Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 138, Decatur, Adams County, 11 June 1937 — Page 7
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K( ,iES < u E. Circuit 1 R U'o’*-'"'" 1 ' I '' p, “ tor pieaiant UMiooi. « :3 ° •*■ ,n ;. afl „ i IJB B euiah Chapd I ®W»laaaant valley I school |Kw' M ' E Church I " E ' jen'k”'. 10.30 a. ■HTflower, pastor. pray.-f s' t'vice, Tues(■Heli P- lIL m B. C. Church Flesher, < Mrs. superintendent. sermon. I'o 15 a. in. No upon the name of the ■K ,iil pay my vow « Ull, ° - — _^H, r . Evangelical Church S. Lozier, minister ffi .. Sunday School. Koi superintendent. WK. , r v ..ml prai ■■ jBR. -o-y Worship - -o — union Chapel i. F. Knepp, pastor School. 9,T."> a. m. The marked the best present year. Sunday School awaits you
I Stult’s HOME Grocery PHONE 88 or 98 C 9 EVERYTHING FOR THE PICNIC. CAMPOREE J AND FIREMEN’S CONVENTION! ■| Wonderful Burco Coffeel9c «A pound Cloth BANANAS Satisfaction Coffee 19c * V PURE gM- ■ - Chase & Sanhorn , 29c CANE SUGAR 3 5 IbS ' MONARCH COFFEE Oranges, dozl9c EX Vacuum Tin. pound 29c Lemons 3 for 10c ■JELL-O, pkg. C C 2 pounds 55c I Cauliflower, each 23c ■ *<; Flavors of the Real '* pound tin <9c HOME GROWN with the Big Red Let- M. J. B. Coffee STRAW BERRIES |Hkrs on the box! 3 th. for 95c FULL <g ■» .— M JELL-0 ICE CREAM MIX (H \ ■ hniiia. Tutti- NEW—Fancy wfrutti, etc. JLVv COOKIES, pound 19c PEERLESS fi£ ft m ■ Peaches ll' r ;i n< 2 for LAST CHANCE FLOUR, Only /jpV ■ reatnes. ig. cans, 2 for Jac BIG 2 pOUND BOX GOLD MEDAL sl.lO ig. cans, each 19c SODA fl fit Saturday Only! ■ Old Fashioned Sliced CRACKERS * / ~ . ■ Peaches. 3 for 69c 1 " rl Howard ■ Big Full Cans! ORDER BUNS Finest T °IUET TISSUE ■ Pineapple, Ig. can 23c and BISCUITS Early! Large Roll FREE! ■ Peanut Butter, Ib.ZZZ 15c Dinner Biscuits, doz. 5c with purchase of 3 rolls. ■ 2 pound Apple Butter 25c Big Buns. doz. 15c - ‘ ■ Strawberry Preserves 23e BIG LOAVES JCg QUARTORANGE, ■ Corn Flakes, pkg.loc BREAD — 3 lor GINGER ALE, etc. Jlx size Pickles. hottie 10c RH’PEED HEAI No bottle ( . h . ir{fe ■ 19c size Pickles, bottle 15c an( * ‘ 1 •'* *■ A—- — OUVES, Alll sizes 60c Value ma browns pie ■ I lain and Stuffed.for JUST M|X and BAKE! ■ MILD CREAM CHEESE — poundl9c OLEO. 2 lbs. 29c
SORG’S MARKET Successor to Schmitt Market. 107 North 2nd Streel. FREE delivery to all parts of city PHONES »■-> <>r Illi stock SATURDAY SPECIALS KtL 191 c ,™ s n» Hamburg lb BEEF BOIL b ET~PLATE lb. IQc — I g fi J Machine Sliced & *»« I Beef Steak lb &■ refc TRUCK".ROAST lb 17 c a. 1 V'EAI ifHI RY I OLEO BREAD SWEET, dozen 15c £ ' AL COLBI - „ nr DILLS, each 5-. paddies cream 141/oc lb. 3 for 25c mixed, pint— 19c Boneless I Cheese-- 11
, I at our school. | 10:15 a. m.-At this service, we i will have the concert male quartet of Indiana Central college with ( 6:30 p. m.-Christian Endeavor | services Leaders, for the inter [mediates, Lewis Brown; the lead I er for the Seniors will be announcI ed Sunday. 7:15 p. m.—Worship service Wednesday, 7:30 p. m — Mid nT ~ BrVlCe a,ld “‘“dies in the Hook of Acts 1 Thursday. 1:30 p. m.-Meeting |of the W. M. 8, with Mrs I f I Knepp. 