Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 226, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1934 — Page 5
( lII'KCHES Monr 0 ' M E ' \b'i S 3 . , September 23 Su<’d«>- ' |iin|l|l , Wt „- M |»|,, ; Th.. "ill The Short Hod. ’ , |'„. i i,h | f ont 10:20 to 11 . 1.. liman. W 3" " M . Mli" B Mr S.lB-l 1 mv. mil'll. It'-' ■ \ ;■ ” vnl '’' M ... H'' Mm'-"-— K" 5 .h....i ■ r,,r mh„l.iv molt) IHfr detail- '" " ,h * ‘ ,V " nl ■jin.v -<>" 3:30 IM K.,th Jkthlff I" • K‘* » ■ « u-el..vK ■ !:! Choir 11 In a!Hal. with Mrs. bathe leader. • Special Notice tUum. Colnriil Quintet mgained appetite Km weight with BLLOGG'S ALL-BRAN SI Cereal Relieved His B Constipation vou arc a sufferer from head loss «f appetite and energy Bepl'essness. or any other of th< ■ effects of constipation Kj this enthusiastic letter from Bjtclntyre: Bvf,. r a l"ng time my system ’rat in very good working order. K since eating Kellogg’s Au? I have regained my appetite Bimv lost weight. And my system K good working order. Kellogg'! sure does the trick.’’- 1 ■ J. A. Mclntyre, 160 Ruscomt E‘|_. Philadelphia, Pa. ■ T'=ts show Kellogg's Ai.L-BraN ■ovides the “'bulk” needed to re Seve ordinary constipation. It alsc ■mains vitamin B and iron for tht ■ood. ■ You'll enjoy this delicious and ri auy-to-eat cereal. Serve ■ with milk or cream—or use often ■ cocking. U Just eat two tablespoonfuls daily. Hhronic eases, with each meal. 11 Kt relieved this way, see your Hector. M Kellogg’s All-Bran is all bran nth only necessary flavoring added 1 contains much more needed bulk’’ than part-bran products, lade by Kellogg in Battle Creek
HITE’S GROCERY PHONES 31 and 204 The Big South-End Food Shop Where You Buy for Less. PRUNES 3 lbs. 25c 5 lb. sk. Self-Ris-QP? Fancy Diced OKp ing Buckwheat.. Carrots, 2 Large cans Apricots in Peaches, large cans in heavy syrup 20c heavy syrup 100 lb. bag or Quart jars 1 r p Oyster Shells .. Applebutter ... ItH Raisins .x. 3 lbs. 25c Our Telephone service excells in courtesy and promptness and our Delivery trucks pass your door 1 times daily. Large cans 1A Z1 Perfect Kraut lA.. Bed Beans .... LUC can IvC Size 2 can Hom- Small cans Crushed or 'ny, doz. cans .. lOt Sliced 1A t Quart jars -1 r Pineapple AvC Bill Pickles .... luv Large cans Van Camps ter ioc p,,rk&BM "‘..ioc Peaches or Apricots s l.29 Onions, large Fancy Perfection Gin- .! ze ’ 10 lb. ger Snaps 1 A/« 19c r",' Jr «i"....25c “ loc Urge cans Y el- IT. I resh Salted 1 ()(* Jo* Egg Plums 15C leanuts ’ VAKI PA kino Siked Bean *’ Red Bcans ' •nil uAIVII U Hominy, Tomato Soup, can OV Red Kidney Raspberries. 1 v ns ’ 1A /• solid P atk > can -AtlC 1 meapple Juice 10c solid pack, can . JLvC Little Elf Dessert r Q uart J ars Powder Peanut Butter.. Large 14 oz. bot- OR- Six Rolls Toilet O* « tle Catsup, 2 for ZmC Tissue ZOC
from Cleveland, Ohio, will present an hour and a halt ot song Saturday evening. September 22, at the Adams County Holiness Association tabernacle at Monroe. The program will begin at 7:30 o'clock. The public is Invited Those who have heard this organisation before will remember “Lacy", the extra high tenor, who seems to know no limit upward. If you have never heard this organization you have missed a real treat, so come Sat. urday evening and hear these songsters. o Antioch M. B. C. Pastor Harold W. Spencer George H. Bright, Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a. in. Morning worship, 10:30 a. m. v Young Peoples Band. 7:30 p. m„ Arthur Fosnough, leader. Prayer service Wednesday, 7:30 p. ni. Come to Antioch and worship with us. o Calvary Evangelical Church Sunday school at 9:30, James Barr, supt. Prayer and praise service at 10:30 conducted by the class leader. Worship with sermon