Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 219, Decatur, Adams County, 16 September 1938 — Page 3
fuSOCIETY
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Bufen ff* SUN. MON. TUES. Ms Matinee Sun. 1:15 P. M. Cons. [ 10c • 25c Bl You expect the unexpected from Jane... B| BUT SHE’S NEVER GIVEN YOU £ 51 A SURPRISE-HIT LUCE THIS! B KB far the best and biggest picture she's B B ever had ... the happiest, the funniest, J|| IB B the heart - tugging - est! . . . JrV'WITHERS ■feRF favorite! of yours I GLORIA STUART Wfiffil HENRY WILCOXON ! ESjEBBIIW DOUGLAS FOWLEY r I JED PROUTY HELEN WESTLEY . ROBERT ALLEN * 20th Century-Fox Picture Directed by Herbert I. leedt I- ADDED— Fox News and March of Time also l( ’c T ~~ “ Ta ka Chance Nite” fQ c . Cartoon and Comedy 11 VV rin „ f Saturd ay - “GUN FIRE” Rtn're r * en - Also Cartoon and 11th Chapter ‘ s AGAIN. A Great Program for Only 10c—15c in hit 1 ™" B '*? an error ' it was stated in our advertise,Ure to hp t! u' eninß ' s P a P e r that the next Smith Bellew picPicture w»o k Wn a ' our theatre will he “Rawhide.” This re ka.se ha« « S « n August 13th, and the next Smith Bellew been named.
T CLUB CALENDAR Mociety Deadlin*. 11 A. M. ■lj Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Friday C. 1. C. Class. Mr. and Mrs. Free- 1 nJ man Schnepp. 7:30 p. m. s 1 Mt. Pleasant Ladies' Aid, Mrs. Francis Fuhrman. 2:00 p. tn. Eighth St. United Brethren W. M.i A., Mrs. Roy Wynn, 821 Madison, t St., 2 p. m. 1 i Phllathea Class, Mrs. C. E. Peter- >■ son. 7:30 p. m. Saturday A. It. C. Class of Union Chapel,* ; Hanna-Nuttman Park, 6 p. tn. >• Mission Band, Evangelical Church I'3 p. tn. r 1 Cafeteria Supper, Zion Reformed •] Church. 5 to 7 p. tn. f Tuesday Psf lota XI, Mrs. Gerald Smith,, r 7;3t) p. m. Young Matrons’ Opening Banquet I Meeting. Mrs. Dallas Goldner, 5:30 « p. tn. Loyal Daughters Class, Mrs. Cail Hammond 7:30 p. nt. Mary and Martha Clast M. E. | Church 6:30 p. m. Kum-Join-Us Class. Hanna-Nutt- ■ man Park, 6:30 p. m. Tri Kappa Buiness Meeting. Elk’s • Home. 8 p. m. • Tri Kappa Executive Committee. ', Elks Home, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday ’ Historical Club Luncheon, Mrs. “ Giles V. Porter, 12:30 p. m. Business and Professional Womens Club. Rice Hotel, 6:30 p. m. Mrs. A. R. Ashbaitcher. Mrs. Call ' Yost. Mrs. T. L. Becker Mrs Ted White and Miss Arline Becker. I 1 There will be a business meeting of the Tri Kappa sororitv at the 1 Elk's home Tuesday evening at i > eight o’clock. The executive comf mittee is asked to meet at seven- . thirty o'clock and every member 1 “ is urged to be there. 1 ■ ST. ANN’S STUDY CLUB OPENS FALL MEETINGS The St. Ann’s study club met at 1 the home of Mrs. Thomas Leonard 1 on First street for the opening fall I meeting after the summer vacation. ■ After prayer the roil call was answered with current events. Mrs. Veronica Wolpert. general ■MBaMMMMMW>aaM**M*B*~.MMHMMasMKM
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 16, 1938.
