Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 47, Decatur, Adams County, 24 February 1938 — Page 3

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fright, 1938 Fnlnn S)»<li<»i,., ln C . Amazing exof John Wilkai: drumtte Rayn;or.-1 s, •• yUm- ”> lans i.-spon.-ible m Turkey ' etc . am!, for "Dan, .■ of the W.-.den in Senja Hem, - Happy ago Williams was a parked car on Olympic Without warning, Mclure eras’.,, i |!K‘ ' fra< taring his skull, H® 0 pap.-: - ~: 1 him. W and there lav. for two ’ nameless traffic victim whet: |.,. recovered . ■K* ■'■'■ the quintet Were not 1U “sociatee a. s ~,I PII merely | la .; glin „ Glenda Farrell-Drew romance agair on th? thc tennis ace, an.l B’g e n &f ’ P^' S inches are Ms? end of trouble to the ^ ani ' ers trou Pe at WarBttoT"' Cla,,lie Ra ‘™ |K 0 c ‘° han,J out fatherly » - r r . Bul !t H SO n t °L ar " !s ‘nan |K>’o. Ratns k" ° ng shots of and in S .; U, ari,lg buil ‘- Bison' a bo x St ’ UrS ' he tMbe V° llywood training U 0 V he " Sunday' Caugb ‘ B BlllllI! ',r<er came tar grabbcd the a an '‘ pbot °- B »•>« is a 'n aZe - Mostex■H ■ a collapsing wall. ■?'" a thri “ Os B anand Ws We t h g °r The Sfe r Vogt ’ tbe former room Xn^ ding in ■^ h abo '’e and ! J here was B W tended ,n 4 barra 8 e of a; ‘on a siv » U^on them. ExBS igh ’ n S more "th ng mir ’ !® df h « than too M^ySg h S l ‘ n Writeg Jules B‘ as Is Bow ™?? e3 ' such « agen£ Ways Portray a = illiterate

bars Carter. (Blossoms On Broadway — Donna > Lou Kortenber . Waltz Clog Millie* Jane Raake i The Cross laidy—Jane H >oten Tapping Along -Virginia Miller md Shirley Ann Boonhrr) , sleepy Hollow Tune—Huth Mi' . 1 ler. I Dolly Speaks A Piece -Betty Miller. . Gold Mine il-n the Syy Patty , J Van Buskirk A Joke on Mother Bonnie Lou ■ onniston Ten Pretty Olrta—Jerry Lobsfger Toy Town Band — Nancy Betz. Jean Ray, Kathryn Meisner. Which One Was Kept Lois Ann ' Miller. Soft Shoe Rhythm Dance—Jean ! Stewart, Barbara Carter and Gayle I Scott Movie Pests—Gayle Scott Dlpsy Doodle— Billy McWhirter Evenin’ Grace- Jean Stewart Mother Goose Gives a Party Old Mother Goose- Peggy Greaney Little Boy Blue -George Troxel Puss In Ikoots -Teddy Heckman 1 Goldilocks- Maxine Wiethe Three Bears—Ruth Miller. Millie Jane Raake, Virginia Miller. Red Riding Hood-Shirley Ann BoeI shore I Snow White—Delores Goneau Seven Dwarfs — Victor Porter. ! Robert Smith. Jerry Lobs i ger, Janet ' Bailey. Jane Hooten, Dorothy Jean Kohne. Marjorielu Hill Little Miss Muffet—Donna Lou KorI tenber. Alice In Wonderland — Margery Mil’er I White Rabbit—Marilyn Morgan 'Jack—Billy McWhirter Jill- Sharon McClanahan ‘curly Locks—Patty Vaivßuskirk. RILEY P. T. A. WILL MEET The regular meeting of the Riley P. T. A. will b>> held at the school ' Friday afternoon at two-thirty o'1 clonk. A special musical program I has been arranged. Mrs. Gertrude Meyers will continue her discussion of the book •'Untying Apron Strings.’’ A found ers’ day collection will be taken. ■ All members are urged to te present. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL HAS REGULAR MEETING The St. Vincent de Paul society : held its regular meeting Wednes day afternoon at the K. of C. hall with thirty-six members present [The opening prayer was given by . I the president. Mrs. E. F. Gass. ! After the business meeting, a so-