6:15 West Monroe street’ —~o—- — Notre Dame Proiessor Heads Alaskan Trip South Bend, Ind., June n—(VP) Rev. Raymond W. Murray, professor of anthropology at Notre Dame 1 University, is on his way to Alaska' with a scientific expedition to search for evidence of the first tnhabitants of the North American continent. The expedition, sponsored by the American Museum of natural history and the university of Alaska 1 will excavate near Fairbanks in the I mastodon creek district. Skeletons of ipre-historlc mam-1 i moths, mastodons and other animals already have been found and' the expedition is hopeful of discov- 1 ering some evidence of the hablta • tion of man there. If so, it would j tend to verify the theory that the first occupants of North America' came from Asia byway of Alaska' some thousands of years ago. Trade In a Good Town — Decatu* * TODAY'S COMMON ERROR i Never say, “I cannot help but | see that you are sick;” say, |j "cannot help seeing.” »♦
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1937.
CHILDREN’S DAY ' PROGRAM PLANS Program Will B e Given At St. Paul Church Sunday Evening A children's day program will oe , Presented at the St. Paul church, four and one-half miles southeast <> Decatur, Sunday evening at 7 So o clock. , Tlie public is Invited to attend. | she complete program is as folblows: I Song—Choir. i Prayer— Pastor Rev. McPharen. Recitation—Virginia Railing. | Recitation—Dickey Shoaf. Recitation— Helen Railing Recitation—Vivian Beam. Recitation—John Harold Parrish. Recitation—Doyle Hawkins. Song—Tommy Noll. Song—Choir. . Recitation -Tommy Noll. Recitation—Doris Shoaf. Recitation— Earnest HLnde’ine. I Song—Class 1,2, and 3. I Recitation—Patty Noll. Recitation—Jay Martin. Recitation—Gloria Shoaf. Recitation—Rowena Randenbush i Flag Drill. Recitation — Winifred Shoaf Play—Olden Times. Remarks-By Pastor. i Collection. | Recitation—P.oma'ne Raudenbush Duet—©earn Sisters. Reading—Helen Martin. Play—Suffer The Little Children. I Recitation —Dean Reber. Recitation-Charles Mcßride. Song—Choir. Benediction. o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
I-.. ; 7 the Scener23] WaLYWOoW®
By HAKKUON CARROLL lumright, imi, Features Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD—One of the big pictures of the last six months isn't doing as well as expected around the country and Hollywood postmortems lay it
to the fl 1 m's tack of the "boy , meets girl" ele- . ment. Con se- , quently, you can expect to see ' romance rule more than ever in the movies. At Twentieth C e n t u r y-Fox, Darryl Zanuck is sending "Love Under Fire” back into pro-
r ** Pl si Loretta Young
duction, maybe for two weeks of added scenes, to get more oomph Into the romance between Loretta Young and Don Ameche. One of the added sequences will be a duet between the two, "The Language of Love". This will be the first time Loretta ever sang on the screen. Her voice is mezzo soprano. Love, or at least the attraction between (he opposite sexes, continues to do all right in Hollywood's private lives, too. Newest twosome around the play spots is Louise Hovick, the erstwhile Gypsy Rose Lee, and George Saunders, one of Hollywood's smoother heavies, whom you may remember as Madeleine Carroll’s husband in "Lloyds of London”. All this time, it seems, Franchot Tone has been annoyed by the title, "filmland's perfect gentleman". The star is gleefully exhibiting a two-page letter once written to his parents by the Hill school in Niagara