i leader, took charge of the meeting ,in the absence of the appointed , leader. Mrs. Car) Myers. The study | of Hie Life of Christ was completed. On October f> the club will meet 'at the home of the Melhers sisters on West Monroe street. Mrs. Jared i Reed Will he the leader. PIANO RECITAL TO BBE GIVEN SUNDAY Miss Kathryn Jackson will pre- , sent a number of her 'pupils in a piano recital to be given at the; First United Brethren church ofj this city, Sunday evening. Septemj ber 18. at 7:15 o'clock. The public is 1 Invited to attend. | The following program will bn I given. Solo—Grand March To the Rix--1 ing Sun Maxine Hilton. Duet — Nations Recall March—- ; Bobby Lon August, Mary Lou Roll--1 inson. Solo My Lesson Today—Thelma Daniels. Solo Tripping Over The GreenStanley Mcßride. Duet —Sylvan Waite- lona Hart'.eroad, Ruth Harris. Solo — Hawiian Grand March—i Lorella Anderson. Solo — Drifting Clouds. Naomi : Yake. , Duet —Home Sweet Homo March. Forest and Pauline Hawkins. Solo—Sandman— Wanda Mann. Solo—Spray Waltz—Gladys Manj key. Solo —Pixies Good Night Song—iiellen Gelmer. Duet — Day Dreams of Youth — Juanita Mcßride — Jay Martin. Solo — A Heauitful Dream —Doris . Adler. Solo—Drive Around the [<ake — Bernice Ostermeyer. Duet Oklahoma Sunset Waltz— Neva Lon Crownover. Wilm -. Bailey. Solo- Woodnymphs Harp — A ; Dream Song—Lenore Stauffer. Solo - Rose Petals. Hellen Worth1 man. Trio— Welcome to Spring—Mild- ' red Shifferly, Ardella and Faynta Miller. >Solo —Love Dreams- Mary la>u ; Robinson. Duet—Snow Bells—Eleanor Mankey, Maryanne Yake. Solo —Glide Waltz — Drowsy WaI ters. —Eugene Smith. 1 Duet — Silvery Echoes—Berneta i Lytle Maxine Hilton. Solo —Echoes from the Convent Chapel—Naomi Geimer. Duet —Parade of Wooden Soldiers —lrene Snider. Betty Isnogle. Solo —Variation — Phyllis Kolter Duet—The Young Buglar — Juanii ta Mcßride. Wanda Bailey. Solo — Moderato, Prestissimo, I Adagio. Civo —Susette Mitchell. Duet —Dance of Deanions —Eileen Monroe. Gloria Horman. i Solo —Reverie.- —Mary Jean Trick ' er. Duet—Glow Worm —Phyllis Kol- : ter. Alice Yost. Solo—Andante. Animate, Presto, Ijirgo—(Berneta Dy tie. PERSONAL!! D. S Wolfe of route 6. was among ; yesterday's business visitors here. John Carroll will leave tomorrow for Loyola university. Chicago ; where he will continue the studv 1 ■ of medicine. Mrs. J. B. Holthouse and Miss | Margaret Holthouse will go to Mti- ( waukee,. Wisconsin Sunday for ai week's visit with Mr. and Mrs. Bob] Holthouse. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Holthouse, Mr.; and Mrs. Boyd Fuller of Los AngeI les. Cal., and Miss Ruth Sloan of . Urbana, 111. will be the week-end I guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith at their cottage at Hamilton Lake. I Miss Ruth Sloan of Urbana, Ohio, today for a visit with i friends. While in Decatur she will 1 be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. E., Holthouse and over the week-end j she will be the guest of Mr. and: : Mrs. Fred Smith at Hamilton Lake. • Mrs. Carrie Haubold is ab’e to be ■ ! up after a week’s illness. I A number of D. H. S. students lure planning to attend the football I game at Bluffton this evening. The annual hoboes soup night ■ ■ field at Sun Set park Wednesday : 1 vetting was attended by about 400 j guests. Irvin Stucky of Monroe was a De-, i catur business visitor today. Miss Ruth Voglewede left today ' ' to enter her senior year of college 1 I at Mt. Saint Joseph, Ohio. CZECH GOVERNMENT ' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) i on treason charges for issuing a ' proclamalion announcing that ■ Sudeten Germans wanted to "go ■ back home to the Reich" — GerI many. There was no compromise about the government’s attitude 1 today. It not only ordered the arrest j of Henh in and the suppression of storm troop activities but througn the governor of Bohemia, in which is the German area, ordered all possessions of weapons and munitions in the German or mixed Gorman districts to surrender' | them within 24 hours. Failure is 1 punishable by imprisonment for
