Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 179, Decatur, Adams County, 30 July 1938 — Page 3

Ksdciety

® n WITH SHOWER i,.lnl»u ■ l< '' 1 ■ w ■ wl , «"<> B; J H.'i-H |IK ani B" K , n. B:, ■ L Hlndfolded and b'd to fc-mad ■ Ln.-.l and she fmmd her ■ a doorway decorated with ■ I'the ceiling to the table. ■ La- piled ■> .•!> " 'li many B, and useful The em Bns room’ *.•>••■ deeorated Bid’ " f " ,w, ' rs - K. w „-.. Misses Alrna. B and Imdella Falling Loretta Weiland Florence Heuer Via. Hand El'a Franz and Frieda .De Messieurs ;<■d MeS■fUrenee Busiek. Paul Bus- ■ , Wilson V.eiland. VP r« Martin Bienz. Sloan ■ m-s. A »K llst Bl,sirli ' Mr “’ e Bucher and Carl Bucher. ■ womans missionary society ■ Zl on Reformed church will the church Tuesday after- ■, two-thirty <><loM:. Miss H ?t be the lead- ■> will be a called meeting of of the \> -iman - ■ the lumie of Miss Matilda ■, yrr Tuesday evening at sevK... 3,,-k A!! members are ■to attend. ■ class Ks PICNIC members and guests class of the First Bap■xlayedw! enjoyed a picnic ■jz Hanna-Nuttman paik Frigames were played and a followed. ■ catholic Ladies of Columbia ■ar- their regular meeting at of C. hall Tuesday even- ■ seteti-thirty o’clock. ■ firemen's auxiliary will have Bt business meeting at the fire ■ Monday evening at eeven

behind the JcenejESX !’HOLLYOJOOu%?]

By HARRISON CARROLL I « ■ Cupyrichi, 1933 1 Buag Features Syndicate, Inc. , KLLYWOOD— Lights! Camera! Bn! Everybody on the set of ; P “Brother Rat” | B has a weather , LB eye on the behavior of Pris- ■ ; cilia Lane and Wayne Morris. ■ W W who have to B. play sweetBiW"' hearts in the picture, white , i'“ privately they ; JUT have just quarB M relied and Q W. broken up their MB* Lane ro ™ ance ' u You hear stories that it iayne who carries the torch, he denies it vigorously, e are sitting in his dressing ion the set this week. The >any is working and Wayne is hng the call to his next scene. Priscilla and I are still friendtells me, "Why not? She hurt me. Not a bit.” he arrival of an assistant diw closes the subject. Wayne worl< - It is a scene Eddie Albert, who plays er cadet, and Wayne is nng the fickleness of his ihe girl is Priscilla Lane l .“' ls . Slttin e on the sidelines, yne has to make this speech: ,e s Joyce, the smoothest 14Ld?? 1 ' that ever the f“°? ah ™ lley - °° wn on my di midwin ter hop, she was bljJ q^ Wa n S m<! Hke 81 bUSh in lth ,. d - But now, only two iscl w ter ’- Shes down "nth that “el. Harrington ” 1 tomn. Camera ra nge, some of a “ g " Prls(orri» 5 ng . t° look unconcerned. wl ? knows what “ £‘ the B P eed hout. lidiiip- □ ei ? ht times in a row. hghlev L Smi !’ Erector William “wv ?. says sternly: 'uareco.t the matte r. Morris? )n «y in am com P an y m o re lary .. film than you are in out HrdJ Ur * is M*o C m’ * row ° f “1. U. M. sound stage

