Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 84, Decatur, Adams County, 6 April 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
F CLASSIFIED 1 ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS C ARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALK — New Living Room Suites $45 to $l5O, Sprague Furniture Co., phone 199. 80t6 FOR SALE One galvanized brooder house, 609 chick capacity. good as new. One Turnbull wagon and hay ladder. F. J. Schmitt. a-82-3tx FOR SALE 2 Chester White male hogs Ready for service. C. D. Houk, HotfiMd Ind., 83-3tx FOR SALE -Carload of seed potatoes. inquire at Old Foundry Bl lg.. Elm St., or phone 70 84a3tx FOR SALE -New 6 H. P. International gasoline engine with throttle type governor. Fred Faster -Mount . . ' 4 .: t x QUABITY BABY CHICKS. These chicks are produced from good flock*. all breeders Bloodtested for Qacillary White Diarrhea by the Stained Antigen Whole Blood—tFsr,TnwlerTnrFowtr"Sijpervißion7 reactors removed year 1933-1934. All e<srs set weigh 23 oz. or more per dizen. Chicks priced reasonable. Order your chicks early from Baumgartner Hatchery, 6 miles 1 west and 9 miles south of Decatur] on route i. Bluffton. Craigville| phone. Fri-ts i FOR^SALE —Chicks from culled I flocks. Large Leghorns and I Heavy breeds 6%c. Custom hatch,] 1337. Buchanan Electric Hatcn- i ery. Willshire, Ohio, Route 1. 4 miles south. Apr. 6-10-13-17 x ; FOR SALE—A good stake body to | fit a 1% ton truck. Two goodused 32x6 truck tires. Elberson ' Service Station. 83a3tx FOR SALE —New and Used Pianos $36 to $225. We sell on terms. Sprague Furniture Co., phone 199. SOtC WANTED WANTED—Light hauling, ashes, rubbish, etc. Prices reasonable. Phone 1208. 79a6tx WANTED To rent, three or four , unfurnished rooms or small I house. Phone 5142. 83-3tx I FOR RENT FOR RENT—3 rooms, suitable for offices. Newly decorated. Plenty of light: heat and water furnished. Inquire Niblick & Co. 82-3 t i'OR RENT—-6 room semi-mo,tern house at 821 North Third street i See Homer Liby, Bellmont Park. S4-hg3t 0 <9 • Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these j tese Questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. - i. Rho was the most famous EngIj.i n ai . mirat? 2. Where is the Khyber Pass? - 3. To what institution was Harry JC Thaw -committed after his triai •for thg shooting of Stanford White? „ 4. Who originated t6e "Cook’s JTours?" ** 5. In which mountain system is •511. Everest? 6. Name the principal river of Jndiana. *" 7. What is neuritis? 8. Os which country is Lhasa the M 9 Name the judge wio presided •kcthe Sacco-Vanzetti trials. 10. What whipping instruwer.: was ■used in old Russia? “ ; o—, ■*- 4 2] Household Scrapbook j —BY—--3 ROBERTA LEE ♦ ] The Double Boiler Cf the water in the bottom pan of boiler gets low. use boilZjng water when refilling it. if cold water is usel the food will take "i longer to cook. Vines - Do not plant a twining vine it can ascend a sapling. «4N*irher should it be planted where* It > will cling to stem roots near a j .-wooden wall. — .. An Iron Sink ' w To clean an iron sink nb-ely try 1 •Using steel wool moistened with j .Jinseed oil. •> *' o
*Get the Habit — Trade at Home - ■ , *- Roy IL Andress Licensed Chiropractor L Phone ,(93 315 N. Fourth st. " Hours by appointment. For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath *> Phone 314 140 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to & p. m.
'MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN M ARKETS LOCAL MARKET , Decatur, Berne, Craigvlll .Hoagland Willshire, Ohio I Corrected April 6 No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday 160 to 210 lbs $3.90 210 to 250 lbs. $4.00 250 to 300 lbs. $3.90 . 300 to 360 lbs $3.60 i 140 to 160 lira $3.10 < 120 to 140 lbs $2.20 ] 100 to 120 lbs. ....„ $1.90 i tis $260 Stags $1.50 Vealers $6.00 Spring lambs $9.00 down ' CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat 86% Corn 4814 50% 52% Oats 32% 33% 33% EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK . East Buffalo. N. Y.. Apr. 6.— (U.R) Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 2.400; holdovers, SOO: active; 5 to 15c over Thursday’s average; some lightweights | up more; bulk desirable 160 to 250 jibs.. $4.65; mixed weights and plain er quality. $4 to $4 50; 140 to 150 lbs.. $3.85 to $4.25; pigs downward I to $2.50. Cattle, receipts, 150; steady: (common to medium. 1,1001 b., steers $5.35; cutter cows, $1.35 to $2.50. Calves, receipts. 600; holdikers. 1300; vealers weak to mostly 50c i ilower; better grades fairly active; < medium and lower grades draggy; I I good to choice $6 to mainly $6.50; common and medium, $3.50 to $5. Sheep, receipts. 700: holdovers. 1200; lambs active; strong to 25c I higher: good to choice woolskins, $9.50; equivalent to $9.75; shorn lambs. $7.25 to $7.50; closely assorted kinds quoted around $7.75.. Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs steady; 250-300 lbs. $4.25; | 200-250 lbs. $4.15; 180-200 lbs. $4; 160-180 tbs. $3 90; 300-350 lbs. $3.80; 150-160 tbs. $3.40; 140-150 lbs. $3.15; 130-140 lbs. $3; 120-130 j lbs. $2.50; 100-120 lbs. $2; roughs . $3; stags $1.75. Calves 66; Lambs $8.50-8.75. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected April 6 N&. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs or batter 79c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs 78c I Old Oats 31c I New Oats 29c 1 1 First Class Yellow Corn .„ ... 58c . Mixed com 6c less Soy Beans 60c to 90c ! — o SlMcte _ J MARltf SY CHARLEY GRANT ■ Yep. even a gal of real polish kin have a shiny nose. When a tellers nose is a little REDDISH it ain't no sign he knows his onions. . When a gal begin t’ look daggers some feller, gits stuck. No sah. Communism will never git us out of th’ red. Ho hum. many an engagement is broke cause th' feller is. Yep. most o’ th’ reds are a dern 1 black lookin’ crowd. 1 ’ fr-'-" ■ ■— 11 %l»|Miin(m«*nt of Vtlminiutratrir Notice is hereby given. That the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of David Polm late of Adame County, deceased. The estate w probably insolvent. X." Ada E. Shrider, Administratrix XX liilakrr anil Mill*. Utorury I .March 22, 193 4. March 23-30 April 6 O NOTICE—The Colonial Home for invalids, aged paralytics. Special rates for confinements. Mrs. H. Anspaugh. South Main St., Rockford, Ohio. k-84 6tx Can you sympathize with the junior class that has “Tool Many Bosses"—Friday. April, 10, at D. IL S. Auditorium? 84-3 t
Federal Farm Loans Make application with the! j Adams County National j f arm Loan Ass’n., Charter No. 5152, office with the 1 Schurger Abstract Co., 133 South 2nd street. Decatur. Fjre and windstorm insiirj ance accepted in any old line or good mutual insurance co. 1 ————j N. A. BIXLER 1 OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted HOURS; 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.
COURT HOUSE New Cases First State Bank vs. Rudolph Weiland et al. note and fraudulent conveyance, H. R. McClenahan, attorney. State of Indiana vs Merle Chrisman, bastardy, transferred from justice of peace court. Nora C. Hall vs. Lewis Sprunger damages. Kichonn, Gorxion and Edris. attorneys. Divorce Granted Frances Alverson va. Dickenson Alv'erwon. damages, plaintiff granted divorce and custody of two minor children, with $2.50 weekly support money. Costs of the case taxed against defendant. Cause Dismissed Nora C. Hall vs. Lewis Springer, damages, cause dismissed and cost”
W IM WOLF/ SON' 7> y LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE ~
