Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 17 October 1938 — Page 3

CIETY

of ENJ° y o, ( „ R 1 ,| P * R < 'lor.- Cralik'i i sßr L ■ •" ,!1 "- U p ' ll '"' Mr -'"'l ■ 'I B',, Miss M.rv l» ! "' v ' ,:i I-'' l '° r “ SiX ' fl meet mg. for ...... '^■ Ml .<Sab.n i; o S'!■"-<'l Berne S'hag will -7 !r avel.'K n» f' iP abl 01 “ l JL li;,li>h 'T' ,s „!■ -".'ing. Every Corinthian Hass meeting W 1.1. l at th.- Mme <’f "-fl*. Kun?" f-vcning |H..'.. .1 until farther ■4 Kl !;.•■ ■ •r.-.l church will ■ sal- it. the church *'■ «fl r . . 2k; ■'■ ~s , , ' of Tri fl, is asked to meet at 'he Elk s " .. o'clo k Tues1% an all .lav meetin? at the ' v .. < ,|..> Hl Yost Thursday fl.. ask-d ■■, attend. t.osß' - Frivolity will meet with \V..Ham Atmos’ W. Inesday a . .cvea-thirly o'clock. •■)s^B-■ ■ wiil 'tlfl home of Mls cliarles Bpl .Baby’s Cold discomforts relic.eJ i without dosing —use

!!■■■ i -Behind the ScefgtSX BtollyuioodO

HARRISON ( ARIiOI.L . <<’Pyri,lit. ISHS , *'■"! Matures vindicate, Inc. of Hollywood. Freddie Bar--w ■ so Ami t ican--Cl-M feels it must re-

develop his Eng- 1 lish accent. To I this end. Fred- I r,. w ’*«> « die is say in g j goodby to his friend and tutor of several years. R. L. Van Scoyck. When the boy star goes on his personal appearance tour, he will have a new instructor, Captain John V. Conner ev.Rrit.

firr ■ -*«*■ »r j K I Freddie

vooper. ex-Bnt-offii>r. Captain Cooper, Sy, studin hopes, will have FredITO^H S accent back to normal by the th at cameras are ready to on the lung-delayed producor Kim". " Raye and Composer ,’^^V 1 Hose will start marriage in Os their own - The y have , a lar ee colonial house not ‘tom Hollywood boulevard. -t^B“ nwhl1 ®. Martha's mother is u' n ’ 0 hillside home ■ the star used to live in canyon. riße? a r-’ he " Gun ? a Din” location, ,'K.I ,y Grant, Douglas Fairand Vlctor McLaglen \ SVVe^ere d in woolen uniHb J9 ' tba temperature now drops rl fiL’r ai ehief sutterer is Charw° r Sam Jaffe who must wh° r i! ! he camera tn a loin ..^K)thinJ llCh Kipling described as K : of ?h« U K h before and less than evt^ 1 behind -” Several hunHrh»v ro>, as are in a sim ilar plight. rSe in ov ercoats, shiver '^KtiL tak . es ' The water at the ■E to h aC ? a " y is so cold that it . bea^ed before the seven P ‘ ts in troupe will drink ■iesn’t U n h ‘ nk being sl ‘ghtly balmy <K brnH ay ’ consider this. The a' er % have signed to ■orld’s iL the opening of the B p ir salarv n” New York and sa 'ary will be $50,000. ■^ke y y b ßnnn CaUSe of the Publicity. ‘■»imitat? n „ y ,?° W refuses to give ■ does . ? 0t o Wal!ace Beery, but Bt'-een cil'? fIC takeoff of seenes dward C- Robinson ■ickey h ‘ a ” lc Believe it or not, W e> ha, . red hQt

- CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Maey Phones 1000 — 1001 Monday Woman’s Club General Meeting, Library, 7:45 p. tn. Research Club. Mrs. W. I Krick 3:30 n. m. Tuesday Root Twp. Home Economies Club Guest Day. Monmouth School. Decatur Flower Garden Club, Mrs. Floyd Arnold. 424 floss Street, 2:30 I-. m. Psi lota XI Masquerade Party, Miss Dora Shosenberg, C p. m. Kum-Joln-Us Class Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Eichenauer 7:30 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Daughters’ Claes Meeting, Mrs. Clarence Smith of Preble, 7:30 p. m. Tri Kappa Executive Meeting. Elk’s Home. 7:30 p. m. Tri Kappa Business Meeting. Elks home, 8 p. in. Wednesday St. Paul Ladies’ Aid Society, Mrs. Marion Reber, all day meeting. St. Paul Ladies’ Aid Society, Mrs. Marion Reber, all day meeting. Frivolity Club. Mrs. William August, 7:30 p. m. Business and Professional Women’s Club. Rice Hotel, 6:30 p. m. Shakespeare Clu >, Mrs. Charles Dugan, 2:30 p. Tn. Historical Club, Mis. F r ed Handler, 2:30 p. m. Thursday Phoebe Bible Class, Mrs. Charles Beineke. 7:30 p. m. . St. Mary’s Township Hom? Economics Club, Mrs. Frank Johnston. 1:30 p. m. Woman’s Home and Foreign Missionary Society. M. E. Chinch, 2 I p. m. Christian Church Brotherhood. James Anderson. 7:30 p. m. St. Luke’s Ladies’ Aid Society, 1 Mrs. John Yost, all day mee’ing. Saturday I G. M. G. Class Baked Goods Sale. . Mutschler’s Market. 8 a. n, • Zion Reformed W. M. S. Rumi mage Sale. Church Basement, 9 i A. M. • Thursday evening at sevenI thirty o’clock. All members are ask- ’ ed to come masked. Dues are to be paid at this meeting also.

I screen story for Robinson. WarI ners really ought to contact him. In a business where credit stealI ing is all too common, it’s nice to i hear of a gesture such as David 1 Butler just made. They were tryI ing to figure out a punch ending I for the picture “Kentucky”. Who 1 but a property man should turn up with a swell idea ? Instead of ’tuaipi s's; cue si. * ‘ ’ Butler gave the property man full credit in his report to his superiors. Understand the production department has written the "props" a nice letter. If Miliza Korjus makes a hit in "The Great Waltz”, M-G-M will give her a big ballyhoo under the slogan “Korjus — pronounced Gorgeous”. A bit of license for it’s really pronounced “Koryus”. However, the idea seems a good one for the average tongue would stumble on "Miliza Koryus ’. Now that Genevieve Tobin has married Director William Keighley, her brother, George, will become one of Keighley’s assistants. He

formerly worked in the story department of Miss Tobin’s agent, Everett Crosby . . . The reception of the picture, "Drums”, proves that Korda’s discovery, Sabu, really has a draw. First two weeks of the film in

J 1 J > *** dU - Gale Page

San Francisco were as big as "Algiers" . . James Ellison and Gertrude Durkin are off to New York . . . Director Robert Sinclair really had the jitters when his wife visited the "Dramatic School” set and Luise Rainer and Paulette Goddard, for a rib, showered him with caresses . . . Mrs. Sinclair knew it was a rib but Sinclair didn't know she knew . . . Gale Page hired the three-piece Mexican band at the Vista Del Arroyo and. after closing hours, took it to Hollywood to serenade her friends until the wee hours. Rosa Ponselle was in on the fun . . . New twosomes: Randolph Scott with Mary Lou Dix at the Tropics . . . Colin Tapley with Mamo Clark at the Club 17 . . . Harry Carey has been in pictures for 28 years and "The Law West of Tombstone” is his 300th picture role ■ . . Franciska Gaal has been given the old Garbo dressing room at M-G-M. Greta has a brand new one awaiting her return.

