Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 140, Decatur, Adams County, 14 June 1938 — Page 3

aXBDCIETY

■ ' WatriNC school ** ■J.M.f Mr an.! Mn Ray nHMjW ,;a-< entertained the at a luncheon. of Root town- . ~W Vi...’ a' the Monmouth llfl' .. •my .lf'*TU....M day meeting at the William Shoaf Thure- ' ni orn!'*M - urg°d to I class of the Union school will meet at „'M- and Mrs Forest r-niay evening at Tie ladies of the H, their fathers are urged to be ipreÜbixler UnG occurs Lsdora Irene Baker, daughter an d Mre. Frank Baker of Lrth Bth street became the p Gerald Bixler, son of Mr. [in. Ell Bixler of Monroe. L marriage was solemnized 1 Ur evening at eleven o’clock [p, b. parsonage in this city, iter. James A. Weber read the ring rites. * k Bernita Lytle played during ' (Binony and Mrs. Weber sang promise Me” and “Sweetest r Mr. and Mrs. Howard BurMed the couple. I bride wore a navy blue chlfsit trimmed in dusty pink, tembers of the immediate fai attended. Out of town guests

■IEAVIATION CAPS.'GROCERi

Efithind the kernel ■HOLLYWOOD'^

*■*? HARRISON CARROLL B • Copyright, 1938 Features Syndicate, Inc. ■BOLLYWOOD—Norma Shearjflk Marie Antoinette” runs so

.uutciic i uiia aw Norma Shearer

i- m.r, ,t. s there an interBpior, even at sneak preThe first I reBjll. although Bht may have B® others. ■ ‘fee picture B» taken, ■lidst great B|«recy, to BA®* where B* audience is

■uuiCULC IS Bjj* up largely of students from B% colleges. These young ■*Pl« are required to check back ■ the dormitories at 10:30 and BjHy do. no matter what the picBe but there were no walkouts Antoinette”. ■ The cards were enthusiastic and B G ' M. thinks it has a smash hit BAs you know, Miss Shearer is B®otined at the finish of this However, Director W. S. Bj> Dyke has spared audiences the Browing sight of the queen with B nead on the block. You see Bta a tumbril, riding to her BJfe, and then you see the upper B* of the guillotine, the knife latest ribbing duel is between I®*’* Gable and Walter Pidgeon E™* started it by changing I ‘ws name to Clay Pidgeon. ■ hound two went to Pidgeon. It |*w on the seventh, or woolen, anL*"“? of Gable's marriage (the I and his wife are separated, I. *■»•>. so Pidgeon showed up “Too Hot to Handle” set Jr*? an elaborately wrapped suit of red woolen under- * n?i» Chapln Sets a giggle out ij* Hem that Buddy Westmore, wtk Kaye's ex, is now going Gwen Kenyon. w f°me boy, that Westmore," he j"?*' “from wide mouthed to the Gwen Kenyon.” „?J ncan Renaldo, they say, may >«„ T° a real comeback in S .Wwn of the North”. J 8 tlm e he got a break. The oi ili occupies The unusual position Unit i n * a >egal resident of the te d States, though a man withto » country. He doesn't know of of even the nationality to. Parents. He remembers Ben i Wlt * l ®everal different fami- ® Rumania, Bessarabia and 7'that is all. Mter the “Trader Horn” expedi--1830, Renaide served 19