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, Ti A. M. t Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Monday , Adams county music chorus, Mon-’ roe high school. 1:30 p. m. .1 Firemen’s Auxiliary. Fire Station, |l7 P- m. Tuesday , Woman’s .Missionary Society,' ( Zion Reformed Church, 2:30 p. m. • Art Department of Woman’s Club Miss Matilda Sellemever. 7:30 p. m. ’ C. L. of C., K. of C. Hall, 7:30.1 p. m. Wednesday 7:00 P. M. Prayer Meeting for the ’ three age groups; Children, Adults ’ i and Young People. 8 p. m. Choir Practice, — ' ' o'clock. All members are asked to 1 he present. CHRISTIAN LADIES AID SOCIETY MEETS I. I The ladies' aid society of the J First Christian church met in the :’<hureh parlors Thursday afternoon . for the regular meeting. After scrip,'ture reading and the Lord’s prayer i'roll call was answered with a verse ■. of prayer. i' Plans were completed for the .'booth at the street fair. Following i'the closing with the Mizpah bene-' • < diction the members sung the birth- ■ 1 day song in honor of the president,' I Mrs. William Kohls who was then presented with a lovely gift. lj During the social hour various' • interesting and entertaining artie-. I i les and poems were read. Delicious refreshments were served to the six I teen members and five visitors pre- 1 leant by the hostess, Mrs. Rene Ross- • man assisted by Mrs. Hersel Nash. II o Adams County Memorial Hospital | Admitted Friday: William Stonei burner (dismissed), three year old . 1 son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Stoneburner of 603 North sth st.; Eunice Hamrick, four year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hamrick of Willshire. Ohio; Harold Zohnan. Dixon, , Ohio. Dismissed Saturday: Bonnie C. ’Macy, Bryant; Noah A. Schwartz, * route 2. Decatur; Miss Leila Huck--1 riede. Bryant. oARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mitchel of 1 route 6 are the parents of a baby i son. born at the Adams county me-

and Wallie Beery and Mickey Rooney are out before the camera throwing insults at each other. Beery is a gin-sodden veterinarian and Rooney is a jockey. At this point in the story, a valuable thoroughbred has taken sick and Mickey is refusing to let the doc touch it. “Y’ou’re a has-been!” he shouts, ! "Your hands are trembling like jelly! You’re through! You're finished!” Beery makes a lumbering rush at him and chases him out of the scene. The minute he is out of range of the camera, Rooney drops the pose of heavy drama. “Hey,” he yells, “What time is it? Have they run the first race yet?” He sends his valet scurrying outside to telephone. What Mickey doesn't know is this. Director Sam Wood has learned the horse that Mickey bet on in each race and has framed it sc that Rooney will get fake returns, with his choice trailing the field every time. Those first few pictures of a newcomer are a terrible ordeal. This week I watch Bettj Jaynes and Douglas McPhail, twe ', M. G. M. hope

fuls, getting , their baptism ol fire in "Sweethearts”. They are doing a scene . with Frank Morgan whe knows everj trick of the acting trade anc who has all the : polish and the timing that the : youngsters lack. They are try-

■ ** ■ Betty Jaynes

mg hard but they are over eager. In one place, where Morgan speaks a line, hesitates, then gives that silly laugh of his. Miss Jaynes jumps the cue every time. Director W. S. Van Dyke is sympathetic but he likes to shoot his pictures fast. ‘'Honey," he says, “you’ve got to wait for him.” Turning to his property man, ne snaps: “Key, give her a cigar or something that she can light there.”

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY. JULY 30. 1938.

