Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 127, Decatur, Adams County, 28 May 1931 — Page 7
IB HEADS HIVE BANK |‘B rat. Mo. *’-•> <U.R) 1 Wr«JK' i>t (inuiii.i, . i <h ' "I .1 dill farmer. /Il ■Eis'ridi '" ' v ‘ is,iii "- BhU gUI' ll "’ 1 " s " ■ . I KitW ■•■ • ■!•• -i"t' has b«-<-n .'■'J'-etli. ' '"""' llul " llllv VJH. ,liil fa, ' |, “' l -" | .mill I ■ mid I know what market i'Ki'ijjM "i know, has Io Im ■_! Mtnr ■ 1 in Cl linoniii S BL_Jwt.-i now as dm s 1 a, ms dm i. s on i Infl Nebraska lainh, ■ ■■. Id' the coarse ■ jB), . . mniiiittee of llm K] .aril He is presiK>|£ liminlas county i\ Ki w" : ‘ r> 111 111 ' hl h| H ee *, si .1 a Chicago •
OUR MEAT MARKETS WILL BE OPEN UNTIL Hturday Noon May 30 i SCHMITT MEAT MARKET I MUTSCHLEICS MEAT MARKET H 1 ” I SATURDAY, MAY 30 |k CURVE INN I Filling and Service Station I JUNCTION PIQUA and ROAD 16 K l mile East of Decatur Rid. (Jas and 1 qt. Oil I Refreshments !>rop -
I mi II |« I^ll■■ ■ !»'■■''■. I—'fc i w >.m a . , ■i~, ■ m ■«.■ i>- - . * KJ "W/T JN There is no Substitute W) * ■sggj Quality lIjyALAD DRESSING jah . Qt. Jar29C [ I DILL PICKLES Qt. Jar ...15c | NUCOA or GOOD LUCK OLEO tb. 18c I BEANS, Great Northern th- 5c I PRUNES, Medium Size tb. 5c I Binger Ale 4fL* I g CANADA DRY 3 bottles 4: UL I SCRATCH FEED ICO tb. bag $1.59 ■ BLOCK SALT 50 lb. block 33c ■ NUTLEY OLEO - 2 tbs. 23c I SOAP, P.S.G. or Kirk's Flake 3 bars 10c ‘■B~~ Ginger Ale ‘l'm* I I CLICQUOT CLUB - bottles S BULK RICE tb. 5c ■S 8 O'CLOCK COFFEE . Tb. 21c |g. SUGAR, Pure Granulated .25 tb. bag sl.i9 WHITE HOUSE MILK, Tall 3 cans 23c 9 Wisconsin ! f-Tp | I ( REAM CHEESE Ib - RED EEANS, Sultana can 3c ■ PEAS or CORN, Golden Bantam 3 cans 25c ■ EEL MONTE PEACI IES No. 2 1 . can 20c g PINEAPPLE, lona No. 2J/g can 19c g Sultana 1 (L* g PEANUT BUTTER lit. jar lif V B BROWN SUGAR n ’' bc | ■ LARD, Absolutely Pure n> - Ijc l| H LIMA BEANS 3 tbs ' - bc | i Q9a* | NEW POTATOES >'• tb. peckUUV I HEAD LETTUCE 2 for 15c |j| BANANAS 4 lbs. lor 19c |up rec® STORES
lawyer nurteil practicing law j., mlnoiH in 1908 Previously, he had attended school at Chicago t ’n verai y, Northwestern University and University of Monn, in Ger many. 1 — —o— New 100 Yard Record Set Mioenix, Arlz (pp) _ Hatiy ■ompkipa, Pl nix high school track star, closed his prep school career this year by establishing a new southwestern record of 9g seconds for the 100 yard dash. Tompkins has won every event in which he has been entered which. In it Helf in a record. FINO NEW DATA IN CITY OF OB Philadelphia, — ( UP)- Historically important tablets, one of which provides the first evidence that the I ancient city of Ur. of the Chaldees; was inhabited as late as 324 B. C. in tile reign of Alexander the Great have been unearthed by the joint archeological expedition of the University of Pennsylvania Museum and the British Buseuni. Announcement of the discovery of tlie tablets was made by Horace I H. F. Jayne,, director of the Unii versity Museum, following receipt I ot a report describing the find from 1 tlie expedition.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1931.
