Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 16 October 1936 — Page 7
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HITE’S Grocery For Super Stivice and Quick Delivery call phones 31 or 204. m Grimes Golden flpjp 10 pounds ■ (Basket 98c) pAR $129 fLOUR 99c Chocolate Covered. 1 Qp 1/UL'Vttv Pineapple center, th. .. IvL MACARONI 10c PANDWICHSPREAD "r 1 ...25c ISALDRESSINfi -25 c canned Goods Large cans Peaches in BAKFn Heavy syru P' 2 cans 35c Pl’n i.i-. Large cans Apricots in J-kD BEANS heavy syrup, 2 cans 39c MIXED VEGETABLES Large cans Pineapple in TOMATO SOUP heavy syrup, 2 cans 45c PEAS * Small cans Peaches, TOMATO J|’ICE ! Small cans Apricots, I MONEY BEANS 2 cans 29c Small cans Crashed ASV Pineapple, 3 cans 25c Small cans Sliced jW sK"-»* Pineapple. 3 cans 29c Large cans Ripe Prunes CAN in heavy syrup, can 15c CORN . 25c PEAS Early . J, T 25c GREEN BEANS " , ' recn < “ 1 25 c
Endeavor will hold a welner roast at Hanna Park. Wednesday. 7:30 p. in. Midweek' ! prayer service and Bible study. The class leader, Ernest Schroder,' 1 will conduct the same. Friday, 6:00 p. ni. the Young People wil hold a i penny social, at the Dent school I house. o Calvary Evangelical Church George S. Lozier, Pastor 8:30 a. tn. —Sunday Shook Mr Roland Mi’ler Superintendent. 10:30 a. m.—Prayer and Praia?, j Service. 7:30 p. in., —Thursday—Worship 1 Service and sermon. The League’ of Christian Endeavor will meet on ' Thursday evening following the worship service. oDecatur M. E. Circuit J. W. Reynolds. Pastor Mt. Pleasant Church School 9:30 A. M. Beulah Chapel Morning worship 9:30 A. M. Church School 10:30 A. ,M. Washington Church School 9:30 A. M. Morning Worship 10:45 A. M. Pleasant Valley Church School 9:30 A. M. Dr. F. E. Fribley. district superin- j tendent, will preach at the evening | ; service at 7:30 everyone invited. o | FARMERS MAKE -'-fA<‘yT- i .yj'-. i ?D.. p gf > .y pa<»e qne> with the recommendations from other states. The expressions of farmers in the ten states in the north central region will be molded to meet the needs of the entire region and coordinated with program recommendations of farmers from other regions for the national program. ALF M. LANDON i£9c^ l^3’ R liX I i OM P A<>R J’ NR) drive. Landon was met by his family and a crowd of well wishers on his ' return today from a middlewestern I campaign trip. The governor wav I ed a greeting, kissed his youngest I children, Nancy Jo and John Cobb, j and drove to the executive man 1 sion. He will set out on one of the ' most aggressive presidential cam-1 paign tours of many years on Bun- : day night, only three days after ; concluding his journey across the major battlefields of Ohio. Illinois. ' Michigan, and Indiana. He will I not stop until he casts a vote on I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1936.
