Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 97, Decatur, Adams County, 23 April 1937 — Page 7
——— - - - - - ■■■■ ■ — -, - - - — „ i .... . . i ii ■■ ■ ■’*
Ki. CHURCHESJ ffc.re U. B. Circuit ]i. i;:iiK''i'. pastoi R Willshire School. 91 30 a. m. H. 10:30 a. m. ■| ttt ..etiua Wednesday CV6RH Winchester ffittgg. 7:30 p. m. HRmeeting and choir pracEglednesday evening. M. E. Circuit Reynolds, pastor Mt. Pleasant worship. 9:30 a. m. School, 10:30 a. m. Qb Beulah Chapel School. 9:30 a. nt. Washington worship, 11 a. m. Valley School, 9:30 a. m. service, 7:30 p. m Evangelical Church s I J ° zier ' minister t#> m.—Sunday School. Rob ■Rjr, superintendent. K. ill. I’layei and praise Mj, m Thursday There will *OB rer service. The minister j K attendance at the sess-
— ATTENTION ! — • I DRESSED While You Wait I Metz’s Egg & Poultry Co. 135 South First St. SPECIAL PRICES FOR SATURDAY ’’»••• Old Barred Rock Roosters 18c tb aS ling Hens—3 to 4 tbs. 19c tb Rcjstmg Hens—4 to 6 Tbs. 22c Tb ■trs—l'. 2 to 3 tbs. 26c 4 28c tb ■gj PHONE 156 We Deliver on Saturday.
and make no inquiries. |™"y| Saturday Savings I Stork I E ■Nippies J AI^ AUZE! I = hygienic | ■Mode famous by the fl I I S POWDER t Etienne Quintuplets B L |jb Hsa g*> h lO<* I ißlki _i EL 50 c jE I tl it bl7 I L BABY LAXATIVE 3 carbonates I I 25™ I ::.r.°“ ND | kill moths I B. „ excess acid. ■* ■■ « ■ ■ln Patented Package M Aidsin com- g I] SbstaU, g|| bating colds. ■ g MftfaJ ABSORBENT COTTON ■ 40 c I I Eikay’s w I hymohonyf I PEPTONA I MOTH FUME I (GREETING CARDS I I Reliable Spring Tonic I CRYSTALS SC Inc ■ I <r 4nn I Even kills moth eggs. ■ andlU ■■ full'll.VU ■ Use to protect woojens. pint 1 16 oz. can fRING NEEDS | UM,TED OfFER F slr ' nß,h - *’* FR E E I fcs it 29C I Soothe Irritated EYES | Pan * Double Size Flannel ■ ETYFLO IK Tabs Polishing Cloth with ■ tltl-V I i pt Johnsons Furniture ■ Eye Lotion With Clip k k Alcohol « p,, “ sh I Eftc F"' °™UC Both-0,, iSU (80.3 J P** 19c 1 _ WALLPAPER - 1 5c ce^t ALL, ’ A,>ER CLEANER 1 SQUARE ENAMEL 85 C ent— c Ont ai n g 1i/ 2 times the amount of Woodwork and lurniture. Quart r Packed in the standard « "" •^ n AW TURKLEEN — Rug and 35c jy« package 25c Paint Cleaner — pkg- _ UARE FLOOR fIA« VENETIAN BLIND MEL — Q uart - SOC BRUSHES B. J. Smith Drisg Co
,! ion of the annual conference at i Elkhart during the week. o CRASH CLAIMS (CONTINUED FR_QM f> AOF QNjn\ Catholic church, will officiate at the services, Saturday. Burial will be made in the Catholic cemetery there. Surviving the death victim are the parents, Mr. and Mrs. John O’Shaughnessey of Monroeville, three brothers, Edward, Robert and Charles, al! of Monroeville, and three slster.a, Mrs. Catherine Rison of Fort Wayne, now in the hospital here, Mrs. Al Schneider, of this city, and Mrs. Mary Smith, of Cleveland. o OBSERVANCE OF (CONTINUEDjrKOM PAGE,ONE) Ward diamond at 5 p. m. Youth day in entertainment wilt be held Thursday. The Rotary club will honor the boys at their regular meeting at the Rice hotel Thursday evening, while the Junior Arts department of the Woman's club will entertain the eighth grade girls. Friday will be Youth day in ■ citizenship. A special program will be held at the Catholic school auditorium Friday afternoon. Youth week will close Saturday, May 1, with health day and day I out-of-doors. The committee is planning a hike to Hanna-Nuttman
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1937.
