Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 215, Decatur, Adams County, 11 September 1931 — Page 7
■lff ISSUES ■bississii’pi ' a ’■ Ad.nini'tration ?.s - ■'. .W ■ ' coi' ntr >'- tl) s(:aiu!i''-ii 1,11 111"
Peaches MICHIGAN ELBERTAS ■ —at— I s. E. HAGGARD ■ 1 mile north, 3 miles east of Monroe. I Monday, Sept. 14th I BEST OF QUALITY ■
, 9 aMMMMBaMUMBBMMMHMu 'IIHIHII II ■ I 9T Betty Blue Brand 1 Pears 1 I /\ • 1 z'X j ».s?Luscious ripe pears cann* 1 I IfliC -' in their ov.n syrup Espoo 1 » VrUIVIY vyclto ly Tine for breakfast or for >n, dessert at dinner. Vj 2 2 pV 13c o CLUB —pre- -~-4 S '• ■ llf \(* ' i ' : cooked in 3 -* ♦ V4IHS J f*• 5 n inut. Has that nut- Le/'-Xv’l s 29 ** navor k7<- <*w» ( '-■Jewel Coffee Fels Naptha SOD £ „H ’ Iclicic'is Brazilian Bour- Qnfln V>l VIC K.U* S p ton Santos special— kHrtlll <■ COUNTRY GLUB —Fresh ’ b .mi o- r> • and crisp from Kroger ovens | ’1 / Lbs. TflC GcnerOUS SIZC bar Friday and-Saturday are the ' ’( f""' - Z *’J f"* price! Ic J Her Grace j'lp B,rs 2 Lb. Pkg. '.rn.whi.nd You','*«t*J'- 1,8 T«al*ty has made it __ ike it: lb popular for every soap < 9 < W purpose. Specially priced Xh |r» 9 Navy Betins 4 lh , 25c for ***** a, ’ <l Ka,,,rday ' ~‘9 Bulk Rice 3 „,.. 17c *~ — M 4 im .25c Apple Butter N «^ r Y t b - spw,b ’ l9c L Always A Choice Selection of Finest Fruits & Vegetables W ('RAPES, California 1 f|p PRUNES, Fresh RQp 9 TOKAYS, IbXW ITALIAN. 16 lb. lugO«JV « PEACHES, Ohio 7O P SWEET POTATOES H 9 ELBERT AS, bushel <v V G pounds - f A '»9 — — - • TOMATOES Iff i 9 — =SELECTED MEATS= I A rondale No. 3 can JL O I 9 It pays to buy first quality meats! You’ll find ours the RALSTON O‘X 9 finest always, and at lowest prices, too! Food — tor growing “O 1 youth- pkg ] BACON. S£r- 10 ' kart s—light average bacon—in the piece, half or BREAD r * l w h<>k, lb. Country Club — full / S l /1/Gu t-.b. .oaves '9 -X- “ /£i Tomato Soup Ofor OEC 9 | Smoked Pork Hocks Lb. 12V2C t^ be eco'nom ,11 H AMS, Fresh Boneless 1Q« 91 * ’ ne lcr Coasts lb. J HAMBURGER and ; I SAUSAGE Preserves • — Finest quality pure meat only is ground for these Onr r „ un(l n g tasty preparations. / L ■ Z II»S Z “**C COUNTRY CLUB- made of ■ jW purr fruit and sirw. A 1 HI large assortment of flavor ■
known a."so<iationn outlawed certificates from Mississippi colleges and schools. Financial leaders In tile south and east will be close observers of the financial statement of Mississippi. The state narrowly averted financial disaster by defaulting a bounded interest due early in May this year by a last minute sale of bonds. The indebt;*dness of the state is in the neighborhood of $33,OtNI.OOO, while indebtedness of the current year is expected to total $7,000,000 before January 1. Two Factors Blamed Indebtedness of the last y< ar is blamed upon two factors. The decrease of income from taxes and the failure of th ■ budget committee | of the legislature which worked Gov. Theo Gilmore Bilbo in properly allotting funds. Another factor may cause tin ' governor to enter state polities. That is the issue of raising money ' by taxation in a state where few large industries exist and where more than three-quarters ot the pie
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1931.
pulaton lives in the country. Governor Bilbo is convinced al sales tax applicable to every article excepting agricultural products should be established in Mississippi. The present state indebtedness of more than $33,000,000 will be i done away with, he argues, if this I form of taxation is used. While Governor Bilbo is considering these problems, there are several major issues which face the new administration taking office in January and which enemies of the governor declare are leavings of his term. The state road building program is years behind schedule, although an $80,000,000 toad build ing program with no plan to raise the money was passed by the last legislature. Further, adequate quarI ters must be established for the ’ state's prisoners, Insane patients, old. writ veterans and poor. Gov. Bilbo is confident all these [ lands can be raised before ho leaves office by the borrowing of funds trotn banks on the assurance of leg [idative leaders that funds for the i operations of the in/titutions and I departments will be raised by ap j propriations of the now legislature. o Chronic Sneezers Offered Bed and Board Chicago, Sept. 11.—(U.R) Special .air and free board and lodging have i been offered to some of Cook I r ounty s 30,000 hay’ fever sufferers | by the Illinois Research hospital in an experiment to bring relief io i chronic sneezers. The test will be made in a eight- ! bed ward, where the air will be spot hilly filtered at night to eliminate ai. pollen. It is believed that patients will be fairly comfortable during the day as they engage in I activities outside the hospital, if tile air they breathe at night is I free of pollen. Volunteers accepted in the exi ;>ei iment will lie kept under obser;t at ion four days. They will be al- ’ lowed to go to ball games and j shows, in order that a cheek may ■be made upon the effectiveness of 'the relief. No medicine will be given.
