Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 145, Decatur, Adams County, 20 June 1945 — Page 3

DNESDAY, JUNE 20,1945.

Bosomy

L home makers f HAS meeting I nappy Home Makera clulb fitly at the home of Mrs. feting was opened with the t ringing the song of the I l ' * 01() Black Joe,” followed [ CIU I> creed and song. Roll F ans wered with “when and Li' wa« married," and fo’lowLhort business meeting, Mrs. L Reber and Mrs. John BaltL ve the less on easy salads. L a l contests 'were enjoyed Llelicious refreshments were I, bv the hostess, assisted by L bw and Mrs. Baltzell. The meeting will the at the home L ©wight Schnepp. -1 '— IFpTION HONORS BURNED VETERAN L Andrews, who recently reI from over three years aeL duty with the navy in the ‘ was the honored guest at

hOLLYWOOSO

| jy HARRISON CARROLL Isins Features Syndicate Writer Bollywood — That famous ■ “If you want anything, just Btle" is getting to be a tired ■ to'uuren Bacall. And if you F want to make a hit with her, KMsitajill don’t call her "Baby,” either. B* * ' 'W The season’s 'll most publicized Bpjp glamor girl is K. ir slttin £ on the Bl' g “C on f 1 dential HMRI Agent” set this week watching ylOidaM Charles Boyer K antl thinking °f HBaMMI Humphrey Boiarrison Carroll gart. r She’s wearing Im-colored slacks and a man’s Ke shirt open at the neck. Her Ke feet, with painted toenails, are leased in sandals. ■She has on her gold-chain wed|g ring and her charm bracelet lh the little gold whistle on It. ['Will they ever stop writing tout that whistle business?” she • ks me plaintively. "And are the 1 lumnists forever going to refer ; Ime as ‘baby’? j''it makes our marriage sound leap. Like it was one long party. Is not that way to us. We are seri|s. I’m a lucky girl. I think Humprey is the most wonderful man I the world.” iLauren likes Boyer, too. “He’s nice,” she says. “Not a bit toney and has a marvelous sense '■ I humor.” But to get back to the com- ■ pint department, Lauren says the kture, “To Have and Have Not,” : fever did contain the line as com- i [only quoted: “If you want any- t ling, just whistle." t "That was the way Warners icrtened it for the ads,” she says. My next move is obvious. I ask ■ |r to repeat the real line. She oks reproachful, but obliges. She ves it to me in the same husky, iwocative drawl as in the pic- ' ire: " V v *. don’t have to act with me, 1 lev You don’t have to say any- 1 ling and you don’t have to do any- i >ing. Oh, maybe just whistle, You t low how to whistle, don’t you, <

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9' KBXBSSKBBS: SSE2E««e»» B ■ BE BRIEF WHEN YOU USE I YOUR TELEPHONE. IKB When you make unnecessary calls, either local or long distance you hamper the war effort by tieing up the lines that are almost constantly being used by the government. ★1

a reception given recently at Han na-Nuttman park by t.ho members and friends of the .Church of the Nazarene. A carry-in supper was served at a large table, centered with a huge decorated cake. After the supper, the following program was given: poem, Mis Nola LJby; quartet, Ransome Barkley, Mike ißieberstein, Mrs. A. W. Lytle and Doyle Lytle; readmgs Doyle Lytle and Mrs. Andrews; girls trio, Colleen Edgell, June and Joyce Ward; orchestra selections; trio, 'Morrison sisters; accordian solo, Irenios Mattox. Approximately fifty persons attended the reception. The Ladies Aid society of the First Evangelical church will meet at the church Thursday afternoon at two o clock. Mrs. 'Carl Hammond is the chairman of the June section.

