Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 259, Decatur, Adams County, 2 November 1937 — Page 3
ifcfN SOCIETY ' RT . 0 ■"■ — ■—■ ll . «
"T- colchin ° J®., etO association I n .. >'■■■ ~r - MiHS r ' ihin Friday for the s jnl l social • or « an - an<l Jo(4^»^iib(l ~..g lli arly " vr , and prizes , sir niaii A.exand a W ulliinan. Adeinncheoil was SCHULTZ TO SOCIETY , , , home of Mrs. . vcning with M.s \ Artman. ML . | ■ card form secretary Mission and Virgil A ~ jii"- rotary. It was de,IN C ‘ :i; K(l - ■' "o’nan's day profirst Sunday in U.' ember. Maj ~,,.< conducted .Mis. Schultz playi, rt ~ , all for worship H \nd Jesus Fed”. InterU *W«^Mp.,hy Mrs. 11. and Mrs. Fred King. Xov: with playlet by Mrs. and Mrs. .1. E. Ander--500; payers read by the 11,,,phus Drum. Oren ||,, ; r n ,an and Mrs. **• Th 'inn i 10--ed witli ”15: SUBJECT ' - ’ ■vi sual paper niet Monday i Up at the borne of Mrs. R. D. 1 , t .'.mty members pre- ( r 111'1 ent events. Mrs. F. , read a most interesting] **■ jg a j limb ]~(| name for a | ’ stO f mind. It applies , ' J* at ea-e feeling, a sense S.An or a threat of injury or ' I’op:. -.J behavior results 1 ,lilli " s l,r runnin - away ' arousing the ! Spk-hiil or abnormal fears are llk Typical phobias are with bodily posture; 1 .K balance or fear of falling. 1.. comes the start of : "-lil; Mj tin- fear of throwing 1 ife. - ? lf from some high place, if -K fear complexes are caused 1 K ■rvousness. Nervousness is I by a lack of adjustment to 1 Be forld as it is; therefore the 1 p° ss ible - ire must be some readjustment between the \ s inner forces and the de- i lbs iKaud- of the social world.'* 1 s Hi-uer i losed her dis: ussi.m « " fo'lowing practical advice. M ■Beta- m admit that you have ab-
■Mlehind the Scene£>jd
topyright, 1937 S * ,raturel * Syndicate, Inc. When you see MtMK Sonja Henie picture, "Hot and
U V** X. f IZUI CHIU Ea— I J Sonja Henle
li ■*'B le peasant that ■ l caW t *r »■ -■■ ■ !< _s ■1 ■nily heirthat ■been .- '•‘Wieri of the eian ■MO years And. ■W •ear,no ,t. ' Bthe st breaks XI B l ® o1 >1 ?<ori iistom • fßr ressls <l 1 e
mother to daughter at the marriage. is the first girl of her win) ever received the cos- ■ tume before going to the altar. an old Hollywood legend ■ *“w ; film colony waitresses are [ ■ ““•pointed actresses . . . who I failed to crash the gates or. I • succeeded, found the going I 100 ; ough. . . . Just a yarn, of but there is one waitress I th l? l '’ ll y wooli restaurant, who is of a former director I stepdaughter of a one-time father's name begins with her stepmother's with R. I is a tricky business in I tv«L a City - Rosemary Lane and I „I Powell will be doing a wading I nCe for several days in “Hol- ■ Hotel". In case they hold I aS®" 5 company by developing flu | Warner Brothers out a $50,000 insurance ■ *W. V Half on each star. all the warnings that have I H Printed, Film Tough Guy BarI hS^ ,5a '^ ane P* c hed up a hitch- ■ °n Ventura boulevard two I h2 tS a ®° antl was rewarded by I a gun s * uc k in his ribs. I rravu'" 10 let g° a Punch and the bandit's gun. It I until the fellow had jumped I 3K* 1 the car and disappeared that I zjr lscov ered the weapon was a I W'-.-ater pistol. I PuH J’ Oakies will enter the i nSo • ns business via a monthly I W azille about dogs. They'll call
i CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 —■ Tuesday Tri Kappa Business meeting. Elk’s Home, 8 p. nt. Psi lola Xi Business Meeting. Miss Marjorie DeV ss, 7:30 ip. m. Dutiful Daughters, Mrs. Fred Me Connell. 7:30 p. m. Young Matron's Club, Mrs. Albert Beery, 7 p. m. Catholic Ladies of Columbia, K. of C. Hall, 7:30 p. nt. Delta Theta Tau Sorority, Miss Margaret Wertzberger, 7:39 p. ni. Wednesday Shakespeare Club, Mrs. S. D. Reavers. 2:30 p. m. Historical Club, Mrs. Fred Hancher, 2:30 p. ni. Junior-Senior Walther League. Zion Lutheran Church, 7:30 p. m. Thursday Presbyterian Missionary Society, Mrs. Ira Fuhrman, 2:30 p. tn. Homestead Home Economics Club. Mrs. Ernest S. Scott, 7 p. in. Church of God Ladies' Aid Society, Mrs. Gilbert Strickler, 1:30 p. m. Ever Ready Class. Mrs. Paul Edwards. 7:30 p. m. Woman’s Home Missionary Society, Mrs. Judson Passwater. 2:30 p. nt. Kirkland Twp. W. C. T. U.. Kirkland High School, 7:30 p. m. So Cha Rea. Mrs. Dick Ehinger, 7:30 p. m. Christian Ladies’ Aid Society, Mrs. Henry Lichtensteiger. 2 p. m. Mt. Tabor Ladies 'Aid Society, Mrs. Clarence Chronister 7:30 p. m. i Union Chapel Ladies’ Aid Society, Mrs. Freeman Sehnepp. Evangelical Woman's Missionary Society, Church, 2 p. m. Monday Research Club, Mrs. Eugene Runyon, 2:30 p. m. normal fears. Try to control the emotions of anger, hatred or resentment. Get understanding! Get courage! Get busy!" After the secretary's report was read and approved, the club voted to have a Christmas luncheon Monday. December 13. Mrs. Eugene Runyon will be both hostess and leader at the meeting next Monday, with “Light-House tor the Blind" as her subject. MRS. W. H. FOUGHTY ENTERTAINS GUESTS Mrs. W. H. Foughty entertained with an oyster supper Monday evening honoring the birthday anniversary of her husband. The guests included : Mr. and Mrs. Del Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hoppengardner. Mr. and
it “The Illustrated Animal News" and will feature film colony pooches . . . especially the afghan hounds from their kennels. Checks from advertisers will be turned over to a home for stray pups. The day’s screwy story. Charles Lang-, cameraman on Crosby's “Badge of Policeman O'Roon’’, has asked Mary Carlisle not to get more than six hours' sleep a night while working in the picture. Too much sleep, he says, makes the eyes puffy in the morning. Lang says he uses the same system on Dietrich. At the Filmarte theater in Hollywood, they revive old hits. The other day it was Lubitsch's "Monte Carlo” and Jeanette MacDonald, passing by, stopped in to see one of her early vehicles. The costumes of the day and the somewhat dated technique were too much for the star who broke into peals of laughter. In the middle of it an usher I tapped her on the shoulder. “Please,” he said, “don’t make so much noise.” Chatter The Garbo-Stokow-ski marriage rumors will help her picture, “Conquest”, which is being released soon. . . . Did you know that Edgar "Slow Burn” Kennedy is a great-nephew to David Livingstone, the explorer? The comedian’s middle name is Livingstone. . . . Ernest Truex made a nice
linger Rogers
thing of "Marco Polo”. He was on the Goldwyn payroll for five months. . . . Now It’s Lee Bowman who is taking Ginger Rogers to dine. They were at Levy’s tavern. . . . And. speaking of dining, it was quite a dramatic mom ent when
Marcel Lamazc, of the Case Lamaze, supplied one of the courses at Eddie Sutherland's dinner for George Rector. Twenty-three years ago, Lamaze, wearing a uniform with brass buttons, sold cigars and cigarets for Rectcr in hie New York restaurant.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1937.