CAPITOL HIDES • 2 CRYPTS FOR WASHINGTONS Built at Request of President Monroe, But Never Used Washington. Sept. 11. -(U.R) Few jof the thousands, who annually visit J the Capitol here realize that in the, 1 i basement, under the dome of the . structure, there are two vacant vaults, hewn out of rock, for George! and Martha Washington. The preparation of these two 1 .■tombs and the reasons‘why they j i remain unoccupied are an interest- ] ; ing bit of tile personal history of] George Washington, which has been! brought to light in preparation for] I Ute George Washington Bicenten ! tiial celebration in 1932. When Washington died, historians believe, there was no doubt ini his mind that his body would be I (claimed as national property and! suitably interred in a national! monument. 1 “It is certain that Washington! ■ never gave even a hint of his' c views, or wishes, in regard to the' * disposition of his remains, except I i what is contained in his w ill,"! > wrote George Washington Parke I Custis, Washington's adopted son, - in his “Recollections of Washing-i j ton.’’ National Honors t “He, no doubt, believed that his i ■ ashes would be claimed as national i 1 property' and entombed with nat-l t ional honors." Curtis continues, s "hence his silence on a subject that I has agitated the American people' - since his death.” Custis remarks that “the high' I- authorities of the nation begged | 1 his remains for public interment at j v the seat of national government.”; t Part of a resolution passed by ■ Congress read: 'Resolved by the Senate and the] House of Representatives of the United States of America iu Con gross assembled, I "That a marble monument be, by the United States in the I ‘apitol, at the city of Washington,] ami that the family of General . Washington be requested to permit his body to be deposited under it; , land that the monument be so designed as to commemorate the great l events of his military ami political life.” President Adams followed CongresS’ instructions and received a i reply from Martha Washington, I saying that she bad been "taught .by the great example which I have so long had before me never to oppose my private wishes to the public will." and that she was willing to acquiesce regardless of the "sacrifice of individual feeling I I must make to a sente of public duty. The only reservation Martha Washington made was that she i should be entombed beside her husband. Crypts Prepared On the faith of this document President Monroe had two crypts
f i X. DOUBLE DUTY i ” • BREAD Full I 2 Pounds LOOK ON THE WRAPPER \ND SEE WHAT YOUR BREAD WEIGHS! DOUBLE DUTY —the quality loaf—is your biggest bread value. It is made without skimping—from the purest and richest ingredients. A real food and a joy to eat—a full IJ4 lbs. in weight—yet it costs no more than ordinary bread. Insist upon the best your money will buy —-DOU LE DUTY BREAD —sliced or unsliced fresh every day— AT YOUR GROCERS! —■■■■■'—■■ - ■—— — Devils Food Cake Another Perfection treat —a generous K & “ size two layer cake covered with choco- M |E late ic'ng and sprinkled with chocolate sti/ decci ettes. A regular 50c size. | PERFECTION BISCUIT CO. FORT WAYNE INDIANA |
constructed in the basement of the Capitol, under the dome. But the resolution of Congress was not carried out. Again in 1932, at the Washington centennial, a movement was made by Congress to have Washington's remains moved to the Capitol, but this, too, was never carried out. Tlte need for a national tomb for Washington has been obviated, according to the Washington Bicentennial Commission, by "efforts of patriotic women who have forever preserved Mount Vernon as a nat-i ional shrine.” o Soviet School Attendance Showing Huge Increase MOSCOW (U.R) On the anni- ■ versary of last year's decree making elementary education conipuli sory, it was stated that at the 'present time there were 17,500,000 I children attending school. This! I was 82 per cent of the total num-1 ; her of children of school age. Os these 17.500,000 children. I 15,500,000 are between eight and i ten years of age. Compared with the Tsarist reI gimo, this is a big increase, for the I highest school attendance figure i then attained was 7,000,000. Studies are being conducted in | 70 different languages, and during I the present year 90,000 new’ teach- ' ers have been recruited. U. S. Airlines Take Flying Honors From Germany Chicago —(UP)—With a daily I schedule of 35,000 miles. United 1 Air lines, through its subsidiaries, National Air Transport. Boeing Air ■ Transport. Pacific Air Transport | and Varney Air Lines, has outstrip : ped Lufthansa, the German line to j obtain the record of flying more j miles daily than any airline in the * world. 1 nited Air lines officials ani nounced. With new schedules. Unit'd Air , lines is Hying 35,000 miles a day. or ! i approximately 12,000.ini0 miles a 3 i year, of which 5,000,000 miles arc IB ■ at nirht. This night flying is three ,1 times greater than that of any ■ European company, officials stated. ■ HOSPITAL NTmE« ’ * Claude Wall, Geneva, route 2, un- " ' derwent a major emergency oper 5 ation last night at the Adams County Memorial Hospital. Gene Strahm, 339 North Ninth' 1 ; tri' t. underwent a tonsillectomy ■ opeiation at the local hospital to- ' day. i Church Plants Acreage In Wheat And Oats BENTON. Kan. U.R) If raising 1 grain is tile best way for an irxdi- ' • vidual to make money, it ought to be a good way for a church to raise ! it. too, according to members of the Benton Methodist congregation. I Needing SB,OOO to retire a mort-! gage for a new building, the church secured 150 acres ot' land, . which will be planted in wheat ' i ami oals, with members of then church dividing the work on the farm. !
