Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 51, Decatur, Adams County, 27 February 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, I -BUSINESS CARDS, | AND NOTICES FOR SALE - . FOR SAI.K , — iodo Heavy Bleed [ Baby Chicks. one week old from ■ Bloodtesteil stock. Model Hatchery,. Monroe. Indiana. * 47-a FOR SALE—I 4 head of fall shoats.j Daniel Noffsinger. 1 mile north. |; % mile east of Monroe. Phone|; Monroe B-5. 48-3tx ; FOR SALE I year old bay ge’d- 1 ing, weight about 1500. an exceptionally well broke horse. Extra good fresh cow. giving 5 gal . with second calf. Other good [ J milk cows; 10 head good yearling Ju ifers.; 2 g »od brood sows; 2i single row corn uiltivatois. Wednesday. Feb 28. 1 o'clock p. tn.. Also big merchandise sale at night, i Wells County Community Sale, >, Bluffton. Ind. it |; FDR SALE—Fresh cow with heifer J calf. Also Chester White boar. Wil-' Jlam C. Macke. 5% miles northwest ' of D-catur. Preble phone. ola.'itx FOR SALE -One good Guernsey row. coming fresh soon. 6 years old. Phone 23. J. A. Hendricks. ' | t9a « FOR SALE Used Fordson tractor; .2 'j actor plows; 2 cultipa.-kers; rotary hoe; 2 Wayne air coni pre s-' tflFj.'Uke new; 10 electric motors ' IJJip. to 5 hp. See the new Ford-' .xm -tractor. Craigville Garage. gFeb. 12, 15, 20, 22. 27 M.2x: ' FUR SALE New quality furniture ' ■at hprgain prices. 2-pc. living room suites. *35; 3-pc. bedroom | suites. *45; 8-pc. dining room suites, ' *65. te!2 Axminster rugs. *25; 9x! 1 12 lett base rugs, *4 95; kitchen l * cahiiiets. *22.50; Kalamazoo ranges, factory prices; bed springs. *6; mattresses, *6; watch our windows fljr bargains Sprague Furniture f»o . Phone 199. 49-3 t WANTED WANTED —Barred Rock Eggs for 1 hatching. Must be from good * laying strain. Apply at once. | 1 Pinedale Hatchery. Second hml I 7TavkM.ii st., Decatur. It COURT HOUSE b Real Estate Transfers Edgar Mutschler. part of in lot i’ 1. Decatur, Bellmont Park Addl- ; tlon. to ,1. Henry Graber for *I.OO. , —o Perfects Swimming Suit PARIS (U.R) P. de Corli ’t. ' . architect former navy subaltern. > ( has perfected a swimming suit i . equipped with paddles for the j hands and "fish-tails" tor thei feet, which he claims will increase I , the average swimmer’s speed from > 30 to 50 per cent. He advances ' the equipment as valuable to life savers and pearl divers. i —o j i Needle Threading Champ i 1 Niagara Falks, N. Y. —(UPl —Leo ; 1 Kodeski, 19. lays claim to the 11 world's needle threading champion-j.-ship, previously held by Bob Wolfe, ■ 27, of Toronto. Ont. Kodeski says | he threaded "SO lengths of silk j thread through the eye of a needleji beating Wolfe s record by 10 i lengths. ! |*|ti*i*it»nri*l of kdiiiinhlriiliir | , Notice is hereby given, That the undersigned has been appointed Ad-Is ministralor of the estate of Sarah ; Jlellej’, late of Adams County, de- < t*HKed. The estate is probably sol- ' vent. . Pead Smith. Administrator I'.url 11. ttliiiiis, \tturner Feb. 1::-.’h-_*7 i j Roy s. Johnson ;> J Auctioneer lUr * Now booking WEf / winter and spring Jk. sale dates. My a/J dates are filling Xf**” fast, claim your date early. Feb. 28 —Sale of Threshing ma-1 chinery on Rolla Longenberger farm. 1 mile soutl and 1 mile east of Monroe. March 1 — Monroeville Chester White Breeders sale of bred sows, on the Bert Marquardt farm, 4| miles north of Monroeville, on the | Lincoln Highway. March 2 —-Mrs. Daisy Rickord. 3 I mile west, % mile south of Linn | (.rove. March 3 —Community sale. Decatur. Monroe street sale barn. March s—Jim5 —Jim Lee instead of the Sth. March 6—Orval High. % mile south of Ohio City. March 7—Mrs. Mina Repperl, I 1 % mile north of Magley. March 9—George Mellott at the George Crieger residence. 1 milsouth, % mile east of Ohio City. Horse sale. March 10— Decatur Community sale. March 12—• Henry Sauer. 1% mi ■west of Decatur on the Archbold road. Closing out sale. Office in Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg. Telephone, Office 104. Res. 1022