election day at the polling place in a garage on the Main street of his home town. Independence, Kan. The unexpected western thrust was in keeping with the "surprise'' type of generaliship Gov. Landon has employed. It ranked with his sudden jaunt to Portland on the eve of the Maine election, a journey the Republican nominee considered a "turning point." In the same way, his friends looked on the decision to visit i California as the most strategically important act of the homestretch I drive In the national campaign. I They believed the move would ini crease Gov. Landon's prestige as a i political strategist and would give the Republican campaign a spectacular impetus in the home I stretch, just as they believed the . Maine trip served to jerk their . drive out of the doldrums and startI ed it running tn high gear. TULSA YOUTH 4£ONTINUEDJFROM PAGE ONE) R. F. Wil ox, oil millionaire in this oil-wealthy city, had been threatened with kidnaping. Kennainer v is convicted of manslaughter and entenced to serve 25-years in prison. Then Born killed himself short!ly after the Kennainer case exi ploded. His father sought unsue- • cessfully to have new investigations into the death. He died under similar conditions to Everett's death. Police said the guns were remarkably similar, the manner of the wound was the same. Serial numbers of the Everett gun had been filed away, apparently within the past 24 houfs, police said. Young Everett was found at 8 a. in. yesterday when his mother went to call him to breakfast. The I bed was mussed. He had apparI ently tried to sleep. The night bei fore, his parents had offered to I give him $125 a month to attend college, but he turned it down beI cause he thought he would ‘Tie | happier working for a living." THOUSANDS BRAVE I ED f r ROM J'VjE WE) jL. Davey of Ohio. Gov. Paul V. I McNutt >f Indiana joined the par Ity here and explained that his
Place Your Order With Us! " e deliver at all hours of the day. Our Service and Quality are second to none. Be Convinced! Try It. BOLOGNA, FRANKFORTS and PUDDING 2 lbs. 25c MEATY PLATE or BRISKET BEEF BOIL 10c. 3 lbs. 25c FRESH PICNIC H AMS, 4 to 6 lbs. 20c Hi HAMBURGER (all meat) 2 lbs. 25c MEDIUM HEAVY CHUNK BACON 26c lb VEAL PADDIES (boneless) 25c lb MINUTE STEAK (no waste) 25c lb SWISS STEAK (fancy and young) 23c lb POTATO BREAD 9c, 3 loaves 25c M. J. B. COFFEE 35c, 3 lbs. SI.OO PEACHES, No. 24 size, heavy syrup 18c, 2 cans 35c P. W. CRACKERS, p pkg. 13c, 2 pkgs. 25c SMOKED JOWELS (home cured) 20c lb FANCY WHITE LARD lb 15c, 2 lbs. 29c We sell Sparkling Crystal White Sugar. All size bags. ——— FLOUR OYSTERS McKenzies Pancake or Buckwheat »)!’ „ 21 lb. sack QA 1 ,nl •: _ Flour, bag .. a-iOU Winner Flour ...,Ovl Quart 5dC Blue Ribbon oo p M inner Flour .... Small cans Libby’s ID,, Malt, can . 5 lb. sack OAn Fruit Cocktail IVV __Z_— Gold Medal Flour 30c Small cans Libby’s lA p - - Crushed Pineapple .. IvL WISCONSIN rnnn 2? 10C SWISS CHEESE FOOD, can . ±VV Rrd Bafi _ ()ur Spc . ■< q ———————— SPECIAL 99z* cial Coffee, pound .. 1• V CREAMERY 7‘),» Pound —— ~ BUTTER 2 lb. Z3C See our Cheese Display ’ b ' 15C in our East window. 2 pounds 29c A Complete Line of Heinz Soups WINNER TOMATOES, can 10c 1 CAN 1 r — o CANS CORN, Red Jay, can 10c 1 I’JU O PORK & BEANS, No. 2 size can.... 10c Heinz Strained Foods for Babies TOMATO SOUP, 21 oz. size 10c 1 CAN IHz. — 9 CANS 97n SWEETPOTATOES, 1 Ivv O fai I V Dry Pack Taylors 15c Lewis Lye, can 10c’ Palmolive Beads, pkg. sc» Apple Butter Luna Laundry Soap, ' Crystal White Soap lb. 10c 3 bars 5c Chips, pkg 10c., pound ... 20c X' Tlß^BBB B/ d • Deliveries Please order ■ gggg gg B d /Igg g g gggJg A 'Bg yg g B w to any early for BB B SVggsg , , B. v } J'.L VB k u part ol Service. B BL- < 'v- F-* r ~ ~ A- 1 * * ■ J ■ o the City Phones 106~107 Free Delivery
