Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 145, Decatur, Adams County, 18 June 1936 — Page 5

» \EW DEALERS ■ s v , ■;. . ....M I'AUSC O XE ) B; fl „ i ,v ih *' Bta,e ■ -.W Hoyal S. Copeland of New hail started hia walk. Bit Gov’ Joseph Ely of MassaBJti, and ally of Alfred BLth. ia 1 " 1 ' 1 ,h " '«nvcn M? Smith himself sits in his of BL'S'" Vl,lß ,r >’ ln K tlei lde B,h„r' to stay away or come MJ* and make his walk a ■B?" !jc- spectacular protest BRj 81 Hie Roosevelt policies. BL ( . S delegates headed toward B. .mvention city ready for a Bd tic" t'ciian the rule under B" b a candidate must receive of the 1,100 votes beB a wins the nomination. The BLriirrs feel that the rule gives Bgi a louder voice In party affairs

I LADIES COOL SHEER IWash Dresses | Attractive Styles and M > I Colorings. Fast Colors. I Zw. \/Materials of Voiles I i an d batiste. I k\ Cool Dresses for I H°t Sultry Weather. I Sizes 14 to 52. (fl 100 g • O EA(H AfER-Ss I HARDWARE a?////HOME FURNISHINGS LwMRHaHHBBBaBMHmMaaaanaMHHaBMans

You Are Cordially Invited ’ to attend an OPEN HOUSE PARTY | SATURDAY, JUNE 20 Decatur Hatchery 12 2 Monroe St. Bfree free To every lady who registers at our store on above date will receive a beautiful Sift, and to further show our appreciation, we have arranged to extend three valuable attendance PRIZES KI Prize $25.00 cash on the purchase of a new 1936 Kelvinator SPECIAL p . ze sls>o0 _High duality Electric Mixer. We nave arranged for the .. . p r j. ze SIO.OO cash on the purchase of a new ’"•''ices of a special factory 4,0 ‘ 1936 Kelvinator representative to assist you . .... . ' n choosing the features •> Additional Prizes ot imi i cat n 'mantled in modern elec- pgu 1936 Kelvinator. refrigeration. Bring on ‘ ,n> y°ur refrigeration problems kelvinator Decatur Hatchery i 2 2 MONROE ST.

because they can block any nomi nation distasteful to them Postmaster General James A Farley wants tn abolish the twothirds rule, believing such action: will prevent recurrences of the Madison Square battle when more than 100 ballots were taken before Democrats could got a candidate, in a Hying trip through the city yesterday ho said the issue undoubtedly would go to the convention floor and that there was much sentiment In favor of retaining the rule. Once that issue is settled and the platform adopted, the convention will settle back to the business of renominating Mr. Roosevelt and Vice-President John N. Garner. Both will be put across on the first ballot, and the high point of the convention will come Saturday night when the president steps un-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE IS, 1936.

der the flood lights nt Franklin Field to deliver his acceptance, speech- an address that will pitch I the tune for the Democratic campaign against the Landon-Knox ticket. ACTIVITIES OF -tSSJUJUiEIUiII’s. I !LE*!IE, ° NE > band, whom she bad revealed as the official legion printer. “I don’t know anything about it," Guthrie sajd. “And if I did, I wouldn’t tell you.” But Guthrie revealed that while his wife had ibeen punished for her telling of secrete, he had been threatened. "A man came walking up to me on Monday afternoon, tossing a bullet up and down in his hand.” he said. “He put the bullet in my hand a.nd said, ‘see here, you don’t know anything and don’t you say anything." (A Black Legion neophyte is given a bullet following his initiation and told that should be betray th" society, the bullet’u mate will kill him.—Ed.) Mrs. Guthrie still was too hys- | terical today to .tell a detailed I story. She said that yesterday I after luncheon she took her dog ’ for a walk. Arriving at the door ■of her home, she was bending over to pick up the dog when the door opened and a man struck her. i She was dragged into the house, she sajd. The blow knocked her unconscious. Later she was i bound, gagged, and flogged, police said. ———————o- — ■ _ Belgian Strike Spreads Rapidly Brussels, June IS —(UP) — The > Government drafted decrees today . authorizing the requisitioning of food as Belgium’s strike of 300,000

LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY Loans arranged on plain note or on furniture, auto or livestock. Men or women qualify. No one else need sign. Liberal repayment terms Don’t delay. Make arrangements for a loan today. RED! ( ED <OST We make loans up to S3OO, at less than that permitted by ih law of our state governing small loans. See Us Before You Borrow Local Loan Co Over Schafer store Phono 2-3-7 Decatur, Ind.

