Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 210, Decatur, Adams County, 4 September 1931 — Page 5

MIS LAKE ■RING STORM ■S i x m Si'pt- * (u.r) ■r-' r ~! V of ‘ |( . unied In the »■!■•;. 'AP-f R cently by '-n P‘"^> s - W mh. i '■ s ' i, " vs T ■ ' el KI I'.ise; Mr ■’;•, e.nv.-" "•'•• Mrs . ■ .Immmx ami ■ ;„nJ tr. 1- "1 the R' aWi » hpfami . strneW four ’u>ur ■ y '""'I

I II ■!■■■■ I ■ ■ 16501 ~ I 8 111 SHOW i< •, ' I*®k I L ■ N ‘ rE |z / - KANE BROS.' ■ / -PRESENTpR x IXk Continuous M <ty\ JJJI j < Im CAMCAREER'' /<? lIWI'CMMW / £W/\ &£7 [BURLMQUE \W ■ talking pictures \r v - y p!6 ■

\ DOUBLE I VJJREAD/ ‘ Full lg Pounds I LOOK ON THE WRAPPER AND SEE I WII A T YO U R BRE AD WEIGHS’ I Not only is DOUBLE DUTY’ the finest bread you I ever tastrtl—because it is baked just right from I the highest quality ingredients—but it is also a I full 11,I 1 , tbs. in weight. You get your full bread I value—in qnality and in weight —no skimping I or reduction in weight xj.Jien you insist on I / KLh DUTY BREAD—sliced or unsliced—fresh every day— AT YOUR GROCERS’ K < -jSLav X M ANGEL FOOD CAKE ■I /ftl Again Perfection's cake special for this J" J Im' <tnj weekend is one of those delicious Angel H wf Feed Cakes covered with white icing m ■_ ■■ ■i| fry BEk antl decorated with cherries. Order it ■ 1 j' . y now at your grocers. M t - PERF£CTION biscuit co. I. Fort Wavne. Ind. ,/wA DoubleDutyßread V s&l*Ss>s.

or drinking water when a cloudburst In miles southeast of Oro Grande, N. M., turned a dusty de- ] sett road into a dangerous, windi lashed lake. j Shows said the lake was about one mile and a half wide and two miles long. Water raised a foot in 15 minutes during the cloudburst. The men spent three days working to get their cars out of the water and mud. Twenty New Mfexico highway department men helped them save the cars. The women turned cooks for the highway (gang while they worked. “Once we wore up to our waists lin water trying to get the cars out," Shows said. “A black cloud gathered over the desert again. Then the bottom fell out of that cloud. It got so hlac kand rained so hard we couldn’t see each other out in the lake.”

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1931.

antelope herds SEEKING WATER 3 Bend, Ore., Sept. 4—(U.R>—Even nature, inherent protector of game ’ life, is takingj its toll of the antelope herds of southeastern Oregon and northern Nevada counties. 1 housands are facing starvation and deith because of a lack of water, according to Dr. J. C. Vandevert of the Oregon State (lame ’ Commission. Sportsmen soon may - lie called on to aid in preserving 1 the fast disappearing herds. Doz- ■ ens of suggestions have been made t to the game comrtiissioh, hut only i two recommendations indicate posr sibilities of materializing. Establishment of an antelope re- » serve—the first in the United States or the leasing of what few waterholes remain in that section from ranchers will receive consideration from the commission shortly. One of the last waterholes of antelope in the interior of iAke county known as Desert Lake, is drying up and the animals already have be- : gun migrating. In desperation, the antelopes have invaded farms and ranches, only to he repulsed and frightened away by game wardens sent to prevent depredations. | Damage to crops brought protests j from ranchers and the game commission will he asked to bay t'Or | the depredations. , World’s Largest Pencil Plants Form Combine Washington, Sept. 4.—(U.P>—Fori mation of an international pencil cartel by three of the world's larg- [ est pencil manufacturing firms, two German and one Czecho-Slovakian. has been announced by the Com- | merce Department on the basis of I reports received from Berlin. A. W. Faber, and Johann Faber, i German manufacturers, and L. C. 1 Hardtmuth, of Czechoslovakia, are ' firms involved In the agreement, which provides for a holding company in Switzerland with a capital iof 25,000,000 francs. Total production capacity of the three firms is Estimated at about 4,000,000 gross iof all sorts of pencils. Old Arizona Has Changed Phoenix, Ariz.—-tU.Rl —Roy Ander son learned the other day that | things have changed in Arizona I since carrying a gun was customary. He tried It and landed in jail i for 30 days.

