Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 49, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1937 — Page 5

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| BEEF lifU ROASTS M ib. 18c swiss STEAK ,b ’ 23c CHK KEN IcW Dressed lb -Xsc 4VE A L MU ZpWBV roast in €x2EJ ib - 2sc V i BAC 0 N Delicious sliced and rhined Bacon. Just the thing to serve a* IONE pound 15® I FRESH PICNIC HAMS It Good to Slice or Boil « I I Pound IOC GERBER’S M KAT MARKET

SAFETY and LONG WEAR ||O put on New GOODYEAR G-3 Tires Ride on Goodyear Tires—and have real center traction safety in ail weather*— on all roads! FOR NEW CARS nESSdOE. iliM and old cars YEAR Auto Radios SCume see these bicycles Seat Covers -they’re beauties! Very Complete Line , . , . , of Accessories latest in design and construction — combining beauty, speed, comfort Drive in for Expert BICYCLES and completeness of LUBRICATION S — equipment. Built for long, 9 FOR BOYS rugged service. See our SERVICE $4 AD 9.... °* AS complete line. You’ll I 9 lIZ $0995 agree we offer greater Most Cars M— *<CHH values for your money. — IffsMM "SS” Attention ■ liweek | jfcJcasH SCOOTERS "Sr 4 Radios Farmers! B We can measure and equip with , Goodyear Tires, your farm im- ■ | Bands to your wheels and by uslS ’’ ‘ in a a demontable drop center - pKHB Sid!rim. You can use tires on other \»y E \SY pieces of your equipment—thus ■I «990 ~ I<?H cutting expense. See us before TFRVIS you huy ’ without obligation to ilff Small down payments— Balance easily arranged I r Real values . . several models to ~ , „ .« Choo.. „.™., CarlC.Baxter, Mgr. table model home radios—five ' six and eight-tube sets . It —- —' ail peak performers at rock-bot | tom prices. terms to | . your convenience. Come in. See 'JIIII MJ■ J | I and and hear them! h&M .d CAR L C. BAXTER. Mgr. kil2!i dlsi * n Phone 2i.2

rlata had found her of "unsound mind" and pointed also to the fact that "the state of Illinois has not ’ exacted the death penalty in the I case of a woman for approximately 90 years." Swain, coavlcted of the hotel room murder of Mrs. Mary Louise Trammell last August, shuffled into the portable execution chamber of the Cook county jail at 12:03 a. m. and was pronounced dead 12 minutes later. Mitchell did in the ! Menard prison chamber at Chester, j Hl., still protesting his innocence. 0 STRIKE CAUSES (CONTINUBD FKOM I’Aljlj (Bill I company statement said. Homes depending upon electricSMBS

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1937.

J.ally operated oil heating units felt 1 t the effect of the strike as local 1 power failures smothered furnace a tires In stores of homes. Appeals • for relief of the situation were numerous, police said. 1 The strikers seek wage and hour > concessions. •1 Hopes for a truce until March r IS were given a setback at confer * I enees last night, the company re- ! vealed. >1 The Electrical Workers Union . local No. 292 receded from its de-1 . mand for recognition as sole bargaining agent and the company agreed to recognise labor s rights to bargain collectively. "But at the last minute," the power company said, "a new demand was made by the union—that the company pay strikers full time for days occupied striking " BUDGET BILL (CONTINUED FROM PACK ONE) Rep. Arthur J. Gladieux, D„ Fort W ayne, to line.t women to an eight hour work day. "Women don't want to be treated as a special class,” Mbs Robins told the house. “By limiting hours of work thia bill likewise would limit the money a woman could make. It could even force girls into houses of prostitution-” 1,000 LOYAL fONTINt'Er) FROM PAGE ow with them on their way to field hospitals. Some said there had been dissension among the loyaliate. Several declared that the loyalist officers were killed by their own men after a dispute over food orders Wednesday. MONROE NEWS Hailey Ehrsam and Lester Ehrearn of Fort Wayne spent the week--1 end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs- Oscar Ehrsam. Mr. and Mrs. Hubesrt Meyers of Fort Wayne are the 'parents of a baby girl, Claudia Jane, born Feb ruary 2uth at the Methodist Hospital. Mrs. Meyers was formerly Creo C»ist. Mr. and Mrs. James V. Hendricks is visiting relatives in Fort Wayne Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bowman of Napoleon, Michigan, spent the

