Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 174, Decatur, Adams County, 24 July 1925 — Page 6
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Fisher & Barris CASH GROCERY Dealers in Granite, Tin and Aluminumware. 119-151 South 2nd St. Phone 3-4-5. Free City Delivery. Quality, Service, Low Price. r> . . Fancy No. 1 New V\ hite ()3c Fotatoes Cobblers, 10 lb. 44c; 15 lbs. niip 4 D aTie Granulated, 89c tjU VjAK 15 pounds . 25c pound bag for $1.54; 100 pound bag for $5.95 Peanut Butter, Best Grade, plenty of oil, Nice and smooth, pound, only • playtime, real quality, lb. Oleomargarine 2.x-. n«. Nut, m29c Peaches, Fancy Yellow’ Elbertas, basket2oc Fig Bar Cookies, Nice and Fresh, 2 pounds.. .25c TM 'AITFi Gooch’s Best, More and better ILjOUiA bread, from old wheat, 24 lb. $1.25 48 poundss2.so; Barrels9.9o Pickles, Dill or Sour, Full Quart 40c Mustard, Battleship Brand, Full Quart for.. .20c Apple Butter, No. 3 Size Cans2sc Apple Butter, gallon cans, Libby’sß9c Pork and Beans in Tomato Sauce, Libby’s Large Cans, 3 for 25c; Canloc Shredded Wheat Biscuit, packagellc ’’ost Bran Flakes, 2 packages 2 _ LJ _ LJJJJ _ L: jj_-_ ; 2sc ( orn Flakes, Kelloggs or Post Toasties, large 15c Jersey Corn Flakes, 3 packages2sc ■■■■■■■■■■■■bbbbhmbhbbbbbbbbhbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb®®®"®""® n/JII 17 Large cans Pet, Carnation or Borl/liLilV dens, 10c; small sc. Eagle brand 20c AA TC Q uaker » ,a rge p k£* (J A 1 M Regular or Instant2sc Rolled Oats, in bulk 5 pounds23c Pimentos, large canslsc <; inger Ale, Cliquot Brand, bottle2oc )AP, Laundry, Flake White, R. N. M. or P. & G., 7 bars29c Matches, Search Light, package of 6 boxes. .34c Salmon, Tall Cans, Pinklsc Tuna Fish, all white meat, ’A pound can3oc Shrimp, Wet Pack, can2oc Tobacco, Scrap, 3 packages2sc Jello, All Flavors, packageloc Hominy, large cans, Snow White, 3 cans2Bc Peas, New Pack Early June, Sweet, and Tender, 2 cans2sc Tapioca, Pearl, Snow White, 2 pounds2sc Minute Tapioca, 2 packages2sc Honey, New Comb, 2 for 45c; section23c Apples, Hand Picked Transparents, 6 pounds 25c ' """'invnMMMHBaMaMMHnMHMaaHaMI Celery, Red Ribbon, one stalk equals two of ordinary celery, fully bleached, 3 large stalks 15ci Garbage Cans, Heavy Galvanized; Buy them here for less9sc, $1.15, $1.25 Pails, Galvanized, 10 quart23c; 12 quart2sc; 14 quart2Bc Tubs, Heavy Galvanized, .. 45c, 59c, 69c, 79c. 89c Wash Boilers. Galvanized, onlysl.4B Watermelons, Cantelopes, Complete Assortment of Fruits and Vegetables.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, JULY 24. 1925
| DAIRY BUSINESS GROWS 1 Milk Production In Indian* IncraiMß Two P*r Cent. During The Lait Year. MVlk production In Indiana Increased sixty-seven million pounds, or two percent, last year compared with the previous year, according to the latest figures compiled by the Creanie'.-y License Division at Purdue University. The total production of milk was 3,200,000.000 pounds In 1924. compared with 3,133000.000 in 1923. W. (I Goss, acting head of this division found. The total of creamery butter made 1 by Indiana creameries In 1924 was 53.462,000 pounds, an increase of 1,800.000 pounds, or 3.4 percent over 1923. Eighty-seven dairy plants reported butter as the major product, while 124 reported butter made. Figures show 21.600,000 pounds of butterfat were shipped out of Indiana last year In terms of milk this means that 540.000.000 pounds would have been shipped out. I A total of 1588 cream shipping stations operated all or part of 1924. Two hundred and thlrty.four dairy ! manufacturing plants or an increase I of fourteen were licensed. The total increase was found to be entirely > milk plants which began to purchase > milk on the butterfat basis. Twenty-nine plants are classed as I ice cream factories while sixty-four .'•eported ice cream made. Licensed • plants are now making 66 percent of ; the total amount of ice cream conI sumed in Indiana. The consumption of ice cream decreased 126,332 galI lons in 1924, or .25 gallons per , capita. , ‘
