Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 128, Decatur, Adams County, 31 May 1938 — Page 3

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T Os GUE STS I _*»»I^^B e rTAINED HERE ' ll s " " luy r '"' i 11 ■""' n ' Ma r . ••> M"Ui.". HI . -' >' B ix'. I .Hid '' ' ' ■«*' , ' hl Mi< I ' , ” , ‘ >n< " » .i X |.|. hfUsUdg.-:- ■ rtlldi ■'"■■ l{illV ' l,lrki '‘ xi — fho • ■ J , . 'tonic i. !■■ p Jesse Edgell. |t , ..f Mrs. Kenneth i. pictures. B rl< entertained FriKqli:.: for her sister. Mrs. of Akron. Ohio. Othin. in Mi'”. Albert . Mi. i'-'st Chicago. ■ ■(S.TOV KITSON ‘iC.fKs IURPRISE PARTY ih K ■ XX ,-•.- husband on K,-,. W1 : bis birthday miniSattird.iv evening. Cards S 'Kree|jC"i " nil at ,he close of Kg.i«s Mrs Kitson assisted by

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Behind the Scenery!

■ls iiakrison < akkoi.i. ' , Copyright, 1938 >. 15 ■ Bp* Features Syndicate, Inc. — A persistent ri^fr 1101, Annabella will give

up her Hollywood career and return to Europe where she is a top ranking star. Apparently, this is no more true than is the case of her countrywoman, Simone Simon, for the French actress, currently ap- . pearing in ‘‘S u e z”, i s taking a three-

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■Brlease on a Bel Air home ami 5, brother, Pierre, in a school this fall. ' however, that Annato visit France ami, to do a picture there beKsteho return to Hollywood. sbe was kidding but, at Conga the other night, introduced Arrange, in this manner: know my tiance, don't Ithing can happen here. >ca! department store has maturing a display of ‘‘Robin | costumes. Part of the show ] ife-sized wax figure of Errol other day, a pretty girl and ographer appeared on the The girl linked her arm in • the Flynn image and the rapher snapped several picstore employes figured Bg'.f“ r w ere from the Warner KL , s studio. But they weren't. was a Davenport, la., looking for a new way to the movies. The payoff when the photographer, a good thing, began •tuning customers in the offering to take souvenir 1 with the dummy. to the photo services. The nd dancing in M. G. M.’s n the Stars”, is a brother and Bubble Dancer Sally ' eyebrows lifted here when , heme and David Niven left tout the time that Merle was due to arrive. !®.'f as supposed to have ted Niven in Merle’s affec- ' °nly for a while though. 'alk S » been free -tancing. ' s z \ o mind a description ./< lhe U be the first to *t, given to me by a

CLUB CALENDAR —— Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Penny Macy Phones 1000 — tQfil Tuesday Kirkland Home Economic!) Cluh ‘ Kirkland High School, 1 p. m. Tri Kappa Business Meeting, I Elks Home, 8 p. m. Klrkalnd Ladles’ Club, Kirkland 1 High School, 7 p. nt. I Adams County Music Chorus, Monroe School House, 1:30 p. m. Wednesday Evangelical W. M. S„ Church' , Parlors, 2 p. m. Happy-Go-Lucky 4-H Club, Neva Lou Crownover, postponed one , weefx. ' Salem M. E. Ladies’ Aid, Mrs. I Dave Habegger, 1:30 ip. m. Thursday North St. Mary’s 4-H Chib, Bobo School House, 1:30 p. m. Homestead Home Economics | Club, Mrs. A. C. Hileman, 7:30 p. m. Pinochle Club and Hsvbands, Mrs. Jesse Edgell, 7:30 p. in. Friday Happy Home Makers Club, Mrs. Kenneth Parrish. 1:30 p.nt. Pinochle Club Regular Meeting | Mrs. Jesse Edgell, 7:30 p. m. Mrs, Jerome Ddßolt, served lovely, i refreshments. Guests included Messieurs and ' Mesdames Edward Deßolt, Earnest Lake. Jerome Deßolt, Jesse Daniels and John Deßolt. The ladies' aid society of the Saltern M. E. church will meet at the home of Mrs. Dave Habegger Wednesday afternoon at one-thiity o’clock. Quliitng will occupy the time and the ladies are requested to bring their thimbles. The Happy-Go-Lucky 4-H club meeting which was to have been held at the home of Neva Lou Crownover Wednesday afternoon has been postponed one week. h The W. M. S. of the Evangelical church will meet Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock instead of , Thursday 'because of the union services to be held at the Presbyterian , I church Thursday afternoon.