purpose in coming was an effort ' to induce the president to carry I his camtmign into Indiana. The wet stieets were jammed with people as the party returned from the stadium to the train. Many had waited for hours in the rain. Before leaving the city, he stopped briefly to view work on a (6,500,009 slum clearance project , that is being financed by the federal government. At Dayton, former Governor' Jajnes M. Cox was to board the train to greet the president. Rear platform appearances were , |scheduled at all the stops. -o - ■ JURY SELECTED reoNTTNtTED FROM PAGE ONE) ed Mrs. Birch suffered severely ' from suspense of the four days at-' torneya needed to select '.heir jury. > o Private Utilities Win First Skirmish il . Nashville. Tenn., Oct. 16 —(UP) — Nineteen private power companies 1 won their firnt major skirmish in a i battle to have the Tennessee valley authority declared unconstitutional today when federal judge John J Gore denied a TVA motion asking dismissal of the power companies’ suit. He did no' rule on conetitutionals ity of the act. , ’ „ Receives Share Os Intangibles Taxes i Adams county today received a s check for $4,490.18 from the state [. an its share of the intangibles tax , distribution. Payments arc made . each six months. o— — 1 Pickpockets Work In Landon Crowd Wabash. Ind.. Oct. 16 — (UP) — Thieves worked rapidly in a crowd gathered to hear a 10-minute talk by Gov. Alfred M. Landon yesterday and picked approximately SBO from . pogkets. Prank Moßaman, retired farmer. - lo.it S3O: Harry Corey, farmer near s Marion, lost sl, and another man
whose name police did not disclose lost SSO. Authorities flashed a warning to other towns along the route after ’ the thefts were reported. o Another Report That Brady Gang Is Seen Hammond, Ind., Oct. 16—(UP) — A night watchman for a petroleum • company near Hammond reported to police today that three men, one resembling Al Brady, escaped Indiana gunmen, stopped at the roadside and asked him directions | into Chicago and Indiana Harbor The men were driving a blue Plymouth coupe without license plates, I he said. Miss Emma May Is Visitor In Decatur Miss Emma May, Indianapolis, reporter of the supreme court and her first assistant. Mr. Nelson, visited here Thursday afternoon. Miss May has served four years witli credit and is a candidate for reelection. She is making a tour or the fourth district, meeting the workers and aiding as she can in the battle for a Democratic victory on November 3. o Rotarians Hold Weekly Meeting The weekly meeting of the Decatur Rotary dub was held at the Rice hotel Thursday evening. Oscar Lankenau continued the discussion of the constitution, explaining article five, which deals with amendments. Rev. Charles M. Prugli. club president, told of a recent visit he made to the offices of Rotary International at Chicago, relating the manner in which Rotary business 1 3 conducted. » life 0 —— Platform Adherence Cited By Townsend Greensburg, Ind.. Oct, 16—(UP) — Ctrict adherance to its party platform and a workable tax "program are credits to the Democratic party, in Indiana. Lieut. Gov. M. Clifford Townsend, gubernatorial candidate,
said last night. 1 Cliarging the Republican party with failure to have a workable tax program, Townsend said "the stabil- , ity of Indiana agriculture and home • life must not be shattered upon the j rocks of any siren tax scheme. ” "The Democratic party has a program which began with strict adherence to party jplatform pledges in 1933 and which was furthered by the Democratic platform pledges of 1934,” Townsend said. o Pension Plan Backers Claim Borah Support Chicago, Oct. 16 —(UP) —National headquarters of Dr. F E. Townsend old age pension plan announced today that U. S. senator William Borah had wired them he would eup- , port efforts to bring the plan before congress and that he believed it .; “economically sound.’' I o Jurors Recommend Manslaughter Charge Chicago Oct. 16 —(I P)—s.A coroner's jury today recommended that policeman Earl Wilson, negro, be held to the grand jury on a charge of manslaughter for the slaying of Joe Gibbons, negro taxicab driver, I one time suitor of Mrs. Joe Louis. 1 The jury found thai in its opinion r Wilson was not justified iu the ’ shooting. Gibbons was killed October 5 w hile attempting to elude capture -by the policemail after be allegedly had thrown a heavy timber through -a resident's window in Chicago's i “little Harlem.” On the witness