Falls. The letter explained that Franchot’s presence was no longer desired by the school and labeled him a "bad influence". Before Robert Taylor left for Honolulu, he received an autographed volume from Helen Keller. t who has never seen or heard him on the screen, yet who calls him i her favorite film star. Answering Your Questions! fiallye Weston, Pittsburgh: Ronald Colman remains Hollywood's mys-tery-man. as far as romance is con- ( cerned. He and Benita Hume were seen around occasionally a while back, but Colman seems to prefer i
STATE CONTACT I ' uo^'. l ' '.y l '. E P. F. H - < .?!.? * *?? P- ! tact the person or persons who ' warned him that “it any cops are | around you’ll pay tor it and she ' will never speak again." Rhea Whitley, in charge of federal agents in the New York area, | retired immediately to temporary 1 headquarters in a private restI dence, and announced that "we are just marking time.” "We have cleared the way to permit negotiations. As tar as payment of ransom is concerned, it is up to Mr. Parsons. We do nothing in these cases to interfere with the safety of the victim, which is our prime consideration ” | Whitley said that any theory was "purely speculative.” He added that “certain things” indicated that the crime was the work of an amateur. ‘ The kidnaping came as a com-
■Baa BARGAINS
the company of his cronies, the Warner Baxter*, Bill Powell and Ronald's manager, William Hawlflr. —■■■ ■ ■ k t The movies are breaking yp another team of entertainers, the three radio rogues. Henry Taylor, who impersonate* Bing Crosby, Fred Allen and Ben Bernie in the act, has dropped out after six years to become a character actor. His first job is a gardener in the Myrna Loy-William Powell picture, "Double Wedding". It took plenty of talk for Warner Brothers to persuade Errol Flynn to remove a good luck chain from his neck for prize fight scenes in "The Perfect Specimen". The charm was made from the first nugget taken out of the New Guinea gold fields. It was given to Flynn eight years ago by a priest. The actor takes it off for the first time for the picture. Chatter. . . . Edgar Bergen, the ventriloquist, stole the show from George Olsen's band at their joint premiere at the Cocoanut Grov*. Called to the microphone, Eddie Cantor said he’d never seen Bergen before, but that the ventriloquist: had revived a dying art. A number of cinema lights in the audience applauded the remarks... . Gregory Ratoff and Eugenie Leontovlch will spend a month in Mexico when he finishes directing "Lancer Spy".... Toby Wing is really getting around these evenings ... at the Swing club with Wesley Ruggles and at the Marti with a Boston diamond merchant. . . . Edward Norris will breed deer on his San Fernando valley ranch. A swell racket, he says, for the government furnishes the original stock free and buys back seven-
month-old dec? for sls a head. . . . Connie Bcnn o 11, whose nicer deeds never reem to get Into print, is buying a complete graduaiiot. outfit for a Hcl--Iyw oo J high school girl, who wouldn't have it otherwise. . . . And, at a reccrt Hollywood game
IF'WI Constance Bennett
of chance, George Jesse) complained: "What’s the use of gambling with producers? They stait I with thousands, then they g't to betting theaters, and 1 haven't any I theaters.”