: park, where a picnic and contests will be enjoyed. o FORMULATE NEW 1 PAGE ONB) 1 resorting to a house petition. In addition they are working to complete action on all appropriation bills, including the *1,500,000,000 1 work relief bill, by May 15. The joint house senate commit- ■ tee on government reorganization • I was being prodded to hurry its ■ drafting a bill. Leaders are work--1 iug for a complete measure which 1 can be pushed toward passage be- > fore summer. ■ Behind the maneuver lay the threat against the economy program of a prolonged congressional session. Leaders said that it congress remains here until fall it was doubtful that the president , could win out. It was pointed out that long sessf ions of congress have always der veloped strong “pressure” blocs. . Fighting for various sectional authorization measures, these . groups might be able to put . through legislation throwing the , president’s budget out of line by *1,000,000.000 instead of a net , *418,000,000,000 as at present. House leaders have been assurI ' ed that senate action on the presiI dent's court plan - when it reaches the senate floor, regardless of the judiciary committee decision —will , not he delayed by a filibuster. On that promise they are hopeful of ( house action a few weeks after the senate acts. committee to approve the bill at Failure of the house judiciary an early date will result in a voteforcing petition being given tacit leadership approval, it was learned. The signatures of 218 members could take the bill from the committee. o Spooners Crack Light Bulbs Honolulu <(J,R> —The city council has decided that broken electric light bulbs about the city are due principally to spooners" who prefer the Hawaiian moonlight to any artificial lighting. As a consequence. it has decided to approve a bill for *BOO for broken lights
GREEN EXPELS I LEWIS FACTION l A.F.OfL. Head Virtnulh • Reads C. I. O. Out Os Federation i i Washington, April 23. — i(U.R> — ■ President William Green if the 1 j American Federation of Lab:r t‘. ' day virtually read out of the fo«Jcratio nrebel unions affiliated wl'b 1 John L. Lewis’s committee for in- • dustrial organization. His action, backed by the unani--1 mous vote of the. A. F. of L. execuI tive council, completed the greatI est split in 50 years of union labor I history. Leaders of both factions - frankly admitted it was the pre- - lude to a bitter and possibly prolonged factional war. II Green, recalling that the coun- '■' cil had been empowered last fall j I to convoke an emergency conven- ' tion of the federation to expel the ' I CIO group, said the Lewis unions i ’ were “steeped in the cesspool of. illegality and of irresponsibility." ! ■ “Under such circumstances," he said, “it is not essential that a ’ special convention be held —indeed, ' ! by the very utterances, acts and 1 deeds of the organizations making up the CIO they have demons strated clearly and definitely that r they no longer regard or consider’ themselves associated in any way, t with the A. F. of L.” f He called an unusual meeting of- - presidents and officers of 108 loyal t unions. They will sit with the ’ - executive council in Cincinnati, 0., • May 18. The meeting will plot a I vast organizing drive counter to the CIO and will set up a special financial structure to support it. When he was asked, “does this mean yo uare finished with the C. I. O.?” Green replied abruptly: "Place your own interpretation on that.” Cources high in federation council said the primary objective of the Cincinnati meeting would be 1 to create au emergency "war chest" to pay for the counter-CIO drive. Two courses are open: (1) I to levy a special membership tax; (2) to enact an emergency assessth ORDINARY SHOES make for ORDINARY JOBS • Mol, «'« J —r~r •aKutivw J , • Kwpi your mind alert \ _ 7 r z . v . x ww • Support, /T, / | »h» arch I j • RolievM \ / JXgV PfßMur* J I Ms- £ 1 A\ r.) I Wife! J t ! -Styles as smart i as any you'll see! We have a good selection in colors and whites. SZSo $5-oo NICHOLS SHOE STORE
