Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 56, Decatur, Adams County, 7 March 1938 — Page 3

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gMWr* 1-' — |^v su£C » ffU ? ' .. ' M i! ■■■■■ IS. i K;\ 9, j s~ ' ?\ S' |O ■ - 1 ”■ ' i Bh -2-: '■'' ■" V M 1 "- ~ '!• F’lvmnU'h :n Mav I • at Sunday .-■■.•• I « 11 ■".-m- ai! -‘ u " ” t- ■ I '■ 1 I, ■ fcMa V..W. « ■ r . 11. '»."■:■••■' V« T l ’ *' '" k K «’.: "''"’ "”* l . ’ ■" 1 ' ll ' l ' 1 ’ iK . "•■•< i child. K>. ' ' Sunday i- ' will hir !1 !>a<' •: ■ n’ Thai's■ficna ■ F.l Warr-’ii. Mrs. Arbie K \|-< Wiilun !’• H K, ls -..-< Each ni.-ii'b-r h '■> Kut Lutheran . h->ir will Kw’-*laV H.- A Kiptfsent. KcW ? M <’ I’-anz-l:-■S'Jlh <!:-"■■ «i:'. KuV.v a TS'iis■ereains ; ' l ' ll '’ l k-

I&ehind the Scenes3X

■cy HARRISON CARROLL, ■ Upyrifbt, IMS ■ Lit Fulom Syndicate. Ine. ■H .. ■1 no ballyhoo about it. Loretta

Youngs sister, Georgiana Belzer, already is signed as a Selznick starlet. She is under seven-year contract and probably will play one of the minor roles in "Gone With the Wind". Georgiana is 13, just the age when Loretta made her screen

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I debut. And that Brtat Loretta couldn't get around sen she was trying to argue ®nst a movie career for her iy sister until she was a little let b the end, they didn’t tell i»tta about the contract until wit was signed. ]his makes four daughters Mrs. her has given to the screen, “y Blane and Polly Ann Young Wthe others. tell you fantastic stories id D>vw d U^ h morey Alice Fa y e Butler had on his horse, Sltaand'’ ’!' hCh W ° n at Santa paid m6O - Actua "y. t .,. r aad a script girl split a to Bunt h 1 8," across the board er had only S4OO on the a t profits but no fortune. toHuml Wlre - hai « d terrier, “best T”? Bogart ' s CU P hi,XrJ Ct ° r Os the y ear I’e such epged comedian, who ft ™ ell Performance in «nX u >n ruth "’ led a “ the "5000 vnl g m ° re than 3 ' ooo °f I8«ond^ Bcastb ythefan3. one ChLmni^ 04 *’ t 0 ene Autry’s a^ P^ With f-800 votes, tarth" rot" ffal ° in “The Good ions fan vn eatlon and one facel liol d for the M. G. $ e you b r y famii y beehlVe WlthoUt oUß c n Sat r u°rL had ° ne sent to the ’’Sullivan and / ?P d Maureen “bboard It removed the what before the y “•■wJZ * M inside ’ »r of the hn> a ° ver lhe lower * Premise? Mtn and Maureen fled w aoiar? 1 arnan came out Wel '«ne P C ° rralled the ftcHß t 0 P er - lo «. 000 e er ' director owns mer » studies fin« paintin gs and ’Praisala) ard / surance company "1 and has a collection of