Many Reunions Scheduled For Summer Months ♦ Sunday July 31 Haggard Reunion, part. Berne. Borne annual reunion, Sun Set I park. Myers family reunion, Sun Set' park. Cowan reunion, Sun Set park. Hoffman reunion, rain or shine, Sun Set park. Sunday, August 7 Bioeke Reunion, Otto Bleeke’e' Union township. Roppert Reunion. CCC Camp near Vera Cruz Park. Brandyberry Reunion, Lehman Park, Berne. ~ Bedford Reunion, Hanna-Nuttman i Park. ' | Ninth Brandeberry Reunion. Leh- ( man Park, Berne. Weidler Reunion, Hanna-Nuttman Part. Fuhrman reunion. Hanna-Nutt-' man park. Dettlnger annual reunion Sun Set park. Johnson reunion. Sun Set park. Brunner annual reunion, rain or shine, Sun Set park. Sunday, August 14 Hilyard reunion, Riverside park, Findlay, Ohio. Tumbleson Reunion, Memorial Park. Sunday, August 21 Crist Reunion, I.ake George. Smith Reunion, Sun Set Park, all day. i, Martz Reunion, Lehman Park Berne, 9 a. m. Hawkins Family Reunion, Hanna Nuttman Park, Basket Dinner. Durbin Annual Reunion, Legion Memorial Park. Hitchcock reunion, Hanna-Nutt-man park. Rellig and Roehm reunion, Sun Set park. Dellinger annual reunion, Sun Set park. Miller and Snyder annual reunion, Sun Set park. Sunday, August 21 Brentlinger Reunion, Welker's Grove. Steele Reunion, Franke Park. Fort Wayne. o Recovering From Effects Os Poison Bill Stoneburner, three-year-old sou of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Stone-! burner, of this city, was rushed to ! the Ada.ns county memorial hosiptal laet night when it was discovered : that the tot had accidentally swallowed a quantity of laxative tablets, containing strychnine. Because the number of tablets which the child had swallowed could not be determined, and since each tablet contained one-sixtieth of a grain of strychnine, the physician decided upon immediate first aid. After pumping the child's stomhch and administering counteractive medicine, the physician pronounced him out of danger and he j was returned to his home. PERSONALS! Mr. and Mrs. Delton Passwater and daughter Fern, and Ralph Spade have returned from a trip through Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota and lowa, where they visited many places of interest. o Ten More Entries In Twins Contest! Ten additional entries in thA Twin Day contest on Thursday of street fair week were announce !; today by George Laurent, chairman ' of the event. The new entries are: Robert Lee and Rowena Lou Mattox, Mrs. Henry Hirschy and Mrs. Melvin Kohler, Julia Campbell and Jennie A. Smith Earl and Robert Sprague, Chelsie Calvin and Chalmer Coolidge Miller. o — August Leimenstoll Reported Unchanged The condition of August Leimenstoll, Magley farmer, who was critically hurt Thursday when his car i overturned on federal road 224, west ! of the city, was reported unchanged today by the attending physician. He is suffering from a crushed chest, possible internal injuries and two fractured legs. The physician i Mated today that X-rays also re-. I vealed a broken left clavical. He i has been unable to take food or ! nourishment. His condition is etill i critical. HOPES DIMMED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) made a day-long search returned to ' their base. They had covered an I area 350 miles long and 120 miles I wide without finding a trace of the 26 ton flying boat. Pan American Airways officials said the place where the oil was on the water was in a ship lane to morial hospital Friday evening at 6:30 o’clock. The baby weighed eight pounds and thirteen ounces. .

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the Philippines and that it could i not be determined yet whether the] oil had come from the Clipper or a ! vessel. At 6 p. m. (4 a. tn. CST) the four-motored ocean plane was 24 hours overdue on a 1,600 mile flight from Guam Island and ft had been almost 27 hours since her last radio message in which she reported all was well. She was down somewhere; whether floating intact, hetsix passengers and nine crewmen safe, as the searchers hoped, or wrecked and sunk, as some feared, no one knew. At the close of the first day of an extensive army and navy search of the ocean area between the Philippines and the Clipper’s last reported position, there was only one bit of news at least encourag- ■