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected Feb. 27 No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday 160 to 210 Mis. *4.65 . IM lbs. *465 250 to 300 lbs, *4 60 3im to 350 Ma *4.2(1 no to IM Mm. *4.20 IM to 14i< lbs. .. ... *3.25 inn to U# Hie. *2.40 Roughs *3.25 Stags —.. *1.75 Vealers *7.25 Lambs *9 00 Decatur Produce Company Egg Market No. 1. dozen -—l6 c No. 2. dozen ... l< r No. 3. dozen -12 c ! FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind.. Feb. 27. (U.R) —Livestock: j Hogs steady to 5c lower; 350-300, lbs.. *4 95; 200-250 lbs.. ,4.85; 160-1 200 lbs.. *4.70; 300-350 lbs., *4.65; 150-16 U lbs.. *4.25; 140-150 lbs.. *4; 130-140 lbs.. *3.75; 120-130 lbs.. *3.25; loe-120 lbs.. *2.75; roughs. | ,3.75 down; stags. ,2.25 down. Calves. ,7.50 down; western' lambs. *9.50 down; natives lambs. ,9 25 down. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat .87% 86% .87 Corn 50% .52% .54'4 Oats .34% .34% .34 EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y.. Feb. 27.—<U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 1.500; holdovers, j 250; draggy: few early sales about steady, packers bidding around 15c lower; desirable 160 to 230 lbs., | sold *5.25; mid-session bids. *5.10 ! to *5.15. Cattle.i receipts. 100; cows ■ steady; cutter grades. *2 to *3; i steers unsold. Calves, receipts. 75. vealers tin-. changed. *8 down. Sheep, receipts, 50: lambs nomi- : Daily steady; woolskins quoted to ' *10.25. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected Feb. 27 Nc. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs or Better . . 79c I No 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. 78c ■ Old Oats 32c I New Oats 30c I First Class Yellow Corn 54c ! Mixed corn 5c less Soy Beans 50v-60c o Farmers' New Worry Lethbridge, Alta. —(UPI — Farmers have been confronted with a new worry in this region. Large number of horses are reported to i have died through eating hay which I had been saturated with sand ; ground into stacks by recent wind storms. Youths Sentenced to Church Seattle — (UPI — Two youths, charged with attempting to deal a small lamp from the First Christ Scientist Church, were sentenced to attend church every Sunday for two months and attended Sunday school and both mornng and evening services. Q Canada Taxes High Montreal.— (U.R. —Taxing authorities, Dominion, provincial and municipal. in Montreal, took 35.4 per cent of the average Canadian's income in 1932, as compared with 17.17 per eent in 1922. according to Dr. H. L. Brittain, director of the Citizens' Research Institute. The 1933 average, he said, will be even higher.
You Can Borrow ■ //w t 0 0,1 %our I Own >isiiature — Loans “iSF Call Write Phon®—Nn Obligatiena! FRANKLIN SECURITY CO. Jver Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 237 Decatur, Ind. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Guaranteed RADIO SERVICE e repair any make of radio, promptly and at a very reasonable cost. Tubes tested free. Phone 241. Decatur Elec. Shop N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Lycu Examined, (alsauca l ilted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.