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 I Monday Research Chib, Mrs. C. R. Sny-' , lorn. 2:30 p. m. Pythian Sisters, K. of P. and Families Carry-In Pinner, K, of P , Home. 6:15 p. m. Decatur Domen's cluh, Decatur high school auditorium. 7:4f p. m. Firemen’s Auxiliary, Mrs. Arthur Baker. 7:30 p. m. Union Chapel Rfble Class, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Baumann, 2 p. m. T uesday Sisters of Ruth. Mrs. Hart Moffett. 7:»0 p. m. Union Chapel A. R. C. Class. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Chase 7:30 p. m. Loyal Paughters, Evangelical Church. 7:30 p. m. Civic Section Regular Meeting. Library. 7 p. m. Relietkah Ixxlge. I. O. O. F. Ha’l, 7:30 p. m Zion Walther League, junior society. church basement. 7:30 p. m. W. C. T. U. Institute, United Brethren Church, 2 p. m. Wednesday I Zion Lutheran Missionary Soc-! iety. Church Basement, 2 p. m, Beulah Chapel Ladies Aid Society. Mrs. Frank Spade, all day meeting. United Rrethren W. M. A.. Mrs. Homer Bittner, 2:30 p. m. Choir Practice. Zion Lutheran i church, after church. Shalkeepeare Club, Mrs. A P. SiltI ties. 2:30 p. m. Historical Club. Mrs. Brice Butler, 2:30 p. m. Thursday Pinner Bridge Club, Mrs. William Bowers, 6:30 p. m. M. E. Woman’s Home Missionary Society, Mrs. C. D. I<ewtoi>, 2:30 p. m. Women and Girls of St. Mary’s I Parish, K. of C. Hal’, 8 p. m. Eastern Star Pot Luck Supper. Masonic Ha’l, 6:30 p. m. Presbyterian Missionary Society, l Mrs. Huber DeVoss. 2:30 p m. Women of Moose. Moose Home, 7:30 p. m. Mt. Pleasant Ladies’ Aid Society. Mrs. Archie Susdorf. 2 p. m. I Loyal Daughters. Evangelical

historic motion picture stills valued at another $147,000. The penguin in Shirley Temple’s “Little Miss Broadway" wears a tuxedo in one scene oi the film. Which was responsible for the funniest studio memo of the week. “Please have the penguin at the wardrobe department at 2 p. m. for a costume fitting." Just heard of the strangest writing partnership in recent Hollywood history. Six months ago, ’ a Spanish girl, living in Manchukuo, wrote to Walter Abel out--1 lining a screen story. The actor liked the story and wrote back. There has been a further exchange of letters and Harold Kussel, R- 1 K-G scenarist, has been helping Abel put the story into shape. But, the other day. came a message abruptly ending the collaboration. Military censors, wrote the Spanish girl, had advised her to discontinue giving out Information about affairs in Manchukuo. On the "You and Me” set at Paramount, we run across a strange sight. Sylvia Sidney has bought a colonial farmhouse in Hunterdon county, New Jersey, and along with it, several four-poster beds. The star, Bernadene Hayes, Joyce Compton and a wardrobe woman are busily making a quilt for one of the beds ... an old-fash-ioned quilting bee in sophisticated Hollywood. The Sunday magazine section of a morning paper contained recipes I for Italian dishes given by Giovanni Martinelli. The news section of the same paper carried a story of Martinelli fainting at a radio broadcast from an attack of indigestion. . . . Shirley Temple is SIO,OOO richer for a fashion tie-up with an eastern manufacturer of children’s clothes. a New York columnist recently referred to Charles Eaton, local restaurateur, as a virtual millionaire. Since then, Eaton s cashier has been held up. his safe has been robbed of $2,000 and he

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has received visits from the internal revenue men and the sales tax people . . . Martha Raye was taken to the Cedars of Lebanon hospital. Do ctors were fearful of pneumonia. . . . Add to new twosomes: Helen Twelve-

trees and Cecil Sillman at the House of Murphy. ... Andy Devine has been asked to pick the beauty queen at his alma mater, the Northern Arizona ; State Teachers’ college.

