Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 141, Decatur, Adams County, 14 June 1935 — Page 6
Page Six
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Edna Hoile, who sustained a fractured toe recently, w e able to be uptown today. “I SUFFERED WITH CONSTIPATION* FOR SIXTEENYEARS’ ’ Then All-Bran Brought Relief to Mr. McNeil We quote from his unsolicited letter: “I suffered with constipation* for 16 years. Finally, I started using: Kellogg’s All-Bran in connection with other nourishing foods. “I consider myself a well man at this time, not having had an attack for over two years. I am sure AllBran helped wonderfully by overcoming constipation*.”—Mr. L. M. McNeil, Lockwood, W. Va. •Constipation due to insufficient ••bulk” in meals. Tests show Kellogg’s All-Bran provides gentle “bulk” to aid elimination. Also vitamin B and iron. This ‘'bulk” resists digestion better than the fiber in fruits and vegetables, so it is more effective. Isn’t this food safer than risking patent medicines? Two tablespoon- ' fuls of All-Bran daily are usually sufficient. If seriously constipated, I use with each meal. See your doc- j tor, if you do not get relief. Use as. a cereal with milk or
cream, or in cooking. Sold by all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek.
Keep on the Sunny Side of Life
THE THRIFT SHOW Variety of 't*‘ --xrA i V JPyjjWSk 'i Fresh Garden | Vegetables ■! L&Lsi | V'tSSew ‘ J Fresh g> BANANAS STRAW- 11 ' Aellow, Ripe BEKRIES. 5 lbs. 25 C NEW POTATOES 10 lbs. 23c ? tomatoes it. i n c Fresh. Red Ripe. AW ■ ■ '■ 4 Oranges, dozen ... 25c New Cabbage. Ib. .. 1c SBaßfe ~ '■ Jjsis* s ' j Lemons, 300 size, It dozen 25c Pineapple, 2 for .. 29c Little Elf Cake Flour, 5 lb. bag 29c FT OIT R Little Elf Spices. 3 sift top cans 25c MtoO|k ±j vu. av Little E)f Fruit Pectin 3 pkgs 25c ragogfc r> ia at ai o< tt. «i o- Litt,e Elf Vinegar. 24 oz 10c MHO Gold Medal -1 To. sl.oo Little Elf Marshmallows, Boz 9c Burco, 21 Ib. bag . . 75c Little Elf Sweet Pickles. 10 oz. jar ... 15c Grapenuts Flakes, 2 pkgs 19c Buckeye, 24 Ib. bag 73c Wheaties, 2 pkgs 23c ■—■ ■ Certo, bottle 25c -i iM ELF BREAD FLOUR 24 lb. bag 93c BURCO COFFEE 9 !bs - DEAL No 1 “ Ouv large 2'/ 2 cans LITTLE ELF MILK .... 3 cans 20c GINGER ALE 2 24 oz. IQ C )ors9c PRUNES, Little Elf 9 lb- pkg. 91 p Little Elf Can Goods &lv DEAL No. 2 Minute Tapioca, pkg 10c Paper Napkins, 60 in No. 2 cans Bread, 1/ 2 tb. loaf, S for 25c cello pkg. Sc PORK AND BEANS, PEAS, Ice-Cre-Mix. 3 pkqs 25c Paper Plates, dozen 9c GREEN BEANS, CORN, Little Elf Sweet Corn Burco Brooms, all corn TOMATOES 2 cans 29c each ... ._ 47c ALL Spring Time Peas, Elf Bathroom Tissue. i,'z.i> J") rj 4 4 No. 2 cans 25c 4 rolls —25 c —■ Little Elf Applebutter, 20 Mule Team Borax, __ quart 19c pound pkg. . 15c A "n! 41 -dMFIK'T Chase A Sanborn Coffee Oxvdol, laroe pkg. 21c pound -26 c Old Dutch Cleanser. f JF W jLkl Wax Paper. 30 ft. roll 5c 2 cans 15c ’’“j 22 - u3R“" > "'3moS King Bee June Peas, Elf Sliced Pineapple ' ' 2 cans 23c 2 laroe cans 45c v E A L BEEF MVOI Bursle >'’ s £ ROAST, ib 23c 1 ■ ICED TEA "■•■•••**. round*steak ib. 2b<- O v £: 23c ROAST, lb 25c — n nm p stores 61i'F7 SKt:r£ SX"T.2Oc butter, ib...J7c QUALITY FOOD MARKET 121 Second DECATUR, Indiana Phone 192 W TMCU&A ' 1 _
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NBA EXTENSION IS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE tlon was urged by senate Democratic leaders today as a means of | I "lessening the major hazards of our civilization.” As the senate began debate on I the broad program, Sen. Pat Harrison, D„ Miss., explained the beneI tits it seeks to provide for the aged and needy. “In general,” he said, "the purI poses of this legislation are to in- ! itiate a permanent program of assistance to our American citizens in meeting some of the major economic hazards of life. “It is not intended as emergency legislation, to cope with an emergency situation, but rather it is designed as a well-rounded program