Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 162, Decatur, Adams County, 11 July 1945 — Page 3
.If/EDNESDAY, JULY 11,1945.
k k TAU SIGMAS OY CHICKEN SUPPER embers of Eta Too Sigma sor- / enjoyed a chicken supper J evening at the home of Mrs. j Arnold. Following the sup'four tables of bridge were Bred and prizes awarded to Mrs. .. Steury and Mrs. Homer BarLater in the evening during social hour, the hostess, Mra. old, assisted by Mies Iverna ling, served dessert. te next meeting will be held . July 24 at the home of Mrs. est Lake on First street, with Betty Tricker as hostess. •s. Dwight Sehnepp will he ees to the Happy Homemakers 4 I Thursday evening at eight ck at her home. A good atiance is desired. T|e Victory Claes of the First . y. church will meet Friday k’ing at seven-thirty o'clock at ’r home of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon 'All members ane requested e present. te Pei lota Xi picnic will be Tuesday evening at six-thirty ck in the Boy Scout cabin at na-tNuttman park. Each mentis requested to bring her own >service. o LOCALS •. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Miller, hter and son of Western ags, 111., Mrs. E. F. Miller and hter Rowena of Fort Wayne i business visitors in Decatur and Mrs. Edward Peck and yßren left today for Hackensack. whei-e they will spend their Wtion with relatives. ss Alice Slusher, daughter of lißons to rdim MONTHLY Wi FEMAU Jb? misery . j (Alta Else Stomochic Tonic!) /a E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Comjfyid is famous to relieve not only X thly pain but also accompanying ous, tired, hlghstrung feelings—a due to functional periodic (Usances. Taken regularly— it helps 1 up resistance against such disi. Pinkham’s Compound helps naI Follow label directions. Try it! i(ia&(Pi/nkha/mb COftTOUKD 4 ■ *• \
Uje Scenes I YUIOODS'.Jj
By HARRISON CARROLL tins Feature* Syndicate Writer —OLLYWOOD—Every movie its stubborn scenes but, for ent nright perversity, I’ll give you one that Director William les erle shoots this week with Sill le Oberon and Charles Korvin in "As It Was
Before.” There is no tough problem of mechanics. They are working in the doorway of a tight little set. Merle comes up and puts her arms around Korvin and, suddenly, talking low at first,
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he begins to ac—j her of betraying him with ther maij. He pushes her away rn strides back and forth. His jnd.ic rises with his anger. They to r- never more than a few feet ;e . it The dialogue is impassioned. □ ts ut they take it again and again , r: it just won’t come off. h ‘ iC ferle’s bridegroom, Cameraman ' b g ien Ballard, sits quietly on his :h and never says a word. ut Director Dieterle, whitezed and towering above everyelse on the set, alternately laces and exhorts Korvin to mad. lust muffle It with a little more lization than Othello,” he ds. “But the same rage. Then have it." nee, everything is going fine voices outside the sound-stage gagi the take. Dieterle makes a Altering comment, then is back mSKorvin like a bull-dog. his urgency, his English is <7s|ting shaky. main thing now,” he says, to take the bottle off entirely, t let it go to pieces!” f'/fawvin tries too hard and blows me. This is the tenth take and rle, who has b?en weeping real «rs, plays this one without moisyfc. Her tear-ducts have dried up. . on and on - - ?If we get this not before lunch, might as well quit for the day,” * Serves Dieterle, pessimistically. Come back tomorrow, we’ll still here,” a member of the crew Ispers to me. ... ....
