Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 91, Decatur, Adams County, 16 April 1938 — Page 3
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!C,i K PROGRAM , ' >„.' ■K ■ ■ '' ’" M 7' ■K \ , " li ’ ,li y B - KU** uiu| ' >,,j M.' - Ti i| be MF.' -■■« **#"*" Bo’ Ed-'ar ■K< Lain O'' l "' l '- MB Borowski 18. ■ r.oH'.olun Mrs R ■■«.< Carn- liaubold. £HB a,, onipanisl. boui»<- Ilaubold; ■Hyiss Helen H.iuDold chorus: ■K'-' • ■ 1 l " k ' y |K:'..- Cod., rd ■■yo William Gass ■By.. Ralph Walla. •’ ■■y« Louis- B.i’d old ■B Miss Lulu Gerber. RK^BfEASTER EGG HUNT KINDERGARTENERS ’.■■<• E.io. .-rg hunts ■K-.<■:'. was iv-’i by Mrs ' ..-.• ■ The ■K,- E > '• r rail- ■?.■ hidden for K and logs . to leave. • x...ri numbers
(Flowers for Easter ■■TL’WW}' ifSLS-—— ; ? -.k « 9 // - : ’ Lr ‘ ■"*■' d We have a pardonable \ fSi II pride in the manner in \ sii V A which we handle IS 9> V\ aster orders ... a | w- VJ pride that reflects itself in the ha PPi"ess of i fl ; f \>A ”*4 those we serve. -H: . Yl7 1 or y° ur convenience ■ /vSn\ Iv / We w '** remain open '*'l *f\ this evening g ■| \«r \ Jia nd Sunday \ J j unti * 1 P- 171 • 7 ’ I i k yj r/ I DECATUR FLORAL CO. B Huttman Ave. - PHONE 100 HF Wi I EASTER I Mbyl K p w Km Easter Sunday is to all Hr* of us a day of Rover- iffiCjg Hf 7 once and Gladness. It ■Bh' is from the bottom of |K<\ our heart that we wish ' < for everyone v MU Bi A HAPPY jO| AND JOYOUS Tjjl EASTER. ft® KO £, BLACK JI if f») • FUNERAL DIRECTOR K PHONE 500 — ~~
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy •hones 100 Q — 1(M>1 Saturday Colored Egg Sale, Mutschler Market. Bake Sale and Easter Market, Charles Brock Store, It a. m. Women of Moose Annual Easter , Supper, Moose Home 5 to 7 o’clock Monday Woman's Club Business Meeting D. H. S. Auditorium, 7:30 p m. Woman's Club Program, D. H. S , 8 p. m. Pythian Needle Club, K of P. home After Temple. Tuesday Kuni-.Toin-Us Class, Rev. George Lozier, 7:30 p. m Decatur Flower Garden Club, Mrs. W. E. Smith, 2:30 p. m. Civic Section of Woman's Club. Library Rest Rooms. 7 p. in. Tri Kappa Social Meeting, Elk's Home. 8 p. m. Girls' Missionary Guild, Zion Re-' formed Church, 7 p. m. Young Matron's Club, Mrs. Alva ' Ijawson, 7:30 p. m. Usi lota Xi, Miss Eleanor Punish I rey, 6:15 p. m. Rebeltah Degree Team. Odd Fellows, Hall 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Decatur Home Economics Club. Mrs. L. E. Archibold, l:30t p. m. Historical Club, Mrs’Fred Ahr,! 2:30 p. m. Shakespeare Club, Mrs. John Hel- ' ler. Rice Hotel. 1 p. m. j Business and Professional Wo-1 men’s Club, Called Meeting, Mayor’s i ■ Court Room. 7 p. m. Thursday I Evangelical Ladies’ .Aid Society. ■ Church Parlors, 2 p. m. | Woman’s Foreign Missionary. I Mrs. Delton Passwater. 2 p. m. i included Dora Jean Railey, Agnee Beer. Phyllis Owens, Helen Jean Owens and Mrs. Reinhold Sauers. " The Kum-Join-Us class of the Evangelical Sunday school will meet at the home of Rev. George Ixmier Tuesday evening at seven thirty ■ ■o’clock Mr. and Mrs. Edward Martz , will be the assisting host and hos- { tess.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1938.