the StengdAJ WhollyuioodMl
By HARRISON CARROIX Copyright. IS3B. King Fraturn tiyndkate, iac. HOLLYWOOD—There has been a lot of talk about the Inheritance coming to John Payne, but it will not reach anywhere near the figure nimtdhH in thn
quoted In the rumors, J 300.000. Payne saye he gets the principal of a $40,000 trust fund next year and that he will devote part of the money to buying back the old family plantation outside cf Roanoke, Va. Anne Shirley's handsome husband aheadv
Harrison Carroll
ousuaou aneauy has bought 200 acres ol the land that once belonged to the Payne ind the White plantations. The money has come from his salary it Warner Brothers. Payne made i hit iN "The Garden of the Moon" ind is working now in "Wings of he Navy". If the studio goes through with its plans for him, he won't have to worry about inleritances, anyway. Mrs. Edward G. Robinson will lave a Trotsky interview In a comng issue of Bob Wagner's Script. She got the material through alklng to Russia's famous exile luring a recent trip to Mexico. A portrait of Hollywood's ;lamor star, Hedy Lamarr, will be xhibited at the San Francisco air and the painter will be none >ther than her boy friend, Reginald Jardiner. He has worked for months on the five-foot canvas which depicts Hedy wearing slacks ind with a bright-colored scarf iround her hair. Why slacks, I wonder? They ire the least glamorous of garments. Are Lucille Ball and Director Al Hall finally going to take the gosdps out of their suspense? With "Annabel Takes a Tour” completed, Lucille is on her way east and Hall is supposed to follow. They may get married but don't count on it. On the 23rd of this month, Mrs Marguerita Pughe, mother of the late Jack Dunn, returns to England. She has made many friends n Hollywood and the following mcident helps you to understand why. When Edward Small picked Louis Hayward for the role Jack was to have played in "The Duke jf West Point”, Mrs. Pughe called
from one to five years. As it moved to smash the din orders in the Sudeten area .nd make plain its intention of fig - ing if necessary, the governmi i>t took action to present its cas - t j the world. Votja Benes, brother of President Edouard Benes, left for the United States to give Americans a picture of the situation as Czechs see it. ThWre were only isolated, minor incidents in the Sudeten area last night. Two Czech soldiers were -onorfod killed at Butzengruen, near Falkenau. i nis morning all was reported ■uiet. As to Henlein, there was little , belief that he would be arrested. It happened that just before the j order tor the warrant for Henlein i was issued, the German language I radio had announced that Hen- ' lein, Karl Frank and other Sudeten German leaders had left
New Automobile Speed King *'
, x&m- ' ■ ,x W; v r w 4 iw- . r *• ' , J / k< & ■ : 11 y » ■ lob - - •Htriui, •"•■ '■’**Wi\ '■ «®sp Kv- ’7 * ;S : V. 7 f • : ■ : ■ tlb" Hjg • V-: - ." ■ trfP* John Cobb in his turtle-shaped racer I Here is the new world’s automobile speed king, John Cobb, London fur broker, who splintered Capt. George E. T. Eyston s mark by more than five miles per hour in driving his trutle-shaped racer over the ' ponneville salt flats in Utah at an average of 350.20 miles per hour.