by Rev. M. W. Sundermann on Thursday night. This church is making plans for a community revival meeting to open Nov. 4th with the Rev. J. O. Mosier, of Van Wert, evangelist. STRIKE PEACE I. LOOMS CLOSER AFTER REQUEST FROM PAGE ONE) board’s program for adjusting problems in the industry was received without comment at the office of Francis J. Gorman, strike leader. Members of the textile union's executive council were hastening here for a conference at whicll a formal decision will be made. Many of them are in strike areas and may not be able to reach Washington until late tonight. The meeting was called by Gorman, immediately after receiving the report of the board headed by Gov. Winant. At the same time George A. Sloan, president of the cotton textile institute and spokes, man for industry, prepared to poll mill owners on their reaction to the findings. It was considered probable that an order to end the strike would be conditioned upon acceptance by the industry of the Winant recom. inundations as a basis for solution of the conflict. President Roosevelt and Becretarjpkjf Labor Frances Perkins exsatisfaction at the work of the board and great hope that solution of the strike would be effected. Interpretations ■of the report by labor and management differed. Gorman characterized the report as an "indictment of management'
' DECATUR BAYLY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1934.
but would not indicate whether the strike would be called off prior to conferring with the executive council. Sloan said the recommendations were concerned primarily with machinery for administering the textile code and that the board had recognised "the far reaching improvements for employes" effected by the code. ”1 will confer promptly with lumbers of the cotton textile code authority," he said, "so as to determine what means they will take to ascertain the views of the industry" As the peace possibility was being considered, plans went forward to add 20,000 dyers to the strike ranks Monday and the national guard was resorted to in another state—Massachusetts —in an effort to avert violence. Proposals of the board were: Creation of an impartial three, man board similar to the steel lab. or board and the national labor relations board to protect labor's collective bargaining rights and other labor provisions of the code. An independent study by the department of labor and the federal trade commission of economic conditions in the industry with a view to discovering what changes in hours and wages can be made. Supervision of the stretchout by the proposed textile labor relations board and creation of a special committee to study the problem and recommend permanent measures- not later than January 1. Study by the labor department of job classifications as an aid toward preventing minimum code wages becoming maximum wages. JAPAN DAMAGED BY TIDAL WAVE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) school buildings over the children at their studies, and washed ashore scores of vessels, some of them weighing 1.500 tons and more. From the ruins of the schools rescuers here dug the bodies of 310 teachers and pupils. In Kyoto, 25 miles north, the bodies of Rfi children and three teachers were recovered from the debris. Elsewhere through the prefecture the toll was as heavy and the total listed officially had reached 412 dead and 1.354 injured among the school children tonight. Among the most pitiful sights amid the devastation were the efforts of pet dogs to 'dig their way through the wreckage to where their little playmates had been buried.
$2.95 $3.95 Snappy new styles in the popular colors. Select your New Fall Hat from our large stock. SHEETS BROS.
