Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 19, Decatur, Adams County, 22 January 1938 — Page 3
•«, ™ A, “.?7.l — BB* " V . .!„. home Os Mrs.. ■r*~. '".”i''m o* <|llll'< A pot a ' miloved at ■ ! : ’ >•’ ..>■ mK. : IL.' St.pler. -lames ■ Fm-n.i KlirlmX. Leo MM ■ ■■ ‘ i| |. E:.«ti.> Yager. Hl. Iff !-■>.! Sionburner, |h .. Gm Yoke. Wilhcmena Km--. ...,, 8,.,. . M . l|V S township Will ' of Mr.’. Ralph to be Pythian Needle chib will th.. K of I’ home Monday Mcsilanies <’. \nnen. A. BtJele-harvey >'»!i <*f Mr. and Mrs. Ohio, and Olivo Harvey of Warren, daughter of Mrs. Lillia nnitfsl marriage ced at the 1 B t 1S i ring service. ci., anted by Harv> v ami Miss Evelyn I They reside with the parents in Convoy. Women wishing to attend the | he'd at Fort - -nl.iv and evemeet \| o’clock ■Sunday noon. OF MOOSE guests V ~ ■ Tim’ ' ■t(l ■ •■•,.■.■ w.-re hostesses Hv.t Afternoon At Bridge,” was I - of the members. 1 were played and prizes aBpßed to Mrs. Rhoda Hill Mrs. 1 ..rm..in Mrs Her' Ha'ey and EH’! John Loshe. Jr. - ••.. ’ < wore veil lining room at the close of Th- membership com-jponsor<-d the affair and in- 1 Mesdames Cecil Gause,
EBehind the Scenei>i]
i» HARRISON CARROLL Copyright, IKS g ■ Features Syndicate. Inc. ', Deanna Durbin is a student
in a Swiss school. She gets in a fight with another girl and is ordered to write 100 times on a blackboard: "Young ladies must not make other young ladies eat photographs.” This week, Director Norman Taurog is shooting the scene.
K ®■» t «; » K'- ""i R D ma Dui-ten SSISSSBs! !
■L For the camDeanna only has to complete ■ “ once. But the rest of will show in the and must be covered with 'K? ng - movies are clever at tricks, Can 1 im^ate a star's penwell enough to fool the ■if while the company stands dand waits, Deanna has to tae sentence over and over “ ntil Bhe reaches the point Blto j^ Camera WiU pick her U P is one difference. th ®. take she Ife ave« tl‘ PS u Slißht, y as Bhe p i, Ch B alk across the ■K d.tr o ; t 1 a natural touch, ■uty a * ittle from her K tar she n°' ? hen the camera arefUlly kee P s her lips IDi r r V ou P le °f false starts, ■r Deann?? s Okays the s «ne. ■: and , 18aves the schoolroom to dn °' er t 0 lier dressing 1 aider th? . some real studying K t ’ he stu dio teacher, Mrs B a^ h ° , ' >meW is before legal diffieFm” after 12 mon ths ■ « work- in e tw With M G M I «ped” at n the Picture, "Kid--1 neLd . nt ‘ eth C entury-Fox. thls st °ry is 1751 K anif k ‘ ** wearin g a costume | "Lloyds of e he wore m K- the an ? ndo "" Hia hair Z 9 rl ed, but t ? pearance °f being I **y no. he P eo Ple on the set Bg Deanna Durbin, Freddie has
CLUB CALENDAR Society Desdline. 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Saturday Parent-Teacher Council,, Mrs, L. A. Cowens, 7:30 p ni. Rummage Sale, M. E. Church Basement, 1 to 8 p. m. Cafeteria Sapper, Zion Reformed I Church, 5 to 7 P. m. Monday Junior Woman's Club, Miss Jeanette Gard, 7:30 p. m. Research Club, Mrs. R. W. Graham. 