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GEM Mr. and Mr.s Orval Slu-her, is visiting at Berne with her grandmoth- ■ mother, Mrs. Frank Tremp, while ■ Mr. Tremp is assisting his son on . his Wells county farm. Mrs. Robert R. Sanchez, Jr., spent • a few days visiting her parents, . Dr. and Mrs. M. O. Lester, after at- • tending the funeral of her grand- ; mother, Mrs. Lou E. Lester, at Ind- . ianapolis, Mrs. Sanchez returned i to Baton Rouge, La. by plane on Tuesday. I o O O Adams County Memorial Hospital | o o Admitted: Ulysses B. Wood, 356 North 11th street; Mrs. Raymond Klusman, 821 North Second street; Mrs. Carl Ficher, 818 West Adams street. Dismissed: Joseph Adams, 929 Russell; baby Joseph Leroy Vore, route 3, Decatur; Miss Mary Helen Runyan, Rockford, O.; Mies Linda Kay Peterson, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Eugene Caffee and baby daughter, Judith Kay, Willshire, O. 0 FM Cpl. and Mrs. Frederick “Pete” Mylott of Gulfport, Miss., are parents of a baby boy, which weighed 8 lbs. and 15 oz. Mrs. Mylott , was formerly Miss Mary Lou Galligher of Findlay, Ohio, and this is their first child. Mr. and Mrs. ■ Martin J. Mylott of Decatur are ■ the grandparents. Mr. and Mrs Robert Swoveland, , route 5, Decatur, have a baby boy, • born this morning at 2:45 o’clock at the Adams county memorial hos- ' pital. The baby weighed seven ’ pounds, one-half ounce, and has not been named. Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Furhmann. 921 Walnut street, are parents of a baby boy, born at the Adams county memorial hospital last night at 11:25 o'clock. The baby weighed seven pounds and has not been named. Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Lytton Armstrong, route 1, Bryant, have a baby girl, named Linda Alice. The baby weighed five pounds, seven and one-half ounces and was born at 3:15 o’clock this morning at the
And then, miraculously, it happens. No disturbing voices from outside. Everything perfect on th* set.* "Print that one,” says Dieterleu The script girl writes down: “Print take 31.’’ A wave of relaxation sweeps over the set. The stubborn scene (there’s one in every picture) i* licked. * Over 700 extras sit in a blue haze of smoke watching the prizefight between Danny Kaye and Jack Roper in "The Kid From Brooklyn.’’ This is a lot of extras but the main topic of conversation is the smoke. Everybody in the stands is puffing at a cigaret or a cigar. And it’s all on Samuel Goldwyn. A day on this set is costing Mr. Goldwyn 130 cartons of cigarets and 15 boxes of cigars. There's a rumor that the people sitting ringside get 15-cent cigars and thos* in the rear rows only 6-cent cigars. While I am on the set, Kaye and the seamy-faced Roper don’t trade many punches. Mainly, Danny is clowning around at the ropes, taking imaginary falls for the amusement of the extras and the visitors out front. One of these visitors is George Raft, who has come over from another sound-stage where he is making “Whistle Stop.” After a while, an assistant comes looking for him. George swears under his breath. Raft, who goes to the fights two or three nights a week, can’t even bear to be torn away from a movie bout. Over at the Pine-Thomas studio, I watch a brawl between Bob Lowery and James Bush for “They Made Me a Killer.” The boys mix it hot and heavy and Bush accidentally lands a real punch on. Lowery’s nose. “That did it,” says Assistant Doc Merman. “Now you’ll play the last five reels in profile.” “Yeah,” says Lowery, rubbing his injured proboscis, “and I suppose you’ll shoot the love scenes over the back of my head.” Producer - Director Bill Thomas looks nervously at his watch. “Don’t worry about your nose swelling, Bob,” he says. “When we hire an actor, we want plenty of features.” .
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Phones 1000—1001 Wednesday St. Luke’s girls guild, Mrs. Ervin Lockner, 8 p. m. Thursday Zion Lutheran missionary society, church auditorium, all day. American Legion Auxiliary, All Day District Meeting, Fort Wayne Post 47. Mount Pleasant W. S. C. S. Mrs. David Cook, 2:00 p. m. Methodist W. S. C. S., Church Parlors, 2:30 p. m. Union Chapel W. M. A. Mrs. Freeman Sehnepp, 1:30 p. m. Calvary Evangelical Church Ladies Aid and Preaching Service Combined, Mrs. Mila Harmon, 8 p. tn. Better Homes Club, Monroe, post- 1 poned. I W. M. A. of First U. B. Church, Mrs. Orval Reed, 7:30 p, m. Officers, escorts and committee chairmen, Women of the Moose, Moose Home, 7 p. in. Friday Victory Class of First U. B. 1 church, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon flill, 7: 30' p. m. American Legion Auxiliary, Le- 1 gion Home, 8: p. m. Nuttman Avenue U. I?. Church Y. P. M. 8., Hanna-Nuttman Park, 1 7:30 p. m. Sunday Annual’Calvary Evangelical Sun- i day School Picnic, Hanna-Nuttman Park, afternoon. Monday Men’s Union Prayer Service, First Evangelical Church 8 p. m. : Auditorium. Tuesday Happy Home Makers Club, Mrs. ; •Dwight Sehnepp, 8 p. m. Psi lota Xi