boors T Take Charlie Einfeld's staff at Warners. "Les Mason was a college professor. Carlisle Jones is a member of the Nebraska bar. Irving Fein is a member of the New York bar. Thornton Delehanty is a former New York film reviewer. Jerry , Breitigam was feature editor of the New York World Telegram. George Schaeffer was Hollywood correspondent for the Chicago Tribune. Joe Jefferson O'Neill has ] been listed by Stanley Walker as one of the 12 greatest reporters of all time. Dan Mainwaring has had five novels published under the nom-de-plume of Geoffrey Homes.” It isn’t necessary to answer Mr. Levine. He is a press agent, too, and has achieved his object in getting this printed. Pete Smith, once a press agent, too, and now the most successful commentator in movie shorts, will be photographed in one for the first time in "Ice Hockey”. Advance tip to his fans. By a simple manipulation of his jaw, Pete gives a swell imitation of Pop Eye. It all comes under the head of good clean fun, I suppose, but don’t the fans know Myrna Loy is the wife of Arthur Hornblow', Jr. ? She just received a placard, six feet by 10 in size, from the "We Want to Marry Myrna Loy Club” of an eastern state. Cost S3O in stamps to send it. Ida Lupino has called off the trip to England for film work so she and Louis Hayward can keep on trying to make up their minds. . . . The Mary Carlisle-James Blakely twosome continues after all these months, but she says it’s no romance and please print it. . . . K. Hepburn is back in town and her first visit was to the “Vivacious Lady” set at R-K-O. ... To see Ginger Rogers . . . which ought to finally kayo the feud rumors. . . . Money lured Phil Regan away from his family at Christmas, but he turned down engagements to be here with them on his fourteenth wedding anniversary. . . . Unusual twosome at the Cocoanut Grove. William Powell dancing with Alice Brady to Eddie Duchin’s music. . . . Virginia Bruce is giving a series of dinner parties for six to pay off the social obligations incurred before her wedding to J. Walter Ruben. . . . And the Yacht Club Boys now have two phones in their Paramount dressing room. One of them carries a card reading: “No horse tall: here”.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1938.

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — ioei Thuracay Rebekah Lodge, ,| O. O. F. Hall, " 30 p. m. Dinner Bridge Chib, Mrs. William Bell. 6:30 p. m. Final Pre-Lenten dance, B. p. o. Elka, 9 p. m. Loyal Daughters Class, Mrs. Earl Fuhrman. 7:30 ip. m, M. E. Ladies' Aid Society, Mrs. J. Ward Calland, 2:30 p. m. Women of Moose, Moose Home, 7:30 p. m. Eastern Star, Masonic Hall, 7:30 IP. nt. Christian Ladies’ Aid Society. Mrs. Paul Daniels. 2 p. m. Friday St. Rita's Study Club, K. of C. Hall, 7:30 p. m. Mt. Pleasant Bible Cass, Mr. and Mrs. Frances Fuhrman. 6:30 p. m. St. Mary’s home economics club, Mrs. E. W. Jackson, 1:30 p. m. United Brethren V. I. 8. Class, Robert Drake. 7:30 p. m. American Legion Auxiliary, Leeton Home, 7:30 p. tn. Riley P. T. A., Riley School, 2:30 ,p. m. Shakespeare Club Book Commit- ' tee. Mrs. A. D. Suttles. 2 p. tn. Saturday Chicken Supper. Zion Lutheran Church. 5 to 7 p. m. Public Party. Moose Home. 8 p.m. Monday Research Club. Mrs. Nellie Haney 2:30 p. nt. Tuesday Zion Reformed W. M. S., Church , Parlore. 2:30 p. m. Dutiful Daughters' Class. Mrs Pat Maloney, 7:30 p. in. Wednesday Historical Club. Mrs. Ben DeVor, i 2:30 <>. m. Shakespeare Club, Mrs. Burt Townsend. 2:30 p. m. cial hour was enjoyed, with lovely 1 1 refreshments served by the hostesses. Mrs. Will Schumacher, Miss Blanche Ervin and Miss Bertha Johns. MRS. MARION REBER HOSTESS TO SOCIETY The ladies' aid society of the St. Paul Christian Union church met at the home of Mrs. Marion Reber Friday for an all day nieetinr. A potluck dinner was served at noon. The day wa* spent in quilting. Those present were the Masdames T. R. Noll, Wm. Hawkins, Paul McAhren, Kermit Parrish an«tdaughter Ardola. John Hindelang, Carl Adler. F. O. Martin. Frank Aurand. Mis* Nellie Hawkins and ths Mesdantes Harve Smith, John Parrish. Floyd Arnold, Forest Railing and daughter Virginia. Ransom Barkley. Marion Reber, Jannita Noll and Evelyn Reber. BIRTHDAY OBSERVED OF THREE GENERATIONS Mr. and Mrs. Roy Steele entertained with a six o’clock dinner Wednesday evening in commemoration of the birthdays of three generations. including Robert Steele of Convoy, his daughter. Mr*. Lawrence Barkley of Monroeville and • granddaughter, Viola Steele. A de'iclos two course dinner was j* > v ,*-,, i A ' < You’ll have more fun when the SKIN is clear fromWITHIN_ NO man or woman wants to have a finger poked at them or receive sympathy because of an unhealthy skin appearance. Some skin troubles are tough to cor- , reel, but we do know this—skin tissues like the body itself must be fed from within. To make the food we eat available for strength and energy, there must be an abundance of red-blood-cells. S.S.S. Tonic builds these precious red cells. It is a simple, internal remedy, tested for generations and also proven by scientific research. You* too, will want to take S.S.S. Tonic to regain and to maintain your red-blood-cells... to restore lost weight ... to regain energy... to strengthen nerves... and to give to your skin that natural health glow. Take the S.S.S. Tonic treatment and shortly you should be delighted with the way you feel... and have your friends compliment you on the way you look. Available at any drug store -_~ ’ I wSmi I ik