2:30 p. m. Pythian Needle Club, K. of P. Home, After Temple. Tuesday Decatur Garden club. Mrs. Fred McConnell, 2:30 P m Root Townshp Home Economics Club, Mrs. Ronald Sauers, 1:30 p. tn. Young Matrons club, Mrs. Frank Crist, 7:M p. m. Rebekah Lodge, I. O. O. F. Hall, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday St. Vincent DePaul Society, K. of C. Hall. 2 p. m. Shakespeare (Tub, Mrs Harry Moltz, 2:30 p. m. Thursday Busy ißee Home Economics Club Mrs. Ralph Longenberger, 1:30 p.m. Earl Whitehurst, Bert Haley and Andy Zeser. The refreshment committee included Mrs. Lulu Shaffer and Mrs. Dora Cook. A similar party Is being planned for the future. ‘ The Young, Matrons club will I meet at the home of Mrs. Frank Crist Tuesday evening at seven I thirty o’clock. ! ANDREWS-DEERHAKE WEDDING ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mns. Tom Andrews of i this city announce the marriage of : their daughter, Catherine, to Alonzo Deerhake.. son of Mr. and Mrs. ■ Deerhake of St. Mary’s Ohio. The single ring ceremony was ; performed by the Rev. C. N Bari nette of Cynthiana, Kentucky, Sep- ' tember 4. 1937. The bride is a graduate of the j Decatur high school and is employ- ' ed at the General Electric. The groom is a graduate of the Memorial high school and is em- ' ployed at St. Mary's, where the ■ couple will make their home. LAUTENSCHLEGER-NEISS MARRIAGE ANNUONCED Announcement has (been made of the marriage of Miss Margaret i Fern Lautensohleger of New Bedford, Ohio and formerly of Decatur, to Harry Nelss of Fresno, Ohio. The wedding took place in WillsI burg. West Va„ Friday morning, November 26, 1937 at niae-thir
to go to school between scenes. He and his instructor are working on "noun clauses". Freddie is supposed to underline mistakes. “But please don't look," he says, “For I got most of them wrong.” Freddie is glad to be back at work and is not at all nervous because of his long absence from the camera. He has grown an inch since you saw him. “But my height and weight are exactly average for my age,” he hastens to add. Children in the movies are the only ones in the world who have to worry about growing up. The awkward age usually means a halt if not the end of their careers. Out at M. G. M., Maureen O’Sullivan is appearing in the picture, “Madelon”, a part originally intended for Luise Rainer. It cost her a role in “Marie Antoinette”, but this is a bigger opportunity and she is glad of the switch. Maureen explains that she keeps a fish-stand in the story and is in love with a sailor, John Beal. "He is a wanderer and has to decide between me and the sea,” she says. "It’s a good deal like the decision my husband, John Farrow, had to make about me, only Johnny decided in my favor.” Wallace Beery and Frank Morgan are in ’ Madelon", too, so the picture will
have a good deal in it besides romance. For the first time in screen history Frank Morgan ends up with the heroine. He marries her when her sailor runs off to sea and proves such a kind husband that, when the
EH Frank Morgan
wanderer r etums, Maureen will not run away with him. "Frank and I will be Hollywood’s newest love team,” says Maureen. The idea appeals to her Irish sense of humor. She is smiling as Director James Whalen calls her out before the camera.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1938.
