Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 217, Decatur, Adams County, 14 September 1937 — Page 3
felN SOCIETY
PWHIAN SISTERS ENJOY CARO PARTY Pythian Sisters enjoyed a party at the K. of P. home affijii evening after Tetniple. Mfrlte and bunco were played and .jU were awarded to Mrs. A. L. 1 nrgjLtn and Mrs. A. R. AshbuuchJmT»- bridge, and Mrs. Jesse Hunte and Mrs. Fred Hancher for jf, Harve Baker was awarded attendance prize. The district meeting will te held In DeSeptember 28. JHlicious refreshments were g£K,i at the close of the games. kSL- Rurallstic Study club will at the home of Mrs. Herman ■er Thursday evening at .eight a>k. He anna tuck WANYE DULL Anna Marcella Tuck, (laughMr. and Mrs. Fred Tuck of K, n. Michigan, and Wayne Dull son of Mr. and Mrs. Ja»l' I>uU *f Wren, Ohio, were in marriage at the home of the p oom's sister, Mrs. Lloyd DanSaturday afternoon at oneo'clock. M,- Rev. Lloyd Bower, pastor of Episcopal church of read the marriage vows under an arch of pink and blue The single ring cerewas used. K- .lean Wasson of Clare. Mich.. of honor and Floyd Dull, brAer of the groom, acted as best bride wore a gv*n of baby ■ taffeta. The bridesmaid wore ■]. pink floor length frock. Sunday a reception for forty and relatives was held. The ' table was centered wedding cake. ouple wi'l reside in Decatur. is employed at the Inter-1 Harvester Company in Fort Wayne. Mt. Pleasant bible class will 1 ■k it the h.tne of Mr. and Mrs. | Mb Sing.'eton Friday evening at : o’clock. All members are urg-; attend. ■ — i A. B. C. class of Union Chap- ’ d Brethren Sunday school 1 at the home of Mr. and I Mat. Sylvester Everhart Friday everung! at seven-thirty o’clock. T1 ladies’ aid society of the I church will meet in . M'thurch parl.rs Thursday after-; ■Bt at tv*» o’clock. Mrs. Charles ' ML' i,er will have the devotionals 1 Mpiort musical program will be I ■B: Tthe regular meeting will be foil* ■ed by a meeting of all section
the ScenerCQd
■By HARRISON CARROLL I Copyright, 193* ™ Hing Features Syndicate, ln«, BOLLYWOOD—This will inter- : B Hollywood’s part-time soldiers Director W. S. XT rars DvLn hoc
Van Dyke has received an order transferring him from the marine reserve corps to general service at the San Diego base. Meaning that he might be called at any time to report for duty. Should a threat of war develop, a lot o f Hollywood
rs rSI ■l allace Beery
Kebs would be getting similiar Mers. Director Clarence Brown, ■ instance, is in the aviation re■'e, while Wallace Beery and •hard Schayer are in the naval ■erve. is a better reason than the ■ ■ends of Phyllis Brooks suspectl ■ the 45-mile-an-hour speed gov- | •or on the actress’ new car. It’s | ■ little matter of a suspended •Wht-day jail sentence. Seems as ! starlet was caught in New irk going 85 miles per hour in a ►mile zone. The judge didn't int to suspend the sentence, her, but finally consented to a ar's probation, which isn’t over til next March. If he can get out of the Gracie elds picture in London, Victor iLaglen will board a Clipper ship China to get a look (strictly an observer’s capacity) at the hting over there. It is the idea his publisher, who thinks that chapter on the Sino-Japanese uation would be an ideal finale the star’s autobiography. The een’s Captain Flagg has seen t other wars, always before as a rticipant. If the Shuberts intend to bill . r as Gypsy Rose Lee, Louise ivick says she won’t do the : for them. The former ■ rip-tease queen believes what's : ne is gone and considers the ' ■me Gypsy Rose Lee in that I tegory. I — I Answering Your Questions! < ah May, South Gate: Errol 1