of attack on principal causes of insecurity which existed prior to the depression and which we may 1 expect to continue in the years to | come.” DEATH TOLL OF CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE to wear crepe on their coat sleeve for five days, and flags of all labor front buildings will remain at half mast until after the funerals. Hundreds of the 10,000 employes i of the plant, the most modern in I Germany and the largest of its 1 sort, were suffering from shock. ' Thousands of persons for miles around still were jumpy. No cause for the explosion had been determined. A thorough investigation was expected as soon as the ruins cooled. Reports of a death list running into hundreds or thousands were denounced officially as false. Villagers far enough away from
the factory to distinguish clearly heard four great explosions. The : first was at 4:30 p. m.. the second immediately after that, the third at 5:45 and the last at 7:30. Germans as a whole did not learn of the explosions until 10 p. m. when the news was given over the wirelese. As the first blast occurred, in a small room of one of the many factory buildings, fire started. The flames ate their way along, to cause other explosions. Windows were shattered for miles around the village of Reinsdorf. Debrie injured fleeing vilI lagers. POISONED MEN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE work with them were affected. The lunches were prepared Wednesday night and issued to the men as they departed for the various projects yesterday morning. Coy said the would await a chemical analysis before making u definite statement regarding the cause of the epidemic. Physicians said, however, that analysis would not show whether food was deteriorated. JUDGE ORDERS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE in federal court last November on mail frajid charges. Later the state tried unsuccessfully to convict him of embezzlement. In the bankruptcy law trial the government charged that the two Insults and Stuart, as directors of the Corporation Securities company, transferred $2,330,000 in assets of the company when it was tottering on the verge of bank-
DECAtUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1935.
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• ; ruptcy. Thompson, attorney for Insull I throughout his ordeals, said in I arguing the motion for a directed verdict that the government's tes--1 timony, which consumed only two i days was built from only a dozen witnesses, “said nothing more than we admitted in our opening statement.” Insull, dapper; with cane and flower in his button-hole, appeared amazed at the abrupt ending of the ; trial. He listened intently throughout the hour-long arguments for the directed verdicts and jerked forward in his chair when John Knox —sent here from New York to preside over the trial—announced his decision. He recovered his composure, walked to the witness box and shook the hands of the jurors. “I want to thank you gentlemen.” he said. “It was a pleasure knowing you.” To newspaper men he had nothing to say. INTERVENTION OF CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE danger of complete power failure, as only a few men are needed to operate the machinery, mainly automatic, which stokes the boilers and runs the huge dynamos. Only sabotage or breakdown in the machinery could effectively halt the flow of current, it was indicated. Company officials said all normal manufacturing and do- ( mestic needs were being supplied, I There remained the threat, how- ' ever, that many factory workers I might be thrown out of employ-; ment and thousands of homes and | offices darkened in event ths; strikers succeeded in making the walkout completely effective. o Orders Arrest Os Drunken Drivers : Indianapolis, Ind.. June 14 —(UP) 1 —Arrest of drunken automobile drivers was ordered today by Ray J. Hinkle, chief of the state excise I police force. The excise force will enforce all types of