Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 68, Decatur, Adams County, 21 March 1938 — Page 3
•-SOCIETY in | taw™-- * A
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Behind the Scenes !
B; HARRISON ( ARROLL I ■ . Up)ri t ht, W3B , FViturr, Syndicate, Inc. ■LLTWOOD — Lights! Carnal Action! Inside a United sound stage, they are B*-; a wild flight of Spanish
refugees across a river. The river is confined in a tank, with wave machines to , give the water the appearance of flowing. The banks are covered with realistic looking moss and with trees. Dow nstream, to get over the effects of a war. are
SBi < ■ ’ I ■ vr J Fonda
remains of a blown up bridge, "rettor William Dieterle. wear- ® ever-present white gloves, “ behind the camera on a promontory projecting out the river. tfugees, some of them with toluoned guns, are splashing im and clambering up on the , e Henry Fonda is yelling heiwd° ’ t<>P a " d fight f ° r their tees' 8 ? 1 ?*’ whether the fleeln S from the ere Rebel a ™y- Notell nnt picture are you able T eV *2Ji ,h?n uniforma are hneriv ..“ The Adventurers”. J" 1 ? called -The River Is le ,n W th? r o Wanßer doesn ’t take tnt of bpanlsh conflict. The p * ctu « « that war. *no*devA < ?^ e ?^ Ween so 'diers. 'bf Women nt ° the S'aughDete^uT. and chlldre "- «to *tfire h Th terror at being '“'■•track of y thi r « e nOt making a Pplies the SCene - 80 he 'MirX n ° iSe 01 bursting be yells, “Bang!" outs at e the /aVeS hls arms and Nation to the 1 ? 8 ? 0 Pay more Mag the ° m the fact that he is M «oveuo mu'; Car rillo *° has beer 1o - For davs *n Santf ht u g , to save hi 3 dte flood Monica canyon i'&ays hearSingfor this all ft atMa^ MmaroOnedby !“ ’cent twlst ia thls wa tch was supposed
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phone* 10Ce — IQOI Monday Research Club. Mrs. Leo Saylors, 2:30 p. ni. Woman's Club ami County Federation meeting. Masonic Hall, 6:30 p. tn. Tuesday United Christian Missionary Society. Mrs William Kohls. 7:305. tn. Rebekah Lodge, I. O. O. F. Hall, 7:30 p. m. United Christian Missionary society, Mrs. Elmer Harlacher, 7 p. tn. Zion Junior Walther League. Zion Lutheran Church. 7:30 p. nt. Root Township Home Economies Club. Mrs. R. O. Wynn. 1:30 p. nt. Wednesday Calvary Evangelical Ladies Aid. Mrs E. W. Jackson, all clay Shakespeare Club, Mrs. Herman Ehinger, 2:30 p. m, Historial Club, Mrs. Delton Passwater, 2:30 p m. Thurscay Christian Indies' Aid Society Mrs. Ebner Harlacher, 2 p. ni. Women of Moose. Moose Home <7:30 p. m. Friday Kirkland Home Economies Club, Kirkland High School. 1:00 p. m. | M. E. Ladies' Aid Society. Mrs. Jesse Leßrun. 2:30 p. m Saturday Supper. Zion Lutheran Church. 5 to 7 o'clock. Woodrun. president, presided over the business meeting. During the social hour games were enjoyed and i a delicious luncheon served. The Root township home econo- : mica club will meet at the home of Mrs R. O. Wynn. 9M West Madison I street. Tuesday afternoon at oneI thirty o’clock. The ladieif aid society of the Me- ' thodist Episcopal church will meet at the home of Mrs. Jesse U-Hriin Friday afternoon at two-thirty o'- ' clock. Members are asked to note I change in date. The ladies' aid society of the First Christian church will meet at the home of Mrs. Elmer Harlacher Thursday afternoon at two o’clock. ENTERTAIN GUESTS AT 6 O'CLOCK DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Harve Baker of 1 South Third street entertained with
U> be shot on location. But the river and the set Wanger had built on its bank were swept away by the storm. For a scene tn "Little Miss Broadway” George Murphy and Phyllis Brooks are smuggling Shirley Temple out of a theatrical j hotel so she won’t be carried back to an orphan's asylum. The set consists of the comers of two buildings separated by a wall. One is the hotel, the other, the New York mansion of a feminine recluse, Edna May Oliver. Miss Oliver plays a character patterned after one of the famous Wendell sisters. They call ner Wendling In the film. Interior sets in her house resemble the old Vanderbilt home. The hotel also has its historical model. It is almost a duplicate of the United States hotel in Saratoga Springs. In thia scene, Director Irving Cummings has George Murphy hoist Shirley up on the wall and climb up after her. Then Shirley pulls the heads of Murphy and Phyllis Brooks together until they kiss. She thinks it is cute and, on the second take, she breaks out into a giggle. "Great!" says Director Cummings. "Print the one with the giggle." Mrs. Temple has been watching the scene with us. As Shirley
Shirley Temple
comes over, she says; _ "Shirley, I either you are I losing weight or i your coat is too | big.” f "Oh, I am I losing weight," I says Shirley, I with a twinkle. I "At least I hope I so.” I Which makes [ you realize you are in Hollywood Even the
child stars parrot taik about their figures. As a matter of fact, Shirley doesn’t diet, never has. Her mother thinks her baby plumpness has been one of her attractions: and is sure she will slim down when the time comes. Hollywood’s most famous child star is allowed to have one piece of candy a day— . usually butterscotch. And she gets ice cream on? time a week —on Thursday night, when the family cats out in a Beverly Hills case.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1938.