DF.CATIIR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 7, 1938,

BH C ‘ rl ’ *^ lrr * hazardous feat, asked for a ' 4 *- ■ - IMW Camel And that led to the question: "I’ve ♦ ha’ noticed that you’re a steady Camel smoker. Miss Reed. Do you have definite reasons for JWH preferring them to other cigarettes?" Zr4k “ w / ■ .jgs, J J THIS SHOWS Miss Reed in one of her g& HERF’S MISS REED’S ANSWER: "Yes, indeed, I HSIML during stunts-h-aping from a speeding Certainly /'.in. Camels are distinctly different in C,ir a hicomotive. I knosv what hard so many ways. Going through my stunts over and „ ’ s » s * le sa y s Many a time I’ve over is a severe test of healthy nerves. I smoke ..f, ecn thankful for that cheery ’lift’ I get Camels all through the day, and my nerves don't DARING? Yes! Foolhardy? No! lone Reed knows uhat she’s doing. with a Camel.” feel the least bit frayed. Being so mild, they are And she is careful in her choice of a cigarette, because, as she says: "It gentle to my throat too. After a meal, I enjoy means a lot to me to know that my cigarette agrees with me!” | Camels—'for digestion's sake.’ You see —in so many ways. Camels agree with me.” Millions Os Other people find that ame^s i ,ve them what they want in smoking! ■ I* ’ <amc ' s f°r star stunt girl —lone of life. Il you are not now enjoying o f fi neri MORE Reed! its Camels for the famous Camels, perhaps you, too, w ill find EXPENSIVE diving expert — Commander Ells- that it means a lot to smoke Cam- ■ TOBACCO 1 " I •\. <7 berg! And for golf champion Ralph els — the cigarette that is made g>v>X'>-.' Cv»Guldahl; speed flier Roscoe Turner; from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE —Turkish an , and men and women in all walks TOBrkCCOS.Turkish and Domestic. ■ Domestic. / jfi FOR RECREATION Mis, Reed likes cooking DOUBLE-FEATURE CAMEL CARAVAN ’Hollywood seems to have a decided pref. •X'al ck f r? w ” .... ... . SKkOhI V l l 7 V Vs ■ LJw 1 s k & * Benny Goodman s Swing School —in one \1 ° r Camtls ’ shc Sd > notice that — fast fun . tl | k j hour . Tuesday at 930 pm so many of prefer Camels.” 8 w P ni pnl pm P. S.T., over Columbia Network.

! ohurch. 7:30 p. m. Christian Indies' Aid Society. Mrs. Dora Akey. 2 p. m. i Union Chapel Woman's Missionary Society, Mrs. George Brown. ■ ] 1 p. m. Evangelical Y. P. M C.. Miss Het-[ ty Hanuna, 7:30 p. ni. Saturday Mission Band, Evangelical Church 3 p, m. : The Mt. P'easant ladies' aid soc-j iety will meet at the home of Mrs. 1 Archie Susdort Thursday afternoon ' at two o'clock. The Women of the Moose will 1 ’ meet at the Moose Home Thursday ; evening at seven-thirty o'clock for’ their regular meeting. The senior i regent will appoint all committees ’ for the district meeting, to be held j ' in Decatur Sunday, March 27. Plans will also be made for the annual Easter eupper to be given at the . Moose Home. The drill team is re- ' quested to be present to rehearse ' after the regular meeting. All coworkers are urged to attend. The missionary society of the Zion Lutheran church will meet in the church basement Wednesday I afternoon at two o’clock Al! tnem- ' bers are urged to attend. The Beulah Chapel ladies’ aid j society will hold an all day meet- | ing Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Prank Spade. Every member is urged to be present. | The woman's missionary society : lof Union Chapel will meet at the; home of Mrs. George lErown Thursday afternoon at one o’clock. Mrs. Dwight Brown will be the leader, with “Rebuilding Rural America" i as the subject. The Sisters of Ruth class of the First Christian church will meet meet at the home of Mrs. Harl Mos- ! sett Tuesday evening at seven-thir-ty o’clock. The ladies' aid society of the J First CVhristian church will meet |at the home of Mrs. Dora Akey (Thursday afternoon at two o’clock. ; A good attendance is desired. BIRTHDAY DINNER GIVEN AT MCCARTHY’S Mr. and Mrs. Jud McCarthy enphone SOO 1115 W. Adams !=======-