SYNOPSIS Aboard the S.S. "Navarre,” bound for America, Michael Lanyard. reformed “Lone Wolf” of crookdom, is reunited with his son whom he thought dead. Lanyard is disappointed to learn that the boy, traveling under the name "Maurice Parry,” is a thief, but he hopes his son’s interest in Fenno Crozier, lovely daughter of the wealthy Mrs. Fay Crozier, will prove a good influence. Maurice steals the famous Habsburg emeralds from Mrs. Crozier, substituting counterfeits. Lanyard retrieves the gems for Fay. In a bridge game. Lanyard exposes two gangsters “Jack Knife” Anderson and "English Archie,” for clieat--ng his son. Detective Crane warns Lanyard against their revenge. Soon the emeralds are stolen again and Lanyard is suspected when he refuses to name the first thief. M. Pion. French detective, and Captain Pascal are confident of Lanyard's guilt when they find the jewels in the latter’s trunk, only to learn that they are the counterfeits. Fay gallantly says that she gave the zircons (false gems) to Lanyard as souvenirs. Lanyard is puzzled, for he had returned these to Maurice, but he maintains a defiant attitude toward the officers, i Just as the captain orders Lanyard confined in his cabin until he re- ' veals the culprit’s name, the purser appears with the genuine emer- i aids, which were carelessly wrapped and left on his desk with instructions that they be deposited in the safe for Mme. Crozier. To prove her faith in Lanyard, Fay asks him to rewrap and return them to the purser. Embarrassed, the : captain apologizes and withdraws . with Pion. CHAPTER XIV Lanyard waited till alone with the lady to show her a frankly per- | turbed countenance. “That’s all very well, madame. ] But I'd wager my head it wasn’t the . same thief. And I am certain there | were not two shagreen cases. Nei- , ther have I any more idea how the ( zircons came to be in my trunk than t I have of how the emeralds found < their way to the purser’s hands—or why you, madame, should tell fibs to spare me!” < “My dear friend!” Fay Crozier , laughed, abandoning the beautiful i language of France for the home,lier idiom she had been born to. , “When will you get it through your i head that I think you’re a swell per- , son? A grand actor, too; anyhow, for dubs like that bearded infant of a Captain and swine like that Pion. 1 I could see. though, what I’m sure ; they couldn’t, that you were plumb ! flabbergasted when it turned out , those wretched zircons had been planted on yeu. And if you think I’d j ever make things worse for you i when a fat red lie would make them , easiez, you just don't know Fay < Crozier.” i “I don’t, at all events, know how ] to thank you.” “Just let me catch you trying— , any way, I mean, except by letting < me help you, if I can, figure out who < your enemy is.” I Lanyard started and repeated, i “My enemy!” in a low kev. as if the | thought were not only novel to him i but to a degree painful. I “You don’t imagine, do you, it was , any friend of yours that held me i up and did his best to fix it so you , would be suspected!” “You think that?" the same trou- ( bled voice replied. < “I can’t see what else anybody j eould think, when he followed up the robbery by sneaking those imi- , tations into your trunk.’’ “If he-—-if the thief did!" “Who else could have? My dear man, what are you thinking of ? You 1 gave the zircons back to him last night, didn’t you? Well then! What i
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“SAYING IT WITH MUSIC” BYSEGJ POPE YE, I CANT UNDERSTAND)! f FATHER, I LUANT ThC'K K W GET SIX MEN j / DON'T RF SILLS' Yl B 7' X HOUU YOU LICKED THAT < PIANO MOVED ACROSS] TO MOVE IT ? I'LL \ ,2, a MAH ' S E ! VJHERE YA \ ~""X BURGLAR LAST NIGHT- THE ROOM-I'LL HAVE / MOVE IT, ME SELF ./ \ « X „ t ( WANT TRIS ) / \ YOU'RE JOST A WEAK-LOOKING THE EMPLOYMENT r'' H \OONT BE SILLY! E X J']' 5 ,/ \ HALF-PINT OF A MAN AGENCY SEND OUT RIL?S “ (? eAH ’’ yAM ) 7 MEN 5 -/Right- - Z 7 B \\ J /T\~ > (daughter -=-«=- { /cL-i 1 8 \r 11 1 Ms M li dl av '1 A- t Wrftpfc A wA ° b ..J J ;•.Ws ok jj< . A S r7l v ' ,/ w fils o '') / HB T) -7f ) I L2l 13) ■■ L-HMMBH .[.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. APRIL G, 1934.