| I * 0 "You're known a, a great f if S £ it fI I a wkTyi T T 'mok>-r, Mr. bluw. ilff l ""» 4 I j >W | Ijj I 1 j Are they really so different - oihe r iigjrc nob ■1 U 1 Vrß r| jII |rg ■■■■■ ' iu./ b i i W m i 'l < . IL :< I I ' l: ' ' < ' ' 1 V ’w '■ 1 . I t ~ .■ i ■ ■■■ \ i x. HBaßl s £i' 4 j!' M /w< * 1 •< s.>n ■. n .t< << < <•> .1 <» .>. ■„ < >■< ' ' ' II.:.: t 1 .r, . • x t I I 11 1 1 < < 1 ■ ■ - uzr/im,.'l v<-smoki.l a j-.><»i n. mth u'.inds <d < .mills in auto racing driver to jBB the past 10 years, so I/>/< rr that from experiem e.'' BI.N E. \X 11.141 R. radio announcer MHI fflßßdk*** mki iimbi v w r I "Camel i- the ciganlte that 1 .- I agret.s with inc —the cigarette -. that letA me enjoy >m<»king p||F >» •glgK * |||| to the fuii!’’ Jlr AHL ' v ■| “NODDLING” out a problem in SHAW is saying how important healthy “IT’S YOUR MOVE, Cathleen,” says Z' Jj?*? jLIkMMMBmB auto design. And getting in a bit nerves are to a racing car driver. "The fact Wilbur to Mrs. Shaw, his checkers lloiFlrWs'of smoking, doing it. "Camel's that Camels don’t get on my nerves scores partner. His ow n move is to light up JaMI the mild cigarette," Shaw says. a big hit with me,” he points out. a Camel—"for digestion's sake.” • A* - : .<:<:•> i \ s ■ SEw : COMING NEXT MONDAY g| > fa » yl l E-D-D-l-E C-A-N-T-O-R!! Ig Camels are a BH B| | I K’S Americ a’ffirreit fun-maker and pcrsonalih’brought matchless blend —, ‘ r r;.v^p M m °Mvr. B °' ,,ner * MoßE 7>o pm P.S.T., over Columbia Network. K EXPENSIVE If V V 'ft' And —Next Tuesday (March 29) jM TOBACCOS m BENNY GOODMAN —Turkish and /r? H IsllSi hT - R OH I I THE “KING OF SWING” Domestic V ■€ ■ <<■ \> ■ ■ aV f I tear the great Goodman Swing Band ’’go to town.” ggg f* Jf Krry 1 Utsday at this mu /»•«/•-<r nm F S I’.. - b'> pm < sI . "> pinM >1 , aud oju j-ui xjl P. 5.T-, over Colombia Network.