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesday Zion Junior Walther League, Church, 7:30 p. m. Bob U. B. Willing Workers, Mrs. Harve Waltke, 7 p. m. Pinochle Club, Mrs. Sol Lord p. m. M. E. Standard Bearers' Claes, i Miss Mary Jane Beery, 7 p. m. Mt. Tabor Ladies' Aid, Mrs. Bob I Swoveland. 7:30 p. m. Delta Theta Tati Business Meet-. ing. Miss Mildred Niblick, 7:30 p. m. Firemen’s Auxiliary Pot Luck Supper, Fire Station, 6:30 p. m. Loyal Dorcas Class, Evangelical . Church. 7:30 p. m. Rebekah Lodge I. O. O. F Hall, ' 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Zion Senior Walther League. : Church Basement, 7:30 p. tn. postponed. Zion Reformed Ladles’ Aid, Church Parlons, 2:30 ip. m. Friendship Village Home Ee Club. Mrs. Frank Strickler. C. .unty Federation of Clubs, Mrs. i John Tyndall. 2:30 p. m. Business an<j Professional Women’s Club, Rice Hotel, 6:30 p. m. Thursday Evangelical Loyal Daughters, Mrs. Clarence Weber, 7:30 p. m. Evangelical Ladies’ Aid Society, Church, 2 p. m. St. Louke’s Aid Society All Day Meeting. Mrs. Leo Engle. Benefit Bridge Party. Business and Professional Women’! Club, Elks Home, 8 ip. m. Dinner Bridge Club, Mrs. E. G. Coverdale, 6:30 p. m St. Paul’s Ladies' Aid society, Mrs. Tom Noll, all day meeting. Ruralistic Study Club. Mrs. Herman Geimer, 8 p. m. Friday Union Chapel A. B. C. Class, Mr. .and Mrs. Slyvester Everhart, 7:30 : P- m. I‘ocah-citas Ixtdge, Red Men’s . Hall 7:30 p. m. Mt. Pleasant Bible Class, Mr. and I Mrs. Jesse Singleton, 8 p. m. Saturday Y. P. M. C. Baked Goods Sale, ‘ Brock’s Store. Cafeteria Supper, Zion Reformed Church, 5 to 7 p. m. | chairmen. A good attendance 16 de- ’ sired. I The Loyal Daughters class of the I Evangelical Sunday school will I meet at the home of Mrs. Clarence I Weber Thursday evening at seventhirty o’clock. Mrs. Will Dellinger
Flynn la Irish and was bom June 20, 1909. He’s six feet two and weighs 180 pounds. Lili Damita is French and, if the information in the M. P. Almanac is correct, ' she is two years older than Flynn, being born July 10, 1907. A handbook of acting, authored I by several Warner stars, will be published for the Christmas trade by Coward McCann, Humphrey Bogart, whe got the idea for the book, will write the foreword and the chapter on “heavies”. Other promised contributors are Bette Davis. Dick Powell, Leslie Howard, Paul Muni and Hugh Herbert and Frank McHugh. A funny angle to Kay Francis' suit against Warners is that the star, who is noted for her style and for the number of different gowns she wears in a picture, is ine msed because she didn't get to play in “Tovarich”, where the heroine has only three changes of costume —a shabby suit, a maid’a uniform and one party gown. Chatter. . . . Michael Bartlett has departed for New York with ! his middle-aged housekeeper, two dogs and a cat. At the train Bartlett had *
la ® I I ,x- I I p w I Luise Rainer
two friends to see him off. The housekeeper had 18. . . . Hear that Luise Rainer and Clifford Odets , have rented an I apartment i n Greenwich Village and that, after furnishing it, she now wants to do the apartments o f
all her friends. . . . Donald Novis, who started to fame at the Cocoanut Grove, returned there recently at a salary | ten times as large as he got for his first appearance. . . . Boyer and Pat Patterson sail for Paris on the 28th. . . . James Cagney’s kid sister is off for New York via the canal. . . . That was Joan Davis, the eccentric comedienne, with Borrah Minnevitch at the Swing club. . . . And James Stewart has gone to bed in an effort to gain 12 pounds in four ■ days. He’ll stuff with food and * take no form of exercise.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 14, 1937.
