Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 181, Decatur, Adams County, 2 August 1937 — Page 3
M SOCIETY CLUB CALENDAR TO HOME MAKBRB —I, ■U F l„v<l M iuhe!l h ‘ >Btes * Society Deadline, 11 a. m. EfePP.v n°""' Muker ’ l C “ b ,"; Fanny Macy township Thursday Phones 1000 — 1001 bß*“ Three tie* members. K’Sneth I’arrlHh. Mrs. C. W. - F’and M* t 1 **" ® lUb,n - C. L. of C. Meeting K. of C Hal! into the club. 7;30 p m the ro ll,ilie ">’‘ ~ling wlth „ KvMrz. Mitchell, a business p arm Tenant | k | d F(|r or Slaying His Employer of the first Thurs•‘Xrating painting dem- Vincennes, Ind Aug. 2-(UP)_ ■ , given by the leaders | John N. Bey, a farm tenant, was l;i '"» cake were served I held in the <•■ *mty jail charged with EW >fl ?„„ t i, lg guests present, first degree murder awaiting grand Harve Sells, Ralph j Jury action after the shooting of Mitchell. Russel Harry Taylor, farmer living near P . U ] Meyer. Kenneth Mit- here, in an argument thte morning nneth Parteh. Lou Stump, over who picked a bag of tomatoes. C- "• Mitchell. Mrs. The office of sheriff C. A. Joice EBj” and the Misses Helen said that Bey confessed the crime Iw!” 1 ! grille and Dorothy Wil- and re enacted it when taken to the t he hvstess, Mrs. Mit- scene’by deputies. Bey is the tenfl' I ant farmer ~n property owned by : R jt meet(nK will be he'd at Taylor, and is about 70 years old. of Mnt. John Hindenlang, 0 HL septembej. Cyclists Are Warned ■ ... Mrs. l. a. Graham ot To Stay Off Midway Ha Fourth street had «® their L , Sunday noon Mr. and I olice today warned all cyclists Graham and Mrs. to stay off the midway during fair Barnett of Cleveland and week. Considerable trouble has aa l Graham and daughter been experienced in previous years Bw —u of this city and Eugene from young people riding bicycles, of Wheeling. West Va. Police warned that they would —o- — confiscate and held all bicycles unKe tiellnor af,er falr Week - if ‘he warning Rjlljll Airliner was disregarded. K Reported Crashed ( . I “ I Bug Upsets Town Aug. 2—lUP)—An Italian [ JENNINGS. Mo. (U.PJ—A bug in was reported today to have the ear of a justice of the peace with the loss of several ; disrupted a club meeting and disKnt Wadi Haifa, on the Nile at i turbed the peace of this small of Egypt and the Su-1 town for two days. A flashlight iKiWsdi Haifa airdrome is used . and hairpin remedied the situaLitterio line on its Rome . tion. service. Officials of the i — 0 — Ki here refused to discuss the | TRAILERS FLOCK TO ,K but said they might have a| WISCONSIN'S ROAD TOWN for publication later , Planes bound both to and i Trailertown, Wis. — (UP) ■a Khartoum were scheduled to Trailertown, Wisconsin's newest KWadi Haifa today. 1 community, is a virtual t-wvn on 0 1 wheels. Herman Myers — Indianapo- , Founded May lon a busy high the week-end in Decatur, wav ni . ( ]way between Racine and Mt -' her son. Jobn. | Kenosha. Wis., the new community Bf T. My Jl— offers modern convenience to ~ families who wish to settle down ■To Make Good Pickles li in a trailer - ■kt ESTELLE'S B. & B. Spice Trailertown was founded by Hfoture. with Green Tomatoes Glenh >H.Jm of Kenosha. Result was Br Cucumbers. Eat ’em the | that he opened Trailertown, offer■sk day you make ’em. The jng p' lU g in electricity, water connects* you ever tasted Direction. , telephone service, and daily St0 ’ es . mail deliveries to all comers. ■T More than 25 trailer-families have
I B) HARRISON (AKROLL fl I'opjnfht, 1937, ■ ii>r Feature* Syndicate, Ice. JOLLYWOOD — Marriage ru■tos concerning Ida Lupino and
Louis Hayward brought a unique reply from the actress who told your correspondent: “I’d love to but he hasn't asked me yet.” Hollywood had heard that the long standing romance of the two would probably culminate in a trip to the
•I*' I Ida Lupinu