New Photo of U. S. Supreme Court Nominee, Wife rt/~ — : n i ? v ; i: ' ' </ • Mr. :i:nl Mr-, st.i'il. v I ■ Rviilßßg
This new photo of the U. S. supreme court nominee, Stanley F. Reed, and wife, was taken as the couple departed from their Washington hotel for a dinner engagement with the chief justice of the
o’clock. ] i The bride has been employed in a department store in Dover, Ohio, 'and the groom is engaged in farm-' ing. The couple is now at home on . a farm near Dover. The St. Vincent DePau’ society will meet in the K. of C. Hall ■ Wednesday afternoon at two o’j clock, at which time th -1 annual, i guust day party will be he’.d. Each I member is urged to bring a guest. : Hostess for the affair will be the' Mesdanies Charles Om’or, Frank Barthel, John Fisher and Edward Vian. — UNION MEETING WELL ATTENDED One hundred and ninety guests attended the union meeting of the I missionary societies of Decatur,. held at the Zion Reformed church , Thursday afternoon at two o'clock. : The following splendid program ’ , was given: Prelude —'Miss Lulu Gerber Scripture—Mrs. G. O. Walton Prayer—Mrs. C. D. Teeple Inter church quartet— M‘»sdatnes ’ Da n Tyndall. W. P, Schrock. Dallas Goldner. C. E. Be 1 !. Accompati- i ist. Mrs. Fred Smith. Book Review, "Mecca and Beyond”—Mrs. R. D. Myers. Offering and prayer of consecra-1 tion—Mrs. Glenn Marshall. Hymn "Blessed Be the Tie That Binds" Benediction —Mrs. R. W. Graham Mrs. C. M. Prugh presided at the meeting. At the close of the pro-' gram the ladies enjoyed tea and a social huor. j ENTHUSIASM SHOWN |AT FINE ARTS MEETING The Adams County federation of I clubs held the first annual Fine | Arts meeting in the auditorium o' | the library, Friday afternoon, the ! purpose of this festival being to bring the Fine Arts into every day j life by creating and living with good music, pictures and books and to promote creative work and interest in these subjects in each community. The splendid program was given! under the leadership of Mrs. Her-, man Ehinger, assisted by the chair-1
Son, Awarded to Mother, Prefers Father’s Care ' M Jh. ? W jg I * i vi U 818 & Howard I- rankel jjk> Domestic drama comes to a courtroom climax in after a custody suit in which the youngster was Elizabeth, N. J, as 12-year-old Howard Franke! awarded to her care. The boy declared he preleired avoids the arms of his mother. Mrs. Rose Frankel. to live with his father, Julius Frankel.
court, Charles Evans Hughes. Reed, 53-year-old Kentuckian, has been U. S. solicitor general. He succeeds to the seat on the bench vacated by Justice George Sutherland.
'men of the various departments, Mrs. W. E. Smith, Mrs. John Myers, Mrs. Ralph Roop, Mrs. Will’am Bell and Mrs. C. O. Porter. Mrs. Henry Heller, district president, gave an interesting report of the recent council meeting in .Indianapolis, including the foundation fund tea held in the home of the Governor. She told of the fine arts meeting to be given in Mun | cie April 7, and expressed her de-, | sire that this county 'be well repi resented. A group of songs was ' given by the Decatur glee club, tin- ' der the direction of Miss Helen ( Haubold. Mrs. W. E. Smith, chairman of I literature told of the Bible as lit-1 lerature and of the incentives that | had been found in it for great paini ters through the ages and she urg- ‘ ed more programs on the Bible for I all clubs. She then introduced Mrs I Charles Teeple. who gave a splen- ' did review of "And So Victoria.” Mrs. C. 0. Porter read an original poem "Did You Know?” giving ; the history of the clubs and their I many accomplishments. In the beginning the general federation of women’s lu-bs was made • up of individual clubs. Then state i federations began to appear, and last the general seeking a uniform i organization. It is to promote this I effort that the money Dorn the ' foundation teas held during the ! month of January is to be devoted. | Mrs. John Myers had arranged an excellent art exhibit. This in- ! c.’uded posters, scrapbooks, book•ends and othe rthings from the public schools, A lovely wooden bowl by Ellen Mailland was of unusual interest. A number of posters from the Catholic school gave evidence of the fine work along art lines that is being accomplished in their schools. Two are of especial interest, because they will be exhibited in Milwaukee at the Catholic youth’s organization. These were by John Noonan and Fred Coffee, both boys tronr the eighth grade. Another poster that drew attention was that of Robert Franz that had won three first prizes in the ■American Legion poppy contest. Other work included as beautiful ! screen painted by Mrs. Adrian I Wemhoff, several pictures by the