served and a color scheme of pink I and white was used. Two large cakes decorated the table. In the evening, pinochle was played. , The guests Included Mr. and Mrs. I Robert .Steele, Mr. and Mra John! Sieele, Arthur and Richard Ward | of Convoy, Ohio, Mr. and Mis. Ixiw- i lence Barkley and non Dickie of I Monroeville, Mr and Mrs. Arthur Shoaf, George Steele and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Steele and family. MISS MABEL FUHRMAN HONORED WITH PARTY Mrs. Ervin Schuller and Miss Evelyn Fuhrman entertained with a surprise party honoring their sis-' ter Mabel on the occasion of her eighteenth birthday annlvert.ary. Games wereenjoyed during the evening and a lovely luncheon «erveil. Those present Included; The Misses Eldora Bul'.cmeler, Adelinda Buuc'k, Irene Buuck, Dorothy Miller and Viola Ehlerding. Messrs. Norman Buuck, Marvin Conrad, Wilbert Gallemeyer Ervin Stopjjenhagen, Norman Bultemeler and Arnold Ostermeyer. The Dutiful Daughters’ class of; the Evangelical Sunday school will ; meet at the home of Mrs. Pat Maloney Tuesday evening at seven- ( thirty o'clock with Mrs. Bryce Roop and Mrs. Glenn IHurk.'ey assisting hostesses. KUM JOIN US CLASS REGULAR MEETING The Kum-Join-Us clasa of the Evangelical Sunday school met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hooten Thuesday evening. The business meeting opener! with Raymond Eichnauer reading the devotlonals. The class decided to have an an- ; nlversary supper in March. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fleming were appointed to serve on the entertainment committee. Mrs. Chester Reynolds, Mrs. Clarence Smith and Mrs. Ton* Lutz will have charge of refreshments. The meeting closed with prayer by Chester Reynoldu. Contests were enjoyed and prizes given to Mrs. Raymond Eichnauer ' and Pau! Fleming. A delicious luncheon was served at the close of the evening by the hosts and hostesses Mr. and Mrs. Hooten anil Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lutz. The book committee cf the I Shakespeare club is requested to ; meet at the home of Mrs. A. D. Suttles Friday afternoon at two o’clock I The W. M. S. of the Zion Reformed church will meet at the church j Tuesday afternoon at two-thirty o’-1 ■» clock. Mrs. Walter Deitsch will be the leader. All members are urged to Attend. MRS. EARL ADAKfS S CLUB HOSTESS The ladles’ Shakespeare Club met at the home of Mrs. E. B. Adams Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. A. D. Suttles presiding. After roll call and current events, the meeting was turned over to Mrs. Herman Ehinger, leader for the at- j ternoon. Mrs. Ehinger. assisted by Mrs. i D. W. McMillen. Jr., read one of the | moat interesting and modern of the , current plays. At the close of the j afternoon, candies were served by the hostess. The club will meet next Wednes- j day with Mrs. Burt Townsend. j HISTORICAL CLUB MEETS AT HOME OF MRS ACKER Mrs. Floyrt Acker was hostess to the Historical club Wednesday afternoon at her home on Wa'nut ; street. Each of the seventeen members present gave a current event and a quotation. As February 26 is i Longfellow’s birthday anniversary, many of the quotations were from his poems. The subject of Mrs. Giles V. Porter's paper was ‘ The Sanctuary and the Singing Tower.” She prefaced its description and history with a ■biography of the man who built it— Edward W. Bak. “Bok's parents came from the | Netherlands and settled in Brooklyn. He did odd jobs in his spare time from school. His father died when he was eighteen and he left school to help support his family? "He was editor of the Ladies' Home Journal for thirty years, married Mary IjOtiise Curtis and was the father of two children. The sanctuary and singing tower of Mountain Lake, Fla., was built as ( a monument to his grandfather who one hundred years before had transformed a grim desert island into a wooded paradise for birds." The tower and carillon and th? fifty-tbree acres of tropical gardens were described vividly. Mrs. John Schug had a subtopic on the pioneering of Bo>k, tl>e editorial pages of the Journal thirty-two years ago, on syphilis, patent medicines, the public drinking cup and for a safe and sane fourth of July. During the social hour the hoe- | teas, assisted by her daughter, Mrs. Russell White, served delicious refgreshmente. Mrs. W. P. Robinson was welcomed as a new member. The meeting next week will be held at the home of Mrs. Ben DeVor at which time Mrs. John Schug will have the paper. ■ * — « TODAY’S COMMON ERROR — - Never pronounce bayou — bay’ ll or bay’oo or by’-oo; say, by’-tt. | I*