laws involving liquor and will not confine its activities to en-1 forcing laws regulating beer and | liquor dealers. Hinkle explained. Robert Nordhoff, Jasper, has been I appointed lieutenant in charge of the southern section of the state, I Hinkle announced. o Murderer Os Six Executed Today | Quebec, Que., June 14 —(UP) —I | J. Respire Gilodeau, 45, former prospector ahd mail carrier who ran amuck list fall and killed six per-! sons, was hanged at 8:04 A. M. to-| day in Quebec jail. Bilodeau was seized with |a> fit of homicidal madness last year follow-| ing his dismissal from the post office, and shot and killed five of his closest relatives and then murdered this former superior, Actave o Fiset, postal inspector. An appeal on the grounds of in- J sanity was made following his conviction but it was dismissed. |Ririi WHY allow the thought of “uninvited guests” in your empty house to poison your vaca« tion day dreams? AJTNA-IZE An Aitna Residence Burglary Policy! eya for what the burglar steals. And r any damage he may do. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. Aetna Life Insurance Co. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. Agents Decatur, Ind. Phone 358 llliiiiAiiiuill
! - - In Defense of Plumbe r s Marshfield, Ore. —(U.K) —It's more than tradition It's good advertising — that plumbers forget their tools. “Sure we sometimes forget our tools,” a plumber said at the state convention of his craft here. But it’s good advertising, and has made a lot of people think about us, even if they do cuss sometimes.” Love Prefers Loveland Ixtveland, Colo. — (U.K) — “Loveland” meant more than a city <o Miss Madonna Saltsburg of Hold■redge, Neb., and Ralph R. Propp of Sidney, la. Because the name of the town had such a romantic ring, the couple drove 258 miles.
DU ANO THE NEW ' I CAN IS SO EASY ITO OPEN/ -r . WK | sos BELL’S ~ Winchester House p ‘” s " 5 * Cash Grocery PH 2^ E Forest Rose Flour for Bread or Pastry, 24*4 lbs. 69c Navy Beans. Hand Picked — 6 lbs 25c Pumpkin — 3 large cans 25c Fancy Cut Green Beans — 3 cans 25c < Log Cabin Golden Syrup — per gallon 53c TEA—Bulk — Per pound 19c. 29c and 39c P & G — 6 large bars 25c O. K. SOAP — 6 large bars 25c CRISCO — Large — 3 pound can 58c WILLSHIRE or MILLER’S BREAD—I *? lb- loaf 9c SEED POTATOES—RuraI Russets—Bushel .... 55c COCOA — 2 pound can 19c SUNKIST ORANGES—Dozen .. 15c. 19c. 25c and 45c Miller’s Corn Flakes — large package 10c j That Good Full Cream Cheese — pound 19c We Sell McMillen's Feeds I ' I I f 11 1 ■ »■ 1111 I —— Honey Cookies, doz. 10c Cucumbers, 3 for 10c j Good Country Butter Golden Wax Beans pound 30c pound 7*/yC Cream Choc. Drops Lemons, doz. 23c pound 15c Strawberries, Qt. .. 15c Chocolate Carmels th 15 Peaches. 6 pounds 25c Gum Drops, lb. ... 10c Cantelope. each ... 15c Sugar Cookies. 2 lb. 25c New Potatoes. 10 lb 25c i Pink Salmon, 2 for 25c Tomatoes, Red Ripe. Chef Tea. 15c value 10c pound 10c Spaghetti, Diced Carrots. Kraut. Peas. Pork & P „ Beans. Hominy. Red Beans, and Kidnev Beans eJU We have a Full Line of Fresh and Smoked Meats. Appelman’s Grocery] FREE DELIVERY PHONE 215 - 219 Palmolive Soap Burco Flour 4 bars 19c 24 lb. bag 79c Super Suds, large . 19c Bisquick, Large ... 35c 2 Small 19c Small 20c P & G Soap Ginger Ale, jl bars . large bottle ■,... 10c Home Grown Strawberries Icing Powder Corn and Green Box 10c Beans, can 10c Minute Tapioca, Tomato Juice, Box 12c 2 cans 19c Marshmallows Prepared Spaghetti pound • 10c Large can 10c Toilet Tissue ™ 3 forl9c Log Cabin Syrup Grape Nut Flakes table size 22c 2 boxes 22c (Lg. Glass Plate Free) (Cream Pitcher Free) Sur. Jell, for preserve, Sfe,* b °’“ 2 boxes 25c 1 <»*t i oasties Crisco, 3 lb. can... 63c u France, 3 pkgs. 25c Certo, bottle 28c Vegetable Soup v ? C C J 17c Pork & Beans, Van- Imperial Coffee, lb. 19c Camp, 3 Ex Lg cans 29c Champion Coffee, Peas, 3 No. 2 cans 25c pound 23c Burco Cocoa, Nu Blend Coffee 1 pound box .... 10c pound 25c Jell-O, 3 pkgs 20c We-Grind-Em.
