Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 221, Decatur, Adams County, 17 September 1936 — Page 7
iHIGHpGHTS c[ InLw IV ! E SfWMI lew ... XeweM laMs .• • E BaMy. Xewevl leather* ... Price* from ■ * *1.99... Hosiery Io mulch from 59c ■ < / * - • —>- - ry * Fur arbool or campa* •.- Smarf a* a frmhauiß... Price* from 91.99 .. . * Howh ry 100 .. . from 39c fc V < /k V flB. Ofc- ik ff % MILLER-JONES SHOES 112 N. Second St. Decatur And by “good furniture" —we don't mean “high pric- -——- ed." But we do mean that f Uy‘- -xsSfe&y it has betn constructed by ISMja. master craftsmen along i the lines of fine quality ggalßu - that you expect from V , ' qtSSg Zwick’s. All of it is GOOD --BKsf- from the inside - — s<^ fc! ’- in A out •' ' '•' ht ' lhcl |s|i|pg^‘'' lgir ,you consider just A f* - J-TW ._Z an entire suite. . . ■•'<, _. ~/__ . ~J Made lh =~ ■'— ~" DIN bA R 2 Piece Mohair . IE II Charles of London Life JW Living Room Suite ‘ | $ 106.00 t _y OTHER SUITES as low as $39.50. ” “ This suite is especially lourtgey and comfortable and good looking. The framework and handles are solid mahogany, beautifully finished . . the master tailoring is all done by hand—so you see, there’s plenty ol quality, too. Premiere tempered springs on a sagless w ebbing bottom assure comfort and durability. 'I he line Zimmerman covering comes in a complete range ol colors including rust, green, blue and brown. W. H. Zwick & Son . NORTH SECOND STREET - ■
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1936.
Zionchek’s Widow 7 Faces Suit Mr ■ j V J V ■■■ ' fr : i Ml ■ s . *: ■ * j / . ■:. .. it ■'l .■ Il _j2 ! ■'■. Mrs. Rubye Zionchek Kenneth Romney When Mrs. Rubye Zionchek, widow ot the Seattle congressman who j leaped to his death from an office window, returned to Washington. D. C., above, to face snfts filed by the former Zionchek landlady, it was to Kenneth Romney she turned for help. Her late husband had advised her that Romney, right, sergeantsti-arms of the house of representatives, was his "only true friend/’
RUSH REPAIRS (CONTINUED j-ROM PAtiK OVtB) Merrill in a pilot, talked with t>he f’iers together and individually after his arrival in a motor boat 1 with supplies and mechanics. Relations appeared more friendly and the fliers, first to make a roundtrip crossing of the Atlantic, worked with the mechanics In repairing the ship. The “Lady Peace" lias been dragged from the bog where it' bonneed to a stop .Monday afternoon and its damages appeared leas se-j vere than had first been feared. Richman said he was “quite confident” that they could fly the "Lady Peace" on to New York within 48 hours. o — DRAFTS MEN TO (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONBt I ing lettuce pickers, members of the fruit and vegetable workers union talked abont calling a general strike. They held a mass meeting last night in an inn outside of Salinas, fearing that a meeting within the town limits would be broken up by vigilantes and sheriff's deputies. For two consecutive days the strike-breakers, have fought In Salfnas’ streets. Several were wounded yesterday when guards assisted by vigpantes and sheriff's deputies used nauseating and tear gas to break through lines of strikers with . truekloade of the fast-ripening lettuce crop. After the strikers had been scattered, 25 truckloads ot lettuce picked by strikebreakers were taken into the packing plant to be crated for
Starlets Announce Engagement jOiE IL-- k ■ljjte 1 W* ! ■ i ■■ ; >’ *' ? y' m£b -|. .' / ? "' -riwaSJTkri! Grace Durkin . ’ Bill Henry Although previously denying their romance was really serious. Grace Durkin and Bill Henry, two of the. more promising Hollywood starlets, admitted they planned to wed in December when the young lady was discovered wearing a handsome diamond solitaire. I
' eastern markets. Yesterday’s rioting was the most serious since the strike began after growers refused the strikers’ demands for a new wage scale, pre-! ferential hirfne. and Union recogni-i tion. Os the wounded, two were shot and the others were injured by clubs, fists, stones, and gas fumes. 1 There was no way of computing! their exact number. ISSUES APPEAL ' p ' G r QNEJ | ■ 1 said. 1 The national income, he said, soon will be double what it was at the depression low. Nearly : 6,(MlO,00f) more men and women | are employed in private industry I and 3.000,000 are employed on ! government-made work, he said. I “Factory payrolls for the first 1 /quarter of this year were more t than $70,009,000 greater each week , than they were in the first quarter , ot 1933." he said. “Systematic and successful efforts to raise the buying power ot wage earners and farmers have increased the bus!- ’ ness of merchants and brought : orders to mtuiufacturers.” i While stressing the increased obligation of local charity, Mr. : Roosevelt reaffirmed, that "when; 1 human distress reaches the point : 1 that government assistance is I 1 necessary, government up to the I 1 limit of its local, state and its ■ 1 federal resources must ajtd does 1 I act." ■i “The cooperation given by the ■ federal government,” Mr. Roose- ■ velt said, "in social welfare activi- ■ ties extends rather than contract -;
the responsibility of private ac- t tlvitles for local relief. “Happily, private organizations i are now in a better position to accomplish greater things than i for many years past. Increase in ; prosperity heightens the ohliga-
;«El »s“ E3 «El mEI 9sii rsm "s« E!« « s * KI» El» Cl “ E ism _ 9 „ m ® Stripes are Right! S 53 Cl 5 For . 3 5 FALL W? g ism ■ wjgr n hsm 3 ra ism hsm km W\ HSM 3 ; S 3 1 KI ism HSM □ Wli ° ISM 'J n / r" V- ■ F “ ISM Ji “ ia ""mK/U S ISM F * W/ _ n i - '** t 53 *** > HSM ■ ***’ KM / HSMBut Be Sure § You Buy ||B|iKh g I Cheerio wf a 'SM / HSM i Stripes W- » !SM IBia> »oa HSM 3 • liiRW F 3 J Tailored By 0 iSM k z HSM Hart Schaffner & Marx E3 iSM HSM i. . n There’s reason to insist upon Cheerio Stripes this . M , tjSM -a season! Because Cheerios are NOT just ordinary rs |JT Bkn j o M stripes. Cheerios are gay, colorful clusters of strip- hsm <| ings subtly worked into rich grounds of gray, blue O SM and brow n. Bold? Yes, but not too bold. And deti*1 nitely in good taste! ' E3 SM ' ' HSM You can’t go wrong with these exclusive Cheerios of ours. They are tailored by Hart Schaffner & Marx’s expert needles in the latest HSM styles, double or single breasted, in plain or sport back models. fts Jl When you take the fine material of which these suits are tailored ■« we feel sure you can not duplicate these values anywhere. Come in HSM tomorrow, look at these suits, we feel you will be well pleased. SM jl jl HSM ’ $ 27.50 to $ 35 2 OTHER SUITS from $16.50 to $27.50. SM HSM 1 n a Holthouse Schulte &Co 3 SM ‘ HSM 3 hsm E3 hsm [3 hsm ism H «i“ El« £3««“ S™£3 “ “ s “ EIE3 «s“ S
tion of every Individual to aid in ■ the relief of distress in hlu or her own community." Striking tit thone who criticize government relief policies, the j president xaid:
PAGE SEVEN
sure, thouc supeiiKioue ar.J uncharitable aneers which from a nmall element among us have been directed against those in need and ! against those who were honestly I seeking to help those in need/'