I inent upon loyal unions. The federation is considerably I I hampered financially by the CI()| rebellion which cut off a third of its membership and an equal proportion of its dues. o EMPLOYES OF G. M. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ' H. Millard, local U. A. W. president. Millard Immediately ordered pickets withdrawn from company property. Mayor Alex Hall and Chief of Police Owen D. Friend congratulated the strikers on the lack of violence during the strike, and on their quiet and orderly conduct. Wage Battle Stockton, Cal , Apr. 23—<U,R> - Striking cannery workers, deputy sheriffs, vigilantes and highway patrolmen battled for an hour and a half today when one of the four strike canneries was opened in defiance of union demands. More than 30 men were reportied injured as men fought with fists, ball bats, pickhandles and ■ rocks. The united force, several hundred strong, retreated when I vigilantes appeared with guns C. C. Clowdsley, Joanquin county district attorney, asked Gov. Frank Merriman to send national guard troops to the district. One man was reported shot in ■| the mouth before union leaders persuaded their men to give up the battle. The fighting started ' when a truck of spinach came to i the Stockton food products plant I convoyed by state troopers. ’! Vance Ambrose, union leader,; had offered a compromise hut the plant owners apparently decided to ignore it. Tear gas bombs were thrown i by the patrolmen. Those that did not explode quickly were thrown back by pickets. Then deputies’ Inside the plant got into the fight, throwing bombs from behind■ barbed wire barricades. Pick handles and ball bats then . began swinging as strikers and the vigilantes raised by Sheriff. ' P.odel Iraced across the field from i : Stockton. Men singled out each: ■ other and began swinging their, > primitive but effective weapons. Some resumed the battle after being felled Others lay still. o Painted Fingerlains to Court San Francisco —(UP) —Just what tint of red finger naile justifies ejection from a public place is a quetc i 'tion for the courts to decide. Mrs. I Alta Moore hae filed a *IO,OOO damI ege suit on the grounds she was | ejected from a local sports stadium J j because she had “slaughterhouse ' I fingernails.’’ CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers are requested to give old and new address when ordering paper changed from one address to another. For example: If you change your address from Decatur R. R. 1 to Decatur R. R. 2. instruct us to change the paper from route one to route two. When changing address to another town, always give present ad- ’ dress and new address, j
I ALL FRESH STOCK: ALL CHOICE CUTS ’WE SELL JUST AS WE ADVERTISE, ANY AMOUNT AT THESE SAME LOW PRICES. WE ARE IN A 1 POSITION TO GIVE YOU QUICK SERV ICE, HONEST WEIGHT AND QUALITY MERCHANDISE . . . . . CHUCK ARM BONELESS BEEF ROAST ROAST Tender Meaty PLATE ROAST S T E A K 15c 161 c 10c 19c 171 c Qt. Jar APPLE VEAL VEAL STEW VEAL BI TTER R OAST Fresh Ground and Pocket STEAK 17c 21c " AM " 1I1G 121c15c23c PORK PORK SIRLOIN FRESH ROUND PORK CHOPS ROUND ROAST STEAK STEAK SAUSAGE , STEAK End Cuts SWISS STEAK 23c 23c 25c 22c i 25c 27c 21c BEEF CALF PORK SLICED JFresh Cottage PLENTY MIN C E HEARTS BRAINS HEARTS LIVER CHEESE OF MEAT 121 c 121 c 121 c 121 c 10c 2"'-25 c NOTICE SMOKED SPECIAL ITEMS This Saturday smoked meats LOOK . HAMS Can Tomatoes. Peas, Green Beans, DirKlir e ~, c JuB ‘ wh F «i of : ‘ nd pink Salmon, Choice. 2 cans 25c. , ’ snow boy Fresh Wheel of Whole or Half , can I>eaches 2 f(>J . Hdnz Shcedl Fhned WASHING BIG EYE While They Last Jacks, 2 cans 27c. Qt. Jar Mustard, Srnoked powder SWISS 15c - Krafts Malted Mi,k ’ Verv jowls _ 20c > fgltfs CHEESE AAK Special, 2 pound can, 49c. J for schmitts meat market ! ■■inn ■■■■!■ iw ■■linn --inmiira