@l. Z±—E» r? L_r

By HARRISON CARROLL Cowrlht, 1531, Premier Nyndlca**. Ln?. HOLLYWdOD, Cal. Sept. 00 — In nine years as a Hollywood reporter, I’ve never seen such an

V< ■. BE \ Leo Carrillo.

epidemic of cast juggling. Now it is Leo Carrillo who will play “the best darn Caballero in all Mexico.” Until a few < days ago, War- j ner Baxter w'as slated to play this swaggering heavy in Radio I Pictures’ talkie version of “The Dove.” Then along came Fox and decided

Warner must stay on the home lot. Fortunately for Radio, Lett Carrillo was available to take the important role. He was suggested in the first place, but at the time was tied up on another engagement. “The Dove” will be Dolores Del Rio’s first picture since she made “The Bad One” for United Artists. Herbert Brenon will direct and production starts Sept. 20. You probably recall that Holbrodk Blinn created the role Carrillo will take in the film. WE’VE ALL WANTED TO SAY IT. One of those long-winded speakers held forth at luncheon given Post and Gatty in Los Angeles. “If he’d talked another five minutes," flipped Eddie Cantor, “the boys could have made another flight around the world.” LATEST GOSSIP. Lionel Barrymore will receive billing above Nancy Carroll and Phillips Holmes in Ernst Lubitsch’s “The Man I killed.” . . . Harold Llovd, Jr., at the age of 7 months, weighs 14 pounds. This is almost five times his birth weight . . . Geoffrey Kerr thinks be may be Up against a new racket. The 1 other aay he received a letter fran a than in New York asking f*r $25. According to the writer, thi s ( amount was promised to the per I

WOMEN TO WEAR GOWNS OF BLUE Ixindon. Sept. 4.—(U.R) —All women will have to be dressed in blue and men will have to 'tear a blue slip on their even dress coat lapthe Blue Shirts' ball, organ2 _ -S • « ..A U-x«. V _ i

iaisl by Commander Oliver Locker , Lampson and to be held at Dor-1 Chester House No. 5. The object is to further the Blue Shirts' orghnizatfon’s propaganda against alleged Soviet propaganda. ] One thousand invitations are being issued to most of London’s society leaders and to Blue Shirts' | supporters all over England. The] proceeds are to be rfevoted to, charity. The choice of the date, explain-] efl the Commander. was made for] symbolic purposes. November 5 is GUy Fawkes bay when, in 1605. Fawkes planned to blow up King, James I and the Houses of Lords I and commons. No better day could ' be chosen by the Blue Shirts, said ; the Commander, tr celebrate their’ anti-CommnnMic activities. The Blue Shirts—sometimes called English Fascists —are an organ-1 ization recently formed for the pur i pose of "fighting by peaceful means. | especially propaganda.” At the official launching of the movement at ■ Albert Hall in June is had 30,000 supporters. The number now has increased to over 100,000. • '_ <> Baby Pheasants Seek Protection From Man Harrisburg. Pa.. Sept. 4. —(U.R) —] Crows were swooping from a fence! toward a railroad track, apparently] attacking an enemy. A pedestrain investigated and ] found the crows were attacking a covy of pheasants, apparently only a few days old. Font of the tiny birds ran to the man for protection. Six others had been peeked to death by the crows. The man turned the pheasants Over to the State Game Commis ' sion. o Prince Gives Truckdriver 'Lift' Turin. Italy,—(U.R) -Crown Prince' Humberto, Prince of Piedmont, re cently gave a truckdriver a "lift” without the truckman realizing he was rjdlng with royalty. The Prince was enroute to Turin when' jhis ear was hailed by a stranded ('truckman. The Prince's chauffeur started to pass the man. but the ITintte made him strip. The Prince Invited the truckman to ride with him to Tnrin whore the man want-' ed to go. o West Virginia Town Seeks Names for Babies New Cumberland. W. Va.. Sept. I I—(U.R)— Selections of names for ] babies In Hancock county has swer--1 ved from the more popular names of John and Mary to the unusual. The monthly report of the state health department showed that of,

■son who found a carrier pigeon set off by Kerr in Los Angeles. The onh-trouble is, Geoffrey know* nothing about it. . . Victor Schertzingcr has had another kind of difficulty with pigeons. He ran into a flock of them on the highway and received a cut on the face when feathered bodies broke his windshield. A similar accident, in which a jack-rabbit figured, caused Raoul Walsh to lose the sight in one eye. . . . Frank Tuttle is startling Hollywood with a black beard accumulated abroad. . . . Walter Huston is through at Warners. His last picture, “The Ruling Voice,” has been temporarily shelved because it contained too many gangster scenes. SIGN UP THIS TITLE WRITER. Here’s one for the Hays office to look info. A small publishing concern is mailing a circular to film people, advertising “boot-legged books of Hollywood.” For one dollar, you can have nine books, with such titles as “Dining in Hollywood With Cosette,” “Eating

r—-r—- --■ Nancy Carroll.