Steve? Just put your lips together and blow.” This turns out to be a swell day for set-visiting at Warners. On ‘‘A Stolen Life,” Director Curtis Bernhardt is shooting a New England barn dance. The barn and the surrounding countryside cover an entire sound-stage. Right now they are lighting up. Most of the extras are in the barn, but Bette is sitting outside in a canvas chair getting her hair fixed and talking to Director Bernhardt. She plays identical twins in the picture, one nice, the other predatory. I pull up a chair and Bernhardt does a rave about Bette’s characterizations. "There are no makeup tricks,” he says, “and she doesn’t even change her voice for the different girls. She does it all with the eyes. But she creates two distinct individuals.” On the set, Bette even talks about herself as two different people. the nice girl in the next scene,” she says. “My sister, Pat, is off dancing with my beau, the soand so.” “Sounds very confusing,” I observe. "Aren’t you afraid this picture will give you a split personality?” Bette laughs gayly. “Oh, I’ve always had that,” she says. Now over to Twentieth CenturyFox for a quick look at a courtroom scene for "Leave Her to Heaven.” District Attorney Vincent Price is giving Cornel Wilde a bad few minutes in the witness chair. Looking on is Jeanne Crain, who is suspected of murdering Wilde’s spouse, Gene Tierney. Price's delivery is so good that the extras applaud on the conclusion. This is a rare tribute on a set, but Director John M. Stahl is a perfectionist. He orders another take. At the far end of the courtroom, I notice a familiar figure—Stuart Holmes, arch heavy of the early silents. Probably not three people on the set know it, but Holmes played a lead in the first picture ever made by Fox —“Life's Shop Window,” in 1915.

club CALENDAR I Society Deadline, 11 A. M Phones 1000—1001 Wednesday Decatur Home economics club, Mt s. Elmer Anspaugh, 1:15 p. m St. Ann study club, Mrs. Anselm 'Hackman, 7:30 p. tn. W- S. <’. S. of Pleasant Mil’s Methodust church, Mm. c. G. Mann, 7:30 p.m. Wesley class of Methodist church, oy Scout’ cabin, Hanna Nuttman park, 6: 3h p, nt, Thursday 'Ladies Aid society of First Evangelical church, church, 2 p. m . Circle I. of W. S. c. s. of Methodist church, Mrs. John Peterson 2:30 p. m. I resbyterian ladies aid society Mrs. Bert Haley, 2:30 p. m. D. Y. B. class of First U. B. church, Mrs. Frank Bohnke, 7-30 p. m. Phoebe class of Zion Evangelical and Reformed church, social room of church, 7:45 p. m. St. Luke'is guild, church, all day. St. Paul ladies aid society, Mrs. Dwight Schnepp, all day. biiendsihip village home economics clulb, community building 1:30 p. m. Rainbow girls, Masonic hall, 7:30 p. m. Women of the Moose, Moose home, 7:30 p. m. Friday St. Mary's township Home Economics clulb, Pleasant Mills high school, 7:45 p. m. American Legion auxiliary, Legion home, 8 p. m. Monday Civic section pot-luck supper, Boy Scout calbin, Hanna Nuttman park, 6 p. m. T * KA PP A * S*ORi?R It Y* - ' HAS INITIATION SERVICES Fifty members and pledgee of Tri Kappa sorority enjoyed a delicious three-course dinner at the Elks home Tuesday evening at six o’clock. The dining tables were beautifully decorated with bouquets of flowers in pastel colors and matching tapers. 'Each place was marked with a lovely corsage. (Following the dinner, impressive initiation 'services were held at the home of Mrs. Vaughn Hilyard for Jane Maddox, Kathleen McConnell, Vera Steury, lEdna Mae Schultz, Leona Hoile, Rosamond Graham, Mrs. Louis Sair and Mrs. J. K. Gunther. Each initiate was presented with a beautiful gift from the chapter. During the short business meeting, Mrs. Roy iKalver gave a report of the dental clinic. 'Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Lloyd. Cowens, Mrs. Avon Burk, .Mrs. 'Harold Grant. Mies Manila Kunkle and Miss Harriet Kunkle.

