Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 275, Decatur, Adams County, 20 November 1937 — Page 3
i felN SOCIETY — ——
I " I PARTY ' J9rs- SHRENK 1 ■> " IH ■ ;| birthday surprise I n jJ*'-' 1 l,r l '' , ’ rl Wuy,lP ’ll]®*.' Uiinislmd by thI J® puiu.i play-rs. WallmI M»r* h'himy Rose. Harold ■ {"JM .1 Ida Mari'' Schrenk. ~ I til" present were: Mr. and I Mrs jB" ,i ' M '' a " < * M ' S ■ i iib® l, ■""* ,h " lgl1 "'' Al I ■"” l ' llS ( '" HI S| "'" g ' ,| ' t Ksaiie® Bn d •J° an - 1 Mr. »n<l M|S Alb “ 1 ' 1 Detnner. I uuabter I'" 1 is Mr ! "" 1 Mrs - I ! ,IDrain' and . hihlren Eugen.-, IF anti Martha. Simon Dett-i ■ lhroMD l '' l! ""''' Mias E<li,tl ( '" n ■ Xlrs |),, " al ‘ l Springer, I la ivjßlnd Carol Ann of Ossian It J Mid 80>T II " ,| a | d. .Mr. and Mrs. Augdaughter Rosella. I u- 2) Mrs Elmer Brueck and ■ datisM*i Norma Jean. Mr. and i I Mrs. 'Cfcil-* Fenton and son Ilog-' I er. all ot Fort Wayne. I PHItWCLASS MEETS I AT ERNEST LIGHT'S I Tweftt: two members of the Philo ■ | claMMtlte Baptist Sunday school! I met at Uhe home of Mr. and Mrs. ' '»■ Ernest Light Friday evening, with! iil Mrs.dfr nk Young conducting a I Thaaitt. 'ing devotional program. (!!■ Ralph Kenworthy was in charge the business meeting, during I chit#itl. class decided to have a I ■ (’hrisfcu exchange party at the ' I Pec*M>er meeting. I Gatnep and contests were enjoy2|l ed. Loveb refreshments were serv- ■ ed by tile hostess, assisted by Miss I fcaeftg-nbaugh. Mrs. Young and | Mr - |« ht - I ST AWARD BEARERS I REGULAR MEETING I An,lnteresting meeting of the I Stan<4r<: Bearers of the MethodI tint fcr opal Sunday school was tif| held at the home of Miss Wanda I Fry jßiirsday evening. I TMpneeting was in charge of the I preMMt. Miss Gladys Miller. The | tessoil "Moselm Religion,” was givI « by Mimi Jean Zimmerman, Mies I Mary Jane Beery and Lois Jean | Grain. dressed as Moslem girls. - refreshments were served l| "gfc
itie SceneJuS
I B HARRISON C ARROLL I. Copyright, 1937 I Bl Features Syndicate, Inc. I _W jLYWOOD -When the next I picture is made, it is very
doubtful if Glenn Morris and Eleanor Holm will be teamed again as the jungle hero and his mate. The two didn’t get along at all. Outspoken Eleanor was quoted in an interview as calling Morris “just a dumb athlete”. Upshot of it was that the
I EE llor Holm
I **W* fused to pose in any roman- ■ pictures together and the I *sß° P ubl >city department will I |Bto use drawings to get them I >n its exploitation camI The preview of "Second HoneyI B1 *E” saw Marjorie Weaver, I southern girl, get one of the i nRp unusual breaks ever given a I Mlfkinier. After the film was I EE an announcement flashed on II I Bp rr yl F. Zanuck has just preI Marjorie Weaver, whom I Century-Fox believes | will be one of its outstanding stars IM. 38 '” was followed by a cutback l *B p of her scenes in the picture [!■ EB*h the applause of the premK aU , dience unpins in her earSi B Weaver walked out of the er to face a mob of autograph § 'IM not one of whom recognized In a few months, though, it I WI B he another story, for the . BB* SS goes into one of the leads ' Wpally, Irene and Mary", and >l! B?- g tudio is plugging her for i|Mßom. djP’at price authenticity in pic- : ul *’ Norma Shearer’s gowns iy Marie Antoinette" are being opled exactly from photographic •eproductions of paintings. Em- ®? ered designs are studied under glass so as to be Pjffeet replicas of the originals, job is so painstaking that 35 ’fflr'en work on one-hour shifts. ttlj tnd y Scott’s trip to New York nieet his sister, Mrs. Carl BBbert, wife of a Swedish indus- ■ W ls t’ whom he has not seen in JjF* have an Idea of turning this ®>tnn occasionally into an open JP* 1 ' where you fans can air your
, CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11Jk. M, Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Saturday Baked Goods Sale, Sorg Market, 8 a. m. Rummage Sale, Methodist Church Basement, 1 to 8 p. m. Rummage Sale by Decatur Band, Christian Church, 8 a. m. Cafeteria Supper, Zion Reformed Church, 5 to 7. Monday Research Club, Mrs. Walter 1 Krick, 2:30 p. m. Bazaar and Cafeteria Supper. Catholic school, 5 to 7 p. m. United Christian Missionary Society , Mrs. James Kitchen. 7:30 p. m. I Woman’s Club, Library Hall, 7:45 p. tn. Tuesday Zion Junior Walther League, Church Auditorium, 7:30 p. m. Delta Theta Tau. Miss Flothilda Harris, 7:30 p. m. Pinochle Club, Mrs. Russell Melchi, 7:30 p. m. | Bazaar and Cafeteria Supper, . Catholic school, 5 to 7 p. m. Glee Club Concert, D. H. S. Auditorium, 8 p. m. Union Twp. Woman’s Club, Mrs. Fred Hammond, 1:30 p, tn. Wednesday Young Matron’s Club, Mrs. Albert Miller, 7:30 p. m. 1 Union Chapel Baked Goods sale. Brock Store, 9:30 a. m, by the hostess. Miss Fry’, who also entertained with several Hawaiian giutar numbers. The next meeting will be a Christmas party December 16 at the home of Miss Zula Porter. The Delta Theta Tau sorority will meet at the home of Miss Flothilda Harris Tuesday evening at seventhirty o’clock. MEMBERS REQUESTED TO USE GUEST TICKETS Members are requested to use their guest tickets when Miss Kathleen O'Dowd of Fort Wayne presents her program at Library Hall Monday evening at the 'Woman's club meeting at seven fortyfive o’clock. Miss O’Dowd’s program will be in three parts, a monologue, a short story and two playlets', and promises to be a most interesting one. Miss O’Dowd comes to Decatur highly recommended. She has ap-
views on controversial subjects and where, if necessary, the stars and movie moguls can make direct ■ reply, or start arguments of their ’ own. A few sample subjects might be: 1 Do you like to see the dignified stars made the victim of slapstick 1 comedy as Myrna Loy was in 1 “Double Wedding”. Or, do you 1 think the stars are really getting a bad deal from the columnists, air or otherwise. Or, where do you think the star’s responsibility to 1 the fan ends? Should they receive 1 fans who invade the privacy of their homes? Or pick your own subject. If you are interested, let’s hear from you. And try to keep your ■ letters short and to the point. Ever think you’d like to watch an operation ? Olivia de Havilland believed she would and the other day paid a visit to the surgery of Dr. H. N. Enloe’s sanitarium near the “Robin Hood” location. It was an appendectomy. The star entered the operating room dressed in white apron, mask, etc. The next thing she knew she waked up in the hospital bed with a lump on her head and two nurses in attendance. She had fallen to the floor in a dead faint. Chatter. . . . Lucille Ball says she is too busy to marry Director Al Hall or anybody else. “How could I?" she asked us. “I don't even get Sundays off”. . . . Hear that Mervyn Le Roy is planning to purchase several of Rudolph Valentino’s silent vehicles for Fernand Gravet. . . . Shirley Ross sailed for New York and a Broadway vacation. . . . Certain exclusive Hollywood shop was thrown into a turmoil when Margaret Matzenauer fell down the stairs
Wendy Barrie
and had to be carried out on a stretcher. The prima donna has proved a good sport, though, b y autographing the broken heel of her shoe and giving It to the manager.... Wendy Barrie is all set to surprise Hollywood with her singing voice. She’s been studying
under Eddie Kaye. . , . Hedy Lamarr’s escort at the Case Lamaze was Reginald Gardiner. . And here's Hollywood’s newest drink, as made at the Tropics—a rum concoction called a “head ( hunter" and served in a cocoanut shell.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1937.