. Racial Hatreds I hreaten Crisis in Near East f V/ ( I " 1 -W View of Atlieiu JI ? Y %'B, E eof .-^JBBBffl!^" 11 -3 t" qX i H k'' X?~V\l rfi TU RKEY A & f —s. /A- — ♦ A- ( Z, A / —K (A rR I C x X } ' V-. X PALESTINE\ K Jggf zZ)ERLI««IEM * | Map of Near East] yK \ CAIROW* \ - i ■■. •—i aX 4M - j . • . StSOL A - *" f”. ' t. I I < M-«, ■>...,. h, I. r " x
Continued disturbances in Palestine, and unsettled conditions throughout the Near East threaten to provoke a crisis of serious proportions. Greek politics. always turbulent at best, are stirred by factional strife and considerable criticism of young King George 11. Syria is one of the sore problems in the French colonial setup, and Iraq, where the oil deposits represent a rich stake, U causing Great , ~ '
The Pythian Needle club will meet at the K. of P. home after Temple Monday evrtiing. Miss Eleanor Pumphrey will be hostess to the members of the Psi lota Xi sorority at her home Tuesday evening at six-fifteen o'clock. A program will be enjoyed with section 2 in charge. The woman’s foreign missionary society of the M. E. church will meet at the home ()J Mrs. Delton I Passwater Thursday afternoon at two o'clock. Mrs. Leota Beery will be the leader, with Mrs. Jack Freidt, Mrs. Ed Wicks and Mrs. Orville Baughman assisting hostesses. The Decatur Flower Garden club will meet at the home of Mrs. W E. Smith Tuesday afternoon at twothirty o'clock, with Mrs. Leota Beery und Mrs. Charles Bieneke assisting hostesses. The Civic Section of the Woman's Club will meet in the Library rest rooms Tuesday evening at seven o’clock. All members are urged to be present. o Henry Thomas, who has been quite ill the past several weeks, Is reported slightly improved.
Windsors Visit French Resort s Us ' W JP A O Is Ml * ill ■ ’ : - : : . M < -M/• :> v MOa «gF * < ? |jKii||F t / (Hr I l erwßf -™* ~ i <s& .5 Xz | : < ~" F Duke and Duchess of Windsor Here is the Duke and Duchess of Windsor as the famous couple appeared at Cap D’Antibes, French resort, where they spent a holiday from social activities at their recently acquired chateau.
Britain no end of grief. Most alarming, however, is the situation in Palestine where Jews and Arabs are constantly clashing and engaged in a-bitter struggle for control and ownership of the land. Virtual martial law prevails in this British mandate which may be divided into halves and apportioned between the two groups to keep their racial feud from spreading.
■ERSONALS i! Mrs. Donald DilDle, daughter . Marjorie and son. Donny Dean, are I visiting over the week-end with .; Mrs. Dibble’s sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred King. Mrs. Anna Houser and Charles r Straw are visiting at the Fred King I residence over the week-end. i Miss Juanita Noll of this city and ! Miss Frieda Myers of Berne were I Friday visitor in Fort Wayne. : Miss Evelyn Lobsiger is spend- ■ ing Easter and the week-end with ’ Mr. and Mrs. Sam Dellinger in Willshire. Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Archbold of ' Coldwater, Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. Phil Byron of Peru will spend Easter and the week-end at the home ' ’ of Dr. and Mrs. Roy Archbold. Mr. and Mrs. George Ulmer of Lexington, Ky„ are visiting here. Mrs. Ulmer was formerly Miss Mol- . lie Forbing and Mr. Ulmer served . several years as foreman in the . Daily Democrat office. Diok Boch is home from Columbia City for a few days. i Norbert and Miss Florence Holt- ; house of Indianapolis are here for * Easter. .