puzzled Hollywood beauty. ‘‘l guess it must be English reserve,” she said. “He is the kind of a fellow whom you go out with every night for a week an,d then, when he calls on the phone to ask for another date, you have to begin the acquaintance all over again.” Looking for a new parlor game ? Anita Louise introduced one at a party the other evening. She calls it “Balloon Marathon". You divide your guests into two | sides and give each side 100 toy 1 balloons. Two contestants are then matched and they blow into the balloons. As soon as one pops, another contestant steps in. This keeps on until one side uses up all its balloons. You can speed it up by matching | more people at a time, but half the fun is in watching and I heckling. Instead of waiting until June, j Caroline Fisher and Rodion Rathbone decided to be married right

away. The ceremony was to be held at the Rathbone home. ...Jeanette MacDonald I s busy making color tests, so it looks as if “S w e ethearts" may get its budget upped. . . . Joe Lewis’ final night at the Trocadero won him an ovation.

Jeanette MacDonald

. . . And after he had worked until 6 a. m. that morning entertaining the Zanuck farewell party. . . . There was a great hand for Bill Robinson, too, when he announced he was 60 years old. . . . Bert Frohman. who came over from the Club 17 to help give Lewis a sendoff, was another who stirred the celebs to a fury of handclapping. . . . Twosomes around the town: At the Troc, Lona Andre and Bill Faye, Simone Simon and Greg Bautzer, Shirley Ross and Ken Dolan; at the Lamaze, Sonja Henie and Richard Greene. . . . Mickey Rooney gave the Saturday night crowd at the Cocoanut Grove a thrill by playing the drums in Freddy Martin’s band. . . . And, Sunday night, Bing Crosby did a couple of numbers for the stay-up-laters at the House of Murphy. . . . Sunday night also saw the opening of the Cubano room at the Hawaiian Paradise, where you now can dance to rumba music in one room and to Hawaiian in another. .. . Bob Taylor sprained his thumb doing those fight scenes for "The Crowd Roars”. ... And Erman Pessis just divorced by Renee Torres has been showing the town to Fredrika Whiting, Wisconsin heiress.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 31, 1938.

I haugkbinkley WEDDING SUNDAY Mise Betty Haugk daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Haugk of Pen- , dleton. became the bride of Carl I Binkley, son of Walter Binkley, of Pendleton, at a colorful wedding performed Sunday afternoon at 3:30 | o clock In the Zion Lutheran church |at Decatur. Rev. Paul Schultz pastor, read the single ring service in ! the presence of relatives and | Iriends. The ceremony was solem- ' nlzed before tin altar banked with! palms and gladioluses and a background of two-seven branch candelabra lighted with Cathedral candles. Prior to the ceremony, Mrs. Carrie Haubold organist, played a fiti teen-minute program of bridal airs which included “Silversan" and i ; "Lohengrin's Wedding March” for | the entrance of the bridal party. Darwin Leltz, vocalist, sang “At Dawning” and "Through the Years”.' Mendelssohn's Wedding March was played for the recessional. The bride wore for her wedding attire, a white Alcelon lace and silk | net gow n fashioned with a Queen Ann collar and a basque waist of the lace buttoned down the back , with tiny pearl buttons. Her double i tiered net skirt fell into a four-yard , 'rain. With her gow n she wore a ; shirred net Queen Ann cap in three I tiers in hip-length. She carried Cal- ■ la lilies and fever fern. Miss Nora Moore, of Pendleton, maid-of-honor, wore a pastel blue organdy gown designed with a basque waist, tucked sleeves with tiny li'.ue ribbon bows down the front I of the bodice. Corresponding tucka I formed the hemline of the full skirt. Her blue organdy open-crown picture hat was tied with streamers in moire. She wore white lace mits; and carried a colonial 'bouquet of pastel garden flowers. Miss Mary Catharine Binkley, of! Pendleton, Miss Marybelle Holloway, of Anderson, and Miss Jane' Smith, of Indianapolis, were brides-; maids and wore gowns in periwinkle, green and yellow in pastel, shades fashioned like the maid-of-honor's. They carried colonial bouquets and wore organdy picture hats like Miss Moore’s. Robert L. Haugk, of Pendleton, brother of the 'bride, and Vilas j Whittwer, of Berne, attended the, | groom. Frederick Haugk, of Ander- | son, cousin of the bride, and Gerald 1 Haugfk, of Pendleton, another broth-1 er of the bride, were ushers Following the ceremony a reception for thirty five guests was held ! at the home of the bride's grand- ■ mother, Mrs. Louise Haugk Later the couple left on a wedd- 1 Ing trip. The bride traveled in a new beige wool costume suit with | a lace yoke and a hip-length coat j