LOCALS 'Mrs. Mary Raver of Fort Wayne is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Meyers of Dierkes, 'street. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Smith and children, Sally, Mary Jane and Joey, and Mrs. Joe Smith and daughter, Geraldine, visited in Lansing, Mich., Sunday with the latter’s brother, Louis Kintz. Wrap-and-Tie Dress SIZES 1 |H| I 1 Marian Martin What a find for amateur seamstresses! Wrap-and-tie frock, Pattern 9122, flaunts a pert peplum. Blouse has no side seains, wraps to a doll-waist. Separate dirndl skirt. Pattern 9122 comes in Junior Miss sizes 11, 13, 15 and 17. Size 13 takes 3 yards 39-inch fabric. Send TWENTY CENTS in coins for this pattern to Decatur Daily Democrat, Pattern Dept., 155 N. Jefferson St., Chicago 80, 111. Print plainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. JUST OUT! The Marian Martin Summer Pattern Book, a collection of all that’s new and smart in wearing apparel for the family. FREE Nightgown Pattern printed in book. Send Fifteen Cents for your copy.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

a I . r.r If J J ■ j luwSSl M ir H Hillliliillllllllllllilllllll uVf Revs. D. iH. and 'Celia Pellett, pastors of the Union Chapel United Brethren church, have just, received word from their son, Cpl. C. Edwin (Pellet who is located somewhere in the Philippines, stating that he has been quite seriously ill. At the time of his writing, June l'o‘, he had been in the hospital 13 days, but was sufficiently improved to write his own letter. He is a chaplain’s assistant in the field artillery. 'Pfc. Richard Buckley will report to Spence Field, Moultrie, Ga. after spending a several days furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George 'Buckley. Lt. (j.g.) Dave Macklin has arrived here from Boston to spend a few days with his mother, Mrs. P. L. Macklin. Kenneth Friedt, IMOMM 3/c, is spending a seven-day leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Friedt. Kenneth has been on active sea duty for the past several months, Charles William Mowery A/IS, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moweery, 121215 North Bth street, is receiving his Iboot training at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. iHe entered the navy May 24 and his address is as follows: Company 836, USNTS, Great Lakes, 111. Mrs. Paul E. Kern and daughter, Elizabeth Gene, of Mt. Etna, and Miss 'Esther Berniece Kern of Monument City spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Meyers. Miss Gloria Striker underwent a tonsilectomy at the local hospital this morning. 'Carl Hower i's seriously ill at his home in this city. Herman Brunnegraff of Seattle, AVash., who has been a guest of Mrs. Joe Brunnegraff and daughter, Elsie, left Tuesday morning, for Brunswick, Ga., to visit other relatives and friends. He was accompanied by Miss Brunnegraff and Miss Dora Brunnegraff. They will also visit in Kentucky and Florida. o O O | Adams County | Memorial Hospital | o —■ o Admitted: Mrs. Georg? • Kahn, route 1; Miss Gloria 'Striker, 638 Mercer avenue; 'Elmer Ijautenschleger, route 5. 'Admitted and■ dismissed: James Gay, Jfomesteaß 44. . 'Dismissed: Mrs. 'Harold Barger, route 2;-Dondld J. Boswortli, Almeda, Calif.; Michael Ehler, IWB Fourth street; Thomas Ehler, 108 Fourth street; Mrs. Mary Lehman. 316 Jackson street; Mrs. Wilmer Diller, Delphos, O.; Mrs. Francis Tumbleson and'baby boy, Wren, (>.; lE'lma Ehlerding, route 2; Mrs. Hugh Reynolds and -baby girl, AViilshire, O.; Mrs. Jennie Durbin, 1111 North Second street. O ; Better Make It One-Way Old Orchard Beach, Me. —(UP) —Thieves brokp into a railroad station here and took only four roundtrip tickets to New York.