« ♦ Adams County Memorial Hospital ♦ ♦' i Admitted Friday; John Brite, 515 i East Washington St. Fort Wayne. Dismissed Friday: Ivan Aiken,* route 6; Mrs. Homer Aspy and daughter Thomasine Marie, 227 South 4th st. Dismissed Saturday: Mrs. Clarence Brunnegraf, 703 Elm st. Dismissed Saturday: Mrs. Clarence Brunnegraf, 703 Elm st. ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Christ Bohnke of j route 3 are the parents of a baby |
the SceneiX A
By HARRISON CARROLA. Copyright, 1938 King Features Syndicate, Ine. HOLLYWOOD—Lights! Camera! Action! ' Murder is a familiar topic in the movies but try and arrive on a sound stage at the exact moment the crime is being S committed for the cameras. This week, on a hot tip, I dash over to the Wanger studio to see guns blaze in the picture, “Algiers". The camera is pushed up close to a small set Charles Boyer representing a < ro o m m the Casbah, or native quarter. A card game is in progress on the floor. One of the players is Charles Boyer, who portrays Pepe Le Moko, a French crook who has taken refuge in the lawless area. Other players are Alan Hale, Gene Lockhart and Stanley Fields. Lockhart is a police informer who has betrayed one of the band. He is sweating under a subtle third degree. To make sure that he sweats properly, Director John Cromwell has a prop-man spray his face with oil. In the picture the scene will last two minutes, the informer will die at the end of it. Cromwell already has spent a day and a half photographing these two minutes. It is 11 o’clock when 1 reach the set. At noon the third degree is still on. I ask Boyer when the actual shooting will take place. He shrugs. "Oh, about five o’clock this afternoon,” he says. “Maybe four. Who knows?” A busy columnist has no time for such leisurely murders. So, once again, I go away without seeing the shot fired. On the way out of the stage, I meet Hedy Lamarr, who appeared in the sensational "Ecstasy”. Miss Lamarr has been under contract to M. G. M. for months, but "Algiers” will be her first Hollywood picture. “I made two pictures before ’Ecstasy’,” she says, "then I worked on the stage. Then I married and now I am here. . . . That
MONROE NEWS I Mrs. Pearl Smith of Fort Wayne spent the week-end with Mrs. Sherman Essex. Miss Louise Musche of Elkhart .spent the week-end with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Bueche.! Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Johneon and j Mr. and Mrs. Rdbert Anderson, Fort, Wayne visited Mr. and Mrs. tA. E. Everhart Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hendricks of Kalamazoo, Michigan, are spending the week with their parents, Mr. I and Mrs. Jim A. Hendricks and Mr. and Mrs. J. N. ifturkhead Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hahnert of; Urbana, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smith of Newcastle nd Mr. and Mrs. Ralph ’ Row of Decatur were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hahnert Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ehream of ; Fort Wayne visited Mr. Ehrsam’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Ehr- 1 sam Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Shirk of Fort Wayne visited relatives in Monroe Saturday evening. Ruth Bahner spent the week-end at Fort Wayne, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Fred Smith. Mr. and Mrs. John Crist spent Sunday at Fort Wayne, the guests of their daughter, Mrs. Hubert Meyers and family. Mr. and Mrs. Rolla Longenberger of Fort Wayne visited Mr. Longen-1 Iberger’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Longenberger Sunday. E. J. Fricke and daughter Mabel of Indianapolis, spent the week-end with Mrs. Fricke and family. o JUNIOR COLLEGE OFFERS COURSE IN MATRIMONY iSacramento. Cal. —(UP)--Sacra-mento Junior College, impressed by a survey revealing 85 per cent of its girl etudents are married within five years after graduation, has established a course in matrimony I and homemaking. A department of home economics will conduct the courses of instruc-
tion caluculated to make the course of true love run more smoothly. One hundred forty girls have registered thus far, 35 of whom selected homemaking as a major. No boys j have designed to enroll, however. Training in child developement will be emphasized, with the co-op-t ration of two local day nurseries, girl, born at 5:25 o'clock Friday evening. The baby weighed eight and one-half pounds and has been named Lorene Ellen. Maxine Lucile is the name of the daughter born to Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Cook Saturday evening, April 9at nine thirty o'clock. This is the third child in the family.
sums it up quickly, American tempo.” At least, there’s nothing leisurely about Hedy Lamarr. On a darkened Paramount sound stage, we proceed cautiously towards the lights where the “Sing You Sinners” company is working. “Quiet!” calls the voice of an assistant. We stop lest a creaking board spoil a take. Expecting to hear dialogue, or perhaps Bing Crosby crooning a popular song, we hear instead a trio of voices raised in the old hymn, "Shall We Gather at the , River?” Moving up after the take, we discover it is Crosby, Fred Mac Murray and a boy actor, Donald O’Connor. They are singing to a congregation in a small country church. This is one of the early scenes in the picture, Director Wesley Ruggles explains. Later on Crosby croons the familiar type of numbers. But this isn’t the first time he lias sung to a religious congregation. As a boy he was a member of the choir of the St. Aloysieus church in Spokane. Quite different, the music to be heard on the "Alexander’s Ragtime Band” set at the Fox Western avenue studio. Tyrone Power is leading what is supposed to be the first swing band concert at Car-
negie hall In New York City. The orchestra is playing a modern swing arrangement of the early Irving Berlin hit, "Having a Heat Wave”. Power has a real orchestra leader out front to cue and criticize him on the use of the baton, But he
> Jl Tyrone Power
has become surprisingly adept in the art. Director Henry King, Ah’red Newman, in charge of the studio’s recording orchestra, both will tell you this. After the scene, we compliment Tyrone on his skill. “Yeah,” he says, "but what am 1 going to do when the picture gets out? I mean, when I’m in a night club some time and they ask me to get up and lead the orchestra."