picnic, Boy Scout ■ Cabin, Hanna-Nuttman Park, 6:30 P. m. Adams county memorial hospital. The baby boy born to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Liechty, Berne, at the Adams county memorial hospital at 7:50 o'clock Tuesday evening, weighed seven pounds and ten ounces. He has been named Wallace Layne. Mr. and «Mrs. Elmer Beerman, Monroeville, have named their baby boy, Podd Leslie. The baby was born Tuesday afternoon at 4:15 o’clock at the Adams county memorial hospital and weighed sevoji pounds and seven ounces. —— o —- U.S. Public Health Service Warninq On Infantile Paralysis Washington, July 11—(UP) — The U. S. public health service, i warning that a seasonal rise in infantile paralysis has begun, urged parents today to keep children out of crowds and take other precautions against the dread disease. Listing 155 new cases in the country during the week ended June 30, the service said a rise in poliomyelitis could be expected from now until fall “because this j Cool and Charming I 9,05 ' I'M fcW*? ■ BA f tHwiM ■ I Marian Martin Refreshing as iced lemonade is this slim-waisted frock, Pattern 9105, that will keep you looking your best through a hot day. Cap sleeves, square neck . . easy sewing. Pattern ‘lO5 comes in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 32, 34, 36 38 40 42. Size 16 requires 2% yards 39-inch fabric. Send TWENTY CENTS in coins for this pattern to Decatur Daily Democrat, Pattern Dept., 156 N. Jefferson St., Chicago 80, 111. Print plainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. JUST OUT I 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 hook. Send Fifteen Cents for your copy.
DECATUR DAiLY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.
wIeI I saM 'I ( Cpl. David Terveer, son of Mrs. Frances Terveer of Madison * street, is now located at the following address: 61st A.E.S. Sqdn. I I “C”, Rosegrans Field, St. Joseph (6) Mo. Pvt. Tom Terveer, who was recently inducted into the army, ' and son of Mrs. Frances Terveer, has the following address: Pvt. Tom Terveer, Company “C", 6 Bat. 2 Regt. Cajpp McClellan. Ala. Richard Briede, seamon, first class, recently advanced to that rank, is spending several days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Briede. Dick is stationed at a powder factory at the United States naval base at Indian Head, Mary- 1 land, and will return there Friday evening. The Briedes’ other son in service is Robert P. Briede, S 1/c, receiving pre-radar training ' at this address: N. T. C. Hugh Manley. 2935 W. Polk Street, Company 136, Chicago 12, 111. Charles A. Krummen, AOM 3/e, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Krum- ; men, 221 North Sixth street, reported to San Diego after spending 1 a 20-day leave with his parents. Krummen is a deck gunner aboard a navy P. B. M. patrdl plane, and recently saw action on Iwo Jima, the Philippines and Okinawa. o 50,000 WORKERS ARE (Continued From Page One) had its labor disputes. Already 14.200 workers had quit their jobs in various plants. Domestic service to seven states by the United Fuel Gas Co.. Charleston, W, Va„ was at a minimum as the result of a strike over wages < by the CIO International Oil workers union. In Pennsylvania, all four Jones and Laughlin Steel corp, coal mines were closed by a strike over the rehiring of a war veteran. Nearly 500 United Mine workers struck at the Cambria mining company’s Webb mine, Bellaire, 0., allegedly because fines were levied against employes who missed work. I A dispute over employment of three union cashiers left at least 130,000 families in Detroit Without milk for the third day. Other strikes in the Detroit area hampered production at the Graham-Paige motor corp., The Dodge truck plant of Chrysler Corp., the Gorham tool Co., and American metal products 1 Co. New York newspaper delivery I men faced loss of closed shop privileges for refusing to end their strike against the New York pub- , lishers association at 8 a. m. today. is the time of year for it.” It suggested the following precautions in communities where cases of the disease are reported: 1. Keep children out of crowds. 2. Avoid swimming pools. 3. Avoid over-exertion such as exhausting bicycle rides. 4. Don’t remove tonsils except in urgent cases. 5. Get rid of flies. MAKE WBb. (ICECREAM) At home —Any flavor-Delicious-Smooth -No ice crystals-No cooking-No re-whipping-No scorched flavor —Easy — Inexpensive-*2O recipes in each 15« pkg. Please send this ad for free full-size sam. pie offer, or buy from your grocer. Lonßonoenßy Brand Homemade Ice Cream STABILIZCR t esV 0 ” S Leading physicians attest the fact that we maintain highest ethical standards. Why search further when it costs no more to be advantaged by our skilled services? Holthouse Drug Co. ***** • • • • •