These Beauties Singled Out by Cupid! —- «— —*** — ‘ B ft |9p W t X" wrl; 14 jB, j ■ [Martha Barkley * ' •’ I iflCvelyn Sullivan Livermore [£ / \<z / 4 > z r ’ v " ileWW' I , I-k g J 1 ■ ■ w I li ■ ? H > I gIiXIKWtaZMBLI >1 li > '[PBr Eleanor
Four young ladies currently in the headlines are these four beauties, two of whom were just married and two others who are planning to wed. Extended romance of Betty Grable and Jackie Coogan, Hollywood celebrities, was sealed when they obtained their wedding license. Two others prominent tn show business made the headlines when it was announced that Eleanor Holm and Billy Rose would marry as soon as they are divorced from Art Jarrett, bandleader, and Fannie Brice, veteran vaudeville star Another publicized romance is that
peared before the Fort Wayne woman’s club and the E. Jane Hamilton society. Mrs. John Petersen is chairman of the program, assisted by the Mesdames Raymond Kohne, Albert Gehrig and Herb Kern. The Zion Junior Walther league 1 will meet in the church auditorium at seven-thirty o’clock for a social meeting. — The woman s home missionary society of the Methodist Episcopal church will observe a thank offer- I ing program Sunday, morning at : nine-thirty o’clock. All members are urged to attend and bring an offer-1 ing. MENU ANNOUNCED FOR BAZAAR The following menu will be offered Monday night at the supper . to he served when the students of the Catholic school give their two day bazaar: Chicken, beef roast, mashed po-
Stage Set for Soviet Election Josef Stalin M A dL s // t L-t W? Ik. Youth teaching peasant Yczhoff ' ■» ft-J * Soviet Russia goes to the polls on Dec. 12 to elect 1,000-odd deputies to the Supreme Soviet congress and 2,000,000 deputies to local Soviet councils. More than 100,000.000 are expected to vote. First to announce their candidacy were Josef Stalin, dictator and chief commissar, and Nikolai Yezhoff, head of the Russian political police. The Soviet election differs radically from most elsewhere in that there is only one party represented on the ticket, voters choice being restricted to candidates, all of whom are pledged to the same credo. However, the "privilege" of voting a secret ballot strikes the Russian las rather satisfying and a most democratic step. Discussion groups review the qualifications of various candidates and the whole business 1 u carried off in very serious manner.
