The twot.liird's court provision has been reported to have strong support in the house where Rep.

PAGE THREE

I Martin Dl«ei, D.. Tex., claims more I titan u majority of the representsi fives will vote «uch a requirement, probably both in legislative form and as a proposed constitutional amendment. Tractor In Irrigation U»r VANGUARD. Sask (U.R) Two farmers are foiling nature and drouth with a mun made machine. Giving it?) hope of ruin, Frank Burton and John Waldner devised a tractor-operated puinp ( I<> irrigate their 40-acre farms. The pump carries about 2,600 gallons of water a minute from a nearby river and pours it on the parched land. Phone 300 1315 W. Adams