CLUB CALENDAR - Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy •bone* 1000 — ioei Tuesday Loyal Dorcass Class, Evangelical , Church, 7:30 p. m . Mothers’ Tea, M. E. Church, 1:30 | p. m. Civic Section, Library Rest Room 7 P m. W. C. T. U. Flower Mission Day I Meeting. United Brethren Church, I 2 p. m. Trl Kappa Business Meeting, 1 Mayor's Court Room, 8 p. ni. Mother's Study Club, Library Auditorium, 2:30 p. m. Rebekah lodge, I. O. O. F. Hall, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Reformed Ladies’ Aid Society, ! Church Parlors, 2:30 p. m. j Busy Finger 4-H club, Miss I Thelma Myers. Business and Profeselona! Women's Club, Rice Hotel, 6:30 p. m. Zion Lutheran Missionary Society, Mre. Arthur Hall, 2 p. m. Root Township Merry Maids, Monmouth School, 1:30 p. in. Thursday United Brethren D. Y. B. Class. Mrs. Manley Foreman, 7:30 p. m. M. E. Wesley Class, Hamburger i j Fry, Hanna-Nuttman Park, 6:30 1 | p. m. | Phoebe Bible Clase, Zion Reformed Church, 7:30 p. m„ postponed one week. Presbyterian Ladies’ Aid Society, jMrs. J. L. Kocher, 2:30 p. m. I Progressive Workers Class, Mrs. Marie Deißolt, 7:30 p. m. Woman's Foreign Missionary Society, Mre. C. L. Walters, 2 p. m. St. Luke's Ladies’ Aid Society, Mrs. William Shoaf, All Day Meet-) ing. Friday Union Chapel C. C. C. Clase, Mr.. and Mrs. Forest Walters, 7.30 p. m. included Mrs. F. A. Yost of South Bend and Otis Baker of Indianapo- j 11s. After a short wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Bixler will be al home In : Wabash. 1 1 The Weeley class of the Metho-

months on McNeil’s island on an immigration charge. Loyal Wends were responsible for a presidential pardon and for permission to live in the United States, where he becomes a full-fledged citizen in 1941. Judy Garland’s condition Is so good that she is home from the hospital. Her biggest thrill there I was a wheel chair visit to the mai ternity ward to see her niece and namesake, Judy Gayle Sherwood, ■ new born daughter of her sister But for the aid of Spencer Tracy, 1 Mrs. Alice Claypool Vanderbilt, mother of Alfred Vanderbilt, would | have missed her train connection When the Matsonia docked the other day. She lost her baggage checks and was caught in a crush of Honolulu Shriners arriving for the convention here. Tracy unearthed the checks, installed the society matron in his car and whisked her to the station just in time to catch the train. Understand Charles Bickford | was knocked off a 30-foot cliff in a fight with Wayne Morris for “Valley of the Giants”. He fell into the river and was pulled out by Dan Turner, the stunt man. It must be true that red headed Dick Foran is through with west- | erns, for he Is selling the horse in his stables. . . . June 20 is th

|j| » Rk < Clara Bow

day the Clara Bow baby is expected. . ■ • Geraldine Spreckels and Ivan Lebedeff have resumed. They were at the Trocadero. . . And that was Melba Marshall with new--Iy.div o r c ed George Barnes at the opening of Frank Sebas-

Frank Hanofer vvell-know film colony night-User proprietor of « ip P . Don ••Frank's on th t £ ar j igle> the Terry “nd M affe ctionate canary, stagea m the farewell before she left for opera season in St. caDed at the st ay-up-laters who gaped ck _ the Wh i te F nfn Drew Paramount ings of EUen Dreu, the stock be * uty ' tM emselves this fall. combination the t he nude Hollywood eslg ' on the wane shades in hose * " be and that b ack staking. very much the thin*.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1938.

