Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 137, Decatur, Adams County, 9 June 1936 — Page 5
fc INCREASE ■eMPIOYMENT Bitcd States EmploySXLii seriice Aids In jie-Employ ment lßfaiUV" hs <UR> MW"’ ...- i m|>l<>ym.nt ay.., b* ii- i "I” 1 * MR,.'..,. f . .vi.•• " as "■I"" 1 - 1 HR" , •:.I' ' <li - 1 I' 1 '" i' 11 "' 1 "* ■R", u th- >I.H' during ■V. . ... vi-r Uli’ previous i, was reported. gnk v et; this Pain in part ■R improv lie : i Cjr|l . IIP I »>'>'•<• “spe< H th, fa. I that the period of ■R , placements IS How ■R...',, >. .vice lias more Jimmid jobs lor persons industry. HR... jp'oym* ill Were aeeompail H. marked deerease in the „j p. 1.--ns registering Im |R,j , ;!!| o,.vmeiit otliees and a jp the tolal active file of >•. Klim jobs through the IK ill system, it waHR. '' I Si.lies employment | lw d. a total of 1(19.1 ?U |^K ni , l,:- .'e industry dm ■' 1,1 19 1 March, SR. 2U0.58.5 |ll.i,' HR; public and govej mm m.il ' R.-:. :J prevailing wages nation during April, a gain
I I' M Responsibility 71 S| For thirty-five Q M j ears we have I been demonstratinn the dependa- T 6 |H bility of this 0 organization. JP Ss \\ e may be tie- » pended upon to M I- .1- sunt e every ’IL responsibility in 1\ time of need. M I
I SPECIALS 1 Save On Paint! Low Prices Effective ■ UNTIL JUNE Isth your surroundings. Your Home can be made more £ attractive at extremely low cost. I Special Prices On Hoosier Paints '■fc LUXIOD HOOSIER UtWRiNbiM FLOOR ANO BlpOSlEgfl ■ RiP F ° U JU? l UR — deck enamel ■ '■ ZVr-/' ENAMEL l|ni)Sl(‘l* Durable, Water- vI?NI Sli A ,ough duruble ■ Proof and easy 'AKIN ' • ||oUr drying flfeg-g!jS&£s£ ■■ t AFPir r.rrN T to apply. For Will stand severe cn!inie j. This Is DE CKBjffi X. •X-' furniture, wood- usw on floors r ,. a ,||y a sc it ft ''''iiniAturwoini' 'work and floors. without showing proof finish. easy Comes in 18 scratches. Comes |n t .| pa n. This H Beautiful shades. j n Clear, Light Oak )s a true enamel ■I Golden Oak. Dara BI1( | not to lie confused with the „ QUICK DRYING oak and Walnut. or dinajy floor paints. ■ jtePriee ft. 1 *? Salc l>rire 75c Qt - B red BARN PAINT 81,10 |,ri "‘ • • Mll ’ GALLON .... »Lh ' I This i. a heavy h.d« »ai.<. »"■' -« 110 tto " otl """ |fi Linseed Oil- Both coats. 1 10% Discount (u. Hoosier Paints ™ Bl ..... mivN AMI enamels for years || WE HAVE HANDLED HOObiMJ « . SATISFACTION. S | ANI) W E GV ARAN lEh J nMK I Kohsie Drag Store
First Lady Greets Farmerettes hhP f Jkßrh Mri Roosevelt Mrs. Alfred Watt Mrs Franklin D Roosevelt played hostess to representatives of the Associated Country Women of the World at the White House when they convened in Washington. D C.. for the organization's third triennial convention. Photo shows Mrs. Roosevelt, left, chatting with Mrs. Alfred Watt, right, of Vancouver Island. B C., president of the group During the conference President and Mrs. Roosevelt, and two cabinet members addressed more than (>.OOO delegates from every state in the union and 16 countries.
