Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 22 August 1938 — Page 3
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■ liHARKIsoX CARROLL Copyright. 1938. *»s Features Syndiratr, Inc. fIIOLLYWOOI' Preview of of the North" was unfl usually draK/m-— matic. George Kat; > suspension by i Param, dint and fllft: Dorothy La- ■ niour, only two Hl weeks rid of her 3 ?P'"-h':. t ame to t,le theater j with special guards to see ■Btt I that she wasn't flwbLamoui ]ostled b y thp ■ crowd. Dorothy K was advised to Bp” tlome - but refused to miss F 8 tte Picture in which she from sarongs. sold his swank i br^T St before hc had time , !t in. Clark is crazv i ancy automobiles and has tV, ™ ney t 0 afford th em ssh» make him to ° conspic- • oftteT 3 ' S ° he has bought * 0( the lowest priced coupes ,^» IYor 1 York a so r S t S h terS are gOing f J ll6 °P enin g ot •Wes bUt by differ ent E,A M e a bright idea •?’t o th u &nd Bob Tap--6,2.?* J Varner Brothers’ Continent Pr ' scl " a crosses K hitaneann/ 18 San Fr ancisco #!Uoni> tw ’ a " d gets P ul> "Withe mi w? Ute ’ Lola heads booked f 0? » eWest ' Rosemary fete times ». he southern route. y r. C1 ‘ PPingS if « Wng T Roone y. he lution but Ta hoe on his a ~ t 0 Omaha. * d t visit y ’T° wn " company ° f Sh| rtey ? ,an mah n h Ccnt uryb ma “ department was ® le ‘ters con ■ Bpt of almost covered o nng smas hed > « adhet J 1 t ° ne side with aske « to am tape ' Shirley •^ti On of thp Sraph 016 » new ? myster y has re- £ ?h g4o >«- F ™ k ‘ e in ‘he auto- ? Cil the r»n ’ put the Pen“Wena whera^tw 11 tracks at *"* h horn tt. he child B tar *’* 11 'C e .^ t ' Thepen’Peclal value to the
I CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesday Root Twp. ome Economics Club Picnic, Lesion Memorial Park. I Decatur. Noon. Zion Junior Walther League Swimming Party, Lutheran Church, 17 p. m. Rebekah Lodge I. O. O. F. Hall. ' 7:30 p. m. Pocahontas Lodge. Red Men’s ; Hall. 7:30 p. m. Delta Theta Tau, Mrs. Al Schneider. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday St. Luke Ladies' Aid, Mrs. Frank j Yager, ail day. Senior Walther League, Lutheran | Church 7:30 p. m. Thursday Ladies' Aid Society. First Christian Church, 2 <p. m. | St. Mary’s Twp. Home Economics Club Picnic. Hanna-Nuttman Park. 1 10 a. m. CRIST REUNION AT LAKE GEORGE | Forty-seven members o' the I Crist family enjoyed a reunion at 'the Floyd cottage at Lake George i Sunday. A basket dinner was served at noon. During the business meeting John Crist was elected president and Mrs. John Floyd, secretary-treasur-er. The reunion will be held at Fort ' Wayne next year, the third Sunday in August. , There will be a business meeting 'of the Delta Theta Tau sorority at the home of Mrs. Al Schneider Tuesday evening at seven-thirty _ o'clock. The St. Mary's township home economics club will have its annual i picnic at Hanna-Nuttman park Thursday morning about 10 o’clock. A dinner will be served at noon. Each guest is to bring a covered dteh and her own table service.