Married 60 Yea Will Celebrate Mr. and Mrs. Jesse H. Stfe’e, prominent residents of this county, living near Pleasant Mils, east of Decatur, were married 60 years ago today, by the Rev. Eli Stoops of Waterloo. Tlie anniversary of the notable event and celebration of the longevity of the marital union, will be observed Sunday, July 15, with open house at the Steele residence. Friends of the estimable couple are invited to the reception from 3 to 6 o’clock in the afternoon Mr. Steele, aged 82, and Mrs. Steele, age 77, are life long residents of this county. They are tile parents of 13 children, 11 of whom are living. The children have arrived home for the family union and wedding anniversary. The celebrants are enjoying good health and still take a keen interest in the comings and goings and family life of the members of their immediate fireside. Mr. and Mrs. Steele are among Composing room employes at two Fort Wayne, Ind., newspapers also continued on strike. Other .strikes were in progress at the Spicer manufacturing Corp., Toledo; The INCA division of the Phelps Dodge Cooper products Co., Fort Wayne, Ind., Northern Indiana Brass Co., Elkhart, Ind.; Continental baking. General baking and National Biscuit companies, Albany, N. Y., and four war construction projects in the Wash-* ington, D. C. area. _ o_— — SWEEP JAPS' PLANES (Continued From Page Ore) inawa battle the 14th raided Japan's Shanghai oases so effectively that no enemy planes from that area participated in the strikes against American invasion forces. Summing up three years of operations in China, the general said that his airmen had destroyed oven 2.000 Japanese planes in the air and on the ground and they had hit over 2.000,000 (M) tons of enemy shipping, more than the Japs have floating now. Chennault's streamlined organization operated with the tightest possible personnel, with some units using only 50 percent of the enlisted men normally required. Commenting on the possible growth of American airpower in China. Chennault said, “Supply problems remain practically as be-j fore, though our airbase facilities ' are ample for a greatly augmented effort.” The general said he believed it was always possible that the Japs might surrender, but there was a ! much greater chance that they' will continue to fight. - M Veteran Logansport Businessman Dies Logansport, Ind., July 11—(UP) ■ John H. Barnhart, 95, who voted for every Republican presidential nominee since President Grani, died last night. He had been a hardware man here 50 years. Barnhart was a graduate of Wabash college and held the Ph. D. degree from Williams college in Massachusetts. He was Indiana’s oldest Elk. Survivors include a daughter. Funeral services will be held tomorrow. 0 Employment Service To Civilian Plants Indianapolis, July 11 — (UP) — Inter-regional recruitment facilioffices will be made available to ties of U. S. employment service employers engaged in certain civilian production, as well as war production, director John K. Jen-1 nings of the Indiana war man-
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SENATOR TOM CONNALLY of Texas, one of the U. S. delegates who helped frame the United Nations charter, is shown, right, with Senator Hiram Johnson of California as the charter was given its first public hearing before the Senate foreign relations committee. Former Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., president of the San Francisco conference which framed the charter, outlined the general program of the charter and then turned its further progress over to Senator Connally. — (7 nttrnatfoual)
irs f Couple Anniversary the most known residents in tiiis county. They have been prominent in church and rural farm life for more than a half century. Mr. Steele taught school in this county for 26 years ami also served several years as assessor in St. Mary’s township. Their children are. Mrs. D. H. Tumbleson, Fort Wayne; Mrs. B. i 1. Hosier, Walkerton; Roy Steele of Pleasant Mills; Mrs. .Harvey Koos, city; Guy Steele, Ft. Wayne; Joe Steele, Pleasant Mills; Mrs. Murray Holloway. Pleasant Mills; Mrs. Richard Davis, Michigan City; Mrs. Fred Hilty, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. Richard Mjller, city, and Mrs. Lawrence Johnson of Middletown, (). The Rev. Stoojw who married Mr. and Mrs. Steele is the father of Carl Stoops, a government employe, who was rescued from the Japanese by his son. Sgt. Joseph Stoops, in the Philippines. The I latter also liberated his mother, who had been held as a prisoner I of war by the Jape. — I power commission announced to- i day. Because of the gradual conversion from wartime to peacetime activities and the simultaneous continuation of war production, Jennings said, local USES offices in areas where the supply of labor is in excess of local employer needs will receive orders for workers from employers whose needs cannot be met in their own localities. 