to wish him good luck and to mak« a generous bequest. She Is presenting to Hayward the ice skatei of her dead son. Hayward will wear them In the picture. Special to the Valentino fans Small denies that Hayward alsc will fall heir to the role of th* screen’s great lover. The searct for an actor to impersonate Valentino is still going on. Morton Downey's opening at the Cocoanut Grove carried you back to the days when this spot was at the height of its glory. Hollywood stars at almost every ringside table. Downey sang for 38 minutes straight, the record for a solo act at the Grove. When his repertoire was almost exhausted, Downey said: "I never thought I’d try thia number in a supper club but I am going to take a chance." And he sang a simple lullaby. It held the gay crowd to breathless silence. Many an eye turned to Barbara Bennett, mother of Downey's five children and still lovely as a screen star. Out on the Sunset Strip, at Phil Selznick’s club, another Hollywood crowd gathered the same night to pay tribute to Peggy Fears. In her audience were Fannie Brice, Irving Berlin. Tallulah . Bankhead, Lenore Ulric, jay Paley, Franchot Tone and George Murphy stagging. ditto George Raft and Mack Gray. Earlier in the afternoon, the papers had carried headlines that Peggy was down to her last string of pearls and was singing to eat. In on* number, Peggy minced across the floor showing how Ziegfeld taught girls to walk by balancing a book on their head. The book fell off. "There go my pearls," said Peggy. Cesar Romero is spending hours on Joan Crawford's set these afternoons. . . . Margaret Lindsay's latest escort is Bob Abbott, who used to take Anita Louise places. . . . Leo Gorcey and Cath- ' erine Marvis won’t be married until Christmas, but he already has bought the wedding ring. . . . Hal Roach's daughter, Margaret, will open a singing engagement at La Conga. . . . Harpo Marx, always the prankster, loudly applauded his own entrance on the screen at the “Room Service” preview; . . . And Sally Eilers will go to night school at U. C. L. A. this semester to continue her study of philosophy. Which makes her the only screen star who manages to , have a career, to be a wife and mother and to go to college.
I Czechoslovakia within the last few hours. j Only a short time before. Suda-, ten leaders said they would re-' main in their towns, depending' on their followers to rise in their support. Old Fort Players i! To Present Program 1 , The Old Fort players cf Fort Wayne will present a perfoimance on the first evening of the two-day convention of the Northeastern Ind- ' iana teachers’ association at Fort Waylie, October 27 and 28, it waS made known today. Principal speakers on the program will be HookerT. Washington, Jr. son of the famous negro; Rabbi '.Stephen Wise of New York: Dr. F. B. Knight of Purdue university and , Dr. Clyde Wildman, president of De- ' Pauw university Theachers of Decatur will attend.
LAWYERS ADOPT CODE OF ETHICS Indiana Bar Association Takes Steps To improve Justice French Lick. Ind., Sept. 16 — ( (U.R> L. L. Hornberger of HamI tnond, president of the Indiana 1 state bur association, today urged ! "integration" the bar as n [ step toward allowing the legal ( profession In Indiana Io “proceed unfettered in Improving the udi ministration of Justice." He addressed more than 300 I lawyers gathered here for their ' annual two day meeting. The ' final soHslon wfll be held toinorI row. Bonib>rger explained that the l "integrated" bar would mean all ’ lawyers would be members of an 1 assoc iation under the direction of , the supreme court. The system j is successful in 20 states, he said. In addition, he urged complete | political Independence of the | judiciary the careful developi inent of young attorneys, udminj tstration of justice with greatest reasonab'e speed, raising of ad- | mission standards to the bar, and i the assurance to every man of ; adequate defense of his civil rights. j New officers to be presented i tomorrow are William H. Hill, of Vincennes, president, and Milo N. ■ Felghtner, Huntington, vice-presi-dent. The committee on illegal pracI tice of law and grievances backed Bombergcr's suggestion of an integrated" bar and in its report recognized the "futility of any attempt to discipline lawyers under our existing procedure." They concluded an "integrated" bar would answer the problem. The committee adopted a comprehensive code of ethics which j marks the first time the legal pro- : session in this state has had an j official adopted canon of conduct. A committee on criminal juris- ' prudence recommended establish- ' ment of courts in each comity similar to the municipal courts in SUN. MON. TUES. 10c Matinee 1:15 Sunday j 2 Great Action Pictures! EVERY LUNGE OF THE LION BROUGHT DEATH CLOSER! One of the thrilling scenes | in Bulldog Drummond's omoxing adventure with International spies! bjewßS — ADDED THRILLER — A spine-tingling mystery hit that will raise your hair! “THE MISSING GUEST” With PAUL KELLY Constance Moore, Wm. Lundigan Evenings 10c-15c o—o Tonight & Saturday TEX RITTER in “UTAH TRAIL” with “Beverly Hill Billies” ALSO —"Fighting Devil Dogs" Comic S. Novelty. < Of* Bo,h Rights o_o Coming Wed. & Thurs. — First Chapter Greatest Serial Ever Made. "Secret of Treasure Island" PLUS — Wallace Beery in "Bad Man of Brimston*.” Only 10c.