Who Could Ask for More? C-. ! - Or „ < - *WF Mr Wife LT '• 1 Here’s convincing proof of the point that the well-advertised weather 1 ■ is not the only asset in California. One might even be pardoned for ! saying that the beautiful maiden so alluringly draped by the sea ■ shore should be what every fully equipped beach needs to ensure I lasting popularity. What the wild waves must be whispering to lovely ■ Leila llyams, M G-M movie actress, can’t be far removed from “Let’s ’ 5 got together." You can't blame them, can you?
I "During the past few months wo have been excavating the residential section of the town belonging |io the partiarchal age. from 200V Ito 1900 B. C.” F. Leonard Woolley field director of the expedition, said in his report. Find Brick Houses "Above the residental quarter we have encountered only a few dis-1 jointed fragments of walls of a lat-1 | er date. At the lower level we found ■ I mid brick buildings lying some feu , feet above the level of the well pre-! i served houses of the Abrahaihiet
fIMMHMHBHHHIMBHEBIWMDHHHIHHBMHHHBBB At Your , . Dealer l r. < F / ■ v ? i ■ feWF ” x x t i y -BX. feW X - - / ir . X - • < \ ■ SA A " ,s '- ■ w’y" ■••• •""" x f W p fl . man. Br-.m V * -Xi z _. Cloverleaf W A A- Tasty Ice Cream f° r Decoration Day and the week-end >XNnM Decoration • | " n » trs i “ ld parties Eresh Strawberry I ruit — Pint apple rruit. Ice cream Cr/zX' > n Package and bulk at all dealers ami WC X?N Day !,,,.,.tains. For a refreshing drink ask for a Choco’»s9' late Malted Milk with Cloverleaf Tasty Ice Cream. FLAG CENTER BRICKS order early. Cloverleaf Creameries Incorporated
period and separated from them by by a stratum containing burnt brick walls of about 1400 B. C. "InscriiH'd tablets found in the ruins afforded accurate dating evidence. The Ironses were occupied, one tablet showed, down to the twelfth year of Anexander the Great This is the first real evidence we i have that proves that Ur survive! I down to the Greek age.” _ o Robert Heidrich of Fort Wayne I was a business visitor in thiis city today.
GAME PBESEBVE TO BE SURVEYED Washington, May XU.R> Several wild life societies have accepted invitations from the Forest Service to cooperate in a study of wild life and game conditions in the Kaibab National Forest of Arizona, in June, It was announced here by ('. 11. Rachford, assistant forester in charge of range movement. Overcrowding of the preserves of the Kaibab National Forest, particularly in the Grand Canyon preserve, necessitated the removal of a part of the game there, particularly deer, by trans-shipment to other f< rests In the southwest ami by restricted limiting. The Forest Service points, with! pride to its work In the Kaibab i Forest, where absolute protection [ has so increased the stock hit it i was necessary to reduce it by I hunting. It is also remarkable, the Service says, that the 5,261 hunters in the area during the past five years there was only one accident and* no fatalities. The abundance of game on these preserves of the southwest is expected to furnish ample supply for the survey. o Get the Hablt--Trade at Homs
How to gain New Strength
V jIF Colds, flu and sickness play havoc with the red-blood-cells and the body therefore has less resistance against further disease attacks!
