Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 186, Decatur, Adams County, 8 August 1938 — Page 3
A < SOCIETY jnJHKBk —-
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IK HARKI>U.X < \RKOLL Copyright. 1938 I< utur»> syndicate, 3nc. - I'ity thi poor movie stars ■»«; cavorting a night club. ,apt to be shot . morning or L, “ aft<r lunch when nothing be so welcome as a siesta. ■ visit the set of I.. es Has Nancy” and 4; Janet Gaynor. Robert Montand 50 extras pretending ■■. . tino o’ their lives . stuglare down on " in a night club set. |H is 130 p. m., the first shot !1 lunch. ..- playing "Tea for and the dancers are gliding the room. extras wear a s of stocking over their shoes to deaden of their feet so the r.e can pick up dialogue, dress extras are all good this shot for instance, they CO ! unobtrusively clear a path for and Bob. who angle in and .• .• the couples. The extras or - 1 .' - have to be careful not to !nto the stars but they must ■Kstire not to get between them the camera. b ’J‘ toddle of the shot, DirecThorpe calls a halt. he says, "you are holding f'bow so high I can't see your or Janet's face." Q*'* even mine?” asks Bob with r 7 shoot the scene three more ■W es before Bob can remember to his elbow down while he is 9V c>ng ' he tells me: “That's 1 K°t into at school. Every 1 do a dance scene, I get out for the same thing.” t^^BPParently, Bob's stand-in ? dance « all. When they ' “’ arsin ß for an °thcr camera K u'. P' rect ' jr Thorpe, steps out floor 3 Jane *' s s tand-in around ■lit - lr m t< .’ rS have t 0 be h andy men at. Another morning at Un f’ We are "’atching a feast for the picture, * rntn Yesterday". iJH A ™ Tamiroff, a former Cossack j®L as come to America anu beBrtv tf'V’lt baron ' is « ivin & a th ° grand ma nner of ■ijws court. Uhi ° r T° re guests sit at a I® Wine b V n u behind each chair is ■ovi oh et with of S shot «, Jhampa gne. During the an? f the BUeßt3 reach for ~ le an d open it. fBB are Ruppnoad to be pM
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadtine, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phonas 1000 — 1001 Monday Music Department M:s. C. J. 1 Beavers. 7:30 p. m. Tuesday Standard Bearers’ Society, Miss Kathryn Yager. 7:30 p, m. Church Mothers’ Study Club, M. 1 E. Church. 2:30 p. m. ' Zion Junior Walther League, I Lutheran Church, 7:30 p. tn. Loyal Dorcas Class, Evangelical Church, 7:30 p. m. Pinochle Club Called Meeting. Mrs. William Lister, 7:30 p, it). Rebekah Lodge. I. O. O. F. Hall, ' 7:30 p. m. Thursday Eta Tau Eigma. Mrs. Don Stump, (postponed one week. Ever Ready Class Picnic, M. E. ' Church Dining Room?, 5:30- p. m. Evangelical Missionary Society. I Church Parlors. 2 p. m. Friday Pocahontas Lodge, Red Men’s I Hall 7.30 p. m. Auxiliary, American Legion Homo 7:30 p. m. I ' All mothers interested and all members are urged to attend. The American Legion auxiliary ! will have a regular business meet- ' ing at Legion Home Friday evening ■ at seven-thirty o'clock. The Ever Ready class of the M. i E. Sunday school will have a picnic in the church dining rooms Thursday at five-thirty o’clock. Each member is to -bring one covered dish. Rolls and cold drinks will be 1 furnished by the officers. This is I also the regular monthly meeting. FORMER RESIDENT’S SON IS MARRIED The marriage of Miss Elizabeth I Phifer Smith and L. Morgan Boyers I was solemnized Tuesday evening in I the Chantry of St. Mark's Episcopal I church in Berkeley in the presence i of members of the two families and a few friends of the young couple. The wedding took place at the twi- ' light hour with the church lighted 'by white tapers. The altar flowers were white gladioli and white snapi dragons. The chancel was decorat- ; ed with baskets of magnolia which
