Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 192, Decatur, Adams County, 14 August 1931 — Page 7

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ftppelman’s Grocery Xiongs 215 and 219 delivery service fl| pound boxes 3 Large £*v\, ■fashioned llokies, 2 dozen Apples, lb •HEATiES SWEET POTATOES Boxes AUC Pound 0C jivS Quart Jar 29c £RESH PEACHES 25c BJeETPICKLES 99/» Home Grown Muskmelons BaartJar each 10c, 15c and 20c Singer ale watermelons ok pa. ( Jaart bottle AOC Large round .... OD OUt W" Xk ' l,int lm “ k ' loc vTat7 hi:s TT 0 Perfect red j 6 boxes AOC ■ EANNcans W ARDS SPECIAL Or. JrEEN BEANS 2f»C CAKE: ■°" S — — SWEETHEART TrT ■ORN AND PEAS 25c CAKE ■ POP corn SOTP BEANS l£ c 3 pounds ZDC ■p°u n ds__.. ; •.... HOME MADE SOAP ■RAM LATED Large bar ■GAR, 10 lbs ; : ■— — P. &G. SOAP , lAn JOILET PAPER -|9 C 3 bars AUt B Rolls 7 ~—— B — Lux, ( amay or Cocoa HardBLIMALENE 21 c water Castile 09 Bargepkg AC 3 bars “***' ■■■■KaHHHBHnnHBmaHaBHnBHHaBi Witts&ifer’sj Specialß ■ Phones 106~107 Free Delivery A I Saturday Only I Wholesale Cash Meat Sales ■NiCK BUNCH OF SPRING CHICKENS AND HENS ■JUMBO FROGS AND DRESSED RABBITS ■CHOICECUTS OF BEEF, VEAL, LAMB AND PORK ■PLENTY OF PORK OR BEEF TENDERLOINS PICK SWISS AND FLANK STEAKS i l LK PLAIN—STUFFED OR RIPE OLIVES POME MADE COTTAGE CHEESE-COOKIES AND CAKES I —A FEW REAL SPECIALS—FGAR CURED HAMS, whole or half, tb 20c ■FANCY MILD SMOKED JOWELS, 2 lbs. 25c PKESH HOME MADE BOLOGNA or FRANKFORTS, 3 tb 25c PANCY MEDIUM BACON, 3 pounds 50c LOOP MEATY BEEF ROASTS pound 12V 2 c MESH BOILING BEEF, 3 pounds 25c REAL fresh pretz sticks and potato chips FRESH CREAMERY BUTTER, 2 lbs 65c FRESH PORK LIVER, 3 pounds 25c MCE SWISS STEAKS, pound 2 3c FRESH RENDERED LARD, 3 lbs 28c STALL CANS OF MILK, 5 cans 35c FRESHLY GROUND HAMBERGER and SAUSAGE, 2 lb. 25c ;RESH NECK OR SHOULDER BONES, 5 lbs 25c BITAN MALT, Large cans, 2 cans 85c bi UE RIBBON MALT, 2 cans 93c 2"ans YACHT CLUB PEACHES or APRICOTS, 2 cans.. 35c AN ()’ WAR COFFEE, 3 pounds 75c FILLERS WIN LOAVES OF BREAD, 3 for 25c PLENTY OF FRESH EGGS ) {*2 oll are interested in any of these specials just call 106 or ■ bG and we will see that you have them delivered right to your , door. Please order as early as possible. '

Rosamond Hoagland, Alice Vance i and Melvina Williams left today foe i Camp Mac, to attend the Otterbctn Guild Girl's Camp. , Jimmy Fisher and Chet Brandyberry are spending the week in Chicago visiting with relatives and friends. ( S. W. Hale is a business visitor in Geneva today. , Mrs. Laura E. Crill returned home after visiting relative* in Columbus i

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1931.