"you SHOULD SEE WHAT I SAW WHERE CAMELS ARE MADE ~C jM IBP *' * -wit * f w p' 1 nW m • BHiJ f >. ML-aic r 9 l mi ii ■MB > .afewfci AMERICA’S LAUGH KING, Eddie Cantor, has his serious II moments too. His uproarious “Cantor’s Camel Caravan” broadcasts WBL. A m I impressed! Every- get so much fun out of smokiny them than any other cigarette. Yes fovorv Monday night-Columbia Network) command respect because of body looks so happy-so Camels. Wouldn’t you like to work -that’s everybodys job at Camels, (every Monday nignt voiuniuiax , , , . „„„ • £■ ao if+ Prmpf l enthusiastic' You’d think each one here? Nobody’s been laid off by Imagine a place like this Camel his sincerity in his work. And Eddies truly sincere in his self-termed fth "f 3 000 R eyno i dswO rkers owned Camels in 12 years. When that old plant. They had social security here iob of “Camel Radio Salesman.” Says salesman Cantor, “Everything isn t the ’ t And say> thousan ds of whistle blows, all the officials in this years ago. When you’re sick, you . miwh tn know about a cigarette like Camel.” Eddie took a trip them are owners—they’ve got. Camel place are right on the job too. And get a nice healthy check each week, to Wta sL-SaZhome o? CamS Xareto. Here is what ho saw- .U.U And .b.y „.n y I» ... .h.y h... nniy J .b-n,.!.,„ g Kyno d...»pr.te.u4 Q I- Have a Camel! See for yourself why It : there’s more real pleasure-more out-and- ■ t f out enjoyment-in Camel’s matchless I idfl blend of finer, more expensive tobaccos i uljL -Turkish and Domestic. if J "pMMSi yl Scewhy tobacco planters, men win. j M x ifc: I SMIm 1 SI’OW and A’»o»’tobacco, make Hk > i IWwl Cigarette. You'll / C s «iy, ‘> s millions of smokers do, / llllbM•' “Camels at/rcc with me.” Wh cn you 80 s-o-o-d. smells so g-o-o-d. J|fei watching those Camel is America s largest- 1 ' by insurance. When you y » V ou’ro smoking a Camel. costlier Camel tobaccos go- aollino - rifrarette f /z,.. ft Iff' A/ reach retirement under the yo Jre smoking some of those finer, costlier ing into finished cigarettes-millions and b 1 ‘ Z Rey no Ms p !an, tlhe comp any se d y thjg biui?ns of them ‘There s a lot of Pleasure check each month for the rest , y k(?r! tobacco ‘just right,’ the way you like it? coming out of those machines, I said to Copyright, 1938. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Wlnaton-Salem, N. C. I Don’t miss Cantor’s Camel Caravan Monday nights F folks, in the picture above. And there• s a P ant Ab es mes, « ey « ct " a y MORE PLEASURE FOR MORE See radio listing in your local paper for time. rSOPLS!'” i