j dlst Episcopal church will hold a hamburger fry at the Hanna-Nutt-man park Thursday evening at six I thirty o clock. | Members of the ladles' add society , th l e M ' E - c hurch will entertain ■or the new members of the church aml 'heir families Wednesday evenal tt:lr ’ o'clock. A good program has been arranged and all members of the church are urged to come and enjoy the pot luck supper and i Program. I The D. Y. B. clues of the United Brethren Sunday school will meet with Mrs. Manley Foreman of West Monroe street Thursday evening at ":30 o’clock, Mr*. William Pennington and Mrs. Homer Bitttier will be the assisting hostesses. Members of the Tri Kappa sorority are requested to meet In the mayor’s court room In the city hall this evening at 8 o’clock. EPersonakl Mrs. Joe Lose, who for more than i five months has been confined Indoors as the result of a broken leg, could not resist the lure of “Test Pilot." Last night, ehe was moved I through the aid of a wheelchair to i the Adams theater, where she view-1 I ed her first movie since Jan. 11, the day of her accident. Jay Alton and Darwin Lictz left , Decatur early this morning on a 250-mile bicycle trip. They will visit with the former’s uncle. Jay Markel at Dayton, Ohio and with friends at Middletown. They will return to Decatur the last of this week. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Krick spent the week-end in Oxford, Ohio and l yesterday attended the college comI mencement. Thetir daughter. Barbara, received a bachelor of science and education degree. She returned to Decatur with her parents and af(ter a short visit here will return 1 to Oxford university to attend sum- : nier school. Mrs. Elizabeth Markel has been ' confined to her bed the past week ( with bronchitis and other complications. She was slightly improved ! today, according to reports. [ Mr. and Mrs. Walter Krick and daughter Patsy attended the graduation exercises of Oxford university at Oxford, Ohio, Monday. Their i niece, Miss Barbara Krick. was a member of the graduating class. Will H. Rohan former hanker and .securities dealer of Fort Wayne, well known here, died at the home of a daughter in Chicago Monday. He was 66 years old and for years j was an outstanding civic and commercial leader of this ipart of the i state. Billy Jones and Senator King of I the Fail-mount Construction CoGrant county, are here to attend to | business. They have the contract to resurface state highway No. 27 between here and Monroe. Frank C. Wallace of this city Is listed among the applicants for the state police school at Bloomington where 45 will he named to serve as state officers. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Engeler have returned from a visit to Indianapolis. Mrs. E. F. Gass of West Adams street under went a major operation at the local hospital this morning. According to reports she was resting comfortably this noon. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Scott and son Ralph will leave the last of this week for a three week's visit In the i west. They will stop in New Mexico i before continuing to Los Angeles. They will return through Denver, Colorado. Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Bowen returned yesterday from Danville, 111. I where they attended the wedding I of the latter’s niece, which took place in the First M. E. church ' h jlrs. Robert Scott of New York and her father, Fred Ferris of Hicksville. Ohio visited with friends I here the first of the week. They I were enroute to Miami university, Oxford to visit with Miss JosephlnMreMd Mrs. O. T. Johnson and ,on Everett spent the week-end in i Chicago with Eddie Johnson, and familv and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Faser. Miss Geraldine Everett of Marion | accompanied them hut rema nedJola longer visit with Mr. and Mis. Faser. —o MiSSin ßctunied To Home 1 Rid girl missing sice last Wed " day was back homo today aT”rThe read news of her mysterio She di^rs a he an h C ad been working fnr a family here but did not exain why Se had kept her where- [ abouts a secret week. War Department Bill Signed By President Washington, June 14 (UP) : president Roosevelt today signet •he $220,987,000 war department ci - it functions bill carrying funds for | r iver and harbor navigator Improvei ments and flood control construe

Smart Summer Styles Featured for Young Miss

By SUSAN BARDEN International Illustrated Newt Writer HOLLYWOOD — Summer styles for the young miss are both smart and varied this year. And today it is as important for youngsters to be correctly attired as it is for their older sisters. Because nowadays the whys and wherefors of fashion start with the cradle and if you wish your darling daughter to grow into a chic woman—she just has to be a well dressed little girl. Although no children of a former generation ever had the opportunity to dress as becomingly or as sensibly as our young moderns, the child of today is seldom too styleconscious. It's probably because the matter of selecting becoming, comfortable clothes has become such an easy job for parents. Talon fasteners, help-y ourselfundies and other modern fashion