will be the assisting hostess. Every ’ member is urged to attend as business of Importance will be discussed. The meeting of the Decatur Home Economics club, which was to have ben held Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Delma Elzey, has been postponed until one week from Wednesday. The meeting of the Progressiva Vi-. kers’ class of the United Brethren Sunday school lias been postponed one week. CORINTHIAN CLASS ENTERTAINS AT PARTY The Gtrinthlan class of the First, | Christian Sunday school met in the church iparlors Monday evening for , the regular business meeting, which was In the charge of .Mrs, James Kitchen, president. After the business meeting the i Corinthian class entertained the i Sisters of Ruth with a “kid” party. I The guests and members arrived in i girlish costumes and the evening was spent playing games and enjoying contests. Mrs. Rene Hoffman was awarded i the prizze for being the ibest dressPrizes were also given to Mrs. H. Moffett, Mrs. Wilford Plasterer, Mrs. Dora Akey, Mrs. Malinda Darwachter and Mrs. A. D. Artman. The entertaining rooms yere deci corated with large balloons and the guests found their places marked with e’ever favors, at a long table centered with two decorated cakes aim bunches of balloons. Each guest was presented with a balloon as a fa~?r. Mrs. Mildred ! Nash was chairman, with Mrs. Darwachter and Mrs. Kitchen assisting. Mrs. Paul Daniels and Mrs. Dorphus Drum were in charge o tthe entertainment. MR. AND MRS. BURGER HONORED WITH SHOWER Mrs. Herman Kuhn and Miss Esta Fleming united in entertaining with a shower at the home of the latter Friday evening, h-rorlng Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Burger, who were recently married. The evening was spent In conteste and games, at the close of which a delicious luncheon was served. The honored couple received many beautiful and useful gifts. Those present were- the Misses i Nina Mclntosh, Opa l Drum. FranJile Bucher, Messrs. Ivan Barkley, Sam Wagner, David Myers and Harold Mclntosh. Mrs. Philip Kuhn, Mrs. Marlin Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Fleming and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson, Charley Magley, Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Fleming, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kuhn an dson, Gerald, Miss Esta Fleming and the guests of honor, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Burger. o MASONIC Regular stated meeting Tuesday | 7:30 p. m. Important that all members attend. W. M. 216-2 t PERSONALS Jeff Liechty, county treasurer, and Ernest Worthman. county as- ‘ sessor, were business visitors in I Berne Monday. Senaor T. A. Gottachalk, Indianapolis, head of the state welfare department, will arrive this afternoon to attend to some business matters. Ferd Mettler of Berne attended to business in Decatur last evening. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Niblick have returned from a delightful trip through the northwest, where they visited relatives and enjoyed themseivest several weeks. The work of remode'ling the residence recently purchased by Mr. Aeechlimann on Wincester street is going a'ong rapidly now. It will be a five-apartment building, modern and will add to that section of the city. French Quinn will be the speaker at a meeting of the Berne Chamber of Commerce meeting next Monday evening. Miss Helen Nickel, who has taught in the S. B. S. at Berne the past several weeks, will leave for Chicago tomorrow and will go from there to New Nork, from where she will sail on the Queen Mary, Octoi ber 6th for Janigir, Indiana, where she will begin her second term of mission work for the General Mennonite Conference. Frederick Vogiewede, a graduate BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL | MILK SHAKE and CHEESE SANDWICH 15c 1
’ Sy -J** 1 Plenty of the right kinds of mild e y r ’P c home-grown tobaccos .. . plenty of the Jf ** ® A | a right kinds of aromatic Turkish tobaccos... \ \ cut * nto I° n g even shreds and firmly rolled in TBO-pure cigarette paper and made full cigarette f° r nlhJt full measure means to Chesterfield smokers. . . BiSW'TTsIiHHBB If and that's nhy Chesterfields give y° u MORE PLEASURE. r JLJ Chesterfieid | wL. ’ cigarettes ft Finest Turkish Domestic Tobaccos (?o „Ti J Mi 1 V \ /) eX^- 3 ... f/icij/lgive you more pleasure Copyright 1937, Ltwzn & MyzM ToMCCO Co.
