Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 109, Decatur, Adams County, 7 May 1937 — Page 7
i TiFflOP VALUES l
lit R( HES J Ev angelical Church S Lozier. Minister nl ‘ suiul.i.' Ml - i-up. i jiii'hib'iit. I l :.i.i'l i i.ii’-c ||®y tmi-'l.i' W.u.hip sermon. — ■ ■Union Chapel be Mother's Pay. ( ||^H) U r wil! be iribiih "I |BkK| P ' K" 1 " 1 " l " ,lwrs ’ wbo i to make America .himh. ■ observe this day. The men ■^ u ,.! aid lure complete Sunday School, and '■ijeSinl program during the eri.d Those Sunday ordinarily taught
F SCHMITT’S MEAT MARKET I W_ WE SELL AS WE AI)VER TI S E I MfrIRDAY SPECIALS! Home Grown~P()TATOES per peck __ 35c Roast Beef Arm Roast I'jjg BEEF BOIL IOC HeFsteak Ijic Keef Bont ‘ less Swiss 21c J*? 11 "*} ? r Sirloin 2$C KesITgROUND IT jc Fresh Beef or 121 C qncFiT HVFR 12fC ■mBURGER Pork HEARTS __ ** 2V SIJ( El) Ll\ ER — ,>,>,»,- .» PORK CHOPS VEAL SB I *» a*_ veal roast PORK Roast 22c End Cut sT E w I ■dies or STEAK and Steak 2?C 15C ™ _______ 35c BULK PEPPER | Laundry Soap I I 2 for SMOKED PICNICS 22c l OC Bar 2MC ■ft-NKS. Sliced or Halves QMOKF.D I ■OGNA. * lb* -• PEACHES, 1 Mll7 2® MEAT Large can *7 JOWLS
|& U* ji Children Just Love Ice Cream 1- ■ and MOTHER does too! So CLOVERLEAF Dealers | in Decatur are featuring a “Mother’s Day Special” I Now, kiddies young and old, fLGVIiRLEAF k L • M 4k™. in to help celebrate this dearly be sure to bring Mother in loved day of the year, MOTHfor a “MOTHER'S DAY ER’S DAY, and they are ofSPECIAL” a delicious sundae sering a delicious MOTHER’S I that she will enjoy. t>A\ SPECIAL. ! Bring your Mother, or someone’s mother in tor the treat of a MOTHER’S DA\ SPEC I AL. You’ll Be Served A SPECIAL AT ALL CLOVERLEAF DEALERS.
1 by women, will be taught by tneu and young men Sunday. The pro- ? gram, which will begin promptly at 9:15 is as follows: Song. Prayer. Study of the Sunday School lesson. Secretary’s report. Guitar solo —Warren Nidliuger. Hymn—Congregation. Prayer. Reading—Sylvester Everhart. Offering. Duet—Lewis and Gerald Brown. Sermon, theme, ‘Motherhood’s : Honored Place.” By the pastor. [ Benediction. services. Earl Chase will conduct 5:30 p. m. —Christian Endeavor the Senior Society, while Ross Gunder will lead the Intermediate Society. 7:15 p. m.—Evening worship service. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. — Midweek prayer service and detailed study of the Scripture. Acts 5:34-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1937.
i|42. | Thursday. 1:30 p. m.—The Wor incu s Missionary Society will meet with Mrs. Henry Bauman and Mrs. Thurman Drew. o Decatur M. E. Circuit J. W. Reynolds, pastor Mt. Pleasant: church echool 9:30. Evening Service 7:30 p. m. Beulah Chapel: Morning worship and Mothers’ Day sermon 9:30 a. m. Church School 10:30 a. m. Pleasant Valley: 1 Church School 9:30 a. m. Preaching 10:40 a. m. . ERIE OFFICIAL 1 I (CONTINUED FROM PAGHC ONg) said, an economic readjustment. ■ Changes being made in the economic structure of the nation are • not radical, he said. 1 Pointing to the recent diflicui- • ties between labor and capital in
the automobile industry. Mr. Spor-I • leder said that this Industry's I method of dealing with labor is antiquated and largely traceable to the tact that the industry has not been removed from a seasonal basis. Norman Kruse, chemist for the , McMillen industries here, and C. M. Ellsworth, garage proprietor, were introduced as new members ' of the club. William Kuhnle was presented as the Catholic high school member of the club for the month of May. M. J. Mylott was chairman of the meeting. - o GERMAN ZEPPELIN (gpffTINUEp FROM » AOK PHjb.)., ■ vestigation. ) Dr. Haus Luther, German ambassador to the United States, • said in Lakewood, N. J., where he i visited several injured members