■tiKORAK According to word received this morning, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Schafer will continue to Miami, Florida today after a several day’s delay In Ky., where th? former was suffering from injuries receiv- < d In an automobiles accident. Paul Strickler and Harold Blythe 'eft this morning for New Orleans ! where they will attend the Mardi Gras. They will then con'inue t-i Miami. Florida for a several week's i visit. Henry B. Heller 1s a business vis- ■ lior In Bluffton today. Mrs. William Linn visited In Fort Wayne Saturday. Mrs. George Flanders was among I Wednesday's visitors in Fort Wayne. Mrs. Paul Cairns shopped in Fort Wayne yesterday. Dr. and Mrs. Fred Patterson visited in Fort Wayne Wednesday after- ■ noon. Miss Marjorie Helm, who has | spent the past several days at the J. H. Heller residence, left this as- ' ternoon for Fort Wayne where she 1 wi'l enter International Buslnens college for a secretarial course. Mrs. Grace Allwein and daughter, Mrs. Frederic Schafer, spent Wednesday in Fort Wayne. Mrs. O. L. Vance visited in Fort Wayne yesterday. Mr. and Mr«. Harny Yong left today for Cincinnati, Ohio, to attend the funeral of Mr. Young’s father. John W. Young, who died Wednesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. M'es, and daughter. Patsy, of this city, spent 1 the day in Winchester, whore Mr. Mies looked after business. Mr. and Mrs. Al. D. Schmitt and family are moving into their beau- ' tiful new home on Mercer avenue. It is a Cape Cod style of bungalow land one of the fine new houses built in Decatur this year. I Mrs. Jeff Bryson and Miss Merle I’mnlg of Portland visited here this afternoon. GEN. PERSHING rrngTTKT’Fn fc-KOM PAtIE ONE) fill most of the invitations. Pershing, the fifth full-ranking general in American history, and the first since Philip Sheridan of • civil war fame, had been spending his leisure time this winter in the I healthy desert climate here, in the company of his sister. Miss May Pershing. His only other immediate relative is his son. Warren, who flew today to the general's bedside from Palm Beach, Fla. o Moose Lodge Plans Dance Friday Night 1 Members of the Moose lodge . ' will sponsor a dance at the Moose | home Friday night for members and their guests. All members ; are urged to attend. A prominent I orchestra has been engaged for ' the affair. o —— Townsend Reports To Pres. Roosevelt — Indianapolis. Ind.. Feb. 24 —(UP) A report of Indiana business condii tions wi'l be presented President Roosevelt in Washington today by ' Gov.. M. Clifford Townsend, state--1 hose sources disclosed. Based on a questionnaire sent out i wo or three weeks ago. the report 1 will express cross-section views of representative farmers, bankers, business men ami others, in was She’s Lone Ranger —TTZSKgSJ” 1 ‘ Jr Mr v wk ■ Mrs. Edmondson First and only woman Texas Ranger, Mrs. Frances Edmondson smiles for a photographer wha visited her in a New York hotel. Active in Texas Democratic poll* I tics, she went to New York tc 1 study law enforcement methods.