hands at the job but a few don t know the technique. So Director Al Green makes the rounds and carefully explains how to open a bottle of champagne. “Escape From Yesterday" is the picture in which Frances Farmer and Leif Erikson are making their return to the camera. This pair are supposed to have lambasted Hollywood in an eastern interview and everybody on the picture is prepared to dislike them. But Green, who has worked with them now for several days, defends them warmly. "I don’t understand all that talk," he tells me. “They have cooperated in every way. As far as I’m concerned, they are swell people.” Miss Farmer and Erikson, a married pair, play sweethearts in the picture. This is an unusual thing for a studio to do but Paramount believes this particular case will have exploitation value. The two players themselves are a little touchy on the marriage angle being played up in publicity. We talk to Miss Farmer about it. ' This young actress is wearing an off-white formal gown with stitching remotely suggesting the ornaments on a Cossack’s jacket. It is form-fitting and very easy on the eye. “Above all things,” she tells me, “I hope Erik won’t be referred to as Frances Farmer's husband. He got started a little later than I did and the press has fallen into this habit. “It isn't fair and I hope they’ll stop.” “Very well, Mrs. Erickson,” we say. This gets a smile. "You needn't go too far,” she amends gently. At Twentieth Century-Fox, we pay another visit to the set where Gregory Ratoff is directing Alice Faye and Warner Baxter in “By ! the Dawn’s Early Light." This particular scene is where Alice is urging Baxter, a down-at- | the-heels newspaperman, to telegraph a sensational story that he has uncovered in China. , It is very dramatic, one of the key scenes in the picture, and Ratoff is so excited that he twice | has to be warned to move back or he'll be in the shot. Ratoff is such an inveterate actor that it's hard for him to stay behind the camera even when he is directing. When they finally shoot the first take, he bursts out with one of his prize observations. "That was great tor me!" he shouts, “but we’ll do it a million times
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. AUGUST 8. 1938.
‘ / SALE AFTER ’> Wk >4 -f < CAMEL BUYS MY TOP- f| f I .. « BF 1 price tobacco, that I Lj irPWfW ... 1 ■W C* B WAS TRUE LAST YEAR J W J a \ \ TOO. CAMELS NW SMOKE A XX T f ’ / B[ -AND THAT OF MOST IB / ~e/ growers i know/ A- BBMfc. f JC x IK ’JRW W«F "kjfe WILLIAM VANDIFORD knows tobacco i g CROWER JOHN DURHAM, JR. (aioev) $ A jP "THIS LAST CROP," says grower Robert from seedling to cigarette. Hit ciga- ; * is enjoying real smoking pleasure. Yes, O Lee Oakley, "Camel bought my best grade rette is Camel! Over and over, he i **'* * Camel. As Mr. Durham states, S. J. BONE CONFIRMS growers’ preference tobacco as they have many times before, says. Camel has bought my best to* j ’ (<e ‘l l ® *°bacco that cigarette for Camels with: "Camels stand ace high with Naturally 1 smoke Camels. So do most bacco. Os course 1 smoke Camels!" MHBBI companies buy. Camel buyers pay tobacco planters. Camel buys better tobacco other planters in these parts." IHBBBH more to get the best of my own crops —my own and that of my grower friends I" Wi'JIMW jSBISW a .i.Mi.,7 B and of my friends. It’s Camels for us!” —^"*"****^. B: ,. . r“ tobacco planters say : “nilß FINEST TOBACCOS... iso | the most richly Camel I I £Clu W/r fa* th bmnllu ’ e snu>ke ' F i te* 1 ■ R —mNctn - north fjAz IsML z' — x TS there a real difference in the to- f f 1 W /aAOCtS I bac co that goes into various ciga- ennwen Man vim Camels are a matchless ilaS Art b L. JL rettes? "Yes"—say the men who//ze WsaM? , |L blend of finer - MORE SMOKERS ) with tobacco-the planters. These men HOLLOMAN speaks as ’ 1-1 EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS WHO GROW S grade their crops long before the w are- £ an ,ns ‘^ r On , ° baCCO -Turkish and Domestic TOBACCO ] house sales. They know who buys their make a bigd'fferenceTn Pi 3 / SMOKE CAMELS.) b «t grades. Camel, say the typ.cal 4 Smokin / Came i take , \ LIKE ME, THEY < P la "‘ e ”°n th., page. -Camel buy, my real choice lots. So ■ ■ C?jmffiaiWnwHWWr. x / »ou.r < our choicest lots! So, for their own J _ 7 t i J tgi < J k ( SEE CAMEL PAY )sm king, planters choose the cigarette ’ smoke Camels. Most —TTjjfi*— Aj Yi TO GET THEIR C 7 that gets their costlier tobaccos —Camel! °‘ Fl Jv f’k BEST GRADES J Yes, there is extra enjoyment in Camel’s . 9 ®i M I finer, more expensive tobaccos. Try gi «> ‘ aMBHIHy \TURKISH & Camels today! Compare them for their E| ... • '/ . .XliXRAVMOHD CRAFT - RAISING FINE enjoyable taste, for their special mild- z J* / « n ik W TOW ■ TOBACCO ■SHtS LIFE WORN ness which permits steady smoking. - _ . .. T— — ZT” “~7 - ....