workers spread alarmingly. Measures to provide emergency food transoprt wore prepared. Although the strikes, now in their fourth day, spread through textile factories, there were few disorders. Demonstrators burned a canal bridge near Mone. Soldiers were summoned to rebuild it. Premier Paul Van Geeland ordered emergency precautions while working for agreements to make it umsalble for Htrikere to retarn to their John before Mont’ay o — GRAIN DEALERS OF (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) aina canal. These new rates were to have been effective June 1, but were denied by the interstate commerce commission. Unemployment Insurance Unemployment compensation is 1 neither taxation nor charity, but is a sound insurance plan worked out on a sound insurance basis, Dr. R. Clyde White, directed of the Indiana university bureau of social research, told members and guests of the Indiana Grain Dealers Association this afternoon. "The Indiana legislature in ad-I opting the state unemployment ! compensation law, did more than plan to pay oeneflts to unemployed workers. It drafted a blue print for the stabilization of employment. The Indiana plan provides that after March, 1939, the amount 1 of contributions of both employ- 1 ers and employes will depend on 1 the record of employment provid- j ed by each concern. There will be a direct incentive for each business to stabilize employment.” “Not only the employee, but the entire community, will benefit by the unemployment compensation," Dr. White said. “Unemployment compensation is away of maintaining the purchasing power of people at a relatively high level when they are unemployed. The employer and the employee set aside small sums of money during times of good employment in order to have a large fund with which to maintain the standard of living in the community at the highest possible level when there is a drop in the amount of employment. “Let me illustrate this by an example from Adams county. In March, 1936, you had IX3 on local relief, and you paid them a total of $2,409.20, or an average of $13.17 per family. Suppose you had had a well established unemployment compensation system, I and the bread winners in these families had been eligible to receive $lO per week in unemployment compensation benefits. An amount of $lO per week might be low. because it assumes that the average weekly wages of the breadwinners in these families was only S2O, but at $lO per week per unemployed person, assuming that I there was only one in each fam- I

la'il DON’T FORGET DAD—HIS DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 21 'K Beautiful new Sums', # .mer Neckwear that will nt <• r e th a n JLv please him. Large assortment patterns. BtffSUk -A B| B jSjfe Special for l athers' Just Received—shipment of WASH TIES ■ • each W 3 SHIRTS & SHORTS New. Comfortable , JOCKEY SHORTS Just the thing lor Summer. OA/» Correct tor each ttVl Summer. pairAdMV H-O-S-E H-O-S-E Mens Summer Hose, good Mens Hosiery. Never a selection patterns. Better better value than th,s. buy several pair. Special, pair 10c 20c I ■ ' —— • RAYON POLO SHIRTS Good assortment of colors itCZ and sizes—each SSKS-SS- ■SMlliHkll ■ « ... In * "I

lly, the total amount which they r would have received in March, 1936, would have been $7,320, or • an average of S4O per family. This i is more than double the purchasIng power that they actually had. I and It would mean that these tam- , Illes would have spent $7,320 instead of $2,409.20 with the mer- , chants of Adams county." Kline L. Roberts, executive vice president of American Bituminous Coal Merchants Associtalon, Chicago, was scheduled to deliver a talk on “Dangers Contfronting the I Retailing Trade" at the afternoon session. Golf and softball games were scheduled for this afternoon at the Decatur Country club. The banquet and entertainment will be held at 6:15 o'clock. Charles M. Newcomb of Delaware. O„ widely known humorist and psychologist will be the principal speaker. Dale W. McMillen, president of the Central Sugar and Central Soya companies, will give a brief talk at the banquet. Make City Tour One of the features of the city tour this afternoon was a visit to the Central Soya company's plant and to the site of Indiana’s only I beet sugar plant. Many of the i visitors also visited the Decatur Homestead project and other places of interest in the city. Committees in charge of the con- , vention were: Avon Burk, chair- . I man general convention commit 'tee. Henry I). Egly, Robert P. ()'- ■ Brien, Fort Wayne. J- Ward Calland

maw® Mli ill Minh w “ —I feel and look belter — there is color in my cheeks — my appetite is keen — my weight is back to normal. “This 7 am noting in my Diary ami I give full credit to S.S.S. forcausing me to ‘feel like myself again.’ ” So we suggest — Don't try to get well in a day...this is asking too muchof Nature. Remember, she has certain natural processes that just cannot be hurried. Therefore, if you are pale, tired, lack a keen appetite, have lost weiyht and feel rundown.. .n frequent sign that your blood-cells are weak, with a tendency towards anemia—then do try in the simple, easy way so many millions approve—by starting a course of S.S.S. Blood Tonic. © s . s s . Co .

Decatur, banquet and entertainment. George C. Thomas, Harold W. McMillen, Steward W. McMillen. W. A. Klepper, luncheon and

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banquet committee. Mrs, Avon Burk, Mik. Sim Burk. Mrs. J. Ward Calland, Mis. W. A. Klepper. Mrs. George C. Thomas,

PAGE FIVE

was the lonimittue In charge ot Ihe entertainment for the visiting womon. Including the serving of the noon luncheon at the Elk’s home.