of 47.8 per cent over the previous month. o HOLD INQUEST (CONT IN IT ED FROM into the truck and took him to Decatur. Odle told substantially the same story. He said he was driving along the berm of the road and that Immel was driving near the center line of the road. Odle alleged he was only a few feet from the Immel car and so was unable to see Fletcher standing in the center of the road. When Immel applied his brakes and sw'erved towards the edge of the road. Odle swung to the middle of the road, where he alleged he first saw Fletcher. Odle stated he then swerved back towards the edge of the road but too late to avoid striking the victim. Odle testified he was 16, that he had been driving occasionally for some time and that he did not have
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JUNE 9,19.36
i a diiver's license at the time of the accident, although he has since obtained one. Funeral services for Fletcher were held Monday afternoon at the Bunnel funeral home in Plymouth at 2 o'clock. Burial was made in ■ a cemetery 16 miles south of Plymouth. He is survived by one ! sister, Mrs. Della Nelson of Plym- . out, and one uncle. ; oG. O. P. NATIONAL , tion of the gold (standard. Definite indications of sentif ment for chairman of the resoluf Hops committee was Jacking in ■ the face of Thomas' refusal to 1 serve. Suggestions that Walter I Edge of New Jersey be chosen ) were opposed by some Landon > backers. Herman Langworthy, . Kansas City, received mention as ■ a possible choice. r, o Ikince Wednesday Sunset
BLUFFTON HAS NEW FACTORY (Hove And Mitten Factory Will Be Located In Bluffton Bluffton, June 9. —Following the! closing of an agreement here for the purchase of the two-story brick | building at Washington and Scott streets front the Boss Manufacturing company as a location for a new Bluffton industry, it was announced that the Culver Manufacturing company hoped to have the; company’s main glove and mitten factory in operation in the building by July 1. The Boss company negotiated the slae of the property to the ; Bluffton Chamber of Commerce,' and the latter organization will execute a deed to the Culver com-, pany. Purchase price of the property was announced as $19,000. In the f transaction the Bluffton Chamber of Commerce will finance the deal to the extent of $6,500 and will hold a lien against the real estate, toj be canceled on the basis of wages paid by the Culver company. The lien will be liquidated at the rate of credit of ten per cent of the amount of the payroll. Thus the lien will have been capceled and title cleared to the Culver company upon payment of wages : totaling $65,000. Thomas Blair, from the home of-, fice of the Boss company at Ke- j wanee. 111., and Frank Goodyear, manager of the Fort Wayne plant of the Boss company, represented that company at a meeting here Saturday afternoon with a committee of the Bluffton Chamber of Commerce and representatives of the Culver company to close the deal. The Culver company is expected to employ 80 to 100 women here at the start, and the factory building will afford room for further expansion. It was stated by members of the first that sewing machines will be installed also in a number of Bluffton homes, in addition to those in the factory building, as previously promised. o HOLSTEIN SHOW (CONTINUED FROM PAGR nNF> regional Guernsey show for thie district will be held in Decajtur for the second successive year in connection with the Centennial celebration. Jersey parish shows have been ' held in the United States for 10 | yean-. The Jersey parish show 1 will also be held in Decatur for ’ the second year next August during the Centennial celebration. The Jersey and Guernsey shows will include exhibitors from the northeastern counties in Indiana. The regulations for production requirements ban all bulk from the show which are not from dams with testing records of more than 300 pounds of butterfat a year. These are class "C" requirements. — o GIVES REPORT (CONTINUED FROM taGE ONE) ing the next three months. The I amounts already paid are: March. $1,703.50; April, $1,664, and May, $1,659. and total, $5,026.50. As under the old act the county must pay the total amount each month ami will then be reimbursed by the state and federal agencies. The total of $5,026.50 will eventually be divided as follows: county, $1,005.30; state, $1,507.95. and federal government, $2,513.25. The estate payments are made each month to the county. It is not known how frequently the national government's payments will be made-. These must be taken into consideration when the i county budget is made up us the WEDNESDAY SPECIALS Ham, lh 21c Shoulder, lb 19c Sausage, lb. 19c & 20c Side, lb 19c Spare Ribs, lb. .. 17c Neck Bones ... 3 lb. for 25c Boiling Beef, ib. . 11c & 12c Beef Steak, Ib ... 18c & 19c Beef Roast, ib ... 15c & 19c Bamberger, Ib 13c Eggs, doz 20c Bread .. 3 loaves for 25c Tomato Plants . 100 for 25c EARL SUDDUTH Free Delivery Phone 226 512 So. 13th st.
