Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 75, Decatur, Adams County, 29 March 1938 — Page 3
.SOCIETY ■lib'
MR S** 3 -' ' Rk E^B^nSPR anG RESEARCH W’ir.nt -’■f X Mrs !.. A Graham ■■ . , Th., ('-.if! of l-H O -nWStl"*Mr:..i-. : - b "'' n v"\ »: •'" <i ' ns ° . ~-r..l ■ H-n a ■ '" ic>i Vlen- ■ ... tod>* c - . . , a'.' .ends of. MB h.AMH< ll!1 :l l' :lll >w t-innda-; IB ... -.r-r ■ d "lily . IM,. ...nvo-d ■■ Hloxl" sl.ind. ■ .» f. w •?•"• nd / ... ,: T . " .- M-. ■ ' ,: '' af "' r ' IB > ; : .!> !■•.>' : ' Am<-ric:i!i ■ •: ■ -nb-: - Gary's ■».-...- - nri.-’on lib-, and .iis.> 'heir pieces of 1 W!,- -h' • M' S Sam Has>Be HERMAN EHINGER TO DEPARTMENT ... .- , Hie Woman's : M < Elizabeth at the of Mrs, HerK rr't.a-M.m v.-ir: As- ... A: s is'.-5.».-re M r s I. A K- M ' M > ■ ml Mrs. McMillen. Jr. o-. K ami a:i:>i>tin< • the appoint- .’■■■! f.dlowitu offiiers to far the comin? year. Mrs. - * ' •■■ .. Mtr-- -- Ii y Young Bk
ft Behind ihekenerZl ■'HOLLYWOOD'OI
■B) HARRISON ( AKROI.L „ Upyrixbt. ISM) *‘“4 feature*. Syndicate, Inc. •< •!> Tunes are never tough that you can’t make
money. If you . know the right way. James Cagney tells the story of two young men who just put over a neat deal on him. There was an old shack on the Coldwater canyon site that Jimmy bought | for his new house. Workmen were going
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I——* S ul,l b to tear it down »o boys ottered to do the work W’ey would give them the the actor’s next trip to the !rt y. the shack was down but ' of lumber stood on the road eet away. On it was a sign ’read: mmy Cagney souvenirs. Lumr°m his old house cheap." days, the boys had made . B ®“ ln S the lumber. And J C™. to fork over a ten s P ot 7 back the rest of it pj^ t , amusln g incident of ve t B '•‘sit to the studios Place at Twentieth Centuryear dX reSid v. ent ’ s wl,e Rrrlved Lm n n . by a studio chaufO f^Xl a U another car damrm f As the caravan is sudd 6 ? e Sound sta ges, the lost track of the h thev In a frantic henX 7u red first one S± lt ° th - AH this time ie ShlL calm! y visiting itudio cha <J emple bungalow. 'death to H °ilywood was in nL, Austin Parker. 4to ,nS I h is t former wife, le to reach hi* 08 ?^ 1 but was >v er X h** ol * h e died, ’menu ‘ ded ln funera > ar " SS dcould hard iy wait ’yhX r g t e " a ? d Charlle Meld Stshl th o r P'cture with tor S , taW is a fine rs are n.J* temperamental, ’ll, the 7<°? S about h‘mduction” “ Utter of ally, Bereft? started and, and Charlie faced d l w ed several takes, then
I CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A, M. Fanny Macy » Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesday Civic Section, Library Rest Room 7 p ni. Pinochle Club, Mrs. Francis Eady, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Frivolity Club, Positioned One Week. St. Vincent de Paul .Society, K. of C Home. 2 p. m. Adams County Democratic Women's club. Geneva M. E. church, f. 30 p. m. Historical Club, Mrs. Frank Krick '2:30 p. m. Union Township Woman’s Club. I Mrs. L. E. Omorod, 208 Third St., i Fort Wayne, all day meeting St. Rita’s Study Club K. of C. : Hall. 7:30 p. m. Thursday Eta Tau Sigma Miss Glennys Elisey, 7:30 p. m. Homestead Home Economics (Club, Mrs. George Auer, postponed ‘ one week. Eastern Star Installation. Maso- ' nlc Hell, 4 p. m. Eastern Star Banquet, Masonic Hall. 6:30 p. m. Eastern Star Inspection, Masonic Hall. 8 p. m. St. Mary’s Township Home Economics Club. Mrs. Sam Haggard. 3 mi. West, % mi. North of Pleasant Mills. 1:30 p. m. Friday Happy Homemakers Club, Mrs. Marion Reber. 1:30 p. m. Monday Research Club, Mrs. A. R. Holt- | house, 2:30 p. m. fr.es secretary. I After the regular business, the , meeting was turned ovef to Mrs. G. J. Kohne who reviewed the three act comedy “Tovarich”, by Jacques Deval. f At the close of the meeting lovely refreshment® were served by the hostesses. The Homestead Home Economics club will meet with Mrs. George Auer Thursday. April 7. ins'ead of ' this Thursday as formerly announced. —o Theodore Schoynicki of Chicago is spending several days with her daughter and eon-in-law. : Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Myers.