Appelman’s Grocery PHONES 215 and 219 DELIVERY SERVICE SPEC I A L I CORN—PEAS—PORK & BEANS—RED BEANS /. CATSUP—KRAUT—RED KIDNEY BEANS Each OC > A 10c Package of iil, T ‘ a fkee wih |> «“» d 4Ut COOKING AND EATING Q 2 1-fb. boxes P. W. .) •’ APPLES, pound dl CRACKERS Home Grown Muskmelons OPCz* PERFECT COFFEE d* -| < | 5c each; 3 for 25c and 2 SWEET POTATOES J TOWER COFFEE Q 5 pounds 4 "4 C Special—Pound 1 ,JC CRANBERRIES 1 Q TOILET PAPER j /x Pound 10V 3 Rolls—looo sheets 1«/ C CALIFORNIA GRAPES | r PORK AND BEANS 1 r SUN KIST ORANGES 1 r RED BEANS I r-i Dozen luv Can / C BANANAS VINEGAR—Pure Cider Qf* Pound OC Gallon FRESH PEACHES PAROWAX IO 8 pounds Pound package 1 GRANULATED SUGAR TIN CANS—Heavy J Q 10 pounds tJOC Dozen ~rOC OLD FASHIONED LEMON 1 r QUICK ARROW SOAP QI I COOKIES, 2 dozen JLfJv FLAKES, large package 1 C GINGER SNAPS 19/* TOILET SOAP Qr ! FRESH FIG NEWTONS 11,, SALAD DRESSING Qfk Pound LLC Quart jar a FLOUR, Bob White or 4 9 IVANHOE SANDWICH i r 3 Burco. 21 lb. sack 4<i( SPREAD, 20c size 4«JC J mi Spec,als Fh(mes Free Delivery 1 O1 Saturday Only K'NCY SPRING CHICKENS OR HENS SPR IN G LA M B ( HOK E CUTS OF VEAL, BEEF or PORK GOOD TENDER SWISS or FL \NK STEAKS FRESHLY BAKED HOME MADE CAKES and COOKIES PLENTY NEW BULK OLIVES Plain or Stuffed FRESH BRAUNSCHWEIGER M( E PRESSED PORK LOAF PURE PORK SAUSAGE, countiv style 2 lbs. 25c FANCY HAMBERGER STEAK 2 lbs. 25c GOOD TENDER BEEF STEAK 2 lbs. 45e | SUGAR CURED HAMS, Whole or half lb. 20c i LARD, Open Kettle Rendered 3 lbs. I FRFSH BOLOGNA or FRANK FORTS 3 lbs. 25e I NICE BEEF TO BOIL or STEW 3 lbs. 25c J GOOD MEATY BEEF ROASTS lb. 12 l / 2 c to 15c § FRESH C REAMERY BUTTER 2 lbs. 69c NICE MEDIUM BACON in chunks, j Saturday Only, pound MEDIUM SLICED BACON, pound 25c I REAMED (Ol l ACiE ( Ilhl SE pint 10c NK E COTTAGE HAMS or Mellow Meat Ib. 32c FRESH BRAINS, while they last lb. 10c PORK SHOULDER STEAK, 2 lbs. 35c FRESH SPARE RIBS 2 lbs. 25c FRESH NECK BONES 4 lbs. 25c (JREEN LABEL or M AN O’ WAR COFFEE 3 lbs. 75c ICO% MALT —SATURDAY ONLY 3 cans SI.OO PERFECT OLEOM ARG ERIN E 2 lbs. 25c ARMOUR’S PORK AND BEANS leans 29r 4 boxes MACARONI AND SPAGHETTI 4 boxes 25c NICE SMOKED PICNIC HAMS lb. 17c SUG \R C URED SMOKED JOWELS 2 lbs. 25c, lb. 15c LARGE EYED SWISS CHEESE lb. 35c Sample Our Cheese Relish K F (’OLD MILK, Pt. sc. Coffee Cream and Whipping Cream 5 Tall cans of EVAPORATED MILK 5 cans 35c We are going to have 2 cans of Yacht Club Peaches or 2 cans of Yacht Club Apricots -Tomorrow .... 2 cans 33c Free Deliveries all Day—But Please order as early as possible. Phone 101 or 107 _
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