collectors because they were run over by the train that Shirley Temple rode on. By this time, Don Ameche will have received news that ought to make him very happy. Zanuck has decided to give him an added vacation to make up for the time he spent in a European hospital. ' The star probably will spend some time in New York and then will continue his holiday in California. J. Gordon Herrell, former editor and publisher of the China Daily Herald, is in town and, speaking at the John O’ London club recently, related the following dramatic story. Herrell was standing on top a 10-story building watching the bombardment of Shanghai at the moment when that famous shell struck, killing 1,500 people and wounding 1,000 more. After the explosion, he said, there was a second of awful silence, then, from ! somewhere, the sound of a radio and of Jeanette MacDonald’s voice singing “The Indian Love Call”. The fragment of music, Herrell said, was indelibly impressed on his mind —a proof that, somewhere in the world, was peace and melody. The Kurt Reifenbergs, she was formerly Mary Doran of the films, have a baby daughter . . . They’ve named her kay Paula and Mary writes me from London: “This is no B product. Definitely ’ a Class A. super colossal!” . . . Vicki Lester . and Dick Pur- . ' cell had a ter- ... rifle fight be- . fore they broke IK' V 1 their engage- Vsi ment and he Wi u headed east on flk ' a plane. . . . Too 1 bad about Lew Sailee, leader of ’ the orchestra at MF' the Beverly t gfc > Wilshire. He [/ Hgi* baa 200 hours Prlsc||la Lar* ’ in the air and is crazy about : flying. But doctors tell him. if he : continues, it will affect his ears I and possibly endanger his livelii hood. . . . When Claire Dodd left ’ here, she eped directly to the . estate of the Howard Hales in the Wisconsin woods. . . . Priscilla Lane relieved the suspense by ■ showing up at Wayne Morris' : party for the “Brother Rat” com- • pany. . . . Olympe Bradna is 18. If that story was true, doesn't that ■ make her free to have dates row? I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, AUGUST 22,
"■ “■»* TOT f In the World or Dport r ONE SMOKER TELLS ANOTHER: KSMOF “GET A UEI WITH " IM _ ______ A pa “IT’S CAMELS FOR MEI ” declares Jane gH A IT WJJ ■« Fauntz Manske, whose brilliant diving has /W g 1 /IB /9 Bl' 9 ■ .1 brought her national fame. She adds: "After £|S |9 I / 9 9“< 9 I i a divifß exhibition when I feel exhausted, I jQB J IBf 9 9’ 1 9 1 1 welcome the ‘lift* in energy I get with a jB y [f 91 f 9 B Hr Camel. Camels give me a swell sense of well- // V being—especially during and after meals. ■ I I 9| Camels certainly add to the joy of living. I W Bl They’re vomild and fine-flavored!” \ MRS. ETHEL ARNOLD, \ tennis star, comments on &MHBWBB B ■'■W r \yy nerve control—“So many x w "iBB 9 \ ijjut \ /A tennis champions prefer ~ /J' \ J Camels. Camels don’t upset /A v . J* \ WC J / the nerves and spoil timing. nß'- fir f y I’m convinced Camels are made rfT'’ • W UTV \ yF m • i r h U from COSTLIER TOBACCOS!" JB ' V L ’ i MARSHALL VI NE, Olympic platform f 1 >-Jg '/ V z diving champion, speaks decidedly for Camels. / 9. t “After a strenuous competition I get a ‘lift’ j for,. B 'O ■ / / '■ with a Camel,” he says. "And Camels sure * jjf' ,<- x ' help my digestion to hum along too.” y Ij AQUAPLANING IS FUN but it’s jf I I |\ exhaustingtoo. That’s one reason why i \ t \ DOWN THE HUDSON— MK Gloria Wheeden says: "When 1 feel X ! / -.A \ Albany to New York-.n JF Z d-r-a-g-g-y, a Camel gives mv energy | .A-,- 3hours. Clayton Bishop, '- B a swell ‘lift.’ And Camels are mild, §SNNHBBBBBB£BBB9BI outboard motor racing SWIMMING RECORDS delicate, vet full-flavored.’’ ?5? F ’ . * t ‘ *’ e says: FAI L before Lenore Kight —Kg— ? H| nerves, and they give my ® “Camels never t.re my taste F W ffl X lIBBt energy a swell/■/!. . Ig . or Ret on my nerves. When : Camels are taut a^ter a meet ’ a a matchless blend 'Yw <• S. ■ 8 KV Camel helps ease the ten- ; ' \ kJBBS H sion. Anotherthing-Camels < I Cf 9* I*' 1 *' are so mild—they never BB J MORE EXPENSIVE B JUT irritate my throat.” .W TOBACCOS / .”N f/Ji — Turkish and / Domestic Xa ralph guldahl. B Open golf crown, says: “One thing about IKSs^ r TZ ' '■ ’’ ’ ' ’ 1 ' 7|w9w -V * sr.-ok. <1 Cam. bII ■ - .oO 1■ ■< r kno'.x Copyrwau 13». B. J. kuyoolua lobncco Uumpfcny. Wtu.toD-oalom, bi. C. SSSS!^""""