The Story of OD and AD OD and AD owned neighboring farms. /717 Z? I Both decided to grow tomatoes. But when fI Cl IflCu' 1 V_ XIV 1 a \ 1 their tomatoeswereripe.ODand ADhad different ideas as to how they should sell — I them. This is the story of what happened. people passed. He put up a sign that said: How -fO . ~ AD sj “ ADs big ’ red> ripe ’ j uicy tomat< * s ” Bc - \ 4 1 v. to>. cause so many people saw the sign, enough fAIA ATA people stopped to buy so that he sold all his ."A.L/ j ' ' ripe tomatoes every day. Many who bought, Oil 'T'L • * Vl’wDl/ 'Wr yV, remembering his name on the sign, came back Sold 1 heir 1 ■— 'x 7 '’ again and again. When the season was over, he had money in the bank. Tomatoes od filled baskets with his tomatoes and AD thought there must fie a better way to ... put tl*m in a wagon and drove to town. He sell his tomatoes. He kneti he must tell peo- One day AD heard that tomato juice was went up and down the streeu looking for pie about them, but he decided he could healthful and good to drink. He thought it ■people who wanted to buy tomatoes. Some never sell very many tomatoes if he talked would also be convenient to handle, to sell, days he sold ail. Some days he sold only a to people one at a time. So he used one of the and to serve in the home. Ile told OD about few. When the season was over, he found he simplest forms of ADVERTISING. He built a it. Ihe next year both decided to make and had made just enough to live on. stand bv the side of the road where many sell tomato juice. r Ah’?— -In He went t 0 the growy stores in town « TT___. where man y came ever y la Y' and I lOn Ar asked the grocers to put a few of his bottles i 4 ''X, A dWWhjMtt jT c/\ 'Ann on r^e ‘ r counters - ien P l,t an adverV7l J mid -Al I J i \ tisement in newspapers read by thousands __ pfople. The advertisement said: P'lldl* zv * *3-- -1 - P “Enjoy the refreshing taste of AD’S Pl RE X 11 wll ' ’ ‘ TOMATO JUICE, pressed from big, red, vine- _ e ripened Tomatoes. Good to drink and good for Tomato Juice OD’s wife squeezed tomatoes all day and AD felt sure there was a better way to y-“ At your favorite grocery store. put the juice in bottles. OD took it; to town make and sell his tomato juice. He took Because so many people read about it, enough and went from door to door, looking for some money from the bank and bought a people asked for it to exhaust the supply people who wanted to buy tomato juice. In a shiny new press that squeezed out juice eas- quickly. And remembering ADs name on whole day he could call at only about 50 ily and quickly. He put the juice in bottles the label they came back and asked for it homes. As most people had never heard of that could be tightly sealed. He had labels again. So AD bought tomatoes from his tomato juice and did not know how good it printed for the bottles, reading: neighbors and made more tomato juice to was, he sold only a few bottles each day. AD's Pure Tomato Juice. supply the demand. ‘ bottles and labels, and employed more peoWbflt O fA ple ’ lcnew because namt ' J;as on ” V’ every h e must a ' wa Y s ma ' nta * n the ODandAD - ■, Did The P ad Sin . ■ advertised and the more bottles he sold, the I Citi* OD and his wife decided that if they were AD now saw how true it was that the Zery it cost him to put up each bottle. 1 heregoing to make any money, they would have more people he told about his tomato juice, fore, as his advertising was extended all to work harder. So she got up earlier in the the more he sold. So he advertised in other over the country and his sales increased, he morning and picked tomatoes and squeezed cities, telling women how good tomato juice reduced the price. 1 hus more and more peoand bottled juice all day. OD spent a longer was for their families to drink. He also sent pie could afford to enjoy tomato juice, and, day in town trying to see more people in or- salesmen to call on grocers. He got so many although his profit per bottle was now very der to sell more bottles. But, even though orders that he arranged to buy tomatoes small indeed, he sold so many bottles that OD and his wife worked long and hard, they from hundreds of other farmers, built a big- he had a very fine business. So both AD and could not make any money. ger building, bought more equipment, more his customers were benefited. A.D tells OD how an Idea Became an Industry—through ADVERTISING J One DAY, years later, OD called on his old neighbor people and employ hundreds more on part-time. We pay dr f sa * < '> <l l ts remarkable how your business has more than half a million dollars a year to manufacturers r.MX grown since you got that idea about selling tomato juice.” of cans, bottles, labels, supplies, and equipment. I —i T' if\ “Yes,” said AD, “but even more important have been “The entire industry now sells more than twenty mil- | _ jjL, ' j the benefits to other people. We are now only one out lion dollars worth of tomato juice a year and the public (10 EEI di of many producers of tomato juice. Yet we take all the enjoys its healthful benefits—at the lowest price at which Ml MB FFH _ S' ( tomatoes grown by more than a thousand farmers who it ever has been sold. Yes, tomato juice was a great idea, II jgy PFfl I have here an assured market for their crops. We give but that idea would have benefited very few—without ~ steady employment the year round to several hundred Advertising to tell the story.” Decatur Daily Democrat YOUR LOCAL PAPER