gave an atmosphere of the South' where the bride was born. The Rev. W. H. G. Battershill of ficiated at the ceremony. The bride was given in marriage' by her father. Stephen Smith. She wore a simple tea rose ensemble of French sheer crepe with accessories of dark blue. Her corsage was lilies of the valley and bouvardia. I The bridegroom was attended by his brother. James S. Boyers. Miss Smith attended Anna Head I School here and graduated from the University of California in the class ‘ of 1936. During the past year she ‘ has been in a medical social service department in New York. She is the youngest daughter of -Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Smith of Berkeley and a granddaughted of Osborne H Parker of Anniston, Alabama. Her sister is Mrs. Dana Spencer Bray! of Claremont. N. H., the former Anne Smith. Mr. Boyers is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Luther Masson Boyers of this city. He graduated from the University of California in 1933 and is at present completing his course at Stanford University School of | Medicine in San Francisco. He is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa.' professional medical fraternity. , He is a grandson of the late ; James S. Boyers, A. M. M. D., who ' at one time served for eight years as a member of the Indiana state board of health. The Boyers family were for many , years residents of Decatur. The meeting of the Eta Tau Sigma sorority which was to have I been held Thursday evening at the I home of Mrs. Don Stump has been postponed one week. Miss Kathryn Yager will be hostess to the Standard Bearers’ society of the M. E. church at her home I on South First street Tuesday eveni ing at seven-thirty o’clock. Election I of officers will be held and all members are urged to be present and bring their dues. MISS EVELYN KOHLS WEDS GERALD SCRICKLER Miss Evelyn LaVerne Kohls, J daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William J Kohls and Gerald Gene Strickler, | son of Mr. and Mrs. James Strickler I were united in marriage at the I First Christian church Sunday ( j morning at eight o’clock. The Rev. Kenneth Timmons read i the single ring rites before an altar. decorated with flowers and white: candelabra. Mrs. C. E. Bell played j Mendelssohn’s wedding march and! Harold Strickler, brother of the I: groom sang “I Love Lou Truly”. Miss Ruth Elzey and Richard i Macklin attended the couple. Missp - i
Elzey wore a white gaberdine suit with brown accessories and a corsage of Token roses. The bride wore an at ractive white sheer crepe tailored suit with finger tip length cape of the same ! material and trimmed in a black velvet collar. Her accessories were white with a black trim. She wore a white hat with a sheer black veil and a corsage of gardenias. After the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served to thirty guests at the Kohls home. The bride's table was centered with a redding cake with a miniature bride and goom on either side. Baskets of garden flowers, decorated the entertaining rooms. After a several days visit in Cleveland Mr. and Mrs. Strickler will be a home with the groom’s parents until the completion of their new home on West Monroe street. The bride is a member of the Tri Kappa sorority and has been employed as a bookkeeper at the Ideal Dairy. The groom is a salesman for McConnell and Sons. ANNUAL FUHRMAN FAMILY REUNION ’ The twenty-fourth annual session of the Fuhrman family was held Sunday at Hanna-Nuttman park. About one hundred members of the