The SI. Paul Indies’ nil society | will meet at the home of Mrs. Marlon Reber Wednesday for an all day meeting. The women or the missionary hocjieiy of the Zion Lulhorpn church i will give a chicken supper at the j church Saturday evening, October 29. The menu will be announced | next week. The St. Mary’s township home t economics club will mee’ at the home of Mrs. Frank Johnston Thursday afternoon at one-thirty o’clock. Election of officers will be held and a good attendance is do- : sired. The St. Paul ladies' aid society will have an all day meeting at the home of Mrs. Marion Reber Wed- 1 aesday. MR. AND MRS. CRAMER HAVE CLASS MEETING The C. I. C. of Union Chapel met ’ Friday evening at the home of Mr. i and Mrs. George Crajner with the president, Glen Roughia, conduct--ing the meeting. A round table discussion of revival meetings was held in charge of Mrs. Charles Bailey, Thurman Drew and Freeman Schnepp. The . class presented the teacher, Mr. Cramer, with a beautiful bouquet of flowers in appreciation of his many years of taithful service. Mr. Cramer responded with fitting remarks of thanks. During the social hour a carry in luncheon was enjoyed. The G. M. G. of the Zion Reformed Sunday school will have a baked goods sale Saturday at Mntschler’r market. The sale will open at 8 a. tn. and continue all day. There will be a business meeting of the Tri Kappa sorority, Tuesday night at 8 o’clock at the Elks Home. Members have been urged to attend. o PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Walters left , for their home in Los Angeies, Cal.. after a week's visit with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Walters of Madison street They were accompanied as far as Chicago by Mr. Walters’ sister. M’ss Helen Walters, who will visit fi lends there for several days before returning to Detroit, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Amerine and i son and daughter, visited over the week-end with Mr. and Mrs Theodore Graliker. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hyiand of Indianapols were week-end visitI ors here. M. E. Hower went to Indianapolis today to attend to business. Victor Eicher spent Saturday evening here. He is the Democratic 'candidate for auditor and is vigor-

ously calling on the various com-, munities of rhe county. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Augenbaugh! and sons John and Philip v sited in Decatur Saturday morning enroute ' io St. Mary’s Ohio to spend the day I i with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Breiner j | and son. -(, ii, V . . < ■■ " - ' 7 ' | Hugo Franz of 133 North Third, street, who has been in a serious i condition at the Adams county me-' , mortal hospital, was reported as! ' considerably improved today. He I has a leg infection believed caused by a scratch on his leg and ankle i received in a fall recently. o TWO MEETINGS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) j <es of the above mentioned soyi j beans are invited to look over the 1 i certified seed lists in the county | 1 agent's office. — —o — FRED MAJOR IS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) j cursion to the Indiana Odd Fellows home at Greensburg Wednesday afternoon. In adition to Mr. Major, Decatur members in attendance were L. ( . Helm, who served as chairman of I I the committee on credentials, and i Norman G. Lenhart, delegate from j i the Decautr lodge. Four Names Added For Petit .Jury | By order of Judge Huber M. Dei Voss, four new names have been drawn for the petit jury for the ■ September term of the Adams ciri cult court. They are: Herman C. i Atz, Wabash township; Sam S. Egj ley, Jefferson township; Curtis Baker, Blue Creek township and El•ifier H- Beineke, Preble township. On the list previously drawn by jury commissioners, Forrest Elzey | and Henry F. Gallmcyer, four were dropped. The sheriff reported Walter Gobel could not be found in this ! county. The other three; Harry; Eckrote, Berne; Edwin Bixler, Wabash township, and Ella Grote, Unlion township, were excused by Judge DeVoss for “good and sufficient reasons.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER 17. 1938.

STUDENT HONOR ROLL ANNOUNCED 1 I ■ ■■ - Honor Roll For Catholic High And tirade Schools Is Listed The honor roll for the Decatur ’ Catholic high school and the St. 1 Joseph grade school was announc- ’ ed today. Mary Catherine Spang- ' ler and Josephine Daniels led the high school scholars with four A's ' and two B's each. Jane Klelnhenz also secured four A's to rank third. The high school list follows: A B Mary Catherine Spangler 4 2 I Josephine Daniels ....... 4 2 Jane Kletnhenz 4 1 Vera Braun 3 3 , Marjorie Kintz 3 3 ' Bernardiue Fuurote 3 3 Geraldine HeimUnn 3 3 Dorothy Rutnschlag 3 2 • Lona Ulema n 3 2 ' Ambrose Geimer 2 4 Laurine Lengerich 2 4 Ruth Borns 2 4 i Leo Alberding . 1 5 . Kathleen Heimann 1 5 Lucile Baker 1 5 Ethel Miller 1 5 James Miller 1 4 . Catherine Teeple 1 4 . James Meyer 6 The honor roll for the grades fol- , I lows: Gighth Grade A B j Dolores Rutnschlag . 1 9 Yvonne Smith 1 4 ~ Joen Wemhofl 1 4 Seventh Grade Mary Catherine Rutnschlag 1 6 Sixth Grade William Hartman 7 0 i Thomas Terveer 6 2 Jerome Wait 2 5 Fifth Grade 1 ' Marian Sorg ... - 8 1 ’ James Hess " 3 James Mies fi 4 Catherine Schmitt 4 3 Joan Bierly 2 7 Miriam Appelman 2 4 i Patrick Briede 1 8 Fourth Grade Patricia Keibers 3 6 Ruth Holthouse 2 5 Third Grade ; Dorothy Flaugh 5 3 Maxine Relief 5 3 Marjorie Gase 5 2 ; Clarice Rutnschlag 4 4 ’ Catherine Gass 3 4 , JURY SELECTED (CONTINUED FROM PAGI-1 ONE) - township, members of the panel, I vlere excused by Judge DeVoss and ' Otto Bieberich, KirKland township, and Sam Egley. Jefferson township, were excused by the attorneys. Talismen brought in by deputy

