Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 50, Decatur, Adams County, 27 February 1931 — Page 5

MR 10 PROVE Ke is no fake ft Pel, 7 'IT' TabraH'/ ■*' „ break a bW' .-one on h and He on a bed of ■'""T th. Jienili. -I i han. ft‘. devlll" art ’ o' ft llll ,th.’ I’alais de -lust.ee behas sued lans r c’iiO” 1 ' d.re.lP's because ftJ.aU railed ■’Fakirs Fu- ■ , Sit-" i» " hir!l l "“’ "*•

"ng __ JAppelman’s Grocery ) BpHONES 215 and 219 DELIVERY SERVICE ?ftßursle\'s High Grade 28c I Chase & Sanborn’s 39c I oldH Coffee, lb Coffee, lb PRUNES 99” FLORIDA ORANGES DA I Urge can Large size — Dozen ■ TOMATOES SUN KIST ORANGES QQ ■ REP BEANS ntp TANGERINES 1 r ■ c au~ 10c B o.~x .. 25c Lan. Sugar JO lbs. 47c ■ Crystal White Soap Chips Op' I ne Onions PA „ * Large Bar <WMV 50 pound bag tJVV ■ 2 Bars Crystal White Soap Free I 10 pounds 15c ■ VanCanips Soap 9£z* SWEETPOTATOES jP p : 7 bars I 2 pounds lt)v Pumpkin Hominy Sauer Kraut ■ Large ca n . 12c Large can ■• Qq Large can . 11c ■Perfect Peaches ‘71777 can” 5 cans $1 |r 9 7 COpFEE IT’S cup-tested ft ITest,xl1 Test,xl by COFFEE ■■ w JsiiGAR tj vopl7 ?C* Fine Perfect or ft Granulated Little Elf, pkg I >»»•- GROCERY and MEAT MARKET r ■ 47C Phones 31 and 204 6 f0r ,. 25c K ’BARONI, 4 pounds 25c 2 lb. box Sunsweet Prunes2sc ■ lull qt. cans Salad Dressing 39c Fancy Dried Peaches, poundlsc ■SALT FISH“ Herring, 2 pounds .. -. 25c I n — __________j ■IS OLE0 ’ 2 lhs 2sc 3 lb. FANCY SEEDLESS RAISINS 25c ■ FANCY RIO COFFEE I*/. BROOMS OQ n ■ pound lwC 50c value Zt/C Ib£!!?EAPPLE Canned Goods Sale ■ 6 )rup. can Z/ F B 3 cans CORN 12 cans S 3 cans PEAS in all ■ > IlinCd 3 cans BAKED BEANS .. Qr ■ Medium S i ze( n>. 7c; 4 lhs 25c 3 cans RED BEANS UOL I FLOUR FRUIT Vegetables ■ Whit B’v.Ob 8 ’v. Ob sQn Fresh Spinach Lar K« California Lima ■ »T to Beans, IQ,. Ifer " SSC 16 oz. Peaches 1 P™n« 13C ■ 24 lbs. Gold Medal 2 pounds 25c I?> f , our ß2c ;sr sPie ..lßc <^ Fru ' 1 5c IQc 25c 2Tomal " cs 10c [LIMA BEANS *■ 2 , tb - P k g- Syn- Fancy Pop Corn that lA n Toilet Soap 1 shine Crackers At JC wilt pop, tb. LUC 3 yikes XW /M fancy New Mine-. Fancy Marshmallows OP., B Mea ‘. pkg 1 E»P pound - 2dt)C .Log Cabin Maple ■ 2 Pkgs. ' *<s Fancy Cape Cod , Syrup, can —OX B Green R. Cranberries, Th LvV , L". • ,ioc rx F " oxßi " 23c 25c

leral uud ‘>f Tahra-Bey in particular.' iln.'crrinE that his hair raising stunts might ba performed by anyone, after a little study and training. ' With the court s permission Tab--1 ia-Bey will stick his knives through ’ his Irndy, have a large and very hard rock smashed in his stomach ?and take a short nap on the points i of many knile-bhides to prove his I' Immunity to feeling and tliut his' tricks are not as easy us they may j > look. M. Hueze, on the other hand, is - in training to give a few depunk- - ing exhibitions among which will i i be runing needles through his arms ■;and othei quaint things like eating I Ire and ground glass. Get toe rtab.t —Traoe at Home.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1931.

CONGRESSMAN IS ARRAIGNED (CONTINUED FROM PAOE ONE, Rowbottom has been free under SIO,OOO bond since his arrest at Evansville several weeks ago. He is married and father of one child. HURRICANE IN FIJI ISLANDS if’ONpNin.jp from p*aa onej islands. Tliete was no authentic news I from tlie Ha district, although it ! was known one entire village had I been inundated.

One river rose 40 feet during the flood, destroying bridges, tramlines and roads. Relief ships with flood, clothing and medical supplies were dispatched to the interior. Il was believed the death toll was confined chiefly to Fijians and East Indians. - -o CAPONE FOUND GUILTY AND IS SENTENCED (CONTINUED FROM '‘NR To Deport Henchman Washington, Fel/ 27(VP) —fThe labor department announced today that a warrant has been issued for deportation of Antonio "Mops" Volpe, reputed henchman of Al Capone. Grounds for the deportation of Volpe were given as moral turpitude prior to entering the United States ■and fraudulent entry. o—