■ —‘ y-rr-ffiMU of Jesse Livermore, Jr., son of the Wall Street operator, who took as his bride pretty Evelyn Sullivan. Young Livermore was in the news two years ago when he was accidentally shot by his mother. Cupid’s course has not been so smooth for Martha Barkley Ryan, however. This attractive young bnde of Basil Ryan, grandson of the late Thomas Fortune Ryan, copper king, is fighting an annulment suit brought by young Ryan who claims the ceremony was performed while he was intoxicated and followed a one-day friendship. _
tatoes, gravy, dressing, green beans, cranberry jelly, salad, ro'ls, coffee, fruit salad, cake and pie. * On Tuesday the menu will consist of chicken, roast beef, mashed \ potatoes, gravy, noodles, peas, bakled apples, salad, rolls, coffee, fruit salad, ca.ke and pie. Tickets are on sale for 35 cents for adults and 20 cents for children. Supper will be served from | I five to seven o’clock INTERESTING MEETING OF CLUB FEDERATION The Adams county federation of ! clubs met at the home of Mrs. R. A. Stuckey Friday afternoon. Mrs. Del- - Passwater, chairman of the afternoon had charge of the meeting. The collect, w’itten by Mrs. Cox of the federated clubs, was given. Mrs. John Tyndall, president, made several remarks. I Interesting talks were given by W. Guy- Brown on “Health”; Dr. Harold F. Zwick on “Health and its i effects on the way people live,” ■ Mrs. Roy Kai ver, ” The effect o
movies on people and their educational influences.” Mrs. Passwater, i "Public welfare”, Mrs. G. Remy 'Bierly, “Community service.’ At the close of the program, lovely refreshments were served, with . Mrs. Passwater and Mrs. Bierly presiding at the tea table. The hostesses for the afternoon included the Mesdames Stucky, rasswater, Bier|ly, Kalver and lx>is Black. o G. Remy -Bierly and daughter. Florence Marie, are among those who will witness the Indiana-Pur-due game at Bloomington today.
CUILIX MAKE THE GOOD ONES BIG _______ _ '■ 5 - f ■ wfeWHr T’fS nW h 1 ' i; ■ ' ’ ..4* * •’ W* jv . ..SMS# Ml ■-< .y _t _ Enlarging enables you to vary your print size. When you get a good shot like this, Have it enlarged SUMMER is about over and by now tures, not as good, are used !n you should have a drawer full ot smaller size and the big "splash” picprints—pictures of week-end outings ture carries them along. and the vacation tour, sunsets and Start separating your pictures inmaybe seashores, the family’s young- to related groups. One group, for iner generation in sunsuits or bathing stance, could be the baby at the suits, capering about the lawn spray sandpile. There is that grand shot of or digging furiously in a sandpile; him, intent on pouring sand out of a all sorts of pictures rich with bucket half as big as he is, with the memories of a grand season. sun making a golden halo about his The question now is—what are head and his little mouth pursed in you going to do about them? Let utter concentration. Don’t keep it them lie loose in the drawer where small, for then you can parely see nobody will see them? Or, will you the details that are so dear. “Splash” fix them up to be seen as pictures it over a whole album page. If you should be? don ’t do y° ur own enlarging, ycur The least you can do is mount photoflnisher can do the work for I them in an album so they won’t be you. Then take your other pictures | lost. And if you have some really of baby and sand pile and arrange i good ones, you might try your hand them informally on the opposite al- : at a "summer book," edited just as bum page. the modern picture magazines are. With this method, you can produce Have you ever studied these maga- layouts that have the real profeszines and wondered why their pages sional touch. Bo hard-boiled in your i are so interesting? Have you won- editing. Don’t be afraid to trim away dered why your own snapshots do parts of a picture. Use four strips of not havo tho same snap and flash? white card in planning the “trim" H’s really very simple—a matter and shift them about like a frame of size as much as anything else, over the picture until it is limited to When an art editor gets a picture just the part you want. Then have that is especially good, he trims it just that part enlarged. Nearly all down to include just the part he good pictures are better for such wants. Then he has it enlarged and trimming and it has brought many a "splashes" it over a whole magazine dull photograph to life. pag;e, maybe two pages. Other pic- John van Guilder ♦
