Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 204, Decatur, Adams County, 28 August 1931 — Page 7
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lAppelman’s Grocery )M hONES 215 and 219 delivery service and eating r quick arrow s6ap flakes — ■pi’l.ES. pound Ut Send in the Lable and q-j 2(®OME GROWN MUSKMEL- nr Get a bread knife. Free ZIC Wd\S .... 3 l°r 25c and 2 T “ ' — aniay. Lux, Palmolive. Life- ’ W" EET I’OTAIOES r buoy and Jap Rose Soap, 3 bars22C 'K — * OXYDOL o t -■RESH PEACHES nr p Large Bar Z LC fc-,ss ££ yx— 15c 10c )BEAXS 7c -K£.' M ' s(* PVRE SANTOS BULK 1 Q 1 PEPPERS r~ SANLFLUSH-2 cans 7T“ 'Wfor til Toilet Brush Free .. 41C (Kittle elf ginger ale i r — size ImC HLATZ MALT, can r/1 ~®IHEATIES -g z* Stone Mug Free MVV (W 1,0X68 lOC PURITAN MALT 4 r fc'- ,VES : 29c - 45 c ■> —... GREENBACK MALT d» 1 /A/I ■KaLAD DRESSING Qfw 3 cans tpJL.VV -■Quart Jar ZMC XT,,, ...... ... I “ 25c 15c *WIXGER SNAPS i O PET ’ CARNATION AND 1 r ■tRA.M LATEI) SUGAR TQ PERFECT MILK, 1 O | l9|,oUndS •••••••■ C 2 Large cans ... 13C Specials I I Phones Free Delivery For I I Saturday Only SPRING CHICKENS OR HENS DRESS ED RABBITS — SPRING LAMB ■r od ( tvJI TS 0F VEAL ’ BEEF or PORK I )ER SWISS or FL ANK STEAKS ■pifvtl\S? KED HOME MADE CAKES and COOKIES I ' E W Bl LK OLIVES—PIain or Stuffed Kp S iJ I n RR^UNSCHWEIGE B NICE PRESSED PORK LOAF ■FWt’vSAUSAGE, country style 2 lbs. 25c KooiXpA^ BERGER STEAK 2 lbs. 25c ■RiT?n TENDER BEEF STEAK 2 lbs. 45c IvK F ?in. RED HAMS, Whole or half Ib. 20c ■i ’„n MEDIUM BACON 3 lbs. 50c Bpp, ’ ~)en Kettle Rendered 3 lbs. 28c ■to nJ?J? LOGNA or PRANKFORTS 3 lbs. 25c Koon T 0 BOIL or STE W 3 lbs. 25c Ifrfxi?M TY BEEF BOASTS lb. 12»/ 2 c to 15c I( ri ?! iI CREAMERY BUTTER 2 lbs. 65c Ito nwV/ W1 ’ AGE CHEF SE , pint 10c ■ FRi\ii i»!J. AGE HAMS or Me Hom Meat lb. 32c ■ PORK w h’le they last Hi. 10c IfrfL SH ° ULDER STEAR 2 tbs. 35c I FRESH RE RIBS 2 lbs - 25c |lon m oJ? EL or MAN WAE COFFEE 3 lbs. 75c |pFRI^A LT A7 SATURDAY ONBY 3 cans SI.OO larma CT OLE OMARGERINE 2 lbs. 25c |ibnv? l M s BORK AND BEANS 4 cans 29c [ ■ McpqmA CARONI and SPAGHETTI 4 boxes 25c ■ PICNIC HAMS lb. 17c II RED SMOKED JOWELS lb. 15c | <GE EYED SWISS CHEESE lb. 35c ||(p (Yu n Sample Our Cheese Relish 1 5Tail L H MILK, Pt. sc. Coffee ( ream and Whipping ( ream ■H e vans of E VAPORATED MILK 5 cans 35c I KO’ng to have some more Nice PEACHES for Tomor- 5 ■ f • Come in and see them. | e Delherieg all Day—But Please order as early as possible. ■ — Phone 103 or 107
English racing world. Everyone was i pleased to see the tide turn even ; though Caerleen was an outsider when he wor approximately |50,000. Lord Derby, who has been racing | for 50 years, ia reckoned to have I won at least $2,500,000 In stakes. He never tetv and all his winnings go hack into the racing sport. Lest year he occupied third place in the successful owner s list with a total of $186,000. The Ascot Gold Cup and the One Thousand Guineas were the most important races won. At tho end of 1930 Lord Derby cut down his racing establishment to meet increas-1 , ing expenses and began this season j with about to horses. He once esti-l
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1931.
mated that it cost him $3,250 per year for every horse in training. — — o— Removing Obstinate Cork wiT'J. T" o ’*. ” corU from n b °ttle when there is neither a corkscrew or knife at hand, stick two safety pins diagonally through the cork opposite each other. By pulling on the upper part of the two pins the cork can be removed easily. — —oBiblical “Leprosy” The word "leprosy” In the Bible may have referred to a variety of sk n diseases, asserts a professor of bacteriology, the reference to whiteness being a characteristic of a disease very different from modern leprosy.