0 Government Trailers Exempt From License Indianapolis. July 11 — (UP) — Attorney general James A. Emmert ruled today that govern-ment-owned truck-trailers are exempt from Indiana licensing. In an opinion for Col. Austin R. Killian, superintendent of state police, after the arrest of a truck driver for failing to have transportation plates on a navy-owned trailer, Emmert stated that the driver could not be arrested legally on that charge. o New Highway Map Is Published By State i Indianapolis, July 11 — (UP) — j A new official 1945 Indiana state . highway map has been published I by the state highway commission, ■ chairman John H. Lauer announcj ed today. It. was the first new road map jo be published by the state since 1942. Its limited distribution will be made through the commission’s ’state heazlquarters, dislgictoffices ' and the state division of comi merce and public relations. ———— ■ —o Cary Grant's Wife Sues For Divorce • Hollywood, July 11 — (UP) — i Barbara Hutton, poor little rich ! girl who married a prince, a count and a movie star in a frantic search for happiness, today admitted she had failed again. She has sued actor Cary Grant, onetime English acrobat, for divorce. Motorcyclists Die When Hit By Train Columbus, Ind., July 11—(UP) —Elmo Leatherman. 35. Taylorsville died in a hospital today from injuries suffered last night in a motorcycle-train collision liiat killed a companion, Eugeni' Despain, 20, Taylorsville. The men. civilian employes at Camp Atterbury, were riding the motorcycle and crashed into the side of a Pennsylvania railroad i passenger train at a crossing in Taylorsville.
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Interallied Berlin Commanders Meet Reach Agreement On Feeding Berliners Berlin, July 11. —(UP)—The interallied Berlin command agreed at its first meeting today that for the time being each of the occupation forces in the capital will be responsible for feeding the German population of its own sector. The food for Berlin will be pro- ’ vided from the respective Allied ’ occupation zones, and importation . for that purpose from the United States or Britain is not planned. The temporary agreement “in principle’’ was reached at a meeting of Col. Gen. Alexander V. Gorj batov of Russia, Maj. Gen. Floyd Parks of the United States, and Maj. Gen. L. O. Lyne of Great Britain. Brig. Gen. Geoffrey de Beau-j chesne of France attended by in-j vital ion. ~ Lyne said that a group of experts th§ occupying powinget and work out details > of the food program which will be announced Jater, I't is not known yet whether the ' current ration established by the ■ Russians in Berlin of 2,000 calories, ; on paper, wil] be continued. How-1 ever, the ration will be standard throughout the city. Lyne indicated that there probably would be some "bartering” of j supplier among the Allies for tlr-ir various zones since it is obviously impractical to bring in milk from Bavaria, for instance, to feed the American zone. The British and American military governments will assume full command of their Berlin sectors at 11 a.tn. tomorrow. All Russian military government troops will be withdrawn from these areas except a few guards to protect Red army supply depots. Lyne said the meeting was “conducted in an atmosphere of great | friendliness and we reached com- • plete unanimity on everything it j discussed.” He said there are about 17 interallied subcommittees designat- i ed to handle the main phases of • Berlin administration. 0 — Anderson Says U.S. Cannot Feed World i New York. July I'l — (UP)—Sec-1 retary of agriculture Clinton P. ■ Anderson said today that thi.s conn-■ try could not feed the world “even , if we were to ship across the oceans I every pound of food we produce.” i Anderson told the Advertising Federation of America, in his first major speech since becoming agri- j culture secretary, that this fact j must be made clear or the United j States will reap “an awful lot of > misunderstanding, trouble and ill will.” o — NOTICE TO IIIODEKS Notice is hereby given that mi Monday, the 23rd day of July, 1915 at 7:30 P. M. in th? office of the trustee of Washington township, located in tile HeVoss building. Decatur, Indiana, Wds will be received i for the purcase of: One School Bus, including body ! and chassis. All bids must conform with state j and federal regulations and must I tie filed at my office prior to that time. The right is reserved to reject all | blds. John B. StonCbumer, Trustee of Washington Township, Adamis County. July 11
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Three-Man Board To Probe Labor Dispute Washington, July 11—(UP) — The »*! National mediation board today announced the names of three men who have agreed to serve the board . . named by President Truman to investigate a labor dispute threatening operations of the Chicago, Aurora & Elgin and Chicago, North I Shore'& Milwaukee railroads. Members of the board will he judge Robert 1. McDonough, Utahsupreme court: judge John W. Yeager. Nebraska eupreme court: and , Robert W. Wooley, former membet ! of the interstate commerce com ; mission. The board will open the investigation in Chicago Monday. <, Democrat Want Ads Get Results
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