PROTECT your self from motor ists who drive like escaped lunatics— JiTNA-IZI /Etna Combination Automobile In surance may be written to cover ever; insurable motoring hazard. Aetna Life Insurance Co. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. Agents Decatur, Ind. Phone 358 lllllilfillllllll
JAMES CURLEY IS NOMINATED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE corner fight, trailed hopelessly. The senatorial race in November will involve: David Ignatius Walsh, a figure in Massachusetts politics for nearly 35 years, who seeks a fourth term. Robert M. (Bob) Washburn, author, lawyer, caustic columnist, and president of the (Theodore) Roosevelt club, who "retired" from politics back in 1916 when he declined to run for a 10th terra in the legislature. — o Baptist Meeting Here Next Year The 95th session of the Salamonia Association of the Baptist chun hes will be held in the First Baptist
Dixie Queen Markets QUALITY MARKET Phone 195 Free Delivery Daily POTATOES U. S. No. 1 QP Home Grown.. IQ., Peck Peck SWEET POTATOES, 6 lbs. 25c ONIONS. 6 lbs. 25c Radishes, Carrots. Beets, Turnips, Parsnips. Head Lettuce, Leaf Lettuce, Cauliflower, Egg Plant, Cucumbers, Mangoes, etc. WATERMELONS Guaranteed Red and Sweet ») for OfC ?» “We plug ’em” O tetlv Oranges, seedless, dz 19c I i Lemons Sunkist doz 19c Grape Fruit,.. 2 for Lvc • * Cocoanuts fresh 2 for 15 California Grapes. Cranberries. Bananas, Peaches. Apples, Plums, etc. CEL E R Y Kalamazoo, Tender and Sweet stalks WHOLESALE 157 N. 2nd st. RETAIL FRUITS VEGETABLES
Fisher & Harris Phones 3 and 4 Fine Groceries
Sugar, Cane Granulated 10 pounds ...,55c lx Non Caking Powdered Sugar 1 n 2 pound pkgs.. 11l Sweet Potatoes, New Jersey, 7 pound 4c Solid Ripe 9K/» Tomatoes. 10 Ib.atetlC Crackers i Q 2 pound box... AOC Ginger Snaps 1 A pound ivl Onions, No. 1 OQn Yellow, 101 b Macaroni, short cut, 3 lbs Spaghetti, 1 r 2 lb. box l DC Peanut Butter, quart jar, 2 pound net Posturn, Instant OQ.. large can O*7V Posturn Cereal 99/* large pkg Drano, Bowlene or Sani-Flush „ can teii±C Staleys Laundry Starch, LT nd 20c Quick Naptha Laundry Soap. 9Qp 10 bars te’Jl Fels Naptha 9Qz» Soap, 5 bars... ti’)l ( hipso I r large pkg lvU 20 Mule Team Borax Chips, 2 large packages tejeJV W hole W heat OQp Flour, 5 tbs. . .. U Yellow' Granulated Fresh Corn O K ~ Meal, 8 lbs tedl 3 pounds 10c Battleship Brandl r Mustard, qt. jar, JLDU Babbits Cleaner 1 3 large cans - • • A VV
church In this city next year, it wan Munuunced at the annual meeting held at the Walnut street Baptist church in Muncie, Wednesday. Delegates from the Decatur church were Mrs. H. N. Shroll, Miss Jessie Winner. Mrs. 8. E. Shamp. I Mrs. Curite Moser and Rev. A. B. Brown. Officers elected at the meeting were: moderator, Dr. Frank Kroner, Muncie; vlre-moderab r. Rev. W- J. I Crowder, Montpelier; secretarytreasurer, Mrs. J. K. Reynolds, i Bluffton, and chairman of religious ( education, C. K. Bell, Decatur. Detector Located Lost Radium Springfield. Mass. -<U.R>—A speck of radium, valued at $4,000, care, lessly discarded in a rubbish barrel | and carted away by city employes, | was located through use of a special detector. Get the Habit — Trade at Homa