Ohio, Bo worst on, and New Hagerstown, Ohio, the pust two weeks. Mayor George Krick and son Robert and William Linn of this city visited in Berne, Thursday afternoon. Miss Martha Moser of near this city underwent a minor operation Thursday morning for the removal of her tonsils. Mr. and Mrs, K. R Crill returned Jw their limin' in Bloomington, after

visiting in this city and also at Columbus, Ohio Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shuw and Robert Schiffer of Shelby, Ohio, | will arrive in this city Saturday to ; spend the week-end the guests of i Mrs. Grace Allwein. j John O'Conner of Fort Wayne 1 j was a business visitor In Uecatur I today. Ernest Sehltckman attended to : business in Fort Wayne this morn- 1 j lug. Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Macy and daughter Elizabeth left today for 1 Rome City where they will spend several days W J. Archbold and daughter Miss Kathryn, have returned from a several weeks motor trip to Detroit, Michigan and Niagara Falls and other points of Interest. They were accompanied to Niagara Falls hy , Mrs. E. C. Tranbarger of Detroit, a ! former resident of this city. The number of people who attended the Toledo, Ohio excursion and the Methodist Sunday School picnic Wednesday, was only slightly less than the number that enjoyed ! the excursion last year. Last yqar a total of 494 persons participated in the holiday, while tills year there were 476. a decrease of 18 passen- , gers. Miss Loraine Teeple of the St. I Joseph Hospital, Fort Wayne and Miss Mildred Teeple of this city j will leave Saturday for a two week’s I trip, visiting at Philadelphia, Pa., New York City, and Atlantic City, N. J. English Coal Exports To Italy Slump — ROME —(U.R) — Italy’s coal im- | ports for the first four months of ; 1931 amounted to 3,495,000 tons. Os this total, 54 per cent came from England, 33 per cent from ] Germany, four and a half per cent 1 from Poland, and the rest from Russia, the United States, FVance and the Saar. Compared with the Italian coal imports for the first four months ot 1930, England’s exports have dropped per cent. In the first four months of 1930, j England exported 2,293,000 tons of | coal to Italy against 1,888,000 in j the same period of 1931. o Town Given Old Grist Mill | Townsend, Mass.—(U.R)—Holland i H. and Huntley N. Spaulding, na- , tives of Townsend and former | governors of New Hampshire, have igiven a grist mill built in 1812 to ; the Society for Preservation of ! New England antiquities. Ed Spaulding, uncle of the formers I governors, once operated thq, mill.

l • /OTfTTTinNN ’ DOEJBLE x BREAD,/ ' ' DOUBLE DUTY BREAD MAKES EVERY MEAL A TRUE DELIGHT! i pi lj Even during (he hot summer months—your three /V rllll daily meals can be made doubly enjoyable when 11/ ttv I oaf :,rt> strv °d with Perfection Double Duty i 2 IU » ljUdl Dread. It makes perfect toast for the early mornin?? breakfast—it ads pleasure and zest to the luncheon and dinner hours—it is unexcelled for the childrens sandwiches between meals. (Jet a °f Double Duty Dread—sliced or unsliced—j \ AT YOUR GROCERS! Wft KV A large, delicious two layer white cake, B ■ fc. with apricot icing and filling. A regular PERFECTION BISCUIT CO. Perfection s_

ANDORRA WILL PAY PRESIDENT $7 PER YEAR Tiny Mountain Republic Decides to Tax Citizens Andorra, —(UP)—The law of a century has been discarded and Andorra lias decided to institute taxes so as to grant a salary to her President and the elders who make up tlie Valleys Council, or national parliament. The President is to be paid an annual salary of $7. The Council decided to adopt taxation to create a treasury to cover these national expenses. Hitherto the country has been the last place in the world to be without taxation. All citizens above 10 will be subject to taxation on the following schedule: For every horse, or cow. In their possession, six cents a. year. For every small barnyard animal pigs or sheep, one cent a year. in addition there will he taxes on French and Spanish cattle brought into the Andorran mountain pastures during the summer, and there is a “church and clergy’’ tax collected by the priests from all land owners and shop keepers. Up to Provinces Whenever there are roads to be built, or other improvements to be made, the General Council will levy equally upon the six mountain provinces making up this tiny republic The provinces will be free to get the money from their inhabitants any way they see fit. The salary of the President will not be the only remunortion for government work. Ministers and members of tlie Coucil will rect\e $1 a day, bus fares and hotel expenses during each of the five annual meetings. Andorra still pays annual tribute to France and Spain, through the Co-Princes, the Bishop of Urgel, in Spain, and President Pail Dimmer, In Paris. France gets 9UD francs or $39. in alternate years, while Spain gets 460 pesetas, or $46. Annual Gift In addition. Andorra makes an annual gif: to tho Bishop of Urgel of 2t ewes, cheese, sut hams tjid 12 roosters. A special cdknmission takes the gift to Urgel, and at the last meeting of the Council the cp«imlssion was named to caicy the