plete surprise to the neighbors
i and friends of the Parsons in this | exclusive community. They said they were a quiet couple who were more interested in the raising of pheasants, squabs and chickens than in the social life of the | north shore. Mrs. Parsons, about live feet tall, weighing about 130 pounds, with gray eyes and prematurely gray hair—friends said she bore a striking resemblance to Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh — has not been seen since Wednesday forenoon when she reportedly told her household she was going to Huntington, a few miles away, presumably to show some property to a prospective buyer. 1 Mrs. Anna Kupryanova. who has lived with the Parsons tor six years, although her place in the household was not clearly explained, told police that Mrs. Parsons left the farm at 11:45 a. m. (9:45 a m. CST) Wednesday with an elderly man and woman in their automobile. Last night pollice | broadcast an eight-state alarm: "Wanted, unknown man and | woman in large black sedan.” o I British Barracks for Haifa I HAIFA, Palestine (U.P.) —The Public Works Department of the Palestine Government is preparing p’ans and seeking tenders for the construction here of army and air force barracks costing approximately $2,500,000. o Minnesota Conquers Rivers Minneapolis,—(UP)—Minnesota's , wandering waters have become stay-at-homes- Not because they are inclined to, but because 103 dams and numerous diversion ditches, constructed by WPA workers, command it. The work of constructing the dam is sponsored and engineered by the drainage and waters division of the state department of conservation.
New Low' Prices Complete Dinner 25c Light Lunches 20c We wish to announce we have secured Mrs. Dague as cook and now offer a finer service than before. 1 116 E. Monroe St. Dew Drop Inn
INFORMATION ON SOCIAL ACT Suggestions On Social Security Act Given By Postmaster Helpful suggestions and information regarding the social security act were released today from 1 the office of Postmaster Phil L. I Macklin. The report conies from Will H. I Smith, collector of internal revenue. Following is an excerpt from' the communication: Figures in the collector's office; showed that 37,180 employer* filed treasury form SSI in behalf of themselves and their employees, paying $841,526.98 in taxes on the 1 wages earned in this district during the month of April. This tax is levied under title VIII of the social security act, which imposes an income tax of one per cent on the wages of “every taxable individual” and on “every taxable employer” an excise tax of one per cent on the wages he pays each of] his employees. In estimating that an additional 9,000 employers were still ignoring) the fact that they must pay the one per cent wage tax due from every employer and employee, Collector Smith pointed out that the 1 law makes the employer alone sub-1 ject to penalties for failure to file returns and make payments. The) employer Is also responsible for the collection of his employee’s share of the tax, deducting it from 1 the weekly wages paid. Employers of eight or more who have not yet filed treasury form 940 and paid the excise tax of one
fro.. ImA /Sot ' mIL /VsL- aR Carload purchases of canned . ~J M I fruits enable your Home Ustore grocer to pass on savings to you. The finest fruits W Hf S ifiiata’' ft* of California are packed unS , A A p • der the Little Elf label, and »v T at these low prices they are SL ® J “positive” values. Re-stock your pantry shelf— v 'M* Peaches h 19c
Little Elf GRAPE FRUIT JUICE 3 N ™ 2- 29c King Bee CUT GREEN BEANS *°„ 2 10 c Soda CRACKERS 1 lie
Puffed Wheat 2 pkgs...lsc Hershey’s Chocolate 8 oz. bar -10 c Grapenuts pkg.,-18c Rolled Oats 5 tb. bag-_27c Bisquick Irg. 40 oz. pkg. 20c Little Elf Prunes 2 tb. pkg. .21c Burco Coffee tb._l9c Rippled Wheat (30 biscuits to pkg.) 2 for __l9c Little Elf Sweet Pickles 10 oz. jar.-17c Little Elf Grape Jam 28 oz. jar..2sc Jumbo Salted Peanuts cello pkg.._lsc FRESH BRAINS It). PORKCHOPS lb. CENTER CUTS UP A I ".». 20c W I. CHOPS, tb. 25c Pocket Roast, tb. 12!/jC t *■ ITHURINGER lb. SUMMER SAUSAGE, Chunk. SLICED BACON »/ 2 lb. J FANCY LEAN ._ pkg. M