SEVEN BODIES RECOVERED IN RAILWAY CRASH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE" ONE) ••*♦•♦♦♦•••• freakish angles. Lights went out and glasr shattered but the cars remained upright. The train was speeding at 40 miles an hour. It carried two pullmans for New York. The train w is rounding a series
[* 1 i Vml M ™iiil RIB F j/ | Allene Corliss /fj COPYRIHiirJWALLENE CESLISS » JUSTRJBDTEVR'KIKB FEATURES
COPYRIGHT.
SYNOPSIS Stanley Paige, beautiful, young society girl, is left penniless when her lawyer speculates with her money and loses. Stanley, however, cares little for the money, feeling that she hss everything in the love of fascinating Drew Armitage. But when Drew breaks their engagement saying it would be impossible to marry on his income, she is heartbroken. Rather than accept aid from her wealthy friends, Stanley rents an inexpensive furnished room and disappears from her exclusive circle to try and make her own way. Her friends agree that a better way would have been to marry handsome Perry Deverest, but Stanley cannot forget Drew. Then, one day, she meets John Harmon Northrup, struggling young author. A strong friendship ensues and they become very necessary to one another. John Harmon is in love with Stanley but refrains from telling her because of Drew. As time passes, his kindness and consideration win Stanley's affection and they are married. Thinking only of Stanley's happiness, John Harmon makes an agreement with her that, if the time should ever come when they cannot give each other the wonderful companionship and understanding they have now, they must end their relationship. After three months of married life, Stanley is serenely happy, but John Harmon has become so necessary to her that she realizes, in order to preserve their happiness, she must have other interests to keep her from getting restless while he is writing. She applies for work in a bookshop. CHAPTER THIRTY An old man in a black skullcap aproached her, stared at her penetratingly from behind enormous horn-rimmed spectacles. He was little and wizened ar.d his face had taken on the color of the yellowed pages of his books, but his eyes, like the words on their printed pages, were still remarkably clear and discerning. “I saw your card,” Stanley began a bit uncertainly. “So?” the old man continued to stare at her. “I would like the place.” Stanley spoke abruptly, feeling that with this old person words were superfluous. “Why?” His voice, like bis stare, was even and penetrating. It seemed to brush aside trivialities, to get at the heart of things. “Because I like books, because I want a job, because I want to belong somewhere, have some—vocation.” “You like books, but do you know anything about them?” “Not much, but I could learn. I think I could learn very easily if you would bother.” A sudden twinkle disturbed the directness of the old man’s stare. “Teaching people who wish to learn is never a bother; it is teaching fools that is a nuisance and a waste of time. The pay is small,” he added abruptly, “and my customers are few—and not interested in pretty girls,” he waited, watching her impartially. “I would like the place,” Stanley repeated, returning his gaze unwaveringly. “Then come in the morning at nine. We will see how valuable you can make yourself to me. I am an old man, 1 do not like to use the stepladder, and in the early afternoon 1 walk in the park.” Outside the shop, she looked for s name, found it painted on a blackboard in faded gold letters, “Felix Rose—Books.”
She turned and walked swiftly southward, her eyes bright, her hands deep in her pockets. She had
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“MAN IN WHITE” BY SIGAK WHAT DO you MEAN BY COMINGS I YOU DON'T KNOW HOW J f /TIDP D U£kU?\ BUOW ME DOWN, I YAM I YA INCINERAKE I A<H’T GOT NO MANNERS) Z P IN HERE WITHOUT YOUR SHOES) TO ACT, POPEYE- ( rIKUW, Finn , ) TIRED FORKIN'FOR ) I KIN NOT STAN' THAT FROM A DAME < ' V ‘z . .WHEN I HAUE GUESTS! 5 YOU'RE FIRED! j SO THf\'s IT? \ SOMPIN' THE CAT < LIKE YOU ON ACCOUNT OF I YAM UJHAT \ D L- f, > MC X- "7 GET OUT OF ( uaull XXI 1 A</i / DRUGGED IN,ANYHOW-J 1 YAM - AN’ YER / r O M U I "RM Wr s Zt '=w f )?J-S 1 ! •.j JBJ I US SSFsMP I fl 3 I* 1 ' MEH Htk——A. Jb_ MB W .M £ri
DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. FEBBUABY 27, 1934.