of the Decatur Catholic high school' last spring, left today for S.iith i Bend where he will enroll as a' freshman in Notre Dame Univer- ! sity. Mr. Vog'ewede was employed as a carrier by the Decatur Daily ; Democrat for several years and re-; cently wae employed in the mailing room. Chalmer and Evelyn Reher left' Saturday morning for a motor trip through the west. They will return , at..it the eleventh of October. Miss Vera Porter has returned to i Ball state teachers’ college, where ( she entered her senior year, after spending the summer with her parents Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Porter. I Q Lawyer Is Charged With Embezzlement Indianapolis, Sept. 14— <U.R) — . Howard H. Bates, 36. Indianapolis attorney, was under $2,500 bond today after his arrest late yester-1 day on a federal grand jury in- ( dlctment charging him with em-, bezzling pension checks from a ■ Civil War veteran’s daughter. i The Indictment accused Bates of embezzling $675 from Ida Reindehl, a patient in a state institu-. tion. Bates is her guardian, the; indictment stated. The attorney is an officer of the ■ Indiana national guard, a member I of the Indianapolis bar association,' and several legal and social fra-1 ternities. He was a candidate for ! Marion county superior court j judge in 1930 on the Democratic | ticket. o Chalk Artist At Eighth St. U. B. Mies Lenora Mobey, chalk artist, will be at the Eighth Street United Brethren church this evening at 7:30 o’clock. Miss Bobe-y will be acovmpanied by Mrs. Myrtle Rich, who will give vocal and instrumen-1 tai solos as Mrs. Robey draws in- ' teresting Bible pictures. Well known hymns will be sung i and an hour of worth while inspirational entertainment is assured for; young and old. The public is invltted to attend. o The Printzess Coat man will be at our store Wednes- . day 9:30 a. m.—Gass Store.
F. D. R. CALLS rr-nK'TTKT-rn ri'W eir.tr nw> a greater liquidation of assets of I such lending agencies as the RFC.I Hopes of picking up $150,000,000 ■ l in that manner faded, however, i | whe nthe RFC was required to lend I that amount to the commodity cerdit corporation for the cotton i , loans demanded by congress. A, 1 further loan may be required on I the corn crop. Os still greater immediate con- ! cern to the administration was the ; general monetary situation, which I has created a belief in financial . circles that there is not sufficient I money available to meet credit de-i | mands. Action of the treasury and 1 federal reserve board this week in transferring $300,000,000 from the I inactive gold account to the treas- ; ury’s federal reserve deposit ac- , count was considered only one step in a situation that will reI quire constant future attention I The government’s huge gold i sterilization program might easily I be affected by future monetary de- ! velopments. One possible step to ease present credit difficulties would be suspension of the sterilI ization program in order to permit I imported gold to enter directly inI to the credit structure. | o— Local Legionnaires To National Meeting Lloyd Baker and Harvey StevI ens left this afternoon for New I York City to attend the 20th anI nual convention of the American I Legion. The men are driving and I expect to stop in Pittsburg and a > number of other cities. The Legton I convention opens Saturday night The two men will represent Adams Post No. 43 of the American Legion. o * Three Killed As Train Hits Auto — Morton Grove, 111.. Sept. 14 —<U.R) — Three Chicagoans were killed when their automobile collided with a speeding Milwaukee passenger train at a crossing near; here today. The men were en route to a farm owned by Michael Heinberge, 47 near Geneva, Wis. The train was 1