same artist, and pictures by Mrs. Russel Owens, Mrs. Robert Zwick, Mrs. John Myers, and two pictures that had been painted by Mrs. Bell's mother, Mrs. Shafer, a former member of the clubs represent- \ ed. Robert Engeler had several i beatiful pictures on exhibit and the Edwards gallery loaned a display. It is hoped to mane the ai ts exhibit an annual affair and to be able to create a greater interes* in local talent. IA social hour followed. Tea was served from a lace covered tea table table. Candles and spring i flowers lent beauty to the setting. I o ■PERSONALS Mrs. Clyde Butler left Friday for Fort Jennings. Ohio, where she was called by the serious illness of her mother, Mrs. Frank Wells. Mrs. E. H. Conner returned to her home in Dayton this morning after a visit with her son-in-law and daughter. Rev. and Mrs. C. M. Prugh and family. T ohn who hppn ill for the Past three weeks, is slightly improved today. i n the article of Dr. J. O. Camp- • bell of Geneva which appeared in Thursday's issue of the Democrat on the page of “Business & Professional News,” it was omitted that Dr. Campbell has the distinction of having the on'y large animal hospi- ■ tai in the state of Indiana and is also equipped with operating room for horses and cattle. Spiced Wine More Popular San Francisco. — <U.R>—lncreasing use of hot spiced wines for winter consumption was reported by the Wine Institute of California, which has been delving into forgotten wine lore of Elizabethan times. o Will Provides Horse Fund Fort Collins, Colo.—(U.R> — The will of the late Mrs. Anna B. Scott of Fort Collins provided care "during her lifetime” for “my old sorrel mare, Dixie.” The mare is to be cared for on a nearby ranch.
18 Navy Bombers Before Takeoff for Honolulu* ill . L - ‘*T,**'~**”’" a— i — ikWka*”'’- ' ywWI A- • -jßtffy Sffi aBV w v3ts®ri* t w j.b? JBM W -f- ft T I , .. ..v. gß— ▲ -- * ’ f . t , . jIV 1 1 ~ A. \ * 11 - $ . - -’T Z \ —
The greatest mass flight over water ever undertaken was the hop made from San Diego, Cal., to Honolulu in which 18 navy patrol bombera crossed |
Alaska May Get U. S. Park ' Seward, Alaska. —|(U.R> —Poasibil-, ity of Kattnai national monument as a national park resort was foreseen here by Louis M. Corbley. chief ranger of the park service, on duty at McKinley Park. Hej said the government has ordered a I boundary survey. o Award Donated to Red Cross Chardon. O- — <U.R> — William J. Goodfield, a farmer, suffered personal injuries an ddamages to his automobile in an accident. He asked $3,000 damages in common pleas ; court. But the jury awarded him I sl. which he donated to the Red' ■ Cross. o Prisoners May Be Rolled Whitefish. Mont.— <U.Rz —Local
“GEE HER [
CHAPTER XXVII Julie couldn’t very well launder her lingerie and hang it in the bathroom,and she was hesitant about ask’ng Nancy's maid to do it She bought herself two silk slips and another night-gown. At four o’clock, while she waited for Nancy to meet her for a cup of tea before they started back to Pennybrook, she counted the bills in her purse and added up figures. She added and re-added and hoped, with a sinking sensation, that her figures were wrong. Fifteen for the organdie. Twelve each for the linens. Sixteen for the chintz print and ten for the hat. Five for gloves and bag. Five for the sweater. Six for the green sandals. Ten for the lingerie. Another five for the purple accessories. The appalling total was ninety-six dollars! Julie shut her eyes as if hoping, by shutting out her vision, to shut out the truth. Three hundred and fifty dollars had once reposed in her pocketbook and now there was one hundred and fifty-four dollars of which she owed seventy-five dollars to Millicent, fifty yet due to Pete and there was twenty-nine left. Her ticket to Fayette on a sleeper was a little moie than twenty-one dollars. For all that dreadful experience, those ten hours of torture, that endless posing for camera-men, those deadly dull 4 .uncheons, she had a profit of seven or eight dollars! Paul. She had met Paul. She was still to have Paul for a few days. He had engineered Nancy into inviting her to remain longer at Pennybrook. He wouldn’t have done it if he hadn’t wanted her there. Warmth spread through her breast thinking of that comfortable conclusion, and when next her eyes rested on the boxes piled up beside her table, some of the sharp edges of her conscience melted away. Paul would like her in her new clothes. Men didn’t know how much women’s clothes cost. Paul wouldn’t know that her sports dresses had cost eleven-ninety-eight. Because they were plain, because she had a perfect figure, he would only see the effect Perhaps Nancy would know that they were not costly but Nancy wouldn’t think about it. Pride and pleasure in her new belongings pervaded her. She put the last pang of conscience from her. She’d pay her