of slight curves when something probably a split rail—caused the wreck. Passengers, who noticed the I iruin was swaying dangerously, were hurled from aeuts us the ! train crashed. Tin diner circled the combination car ahead, and lead crazily. Four negro cooks and waiters, in the kitchen, were thrown in a heap. Two were cut and bruised. One car careened against an extension of the Clark Chewing
a job, she had John Harmon. She would be away from him all day, but she would come back to him at night. The closed door would no longer shut her out, for she would not be there to be shut out; she would be on the other side of. a door herself — the door of a dim and narrow bookshop. John Harmon quietly accepted Stanley’s announcement. She told him that night after they had had dinner on a shaky card table before the fire. It was characteristic of Stanley that she didn’t try to explain and characteristic of John Harmon that he didn’t need an explanation. As a matter of fact, he was conscious of a rather startling feeling of relief. It John Harmon had seemed the same to Stanley in these weeks since their marriage, it was because he had compelled himself to seem the same; if he had rumpled his hair and laughed easily and spent long hours behind a closed door, it had been because it was natural for John Harmon to rumple his hair and laugh easily with Stanley and shut himself away from her when he wanted most desperately to be with her. He had compelled himself to do just this for a long time now and a habit, when motivated by an impulse as strong as this one which shielded Stanley from the full force of his love for jier, was not easily put aside. In his marriage John Harmon had found no release from his selfimposed restraint. He felt very humble about hi s happiness and very responsible. There were times when he could have wept over the sweetness of this thing that had happened to him and other time? when he stood in shaking fear of it. He gave Stanley just what he thought she wanted from him—and kept his passion lashed to a mast. Had he loved her less, it would have been impossible. But because he loved her so much, so terribly much, he could shut himself up in his study but he could not write. If Stanley, waiting impatiently in the room beyond, knew restlessness, John Harmon sitting slumped over his typewriter, knew despair. He had to write—and to write he had to lose his own identity, to become a mere automaton, an instrument of his inspiration; and just now with Stanley so near, with memories of her even nearer and more demanding, he could not lose any part of himself—he could not conjure up any inspiration. No longer could he wander in a world of imagery. He was himself. He was very much alive and vital in a world of reality—a world of devastating, confusing, rapturous realities. But because John Harmon was in love with his craft and because he was intensely in love with Stanley and because he saw in his passion for her a threatening disaster to both of these beloved objects, he stayed in the room behind the closed door and wrote aimlessly, or not at all, and wondered where it would all end. And then, miraculously, Stanley had gone. She was away from early morning till late afternoon. Once more John Harmon was alone — alone with his paper and his ink and his inspiration. No longer was he conscious of every movement in the outer room, no longer did every minute spent at his desk require an effort, no longer was there any need to try to forget that he had only to speak to summon her. She had gone and at night she would come back to him. Until then he could forget himself, forget Stanley. Once more he found that he could write. And with the undescribable joy that only the sensitively creative can ever know he fell upon his task and lost himself in it.