I injr The Philippines telephone' [company advised that a reliable' : employe on Lahuy Island had heard a plane about three hours after! Captain Leo Tertletzky of the Clipper made his last report. Lahuy Island, one of the Philip-' pine group, lies a little to the east of the main island and is on the direct course the Clipper would i have taken on its way to Manila. Two U. S. navy amphibian planes were instructed to take oft at dawn tomorrow, about 3 p. m. today CST, on a minute hunt in the vicinity of Lahuy Island. The plane was flying high and traveling west, the telephone employe said, the motors apparently functioning perfectly. It was obscured by clouds and he did not i ■ identify it positively as the Clipper. 1

HOUSE COMPLETES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Andrew said. “I think perhaps i there Is. But I want It passed I open and above-board." Rep. Benjamin F. Harris, R. Richmond, joined the attack by demanding "where is the emergency that exists tonight that didn’t exist when the governor delivered ! his message?'* ; Passage of the motto was demanded by Rep. Martin J. Downey, D., Hammond, who asserted “It Is ’ our duty to attempt to render the ; greatest good for the greatest number of our people." The bill, which came into the assembly suddenly Thursday afternoon. would eliminate a section of the statute providing that , persons seeking benefits must. ’ have earned $lO after April 1, 1538. to be eligible. Alex Gordon of Indianapolis, labor leader and member of the unemployment compensation commisI sion, told the house at the public hearing that $28,000,000 has poured into the fund since the act first . was passed two years ago. i "It is a great injustice to bar unemployment workers from receiving their just portion of this money," Gordon said. "The releasing of $5,000X00 would j mean an increase of $120,000,W)0 in the purchasing power of 'lndiana,” . Gordon said. “Most of th> money eventually will return to the businessmen and this will help bring j back prosperity.” i Business’ attack on the bill was

keynoted by Henry Cochrnno of Indianapolis, secretary of the Indiana manufacturers association,: , who charged that "this bill came ! up so suddenly that (pdlamt business had had no chance to make , any -preparations." "If would absolutely exhaust the reserve funds many companies have ! built up. We have acted in good ; faith in cooperating with the governor and his recovery program and - feel we should have been informed ! of this move.” The session would have closed ] Thursday evening had the irnem-| j ploy men t compensation hill not! ! been introduced. The assmhly had. | completed the governor’s original I | "pump priming” program at thati ' time and sent the bills to Mm for! his signature.

r RTOO NIN <; ff i‘ii .... Everyone who like* to draw should have this 45 If valuable book. Contains nioney-rnakiiiM tips. » I /rDri ) wayn of getting an<! list of cartoon biiver Also explains how to draw corin' CAAr x* trip.*, editorial < artoons, advertising fr»d . I poster cartoons, magazine cartoons, women > j \ I page features, chalk talks, sports < artoons, f * caricatures, and qualify for big money in 1 uri qJ/k tooning. Sent absolutely FREE. >» » obliga/■kOrta tion. Rush name and age on penny postal (Include touniy in address > Hurry. Our sup--1 FREE books is limited. «k C OtTOOXtsTs EXCHANGE Dept. 21M7-A / / Pleasant Hill. Ohio

PAGE THREE

LINE OF MARC H I (CONTINUED most PAGE ONE) ’ ■ - ’[ shall streets. The Thursday twin parade will form at the Rice hotel for ’he 2:30 , parade, inarch north on Third to , Jackson, east on Jackson to Second south on Second to Madison. The Friday livestock parade at 1:30 o’clock will march m follows: Cattle will assemble an Jackson, j move west to Third. Horses will form on Marshall, move west to . Third street to Adams, eaet on AdI ams to First, north on First to respective tents. i The livestock and float parades ' will not parade down the midway. o 1 S-rn.lr In A ll.hwl Town — De<Wt»»