STYLISTS OFFER CRINOLINE GIRL FOR MISS 1931 Early Victorian Fashions Return to I)r a pe Boyish Limbs of 1930 Parts, Feb. 27.— (U.R>— Fashion, having exposed the boyish limbs of Miss 1930, will try to restore some modesty to her younger sis- ! ter, Miss 1931 and even make her early Victorian with crinolines, ringlets and muffs. The Crinoline girls will come back definitely this winter, fashion forecasters predict, and will give an old-fashioned touch to women's styles which will continue over years. The bustle, the hobble, large cauliflower hats will be revived. Minus Old Ugliness But, of course, they will not be as they were, the experts of the Rue de La Paix and the Rue Royal, the fashion headquarters of the world, declare. It will be for the dress creators to give the suggestion of the old fashion, without incorporating any of the ugliness. The Crinoline Girl of late 1931 will not have to struggle into an underground train, or a street car against the handicap of a dress ten - feet-in - circumference. As a matter of fact, the modern girl will be able to let her great-grand-mother's crinoline lie in its dust in the cupboard, for the new crinoline is-predicted as being transparent. Retain Its Daring In this way, fashion will retain some of the dare in dress which began when it was first revealed a few years *ago that women possessed knees. The crinoline dress is promised as being in lace frills only slightly ballooned. Crinolines and bustles will naturally bring back the ringlet, which, in fact, is already the coiffure recommended to go with the long evening dresses. The muff, too, will be there, all just like a Christmas picture of young Victoria's Court. o Medical Prescription* The custom doctors follow of writing a prescription to be filled at a pharmacy Is said to date back to about 181(1; before that, the doc tor usually stocked his little black bag at the apothecary’s shop and dealt out bls own medicines. 0 Rattler Killed by Own Cite Snakes are not immune to their own jHiison. When a rattlesnake, temporarily blind while shedding its skin, struck at a spot where It was hit with a club, hit Itself Inself instead, it died qplckly from the self-inflicted wound. It was reported to the American Forestry I ’i’ll ROOP’S GROCERY | Phone 366 Free Delivery Special for Saturday Bursleys Coffee pound . qieo, Good Luck 1 Q pounfl - X«zv Brooms, 4-sewed OQz* each Soap, Le Vogue j 3 bars IVL OUR REGULAR PRICES j Little Elf Pink Salmon QP*z» 2 for |Selox Washing Powder QP I 2 for Little Elf Catsup 1 £• 14 ox. bottle 191 'Red Beans '4 ’for Milk, Pet or Carnation 3 for Miller’s Bread 25C 3 Bells Coffee 9Qz» pound - AaOC |P 4 G. or Crystal White 1 , Soap, 5 bars . L 4 V I EXTRA! 125 cC. White Soap Chips, 3 5c bars C. White jSo&p, 40c Value for 2 fb. box Prmium OQz* •Soda Crackers 2i<7V 50 Ib. bag of Onions . 39c Fruits and Vegetables Oranges, Bananas, Apples, Spot, Grape Fruit, Celery, Head and Leaf Lettuce, Cabbage.

GOLDEN CATE STATE GROWING MID-WEST CROPS I By Norrtu Leap, UP. Staff Correspondent < Fresno, Calif., Feb. 27.— <U.R> I The outstanding effect of over-,' production of farm products in ' central California appears to be a' swing away from specialized fruit- 1 growing to diversified farming of 1 the sort that has made the middle I

DATE/P* That’s what hundreds of women are ♦ saying about old style bread since they’ve discovered HOItSUM sliced. Holsum bread conies to you ready sliced. All you do is open the package and serve. , Z No more search for the bread knife and board—or hacking with a dull j knife. No worry about sharp knives \ when children want to make sand- \ wiches. Throw your bread knife * rfl i away — it’s as out of date as a five- / y^ldhat ’ } WiWwFLHolsum slices are evenly, cleanly cut by a marvel machine. Each slice is exactly the right size; you can l " Your grocer serve every bit of every loaf! It will has it stay fresh for days and days. HOLSUM BREAD f READY-SLICED

! we»t famous. They still have their great orchards and vineyards here. But ’ they also now are looking to the ' pedigrees of their hogs and their muttons, and are discovering anew th? fine art in wising prize potatoes ami charm ton Indian corn. A decade a<o the dirt farmer of this territory was usually something of an aristocrat. He valuer! Iris property at so many thousand dollars an acre, and measured his profits yearly by the hundreds of dollars an acre. High Priced Vineyards Vineyards sold as higli as $2,5u0 an acre, orange orchards at nearly twice that figure, peachess up to SI,OOO and even dairyland at as

high ns SSOO, Unleveled, raw land 25 miles from any town and witli . only the promise of the needed irrigation water brought $125 to $175 an acre. Aas for hogs and corn, they were products for the middle west to raise and ship out here. Today the scene Is somewhat different. Only the citrus men i have held anything like their own, ! and ('. ('. Teague, farm board mem ber and head of the largest citrus organization, li a s intimated l>ig | plantings have menaced the pros perity of the orange men. Grapes Rot Last year more than 320,000 tons of grapes were left to rot on the .vines. Scores of thousands of tons

PAGE FIVE

i of peaches moulded on the ground. More than 150,000 acres of vines j have been uprooted In three years, and u campaign is on to pull ani other 100,000 acres. It's a common situation here. Vineyards now sell for much less titan raw lund formerly sold so land vineyards cost from SSOO to SI,OOO an acre to get into production. cHicumwiLs l-at Heal Auk your Drugglat /X if fjrvX for r« Illainomi /JKX J and •L '**' met*lHe botes, sealed with Blue \y# 42b K,bbou - T»LeM»olh«r. Hoy V P 1 TAl'of your Prngjrint. Aik for I / GTcill-f diamond IX » JIKAND PIL! H,f r4O know© A as Best, safest, Reliable. Buy Now. ■r SOLD >T PBUGCISTS IVUYWBW