Msr. Charles Foughty, Mr. and Mrs 1 latwrence Smith, Mr. ami Mrs. Roy I'lrck, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Hoopengardner. Jack und Adalee Rough ty, all of Fort Wayne*, Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Moon. Marjorie and Betty I Foughty of this city and Mrs. Jnne • Anderson of Warsaw. The Masons, members of tho Or- j <ler of Eastern Star and their families will enjoy a Christmas party | and pot hn-k supper Friday D<>cem- I ber 3 at six-thirty o'clock. 1 he Homestead home economics 1 < lu-b will meet at the home of .Mrs. I Ernest S. Scott, House No. HI, I Thursday evening nt seven o’clock’ I Mrs, J. c. Strickler will be the assisting hostess. A dessert lunch- i eon will be served preceding the election of officers. All members ■ are urged to be present. The ladies' aid society of the ‘ Church of God will meet at thy home of Mrs. Gilbert Strickler, Thursday afternoon at one-thirty I o'clock. The Junior and Senior Walther League will meet at the Zion Luth- I eran church for the educational meeting Wednesday evening at sev-en-thirty o’clock. The Senior society will have a business meeting fol- : lowing. All members are urged to attend. — The Gir.is Missionary Guild of the Zion Reformed church will meet tonight at 6:15 o’clock at the rhurch in a supper meeting. All members are urged to attend. CLASS ENJOYS WEINER BAKE Raymond Eichenauer’s class of the Evangelical Sunday school enjoyed a weiner and marshmallow roast at the Spuller farm north of town last evening. In a contest, Mr. Eichenauer was first. The class will meet November 16 to organize. Those present were: Harlan Jackson, Byron Tricker. Etta Anspaugh, Esta Fleming. Mr. and Mrs. Eichenauer and Marcia Martin, INTERESTING PROGRAM PLANNED FOR MEETING The woman's missionary society of the First Presbyterian church will meet at the home of Mrs. Ira Fuhrman Thursday afternoon at ' two-thirty o’clock. Mrs. Noah Frye will lie the assisting hostess. An interesting program has been planned, including a map study regarding the work in the southern mountains. Reports of the group meeting held at Third chur- n. Fort Wayhe, will also be given. Needle work for the African station will be completed at this meeting. Tlte ladies are reminded to bring thimbles. A good attendance is urged Mr. and Mrs. Walter Whittenbarger of route 3 returned Monday evening from a seven week’s motor | trip through the western states, I trave'ing over eight thousand miles, i \\ hile in Los Angeles, Cal., they visited with Mrs. Whittenbarger’s three brothers Roy, Richard and Sherman Carter ami Mr. Whittenbarger's cousin, Ira Los Angeles. They also had the pleasure of visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Jess Sellemeyer and seeing their newly built home. o ARRIVALS /Vdola Marie is the name of the baby girl born to Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Parrish, residing south of Decatur, Friday morning, October 29 at 7:35 o’clock. Mrs. Parrish was formerly Miss Margaret Martin. o Hunters Roam North Carolina Raleigh. N. C. (U.R) Thousands of hunters, from North Carolina and many parts of the nation, went into action this month as the state’s game and bird season be--gan in earnest with opening of periods on deer, bear, squirrel, opossum and raccoon. Missouri Cotton Good Columbia, Mo. (U.R) — Missouri ranks above all cotton producing states of the South in the average yield per acre of the crop, according to a joint survey made by the University of Missouri and the United States Department of Agriculture. o Women Farmers Increase Davis. Cal. (U.R) — A sharp increase of farming interest among women was announced by 4-H Club directors in the Agricultural Extension Service of the University of California. Girls outnumbered boys attending an annual encampment of young farmers here. CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers are requested to give oid 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 two. ,
Wed at ! 1, Grandmother at 29! E Mrs. Hazel Hughes Mrs. Anna May Stogner At the age of 29 Mrs. Hazel Hughes of Amite. La., left, is a grandmother! She was married at 11, and her daughter. Mrs. Anna May Stogner, shown at right witli her month-old daughter, was married at 13. Both of them left their husbands after being wedded six months and are determined the third.generation will not lie a child bride.
Anti-Communist Pact Signing Predicted I Rome, Nov. 2 —(UP) —An anticommunist pact will be signed by Germany, Italy and Japan at the end of this week, it was predicted by reliable quarters heer today. Italian papers published a dispatch from Tokio to the effect that Joachim Von Ribbentrop. German ambassador. would go to Rome to sign the treaty, which will* not include I military clauses. | o Read Plato, Savant Advises Berkeley. Cal. (U.R) — Dr. F. P. Woeliner of the University of t'ali- ‘ tomia has a remedy for poor lawmaking in the United States. He suggests that Washington lawmakers read Plato anil Aristotle for awhile. oAustralia Fights Poachers Darwin (U.R) — The Australian government is intensifying its drive to stamp out the practice of Japanese pearlers making the northern Australian coast a base for their operations. —_o — Illinois Birth Rate Do-.vn Springfield, 111. (U.R) The Illinois birth rate fell more than 25 per cent during the 12-year period from 1925 to 1936 while the death rate remained approximately stationary. These facts are dis-
I New Ways To Light Dressing Tables imSS’ >•' x .. a, " S ! MT ■ « -fl 03 : r •K. : ■K -b ..I ’- t t ; an Hidden lighting above the mirrors sifts smoothly down upon milady’j face when she sits at this built-in dressing table.