debts, distribute her presents, enjoy every minute of what was ahead of her and count her gains in pleasures not in dollars. Nancy took one quick glance at the boxes—three long flat ones for the frocks, a hat box, the smaller ones—and exclaimed: “Good Lord 1 Did you buy out the shops?” “Just a few little things that I really need,” Julie answered casually. She hoped Nancy wouldn’t think she was planning for a protracted stay at Pennybrook and hastened to add, “I was glad to get this chance to go shopping. We don’t have any good shops in Fayette. Now I won’t have to worry about getting my shopping in before I go home.” “No, I suppose you won’t.” Julie was mildly exasperated with Nancy. The other girl never re-acted as Julie hoped she would. I She made it difficult for Julie to [ wholly enjoy herself. Julie was never quite sura whether Nancy
2.570 miles of ocean in 20 hours, carrying 127 men 1 The 14-ton, two-motored flying battleships are j shown grouped at San Diego, before taking off.
I authorities Tiave solved a minor • 'crime problem. A new entrance with a ramp has been built to the • city jail so that prisoners object-1 I ing to being placed in jail can be I I rolled in down a steep incline. t —o Death Cheats Namesake London. — (U.Rz —W. G. Death, of London, cheated hi s namesake when he fell from the platform just as a train was entering the Luton station. The locomotive and sev-! ’ eral cars passed over him, but i Death’s only injury was a scratch- i 1 ed toe. ° Canned Fish For Cats Warsaw.—<U.F>— One of the largest fish canneries in the Polish port 1 'firm of British importers to sup-’ .I of Gdynia is negotiating with a
liked her. Sometimes she was corr dial enough; she had been awfully - decent—Julie picked up the phrase t —about asking her to stay on. e But... i She was an unsatisfactory person Julie thought. She never followed 1 any line of conversation like other f girls and Julie threw plenty of them 3 to her. For instance, if Althea had i come upon her with that great pile • of interesting-looking boxes, Althea i would have been unable to suppress s her curiosity about what was in them. s Then the two girls would have 3 chatted excitedly about clothes for . an hour instead of making polite r little comments about the day in - town, the lateness of the hour, the r seeming impossibility of getting hot 3 tea in a New York hotel. Perhaps Nancy had been entirely sincere when she said life was dull. , If she wasn’t interested in anything t more than the things Julie had heard her talk about, it was small s wonder. But how could life be dull t when you lived in an eighteen-room 1 “cottage” and had a staff of servi ants and the means for any kind of . play you wanted? • Oh, if Julie A.’ierdyce were mis- > tress of a menzge like the Lom- • bards’, she'd be the most radiant person in the worid. , Julie was as much a realist as she . was a romanticist and so it was im- ■ possible for her to throw herself i completely into her brief holiday. She was always conscious that it i was by chance invitation that she . was there. There was something not • quite pure gold about it. The day ; would come when it would be. i And meanwhile there was Paul. Paul was waiting for her, impa- ; tient for her return she saw at once. Long schooled in the delicate nuances of men’s reactions to herself, she saw that Paul was following the pattern with which she was familiar. It was obvious in his increasing little attentions. In the way that he looked for her presence when he came into a room. In the way that found means to draw her aside, to crowd Keats Desmond out when Keats wanted her attention. Her part was handled gracefully. She showed no marked preference for Paul. But when Keats asked her to run into the village for a movie the night after her shopping trip, she found away to tell him she couldn't because Paul had said. “Later, we’ll take a little ride.” I 1 That night Paul slowed the car in a lane bounded by a white fence and tall, shadowy trees that shone in the moonlight. He stopped the car and : put his arm around her drawing her toward him. She leaned against him, dropping her head on his shoulder. So they i sat for a few minutes until Julie could fee] the hard thumping of his heart under his linen jacket. Her own heart bumped jerkily. Then he bent his head and she < raised her face to meet his kiss. It . was long and hard and at first she responded but then she drew away anxious to hear him say something to her. He kissed her again and murmured against her hair, “I’m crazy about you! You’re a little witch. And you know it, don’t you?” Her finger-tips touched his cheek ■ in a slow caress but she didn’t i answer. Roughly he drew her into his arms again and she thought: I hate to be mussed.