— Housewife Plans Flight To Rome in Hillig Plane * * * * * # Mrs. Geraldine Loffredo of Buffalo to Use Ship that Already Has Crossed Atlantic on Her Good-Will Hop to Italy — \ - -. \ I I ; ! !-■ i imi ■! trniffiiint ~ ,_ihl"lihm IiTII ° 'UBERTV’ Plan® For Hop To Qome o Houtewivea are usually associated with the surroundings which a,l K, ‘^ d,C ?l e ’ bu ‘ Mr * Gray Loffredo, matron of Buffalo, N. Y„ hkes to be different. She has been set apart from most of her sex in the modern game of aviation, at least, for her C ? re L r "** * a ' <en * ier up * n ‘G* a ‘ r a * numerous times since 1914 when she began parachute jumping from hot air balloons. In 1917, Mrs. Loffredo made her first leap from a plane and in 1925 she was licensed as a pilot—the sixth woman flier in the country. Her next feat in the world far above the ground is a projected flight from America to Italy as a good-will gesture between the two nations. She doesn t believe a woman capable of flying the distance all alone, so a 1 *?-? ,a!la ? t 9 ,er accompany her as navigator. Her plane is the Liberty, in which Otto Hillig, the “Flying Photographer," flew from New York to Copenhagen with Holger Hoiriis. - -+
' Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 28.—Aviation, taking all manner of people under its widespread wings, has enlisted the efforts of one of a particular class which is usually associated with duties of the home rather than with the risks of trans-Atlantic flying. While numerous men and women fliers have deserted various roles in life to take up aviation in a manner which puts them on the front j pages of the country, it remained for Mrs. Geraldine Gray Loffredo, ' of this city, to transfer her duties ' from those of a housewifg to that of a daring ocean flier. It’s quite ■ a leap even in this rapidly moving i age. But Mrs. Loffredo is used to leaps. They began in 1914 when she start- , ed her air career by making parachute jumps from hot air balloon ; at country fairs. In 1917, she made her first 'chute jump from a plane and, in 1922 in Rome, she made 76 jumps in competition, using a para- ' chute of her own design. Mrs. Loffredo, comely matron of ' Buffalo, is not of the usual type of I woman flier of the era, however. Her name has not been as promin- ' ently screamed across headlines as 1 others of her sex. for she has been tending to her duties as a house- 1 wife. Hut, as a flier of long exper- ’ fence, she surpasses most of the present-day women pilots of the 1 world in knowledge of their ele- 1 ment—the air. True, too, Mrs. Loffredo differs 1 from other air-minded women in that she realizes the limitations of ! her sex. Preparing daily to fly * the Atlantic from America to Italy 1 as a good will gesture between the two nations, she. has no illusions I about which she considers the poor chance of a woman to fly the hazardous route all alone. This courageous housewife is no less brave j in planning her difficult feat when ; she includes a co-pilot in the person of Renato Doimti, Italian war ace and expert navigator, to ac- ’ company her. That's foresight. Mr . Loffredo believes, and it probably, will have considerable to do with I the success of her oceanic attempt. This woman, who steps from the, quiet role of a home-maker to . traus-Atlantic filer, after tasting the thrills of aviation in earlier years,' purchased the plane. Liberty, in ' which Otto Hillig, the "Flying Photographer," and Holger Hoiriis, his pilot, flew from New York to Copenhagen, In which to make her gallant attempt to cement good will between Italy and the United States. As a coincidence, her husband is a photographer of Buffalo. The monoplane, shipped back from Denmark, to Old Orchard, Maine. Mrs. Loffredo’s proposed . starting point, has been nassem bled and is approaching readiness for the long flight which only one flier has been able to complete satisfactorily. Roger Williams did I it with Lewis Yancey, as navigator.