1 I paid. 1 - Estate Case 1 Ueorge Zehr. estate, petition to | determine inheritance tax filed and referred to county assessor. ! Case Dismissed t i First Joint Sock Land Bank vs. [ . Nettie A«py et al. foreclosure, cause I j dismissed and costa paid. Current Report Filed i in the matter of Liquidation of ] | Peoples Unui and Truet company, j -1 current report filed and ordered re- ’ J turnable May 3, 1934. Petition Sustained In the Mater of the Liquidation i 1 of the (M l Adams County Bank. I’e- ■ j tition to compromise claim of j i George G. Flanders et ux. filed, sub-' 1 mitted and sustained and special l representative ordered to compro- > l mise claim and accept Home Own- ■ era bonds and cancel mortgages. Rule to Answer > William Me»el Jr, vs. Howard t
possible doubt ean there be as to who saddled you with them today?” “It is not his identity that perplexes me.” Lanyard worried, “but his motive.” “What other motive could he have had than to incriminate you?” “Be patient with me, madame. Figure to yourself that I find it so difficult to credit him with this second theft, I even question whether he knew anything about it.” “I don’t get it.” The head which Fay Crozier had bowed over the shagreen case, to which she was transferring the Habsburg emeralds, was so vigorously shaken that its docked locks fluffed out like a snowy nimbus. “Unless yon mean you don't want to believe in circumstantial evidence black enough to damn an angel.” “You have reason, madame,” Lanyard ruefully admitted. “I do not wish to believe—yes, that is true.” “But why? For goodness’ sakel Is this crook some dear friend of yours?” Fay’s lively eyes said she spoke in jest; but the jest had cut too near to the knuckle for comfort. Next thing he knew the woman would be worming the truth out of him. "Let us say, rather, it passes understanding that the fellow should invite denunciation by repeating his offence in a fashion more heinous, and identifying himself in my sight as the offender by this nonsense with the zircons. That, madame. was never the act of a man in his senses.” “That I grant you.” For all of the quizzical line which Fay Crozier was taking, the lightly skeptical bias of her attention. Lanyard at this stage began to feel better. The mystery was no less mysterious, but he had at least succeeded in satisfying himself that Maurice—those infernal zircons to the contrary notwithstanding — hadn’t had anything to do with this latest brigandage or its quite insane sequel. Headstrong the boy might be and wedded to the error of his ways, but when all was said, the son of the Lone Wolf wasn’t a simpleton; he could never have won his own consent to conduct so asinine. “Who, then?” Lanyard was teased by inklings of the answer, but Fay Crozier wouldn’t give him time to follow them up. “But neither was it rational to steal my jewels and then return them to me through the purser, all within an hour!” “I well believe you.” A silver-throated call to luncheon was singing through the vessel, and Lanyard seized on the excuse to end a conversation that was making him more and more uncomfortable “But—now you make me think of it, madame—you have yet to seal up the emeralds in my presence, as you promised to. and turn them in for safe keeping. And I happen to have asked a young friend to lunch with me.” "What a clever creature you are!” Fay Crozier crossed to place on the table before him the shagreen case, then fetched from the escritoire an envelope and sealing wax and matches. "You do it for me, please. Then you’ll be sure the job is properly done.” Standing over the man with a provoking smile, she returned to her personalities. “You do know how to put an inquisitive woman off. don’t you?” “Ah. madame!” Lanyard deprecated, busying himself with the parcel. “I would think well of myself indeed if I thought that." “Stuff and nonsensei You know very wel] you’re keeping something from me.” “I have a feeling that you flatter me.” Fenno chose this moment to make an entrance to the sitting-room as
ix>na, note rule to answer, adtaoluti on or before April 16, 1934. Real Estate Transfer* Sim Nuasbaum, et ux to Helei En ly part of inlot 372 In Berne foi j $1.09. Helen Eady to Sam Nuaslmum ' part of Inlot 272 In Berne for SI.OO Monroe Stale Bunk to James E Kessler inlot 21 in Monroe for SI.OO Burl Jolmeon, sheriff to the Mon roe State Bank inlot 21 iu Mon rm-yfor S9OO. Charles E. Sullivan et ux to Elea nor Reppert, inlot 63 In the Decatui Hellmout Adltlon for SI.OO. Bjirl Johnson. 80 acres of land in St. Mary’s township for SI.OO. Erman Johnson, to Elona Johnson 8G acres of land iu 3f. Mary’s town ship for sl.oo. O ' 1 Wilbur FOrter of Fort Wayne was looking after Ford business here today.