1931 tribute. Each province contrl hides its share. Several of the provinces have evolved away of contributing toward taxation without taxing the population. These provinces have accumulated sums through renting muntciI pal lands. This money Is loaned at | 5 per cent to the population and the Interest pays the taxes. in the same way the provinces ; rent mountain pasturages and sell wood from the slopes. All the profits go into thd fund put out as loans. Tlie highest taxed citizen of An--1 dorra is known as the “Ford of Farmers” lie pays S4O a year in taxes 1 on his cattle anil farm animals. The highest tax paid by any business ' man on commercial turnover is $2 annually. Professional men, doctors lawyers and druggists, are exempt from all taxes. There are no motorcar taxes and no income tax. Italian Invents Machine tor Home-Made Bread Rome, —(UP) — Homemade bread J (like mother used to make) without the labor and worry of old-fashioned methods is the promise of an Italian inventor, Mentore Teodori, of Ferrara. Signor Teodori. after 30 years of | effort, has perfected an automatic : bread making machine which proj mises to make homemade bread popular again. . I His machine, called “Autopane” |or in English “Autobread,” does everything from grinding the wheat to baking the bread in one operation Fresh grain yeast, salt, water and ! oil are poured into the machine and i a short time later finished loaves I are taken from the oven. Good Samaritan Robbed Albany, Ore, (U.R) — V alje an ! roles are over for Peter Pingel. He j picked up a man and woman bitch- | hiker and offered the friendless 1 Pair hospitality of his house. When i they left, Mr. and Mrs. Hitch-hiker carried with them a suitcase filled with Pingel’s belongings. Oregon Boosts Stuffed Prunes Salem, Ore— (U.R)— Prunes A<> j not always get stewed. J sometimes stuffed. As a booster, a group of professional women stuffed Oregon prunes and sent | a box of them tootle national conl vention at RipHmond, Va. .: — ■

■ i ~ Notice! i / I will be out of my office from August 17th to 27th. 1 1-15 James T. Merry man

Manager’s Week This is “Get Acquainted wit: @ Kroger Managers’* Week. Vi.-:. courteous manager. See hi: clean, well-arranged store. Hi the pennies—yes, dollars, that keep you within your budget meats, or fresh fruits and vegc tables, selections am complete For Kroger Stores are complet' T/hf Grocery feature/ Pork and Beans c , ln £T.. Plump Michigan beans in rich tomato sauce with pork. ’eanut Butter Lb. Jar 19c Country Club. Blend of choice No. 1 peanuts. Com Flakes 11c Country Club. Delicious with fruit, large 13-oz. pkg. Jookie Cakes Lb. 19c Iced Spiced Jumbles. Delicious. Oven-fresh / Malt Syrup Can 49c I Blue Ribbon. Gives wonderfiUtdng to cookies. Salad Dressing Qt. Jar 29c Embassy. Home-made flavor. Full of Juice! y j California Oranges 2 D ° z - 35c BANANAS 4 lb. 1 ~ 4 Yellow, Firm Pastry Flour s-Lb. Bag 15c l Country Club. Makes better pies, cakes, et«. Milk 3ta 1 cans 19c Country Club. Use for richer results. vVesco 29c Tea. Special blend for iced tea. H lb. pkg. Barrel Vinegar • Gai. 29c Pure elder. Buy your pickling supply. j ' Mason Jars Quarts, Doz. 78c Ball Brand. Square type. Pts. doz. 6Sc. Cane Sugar Coffee 25-Lb. Bag ‘1.26 2 lbs 35C ! PURE CANE granulated. ™ . . , , , t f. - _ _. .. JEWEL Finest blend of ' Use for precarving and table. Bo urbon Santos. \ 10 lb. Bag-O-Swect 52c French brand 29c lb. Layer Cake 29c j Butter Scotch Fudge icing. Large pounds. Del Monte 2 cans 49c Peaches. *Tree-ripened. In rich syrup. Halves. Corn No. 2 can 15c Country Club. Popular Country Gentleman variety. Soft Drinks 2 for 25c Ginger Ale, Root Beer, Lemon Lime and Orange Soda. Large 2 4-oz. bottle. NO BOTTLE CHARGE. TjiftUeat feature / Cream Cheese j»• | quality. Rich and Lb i yi/oc i mild. You’ll like this cheese. LARD lb. Armour’s Kettle Rendered x/ BONELESS HAMS lb. Fine Baked HEINZ “57” VARIETIES We are having a special demonstration on Heinz goods this week. A demonstrator is here offering samples and suggestive menus. |

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