ik ill!!! i th MB W Ch, B > W It w Wi - y a '"’■b A % i W . • ■ W™ * ' \ I V A' - \ , ...Chesterfield writes it for A everybody who smokes em y It s pleasure you smoke for •• • I a ' paul whiteman everybody knows that... and bU it’s pleasure you get m every g burns allen Chesterfield you light. Chesterfields are milder and better- f J Ln X rSSSX. tasting and here s the big reason... W /A W Every Thursday and Saturday A £ t A JkJ t 52 Leading N. B. C. Stations It takes good things to make a A QArl 1/ ’ good product. In Chesterfield we / J*'* use the best ingredients a eigarette f ..with MORE PLEASURE can have.,. mild ripe tobaccos and c .11 • copyright t«s. pure cigarette paper. ’ ()r 011111011 S ICC.BTT * Mr,«S Tobacco Co.

Calls on President K't- rr ■bi Supreme Court Justice Ixnus t. an. deis is pictured on way to see President Roosevelt at the White House. It is believed Brandeis sought eloquently to persuade the President that the U. S. should display more interest in the Palestine problem, sheriff Leo Gillig and accerted bv ine attorneys to fill the panel are: William LeFever, Berne; Lawrence Voglewede, Decatur; George Flanders, Decatur, and Victo>- Eichenberger, Berne. Included among the assets of th? estate are a 200 acre fai m in St. Alary’s township and some personal property. o Funeral Held For Local Man’s Sister Funeral services were held today at Manitau, Michigan for Mrs. Eva Holloway, sister of L.C. Helm, of this city, who died there Friday night. Death resulted from complications, following a fractured hip sustained Thursday in a fall. Surviving, besides the brother heie, are a daughter, Mrs. Frank Beecher of Manitau, at whose home death occurred, and several grandchildren. The husband preceded her in death. Mr. Helm was unable to attend the service because of the illness of his wife. o 500 Sheets B'Axil, 20-lb.. White Automatic Mimeograph Bond, nealy wrapped $1.05. This paper is free of lint and sized for pen and ink. Decatur Democrat Company. ts

THREE ON TRIAL AS NAZI SPIES Governor (’harges Defendants Sent Data To Germany New York, Oct. 17.-<U.R> The i government charged In federal j court today shat three defendants on trial on charges of espionage conspired to obtain information concerning military secrets of the I United States and "transmit It to Germany.” U. S. Attorney Lamar Hardy charged in his opening statements to tho federal jury that the conspiracy against the American government was “conceived and directed hi a foreign government, namely Germany." Hardy said that two of the 14 others who were indicted but are in Germany safe from prosecution —Capt.-Lleut. Erich Pfeiffer, chief of German intelligence at Bremen, and Lieut.-Commander Ernst Mueller, chief of naval intelligence at j Hamburg —“sought out people of German blood and German extraction" in the United States. “They were paid money in some cases; in other cases, they did it for the love of the fatherland,” Hardy continued. Those picked for espionage aer- ’ vice by Mueller and Pfeiffer, Hardy said, “were called agents" and in- , eluded Guenther Gustave Rumrich. . army deserter who pleaded guilty . before the trial got under way; Otto Hermann Voss, former me- , chanic at the Seversky airplane factory, and Erich Glaser, army i private stationed at Mitchel Field. Voss, Glaser and Johanna Hofmann, former hairdreser on the German liner Europa, are the defendants on trial. Miss Hofmann served allegedly as transatlantic messenger. Hardy said the American leader of the spy ring was Dr. Ignatz T. Griebl, a naturalized American wTfo tied to Germany, and that one of the agents sent to this country was Werner George Gudenberg, assistant to Pfeiffer. The attorney said the agents first obtained milyitary information and then transmitted it to Germany. “In most cases," he said, “they used stewards of the North Gar-man-Lloyd and Hamburg-American , lines: in some, they sent the information direct by mail.” Negro Farm Hand Held For Murders i . 1 Smyrna. Ga., Oct. 17 (UP) — I Sheriff deputies today tracked down ■ a negro farm hand accused of kill- ' ing an aged farmer and his daugh-