g altar when Hayreturns from Europe in the ■at few weeks. Sonde Ida. busy at R-K-O In the "Fight for Your Lady”, Wt» the idea. Not only has «e been no definite understand- ? between them, she says, but lf b would like to be more Wished on the screen before the step. Romance has suffered another in the Lupino family. The parents are separated by , , e than an ocean and a conti- ?*' since Mrs. Lupino’s return 7 s Ugland. Ida belives that "'ill mend the rift, however. Gillette Goddard's return to the suffers new delays. The With the Wind” possibility "ow definitely out and Chaplin shelved "Regency” In favor of ‘ ">Mern story with New York Santa Barbara backgrounds dealing with the younger ™ration. With the comedian’s r ely method of preparation, it ' be months before he gets *“®d to starting the film. He is cruising around in his yacht, j?**’ as if Loretta Young and »L ne ,. Power may be taking up they left off at the time of U? He nie’s last return to Holly- .. were at Marti’s Club ton 41 other night and didn’t Z™ t 0 talking about the Uler °r the picture business. Gi^ W ™ ring Your Questions! Cornn ® kins ' Washington: Betty u is ? UU arou nd Hollywood •he s * ettin g as many breaks as »orki erve *’ Ri « ht now ,he *■ in ff in a Monogram picture
sailed “God’s Country and the Man”. Adolphe Menjou, an ardent stamp collector, will show his U. S. collection at the philatelic exposition in New York around the first of the year. The star haunts the 1 stamp auctions and when he is working in a picture, as in "Stage Door” now, he has an agent attend ' in his place. His collection is said to be valued at $25,000. In the six weeks since “The 1 Bride Wore Red” has been in production, Joan Crawford has knit 1 four baby blankets, with the Gary Coopers and the Robert Youngs in i mind. She always does do for each 1 expected youngster, one blue and one pink. Chatter. . . . Bill Davey is rushing to Europe by plane and fast boat to be Eddie Hillman’s best man in case Eudie and Lady June Inverclyde continue with their marriage plans. . . . Hillman, by the way, is richer by a million dollars since his mother’s death a few months ago. . . . June Travis and Dick Purcell, whose romance has cooled, will be cast together in Warners' "One More Tomorrow". . ... A stickup man tried to hold Florence Rice and Michael Bart-
lett with a monkey wrench, but fled when Bartlett kicked him in the shin. . . . Ann Shirley gave Agent Henry Willson a party at the Trocadero. They are still so unhappy over the rumors that she fired him right after the cocktail party he gave for her....
-Xi ■ -» fl| Btr fl : L— ’ , Ann Shirley i
Will Morrissey was just in and is up to his neck in plans, one for a I night club and another for a , theater which will borrow the ■ movie idea of double features—a . drama and a musical comedy on , the same bill with 10 minutes of ; vaudeville in between to take the . place of the newsreel. Both to be in Hollywood, of course. ... Barbara Reed and Donald Barry ! are helping each other pass the r time away. . • ■ But eaeh ge I around with others, too. . . . And i Gladys George continues tog™ i Garbo a race for the tightest • closed set at M. G. M. ) |
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, AUGUST 2, 1937.
moved In. Typical residents of Trailertown are Matt Muahman and hla wife. Their home town !g Judith Gup, Mont Muschman is a social science teacher in a Kenosha school. He , commutes dally, leaving his wife in Trailertown to tidy up their home on wheels. "Housekeeping .In a trailer Is as much work for me as it wan when wo lived in a six room house.” Mrs. Buschman said. ■ Plane Transports Town Winnipeg, Man. —(UP)—TransI porting an entire mining town, in- • eluding machinery, equipment, food and supplies and peole, into an "inaccessible" spot of the Canadian 1 wllde by plane is the latest achieve--1 tnent of Canadian civil aviation. I The town was set up at Favorable Lake. Ontario, where gold is the • principal metal mines). 1 O' —— Musical Brothers Escape Hampton, N. B (U.R) — Three brothers escaped from the county jail here after sawing through the cell roof to the tune of songs and harmonica music. The men took turns singing and playing the mouth organ to drown out the noise while they burrowed through the thick ceiling. Dental Patient Hypnotized London (U.PJ A demonstration of the powers of hypnotism was held at a hospital here when a woman underwent the extraction of two teeth without being conscious of pain. For some days previous to the operation, the woman had undergone treatment from a hypnotist and arrived in the operating room In a responsive state. ,j C. T Civic Hall Goes on Block Honolulu.— (U.PJ — Civic auditoriums have become a drug on the market here. However, the city’s $40,000 hall brought $1,400 at sheriff's sale, with all obligations thrown in as good measure. o Old Coupons Redeemed Crane, Mo., (U.PJ — Dr. S. N. Dalby, dentist, thought he would see how well Uncle Sam takes care of old ob'igations, sending some government coupons that were payable in 1880 to the Federal Reserve Bank in St. Louis. Dalby received a check by return mall. o Trade In a Good Town — Oecatur