of the crew, that all of them able to talk reiterated their faith in llghter-than-alr ships. Speaking of the crash Luther said “it was just au accident.” Although air officials in Washington said the loss of the Zeppelin sealed the doom of such craft for use in the United States navy, later Secretary Claude A. Swan sou said the department would continue to study the possibility of their use. Dor Fuehrer Adolf Hitler In Berlin announced he was sending $12,065 to families of crew killed iu the crash. Gen. Friedrich Von Roetticher. German air attache who accompanied Luther to Lakehurst, reported to his embassy that there seemed no possibility that the crash could have been caused by firing of an incendiary bullet into the gas bags, one of the many rumors which flew around the air station. One of the two bodies recovered late today by sailors and white-jacketed survivors of the German crew, who picked through I the twisted ribs of the airship i while a cordon of soldierc held all I others away, was believed by i zeppelin officials to be that of a I stewardess, a Mrs. Imhoff. The identification was not final, however. because the body was found in the control room and officials | said it was strange that a woman I member of the crew would be in the control room. I The other body found today i was that of an unidentified min. ! Latest check by the leppeltn com- , pany showed the following known ' survivors, many of whom were critically injured: Os the 36 passengers—2l suri v Ivors. Os the 61 crew members and I officers -42 survivors. j High government officials con j verged here to investigate the j accident. One of the miraculous aspects I about the disaster was that a large percentage of the crew and passengers escaped fatal injuries. Various explanations were offered by eye witnesses and survivors for individual escapes from death. One survivor a member of the crew, said he was in one of tbe engine gondolas which was blown off the ship by the blast as it was near the ground. The gondola apparently protected him against I the explosion and he suffered comparatively minor injuries. The* fact that the ship was
I Survey Table i CLEANED | I Alley lots 1 j Baek Yards I i Front yards j I Vacant lots | I Basements | Attics | House gutters | Porches | Garages | I Furnaces | PAINTED AND ' I DECORATED Houses | Walls | Floors tor varnished) | Woodwork (or varnished j Porches or stairs | Fences | Out-Building j Screens | Roofs I Walls (papered or kalso- | mined) I Wails cleaned | PLANTED Flower boxes | Flower gardens| Vegetable gardens|l Grass plots sowed|l Shrubbery JI Trees | j MISCELLANEOUS | Rubbish piles burned jI Insect breeding places destroyed | i I Rats killed j i Fences repaired I Porches and steps repaired | I j Roofs repaired ’ Screens repaired Junk — papers — sold i Ash cans emptied Refuse cans disinfected | Refuse cans provided | Shrubbery trimmed ■ Trees trimmed I Dead trees and stumps removed PURCHASES | Number of articles Furniture and fixtures t'.iectncal appliances | , Repairs Automobile improve- | meuts and repairs |
breaking up, offering avenue for escape, and that thb explosions were less damaging than iu an enclosed area appeared to aid the survivors who managed to escape falling girders and flamiug fabric. Roosevelt Message Galveston. Tex.. May 7 —<U.R)President Roosevelt today expressed to Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler of Germany “my deepest sympathy for the tragic loss of life” in the Hindenburg disaster at Lakehurst. N. J., yesterday. The message, addressed to Hitler, said: 'I have just learned of tbe disaster to the airship Hindenburg and offer you and the German people my deepest sympathy for the tragic loss of life which resulted from this unexpected and > unhappy event." News of the disaster was received by the president aboard the U. S. S. Potomac off Port I Aransas. Tex., In the Gulf of ' Mexico where he is on a vacation 1 1 fishing .trip. I 1 An earlier message sent to I I temporary headquarters here by II Mr. Roosevelt, said: “1 am distressed to hear of the i tragedy of the Hindenburg and - extend my deepest sympathy to ■ ’ the families of passengers, officers 1 and crew who lost their lives." • Cables Response i Berlin, May 7— (U.R> —Adolf 1 Hitler, in response to President. Roosevelt's message regarding the ’ Hindenburg, cabled today as fol- ■ lows: "1 thank your excellency deeply i for the sincere words of sympathy which you addressed to me and the German people on the occa- • siou of tbe disaster which destroy-