Hollywood' Chicken au Nature 1,” i "H o 11 ywood Dreams of Loretta My Love,” "Ho I ly wood Cure for SouL Cancer,’’ “H o 11 ywo o d Bandit’s Wo-| man Waterloo,”, “Why I Canned My Hollywood H u s b a n d.”; “Bumped Off in Hollywood by a Lady,” “Love In a Hollywood

Hoosegow,” and another title too hot for this conservative column. The contents of such books usually belie their sensational captions but this kind of exploitation can do the film colony no good. DID YOU KNOW I That Frank Fay made his sto-e debut at the age of 7 in “Babes i» I To’, land ?**

1 '" » the 51 babies born, only one was named Mary, two John, two Nicholas and four Betty. Many parents sought the unusual 1 for their offspring, naming them: ijTurla, Kostantonas, Danijon, Eral Cosmo, Osman, Lonnie and Romeo Some of the more popular names ‘ on the list are: Bobbie Lee, Betty ! Lou. Dolly Genette, Joyce Ann Helen Fay and Dolores Jean.

ffi Bird House B with the Purchase of a Quart of Cloverleaf Tasty Ice Cream 1. KIL 1/11 X 4to 7 o’clock P. M. Provide a Home for your Feathered Friends These bird houses are of regulation size, beautiful in design, highly decorated and colored, and a real ornament for any yard. Get Yours Tomorrow from your favorite Cloverleaf Dealer “The ideal time to set out bird houses is during the fall. I find that birds do not like their houses to be brand new and a little weatherbeating makes the house more natural for them.”—Joseph 11. Dodson, the greatest bird authority in the world. Cloverleaf Creameries, Inc.

Army Survey May Start Vast Irrigation Project Farmington, N. M„ Sept. 4.—(U.R) —The San Juan valley in the Farmington section may become a vast iarea of irrigation farms if a survey jiidw being made by army engineers I proves the feasibility of a great i reclamation project. I An era of about 500,0000 acres'

A. & P. Price are the Lowest i (Av) IN YEARS a hd A& P Quality is the highest it has ever been. BuyÜBBrSBSHMmh** ing the best of foods at the lowest of prices is the 1931 idea of saving. It's the A& P way I LARI) CORN or PEAS Encore Plain Absolutely STRINGLESS BEANS OI IVFS Pure or TOMATOES 3 lbs. Q No. 2 or Quart Jar 9v» o cans ZOC Standard Pack NUTLET OLEO - > ■■ lb. IOC CLIQUOT CLUB GINGERALE 2 bottles 27c I CAN \I)A DRY GINGERALE 3 bottles 40c SALADA TEA, Black or Green. '/: lb. pkg. 37c 14 lb. pkg. 21c | PINK SALMON - tall can lOc PALMOLIVE SOAP 3 bars 20c LUX TOILET SOAP 4 bars 25c ASSORTED BISCUITS, N.B.C. English Style to. box 29c flour 45c BREAD, (.randmother's Twin or Regular l»/ 2 tb. loaf 7c SUGAR—Pure Granulated 25 lbs. $1.23 SCRATCH FEED, Finest Qua’ity 100 lb. bag $1.69 Coffee 8 O’CLOCK—World's Larges, Seller lb. 19c I BULK RICE, Finest Quality tb. 5c ( REAM CHEESE. Wisconsin fb. 19c BLOCK SALT 50 tb. block 35c < Whitehouse Milk - - 3 S 17c I — FRESH FRUIT AND VEGETABLES — ,]) SWEET POTATOEJs, 6 tbs. for... 25c BANANAS, 4 lbs. for 22c 1 PEACHES, 10 tbs. for 25c CELERY, 3 stalks 10c The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.

would benefit from the project and ] lands now in the public domain in San Juan county would be thrown I open to new settlers. Army engineers under Maj. W. H. Lanagan are making the survey to determine the wisdom of the reclamation project on the San Juan river. A dam constructed 30 ■ miles east of Farmington may proI vide irrigation water for 500,0001 acres.

PAGE FIVE

I The results of the survey very likely will be presented to congress at the next session by congression|al members from New Mexico. The present survey is being made under the provision of a bill passed , by the last congress providing for surveys in connection with proposed reclamation and flood control projects. 0 Get the Habit— Trade at Home