a six o'clock dinner Sunday for Mr.! and Mrs. Stanley Harr of Devils Lake, N. D. Mrs. May Ketchum. Mr. | and Mrs. Fred Hisey and children. [ Mr. and Mrs. Ruseell Hillman of' Portland, Billy and Jimmie Wyant | and Marion and Alyce Kay Baker. The Calvary Evangelical church Ladies Aid will hold an all-day meeting Wednesday at the home of 'Mrs. E. W. Jackson. Al! members! are urged to attend. The day wtl! ne spent in quilting and a pot-luck . dinner will be served at noon. — -o— John D. Aber and son Dicky, of Gallup. New Mexico, arrived in Decatu r this morning for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garard and other relatives Mr. and Mrs. Dick Frisinger of Indianapolis, and Mrs. M. H. Fee and daughter Louise, of Greenfield visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Garard and daughter Patsy. Mr. and Mrs. Al Kern and daughter and Mrs. Homer Kern of Toledo visited over Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kern and other relatives.' C. I). Kern of Elkhart visited in the city Sunday. Mrs. Robert Fritsinger spent Sunday in Fort Wayne with her mother Mrs. William E. Davison. Mrs. Daj vison has been critically ill with heart trouble for the past two weeks. Her condition remains unchanged. She is well known here, having visited in Decatur many time. Bob Beavers of Purdue University Lafayette will arrive home next Saturday to spend the spring vacation with his grandparents. Dr. and Mrs. S. D. Beavers. Mrs. Jesse Rice, Miss Effie Patton. Mrs. Lilly Burroughs and Miss : Mary McKean visited in Fort Wayne Sunday. Art Miller and Theodore Knapke were Fort Wayne visitors Sunday. Mrs. Doy Lehman and Mrs. Francis Bogner returned Saturday from a three months' visit in Los Angei les Cal., with their brother and son A. N. Bogner. They visited many ! places of interest and called on forI mer Decatur residents living In CalI ifornla. Mr. and Mrs. J. D Engeler motor-
JSf .J Phone 300 1315 W. Adams i— • i
■ed to Indianapolis Sunday They were accompanied home by their I son, James, interne in the City Hos- ! pit al. who has been ill with a strepi toccic infection. He is much improved now but will remain in Decatur for a week's rest before resuming bis duties in Indianapolis. Clark William RmitH of Pittsburgh was the week-end guest of i his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith. He was accompanied by Miss Lois Westoff and Mrs. Dorothy I Jones of Pittsburgh. Two car loads of members of the Christian church motored to Harlan Sunday evening to attend the services there. Those w r ho made the trip were Mr. and Mrs. James Kitchen, Mr. and Mrs. Dorphus Drum. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Hutker. Mr. and Mrs. Fred King and Mr. and Mrs. William Kohls. Wayne Beavers of Chicago spent the week-end with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. S. D. Beavers. Mrs. Don Quin n of Chiago is visiting her parents, Judge and Mrs. J. T. Merryman of North Seond street. Mrs. Leo Bundick and baby, who have visited here since Wednesday with Mrs. Bundick’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Engle, were joined Sunday by Mr. Mundick. Mr. Bundick returned to Chicago and Mrs. Bundick remained for a few days. ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Hubert W. Keller of route 6 are the parents of a boy baby, born at the Adams county mer.orial hospital Sunday evening at 'C>:49 o’clock. The baby weighed sev:en .pounds, eleven and one-fourth i ounces. He has not been named. Word was received here Sunday i evening by Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Tceple of Fourth street of the birth of a boy baby to Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Temple McClintock of Win- ! Chester, Mass. The baby was born at the Memorial Hospital in Cam- , bridge. Mass.. Sunday afternoon at ,15:40 o’clock and has been named Andrew Fordyce. This is the third J child and first boy. Mrs. McClintock ! was formerly Miss Alta Teeple of . i Decatur. o NEW VOTERS TO , CONTTNUKD FHOy. ONE) | registered with the dpunty rggis- , tration clerks and 42 have registerLed in the county clerk's office. A total of 146 transfers have been reported by clerks of the 15 -preI cincts and 60 have been made in the county clerk's office. The new votess expected from the registered voters: Ceylon, five; St. Mary's, 36; Decatur 1-B. 19; i French, 14; East Union, 18; N. St. Mary’s, 14; Geneva A, one; East i Root, 24; Decatur 3-A, 27; North 1
| Blue Creek, 27; West Root, 15; ■ l Decatur 1-A, 38; Decatur 2-A, six. SEVEN DIE AS DAFT CRASHES ! 1 43 Others Rescued As Raft Crashes Into Concrete Bridge Pier 1 I —— • | Muncy, Pa.. March 21 — (U.R) ! i Rivermen grappled in the swift ’ current of the Susquehanna river ’ ! today for the bodies of six men • believed drowned when the 112- • i foot “Last Raft” crashed into a 1 I concrete bridge pier yesterday and i hurled 50 persons into the water. ’ W. C. Van Scoyoc, 66. Philadel- . I phia, was dead when rescuers lift- | ed him from the river. • 1 The six missing were Thomas . I Profeett, Universal Newsreel cam- . erarnan. Chester, Pa.; Dr. Charles > 1 F. Taylor, 33, dentist and Burgess i of Montgomery, Pa : Harold Ber- . ringer, 30, Tyrone, Pa., member of I ! the crew; Harry Connors, 65, Burn- -' side, Pa., chief pilot; Malcolm Mc- .! Farland. Towanda, Pa., and W. W. ! Holly. 47. Bradford. Pa. The raft, symbol of the logging industry which vanished when the ■ railroad supplanted'’ canals and I f rivers as freight carriers, crashed i i into the pier while Pilot Connors | 1 manning the Bow Sweep, sought [ ’ to avert the accident. The raft had brushed against a highway bridge and veered sideways into ‘ the stream. It struck the railway bridge with the full force of the \ swift current before the crew could ' i bring the unwieldy craft under con- ‘ trol. , PRESIDENT NOT . (CONTINUED FKOBt TAOE ONE, 1 charged in the house that the TVA • is paying a $6,000 salary to the city [ manager of Norris, Tenn. Knoxf ville, a much larger city, paid its j manager $7,200, he said. Taber I inserted into the record a list of salaries paid by TVA. o Hull Voices Horror At Spanish Slaughter k Washington, March 21 —(UP) — a Secretary of state Cordell Hull toi- day voiced the "sense of horror” i r.f the entire American people over the slaughter of civilians in Barcea lona by nationalist bombing planes. ; | Speaking independently of action ; ' taken by an European government, . \ Hull said the disasters to Spanish t non-combatants in Barcelona had i promoted him again to voice the
disapproval and horror of this government and of the American people , at such wanton destruction of non- j , combatant life. TAKE BIDS ON I (.CONTINUED FROM FAGK ONE) ! ders. Included in the letting are projects for the removal of muck, grading and surfacing on a part of rhe nine and a quarter miles be-, tween Columbia City and Uhuru-1 busco, and the grading and surfac- I ing of approximately 14 miles on ' road 18 in Carroll. Cass and Miami counties, extending between roads I 35 and 31.