.said. The report contain* also opinions on state and federal tax matters, (ondltlons of Indiana employment earnings and other factors, Il was believed. King Carol’s Program Endorsed By Voters ■Bucharest, Roumanla, Feb. 24 (IIP) The plebiscite of the new constitution today overwhelmingly endorsed King Carol's program, Armand Calinescu, minister of Interi lor. Indicated ala press conference | , today. The minister of interior said ’.that only 135 votes had been cast against the new constitution in Bu|charest and that 88 percent of the , population of the nation had partiIclpated in the voting, the results of 'which will he officially announced Sunday. ■ — -o Dr. Townsend Fights Contempt Sentence Washington, Feb. 24 —(UP) — Dr. Francis E. Townsend, 71- year-old I leader of the old ago pension move-. ment, announced today he will ' “fight to a finish” to avoid serving a 3<)Hlay jail sentence for cuntemp* of the house of representatives. Townsend announced hi* stand | after a conference with his attor- ’ ney, Elisha Hanson, a few hours after his arrival here today. Warsaw Man Given Sentence For Life Warsaw, Ind., Feb. 24 —(UP) — Ixiwell Clark, 26. former WPA workI er, was under sentence of life Imprisonment at Michigan City State 'prison today after pleading guilty, to charges of rape. Judge Donald Vandeveer impoeed sentence, ('lark confessed attacking a 7-year-old Warsaw girl. Angola Publisher And Wife Injured lAuburn. Ind.. Feb. 24 — (UP)— j Raymond Willis, Angola publisher, and his wife were recovering today from injuries suffered when their automobile skidded off highway 27 south of here. Willis suffered bruises and chest injuries. The accident occurred as Willis |

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sought to stop hl* car while approaching a truck. The machine skidded Into a ditch. Q Initiatory Work At K. P. Tonight Second rank Initiatory work will be given to a class tonight at the Knights of Pythias home, during the regular weekly meeting which begins at 7:30 o’clock. All mem- , bers have been urged to attend. _o FEDERAL BUREAU DEVELOPS SOYBEAN OIL FOR VARNISH Washington (UP) - A new 100 per cent soybean oil varnlsu which dries ratpidly and has good water and weather resistance ha* been i developed by the Industrial farm products research division of trfe Repartment of Agriculture. The research work was begun 18 months ago under a project authorized by Congress for study'ng new Industrial uses for the soybean and its products. The department is I cooperating with state experiment 'stations in 12 states. I The new soybean varnish is 'standing up well under weather tents lasting seven months, H. T. Herrick, in charge of the laboratory work. said. A high grade spar I varnish exposed on the same (test | panel failed completely in five months, he said. “This work.” Herrick said, "indicates that properly treated soybean oil can be substituted up to

Farmers & Breeders Insure Your Mares During the FOALING SEASON WITH A SPECIAL THIRTY-DAY FOALING POLICY Issued by the HARTFORD LIVESTOCK INS. CO. REPRESENTED BY: Schug Insurance Agency BERNE E. .1. Schug and G. O. Stauffer. Soliciting Agents

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'ldo per cent for 'the oil constituent > In a considerable number of varnishes without Impairing them.” Piqued Wife Unrelenting Richmond. Cal '.U.R> -JemJumin t Jones, 44, WPA worker, had the misfortune to drive an automobile 1 1 into that of his wife’s. She prompt- ‘ ly hud him arrested. ( I ■ I ■ . I O ---- —— Big selection Nelly Don Dresses just arrived. Come in and make your selection. E F. Gass Sore. 47— ) Maybe This Is Why I You’re Constipated 1 Perhaps the kind of food ■ you eat doesn’t give your bowels anything to work on. Meat, potatoes and bread don't form the kind of soft, bulky mass that will help move your bowels. . ! It so, a dish of crisp, cruncny Kellogg’s Allt Bran for breakfast will give you just the kind of "bulk” your intestines may need to work properly. i And in addition, it contains ■ the intestinal tonic, vitamin 8,, which helps to tone them. If you want to get at the cause of your trouble, eat some Kellogg’s All-Bran every day-as a cereal or baked in muffins. And drink plenty of water. All-Bran is made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Sold by every grocer. > ——————————