he said: “All right, Bergen, go ahead and play it your way." Whereupon Charlie cocked his head around and cracked: "Well, why in the hell didn't you tell us that in the first place?” The busiest actor in Hollywood is Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. He is working at R-K-O on further retakes for "Having a Wonderful Tune". He reported to Universal for the first day of shooting on the Danielle Darrieux picture. And, in his spare time, he is making tests for his next flicker with David Selznick. Is there any significance in the fact that Lucille Ball and Al Hall had a plane chartered recently, but failed to use it? The blonde R-K-O star stopped at least one marriage last week. Her cousin, Cleo Manning, was at the license bureau with Arthur Auerbach, of the Jack Haley air program, when Lucille found out about it and persuaded them to wait. Cleo isn't of age yet. Marguerite Churchill will be on crutches for a month as a result
Marguerite Churchill
of a fall on the stairs. . . . Mrs. Andy Devine has been rushed to the hospital. . . . The two young men! chosen to ac- I company Errol Flynn on his cruise were John Glover and Fred Rogers, both of New York. . . . Couldn't confirm it but Nelson
Eddy is reported to have paid |17,500 in cash for the furnishings in the home of a Los Angeles biggie who lost his monev. . . . Louise Hovlck and her husband, Robert Mizzy, are on a four-week trailer trip to Guaymas as soon as she finishes "Battle of Broadway” • . . and providing that conditions in Mexico don’t get worse. . . . That was Frances Marshall, New York beauty, dancing with Eddy Duchin at Topsy s. Jan Garber's the maestro there... • A few weeks ago, R-K-O had 55 writers. Now it has 22. Which * gives you an idea of how all the studios are paring down. The other day, an electrician on a certain set ’ was seen behaving in a peculiar manner . . . bobbing his head first i one way and then another. "What are you doing ?” he asked. i "Dodging that ax,” he replied. |
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MARCH 29. 1938.