Itertained with a dinner Sunday at ! th. home at 304 Masterson Ave- ! nue in Fort Wayne. The dinner was ■in honor of the birthday anniveri saries of Miss McCarthy of Fort ; Wayne and John S. Colchin of this I city. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. i McCarthy and daughter. Mary Jane Miss Anna McCarthy, Mr. and Mrs. : John S. Colchin and daughter. Miss i Helen of Decatur. o EPERSONALS The Misses Patsy Garard and Atola Jane Eady spent the weekend in Fort Wayne visiting with Mists Constance Deel and taking in the basketball games. Mrs. Cloice Beam of route 1. Monroe who was admitted to the Adams county memorial hospital March 2. is improving after a major operation. Mrs. Harry Moltz and Mrs. John Peterson motored to Fort Wayne this afternoon, where they attended the Colonial tea given at the home of Mrs. Charles Moffett of Dury Lane for the members of the D. A. R. Mrs. William Bowers visited in Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon. Mrs. W. Guy Brown was among . the Saturday visitors in Fort Wayne. Miss Martha Macy was able to return to school today after a week's absence on account of illnes. Martin Kirchner. Decatur route 2 stopped in at this office Saturday and renewed his subscription for 1938. Mr. Kirchner said he is in his •seventieth year and has been a subscriber to the Democrat since ihe was nineteen years old. Mies Marjorie Helm returned to Fort Wayne Sunday evening after spending the week-end at the J. H. Heiler residence. Most farmers are reporting little damage to wheat last winter ■ and are having good stands. Field men for the Central Sugar company are taking acreages now and reporting that farmers are; more interested in growing beets due to the government benefits to be paid during the next three years and the fact that it is predicted that other crops will bring lower prices in 1938 due to the bumper crops of 1937. Acreages for Crampton Canneries of Celina. Ohio are being taken In addition to the tomatoes and pickles grown last year, interest is being shown in red beets and other vegetable crops. Efforts are being I made to obtain sufficient perman-. ent acreage to require the construction of a canning factory here, instead of a shipping station as 1

I now in effect. Grover Bleeke of route five, was a visitor here today. I Mrs Daniel Noffsinger of Monroe visited in Decatur this morning. Mrs. Olivia Teeple of Craigville was one of the early visitors in the city today. Albert L. Colchin of E. C. W. Camp No. S 93. Bluffton, visited in Decatur over Sunday. William Biehold. of route one, stopped at the Democrat office at I noon today to renew his paper. Funeral services for Mrs. Rachael Dutcher Blackburn, former local resident, who died at Rochester, were held at the First Presbyterian church here Sunday. A large number of Decatur basketball fans stayed over for the i finals Saturday night at Fort I Wayne after the Yellow Jackets i had been eliminated. i A crowd of about 150 to 200 perI sons attended the concert given at ■ the Decatur Catholic high school gymnasium Sunday afternoon by the Decatur school bands. The members of the hand were com1 plimented on the fine concert ; given. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Tricker of I Sturgis, Michigan, visited here with ’he former's parents. Mr. and Mrs. I E. E. Tricker over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bowers of I Fort Wayne were Sunday visitors , here. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Evies, of Indianapolis, visited here with Mrs. | Eyles’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe I Lose. Robert Worthman returned to Ball State teacher's college at | Muncie yesterday after visiting j here with his mother, Mrs. M. F. 1 Worthman. Ronald Parrish of Jackson. Mich-1 igan visited here Sunday. | Mrs Don Stump and Miss Mildred Worthman were visitors in Bluffton Sunday. Miss Berniece Dubach and Fern Bierly attended the Bluffton sectional. Mrs. Gladys Chamberlain was among the Decatur visitors at the Bluffton sectional. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bosse of Indianapolis were visitors here Sunday A group of Decatur bowlers who went to Bluffton Sunday afternoon I and Fort Wayne last night included Carl Mies. Pau) Briede, A. J. Zelt. Jack Zehr, A. Farrar, C. Farrar. Fred Ahr, Edgar Mutschler and J. L. Ehler. Miss Romayne Elzey and Florien Keller attended the theater in Fort : Wayne Sunday evening. Mrs. Carl Mies and daughter. Patsy, accompanied Mr. Mies to Fort Wayne last evening Herb Callenburg of Anderson and Miss Helen Suttles of Indianapolis, visited here Sunday. Miss Marjorie Carroll of Indi-