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CCC WILL HAIN 4,000 LIFEGUARD Washington.—(U.PJ--The Civilian Conservation Corps will cooperate' with the American Red Cross this year in the training of 150 com-] missioned reserve officers now on duty with the CCC as Red Cross Life Saving Examiners and 4,000,000 CCC enrollees as lifeguards, according to J. J. McEntee, assistant director of Emergency Conservation work. The reserve officers, trained at the National Affuatic schools, will serve as Instructors at the district schools held for enrollees. Enrollees who graduated from the district schools will he assigned to lifeguard duty In the CCC camps as soon as they receive their certificates. At least two CCC senior lifeguards will be assigned to each camp, McEntee said. He pointed out that all outdoor swimming at CCC camps is supervised. The American Red Cross co-op-erated with the CCC in the conduct of lifesaving programs during the summers of 1935 and 1936. During those years a total of 6.636 enrollees were graduated as Red Cross Senior lifeguards, McEntee pointed out. "Thanks to the co-operation of the American Red Cross in the training of lifeguards, the Civilian Conservation Corps has been able to reduce swimming accidents to a minimum.” McEntee said. "Because so many of the boys entering the CCC camps have never had the opportunity to learn to swim, special precautions have been taken at every camp to insure that trained lifeguards are on duty whenever enrollees go into the water." o Steamships Collide, Nine Die, 30 Missing Athens, Aug. 2 — (UP) — Nine bodies had been recovered today and 30 persons were nitesing after a collision between the coastal steamship Anaetasste and the steamship Hydra c*te mile off Piraeus, the Port of Athens. Both ships were bringing excursionists from the Aegean Islands. The Anastassis sank. Fifty of its passengers and crew saved themI elves by swimming ashore. The Hydria, damaged, was unable to aid but reached Piraeus. Ne-Ither ship was radio equipped.
I Miss Vivian Burk has returned from a week’s visit In Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Felix Holthciise, former Decatur residents, have ' moved from Chicago to St. Louis, Mo. ] Mr. and Mrs. Milo Flcak of Logansport are In Adams county dur ing the annual Decatur Free Street Fair and Agricultural show, and visiting Floyd Baxter of Monroe and Mrs. Harry King of this city, as ( , wel’ as many of their old friends ! here. Mr. and Mrs. Felix Maier had as their guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Ed Maier, Mr. and Mrs. A. Zinn and sons, Mrs. A. Davis and daughter Margaret and Mrs. R. K- Wolf and daughters Kathryn and Betty Rose, a'l of Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fike of Chicago visited with Mr. and Mrs. C. E. ■ Peterson Sunday. The Fikes resided In Decatur aLsut fifteen years ago. Mr. Fike is now manager ot the 49th street Sears and Roebuck j store Fred Helm of Indianapolis spent the weekend as the guest of Mr. and Mns. Avon Bunk. Dick Durkin returned to Indianapolte early this morning after a , visit over the week-end. Dick Heller visited in Decatur for a few hours Sunday afternoon enroute from Klinger Lake to Indiana- ■ polls. Miss Betty Foughty returned home from Winona Lake Sunday. She was accompanied by Miss Helen Claire Howe, who will spend the week here. Mr. and Mns- R. L. Wilson and • children. Floyd, Woodrow, Raymond. Earnest, P.dly and Marguer- ' ite, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wilson, Mrs.: Flossie Maier and children. Nora and Roy Lee, Mr. and Mns. Harold i Hilton and children Betty and . Robert Lee returned last evening from a three days visit in London. Kentucky where they visited J. M. Wilson, Jim Wilson and Henry Wilson and /.ther relatives. According to word received here Mrs. Mary McClure and sons who left last Tuesday for Flagstaff, Arizona are r.?w in El Paeo, Texas. According to report they are getting along fine. Eugene Clifford ot Wheeling. West Virginia is visiting in Decatur. He will return to his home Saturday, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. i L. A- Graham, who will visit there ' over the week-end.