■ where students will observe child | behavor and learn to cope with the 1 i problems of juvenile education and | care. Students also will make dally supervlaed shopping tours from which 11 hey will be expected to learn eco-, nomlcal food buying. Present plans call for adult | classes by fall. Not minimizing the romantic aspects, college authorities have; ' pointed out the course also offers other than the domesi tic experience. The material offered ■ is applicable in business, particularliy dietetics, Institutional management and writing for women’s pulbli-' j cations. o Art Students Work in Snow Oberlin. 0.. —(UP) —Arrival of a 1 heavy snow has stimulated activity | in sculpturing on the Oberlin Col- ■ lege campus. Students in art classes and dormitory groups have entered into informal competition in shaping snow figures. o Sailors Go To School Cleveland. —(U.R>—"Sailing before
It Has Been My Desire And Endeavor To Serve You In The Mayor’s Office In alt imperfect world with ordinary humans trying to run it, we will never reach the state of perfection. Life isn’t designed that way. To try to do our best is the most that can be expected. In the mayor’s office I have tried sincerely to be of service to you and by promoting the general good and welfare of the community, indirectly bring beneficial results to all. Decatur’s low tax levy and still lower electric rates are of direct benefit to you. I not only believe in the spirit of “Live and Let Live,” but have a heartfelt feeling that it is our duty to, “Live and Help Live.” The mayor’s office cannot bring perfect conditions, because our own human limitations prevent that. It can help in many ways in building a live and progressive town, by cooperating with the laboring man, the employe and industry in general. This I have done and shall continue to do. Ask for Through the promotion of public works, Democrat building of schools, “Having your house in ballot order,” so that trade and commerce can go on, is one avenue open. This has been done in Mv number m - v three year’s in the office. I have encouraged and helped in creating employment on wherever possible and believe that public procitv ballot grams should be carried on for the benefit of ’ is a"' a _ What is it that you want Decatur to do 1 3 through the mayor's office? Don’t we all want to work together in building the better place in which to live? Arthur R. Holthouse Democratic candidate for Mayor Pol. advt.
GIBBS BOARDTILE for Decorative, Permanent Walls ” l n scores of new model homes; in hundreds of : • moderate-priced and finer i'l ' a' l ‘iit'H" houses; in offices and stores If Jrw I ri J ' FRy — O3O b e this most i ' r* modern, durable and sup Ipremely beautiful material n I t° r wa " s ceilings. Architects specify it bey|f - x , nent, and meets every re•".'.•tfS quirement for color and de- ; sign. Surprisingly low for installed cost, it is most economical in its lifetime service. The fine-textured, lustrous surface will not chip or crack. Easily cleaned, and proof against water or grease. Modernistic designs; replicas of choice marble and wood; plain or tiled effects. We'll help you plan—render estimates—all without obligation. A booklet for the asking. Cash Coal & Supply Phone 32 R. A. Stuckey
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! the mast" no longer la an adventure for youth. It's an education. 1 The Lake Carriers association’s navigation school conducted during the winter in Cleveland hud 63 students enrolled. Twenty had had at least some college educa--1 tlon. o "Prune Bowl” Introduced San Jose, Cal.—t(U.R>—The Chamber of Commerce has adopted a designaion with which it hopes to I make the surrounding region im- ■ mortal. "It is “The Prune Bowl i of the World.” O Letter Lost 3 Years Stamford. Tex. (U.R) — Harold i Fitzgerald received a letter three years after it was mailed at Abilene, 50 miles away. The letter was mailed in Abilene when Fitzgerald was a resident there. It had been misplaced and never left the postI office until It was forwarded to Fitzgerald here eight hours before j he received it. Trnrte In A Town —