anapolis visited here over the weekend with her parents and| friends. Mies Florence Holthouse and Norbert Holthouse of Indianapolis were visitors here over Sunday. Pat Hyland of Bloomingion wa-t among the Sunday visitors to the, city. S. E. Brown has moved his cream station and Cannelcrisp shop into the building on North Second street formerly occupied by the Quality Food market. The Stults Home Appliance store is also located in the room. A large crowd of factory repsentatives were in the city today to attend the letting of contracts for new county road maintenance equipment. Fred King is the second to report! seeing a robin as a sure eign of spring. A rehearsal was held yesterday ■ afternoon in the high school auditorium for the children who are to

Romance of Garbo and Stokowski Leads to Italy • —— S/ r / * it t » “so Or j lip’) MMHRvi X ilia Cimbrone at Ravello. Italy / Leopold Romance of Greta Garbo and Leopold Stokowski up residence. Marriage bans, required by Italian leads to a picturesque old-world villa at Ravello, laws, were expected. The actress and conductor Italv overlooking the Bay of Naples, where the were reported by some European news agencies glamorous star of the movies and the director of as already married. Other dispatches stated they symphony orchestras are reported to have taken were about to be.

talite part in the Decatur woman’s | club program, to be given tonight | by the junior woman's club at the school. Tae Misees Evelyn Kohls and ' Ruth Elzey, Gerald Strickler and Richard Macklin were visitors in , Fort Wayne yesterday. | Principals Rolland Spimnger, of Monroe. Russe'l Steiner of Hartford township and Hansel Foley of Kirkland township were among the Adams county principals to take an active part in the sectional tourney at Bluffton as scorekeepers, timers, i etc. Farmers making rag-doll germinai tion tests of their seed corn are reporting unusually low germination and vitality results due to the I wet weather last fa'l and winter. Rolland Reppert visited here over the week-end. returning to his stuI dies at Heidelberg last evening. Boyd Manning returned to Piqua, Ohio after spending the week-end with hie parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.

PAGE THREE

“What cigarette do the tobacco growers smoke themselves?" “Camels—by a large majority,” say planters who know the kinds of tobacco bought by each popular cigarette

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T. N. Williams, well-known grower, of Winchester, Kentucky, says: “A planter known tobacco. My last crop was the best

I ever had and the Camel people bought my best leaf tobacco. There isn’t any question where the more expensive tobaccos go. They’re in Camel cigarettes."

Top prices, that’s what J. B. Jackson, successful planter, got from the Catifel buyer last year, i “Camel buyers don’t ‘ buy just any tobacco

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— they pay more to get the best. That means finer tobaccos are used for Camels. I say quality has got to be grown in tobacco. That’s why I smoke Camels.”

♦ >

“I’m a planter,” says Vertner Hatton, who has grown tobacco for 25 years. “Camel bought the best grades of my last

crop. Paid a high price for my finest grades. I smoke Camels — because I know there isn’t any substitute for more expensive tobaccos.” Copyricht, 1938. R. J. Raynolda Tobacco Company. WuMton-Saiom. Nortb Carolina

i Cleveland of Rugg Street. Teddj’ Sprtinger. of Celina. Ohio spent Saturday evening in Decatur. L. C. Perry was called to Bryan* this noon because of the serious illness of his mother. Local truck drivers are reported 1 to be cooperating in the new law, requiring the installation of .directional signal lights. A local garage man reported today that he had sold 63 sets to date. Time for purchase of the lights recently was exi tended to March 20. Employes of the county clerk’s office, who, upon arrival this morning first thought that they had arisen an hour too early later learned, much to their satisfaction, that it was an error on the part of an electric clock. A temporary discontinuance of electrical current at 7 o'clock Satrday ntght had halted ! the office timepiece and it hadn’t started yet this morning. They gave up the idea of returning to bed and assumed their duties.