week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mns. O. O iliocjter. Miss Louise Busche of Elkhart spent the week-end with her parents. Mr and Mns. E W. Busche. M r and Mrs. Sylvester Everhart of Decatur were the dinner guests of Mr. Everhart's parents, Mr. and Mns. A. E. Everhart Sunday. Mr. and Mrs Jesse Sells of | Grand Rapids. Michigan, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mns. Harve Selk. Mr. and Mrs. A- D. Crist spent Saturday In Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Haggard visited their daughter, Mrs. Walter Hertel! and husband al Sturgie, Michigan, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Crist visited their daughter, Mns. Hubert Meyers, at the Methodist Hospital at Fort i Wayne Sunday. Mr. and Mitt. Jim A- Hendricks I entertained at dinner Monday, Mr. j I and Mrs. Jesse Sells of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Mr and Mrs. Harvey Sells and Mr. and Mrs. Everett Rice 1 of Monroe. o - —, _ SIT-DOWN STRIKERS (CONT INIIED FHox PAGB ONW) portedly the discharge of three men which they said was for “union activity." Disturbance started in the Fish-' er Body plant where the workers charged their supervisor? were, antagonistic and unfair. Three stewards of the United Automobile Workers of America were discharged. Fellow workers said this action was discriminatory. Union headquarters said that et- < forts were made to negotiate with the management after discharge of Paul Blackburn and William Fuchs. The management allegedi ly refused to listen to the union's I complaint. Last night William Bartel was discharged. Today about 200 work- ’ ers refused to resume their jobs. The plant management blew a whistle and closed down. Halts Discussion Detroit, Feb. 26. — KU.R) —Wage, hour, and recognition conferences between General Motors corporation and the United Automobile - Workers were interrupted today by reports that new labor troubles at the Chevrolet Motor company’s plant at Janesville, Wis., had forced its closing. Conferees halted discussion of minimum hourly wages and the 30 , hour work week —last two of six union demands made at the recent i strike settlement —and explored reports the plant had been closed after' workers had protested the discharge of a fellow employe. This new report of labor unrest ' in the General Motors’ subsidiary 1 came as union employes were said ! to be considering possible strike 1 action in the plants of the Hudson ! Motor Car company. Hudson workers in a meeting last night brought the strike prob- ' lein to the forum. It was understood that union leaders had urged them against immediate strike, but the workers planned further consideration of their plans. Ed Hall, second vice president of 1 the union, left the General Motors conference room to announce that that the Janesville plant was closed by a walkout of the employes. “1 think” he said, “that this | trouble will be all settled by to- , morrow." C. E. Wilson, vice preident of G. M., and chairman of its conferees, ■ confirmed the labor trouble in the | Wisconsin city, but made' ho further comment. UNION MINERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I situation," he said. “We arc just i clearing the brush away." John L. Lewis, president of UM ■ W( remained in New York but held 1 aloof from the conference. He con- , ferred with Murray at luncheon. o Class Records Kept 64 Years Lagrange, Ind. RJ.R)—Mrs. Martha Robinson, 87, who taught school from 1873 to 1905 has the names of all her pupils in one small notebook. Some of her pupils now are in their 70s. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur ANNOUNCING Miss Juaneva Rupel formerly of Betty Jean Expert School has been engaged as operator at the VIVIAN WHITE BEAUTY SHOP S. Second St. Phone 225

Do You Do The Right Thing At The Right Time? — Do you know when to make a duty call? Do you know when to leave cards? Can you make a graceful introduction? Do you know how to enter a theatre? Do you know how to walk with two men friends on the street? Do you know If you may invite a man friend to call on you? Should you thank a man for a social courtesy? Can you set a table properly? Do you know the proper form for a formal dinner invitation? Can you invite a woman and not her husband? Do you know how to dross properly for all occasions? You will find heipfeul information on these and many other points in the booklet “Etiquette for Everybody” ready for you now at our Service Bureau at Washington. Send the coupon below, with a dime enclosed for your copy: - CLIP COUPON HERE Dept. B-109, Washington Service Bureau, Daily Democrat, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, O. C. I want the 24-page bound booklet “Etiquette for Everybody," and enclose a dime for return postage and handling costs; NAME STREET and No. CITY STATE I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind. WAT IS s' t ;.o / I J .KOSfiARDENZI ■ j Cold Frame is Year-around Friend of the Gardener

One of the amateur gardener's best friends is a cold frame. In every month of the year there is important service it can render. In the spring -It is a nursery for young plants; under its protection vegetables and flowers can be started weeks earlier than they could be sown outdoors; and guarded from belated frosts until time to set them in the garden. To make a cold frame is so easy,! any one who caji wield a saw and hammer can do it. It is usally made 3 by 6 feet, or some multiple of this, for the reason that standard hot-bed sash are of these dimensions- This standard sash may be used for both hot-beds and cold frames, which are alike except tha‘ the cold frame is unheated. But a cold frame (or a hot-bed either), may be any size you wish to fit old windows, or frames covered with one. of the modern glass substitutes. These glass substitutes are wor'h considering. They do not break, and the breakage of glass in windy localities is somethimes considerable. They are much lighter than glass, a merit which women appreciate-