'Rea£ ® >3 trß 4) if N [\ /( \ W/f If *7 » ■ ga''lJgjjajk y A w B .iiiu.'.j that y u / '*" > *v*/ X 1 J / lIHBbMBfIBHBIBBIffIfHHHHHBBHHHHV to up f with (hi fin. qualil) II \> B Iliff'-handise at the exf W • optionally low prices \ listed below. \ ELF FRESH PRUNES 6 NO. 2' 2 CANS O»JL ELF TOMATO JUICE OK,. MACARONI 3 TALL CANS SPAGHETTI ®, EE . TOMATOES 25c little ELF LITTLE ELE PUMPKIN 1 n„ O PKGS. LARGE CAN IvV ELF PINEAPPLE 4 GELATIN ELF PEACHES, Halves or Sliced 9Qr» DESSERT NO. 2/ a CANS VVV I LITTLE ELF ELF FRUIT COCKTAIL 00,. |, h( . s 2 TALL CANS 6 ' 25c elf baked beans k7 p ———— Campbell’s Tomato Soup, 2 cans . 15c FRUITS & VEGETABLES L . tt)e E|f Spinach No 2 cgn , Oc Idaho Potatoes, 10 lbs. 33c Red Pitted Cherries, Little Elf, 3 No. 2 cans 49c Sweet Potatoes, 6 lbs 15c Black Raspberries, Little Elf, No. 2 can 17c Apples, Wash. Jonathans, 5 lbs. 25c Bursters Peaches. Home style, 2 No. 2' 2 cans 39c , .. Elf Grape Fruit, No. 2 can 15c Bananas. 4 lbs 2.>c _ Elf Corn, whole kernel or cream style Oranges, Blue Goose, dozen .... 29c Country Gentleman, 6 No. 2 cans 35c Cranberries, lb 19c Elf Sweet Potatoes, 2 Irg. cans 25c Celery, 3 for 10c Little Elf Hcminy, 3 Irg. cans 27c Carrots, fresh tops, bunch 5c Elf Sifted June Peas, No. 1 can 10c. 6 no. 2 cans 85c Cabbage, 3 lbs 10c Little Elf Krout, 2 Irg. cans 29c Grape Fruit, 6 for 25c Elf Red Kidney Beans. 6 No. 2 cans 57c Home Store Butten lb. .... .. . 36c Bursley’s High Grade Coffee, lb. 23c Burco Coffee, lb, 19c ~ Kellogg’s Pep, package 11c ' Swansdown Cake Flour, package . 25c FRESH MEATS Post Toasties. Irg, pkg, . 11c I Elf Unpitted Dates. 1 lb. pkg. 15c SIEAK, Round & Loin King Bee Catsup, Irg. bottle 10c Pound Chocolate Drops, lb. . 10c SAUSAGE, Fresh Casing rr ee: wash cioth with moon rose soap, Pound < bars 19c i™nd EllS ’ Ski ”' ess .. 23c BURCO COCOA in P C. .rAi.n 1 POUND PACKAGE AW Smo. JOWL IQ n Pound I</C CLIMALENE Lge. Pkg. 91 e Franks BOLOGNA bowlene can - i9c 2 Pounds NU-DRAIN 1 Kz. Summer Sausage, lb. .. 25c can Pork or Veal Chops, lb 25c ._ r nimr Fresh Hamburger, 2 lbs 25c 1 E »)IjC Quality Food Market 121 No. 2nd St. DECATUR, IND. PHONE 192
' stand today Wilson denied having known Gibbons previously and that he had refused to take him to a hospital. "He told me to go away and let him alone," Wilson said. Charges Coughlin Usurped Powers t Detroit, Oct. 16—(UP)-A bill of complaint charging “mismanage- ■ ment" and asking the removal of ! Father Charles E. Coughlin and othj era from their trusteeship of the National Union of Social Justice ; was filed In Wayne county court ' here today by John H. O'Donnell, I Pittsburgh. I The bill, which named six others • also charged "unlawful conduct, bad faith, negligence and breach of trust ■iln performance of their duties ” | O'Donnell, who identified himself as a member of the organization I and a contributor to the trust fund ' further charged that Coughlin had j usurped the .powers of other trusJtees and was permitted "absolute ' i and despotic control over the organ- ' ization.” ;i — Labor Group Mill Release Analysis t , Washington, Oct. 16—(UP) —The long-delayed American federation of ) labor analysis of the labor views of ) the presidential candidates, due to be released late today, will be pro- > Roosevelt, labor leaders indicated, s The report, however, will main- • tain the federation's tradition noni partisan stand by stopping short s of advocating the re-election of r‘President Roosevelt, it was believ-
PAGE SEVEN
ed. Adding to the general belief that the report will lead New Deal labor legislation, whs the strenuous ob- . jection of William L. "Big Bill” I Hutcheson, chairman of the labor division of the Republican campaign | committee of its issuance. The obI jection of Hutcheson to the report f and his threat to take his powerful Carpenter's Union “for a walk" out of the A. F. of L„ was said to have delayed the report, usually made in midsummer of presidential campaign years. i o — Ruge Flying Boat Ready • Santa Monica. Cal. —(UP)— Lat--1 est commercial development of the Douglas Aircraft Company here is the huge new 32-passenger all-metal j flying Boat which was test flown I Sept. 24 Designed for long range trans-oceanic service, this plane carries 1.620 gallons of gasoline which gives it a non-stop full load cruising range of 1,500 miles. A maximum cruising range of 3,300 ’ miles is possible with a 12 passeng- ' | er load. Ducks Go on Spree Lodi, Cal., — (UP) — Abraham 1 Bechthold. was fined $l5O for the ' illegal possession of 52 gallons of brandy which officers confiscated and dumped on his property. When Bechthold returned home atter paying his fine, his 100 Mallard ducks ' were drunk in degrees varying from being asleep, to flying on their back ■ staggering around, waddling uncertainly and lying in mudholes. o ... 'Frank Corbett of Fort Wayne transacted legal business here • today.