1 SING * °£OHG ’ of ■ XAIADX rs" fckLL-.. fai iT&fc.
SALAD DRESSING Qt. ELP FL()UR TOMATOES J No. 2 Jgc 99C CORNFLAKES I@C BURCO Little Elf Big Pkg. Littie Elf Salmon, Elf Salad Mustard, pint jar 10c L OllCt I ISSUC 2 tall cans 27c Van Camp Sardines, Little Elf Pimentos, 2 large oval tins 19c tall tin 10c Armour's Star Corned Beef, KULLS Bursley's Whole Green can 21c [ * Beans, No. 2 can 15c Little Elf Kraut, large can 13c Little Elf June Peas, Little Elf Fresh Prunes, No. 1 can 10c large can 15c 1| ojJj BURCO COFFEE lb 17c B| BURSLEY’S HIGH GRADE Coffee 24c LITTLE ELF drip cut Coffee, tb 24c
Burco Icing Powder, 1 . pkg. 10c Little Elf Cake Flour, 2% Ib. pkg. 23c Seedless Raisins, 2 pkgs. 19c California Lima Beans, 2 tbs. 23c Sunshine Butter Bing Crackers, pkg 21c 5c Candy Bars — 3 for 10c Nu Drain and Nu Bowl, 1 of each 25c King Bee Brooms, heavy durable, ea. 49c Moon Rose Toilet Soap, 4 bars -19 c (with complexion cloth) Oxydol, large pkg.__ 21c sml. pkg. 9c Chipso, large pkg. _2lc sml. pkg. . 9c Ivory Soap, large- 10c 3 medium--19c Kirk's Hdw. Castile Soap, 2 bars - 9c Lava Soap, 2 bars 11c
Pineapples ura ™52.99
Oranges doz. IDr Florida —Sweet and Juicy — Fresh Peas 3 Tender — Green Grapefruit d for Florida - . “'J?** Strawberries X pints 25c
Quality Food Market 121 No. 2nd St. Free Delivery DECATUR, IND. Phone 192
HOME STORES |
ed tho airship Hindenburg." Hitler received many other I cablegrams of sympathy from the United States. i Red Men To Attend Tri-State Meeting About 20 members of the Deca- i tur Improved Order of Red Men will i leave tomorrow morning for Green-1 ville, Ohio, where they will attend a tri-state meeting of the order. The members will leave from the local lodge home at 7 o'clock. I Anyone who has not made arrange-| ments to go but would like to attend j it> asked to be at the lodge at that I time. Tho members will go f-Inst to Fort 1 Recovery, Ohio, where a special . ceremony will be conducted. The “trail” will then proceed to Green-j ville. , 0 GERMAN ZEPPELIN | .(gQNTtNTTEip FROM PA <llß Q NR) “Work continues.” “I believe in the possibility of sabotage’’ Eckener eaid. “Because j on every trip to the United States, ’ particularly when the German air liner visited the Chicago exposition, we received many threatening letters.” ■ | Asked whether an infernal maI chine could have been placed a- , board Eckener said it could scarce- | ly have been in a passenger’s lug- j ' gage because a careful inspection is made before each trip. On the other hand, he did not exclude the poeI sibility of a shot having been fired, the sound being drowned out by the motors.
SPRING SONG OF VALLIES It’s a lucky family that gets a variety of tasty, delicious salads every day. Wise housewives know that LITTLE ELF FOODS add that extra flavor which means so much in a salad. Now is the time to lay in a supply of salad “makings.” Visit your nearby HOME STORE for the best values in salad ingredients. There you will find a complete assortment of foods at economical prices.
■■ mb a ■ Steak or Roast, lb. 20c If L I CHOPS Ib. 25c W rmA i Pocket Roast or Stew, 12 Vic ■ ■■ f B Boneless Patties. lb. 25c BONELESS BEEE STEAK a or SWISS STEAK, lb. Choice Young <S BEEF ROASTIb. lyV i’ORK CHOPS lb
Bananas 4 lbs. Potatoes 19 lbs. Onions 2 tbs. 12c New Texas Wax - Jft Home Store Butter, lb. 35c I
Eckener Insisted that if tho catastrophe were accidental, It certainly wae not because of faulty construction. He added ft was conceivable the ehip was struck by lightning explaining: “Such an accident cannot happen en route becamse the ship herself Is absolutely proof ago!net lightning while the gas compartment? are closed but it is possible that lightning might have struck while she was maneuvering, when highly inflammable hydrogen was being discharged.”
CONSTIPATION CUTS DOWN YOUR ENERGY, DULLS HAPPINESS Don’t let common constipation take all the fun out of living. This I condition drains your vitality and enthusiasm. It may also be the cause of dull headaches, poor appetite, sleeplessness. You feel punk. Why endure half-sick days when you can correct constipation due to meals low in “bulk” by eating a delicious cereal? Millions of people have used Kellogg’s All-Bran with satisfactory results. Laboratory tests prove it’s safe and effective. Within the body, All-Bran absorbs twice its weight in water, and gently cleanses the intestines. Isn’t this food better than taking weakenI ing pills and drugs? Eat two tablespoonfuls daily. Three times daily, in severe cases. Serve as a cereal with milk or cream, or in recipes. Sold by all grocers. Made and guaranteed, by Kellogg in Battle Creek.
ELF SWEET PICKLES, 10 oz. jar 15c RED KIDNEY BEANS, Elf No. 2 can 10c SLI. PINEAPPLE, Little Elf large can 23c ASPARAGUS, Little Efl, No. 1 tall tin 19c ELF’ GELATIN Dessert, 3 pkgs. 15c (lime or lemon for salads) with Sherbet
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