family were present. The oldest, member was David Fuhrman, of this city, and the youngest the six 1 months old daughter of Mr. and ] Mrs. Clarence Smith of Preble.) Officers elected were: Robert Gar-, ard, president; Milton Fuhrman., vice president, and Mrs. Ethel; Fuhrman Baumgartner, secretary I and treasurer. It was decided to I hold nevi year’s reunion at the same place and on the first Sun-1 day in August. MISS HELEN SUTTLES ANNOUNCES ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Suttles of Fifth street announce the engagement of their daughter Helen to Herbert Kallenberg of Anderson. The wedding will take place the first of the year. MRS. JOHN NIBLICK HAS 83RD ANNIVERSARY Memibers of her immediate family joined in assisting Mrs. John Niblick to celebrate her 83rd birthday anniversary Saturday, August 6 at her home on West Jefferson street. A dinner was enjoyed at noon and luncheon in the evening. At the same time Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Suttles, son-in-law and daughter of Mrs. Niblick celebrated their 35th wedding anniversary. Present were Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Edwards of Leipeig, Ohio; Mrs. H. H. Stoner and son John of Chicago; Mr. and
Mrs. A. D. Suttles of this city; Miss' Helen Suttles of Indianapolis 1 and Herbert Kallenberg of Ander-' i' eon. _____ o » — 4 , Adams County Memorial Hospital [ 1 0 | Admitted today: Mrs. Carl Mr-; . Connell, Willshire, Ohio; Mrs. Char- ’ le* Ward, route three, Decatur; ) Master William Schulte, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schulte, of Fourth street. , EMPLOYMENT IN STATE GROWING Upswing Os 82 Per Cent Is Reported For Second Yearly Quarter Indianapolis, Ind Aug. B—(UP8 —(UP) — ( Employment in Indiana took an up-, ! swing of 82 percent during the sec- ' ond quarter of the year, according to Martin F. Carpenet, director of the state employment service. Employers filled 14.998 jobs with ’ state employment applicants a« ’ compared to the 7.748 positions filled in the first quarter, Carpenter ) said. The total for the first half of 19C18 i was elightly less than the 21,918 I recorded in the second quarter of I 11937, however. ‘'Ninety percent of the jobs filled I lin the first half of 1938 were in ; private employment,” Carpenter said. “Only 2.262 of the jobs were in public employment.’ A. A. A. OFFERS (CONTINUED FROM rAOE ONE) , ■ and the wheat has been in storage ' 30 days, a county wheat loan in- . speetor, representing the county: i i committee, will inspect the bins , and take a representative sample of grain to determine grade and quality of the wheat. With proper , certification of the county commit-i, ■ tee. the farmer can then give a , . chattel mortgage on the stored 1 . wheat and obtain a loan from the commodity credit corporation An eligible farmer having eligible ( wheat may store his wheat in an approved local or terminal elevator or warehouse, and obtain a warehouse certificate to be used as collateral for a loan. Farm stored wheat must not con- '■ tain more than 13% moisture, while 1 warehouse stored grain must not contain more than 14% moisture for the Indiana Red Winter wheat, i
FIRE OESimS MANILS HOMES More Than 8,000 Left Homeless In Philippine Conflagration Manila, P. 1., Aug. B—(U.R>— Fire tonight destroyed more than 1,900 “nipa" or thatched houses in the densely populated Tondo district of Manila.’ The blaze left 8,090 persons, most of them laborers and their families, homeless. Six city blocks were razed. Thousands of sight-seers promenading along the boulevard, miles distant, were attracted to the scene by the glow in the sky. Firemen, although hampered in their work by the spectators, brought the fire under control after several hours. The Tondo district is the city's slum area. Hundreds of houses of flimsy material are crowded against each other in each block, i Numerous extensi’ - ; fires have occurred in the dis .ict. Meanwhile, reports from San 1 Pablo, Laguna province, south of I Manila, reported that fire had de-1 