I Gum plaut. shearing u corner of the building, and Jeaving a huge ' hide. It rolled on. The last ear I settled upright against the ruinIcd wall. Fire flushed lepeuledlv in one iof the two pullninns. Passengers ( were ill near panic. A man tried to quiet them. •‘We ought to be glad our car is standing up." he said. The fire appeared only in flashes It did not spread and finally was extinguished
He was writing for a purpose now—not just for the joy of writing, not just for the satisfaction of expressing through the written word the thoughts that eried out t» be expressed, but because his writing had suddenly become a definite part of his and Stanley’s life together. It was less his craft ana more his job—it must earn money for him, for them. And so he went at it furiously, even feverishly, ami if he lost something in depth, he gained much in breadth, for his mind seemed very keen these days and very agile. He wrote rapidly and easily and sent out an amazmz number of stories ta Maynard Maynard read them »nd raised an eyebrow and fed them to his ever hungry magazines They were good stuff, they would catch on, they were exceptionally clever - not what he had thought the boy would do, of course, but then Maynard was always seeing things in people and then being disappointed" he was always catching glimpses of the sort of thing he had to do, before the public had cauk%4 him and broken him to her de mands. He had thought that in those early stories young Northrup had sent in tbsre had been a touch of genius, a rare quality of understanding, an awareness of beauty —in people, in nature, in the whole complicated fabric of life, but if i‘ had been there, it was gone now. But the stuff was clever and it was good magazine fodder. It was the sort of thing the public likeo r big doses, and it was Maynard’s job to give it to them. He sighed a bit at that relinquishing of a faint hope; and wrote John Harmon good-sized checks. And so it happened that John Harmon’s name appeared frequent ly in print and the problem of money was no longer vital and he gave up the proof reading and gave himself over to the finishing of his novel. Maynard had promised to look at it if he could get it into shape fur spring publication. He had rewritten the first chapters, discarding the ones started during the summer, the ones conceived while he was still in Vermont. He thought of them as immature—too idealistic. He went at them again with a surer hand — drew in his characters with a bolder touch; in these new chapters everything was intensified, the mouths of the women were more red, their beauty more decisive, his men were cleaner-cut, more virile, with fewer of the finer nuances of character. Both the men and women talked more and thought less, they moved across the pages quickly, colorfully, they did things abruptly and well and with a great deal of nonchalance and well-bred ’ndifference, and they did a tremendous number A things — fascinating, clever things—things people would like to read about. John Harmon was satisfied He worked fast until for some unexplainable reason he could not work at all—the whole thing seemed to collapse on his hands. He had gone so far and he could go no further. He had no more phrases, no more situations—no more anything. The manuscript ceased to be a book and became just scrawled pages of words, and John Harmon knew despair and restlessness and ugly black depression. But being John Harmon, he kept it to himself, until one night when suddenly for no reason at all. except that it happened, he blurted it all out. He had stayed in his study while Stanley busied herself with their supper. He had stayed there feigning work, because he dreaded to go out and pretend to a light and affectionate carelessness. But at last she called to him.