By Jean Prentice WHETHER or not a dressing table is of the built in variety, there are new ways to light it. I ' give you these ideas for possible, use some day when yoa get the urge to redecorate your bedroom a new way: For the built-in dressing table, surrounded by lots of cupboard space, there’s a tricky sort of hidden lighting above the mirrors. The mechanics of the lighting Include an opal glass roof above the table. Beyend this glass are six 60-watt bulbs tn a ceiling box that is ten inches deep. The light sifts smoothly down upon the face of the person who will sit here. The mirror top of the dressing table reflects the light back to the under part of one's face. For a dressing table fitting close- ’ an alcove or window nook
, , closed in a new bulletin on vital statistics in Illinois issued by the state health department.’ o Sentries Watch Turkeys Kirkland, 111. (U.R) — Armed guards and trained dogs maintain constant vigilance over 8,500 turkeys raised on the G. W. Ault farm near here for the holiday market. Guards patrol the turkey yard day and night to watch for thieves and a floodlight is turned on when the birds have gone to roost. City Burns $159,814 Scrip Toledo. — i(U.R; — County commis-. sinners sauntered casually over to tho county jail and tossed $159,814 into the furnace — all in retired scrip, part of a $210,000 issue released in 1933. o Badges Worry Nudists San Jose. Cal.--(U.R) —Perhaps the gravest question which the western nudist convention had to solve when it met near here was just where a nudist should pin his oilier convention badge. In fact, the question hasn’t been settled yet. o Bank Usher Finds Fortune Turin, Italy. (U.R) Absent-mind ! ed customers have made Antonia | Varravelle, a Turin bank usher, a ( wealthy man. Two years ago he I had his first stroke of luck when i he found an enveolpe containing SIOO,OOO. It was never claimed. |
there may be built-in opal glass | panels of light on either side of the ; wall. Behind these panels may be daylight blue bulbs for a daytime lighting effect, and regular bulbs for the lighting under which to apply rouge and lipstick for evening. These two sets ci bulbs are on separate switches, of course. For a kidney-shaped small dressing table, too, where table-top spaco is at a premium, portable wall lamps on either aide are neat and convenient. The ones with translucent inner diffusing bowls give pleasant, softly-filmed illumination. I’ve seen some with crinoline shades that are darlings. Three things should be watched in planning your dressing table lighting: The illumination should be Concentrated on your face and not upon the glass. It. should be adequate in amount. And it should be glarelese.
Personals 1 Avery Dodge of Fort Wuvne at - ' tended to business in Dei ntur today.. Mr. an,i Mrs. E. J Barker of | Thorntown, spent Sunday with the ' former's n«-pln-w. John M. Doon and family. Peter ('. Lelwnan, well known Berne resident, will commemorate i his 90th birthday on Wednesday at ; his home in that town. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Llchtenatciger ' land children. Frederick, Kail, Mur ilia Lou and Doan and Mrs Bello , LV’htenaleiger and diiughle” Dorothy of Ohio City, Ohio spent Sunduy ut the O. T. Johnson home. Car) T. Haist of Indianapolis Is I hero for a few days. Mrs. James Beattey of Indlanaipo-' Ha visited her aunt, Mrs. Obenauer, ' here yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Durkin of Ind i ianapolia were guests of relatives ! here. Attorney N. C. Nelson transacted j business in Indianapolis. Mrs. Dan Gilmartin, of Chicago, visited here witli her parents over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Huffman, of Philadelphia, Pa., are visitin'; here with friends and relatives. Q .1. Oscar Winger To Speak At Monroe J. Oscar Wfnger, extension secretary of Manchester college, will bo the evening speaker at the Monroe township Sunday School convention. which will 'be held Sunday, November 14 at the Monroe Friends church, it was announced today. o Glen Neuenschwander Condition Unchanged The condition of Glen Neuenschwander. Berne young man injured in an auto accident Saturday night, was reported as unchanged by the attending physician today. He was still termed as being in a very critical condition.