tion by the army engineers. The measure. $934,000 larger than proposed by Mr. Roosevelt and carrying $24,025,000 reappropriated from unexpended funds, provides 24,049,000 less than was made available for the current fiscal year including $52,500,000 in emergency relief funds. Funds for the 1939 fiscal year may be similarly increased. To carry on the $344,000,000 flood control program authorized in 1936, the bill carries $»2,000,000. it also provides $31,000,000 for work on the Mississippi and tributaries. TRI KAPPAS TO (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Jean Griffith Marr of Columbus, vice-president; Frances Eward of Greensburg, editor of Cross Keys and a number of others of import-' ance in the organization. Miss Irwin will speak on “Tri Kappa,” Miss Clara Sturgis of Bln tit on on “State Scholarship,” and Mrs. Guy Brown of this city on “Tri Kappa Prize Pictures.” Urge Proper Care Os Flags On Graves In answer to numerous inquiries 1 regarding the removal of flags from the graves of war veterans, Commander Ralph E. Roop and Commander Harry C. Reed ,of Adams Post No. 43, American Legion and Com. No. 52, U. S. V. W„ issued a statement today 1 The commanders stated that all flags should be removed from the graves at sunset on Decoration Day. They also stated that flags should not be allowed to remain on the graves to be exposed and become unsightly and soiled from the weather. Cmomanders Roop and Reed urg- j ed friends and relatives to take no- 1 tice of this fact and cooperate with the veterans. Indianapolis Salesman Is Killed Near Muncie Muncie, June 14—(UP)—C- C, Merrill, Indianapolis salesman, was killed instantly today when his auto was struck by an Indiana railroad car south of here. Former College Head A Suicide San Francisco, June 14 —(UP) Dr William W. Campbell, 76. former president of the University of California, jumped from the fourth j floor window of hie apartment today and was killed. ] Police said he left notes to each member of his family. Officers understood Dr. Campbell had been ill and despondent. Dr. Campbell was a world re-

quips, added to the talcnU ji the modern designer of children’s i clothes, give this generation of : children the opportunity to look , their best at all times at a figure . to fit the slimmest purse. Clothes Make the Child Being well-dressed makes a child much happier In her contacts with I other children. Gone is the inferiority complex many children had in our mothers' and grandmothers’ time because their homemade, plain clothes made from mother or dad's last year's dress or suit, contrasted so glaringly with the tailored “store” clothes which were worn by their wealthier school chums. The hat and two dresses shown above are bound to make mamas proud and daughters happy. Little Juanita Quigley is all set for the warm weather. She is wearing a beige straw hat with a :

nowned astronomer. For years he was director of the University of California's Lick observatory on Mount Hamilton, near San Jose. O — 4-H Club Members Go To Washington I-afayette, Ind., June 14. —(U.RY — \ Indiana’s four top-notch 4-4 club members left today for Washing-. ton to represent the Hoosier state at the 12th annual 4-H encamp- 1 ! ment June 16 to 22. They are Miss Agnes McCulloch,

j Child Bride May Get Divorce 1. *1 4hßhh£|b| All is not well with Charlie Johns. 22-year-old mountain youth of Treadway Tenn., and his child bride, Eunice, whom he married two years ago when she was only nine. This union which caused so much I criticism throughout the nation threatens to go on the rocks. They j ence hasten" far *from B n(?rmalf U Neightars^escribe^rtelr*relaUonsj ? n s d the housework and sometimes gives her young husband a lift in the fields.

poke brim. It is trimmed with perky forget-me-nots and Is tied under the chin with a dark blue ribbon that matches the ribbon that encircles the slightly raised crown. Bonita Granville is sporting a daytime dress of brown uncrushable linen. The collar, sleeves, hem and front are trimmed with yellow ric rac, and yellow pom poms are gay at the neck. The braided belt is part brown and part yellow and ties in front. This is the perfect all-day dress for town and country. Shirley Temple is seen in a delightfully cool party dress. It is made of flowered voile with smocking across the bodice which gives it a charming princess effect. This little frock is the last word in what the popular young lady of the youngest set will be wearing this season.