French Bird Seed, 2 pkgs. ... mmC Flour, Farmers Cream, general purpose flour. 24 1b5....t70C McKensie New Pancake Flour, large >l*., bag . tetll Syrup, Golden No. 10 gallon. .. No. 5, '/i gallon.. 32c Log Cabin 9Q/» Syrup, tin Toilet Paper, 4 1Q „ 1000 sheet rolls. At/C Cabbage, hard 9f*/» heads, 10 lbs. .. teul Heavv Galvaniz- PQ ed Wash Tubs.. Ot/U Raisins, Seed- 9Hv/» less, 3 tbs Milk, Eagle 90/* Brand, can .... teVL Steel W 001, 1 2 -10 c pkgs.... Ivl S.O.S. for cleaning, 2 large pkgs.JteDU Molasses Cook- 1 f ies, 2 dozen.... AmV Blue Dove Orleans Baking Molasses No. 5, •/: gallon Special W ash QQp Boards O «z V All Zinc W ash Boards v’lv Brass W ash Boards VW Oranges, Sun- 9Q/» Kist, dozen .... V High Test Lye 3 cans Red Seal Lye 1 flp can AW Stock Salt AQp 50 lb. blocks. . V Balls Fruit Jars r 7Qp quarts, dozen .. • «/V Pinta, dozen .... 69c Heavy Fruit Jar Rubbers 6 dozen te’Jl dozen 5c Full assortment Fruits and Vegetables
Choicest Meats In r A-wTSfrwy The City REAL SPECIALS Nice Spring QO„ Chickens, lb teOV mrr Mutsehler’s A IL/% AC A N t Henß, . vOTwe wS 4jC Our Best Sliced Qf|/a " : Salad Dressing r£2sc Swiss Cheese, lb,. . teOU Malt Cottage Cheese pt. 10c Old Bremen S Boneless. No W aste !■ ft 2ca " b b b nr I ISnPound 25c, 21b Blue Ribbon d» 1 QK — ■ ■ Malt, 2 cans., tpl •***? Beef Tenderloin Paddies Ih 25c 3 Hamberger T g lb 10c VEAL STEAK or CHOPS lb 20c Butter Fresh Creamery lb 33c; 2 lbs 65c Coffee Register 3 lbssl.oo Fresh Beef to Stew 3 lbs 25c SPEC IA L S Veal NUCOA | Plenty Fancy Swiss Steaks, Paddies Oleopounded ready 1 Qn for pan. tb lot luargerine vi?ai Try Them ' L Choice Beef Roasts from pound L 1 V E R Prime Beef 1 r 0n P 16c 35c Large Loaf Miller’s Q j I VW 2 lbs. 30c lb. Trv Our Minute Steaks, r t lC " d “ 25C g(j Tr ja r.' r .....25c i )■«■ b- ne SUU Fresh Spare Ribs SUGAR CURED SMOKED OKp Plenty Pork Whole or half, lb. " Tenderloins 7777 SUGAR CURED IP, Hearts and Tongues picnics, in IOC , Nice Pork Chops L i A l lD 1 'w Pound 1 ,b Honey Loaf, lb3oc Sausage, Country jiPHyZr 2 P° u,,ds ODC Shoulder Ribs or 9(k* Neck Bones, 3 lbs. DIAMOND MATCHES 5 pkgs . MACARONI F" P 1 680XE5 ......29c ?X AGHETTI .3Sc FRANKFORTS, T . f corn PUDDING or 1 .! JiC ?! j cWffiCH BOLOGNA, 2 lbs... Patn , ck ,lcni ‘> * ' Fresh Home Made < tmthvre .... Weiners, lb Red Fox Ale . $3.00 2 )bs f()r 35c Berghoff .... $2.50 LIL Y OL E O 9Sc Wooden Shoc • $ 2,65 and bottles. KOSHER DILL PICKLES 3 for 10c DELIVERIES TO ANY PARTS OF CITY ANY TIME. Phones 106 or 107 PLEASE ORDER EARLY FOR REAL SERVICE.
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