gERSONALS Mrs, Ellen Hy’and will leave Thursday for lais Angeles, Callfor- I nla where she will reside with her sister. Miss Kato Toughoy. Dr. and Mrs. Lowell Smith of lai- j fayette spent Thursday with the former’s parents. Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Smith and ' son, Gerlo, of Davenport, lowa, are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Miller of this city. While here they will attend the golden wedding anniversary dinner Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Ulman. Mrs. Smith Is n sister of Mr. Ulman. Mrs. John Peterson returned yes- : terday afternoon from a week’s via- 1 It in Fort Wayne with her daughter. Mrs. Char'es Keller and family. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Holthouse of Milwaukee. Wis., arrived lie Decatur Friday evening for a visit with relatives. They left this morning for Bloomington, where they will j attend the Indiana-Purdue football i game. j 4 Adams County Memorial Hospital > 4. Admitted this morning: Olive J. Harmon, Wren. Ohio; Louis Jane Foster, Dixon, Ohio; Flohl Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Jones, Ohio, City, Ohio] Dismissed today: Mrs. Lewis Rumschlag. and baby daughter, route 6. Decatur; Mrs. Bernard Eit'ing and baby son. Edward Laurence, t route 2. Decatur; Neva Lou Crownover, Decatur route; Raymond Broun, route 2. Decatur and George Dawson, Monroeville. CORRECTION , Announcement in Friday’s issue of the Daily Democrat of the birth to Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Deitsch of a baity girl should have been Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Deitrlch of route 2, Willshire, Ohio. Court Refuses Credit Fall River. Mass.— (U.R) — When Rhode Island motorists travel to Fall River they'll probably carry I extra money—just in case they vioi late any motor vehicle laws. DisI trict Judge Benjamin Cook has ; ruled that Rhode Island violators I must pay cash fines on arraignI ment. No credit goes. o 'FIND HOBO SIGNS STILL ARE READ BY REAL BUMS 5 1 AbPene, Tex. — (UP) — Officers ’ here believe in the legends of in-, j visible h*.«>o signs. I The same train through Abilene ’.lfor years has each day carried sevileral weary gentlemen across the -1 wf-stern iplains of Texas. Texas and Pacific officials de-
cided to lighten up. The train was I "shook down” In Abilene and 13 of tlie 17 men and lioys nrrented trad'd their rocking seat for a pick and shovel on the county’s chain gang Tlie ward got out. next day, , hobot-s must have been obeying al : detour sign, For the first time in years, not a single non-paying rider passed through Abilene. — o— —l . Trade In A I,«od Town — Ilecatur
RICE'S HOTEL DINNER MENU NOVEMBER 21, 1937 — 11:30 A. M. to 3:30 P. M. CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP or TOMATO JUICE COCKTAIL COUNTRY FRIED CHICKEN, Southern Style 65c ROAST YOUNG TURKEY AND DRESSING 65c BAKED SUGAR CURED HAM—Apple Sauce .... 50c Maahed or Sweet Potatoes Buttered Cauliflower or Creamed Peas Cranberry Salad Hot Tea Biscuit Cherry. Apricot Pie Date Roll and Whipped Cream Ice Cream and Wafer Coffee Tea Milk WE ARE OPEN THANKSGIVING from 11:30 to 3:00 P. M. Dependable DURING time of bereavement, it becomes necessary that some one person or group Phonp Pisons be depended upon for the comSffeA P* ete arrangement of the last rites. By depending on us, you. too, will find almost complete removal of your burden. e I;.BLACK FUNERAL DIRECTOR V Z__ PHONE 500 —s I No Gift Takes The Place of Photographs f' A To express the real sentiment of Christmas, choose the one Gift that only you can give — your portrait. Your friends will more than appreciate this lasting remembrance of a friendship they cherrish so dearly. Then, too, your Gift shopping is done easily and quickly. Twelve Photos make 12 GIFTS. Check over your Gift List and arrange for your sitting today. Your photos will be ready in plenty of time for Christmas. Edwards Studio
PAGE THREE
Sngke Awakens Sleeper St. Johnsville, N. Y. —(UP)—Seward Smith felt something tickle his cheek while napping. Drownlly, he brushed his hand ucrosH his face. 1 Again he felt the tickle. Opening his eyes, he naw a snake colled beHide him. Smith leaped out of bed The nna<ke followed. He killed the reptile by dropping a flatiron on It h head.