GIVE FAREWELL PARTY FOR VIRGINIA BREINER A surprise farewell party was held Friday evening aF the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Brown for Vir- ; ginia Breiner, who is leaving for Indianapolis September 1 to enter nurses’ training. Ruth Lozier and Betty Smith were the hostesses. Games were played and prizes were awarded to Ruth Hammond, Virginia Breiner and Marcella Tuteweiler, After the game? a ! luncheon was served. Those present were: the honored guest. Miss Breiner; Marcella Tuteweiler, Patsy McConnell. Bettv ' Hamma. Phyllis Kolter. Ruth Hammond, Mary Jane Wilson. Betty Melchi, Mrs. George Lozier, Mrs. Roma Breiner and the hostesses. FRICKE-BELL wedding ICCURS IN AIR PLANE Miss Neva Fricke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Fricke of Indianapolis formerly of Monroe, became I the bride of Simeon Bell of Muncie. in a ceremony which occurred I Sunday on an American Airlines ship enroute from Municipal airport in Indianapolis to Cincinnati, Ohio. Services were read by the Rev. G. W. Thompson of Wabash and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ringer of Danville. were the attendants. The couple returned to Indianapolis this morning by plane, ! I The Senior Walther League will meet at the Lutheran hurch Wednesday evening at seven-thirty o’- ( clock. ; i I MRS. EARL CHASE HOSTESS TO PUPILS Mrs. Earl Chase was hostess to : her music pupils at a reci al and, party Friday afternoon. After a musical .program games and contests were enjoyed. Prices were won by Bobby Foreman. Dick Hakey, Beatrice Light and Kathleen Foreman. At the close , of the afternoon refreshments were servd by the hostess assistd by Mrs. Russell Baumgartner. — —o PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mougey and sons Alfred. Adrian and Richard of Toledo, Ohio were among those who attended the centennial celebration ■ of the St. Mary’s church Sunday. James Holthouse, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Holthouse, under- ! went a tonsillectomy at the Adams I county memorial hosiptal this
morning. Mrs. Grace Sullivan of Lima. Ohio spent the week-end visiting Mrs. Rose Green and attending the Cen- ■ tennial Mrs. Sullivan was formerly! Vliss Grace Hale. Mr. and Mrs. J. Dwight Peterson,! daughters Patty and Sally and son John returned to Indianapolis Sunday after a visit with Mrs. John, Peterson. Miss Martha Macy has returned from a week's visit at Klinger Lake ; with her sister, Libby. J Miss Susie Ennis of Newport, Ky. and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Gilbert and | son were guests of Mr. aud Mrs. Byron Dague Sunday. Miss Ennis returned to her home Sunday evening after a several week’s visit with friends here and at New Haven and Monroeville. Mrs. Naomi Gandy and eon Stewart, Mrs. Paul Henry and Miss Margaret Niblick of Chicago were among those who attended the St. | Mary’s Centennial Sunday and were . guests at the J. G. Niblick home. Miss Winifred Kitson has return-, ed to Indianapolis after a vacation ! spent here. Miss Kitson is employed in the secretary of state’s office.' Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wemhoff and family of Fort Wayne visited here Sunday. Margaret Mylott of Chicago visited here yesterday. Seminarian John Schmitt came i home to attend the St. Mary's Cen-, j tennial Sunday. Among those from here who are attending the state convention of j the American Legion are Commandler Vincent Borman, Ralph Roop, ' James Staley and David Adams. 