> inopportune, tn Lanyard’s way of ’ thinking, as it was spirited. “Ready, Fay dear? I’m simply , famished. Why, M. I-anyard! And it isn’t a minute since I told that i nice boy of yours that you had been called into a conference with the Captain. He was still looking for i you al) over—said you had sent him word you were expecting him for luncheon. Don’t look so pop-eyed, Mother: the nice boy I’m talking about is M. Lanyard’s son. Surely he must have told yon—” "No, he didn’t,” Fay Crozier declared. “But it’s only another of a number of things he hasn't been telling me. I do believe the creature has a low, secretive nature.” • • • It was the father’s thought, when presently he found his firstborn waiting near the entrance to the it la carte restaurant, that however well he might deserve the name of good actor which Mme, Crozier had bestowed upon him, he could not in fairness call Maurice less talented. The young man seemed as blithe as the day, and betrayed never a sign of any proper feeling, neither compunction for his treachery in juggling the zircons into Lanyard’s trunk, nor curiosity concerning the upshot. It was a subsequent reflection, when Lanyard knew what had actually been working in the mind behind that devil-may-care mask, that of the two of them, the younger was possibly the more finished dissembler. “Sorry I had to keep you waiting, my boy.” Last night's revelation had been in effect too dramatic to unsettle the alien mental attitudes that a lifetime spent in France had made a second nature. Today he met his son in another humor altogether and realized in the meeting a surge of emotion which washed away all veneer of the Latin spirit and laid the bedrock Anglo-Saxon bare. Today it wasn’t possible even to speak to the boy except in English, with the offhand air, in the time-worn forms, which the English use to deny their deep affections. “Good of you to be so patient!” “Not a bit of it, sir,” Maurice protested, taking as instinctively to the English idiom. “Your American friend gave me your message, and I knew you’d be along as soon as the Captain got what he wanted out of you.” “To be sure: Fenno said she had told you. But it wasn’t the Captain who detained me so much as Fenno’s mother. I begin to believe I underrated that lady. She’s as dangerous as her daughter. What do you say if we lunch up here?” “I rather imagined you’d prefer to. Can’t very well talk secrets down there in the sallt d manger can we?” And then, when Lanyara had led the way into the restaurant aad chosen a table in a corner, the boy, still observing him askance, in light malice iterated: “‘Dangerous’?” “As the very devil. If 1 don’t have more success in keeping that woman at her distance for the next several days, I stand as little show with her as you do with Fenno—between the two of them they’ll pick our minds of every last thing we want to keep locked up.” Lanyard listlessly waved aside the menu which the waiter was seeking to thrust under his nose. “Order something for me, like a good boy. I don't feel up to thinking seriously about food.” The gesture was disingenuous. It was. in fact, nothing less than a test. But Maurice was equal to it. The deft ease which composed a perfect little luncheon—cold bortsch in cups, filet mignon Chateaubriand, a simple salad, and a bottle of Chateau Carbonnieux—satisfied Lanyard that he had found a son after his own heart. (To Be Continued)
• a — ♦ I must re-register; 11 j The following men are asked to ,r 're register at the Federal Re Em jpioyiaent office. Chamber of Com «■ : merce Building. In order to be ” I eligible for employment; '■ i Delbert Augsburger, Horner] 11 I Asehliman, Eugene Aeschlemun. I »’I Norbert Auman, Herman Alberding. | 11 Sherman Archer, Kenneth Amstutz. 