| 18, Scottsburg; Miss Mildred Goff, 20, Rockville; Clifford I-. Breeden Jr., 18, West Dafayette, and Vernon T. Hitchcock, 19. Salem. Accompanying them is Miss Edna Troth, assistant state club leader of Purdue University. Coffin and Grave Ready | Grand Forks. B. C. <U.R) Clement , K. Vacher, 84. wanted his death to cause no one any trouble. So the | pioneer prospector of Boundary Falls built his own coffin ami dug I his own grave. He was buried in I the lonely mountain grave he dug years

LEWIS DEMANDS (CONTINUED FROM PAOE ONE) chairman John O'Connor, D., N.! Y . of the house rules committee, | not only brought committee criticism, hut hitter denunclatloss i from Republicans. ! Minority leuder Bertrand H. j Shell, R., N. T\, said "the specI tucle of Lewis taking possession of i the office of the speaker . . . un-1 douhtedly will shoe a great many : people,” “But what else can he expected ! from the man who owns the nut- ] i tonal labor relations board and whose interest in the White House j Is disputed only as to Its extent?” | he said. "Next we shall see the speakjer’s office moved down to CIO headI quarters, with the Democratic congressmen being summoned there Ito learn Mr. Lewis’ wishes. Mr. Lewis obviously believes that those i who paid the fiddler are entitled to call the tune." While Lewis conferred with leaders, other CIO officials Lieut.Gov. Thomas Kennedy of Pennsylvania, Richard Frankensteen of ■ the United Automobile Workers unlo, Gardiner Jackson, CIO attorney, and Lee Pressman, chief coun-

Hi - w r W s* JEgtrr 4L wsmoking enjoyment . . . it's a SENSA* % M M f TION. And it‘s proving a sensation to thou* % 11-0 5 . sands of smokers who want the most for the least. % X Copyright. 1038. by P. LorllUrd Co.* K Your Convenience [ | LJ Decides the Payment Plan ’.! _i| 1 Our policy is to permit the family / / to pay for services in the manner g A most convenient. If it is impossible i) / or inconvenient to pay at once, £.. r . divided payments are easily and -lA Quieklv arranged. -3- ! # 41 pfeIZWICK FUNERAL HOME -*T-\ Jb*is _/ / W.H.ZWICK- ROBtKTj.ZWiCK * a ILr' A3iner3unerolService, 3m"' 1 ’i U 111 4 L»n ipj utjGiWerFrunerulPrices PHONES: 61-800 SUNDAY* JUxTig lOood old Dad! Don't disappoint him on his CnitICTUINR big day. He'll be more a U 111 CI If 111 U than pleased with any- w n 111 CQ D thing you give him 111 Ml CH H from this store. We Suggest—an ARROW SHIRT, a bright snappy TIE, several pair of HOSE, a new BELT, or a pair of SUSPENDERS, cool and comfortable WASH SI-AX, some UNDERWEAR, a box of HANDKERCHIEFS, a new STRAW HAT — or the gift he’s always wanted, a comfortable SUMMER PAI-M BEACH SUIT. REMEMBER TO REMEMBER DAD Holthouse Schulte & Co

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*el of the CIO —dl»ru»*'-d the leglulatlon with congreMiimen In their office* uiid cloakroom*, j Lewi* was understood to have I expressed his desires in firm lall- ! gouge. One administration leader i quoted him as saying, "we want ] this bill with a vengeance." | Establishing himself in Hankhead’s office, he then Interviewed i several congressmen brought there by Ills CIO colleagues. These In- ! eluded Rep. Marlin Dies, I)., Tex., | a rules committee opponent of the measure, and Rep. Lawrence Lewis, 1)., Colo. Tile latter refused to i be Influenced by the labor lobby. “I was very glad to meet Mr. ! Lewis." he said, "hut nobody puts I the heat on me. Whatever I do 1 I do on my own." Lewis, demanding that the bill ihe "at least acted upon by the house," charged that dozens of ■ companies are "fattening on govI eminent contracts and they ought ’ ] to obey the law while they are doI ing It.” o — i Plans Mall Development Toledo. — (U.R>— Further steps to f beautify Toledo’s civic center with < the development of a mull are nil- - \ der way. Two streets will be torn • up to provide space.