WANT TO MAKE IT AT HOME? Adhesives — cleaning mid polishing materials —compositions— I cosmetics- Holders mid fluxer Inks mid writing mntertals all these l and many more ara covered In oar Washington Service Bureau's ' 24-pagu FORMULA BOOK, which you can obtain by sending the coupon below, with u dime enclosed, to cover return postage and handling costs: 1 CLIP COUPON. HERE Frederick M. Kerby, Dept. B-138, Daily Democrat's Service Bureau, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Here's a dime (carefully wrapped), for which send my copy of . THE FORMULA BOOK, to: i 1 N A M E- - STREET and No. - J! CITY - STATE 1 i I am a reader of the Decatur Dally Democrat, Decatur, Ind
( . Indianapolis mid urged the legisr l lature to enact n law "depriving - justices of the peace of Jurlsdie- - tion in i.ll cases involving violation of a state or city ordinance I ■ governing the operation of motor! I . vehicles" in an effort to “correct ' i the evil” of technical arrests of , I' motorists and disposition of their i i cases in justice courts. The committee on judicial se ' ■ i lection suggested the use of a ’ ■ separate ballot of judges at elec-] -! tions, remarking that it "is prob-
■UMgMHHigBaagHmttHWKMBtVUtmnHnBmnBMngBHmWF" i Colonial Case Known as Chick’s Place Largest Assortment In Town i Wine — Brandy — Whiskey . . . best quality and aged Whiskey $1.35 qt. — Wine 45c (known brands) LOWEST PRICES — SAME PRICE EVERY DAY Try us for good home-cooked Food and Sandwiches. Soft Drinks — Best Coffee Albert Aeschliman, Prop. f SUN - MON - TUES - MW IMS' Cortirevous Sur.Jay from 1:15 ' only 10c-2sc HIT AFTER HIT! Another New Season Triumph! IT SURPASSES ’x 1 ALL 1 Ml your DEMANDS I \ Great in Theme.. Great in 1 Cast.. Great in Direction 1 ..and that Great Scalawa CL-Charlie McCarthy/ ■ BWlilifli fffjiU I*- \ MsKar ft™™. ■; I ALSO—Selected Short Subjects. o o — TONIGHT and SATURDAY — Last Night's Crowds Cheered This M'ghty Epic of the Great Southwest! A Picture So Big, Mere Words Can Not Describe It! See It For Exciting Thrills! , "THE TEXANS" RANDOLPH SCOTT JOAN BENNETT t; May Robson, Walter Brennan, Raymond Hatton. ALSO—Bettv Boop Cartoon & News. 10c-25c o o I COMING—JOE E. BROWN in “The Gladiator.” I
PAGE THREE
able less voter* would vote the judicial ballot than the genetui ticket but it would result in ,i more intelligent mid bettor selection of judges." — o " ♦ 4 Adams County Memorial Hospital | > « Admitted: Mrs. C. D. Smith, 41» West Monroe stteet.