Forest I’ark Rhapsody SPECTATOR PUMPS Sizes 5 to 9 AAA-AA-A-B-C 5-95 Other Styles at $4.95 —D'Kiddies Saddle Oxfords Sizes 1 to 3 •3.98 I Halterman SHOESTORE

In Pacific Baltic Va ■ --■; -.-■ £ Pvt. Richard L. Kelly, 18 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. William Kelly of Berne route two, is with I the Marines in the Pacific war I theater. He entered the Marines last fall and took training at Paris Island, S. C., and in North Carolina, going overseas last March. He is a graduate of Pleasant Mills high school and was employed at the G. E. plant before entering military service. • Native Os Decatur Dies At Rockford ' John H. Yocum, 33, a native of Decatur, died Tuesday afternoon at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Yocum, of Rockford, 0., after a long illness. Surviving in addition to the parents are a brother, Doyle of Mercer, 0., and three sisters, Mrs. Evelyn Shinbarry of Mercer, 0., Mrs. Lester Wittung of Rockford and Mrs. Margaret Schumm of Lima, O. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p. m. Thursday at the home in Rockford, with burial in the Decatur cemetery. I No License, Youth Fined For Driving Robert Gallmeyer, lis-year-old ■ youth of .Preble township, was fined ! , $lO and ctvsts in Mayor John Stults’ ■ • court this morning on a plea of i guilty to operating an automobile I without a license. The youth had ' ' driven to Preble to make a pur-1

-si «.z r*s Ol . ’ v mi ■Wy ci r ’Ss :.vAMMWjMHroWwwWwtj;.. . fli .—t' v. * .TaKftSs wk i 'U wgS ' * fl ' jfl SI HwigJSl ■' ■ x. ' 7;, JKN ’/• vf* ‘ ...< . Efegrl Office Hours: 24 Hours a Day Your doctor, who is the first to detect a national blood bank into a magnifia need for rest in others, has driven cent reality. v-. M himself without mercy in wartime. Today the word, “cooperation”, W--J fffl He serves his own patients as well as h as a f u y er mean ing in America. The 14 g. 1| those of absent physicians, yet finds tlireat to our freedom has rekindled I| / | time to keep abreast of medicine s an i n te nse national spirit... revealed l I jjji lEJ many wartime discoveries. amazing capacities on the part of our Ig O * Most people were quick to appreci- people to help themselves and their MW ate the doctor’s sacrifices and looked fellow countrymen until victory is & for ways to encourage him. They complete. They are strengthened for attended his First Aid classes and the road ahead. They should go far, learned to call him only when abso- indeed, in aiding our gallant younger lutely necessary. They volunteered to generation get the reward it has whrn a product maintains the assist overtaxed nurses in crowded earned and will go on earning—prog- ‘haractrr that* hospitals ... and turned his dream of ress in a world at peace. cXr"7iom*«p>, Hie nmkrrs of Budweiser set a standard—distinetive in taste, pure, good and 9 distinguished for its uniform 1< >1 <] <X7*4F* 1 Cb <* !• aHL ■■ Budweiser is • something mote trade marr rid. u « dat OFF. than Iwcr ..• <i tradition’, No wonder it is the most popular beer in history. • • ABM 6 © 1943 AN H EUSER-BUSCH • • • SAINT LOUIS