H Quality Food Market 121 No. 2nd St. Free Delivery DECATUR, IND. Phone 192
HOME STORES , ——l , . fc. -»i.,i,—- „,4Xt 1 —* X- ■—l - -j ——
I per cent on their 1936 pay roll, as | called for under title IX of the social security act, have already | incurred a 10 per cent penalty," Mr. Smith said. "There is no exI case for continued delinquency un- | der Title IX. Ample notice was] given employers of eight or morel | that this tax was due from them, 1 and them alone, at the latest, lust' April 1. The employee does not pay any of this tax. "Only 5.900 employers have paid taxes under the provisions of title I IX and I estimate that this falls ] short by at least 10 per cent of the actual number of employers of ) eight or more persons in this dis-' trict. When my deputies, in the ) course of their investigations, discover those delinquents not only I the tax but the penalties will be assessed against them. It would ■ be well for this type of employer to remember that officers of cor-] ] | porations are counted as employees for the purpose of taxation." o Teachers to Earn More QUEBEC,Que. (U.P.) —The Que- ■ bee Government will spend S4OO, ■ 000 a year to improve conditions among the province's poorly-paid I [rural school teachers. Some of the [teachers earn as little as SIOO a I year. :j o [ Surplus Farm Products Distributed In State • I Lafayette, Ind., June 11—(UP) — • More than 8,250,000 pounds of sur‘[plus farm products, removed from ■i price-depressed markets in order to ij increase returns to producers, were i distributed in Indiana during 1936 I to needy and unemployed persons i certified to the state’s relief rolls, i it was reported today. The surplus iproducts were re-
Little Elf Fresh Pruneslarge canlsc Klf Whole Ripe Apricots 2 big cans39c Elf Crushed Pineapple No. 2 can__l9c Little Elf Grape Fruit 2 No. 2 cans__2sc Marshmallows Vs 15c ELF RED PITTED CHERRIES No. 2 can 15c ELF WHOLE RIPE APRJCOTS ... 2 Irg. cans 39c ELF CALIF. BARTLETT PEARS . . large can 25c EIF SLICED PEACHES 2 No. 1 cans. 25c BURSLEY'S SHAGGY FREE PEACHES large can 21c LITTLE ELF SPINACH No. 2 can.-JOc CHOP SUEY PRODUCTS LITTLE ELF BEAN SPROUTS can._loc LITTLE ELF PREP. CHOP S'JEY No. 1 can 17c ELF CHOW MEIN NOODLES 2 cans 25c
PAGE SEVEN
moved from the markets by tho agriculture adjustment administration and the federal surplus commodities corporation, in co-opera-tion with the various state relief ] agencies. I The action was undertaken in | connection with various programs i designed to Improve returns to producers, encourage domestic consumption of agricultural commodities, and prevent waste. •
r' HERH'r W«y I ON CORN “No other corn flakes please my family as Kellogg's do. They’re made better. Packed better. Taste belter. Give me Kellogg's every time!” Tho flavor and crispness of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes can’t be duplicated. They are the only corn flakes kept oveni fresh by the patented WAXTITE inner wrapper. Ready to cat with milk or cream. Many generous servings for a few cents. At all grocers. Made by Kellogg in CORN | Battle Creek. _|w| P you say "CORN FLAKES"
NAVY BEANS 2 tbs. STALEY’S STARCH ftp P&GSOAP 6 giant Sc Bars SILVER DUST | New Large Package . . “ Little Boy Blue . bottle 9c Bo Peep Ammonia, 15 oz. bot. 13c quart 21c Ivory Soap, large bar 10c 3 med.. . 19c Johnson’s Furniture Polish or Paste Wax pint 59c Little Elf Lye 3 cans -25 c Elf Cocoa Hardwater Soap. . 4 bars..l9p Babo-.can._l2c BANANAS 5 )S< HEAD LETTUCE, head STRAWBERRIES Home Grown Qt. “ i Cabbage 3 lbs. 10c New Potatoes, 1 Olh 29 —fifWx Peas, Calif..lb. 10c Tomatoes 2 lb. 25c i Oranges, Vai. doz. 33c K\ | i / Cheese, Wis., lb. 21c Home Store BUTTER 90 Score pound **