1 Mrs. 18. Schulman will return to i her home in Chicago after a visit at I the Kalver residence here. She will ' be accompanied home by her son-| 'in-law and daughter. Mr. and Mrs.. *Roy Kalver and daughter Carol Fay. Wiley Austin was a South Bend business visitor today. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sauer. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Cole and children Da-j ! vid, Barbara and Roger, sipent Sunday at Michian City with Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Cole, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jervis Atkinson and Bob Hite left yesterday for their homes in Detroit, Mich. Miss Helen Bierly of Elizabeth is visiting here with her aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs. G. Remy Bierly. I Miss Cecilia Bierly of New Albany, is visiting with her brother, : G. Remy Bierly and family. ' Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garard have j 1 returned from a visit with rela- j tives in Warren, Ohio, and Erie, Pa. Miss Patsy Garard who has! • been visiting there the past eight | i weeks returned home with her i parents.
EUROPE HOPES Ono aov.l icohj aanNiiNOQt of blows to Chamberlain: Spain — Rebel Generalissimo Francisco Franco, supported and strongly influenced by Italy and Ge'many, rejected in effect the British-sponsored plan for withdrawal of foreign troops from the Spanish civil war. The action delayed indefinitely the new AngloItalian friendship pact, keystone of Chamberlain's program; intensified hostility between Italy and France; made it probable that France! would reopen her frontier to supplies for the loyalist government and thus revive in full bloom the I threat that the “little world war” beyond the Pyrenees would spread to all Europe. The Spanish struggle, more complex and unpredictable than any other, remains the No. 1 danger spot—with no pros-' pect of a settlement. Franco threw his crack troops at the loyalist lines on the Ebro front, concentrating on Villalba, but the government reported that the insurgents had been thrown back with tremendous losses. Fighting ( continued on both sides of Gandesa where governmenlt troops appar-1 ently held their ground. France — Two members of the ■ Union Socialist - Republican party , resigned from the cabinet of Prem-, ier Edouard Daladier as a result of the premier's declaration that the | 40-hour week must not interfere J with the national defense program ; and that France should go back | to work. Fundamentally. Daladier I sought to stabilize Critical French labor problems in order to bolster the national economic and finan-, cial situation, recently taking a I turn for the worse. Germany—Visit of Admiral Nicholas Horthy, regent of Hungary, to Berlin was turned into an elaborate Nazi demonstration of friendship designed to worry every capitalincluding Rome, which goes along unhappily with the Reich campaign for political and economic domination of central Europe. From the military viewpoint, Germany and Hungary virtually surround Czechoslovakia, but just as important is the economic struggle for central European markets in which Britain and France have sought recently to improve their position and which the little entente — Roumanla, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia — now meeting at Bled view as eventually determining whether they must come within the NaziFascist orbit in order to survive. o Toronto Taxi Fees to Change Toronto.—i(U.R)i—Toronto, one of ! the few large cities on the continent where taxis operate on the ■ mileage and zone system
1938. •