county must have funds on hand I to pay the total amount each month, until state and federal reimburseuientis are received. 0 TWO ASPIRANTS 1 (CONT I NURD FKOM PAQ E ONE) ' straddling between locaJ and ■ state control. “I want to remove the bi-parti-san feature of the liquor control act,” he said. "I urge a five-man commission for if the Democratic party Is to be responsible for administration of the act, it tjhould 1 have control. Townsend would not disclose what proposals he made to the committee. Gov. McNutt urged serious con-; sideration of the .platform planks, while Jackson agreed to have be- , fore 'the committee vital stat istics on the tax income of the state. The advisory committee is made I ■up of one member from each of ■ the twelve congressional districts. Those present yesterday were Mrs. Wells, Me Cart, George Stevenson, Plymouth; Mason Petro, Mishawaka; Huber M. DeVoss, ' Decatur; Harvey Cole, Peru; Judge Jules Stevenson. Danville; | I state senator Floyd V. Hemmer, i ; Huntingburg; George Bridenharg-' er, Liberty; Mayor Harry Baldwin Anderson, and H. Nathan Swaim, ’ I Indianapolis. Paul Feltiw, sevi enth district member, was unable ' to attend. o Fort Wayne Truck Driver Is Killed Tiffin, 0.. June 9—(UP)—Carl j Fallis, 22, Fort Wayne, Ind., truck | driver, was killed in a 20-foot fall | from a porch of the Monroe Hotel | here today. He was believed to have i been walking in his sleep. o Mrs. Paul J. Ritt Dies At Bluffton Funeral servicese were held at Bluffton Monday evening for Mrs. Irma Mae Ritt, 40, wife of Dr- Paul J. Ritt. Bluffton dentist, who died suddenly Sunday of infection de-' veloping from influenza. Mrs. Ritt I was well known in Decatur, and at j tire time of her death was president' of the Tri Kappa sorority at Bluffton. Her husband, also well known , here, was formerly president of the Bluffton Rotary club. o 237 Persons Paid Federal Income Tax A total of 237 persons in Adams 1 county paid federal income tax for | 1935, according to a report filed by the Internal revenue office. Tim number of returns filed in I Indiana were 71,150. In Wells ' county, 177 returns were tiled. Allen county taxpayers filed 4,812 returns. o Young Transients Active Salt Lake City.—(U.R>~Stirred by the advent of warm weather, transient boys and girls are pouring through this city at the rate of about 150 a week again, relief officials say. o Another truck load of seed and eating potatoes. — Bell's Grocery.
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President Will Dedicate Clark Memorial - -w—sp--' • - J r ■ : • v* £ t. 1 The George Rogers Clark Memorial at Vincennes, Ind., will be dedicated Sunday, Juns 14, by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The memorial, established by Congress in 1928 In cooperation with Indiana and Vincennes, honors Clark and his associates, who captured Fort Sackville from the British during the Revolutionary War, This feat resulted In England's ceding the entire Old Northwest Territory to the United States ' in the Treaty of 1783. The Memorial building (above) is a Doric temple of granite, and is the featured building on the 25-acre Memorial grounds.
STATE G.O.P. I I IN NEW FIGHT I — Factional Disputes Again Crop Up For Indiana Republicans Cleveland. O„ June 9—(UP)—A ' compromise .program which ended a fight foi- the state chairmanship was threatened today after factional disputes caused the defeat of two i favorites in the organization meet- ' ing of Hoosier delegates to the ' Republican national conventionMrs. Eleanor Barker Snodgrass, [ Nashville, wan defeated in the race for national committeewoman from i Indiana by Mrs. Grace Banta Reynold-.. Cambridge City, despite a jplea in her behalf by Ivan C. Morgan, state chairman. The vote, taken in secret ballot, was 17 to 11. 'j Reviewing the fight for the state ! chairmanship, Morgan told the delegates of the compromise program agreed upon to bring harmony to the party and asserted that the election of Mrs. Snodgrass was a part I of that program. I “Since part of the program has been put aside there unay be other changes," said Morgan after the election. The second upset in Hie organization meeting came when James P. I Goodrich, former governor of the state, defeated Henry W. Marshall, lail'ayette publisher, for the state’s place on the platform committee by i . a vote of 15 to 13. Marshall had been considered a favorite. Secret ballots in both contests were demand d by Hiram Bearss, of ; j Peru. | James E. Watson, former senator
! and delgate-at-’arge, was elected | chairman of the Hoosier delegation ! without the opposition reported to be forming against him. George A. Ball. Muncie, was reelected. national cQiumittetmau I from Indiana. o Widow Os Famous Poet Dies Monday Heafford Junction, Wis.. June 9— . (PPI— The body of Mrs. Eugene Fie-'ds was (prepared today for burial in a shrine l>eside the body of j her famous husliaiul, the poet. Mrs- Field, 79. died yesterday !
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after a series of heart attacks aggravated by threatened foreclosure of the farm retreat where she retired after her husband's death. Members of her husband's fraternity, Phi Delta Theta, rallied to save the farm for her. “My mother died peacefully, happy In the knowledge that her home had been waved." Eugenu Field 11, her son said. —O ■ - ' Auction—s7*/z acre farm, June 15th. 6:30 p. m., North of Decatur on No. 27. turn to right at Second road North of Monmouth.