Smyrna. Ga., Oct. 17 - (UP) — Sheriff deputies today tracked down a negro farm hand accused of killing an aged farmer and his daugh-

ter and seriously wounding the girl's small son. The negro, Will Russell, was held In u secret jail while officers sought to prevent mob violence. Police at nearby Snrl'dtn. Ga., said the negro killed George VS'usli Ington Camp, 66. and killed his divorced daughter, Mrs. ('hristlne Camp-Cauls, 26. Police said tne motive “was obviously” criminal assault. ■ ' o— ————• Five Persons Killed As Planes Collide Detroit, Oct. 17 --(UP)— Two pianos collided In mid-air over the motor city airport yesterday, plunged to earth in flames and carried tive persons to their death. Air authorities were preparing an investigation into the crash today. The victims, burned beyond recognition. were identified as wil liam Stanislaw, 35. pilot; Walter Paselk, 46, pilot and Ford Motor Co. worker, Francis Baby, 2S,Chrysler Corp, worker; Robert E. Lee, 2'l and his son. Robert E., Jr., three and a half years old. o District Contests Set For November 5 The district 4-H club Home Economics contests will be held Saturday. Nov. 5. beginning at 9 a. m. at the Hillcrest school near Fort Wayne. Adams county will be represented In the demonstration contest and in three of the judging contests. Miss Arveda Mazelin of the Monroe Busy Bee club will demonstrate "Altering a pattern.” Margaret Allspaw of Berne will be in the clothing judging contest; Virginia Hoffman of the Washington township

Demand the Best—CERTIFIED Hybrid Seed Corn 613 and 425 Series OUR SEED —was purchased from and approved for this county by Purdue University. It cost us more — it's worth more to you. We have just completed a new modern dryer in order to better take care of ‘your” corn over the winter. We invite you to inspect our dryer and see the big yellow corn on the cob before you buy. Corn raised and is being dried on the Leon Neuenschwander farm a mile south of Berne—just back of Lehman’s park. Order now for sure delivery. ROBERT HELLER. Decatur LEON NEI ENSCH WANDER. Berne

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■ 1-11 club In the baking Judging I coiiiest and Marjorie Dilling of 1 Preble in the canning judging' conlesi. Adult I II club leaders and -1 11 club members and junior leaders are invited to iitleml this meeting Anyone wishing to go should • contact the county agent's office and perhaps group transportation .' can lie arranged. - —_- (> State Safety Program Praised By Townsend — Indianapolis, Ind.. Oct. 17 —(UP) 1 --Gov. M. Clifford Townsend today ! told Hoosier newspapermen attending tho ('. I. T. Safety foudation'a 1 seminar that Indiana now '.ias “the most carefully-considered safety program ever undertaken on a state wide basis." Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines you have tried for your common cough, chest cold, or bronchial Irritation. you may get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford ■ to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble 1 and aids nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mucous membranes I and to loosen and expel germladen phlegm. . . . . Even if other remedies have failed, ' don't be discouraged, try Creomuli sion. Your druggist is authorized to refund your money if you are not thoroughly satisfied with the benefits obtained. Creomulsion is one word, ask for it plainly, see that the name on the bottle is Creomulsion, and you’ll get the genuine product and the relief you want. (Adv.)