The New 1937 ‘Speed Queen’ Now On Display At Schafers WE ARE HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE THAT WE HAVE BEEN APPOINTED AS DECATUR’S DEALER FOR THE NATIONALLY KNOWN SPEED QUEEN WASHING MACHINES. WE INVITE YOUR INSPECTION. 1 hings Make a Washer Fast fr 1. THE SHAPE OF THE TUB | |> |||| JUST AS EGGS BEAT FASTER IN A ROUND MIXING I Y BOWL—SO A WASHER WASHES FASTER IN A BOWL- j J lit SHAPED TUB. .. j 1 J J’■ "V ||| ... —w-rrfWM; t I 2. THE TYPE OF AGITATOR I' IJB | F||THE SO-CALLED SUBMERGED TYPE AGITATOR | OSCILLATING ABOUT 56 STROKES A MINUTE HAS ggjL BEEN PROVED THE MOST EFFICIENT. 59h”"v 1 3. THE TEMPERATURE OF THE WATER fIW EVERYBODY KNOWS THAT HOT WATER REMOVES DIRT J\ V \■ W FASTER. THEREFORE. A TUB SHOULD BE INSULATED (1 (J | 1 WITH DOUBLE WALLS TO KEEP THE WATER HOT N < dk X THROUGH A WHOLE WASHING. W ▼ W/ ELECTRIC AND GASOLINE MODELS. The Speed Queen Is The Only Washer That Gives You All Three Os These Requirements __ A Eor l‘ as l’ Efficient Washing. | 1-1 u Models Range in Price From kJV'I 1/A1 JLiIX kJ $39.50 1( . $59.50

They do not let i nas much light as glass, but for growing seedings they let in enough. How to Do It. The substitutes most commonly used cousist of wire screens covered with maetrial resembling celluloid, or fabrics treated with wax to make them waterproof, and let more | light through. i In making a cold-frame, the frame should be constructed of 1-inch boards, of cypress, white pine or some wood which resists rot,. First dig a hole in the ground slightly larger than the size of the frame. It should ibe at least a foot deep. Into this hole put the frame you have built so that 6 inches of it is beneath the surface and the remainder above. This wil linsure that I no drafts enter from beneath. Construct the frame so that the front is 6 inches above the surface, and the rear, 12 inches- It must, slant toward the south, where the winter sun shines. It is well to hinge the sash at the top of the frame, so it can be easily opened for transplanting purposes and airing. A sunny spot in the garden, pro i

tected as much as possible from the full force of winds and driving rain, Is the best situation for the cold frame. It may be too cold now to dig in the garden, but the sash may be procured and the lumber frame made, so that when the first warm days arrive you are ready for serious gardening. Hardy annuals and vegetable* will get a month's jump on the weatherman if started in a frame, and it in an absolute necessity of you are to have some of the tender. ones. 0 . SENATE APPROVES <CDNTINUED FROM VAG« ONE) potential alternative and other factors in judicial reorganization have been obscured by chargee and de-| Dials of intent to pack the supreme

FARM LOANS 1. Easy payment plan. 2. —Low rate of interest. 3. Never needs to be renewed. 4. May be paid in 5 years. 5. You may pay on any date. 6. Interest ceases date of part payment. 7. Consult us about costs. The Suttles-Edwards Co SAVINGS, SERVICE and QUALITY At Schmitt’s Meat Market “SATURDAY SPECIALS’’ •Fresh Neck Bonesloc ib •Fresh Pork Shoulders, Roast or Steak23c lb •Fresh Pork Sausage (pan)2 lbs. for 35c •Smoked Pork Sausage,2 lbs. for 45c •Short Tee Bone Steaks23c ib •Swiss Steak out of Round22c lb •Choice Beef Roastslßc to 20c tb •Short Stark Smoked Picnic Hams2lc lb •Minced Ham, Sliced or Chunk 2 lbs. for 35c •Salt Lake Herring7 for 25c •U. B. C. Salad Dressing29c qt. GOOD TENDER BOILING BEEF. FRESH GROUND HAMBURGER lbs. <m M — FRESH BRAINS A “Memorize Phone 95 and 96 — Free Delivery Service

PAGE FIVE

beach. Mr. Roosevelt'« bll! would provide reorganization under four general porpoxltions with reapect to which the Brealdent informed congreae. “If these measures achieve their aim. we may he relieved of the necessity of considering any fundamenI tai changes In the power of the courts or the constitution of our government—changes which involve consequences so far-reaching as to cause uncertainty as to the I wisdom of such course.” That language is Intenpreted to j mean that the President, while rei luctant to propose a constitutional ' amendment, probably would do eo I if bis bill failed of enactment or proved Inadequate to achieve the ends he desireso . . — Trade in a Good Town — Deoatuf