1 Noel Andrews, Glen Addy. Roy An ( *’ miller, Grover Alberson. Herbert ■ ir Braun, Raymond Baker, Otis Baker, Robert Barr. Sylvester Byrd. John ' n Brewster. Carson Blowers, Hubert 1 Bentz. Roy Bell, Peter Mosser. Wm j " Butcher, Wm. Derrickson. Cecil I '• Bess. Gustave Bleeke, Emil Bentz, | Martin Bentz. Edward Bteeke, Rob- [ ert Barnett. Melvin Brewster. O. L. j * Brcntlinger. Ralph Bercat, Alva e Beer, Forrest Beer. Elvin Byer, Ray ■ mond Bixler. Harold Butler, J. R ‘ Bookhart, Albert Bixler. Erwin By er. Gale Butcher. Thurman Baker.' Wm. Bailey. Sylvan Bauman. Jesse 1 Burk. Wayne burger. Junior Brown, Al Braun, Robert Brandyberry.] Lloyd Btberstetn, Edward Bentz. | Robert Beery. Harrison Fennig. Leo Bixler. Ralph Burke. Chester Burke. Tillman Beer. Itonakl Burk heart. Carl Bausennan. Adcjlph | Buuck. Paul Muuck. Herman Bittner, Floyd Book. Luther Brokaw. | Herman Bohnke, Fred Brokaw. Al-1 bert Baker. Alvin Behnke. Thurman I Bebout, L. H. Bentz. Virgil ItarSUey. i Charles Bate. John Ballard. s>Bllllß I Beitler, Waldo Bauman. J. H. Barn- i ett, Phil Baker, Art Bonen. o MILL WORKERS GO ON STRIKE (CON'TINCED FROM PAGE ONE) I only a few hundred. Real Silk officials said that out of 3.200 employes only 400 were on i strike. Union organizers claimed . that Only 215 Real Silk employes, a majority of tnem women, were on the job. “This is not an ordinary strike," said J. A. Goodman, chairman of the noard of the Real Silk | company. “It is not even to recognize the I union. I "It is in violation of the basic J plan of employe representation determined by employes (hem ' (selves at an election last October. "At the election, the employes 'voted two to one in favor of being represented by the Employes Mutual Benefit Association rather than AUTOS ' BZFINANCED ON SMALI FK MTMENTS BXTR4 MONEY IF DESIRED FRANKLIN SECURITY CO. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. I Phone 237 Decatur, Ind ' WHENEVER an accident happens to you it happens to your bankroll also. /ETNA-IZli Our 4TNA Ideal Accident policy won't save you from injury, but it will save your mmey. Pays medical and surgical expenses and a weekly income to you while laid up. • Aetna Life Insurance Co. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. Agents I Decatur, Ind. Phone 358 lllliihffilliillll
by the hosiery wor' ers union . (since then the company has enterled into an agreement with the as-1 socialion in regards to wages, hours: of labor and working condition- 1 .” Dffiiials of the Fulton and Nat tonal mills said that their mills are small and had not been operettas I lull capacity. I They said that about 25 knitters (in each plant went on strike, and j because of this fact, a number of lothee employes, not striking, were unable to work. I officials ol the companies re Ipoitwt that they were in'otmed I that the regional lalK>r board had i advised the union not to strike, but ! that it ignored the suggestion. rural c arrier TO BE RETIREI ' (CONTINUED FHOM v-AGK ONE) • • • •••• ♦ j routes three, six, and seven. Mr. Engle is the second postal j employe to he retired a the De- ] catur post office since last fall. Ed | B. Macy, postal clerk was retired Inst November. No one has been I appointed to till the place, hia work being taken over by other clerks
| THE HOME GROCERY S| JOHN B. STI LTS ■I I’honc SS or ‘IS ||q Second g Fresh Country EGGS Saturday Only X All You Can Use 4 i Per dozen only I J / "/r ILOP"ULI—--3 PECOLA THE ORIGINAL S OLEO JELLO S pound \il I lavorj I lOc Cc II THE BEST! JF W f STILL FAMOUS FOR OUR I iy 2 POUND LOAF A | BREAD X : FOR ONL> V ■ THAT GOOD I’EERi ESS CHEES E .. , ■1 .>., i- . Hci.iltii s ■B 2Jc \a I tie KB . I-arißst Neler ■| pound ■ 171 2C " n7SC “ DO NOT FORGET TO ORDER OUR SATISFACTION COFFEE 19c K ONE OF MAXWELL HOI Si: I XMi! Y NO ADV ANC E IN l‘RI( !/ K A REAL 50c 10 BARS I BROOM While Naptha I '" ,i29c 5,,A " 25c K 5 Pound Box 2 Pound < an g SOAP CHIPS COCOA! J 25c "19c H A Real Can of PEACHES or 1, APRICOTS, Large Size . I SODA CRACKERS 2 pounds . ’
.'Ma ll'art time (Girl Scouts T o ''l sponsor ■ j r.irl Scout Trn<^ tl) ' . Mlsh Cilonn.s |.| r I will sponsor ,1 li.-ttetit Ju Cort Tligatre. ii,. xt Thursday nlghij The ntoile i,, Masquei.ol.r ~ , Il|r (man ami Elis,., “"J jwll) be lu j(may he proem,j 1 membeni. Notice World-', Our location f„ r t |„. ' I "">■ ~r - is Avenue. Our i. 1,.j, h0|1 * 1130. We are !lltjrp ~“1 located this , ’a,. ar!t| ; a mile to 111. Eair. «■ ' ] to serve )..u . ent ac< omoil.u „,| is Ml||J ' I helpful, fi i. mux m i plcto iiiforinaii..n S( . n ."j quest. 1 Mr - a "d Mn. D lck