Itrmmed with blue fox sleeves. Her accessories were In navy blue. After the trip Mr. and Mrs. Binkley will return to Anderson for residence at 3123 McKinley street. The bride hi prominent In Anderson and Pendleton society. Mr. Binkley Is a salesman with the D. B. Cole Company at Pendleton. MAY BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION HELD A birthday party wan held Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Burke, north of Decatur, honoring a number of people whose birthday anniversaries occur this month. The honored guests included Mrs. Albert ffltrke, Mrs. George Beholderer, Mrs. Jesse Daniele, Verlln. j Burke, Roger Andrews, Arthur Sch-I elderer, Ruth McConnell, Mariani Burke and Bonnie Lou Burke. Games, music and visiting were I enjoyed. Marion and Jesse Hunke entertained with accordian and guitar music. A delicious cafeterian supper was served at seven o’clock. Flowers and birthday caikes decorated and serving table. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Daniels and daughters Fran-, ces and Grace, Mr. and Mrs. Ruf-! ford Brodbeck and children Eugene.' Wayne and Marcus, Mr. and Mrs.; Harold Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Roger, Andrews and daughter Pattie Joe,; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Burke, Van Olen ! Burke, Ruth McConnell, Marian, Burke, Harlow Miller, Arthur Sch-| eiderer, Faye Martin, Mr. and Mrs. George Scheiderer, Mr. and Mrs.' I Albert Burke and daughters Rosetta, Catherine and Bonnie Lou. The Eveready Sunday School c’ass will meet Thursday evening as seven-thirty o'clock at th? home j of Mrs. Franik Crist. Miss Edna Lower, teacher in the Warsaw schools, visited here over the week-end. Mrs. Jennie Archbold, of Fort Wayne, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Archbold of Shaker Heights, Cleve- ! land, Ohio visited here over Sunday. Mrs. Delia Walters and Mrs. Harriet Wertzberger of Marion, were ! Memorial day visitors here. Miss Lettie Kintz of Toledo visit--1 ed with Decatur friends over DecorI attou day. Mr. and Mrs. Charlee Meyers of ; Niles, Michigan and Mrs. Fred Bell, ! Miami, Fla., visited with Mr. and Mrs. French Quinn over the holiday. | Miss Margaret Vesey and Mrs. | Catherine Vesey Kampe of Fort

Wayne were here because of the 111nese of their aunt, Mrs. Phillip Obenauer. Mrs. Dick Miller and the Misses Nita Miller. Marie Weaverand Marjory Carrol of Indianapolis enjoyed the week-end in Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. James Edwards of Leipsic, Ohio have visited hero the past several days. Mr. and Mrs. Vane Thompson of Fort Wayne motored to Decatur Sunday for a short visit. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Swaim and daughters of Bluffton were among the Memorial day visitors in Decatur. Nine Women of the Presbyterian church have completed the tusk of; cleaning the chtlrch and it presents | la fine appearance. Miss Corolene Townsend and ( Tom Alwein visited in Shelby, Ohio j ever Sunday. Newton Maddox of Fort Wayne spent Sunday with hie brother, Harry Maddox here. Newt Is secre-: tary of the Y. M. C. A. at Fort Wayne. Fred King was among these who I attended the thrilling 500 mile auto-: mobile race at Indianapolis. I Mrs. Wesley Hoffman and Mrs. i Ore n E. Smith, returned to their 'home at Indianapolis yesterday af- ' ter a visit here. | Dick Heller Jr., of Indianapolis, who is ill with tonsolitis la much ( improved. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Colter of I I Chicago stopped in Decatur for a | several hours’ visit with friends Tuesday morning enroute from; Kendallville to their home. They visited in Kendallville with Mr. Col-1 ter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. II.! Colter. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bell and , Mrs. I. "W. Macy were the guests, of Mr. and Mrs. Dick D. Heller ini Indianapolis over the week-end. > Mr. and Mrs. Shorty Lee motored to Bluffton Monday evening. Miss Dorothy Durtkin of East Chi, cago spent the week-end in Deca-i tur. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McAdams and Mrs. Maude Acker of Fort I Wayne were Sunday evening supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sant Adkerl of this city. Harold Smilack of Dunkirk, was a visitor in the city Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Shoemaker of Bryant visited here Saturday. Ara Huber of Saratoga wae a business visitor in Decatur Saturday. Mrs. B. W. Shraluka of Fort Wayne visited with relatives in Decatur over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Parrish and daughter of Jackson, Michigan, visited with relatives over the holiday. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Tricker of