PAGE THREE
ply them with large quantities of canned fish, intended especially for cats. o Ladder’s 111-Luck Proved J Pasadena. Cal. — (U.R)—Mrs. Jesi sie N. Cooper not only believes , that it brings bad luck to pass under a ladder but she knows it. The one under which she passed, and on which a wall paperer was working. collapsed, breaking her leg. o Reformatory Band Dresses Up Mangum, Okla.—KU.R>—The Gran- ; ite Reformatory band is dressing I up. L. V. Warlick, deputy wardI en, said military uniforms of black serge and gold colored brail will I be made for the 42-piece prison band. Caps with gold ornaments will complete the uniforms.
He kissed her throat, her eyes, her mouth. < She said, “Please, Pau1....” “I’m sorry,” he mumbled. “But you know you can’t play with me, darling.” “I’m not playing,” she said softly. “Then you’re not going back to Fayette.” Julie's mind and her heart congratulated each other. She waited breathlessly to hear what next he was going to say. He’d tell her he loved her, wanted her to be his . . . Against her ear, his breath hot on her throat he said, “Next week-end we’ll take my boat. Go somewhere.” “Alone?” His arms tightened. “Certainly, alone!” Gently she moved his arms away, held his hands and looked into his face, smiling softly. “I can’t, Paul! I’m afraid of what you’d do to my heart. You're too dangerously attractive to me. Please take me home now.” Wordlessly, he started the car. Julie felt triumphant. Like a good general, Julie prepared for her attack by considering her progress as well as her opposition. There would be no week-end on Paul’s boat, however attractive and romantic the appeal was to her. She caught her breath thinking of what it would mean to be alone with him for a whole week-end. His boat was probably the luxurious yacht of her imagination. It would be manned by a staff of white uniformed stewards. She would like to have thought that she would be like any other guest. But she knew that Paul had not meant it that way. And she had a purpose as strong as it was different from his. Not only was Paul Hitchcock the only man who had ever swept her off her feet—she remembered vaguely that there had been another man somewhere on another day who had given her the same feeling of helplessness—but Paul was the ideal husband for her. He had everything in the whole wide world to offer her. In exchange for the love, social position and money that he had to give the girl he married, she had equal gifts to return. She had no money it was true, but he would not need any more money. She had no social background as it is rated in New York society but she was a gentlewoman. She had instinct and taste to make up for lack of experience. Any girl could quickly learn the mores of another life. There were schools to teach a girl how to manage a staff of servants, not that she’d need any course. The selections of furnishings and appointments one could leave to decorators. As for clothes, she’d stand on her own good taste. Paul would also have the gift of her beauty. Wherever they went, Mrs. Hitchcock would know she was admired and that was always a compliment to a proud husband. She could give him that. And more. She would always be a good companion. She’d never be a stuffy wife. She’d do all the things he liked. They’d swim in the Mediterranean, ski in Switzerland, go to the races in England, shoot in Scotland. They’d see the Sahara and China and Japan. It would take a lifetime to see all the world and to play in it but she could play for a lifetime. She was adaptable. (To be continued) Cooyttrlil br M>rla Bllurd DlatrMMiM b> Ktac r««turM SjudlcaU. !•<