in July, 1929. Mrs. Loffredo's aerial craft was paid for by money raised by ItalianAmerican subscriptions from all over the country and she has expressed. her hopes that the flight will prove successful in these | words. "A great many Italian-Am-I ericans trust that this flight will mean even more cordial relations ! between Italy and the U. S. To me I this attempt means a double opportunity— the chance to perform a I great service by dramatizing the I friendship between the two nations ; and the chance to fulfill a life-long I ambition.” From parachute jumping, Mrs. I Loffredo turned to actual piloting I , when in 1925 she was granted her license by the government. She was the sixth woman in America to win such a coveted honor and, since that time, has been flying steadily, piling up hour after hour in the air, and becoming more and more adept at the controls. Expert as she is, however, she has the ability to reason, with soundness, that there is just that much better chance of success if a co pilot and i xpert navigator is taken along. Mrs. Loffredo will take off on her great adventure, the climax, a: it were, of a long aerial r areer, with the best wishes of a world of housewives back of her. It is so rare that one of their number is singled out for world renown, al though they all are worthy, that Mrs. Loffredo's succe. s will be th. i success — and a most unusual ac-1 complishment for the whole world , to cheer. CHARGE G. O. P. AIDED GATES iCItiVTINiUP FROM PAGE OWE. Arthur Robiijson, both Republicans, became alarmed at the early strength shown by White in th.state commander race. It was said that they feared White's friendship with Paul McNutt. candidate for the Democtatlc gubernatorial nomination, would endanger the Republican, party in the next election. According to the NewsTimes article, the G. O. P. leaders believed it would 1•• safer to have an active Republican at the head of the veterans' organization. The article said that Senators Watson ami Robinson we re reported to have urged their Legion friends to support Gates. "It is believed in some quarters that the display of partisan political tattles on behalf of Gates may react against the Republicans In Legion ranks.'' the News-Times, a Democratic paper, concluded. o Pig Dance. Dec Orchestra Saturday night. Hoosier Eagles Sunray night. Grim orchestra Wednesday night. Welcome Sun-Set Park. I
State Bank Closes Indianapolis, Aug. 28 —(U.RX— 1 State bnak examiners today were ■ in charge of the Leavenworth State bank, Leavenworth, Ind., ’ the state banking department an- ' ed. The l®nk was closed by order of Its board of directors. Elmer i Merrilees was president and Inez s Stephenson cashier. The bank was capitalized at $25,000, with profits, and surplus of $5.0001. Deposits were given as $189,000. FIND CLUES TO MISSING WOMAN — CONTINUED EROM PAGE ONE) cording to authorities, also had love letters in his possession, written from Olean, N. Y„ and signed “Bessie.” One of the letters was said to he 20 pages in length. The tone of all was “rather warm," police said. Twenty or thirty photographs of women and a picture of a large mansion also were confiscated. The discoveries were reported a short time after Powers broke his I silenete and discussed the disappear-; ance of the woman and children. . After talking with his attorney, I
=_ . ■ Country Club Fine Flour ■— 24 . 8 ’^ k Canned Milk HfeSII 5c '■’■■ Pastr y Fl° ur , 5-lb. bag, 15c. COUNTRY CLUB. Use it „ J wherever recipe calls for milk. bh-. 4f BK Makes better bread and o i . • , I cakes. This sale gives you Kisner, creamier results. a chance to try it economi - i cally. You’ll like it T Pillsbury’s Best “ 24-Lb. Sack Gold Medal ( i “Kitchen Tested.’’ pound Ii Um 24-Lb. Sack COUNTRY CLUB Cream- • . «Y- Fresh from the churn - - ! Parchment wrapped quarters. Palmolive Soap 3 Bars 19c r-• i<.’ud» pkg“ 5?. rwn co,npkxion soa pPeaches Del Monte 2 Cans 33c Halves. Tree-ripened fruit in rich syrup. No. 2H can. CatSUp Large 15c “’>< < ountry cluli. Made of ripe tomatoes. > ‘’7 “F .r '* pure ingredients. 14 ox. bottle. f ' ,'wT 1 ' W T Pork and Beans 2 Ca„ s 13c ( ountry Club. Large Michigan beans in sauce with pork. pp A/nil/Q Blue Ribbon 3Lb.Cc.„4sc ~ s . No ., M : dt an Americas Biggest Seller.” 3- Elbertas, bushel. .. M Hire’s Root Beer Bottle 23c Extract. For making home-made root- BANANAS 1/4* Werk’s Bar 3c ' ■"'“ n ‘ ls : ■ lag Soap. The general utility soap for x J every home. POTATOES 9(4 p Macaroni 2 Pkgs. 13c >’« k Brind Cttl ° F NooJles - Country Club ■ - I li " - "I | Distinctive Flavor! HA M s Fresher Coffee 19c A 'Tp I'resh Boned and Mways sold a few days after f 1 L) , t tasting. Full flavor in the O-ilxK ’ 5-Ham, 1b... lOU f ■;■>. Jewel Brand. I ' v ■***■ • ■7'ir- iTi BKK’’V ”< | i - Hamburger and r'uu-PKc 9~ Kz?-r z 2 lbs XJC Sloxk. " • • 'Jni Ji . ... Layer Cake ■ 35 .. pount ' ’’’’ *-7'-' L irge 2-lb cherry fudge icing. a I luffy white cake with a real t 'me-made flavor. ‘ .''7 TSUW|WW!rsT , ' T, ll —
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Powers said “Mrs. Eicher is just a i friend of the family." He admitted i knowing the woman four or five i years. Mrs. Eicher, although said to be i wealthy, is rather financially strained at present, Powers said. Several months ago, Powers said. Mrs. Eicher wrote him and asked aid. Being a real estate man, he said, he attempted to sell her prop-
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PAGE SEVEN
erty but never had been able to do so. Referring to the widow’s disappearance Powers said: "She’s never been murdered and she and her htldren will show up soon.’’ Powers is held awaiting Park Ridge authorities. o James Cowan attended to business in Lafayette, Thursday.