Sturgis, Michigan, visited with Mr.| and Mrs. E. E. Tricker, the former's parents, over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Franik Young and daughter, Betty Jean of Harrisville, Pa., visited with friends and relatives over the holiday. Mrs. Margaret Elzey and granddaughter, Elizabeth Ann, visited in Celina, Ohio Saturday, The Mieses Jeanette Christen, Myrtle Walters and Margaret Rumschlag spent Decoration Day at the Shades and Turkey Run. The Misses Betty Tricker, Gladys ’ i Doan, June Linn and Madeline Spahr visited In Fort Wayne Mon-1 day. Edwin Kaufman and Mi.is FlorI ence Braun attended the auto races I in Winchester Sunday. Mis«t Eleanor Reppert and Mrs. Stump visited in Vera Cruz Mon(day. j Mrs. George Thompson of Pitts- | burg, Pa.. Mr. ami Mrs. George | Bakewell and children, Doris. Phyllis, Ruth and Harry of Aliquippa., I Pa., Glenna Lee Brown and Don i Minard of Bourbon, Indiana, spent I Memorial Day with Rev. ami Mrs. i Harry W. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Losier Eckrote and 'Miss Marcella Scherry spent the week-end in Akron and Cleveland,! Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. James Beatty and son Jinuuy of Indianapolis are l spending several days in Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Butler of DeI catur and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mal lott and daughter Doris Jean of Fort Wayne enjoyed Decoration ‘ Day on the beach at Michigan City.. ] Mrs. W. L. Clew and Mist Mar-' | garet Fiddle of Des Plaines, Illinois ■ visited over the holiday with Mr. 'and Mrs. Eugene Runyon of this city. Mrs. Clew is a sister of Mrs. ' Runyon. { Mis« Georgia Foughty, who lias j been teaching In the LaGrange l schools, is spending a week’s vacaI tion with her parents here before ■ returning to summer school. Miss Ruth Foughty returned to- ' day to her work at Vogue beauty j shop in Huntington after epending | the holiday with her parents. Miss Hattie Kern of Fort Wayne I was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. I Robert Garard over Decoration Day. Clarence Lewton, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lewton of Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Funk and daughter of Mishawaka, and Mrs. Mary Fox of Fort Wayne, were visitors over the weekend at the home of their father, Amos Lewton, in Root township. Carl Wilhelm, well known local young man, who recently graduated from the state school for the 1 deaf and dumb, is visiting here 1 with his parents mt vacation from

Freed But Not Free! I ■ K ; I j UaL * j j wr j ■■TMaXSMMKnc *•< •4 WWw' ’-Jw :• «ni Sixteen-year-old Donald Carroll, ; Jr., is pictured with a deputy sheriff after a jury acquitted him by “reason of insanity” of the murder of I his 18-year-old sweetheart, Charlotte Matthiesen, in New York. The boy was ordered held for an examination to determine his present mental status. his duties at an Angola shoe shop. ' Carl, son of Mr. and Mrs. John j Wilhelm, learned the shoe cobbling trade at the school and has , been progressing rapidly at his work in Angola despite his handicap. He hopes sometime to own a shoe shop of his own, he says. Burns Prove Fatal To Fort Wayne Railroader Van Wert, 0., May 31.—(U.R> Morris E. Ferguson, 42, of Fort Wayne, Ind., fireman on a Pennsylvania railroad train which collided with a large truck near here last Thursday, died in the hospital here at 9:30 p. m. Monday of; burns received in the accident. ' Bert Young. Fort Wayne, the train's engineer, also was burned fatally. One Man Is Killed As Car Overturns Monticello, Ind., May 31.—|(U.R) —Lotus Novak, 31, of Philadelphia, Pa., was killd instantly yesterday when the automobile he was driving overturned on a curve two miles east of here. The car was

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’one of 16 in a curavnif being driven from Detroit, Mich., to Oklahoma City, Okla. — o - Give Awards For Best Criticisms Notre Dame, Ind., May 31. jHI.R) University of Notre Dutne students sending the best letters of correction or coTnmendatlwn to newspaper editors will receive awards from the unlverilty, it was announced today. Constructive criticism of the daily press is being emphasized by the university. Students have been asked to read their newspapers I with a critical eye, to be alert in detecting misleading or Incomplete newspaper items and to bo appreciative of good editorials. o Ohio Newlyweds 71 Youngstown, (). r <U.R> After knowing each other for GO years and living as neighbors for 28 years, Mrs. Mary E. Tibbs mid PetI er J. Everly, both 71, were mari Wnt. , you have a chance to do it now. Come in and ask about National Car Owner Economy Test—now going on. Any owner of any make of car is eligible. And three brand new Hudson 112 Broughams will be given away each u eek as prizes, just for making an interesting test and writing down what you find out. Complete details at P. Kirsch & Son, Cor. First & Monroe Sts., or any Hudson dealer's showroom. Remember, we're ready to offer you a swell deal on your old car in trade, too—then if you should win a new one we'll allow its full value.