Riots Mark Visit of British Rulers to Belfast "Ik. -XUk- .. M J < ' ' ' " •
Large-scale outrages designed to mar the visit of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth to the Ulster capital broke out in Belfast as the first British rulers to visit Irish soil in 16 years arrived. Customs huts were blown up and burned, a bridge
August 15 Final Day For Reporting Sales Indianapolis, Aug. 2 —(UP) —Au-1 gust 15 is the last day for manu-; facturers and others engaged in in-1 teretate commerce to report interstate sales for all past taxpaying 1 periods to the state gross income' tax division, it was, announced t> day by Clarence A. Jackson, division director. Simultaneously it was announced that information return forms on which these receipts are to be re- ! ported have been made available at al! state auto licence branches. Pending decis-lon of the United States Supreme C.'.urt in a caee I contesting the right of the state to I collect tax on transaction in inter- , state commerce, the division te per-1 mitting taxpayers to defer payment of the tax on such transactions provided the information returns are filed. 0 Trade in a Good Town — Decatui
SUIT IS KEY ITEM WHEN SELECTING WARDROBE FOR COOL FALL DAYS \utumn Fashion Parade Also Features Tailored Dresses Which Are Highly Practical for Wear During Daytime naqr ’ I Harriet Hilliard | iFdWEt*. WiiW~ Ai * n shcri<iun i • fc,. gUI a ■ LIP '•Jt -Il 1 n nK J 'i I [ I' HMHBmMI . Ok \ iiß L. , Ho ■ * jf /I 1 ' '■ I I n t M-rk.Tl' "« ' W?™ 11
By SUSAN BARDEN | International Illustrated News Writer HOLLY WOOD —The smart I shops are already lining up their narade of fall fashions and though most of us are still sweltering under the midsummer sun, they know that time marches on. Hollywood, that city of glamor, i :b always among the first to take note of the new trends for the coming season. So a peep at what the three young actresses, shown above, have chosen for the cool months to come will be a very sood fashion preview. It will ceritainly give us definite ideas of what is going to be worn. Suits and street dresses are about the first items that the returning thinks of as a (decided necessity on settling down Sor the winter. Whether it means another year at college, a rush
partially wrecked and riotous demonstrations staged. Authorities stated that Extremist Republicans were responsible for the outrages. Scenes were common such as the above, when unemployed clashed in the streets several years ago.
Three Injured In Oregon Train Wreck San Francisco, Aug. 2 —(UP) — ; Three women and one dining car ' waiter were injured seriously today In the Southern Pacific trainwreck 'near Ramsay station, Oregon, com- ' pany officials announced. The informal >i was wired by W. L. Hack, superintendent of the Sacramento . division, who said none was killed. Other passengers were “shaken up," he reported. Names ot the in- , jured -persons were not ava-Ilable immediately. Doctors administered : first aid. o Marriage Licenses Harold P. Lowe. 24, Niles, ; Michigan, fireman to Ruth RichI aids, 21, beauty operator. Q Ranch Proud of Record KERRVILLE. Tex. (U.R)—A recI ord herd of 114 calves from 118 I cows was produced on the ranch 1 of Adam Wilson, Jr., near here.
I back to the grind of the office, or i the beginning of a social season-— I they come first. Afternoon frocks, evening dresses and tea gowns can wait for more leisurely shopping. But those early autumn days call for an outfit for shopping, luncheon and matinees. And this time of year suits and tailored dresses are the ideal daytime costume. Suits Lead Parade Ann Sheridan is wearing a twopiece cloth dress that has the unusual new cut. It is made of gray flat surface wool. The model is styled with three-quarter length bell sleeves and shows the season’s trend toward the swallow-tailed flared tunic. A broad belt of the same fabric e stresses the trim waistline. The hat is a gray felt, of the dip brimmed variety. A mink scarf and brown suede accessoriea complete the ensemble. |
PAGE THREE
Pickets Clash With Kendallville Police Kendallville, Ind., Aug. 2—(UP) —dtarold Schwartz, Chicago, attorney for the International Ladies garment workers union, was hurt slightly today when 50 pickets, mostly women, dashed with special , deputies and city police at the Tren--111. <n Garment company opening. The company moved here recently from Jackson. Mich., when a strike halted operations. The pickets here today were from Jackson. Schwartz was knocked down during a brief melee which occurred when the strikers tried to etop workers from entering the plant. . He said he v-.uld telephone Jack- - son immediately for reinforcements. 0 ... i. i Cat Adopts Skunks 8 BASIN, Wyo. (U.R)—A cat at the r Delbert Crandall ranch near here has adopted three baby skunks.
Harriet Hillard sports a suit trimmed with cross fox. It i." made of flattering chartreuse wool anti the jacket is fingertip length. The coat ties at the neck with a cord of the same color. Her little wrap around turban is made of the, same material and her bag, shoes and gloves are dark brown. Una Merkel has chosen a costume that is a study in black and white—particularly appropriate for the tea and cocktail hour in town. The black coat features large silver fox sleeves and is separate from the rest of the outfit. When the coat is removed it reveals a shortsleeved black dress with a large white panel down the*front. A small black hat is trimmed with white flowers and flaunts a saucy little veil. A pair of long white I gloves complete thia charming en- | semble. '