■Personals Charles Rahner and E. W. Buscjie of Monroe were business visitors in j Decatur Tuesday. Bobby Christen Is ill at his home ;on Winchester street with the mumps. Mrs. Frank VanZlle has returned to h. r home In Baltimore, Md., after a week's visit at the home of Dr. ' and Mrs. Fred Patterson of North t Second street. Mr. end Mrs. H B. Macy of Decatur i nd Mrs. William Freitag of Preble visited with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Freitag a.. Goshen Sunday. | James C. Hoffman of route 4. Bluffton will leave Friday by truck for Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta. . Canada where he will make his home with his sister, Mrs. Gladys Kulak. Mrs. Kulak was a former! resident here, having graduated . from the local high school with the class of 1918. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Schafer have moved Into their new apartment at 610 West Monroe street. Miss Fan Hite of Chicago is spending two weeks In Decatur. Out of town people who attended Henry Coyne funeral at the St. Mary's Catholic church yesterday were: a sister-in-law. Mrs Theodore Schoynickl of Chicago; Mrs. Joe Schroeder,-and grandson. Low-! | ■ 11 Smith of Continental. Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Strupp. Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Strupp, Fort Wayne. o Adams County Memorial Hospital I Dismissed: Mrs. Henry Liechty. Berne; Mrs. Leonard Meyers and son Edward. 822 North Third street Marian Staube. Monroeville; Miss Charlene 'Hamrick, route 6. Admitted: Noah J. Schrock. Berne. — o BITTER FIGHT OVER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ) provide a broad program for execu tive department reorganization. One of the pending house bills, however, is in widq variance with , the senate plan to abolish the office of comptroller general and his ' function of checking expenditures before they are made. The senate j bill would establish in place of the comptroller, an auditor general whose function would be a postaudit of government expenditures The pending house bill proposed as a substitute, however, would create the office of auditor general for post-audits, while retaining the comptroller general, appointed by , and responsible to the president. ] Ito make pre-audits of federal spending. One of the house bills already approved would establish a new I department of public welfare and permit the president to reorganize and consolidate various agencies .It is comparable to senate provisions of the reorganization mea ! sure. The other approved hill would give the president six administra ! tive assistants, as also is provided by the senate measure. CITY SELECTED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) interview during which an employment application will be taken. The I representative also will receive claims for benefits from unemployed or partially employed workers who are eligible to receive unemployment compensation. The scope of the employment service has been greatly extended recently. The number of full-time employment offices in the state has been increased from 21 to 43, makNEW CHAIRMAN - , OF ROAD BOARD HK $ :> -s> T. A. DICUS Following resignation of Earl Crawford as chairman of the state highway commission, Governor Townsend appointed T. A. Dicus of Swayzee as head of the commission. Dicus, a personal friend of the Governor, was former super- ! intendent of Grant county schools. He has been a member of the highway board since May, 1937. In 1936 Dicus was head of the: Fifth district Townsend-For-Gov- j 1 ernor Club. j |
| itig a total of 112 cities where serj dee may be received. ' 1 o i Negro Youth Is Held After Fatal Stabbing Vincennes. Ind.. Mar. 29.—XU.RX— Police today held George Douglas, 15-year-old negro, for Chicago authorities after he admitted stabbing Robert Winston in a Chicago bakery Saturday during an argument. The youth was arrested after he hitch hiked here from Evansville. He told officers he didn't know be had killed Winston. Douglas said he formerly lived at Jeffersonville, Ind., and that he , wont to Chicago to work after the 1 1937 flood. o One Girl Killed In Indianapolis Fire Indianapolis. Ind., March 29 — (UP) —Mildred Bowen, 7, waz burned to death and her sister, Mary Belle. 8. was burned critically, in a fire which swept through three adjoining buildings here last night. Mary Relle was not expected to live. The two girls, daughters of Mrs. Louise Bowden, were sleeping in an unstairs room when the fire broke out. They weer overcome by smoke
Decatur Daily Democrat ★ PRESENTS I o ★ — - — ~ — — — — — — — —" — — — — ~ — — - THE TALKING ■*“ ••• ** *■“ *—* —*, .***_ I MOTION I [ PICTURE ] bbbhbbbbbmbbbbbbbbbbbbbbhhhbb IHNRHHDWMWBBBNNDNBKaNBNNBBBHBHNHMRMMNSBINMIMaBMNBBDRMWSBHHMBR®®®®®* I N« A THRILLING TREAT FOR EVERY WOMAN at the ADAMS THEATER TH E DAYS THE DATES THE TIM E Monday - Tuesday APRIL Doors Open 1:30 o’clock « j . Ara Showing 2-00 Wednesday 4-5-6 "Scar in My Kitchen” was produced in one of the major motion picture studios in Hollywood and has a large cast of well-known actors and actresses. It combines in a feature-length picture the romance and glamour of Hollywood with the everyday problems of home-making. You will laugh at and with a Auntie Bella, the large, jolly, colored maid, and be thrilled by the love scenes between Mike (the movie stat) and Dedee, the lovely heroine. And, most important of all, you will sec in complete detail demonstrations of many recipes developed by several of America s leading home economists.