Trouble Spots in Spanish War S ' ■ '■ .. A-..-. z Z • •' z. ' - ["Spanish planes | I — I * ... . ■ .. _ . ... * A-z r* - .["Balearic islands'] lb I"-*’* ■I J A „ i
I In one of the most disastrous air raids in European history. Spanish insurgent planes bombed the Loyalist capital. Barcelona, with many hundreds killed and at least 1.000 wounded. While the world recovered from the shock of the news of the terrific air bombing, a sore spot in the Mediterranean loomed lai ger and larger in European affairs. The
Girl. Man Die In Fort Wayne Accidents i Fort Wayne. March 21 —(U.R) —j 1 A child radio star and a Fort; ! Wayne man died yesterday of in- 1 ’ juries suffered in automobile acci- 1 I dents. ; Rita McGaffey, 9, local radio performer for the last four years. ; succumbed to injuries received when her sled skidded into the path of an automobile here Feb [ ,21. Rita and her sister. Jean, had! I made numerous radio appearances I ias harmony singers. Her funeral i ' will be held tomorrow, her ninth birthday. j Injuries suffered a week ago : when he was struck by a car prov-
■* trouble point is the Balearic islands, off the eastern coast of Spain. The islands are used by Italian warplanes and war craft fighting for the insurgents France has revived the demand for joint action to neutralize the islands. When made previously, this proposal drew angry retorts from Premier Mussolini of Italy. >
PAGE THREE
“Camels are preferred by the tobacco growers, who know leaf tobacco from the ground up” according to the observation of tobacco planters themselves
“I’VE BEEN planting tobacco * for twenty years,” says Harry C. King, a successful grower. “Camel bought the choice
lots of my last tobacco crop—paid more for my best leaf tobacco. So I know they use finer, more expensive tobaccos in Camel cigarettes. That’s one mighty good reason why my cigarette is Camel.”
THOMAS MIDDLETON and his twin brother James have been growingtobacco for 14 years. “The Camel people bought , up my best tobacco
last year,” Tom Middleton says. “They have for 12 years. When anyone talks about finer, more expensive tobaccos, that means Camels to me. I smoke ’em-my brother smokes ’em—and so do most of us around here who grow and know tobacco.”
“DOWN AT THE tobacco ■warehouse they told me they'd never seen finer tobacco than my ‘ last crop,” says
' - "x jT (
J. E. Jenkins, veteran tobacco grower. "Camel bought all the top grades. It just shows that the Camel people make sure to get the choice lots of tobacco. I prefer Camels every time. I know what those finer, more expensive tobaccos in Camel cigarettes mean to smokers.” Copyrirht, 1938. R. J Reynolds Tobncco Company, Wioatou-Salem. North Carolina
ied fatal to Dell Johnson. 59. He I died of a crushed chest and frac- ': ture of the right leg. o World War Vet Kills Woman, Takes Own Life i | Lafayette, Ind., Mar. 21. —(U.R)- — Mrs. Olive Dischbein. 24. of French ; Lick. Ind., was shot and fatally wounded early yesterday by Milford Mars 40-year-old World War ' veteran and fruit dealer here, who I then turned the gun on himself. Mrs. Dischbein, alias Jean Miller, died in a hospital of a punctj ured lung six hours after the shootl ing. Mars died instantly. o Trade In A Good Town — Decatur
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