SAVING—SATISFACTION—SERVICE I The aim of our store is summed up K in these three words. Central Grocery! “OF COURSE” g Phone No. 31 Free City Delivery p White Lily the qual- Betty ( rocker. Best B ity Winter Wheat Bread! Flour h 24 2 lbs.. . . awMnKsmwMnoH I ■■ Bll r " Extra Tender Early I } Best Michigan Hand June Feas, 9V. E Picked Navy 37c o cans K Beans, 5 lbs. hibihi i i .jri imim j —. • juimiwwmbbbi Extra Good Grade I Large Size Califor- pink Salm((n < r | " ia Swee ‘ „ 25C Can 10C B Prunes, 2 lbs. I ElVampiro Fly Pow- i Repast Coffee a real B Coflee tor W4f k ZUC g money, per lb B ,™' k I™» M.nStf j„ 20c 29 "RBHHnfIHHMa B Certo, the wonder x , 3 jam and jellie *?hp £ ost ,, loastK ‘s and 4 maker, bottle UC Ke 11 oggs.Cor n I i ■■— *’ lakes - . 15c I I’et, Carnation and jar ge PB-• ■ • I Bordens Milk QKf* a 3 large cans Post Bran Flakes | ■■—■ and "Pep” 25c U Van Camps Pork & Pkgs < ■ Beans with tomato ■■■’■ I sauce, 25c Extra Fancy Sliced £ I 3 large cans.. Pineapple, I Can I California Lemons, ■■■■■ii I U good size and worth Best 10-cent Toilet I ™ ore ’ 35c ’’? per sol< ' 25c ■ Dozen 3 large rolls.. a Celery, Cantelopes, Cucumbers, Tomatoes, || Peaches, Mangoes, Potatoes, Oranges, Lemons, Bananas, Apples, etc. f; I Owen S. Davis I >C The Store That Appreciates Your Business.
The nine milk condcnsorles continue to operate as formerly and rei port 51 000,000 pounds ot condensed milks or an increase of 3.000.000, pounds in 1924 over 1923. This report includes plain bulk, evaporated, . concentrated and sweetened con , densed milk. An Increase of 80 percent Is noted for sweet cream handled in licensed plants. Dairy manufacturers have found this branch of the business profitable and are rapidly expanding this phase u s the industry. , One hundred and five milk plants purchased milk on the butterfat basis ' in 1924 The one hundred and five licensed milk plants report 257,000 000 ( pounds of milk handled in 1924 com- • pared with 213.000.000 pounds in 91 plants in 1923. or an Increase of 44.000,000 pounds. Milk plants are beginning to see the value of pur- ‘ chasing milk on the butterfat basis, , and the number of licensed, plants is steadily increasing. —— o_ I LAPORTE —Crops are the most important thing now says Emory Rice, farmer, of Laporte. Rice and one of Lis farm hands, Harry Myers, arrest- . id bn a charge of stealing auto equipfueut, and then secured a continuance I po that Myers could help finish har- ■ jesting, * 9'lQi ALEXANDRIA—CharIes Smock of near Alexandria, says Mrs. Zera Id- . vena, of Elwood, hit him on the head ■ >ith a brick, after an argument. She i \s charged with assault and battery. BLUFFTON—A beer case served as . a cradle for a baby born to George i and Argoogle Barbosa, of near-Bluff-ton. The father and mother are Mex- ■ leans, working on the beet farm of Ed McKinney.
ILLUMINATED I Paris. This photo shows the famous Eiffel tower as it appears illuminated for the Paris international exposition. — Dancing afternoon and evening at Edgewater Park Sunday. 173-Jt
I Saturday Specials I Spring Lamb H I Spring Chickens g Nice Fat Hens * Barbacued Ham 1 ■ SPECIAL-OLEOMARGARINE— J f Good Luck, 3 pounds 9 Nucoa rur* Oak Grove, Creamo, J Churngold ? 1 SPECIAL-2 lbs. Man-O’-War I H Fresh Cottage Cheese 1 3 Creamery Butter g J Bulk Pickles | 2 Choice Cuts of Prime Beef Jj Nice Fat Veal j ■ Open Kettle Rendered Lard | S Fancy Smoked Hams |8 m Sugar Cured Bacon ■ Cold Meats S ,■ Boiled Tenderloin, Boiled Ham, Baked “ . Ham, Bologna, Wieners, Minced Ham, 1 Pressed Ham, Veal Loaf, and Summer | B Sausage. . | - We handle everything in the meat line. * We Deliver Any Time. J Try Us. , Phones 106 or 107. ® | Mutschler Meat Market I KEEP AN EYE ON THE FUTURE a sum of money comes into your possession you think what it will buy or what it will earn? \\ here do you want to be five years from now’ Starting a bank account today will have something to do with what you will have later. Start your checking account at this bank. THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST CO. Bank of Service
Girls From “Golden J t ' West” Visit London , (B y Keith Pre,S > Staff Correspondent > j «• -,™; h ■ the 1.'11.1011 ,ir ,h I from th- OoW''" ~ I 1 . |bFV fl re here in numbers. bit one )( does not -e them on the streets or riding »n the buses. B l« only In the halls and dining rooms of the mos expensive of >-° n ' ,on ’ a f aahjon ® W ’ hotels that one comes across these Jthe. slender girl* There, and In .h IlORt exclusive apartments, where uniformed footmen resplendent In brass I.unons and gold braid may be found , lt pverv floor and corridor, with their “ Y „ sirs " and “No, Slre’and smart i nf thp cap. nnd Instantanctouching o> .. ons obedience to one’s merest whirm In silvery voices you hear them .X'X.»' hundred." It is dollars ,hey B e talking about. . There is a pause. Then a low amused voice answers: "But kiddie. 1 gave you five hundred only yester-da-i know. Dad. but you’ve no idea how things cost.” ••Don’t I though,” he retorts, and then with a gesture of mock intolerance he slips out his check book and writes out a check for t amount wanted. Once he had given It to her in five pound notes, and she had stood helpless with her hands full of paper, saying. "But, Dad. wliat’U I do With all this stuff?’’ Prefers Checks So he had gone back to giving her checks She found them so much easier. So much less confusing. Out in front of the hotel or apartment a powerful motor is waiting her pleasure. There is the quiet ’ chaugeur sitting sphinx-like, at the • driver's wheel. Next to him is the . footman- just as quiet, just as sphinx-like. Smart, trim in their