(To Or Continued! n . *"«■' 1-orlls. Distributed k> Kins Features Syndicate. Inc.
HIGH SALARIES BEING STUDIED; S e n a t e Studies Report Made By Federal Trade Commission Washington. Feb. 27-<U.R> Tl "'I | study of f»t corporation salaries Jand bonuses thut enriched execu- . lives during boom years, ami in I some cases continued through the I depression, was before the senate today in a 5,400-pege report b) I the federal trade commission. One of the largest payments re-' vealed was that of President I Eugene Grace of the Bethlehem | Steel Co., who in 1929 received a , salary of *12.000 and a bonus of' *1,623.753. In 1932 he received, *IBO.OOO salary and no bonus. The eoinnnssion'a report wus in ■ response to a senate resolution., It covered salaries mid bonuses I paid by 887 corporations whose I stock is listed on the New York | stock exchange or the New York ■ curb exchange. The data covered i the full years 1928 to 1932 inclu I sive and the first six months of 1933. Following are 1929 and 1932 sal- ( aries and bonuses listed for some major companies: American Machinery mid Foundry Co —R L. Patterson, presi-i dent. 1929 salary. *50.000 and I bonus. *220,980; 1932 salary, *42.500, bonus *101.262. American Tobacco Co.— G. W. : Hill, president. 1929 salary. *144.-1 500 and bonus. *46.113; 1932 salary. *120,000 and bonus. *705.607. Bethlemeni Steel Co. — E. G. | Grace, president. 1929 salary. . *12.000. bonus *1.623,75j); 1932 .alary, *IBO.OOO und no bonus, c. Schwab, chairman. 1929 salary. , *150.000 and ne botius; 1932 sal- ' ary. *250.000 and no bonus. o-. — II Test Your Knowledge — | Can you answer seven of these ! tese Questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. Name the capital of Scotland. I | 2. What colony in America was named New Netherlands? 3. Name the of Alabama. 4. What s the name for an official, authoritative edict issued by | the Pope? 5. On what river is the city of Lisbon. Portugal? 6. Name the author of "Rebecca of Bunnybrook Farm." 7. Who was Edward. The Black I Prince? ! 8. How many counties has the State of Delaware? 9. What name did Thomas Jefferson give to his residence and estate in Albemarle County. Virginia? 19. What part did Myrna Loy playin the motion picture "Arrowsmith?" YOUTH SHOOTS SELF TO DEATH (CONTINUED, - AGE ON E) trigger. Later the same evening while the Fricke family was sitting around the radio Gustave came crawling on his hands and knees into the room. His mother thought Gustave was frolicking with his nine-year-old brother. He crawled upon a couch and listened to the music for a while before lie again slipped to the floor and dragged himself to his bedroom on the second floor. After he had gone to bed Mrs. Fricke found the younger child playing with the revolver and scolded him. Gustave had given it to him but Mrs. Fricke did not know that aud put it back in its aceustomeu place without attaching sig nificance to the incident. The entire family retired shortly after. Gustave stayed in bed until yesterday afternoon when his father l came in and wanted to know why | he was not at school. The youngster replied that his stomach hurt very badly and that he was unable to get up. Fricke called the family physician who discovered the bullet ' : hole and sent Gustave to the hos i pital. But the wound had gone too I long unattended and blood poison-! ing had set in. Just before he died [Gustave confided to his mother that > j he had shot himself at 9 p. m.. the I evening before.