Every Spring take S. S. S. Tonic
Chinese Students Will Scrub Floors Peiking, — (UP)-The education commlHsioncr of Ilottan province, LI Shing-taai, has Isnued an "order that students In governmental schools must hereafter do the junl tor work In their schools, to cut down expenses, according to tlie Chinetie pleas here. This is new departure for China, where students have traditionally not been expected to do work with their hands. Mr. Li said that educational funds are very low, and students should be glad to help make it possible for every student who so desires to get an education. So they are requested to wash floors and water gardens in the schools. o — — ■— Steal Blind Man’s Cow Bowling Green. (>. —(UP) —The ' theft of a "pure bred cow from a i blind man" was charged ag* ( nat three Indiana men here shortly asI ter they had been fined for intoxi- I cution. Indiana authorities said the men had stolen the animal and sold it in Detroit. Posthumous Gift Portland, Ore., May 27 —(U.R) Mrs. Elsie Titus searched an. old trunk of her husband, wtio died in 1926. She found a bank .draft for $703.
in the Spring Every spring countless thousands take S.S.S. — the purely vegetable tonic— to build back their rcd-blood-cells so tlpit they may have that new strength which makes for a keen appetite, firm flesh, a clear skin and greater resistance against infection and disease. You, too, will want to take S.S.S. for this very reason. Select the larger size as it holds double the quantity and represents a price saving. © S.S.S. Co.
Empty Chair for Dead Solon LONIXJN — (U,R>— An empty chair remained at the head of a table during a luncheon in a downtown restaurant in memory of the lute James Stewart, M. P. and former barber. — —— - ■ ' *<>■■■■-■ —io To Visit War Cemeteries Paris, (UP)—A hundred thousand German families have aigni-
KROGER STORES QUALITY FOR PICNICS AND r ‘ , v’ ■ IS WttK END OU I INUS hKS 1 3k § S decoration day 9 S SI m STARTS THE PICNIC ■ IS 3 ■ B $ W H SEASON —GE I VOUK needs at krogers KROGER g,ngek Cream A L E Pure Sparkling Refreshing The Ever Popular 4 2 «X49c r s . n, 15c _ Fine for Macaroni Too. Also Root Beer, Lemon-Lime, Orange Soda E BREAD 7C - Country Club. 1 Ih. Loa vest Soda Crackers 23c COUNTRY CLUB—OVEN FRESH—2 lb. Pkg. SANDWICH PABST-ETT SPREAD £DC ZU lb. pkg Or/C Country Club, 12 oz. Jar Reg. and Other Varieties PORK AND BEANS 3 cans 17c Country Club—Delicious Sauce DILL Pl/’KLES SALMON, Pink Country Club, Qt. Jar Country Club, tall can 35c PEANUT 1A CANADA DRY AQ BUTTER 177 C ,’J hotties ...... 4UC Country Club, lb. Jar The Champaign of CmgerAle MALT, 3 cans Q* |AA Friday specials Country Club .. tj) 1• VV APPLE BUTTER 9 OLI \E S ! Country Club 38oz I CAMELS d»-| Off ,ars TT«jC carton . .... p AN ROLLS for pleasure smoking LrCsh Daily ICED CAKE, OT A Delicious. 2 lb OOC BLACK WALNUT Butter Cream Iced —— Choice FRUITS and VEGETABLES 5 pound BANANAS 19c Golden Ripe CANTELGPE. Ripe ‘ each 15c HEAD LETTUCE, Solid each 10c NEW CABBAGE, Solid 2 lbs. 7c FRFSH and SMOKED MEATS Armour’s Surc to iC A Shankless | g |gp Jj I’lcasc lb. |(J (j PRESSED HAM, Tasty lb. 25c Armour’s Half or “ S(ar Udi 110 Whok> VEAL LOAF lb. 25c I RANKFORIERS, Large Juicy. 21b 25c ARMOURS BOILED HAM QKz. Half or Whole, lb ODC SLICED, lb.. . , ( .39c Jellied Tongue !b. 35c YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT A KROGER STORE! I
PAGE SEVEN
i find their dofliro to be allowod to .' viuli the German army cemeteries ( ' In France ami Belgium. Thia Ih the Urgent German peaceJ time invasion of France since tho wur. —————O'—-.-I.' . ... —. Swifteat and Sioweat Tlie Hwlfteat speed we know If that of light; the Hh.weHl, that of the growtli of the liumtin thumb hall.