I en route from the Twin Cities to Chicago. Heinberger was driving the car. I The other two victims were identi--1 tied as Leo Kuhn and Steffen ! Trendler. I o DEATH CLAIMS I '■tnwTVr’fi'Ti rv«rjir nx’Wi ' cemetery. The body will be removed from I the Zwick funeral home this eve- ! ning and may be viewed at the iresidence after 7 o'clock. ,| o | States In Agreement On Parole Supervision I i Washington, Sept. 14 — (UP) — • Seventeen states have agreed to sign a pact providing supervision of out of stae parolees in an important step to strengthen the nation's i . parole system, justice department. 1 officials said today. The pact will be signed at Kansas City September 24 and 25 at a session of the interstate commission on crime, which is directing a series of reforms in parole proceedure and law enforcement. o Farm Income Higher During Present Year Washington, Sept. 14 — (UP) — ' Farmers’ income for 1937 will reach $9,000,000,000, about $1,000,000,000 higher than in 1936 and the peak since 1929, the department of agriculture said today. The preliminary estimate was made by the bureau of agricultural economics, which said that while the farmers’ cash income is somewhat below pre-depression totals, his purchasing power is about on the same plane. The peak cash income year was $10,479,000,000 in 1929, as against the lowest in recent history of $4,-1 ! 328,000,000 in 1932. income in 1936 was $7,865,000,000. o Kentucky Youths Are Held After Slugging New Castle, Ind., Sept. 14—(UP) 1 Carson Smith, 19, and Raymond Norris, 22, both of Albany, Ky„ were held in jail here today pend- I ing investigation /vs the fatal slugg-| i
ing of Bertram L. Soini, 30, Fitchburg, Mass., during a brawl at the Straughn canning factory. Henry county authorities said Smith and Norris entered the bunkhouse at the canning factory and ordered all occupants out of bed. Smith a'legedly struck SiMni over ! the head with a board when he fail- ' ed to obey the order. | The youths were arrested several hours later when they appeared at the factory to collect their wages, lie had recommended a grand jury investigation. Soini died shortly after being struck. Io _ | BUMPS PUT IN ROADWAY TO STOP AUTO SPEEDERS 1 Newton, Mask. —(UP) —Mot/irists ■ driving along Chestnut Hill Road either go slow or run the risk of breaking a spring. Four-inch humps of tar and gravel
—- - '— - ■ pl FOR PRIVACY P - Which Starts at the Beginning and Carries Through t /A ' f There is a private entrance to / our family room, so that the / family may enter and leave -ii without being seen by others in attendance—in other words, we — offer the family complete privacy from beginning to end. B ZWICK FUNERAL HOME W.H.ZWICK- ROBERTJ.ZWICK J,, 7-" ROBERT B. FREEBY Bf- 3iner3unerulService, Up '' J M Iw? O Ut&wtfunerul'PriCeS PHONES:6I-800
PAGE THREE
have been raised in the road to discourage speeders. The knobs are painted white and signs explain the novel traffic regulators. At a moderate speed the bumps cannot be felt, but jolts and jars accompany a fast passage. o Cotton Consumption Rated Raleigh, N. C. (U.R) — A report released here today showed North Carolina led all states in consumption of cotton during May, 1937, with a total of 168,744 bales. Near- ! est rival was Georgia with 132,517 jo — • I Two-Pound Goldfish Hooked 1 Lancaster, O. (U.R) — Gustav Patni hooked a two-pound. 15-inch goldfish in Buckeye lake. ———o • The Printzess Coat man will be at our store Wednesday 9:30 a. m.—Gass Store.