indict three ' AS MURDERERS (CONTINUED wTTT.rious’o’”* attentions paidj' his wife by Chwbro. I Rims signed a confession in which he is alleged to have Maid that he. had been paid »3«5 “> >‘ lll ch ‘ , "‘ ,ro ' mid that he had been promised mi j additional *1.695. Mrs. Bridges has Insisted her husband is innocent. Hearings on writs of habeas cor-1 pus seeking release of Bridges aud Nelson will be held tomorrow. Ar-1 ruignment on the murder charges ■ is expected to be delayed until after the habeas corpus hearings. NRA TO START NEW OFFENSIV E OVER COUNTRY (CONTINUED FROM FACTE ONE) •••• muiikitic to extreme conservative —who answered his convitation to come to Washington aud register any complaints or criticisms. After his address, the delegates split-up in half a dozen sessions to dissect | NRA from every angle. I
- _ M — 1 I Decatur, Indiana I WEDNESDAY SPECIAL? | PORK 41 BEANS, Country Club, in savory 1 Tomato sauce. 16-oz. can M TOMATO SOUP. Barbara Ann. Rich. Zestful. 10' _.-oz. can . SARDINES. Domestic, in oil or mustard ■ ' 4 size can ■S : . ’•tJS SALAD DRESSING. Country Club. nch. tasty. 3-oz. jar bI ■ RED BEANS. Standard quality, Meaty ■ tender, No. 300 can NAAM BAKING SODA. Arm 6. Hammer brand, okg. ■ SUNBRITE CLEANSER, or Gold Dust ■ Cleanser, can , ■ AVONDALE j Quality flour, economical, use it for all baking, hi* ■ Specially priced! 21 lb. sack Ii (■ COUNTRY CLUB, Tested Quality Flour. 21-11) sack NW GOLD MEDAL, Kitchen Tested Flour 21-tb sack SldM SWA.N’SIM)WN, Famous Cake Flour, pkg. PASTRY' FLOUR. Country Club, for finer pastries, ■ .'i-lh. >ack . I CORN MEAL. Yellow, Quality, Fresh stocks. ] 10-tb. bag 2M ( ALL MET BAKING POWDER. (S-oz. can 17c) | 1 tb. can 29i SOUP, Tall Boy, Vegetable, Tall can SALAD DRESSING. Country oz jar SPICES. Sudan brand, Aispice Clove, Cinnamon, Pepper. BBjj| Paprika, pkg. g J , Jf Latoma Pa e Dry. 24 cz. bottle HBH MW. (No bottle charge) BS SBCHILI CON CARNE. Country ■■ Club, preoared u- t- beans. 9SS u ca i P’JI PUMPKIN. Country Club. 7 a 118 quality. Tb -z WMI No. 2'y can MMg IsSj|sfc,.. SARDINES in delicious to mato sauce, oval can . HB B R E A D | CORN FLAKES. Country Club! Country Club, finest quality. CnSP , a " d De " ]()f oven fresh da.ly, sliced or CIOUS flaV °’’ 13or pk 9 unsliced, 16-oz loaf 5c PANCAKE FLOUR. Country 24 oz. loaf L o C r U w a u’ dy t 0 m ' x h l ff" WHOLE WHEAT BRcAu, 2 ’ 20oZ ' pk9 ‘ Country Club, delicious. Q COCOA, Our Mathers ich, fui heaHhiul. sliced, 16-oz. loaf OC Havor, (1 tb. pkg. 12c i RAISIN BREAD q 2 tb. Country Club, 16-oz. loaf uC PRUNES, Lge 4C-50 sz< 1(L VIENNA BREAD q Fancy Santa Clara s, ’l>. IW Country Club, 16-oz. loaf &C APPLE BUT 1 ER, Country CNH RYE BREAD, Country r» rich, delicious flavor 1 "., Club, fine flavor, 16-oz loaf /C 38-oz. jar lit SWEDISH RYE w TWINKLE, Gelatine Dessert. Country Club. 16-oz. loaf I C Country Club. Six de 14» DINNER ROLLS cious Fruit flavors, 3 pkg Country Club, pkg. of 12 /C FIG BARS or GINGER 11L, GUBST MALT, A Favorite, SNAPS. Fresh stock, tt l" 1 - Light and Dark, aa. OATS, Rolled. Buckeye 1 (|., 2i 2 -fb. can T«/C brand, qqualtty, 5-Ib. bag ivv JEWEL COFFEE A blend of finest Santos Coffees—selected by Krogers own buyers ant rushed to Krogers own roasting ovens. Fresh— because its ground as you buy it. ! 33c I RENCH BRAND, Full bodied and flavory. Ground as you buv it--tb 2k ( Ol NTRY CLUB, Rich and distinctive, vacuum sealed can — tb 23c ( HASE & SANBORN “Dated” Coffee, lb. 25c i — —
NEW EVll)E\ ce ■ IN ! >EATHcB 'Hie 'iist>lnti****’*7 ,, **‘M nillnv-.s muihl b 'A IHT'llts Inllodu. ■ Ml itogidhor win, sa...i .. | f .'B| ;' hal l ’ l ' W.'11rk..,,. , ni /■ -lain lier Imamu ■ jlur the in.-ur.u,. . • W i taken out on h. ■ , before she died H Whistler Pamt,ng 9j .„ H Paris (U.P V ■ , tear, in the l hh,,| M Mi Neil Whistle, : . ~N W er" will return q,.,, summer Annul,:,.. painting s return . b ■ I tlie Louvre Min, lln |, IIS . pielure Wils 1n.n..., .J jso that it might 1., > , k , h i>n ■ lof Allici n :i’s pi-in , 1 will return in tun. ■ , !wi ' r J 'B ! I’ari.i ceromom. - H 100th miniveihj. „• Wb ‘B birth. H Save—Let us do drv. 15 pounds onh |9 v B Wav—Phone 131.' B