■fftg ||i -j® ggj hM Igjl || B | I & Kill BBBBtIbB KK l j 111 * ■ |fl BI h 111 jßwj *•/;’?s W& - z s: . -t THEY STAY BRIGHTER LONGER Thanks to constant improvement and recent new devel- BUY BULBS WHERE YOU SEE opment, the new, brighter G-E bulbs now offer you THIS EMBLEM DISPLAYED greater value for your money. For these new MAZDA lamps made by General Electric w . not only give more light than ever before’. . . but they No Intrecse ln P rite - use no additional current, cost no more, and they Stay -m Brighter Longer. , H Largely responsible for this "lighting bonus” is a newly B A B perfected, high-efficiency tungsten filament. The 60-w att size, for example, now gives 10 per cent more light than w/rr *s°izts the same size lamp of a year ago, yet it costs no more. Buy a fresh supply of these new, brighter G-E bulbs today. the^sUamp 1 And be sure to include some of the larger sight-saving can buy for the price. 7j, sizes ... 75, 100, and 150-watts. General Electric Company, Nela Park, Cleveland, Ohio. ed like this... ge I |p«‘
'Government Deficit Less Than Year Ago Washington, &ov. 2 —(UP) The j | government ended the first four I months or Its 1938 fiscal year with 'a deficit of $562,403, 216, approximately $132,5i10,bu0 below the de I'ii'il anticipated for the entire year, 11 ho treasury reported today. At the I same date he I year the deficit was | I $937.496.214. Q_ Former Allen County Prosecutor Is Dead Fort Wayne, Ind., Nov. 2—(UPI i Albert E. Thomas, 63, prominent i Fort Wayne attorney, died suddenly la’ ills home here early today. Formerly Allen i-oi'hty prosecutor i TliMnas was a member of the law ' firm of Townsend. Thomas and No- I j vitsky. He had been In ill health for | almost a year. Nature Is Bount fal Nearby Chin. Alta. (U.R) -Peter j I Powell b< lieves lie has set up some ( kind of a farming record Last spring lie sowed three bushels of ' whent In n three-acre irrigated field. This fall he Ilin-vested 225 I .bushels of Martinis wheat. —4) —.... . Old Gaelic Book Lost Sydney. N. S. W. (U.R) For 15 months Father Fogarty, of Ire- | land, has searched without success < in Victoria ami New South Wales for the 7th century vellum manuscript in Gaelic of the Hook of | t'lonenagh. He was commissioned | by Hie National Library of Dub- I lin. o Love Is Forgetful Wichita Fulls. Tex. (U.R) Excited over his approaching matri- I monial venture, one prospective Wichita Falls bridegroom forgot •his fiancee’s name when he applied for a marriage license The applicant gave one first name for his future bride, but later in the day, his brother came back wifli ; the license to have her first name ; changed; the groom had given the i wrong one.
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! Chicago U. Students Favor Present Policy — Chicago, Nov. 2 (U.R) Univerully of Chicago students voted today to maintain a status quo In intercollegiate athletics, in a poll by the student newspaper which lias 1 Insisted Hie Maroons drop om of ! the Big Ten. Final returns showed 63.9 per I < ent of flic 758 voters favored Chi- ■ cago's present policy. Another i group - 23.8 per cent voted to subsidize openly. 6.8 per cent were in favor of abolishing intercollegiate I athletics and 5.2 per cent favored ' withdrawal from the Big Ten. Timothy Hay 7 Feet Tall Lyons Falls. N. V. (U.R) Timo- ; thy hay measuring 7 feet, SJnches | in height has been cut on L> on ' Kelly's farm. Kelly said the buy i grew on old meadow land which had not been plowed or fertilized I for more than 9 years. o —-— Weather Halts Traffic I Troy. N. Y. (U.R) The wenlher . halted traffic on the Congress I Street bridge when heat expanded : the steel on the west draw, preI venting it from closing. An ac"ty- | leiie torch cut the jammed parts. | piaklng them fit. and traffic was i resumed. • BE EXTRA CAREFUL | Treat Colds Proved Way Doubly proved— in world's L.rgest colds-clinic, and by everyday use in. more homes than any other ntedication of its kind. No / 1 ‘dosing.’’ Just massage Vapoßub on (7' throat, chest, and i.J I: I ‘I back at bedtime. Relf' It I---II lief begins almost at once And long after sleep comes, Vapoßub keeps right on work ( ng. Its poultice - and - vapor action loosens phlegm, relieves irritation and coughing, helps break local congestion. Often, by * morning the worst of the W cold is over. V VAPORUB