through the rain and over extreme- 1 »1y rough und muddy roods, recent-1 - 'ly to be married here. r t Egg Bandit Sought • Pueblo. Colo.— (U.R) — Police re- . cently sought an “egg-breaking i bandit." The robber is an unusual I type in that he not only robbed • houses but he stole eggs from the refrigerators and broke them on pianos in the living rooms of Pueblo homes. — o i J. C. Miller of Marshall street ■ has one of the most attractive rose 1 arbors in the city. The arbor is - completely covered with roses bearing fifty to sixty blooms on , each branch.
F SCHMITTS SPECIAL THIS WEEK-ENIT Large Spring Chickens to fry 32c ft Home Baked Ham with cloves’and brown sugar, and all cuts Genuin. NATIVE SPRINT; LAMB. Specials for Saturday Rib Plate Boiling Beef Meaty Beef Roast JScft Fresh Ground Hamberger 15c ft I Special Short Steaks 25c ft Veal Steak or Chops 25c lb Fresh Hog or Calf Brains l.vib Frankforts or Bologna . 2 ft. f Smoked Jowels < H< ”" eCured .... 23c ft I Hockless Picnic Hams 20c lb BULK LARI) .... 2 lbs. for Quick Naptha Soap, 5 bars .... 10t Perfect’s Merritt Coffee .. 18c lb Nucoa Margarine 22c lb Whole Tomatoes, 2 cans 25c Large Bottle Catsup, 2 for .. . . 25c No. 2 can Cherries, 2 for 25c Large can Peaches (insyrup) 2 cans i No. 2 1 /i can Green Gage Plums, 2 for 2 A nice assortment of Cold Meats, SpicedHi Liver Cheese, Braunsweiger, German Ha Pressed Ham, Baked Ham, \ cal Boloq and Home Baked Meat Loaf special ford week end. Our Meats are all Native Honie-dre -ed. See Our Window Display! Free Prompt and Sanitary Delivery Phones 95 or 96. ‘ HITE’S GROCER? Plenty of parking space I ‘HONEs <1 3 You will be delighted in choosing from our large assortment of fine (’"xL at P . that fit your budget. Old Potatoes 100 pound bag Delicious Lunch- QAp HOMING eon Meat. lb. .. < a n • • t Pork Lean ß i 5 bxs. Snow Boy 1 Ap (a n ', w Washing Powder-LW | ; ne Granulated™* Prunes OKp 25 ,b ’ baR $P 3 lbs AidV i Burco Coffee -- King Bee Tomato r Vegetable boup So?P- can June Peas Ojf Pels and Carrol 8 5( Evergreen 1 An Sveet Corn, can LW <‘» n FRUIT DEAL » „ . 2 lb- J !,r Fancy Peaches OFC/* verves :*7 large cans, 2 )>iaches ()| . .\ p Lima Beans s ’ ze ’’ Red Bean, gp * ■ can ■ _ No 2 can Peas, Fl VEGETABLE DEAL 1 «*" n 4 n heavy syrup Cocoa, Pure. 1A ( , . f()r . ■ pound can .... BANANAS jl