stroyed more than 1.990 houses of' similar construction there. These . made homeless were said to num-, her at least 19,999. o PERSONALS Joe Johns and Miss Bertha Johns will leave Tuesday for a week's fishing trip at Big Turkey and other Northern Indiana lakes. Mrs. Arthur C. Lutz of Louisville. Kentucky, Is visiting friends and relatives here. Mrs. Louis Dolch, Miss Virginia Dolch and Miss Mary Cowan, of this city, and Mrs. Glen Beavers of Toledo. Ohio, are motoring to Washington. D. C. this week. Leo J. Miller arived home yesterday from Purdue Forestry camp at Hurryville where he has been in training for the past eight weeke. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bell and Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Schafer left Sunday for Evanston, 111., where they will attend the wedding of Dan Schafer and Miss Gertrude Potter Tuesday evening at the Indian Hill country club. Mrs. Jamee Beattey arrived in Decatur this morning where the attended to business matters for the remainder of the day. She will be Joined this evening by Mr. Beattey who e-pent the day in Indianapolis.
They will return to their cottage at Klinger Lake this evening. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Petersen, Mr. and Mrs. French Peterson and Mrs. H. N. Parkineon, all of Chicago spent the week-end in Decatur with Miss Elizabeth Peterson and Mrs. W. A. Lower. Dr. and Mrs. Ben Duke and daughter Barbara who have been spending the past two weeks on a trip through the east are enroute home byway of Washington and Baltimore. They saw Corrigan in | ■New York. Shirley Temple in Boston and visited many places of interest in Canada and the eastern coast. Richard McCashem, assistant manager at the Morris Stere has been transferred to East Toledo. Ohio. Bob Schoenherr has been transferred from the Fostoria Ohio store to the local store. Mrs. Howard Smith and children Joan Maxine, Barbara Jean and Dickie, Mrs. Carl Wysong and Mrs. Maude Acker, all of Fort Wayne were Sunday evening supper guests ‘ of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Acker, t Miss Margaret Vesey, Mrs. Kathryn Vesey Kempe and Mrs. Dick | Vesey of Fort Wayne visited in De- ' catur today. Mrs. H. H. Stoner and son John ' of Chicago arrived in Decatur Sati urday for a month's visit with the j former's mother, Mrs. John Niblick. I They will return to Chicago the I firet of September. I Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Edwards of Leipsig, Ohio are visiting friends ( and relatives in Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Smith and
—— — Public Auction TONIGHT — and Every Night Corner 2nd and Madison Articles of all Kinds. PLENTY OF F R E E ENTERTAINMENT P R I Z E S Sale Conducted by Students Reppert Auction School WE RE EXPECTING YOU!
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children attended the third reunion ■ of the 152nd Medical corps held yes- ! terday at Muncie. Seme of the . members in attendance drove near--1 ly a thousand miles to be in attendance and it was the first meeting for many of the members in twenty ; years. Mayor Rollin Bunch, of Muncie as the honored guest. o Cannery Plans Tomato Picking School Here — The Crampton Canneries of Ce lina have arranged a tomato pick, ing school through the Ohio extension department to be at the Decatur receiving station Tuesday, August 9, at 3 p. m., central standard time. All tomato growers are urged to attend this school. A specialist of the Ohio extension department will have an interesting message for all. o • Probe Shooting Os Kentucky Ex-Mayor Pineville, Ky., Aug. 8. —<U.R> —N. R. Patterson. 69. former mayor of Pineville and member of the defense staff at the recent Harlan mine conspiracy trial, was in a critical condition at the Memorial hospital today with a bullet wound . beneath the heart. He was found in his home last night. A .38 caliber pistol was found nearby. Police were investigating the case. , Dr. Charles Stacy, attending physician, said Patterson bad told him he had been despondent.