neat livery they have been wait| ng there expectant of the arrival of thia Girl from the Golden West. It is twelve o’clock now, and still B hc has not appeared. But one reads no Impatience in their faces. Their orders are to "wait," They da. Possibly she vqill not appear until one. or even two o’clock, but that does not matter Thelr's merely | R t 0 wait. "Girls from the Golden West.” That is what the English call these American butterflies who appear suddenly in London at the height of the ••English season," fluttering from em bassy tea to embassy tea; appearing momentarily at lord so-and-so’s house for a chat with viscountess this, and to dinner later at the home of vis countess that*. Daughters of Wealth They are the daughters of Americans whose income runs well i nto the six figure catagory. London, Paris, Rome, the Riviera —all see them briefly and wonderingly during the summer season. The average tourist who thinks he Is doing well simply to get to Paris, or London, or Rome—or all three—and get back to the States again without having given any bad checks, occasionally catches a glimpse ot these golden daughters as they flash by on tour buried back .in the cushions of some big. sweeping foreign car. Usually they think, "Gee, Hl bet she was a princess all right.” Or “1 wonder what duchess that was?” And little do they realize that in about five cases out of six they would far more likely be correct if. when such a car flashed by them in city or on country road, 'they would comment, "Another Girl from the Golden West—or I miss my guess." o ALL OVER INDIANA THORNTOWN — Town Marshall 1 Frank Johnson, has worthy asslstant in Mrs. Johnson. While Johnson was out of town a prowler visited his I home. Mrs. Johnson chased the wouldbe thief from the premises. I ANDERSON—When Samuel Gustin 81, and Mary Ward, 77. went to the clerk’s office at Anderson to get a marriage license, friends had to help both into the office. [ FRANKLIN — Pleasant township, Johnson county, seems to be a healthful place. A total of 84 male voters I over 70 years of age are reported by I the trustee at Greenwood I TIPTON —Children at Tipton were I reminded that September and school I time are just around the corner by I the arrival of the first shipment of I school books. HARTFORD CITY — Two persons I were injured when Preston Glascock I of Hartford City, fell asleep at the I w heel of his automobile. The machine I plunged into a ditch. I MUNCIE—For the first time in hisI tory the Delaware county clerk at I Muncie had to refuse a marriage hI cense, because of a difference in race. I A negro woman and a white man deI sired to get married. I CLINTON-A total of 563 patients. I with only twenty-one deaths, is the I record of the Vermilion county hos I pital at Clinton at the end of its first year of existence. The hospital has I been nearly full all year. I BLUFFTON —Pop bottles have their I place, but the place is not in the hand. I said Garth Swigerts of Bluffton, w w I cut his hand while washing bottles I at the Star ice cream factory. VINCENNES—An average of "? »''• shels an acre for a 20 acre tract on I the Mary Ewing farm of >"• I cennes. is thought to be a recor I wheat yield for the season in the I State. MARION—Four Marion women, appealed to the board of works for oil I on their streets. They said th- '" I is ruining furniture, rugs ami I tallies ■ WHITESTOWN— Whitestown citi zens will "pull their own." Dr. CarI roll only dentist of the town et I suddenly leaving all of his denial equipment. —o— NOTICE OF MEETING Notice Is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholder of the Old Adams County Bank wm be held at its banking house, locator, Indiana, at 10 o’clock A. MTuesday, August 4. 1925, for the purpose of electing nine directors to serve for the ensuing year, and to transact such other business as may come before them. D. J. Harkless. 161 to Aug, 3. Cashier. ,: — Ashbaucher’s FURNACES LIGHTNING RODS SPOUTING SLATE ROOFING Phone 765 or 739