• and then burned. Four other child-1 ini of Mr». Bowden were rescued | Fire Captain Dunny P. O'Connell was overcome by smoke. o Government In Move On Passport Ring New York, March 29 —(UP) — t The federal government made its - flrat move today against a gigantic • fraudulent pas»i>ort ring by holding ) a photographer, Oseip Graber on a . charge of complicity. Authorities intimated he wae bus- i pected of having provided the pho-' ' tographs with which hundreds of ’ fraudulent passports were obtained ’ by the ring. Including these on which Adolph A. Rubens and his wife entered Russia. Known also as "The Rolbinsons,” they are held there on suspicion of espionage. > o Winnipeg Building Booms Winnipeg —(U.K - Building perr mits for the present Beason in i Winnipeg are within a few thou-1 - sand dollars of the $2,000,000 mark.. . This year’s figure of $1,976,750 ex- . ceeds by nearly three-quarters of . a million dollars the total last year i at the corresponding time. > o • Trade In a Good Town — Decatur ,
TRIBUTE PAID KETTLEBOFIOUGH I High State Officials Pay Tribute To Head Os Bureau Indianapolis, March 29 — (U.P) High state officials paid tribute to- ( day to Dr. Charles Kettleborough, director of Indiana's legislative bureau, who died yesterday from injuries received In an automobile accident March 13. Dr. Kettlehorough. 50, joined the legislative bureau in 1911 and became its head 20 years ago. He had remained through changing Republican and Democratic administrations. "I was deeply shocked to hear of the death of Dr. Kettleborough,” said Gov. M Clifford Townsend I "Few people have served their government so loyally and efficiently as he did. Quiet and studious. Dr. Kettleborough played an important part in the enactment of many major laws in Indiana.” Dr. Christopher B. Coleman, state I librarian and state historical bur-1
eau director, said: "I have never known anyone who seemed to me to have more single-minded devotion to the work of his office and lieyond tliat to tlie public welfare. 1 never knew him to deviate from what he conI siderod to lie the path of ills public duty and In it a performance he worked incredibly long and hard." 1 Funeral services will l)e held at , Topeka, Ind. Magazine Salesmen Jailed At Capital Indianapolis, Mar. 29. — <U.R> — Three magazine solicitors arrested here yesterday on charges of contributing to the delinquency of three Bedford girls, have been turned over to Bedford authorities, state police said today. Those arrested were: Mr. and ■ Mrs. W. E. Spencer, Columbia. S. C„ and Sam Martin, 33, of Lexington, Ky. They were arrested after they had brought three girls to IndianapoHs from Bedford. Students Prefer Checkers Birmingham. Mich. (U.P) Checkers, popular game in (he era of the general store and its open cracker barrel, still leads ping--1 pong, hockey and badminton as
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tiie favorite game of high school students here. 'Rainbow' Fingernails are Fad Philadelphia (U.R>—Tinted fingernails but each of a different shade —now are fashionable for women, according to the American Hairdresser. "Rainbow” fingetimil* were discussed at the Pennsylvania Beauty Congress, No Wonder You Are Constipated! What do you cat for breakfast? Coffee, toast, maybe some eggs? What do you eat for lunch and dinner? Bread, meat, potatoes? No wonder you're constipateddue to lack of "bulk." And "bulk” doesn't mean the amount you eat. It means the kind of food that forms a soft, bulky mass in the bowels. It's this mass that helps your bowels move. The common sense thing to do about it is to eat a natural laxative food. Kellogg's All-Bran for breakfast will give you Just the "bulk” you need. And it gives you, in addition, Nature’s great intestinal-tonic, vitamin 8,. Eat this crunchy toasted cereal every day. drink plenty of water, and life will be brighter for you! AllBran is made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Sold by every grocer.