of y;roe-.rie? for his" mother and in attempting tn pari; his auto, i caught his bumper on the fender <>( ’ another car. State patrohnan Trn-. man Biorle came along at thp mo I inent and a charge was placed i against the boy,.who did not Ini' ; P a driver's licence. - o Fewer Calories For 1945 Civilian Diel Potato Shortage In Eastern U. S. Washington, June 20 —(UP) The government said today that 'Americans will get fewer calorise in their 1915 diet than they did in | the years just before the war. At j the same time produce merchants | warm'd of an impending pota:o fa- i mine in the eastern half of the! j United S'.t' ■ . 'The report of calorlfn came from ! the agriculture department, which . <aid that al 1 hough the supply thie year will be 5 to 10 per cent lower than last year, Americana still will average a "good safe margin" over minimum standards. The cut is due largely to meat, fat and augar shortages. 'A-ide from calories the department said this year’s diet would 'supply a little more of other essential nutrients than before the war. Overall consumption food will .be 5 to 7 per cent less than last year’s peak. The department gave this resume of the latest prospects for the year’is overall food supply: 'Total production: 7 per cent under last year but 32 per cent above prewar levels. Vitamins: Two important ones, Niacin nad Thiamine, will be 10 per cent shorter than last year. Meat: consumption will be 120 to 112'5 pounds per person compared with 150 pounds last year. No improvement in fats and oiks expected before next summer. Eggs: tin record supply so far this year but will grow scarce during t.he next dix months. Beverages: :‘lAdequate.” May be a little more tea and coffee but lees cocoa. Fresh fruits and vegetables: I About as much as last year if vic- , tory gardners come through. Lees iwanned fruits and vegetables, and j reduced supplied of potatoes and I sweet potatoes are in prospect.

Youthful Cyclist Is Killed Bv Auto a) rites were arranged today-for | Frank Tatum, 14, don of Mr. and : Mrs. Boyd Tatum, who was injured 1 I fatally when the bicycle he was I | riding waa struck tby an automobile last night. The car wa<s driven by Edward Sneath, Rockville. o PREBLE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Sanders of Bluffton, Mi', and Mrs. Floyd Andrew# of Decatur and Mr-. Chari s Williams and daughter Alma <spent Sunday ! with Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hoffman and family. .Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schuller and son Jame.s of near Fort Wayne were Sunday dinner guest# of Mr. : and 'Mrs. George Bultemeier and I dangler Helen. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Werllng 'of Fort Wayne pent Sunday with i ; Mr. and Mrs. Eli Golduer. i Mr. and Mr#. Olville Heller of Laketon opent several days at their i home In I’reble, and visited with their iinn and family Mi’, and Mrs. Vera! Heller and son of nixiT Mon- i roevllle. Mr. and Mr-. Richard A-rnol.l and daughters spent Sunday witli Albert Werling and daughter Iverna. ' Mr. and Mr#. Cliarb-s Sullivan are spending their vacation in Florida ! with their daughter and #on-!n-law, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold. Mrs. (Mabel Gilbert and family j of Monroe #pent Sunday with Mr. and .Mrs. Edgar Zimmerman and family and her mother, Mrs. Julia Shady. Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Dochrman and family of Hoagland spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Koeneniann and daughter Anita. 'Mr. and iMns. Ora Newhart of Griffith visited with Mr. and Mr#. Gerald Ro#s and family and other i relative# in I’reble. OMAKEC: ICE creaß] At home —Any flavor — Delicious — Smooth —No ice crystal* —No cooking—No rewhipping—No icorched flavor—Easy — Inexpensive—2o recipe* in each 15< package. Please ask your grocer for LonDonDewj * Homemade Ice Cream "STABILIZER

PAGE THREE

'Mrs. Mabie Gilbert and Mrs. gar Ziaimeniian . a'l.-i on Doughs Elzey Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Earl Fuhrman and daughters returned home ufter spending’ several day# visiting her husband, who Is serving in the armed forcer). — (j

RUMMAGE SALE, Methodist church basement, .lune 23. Rainbow (iirls. t Here’s a SENSIBLE way 4 to relieve MONTHLY I (female pain j Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Con*, pound Is famous not only to relieve periodic pain but also accompanying nervous, tired, hlghstrung when due to functional monthly disturbances. Taken regularly—lt helps build up resistance against sucir symptoms. Pinkham s Compound Helps nature! Follow label directions. Try itl Jfydia,&(P</nkka/nC6 comtoumo I3sn At All Dealers. , " » EARN EXTRA RED POINTS ’ ’ 111 Turn your used fats into valuable Red Points. Points 4c I ound for each pound brought to our market. Gerber MAR K E T