BANKERS MEET AT INDIANAPOLIS Annual State Convention Will Be Held May 5 And 6 Indianapolis, Ind., April 23 —(UP) —A Southern Indiana .banker and a middle western industrialist were announced today an speakers on the! program of the annual convention of the Indiana bankers association, I here May 5 and 6. William S. Elliott, vice president of the Bank of Canton, Ga., and an outstanding advocate of the unit and independent system of American banking, will tkecuss “the crisis in unit banking.” He ie expected toipoint out the rapid spread of banking monopoly throughout the country. According to C- 18. Enlow, president of the state bankers organization and president of the national city bank, Evansv-ille. The tsecond speaker is Louie Ruthenhurg. president of Serve!, Inc., of Evansville. Ruthenburg will speak on the subject of “Industrial peace is a community problem.” Other prominent figures in national and state governmental business and Fnancial fields will appear on the convention program The Depauw university choir of 29 mixed voices will furnish the musical interlude at the annual ban- : quet on the evening of May 5. More than 850 bankers, bank directors, employee and their wives from all sections of Indiana will attend the dinner. The committees which have functioned throughout the state in the
. HHl^■■■■■■■■■■■» Positive Values ® Steak or <g Of* BANANAS C lb. lC r W fl —■ Roast Tb. Jfl Ripe and Yellow Jf ypAio..„. b 20c HEAD LETTUCE e c I V Pocket Roast g Large and Crisp patties strawberries M Boneless Steak to fry RADISHES J for 10c skor eless Sw m. 20c CUCUMBERS each l Oc lb. 19C Florida ORANGES ‘9&r> Dozen Pork Liver, Maine POTATOES Ring Bologna, 2. w ba a Frankfurters GRAPEFRUIT 4 2 S C JOWL BACON, mild cure, lb. 19c ASPARAGUS lb. PURE LARD 2 lbs. 29c 351 c Quality Food Market 121 No. 2nd St. Free Delivery DECATUR, IND. Phone 192 ■■■■Mmam
interests of the banking industry will report at the convention business sessions. The committees are ( those representing agriculture, : banking studies, county organizaI tlons, legislation, membership, bank protection, research and enuploye education. 1 The legislation committee, considered one of the most important of the group, functioned during the session of the Indiana assembly helping to guide bank legislation through the legislature channels. ’ Paul N. Bogart, president of the I Merchants National bank at Terre ' I Haute will deliver the committee 1 report. . o Daughter Os Slain Woman Testifies Courtroom, New Castle, Ky., Apr. i i 23. — KU.R> — Mary Prior Brown, | slender, blonde daughter of Mrs. Verna Carr Taylor, testified today ; how her mother left her home to • go to her death last Nov. 6. Mrs. Brown, 21 years old and : quite as pretty as her slain mother was reported to have been, was i the second witness called by the state in the murder trial of Brig -1 . Gen. Henry H. Denhardt. “Mother left the house that: . 1 day," she said in a slow soft drawl, | I "just as happy as she could be.” Her testimony was intended to | , destroy in advance a defense i ~ theory that Mrs. Taylor committed suicide. ’ —— I Man Arrested For Assaulting Woman ’ I Indianapolis, Apr. 23. — (U.R) —| Charges of assault and battery j with intent to kill were filed to I day against a 35-year-old “sales- 1 man” who tortured Mrs. Delia i Gavins, 30, in an effort to make
PAGE SEVEN
her disclose hiding place of a large sum of money. Mrs. Gavins was beaten on the head and left tied to a chair by a man to whdm she had rented a room in her home Tuesday. He gave the name of Robert O'Day in renting the room. Mrs. Gavins said she was unable to convince her attacker she had nd money hidden. He left after stealing some old coins and keepsake jewelry. Q Doctors and Dentists In Band Oakland, Cal.—i(U.R)—This city is one of only three in the United States that possesses a band composed entirely of physicians and dentists. It numbers 14 players. IhatTwrecT CONSTIPATION MAKES Constipation can dull your whole life. Headaches, poor complexions — tired, lifeless days are often the results. Also, many serious diseases. Get rid of common constipation now with a ready-to-eat cereal — . Kellogg’s All-Bran. All-Bran brings you the two . things your system needs to act naturally: “bulk” and vitamin B to help tone the intestines. Within the body, All-Bran absorbs more than twice its weight in water — forms a soft mass, and gently clears the Intestines of i wastes. It acts naturally. Pills and drugs seldom cure coni stipation. You just keep on increasing the dose and switching t from one laxative to another. Just eat two tablespoonfuls of ; Kellogg’s All-Bran every day, i three times daily if needed. Serve , as a cereal with milk or cream, or use in recipes. Sold by all grocers 1 — made and guaranteed by Kellogg in Battle Creek. •