than meter rates, will adopt the latter on all cabs operating in the l i city effective September 15. o Derision for Bantam Tutea, Okla. —(UP) —Police De- , tective M. C. Sturgeon bought a new bantam rooster and took it home. His 18 hens received the new comer with cold cackles. The aloof-, iiess reached a -peak when cne hen I laide an egg with a perfect qustion mark on on end. o Ice Cream Fine Assessed Barrington, N. J. —(UP) —Police i Chief Edward Schickling was fined I four quarts of ice cream on a i charge of impersonating an officer when police court and the borough 1 council were taken over by boys during Barrington’s annual Youth Week o Mourner Finds Husband Dead Cleveland —(UP)— Mrs. Lillian Peters returned from a funeral to : find that her hueband, Herman, had I committed suicide by shooting himI self through the right temple. , o , Woman Sleeps 36 Days Belgrade —(UP) —The wife of a 'Jugoslav railway clerk has just ai wakened here from a sleep that 'lasted 865 hours. Medical experts ! were baffled by her long slumber. I 0 Rare Penny Stamp Found Melbourne, Australia —(UP) —A I penny stamp valued at $25,000 has ! just been found here. It is one ■ of the issue put out in 1888 to cele- | orate the centenary of New South I Wales. The stamp will be sent to London and offered at auct'on. o Radio “Hams" Score Rutland. Vt. —(UP) —Three Virrnont “hams,” radio amateur operators, generating their own power with aid of an old automobile motor. recently set up radio transmitter and receiving sets at Shelburne Pass and contracted 109 United States and Canada stations within 26 hours. o_ Lobster Weighs 30 Pounds — Yarmouth, N. S.—^U.R) —One of the largest lobsters ever caught in Canadian waters was hauled in off the coast here. It was 37 inches long and weighed 30 pounds. It took 13 men to eat it. City Licenses Bicycles Youngstown, 0. —KU.R) —Bicycle riders here must puchase 50-cent license tags for their vehicles, now that a new ordinance has been passed. More than 350 of the tags were purchased on the opening
day sale of permits. o Cigarettes Without Paper Budapest — (UP) — The paper wraping of cigarettes is done away with by a new Hungatian invention. The tobacco in the new paperless cigarettes is wrapped in a special i tissue formed of fibers and tobacco i leaves. o Popcorn Cannery Hums Silverton. Ore. —XU.Rii—A popcorn j cannery—Silverton's newest Indusi try—has a popping capacity of 64 1 gallons per hour or 512 gallons a day. The corn is not only popped, but buttered, salted and packed into one gallon tins. It then leaves by. truck for Portland. Seattle and other points where it is put on sale. o COORT HOUSE Marriage Licenses Earl Wood. Detroit, Michigan I carpenter to Clara Richards. Decai tur. , o-
i Seven Big Days & Nights i Agriculture—lndustry—Educar?TR> tion — Science — Pageantry — OMKroj fl A\ Hr? Recreation—Music—Fashions Travel—Sport—Art ’./’'.l Engineering (g) E. CURTIS WHITE President !&&/'• GRAND harry g. templeton ’CIRCUIT Fair Mana * er WPS* S RACING HENRY F. SCHRICKER Ji* Commissioner of Agriculture Make Wash Days Play Days jnKrafiSJTl by doing the family laundry with a IMAY T A G A', We repair and service v ■. .feO all makes. ♦ Hoover Sweepers ■ I'l' ? v I Estate Stoves '■ Jj ♦ Kelvinator Refrigerators DECATUR r HATCHERY & 11 James Kitchen, salesman II
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Adams County Memorial Hospital | Admitted; Norman Stoppenhagen route two; Mrs. Isabelle Myer, 212 South Fifth, Master Ivan Zuber, Monroeville, James Holthouse, city. Dismissed: Mrs. Raymond Voglewede and baby, Gerald Lee. route two. Admitted and Dismissed: Mrs. Harry Miller. Dayton, Ohio. o —• — ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert F. Hoile, of Hoagland, are the parents of a baby boy. born at the Adams county memorial hospital Sunday afternoon at 2:24 o’clock. The baby, which weighed seven pounds and five ounces, has been named Ron David. — o 500 Sheets White Automatic Mimeograph Bond $1.05. 500 Sheets B>/ 2 x 11. 16-lb. Special Mimeograph, White 35c. The Decatur Democrat Co. ts
