Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 209, Decatur, Adams County, 3 September 1937 — Page 7
Vaa wOt. BARGAINS
'rural CHURCHES J Monroe M. E. Church E. S. Morford, pastor 9:30 a. m.—Morning worship and tidy. 6 30 p. m.—Epworth League. 7:30 p. m.—Evening service. All Sunday services will be held Monroe high school building. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday — Prayer eeting at home of Mr. and Mrs. lek Haggard. Special music Sunday by Mr. id Mrs. A. R. Morford, Wilmore, : Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Morford, ayton. Ohio: Rev. and Mrs. M. Morford, Elkville, 111.; Rev. and rs. E. S. Morford, Orland, Ind. o Mt. Tabor M. E. Church Sunday School, 9 a. m. Samuel otteral. superintendent. Worship service, 10 a. m. Seron subject, "The Fulness of the ospel.” Lloyd W. Bower, pastor. Bible Study club, Wednesday, 8 m. Prayer service, Thursday, 8 p.m.
ECONOMIZE AT THE Equity Dairy Store SATURDAY SPECIALS Butter On,> ie»l? r^ s ” w 34c 67c ? 13c | CHEESE I Longhorn ■ B „. 24c I Fancy Swiss Cheese, lb. 33c Dry Cottage Cheese, lb. 6c, 2 11c - Equity Fresh Butter Milk, 5c glass, second glass FREE. ttdrmilK 30c a gallon in your own container. WWW* we have 52 varieties of Imported and Domestic Cheese. WE SERVE EQUITY PRODUCTS FRESH DAIL icecream * PINT BRICKS Full Quart Brick HAND PACKED — BULGING FULL £ TWO FOR 25G 22 Flavors To Choose From ~, 20c Pint —4O c Quart 8 Flavors To Choose From BANANA SPLITS lA C ASSORTED SODAS — SUNDAES FLAVORS EXTRA RICH EQUITY HI-PEAK MALTED MILKS CONES HAM sandwiches Also Any Variety of Cheese IOC and 15C 5C ftflr JUMBO MILK SHAKES 10c 22 Flavors to Choose From *WW STORE OPENS DAILY 8 A. M. TO 12 P. M. — ' I" ’"■ j Quality * Courtesy * Service Meats. «««=■». I — M Food Craft Corn Flakes, ■ large box 10c We feature the best you can buy in Native Meats — Beef, Pork M Big Hit Catsup, 14oz. size 10c and Veal. Also a full line of Smoked and Cold Meats, Cheese, Comet Rice, 1 tt>. boxes 10c Staple and Fancy Groceries. You’ll always find our Clerks Cocoa, Yacht Club. 1 Tt>. 10c courteous, whether you Phone or Place Your Order by a Per- (Sat. only) Noodles, old sonal Call. ■ fashioned, 1 lb. pkg... 15c Pork A Beans, No. 2'/j Honey Loaf or Corned Beef SOC I 2 25c Chunk, tb. vww g Spag hetti 15c ■ ■.- Kellogg Deal, 4 pkgs. .. 35c SWIFTS CIRCLE “S” PICNICS ——- Minute Steak, pound 25c Welcome (oaf 9c Pure Pork Sausage (Bulk) pound 23c 3 (oaves 25c Fresh Ground Beef, poundlsc olives, large jar, plain 32c Cottage Cheesepint —Bc quart —l5 c Small cans Peaches, crushed Veal Paddies (boneless) pound 25c Pineapple, Apricots and mixNeckbones 10c, or 3 lbs. 25c ed fruitsloc Swifts Corned Beef Hash, can 18c OUR OWN FANCY BACON zfl A Z T" — RINED AND SLICED — pound 4"C M. J. B. COFFEE (Q « R •|: n „ R oq £ Rib or rial. |W, 3 ‘’"“"t ’ DOlillTg D66i Pound SUMMER BEVERAGES - , . Orange, Rootbeer, Gingerale and VI- A I steak or Roast Pound L,nle Rlcke X’ iar B« bottle nr> ▼ SfYL (No bottle charge) .... AW Drexel Ade, 3 pkgs.loc POUND„ 17c Blue Ribbon Malt I Food-Craft — Good Nut Oleo, poundl4c can tk Peaches, No. 2'/z can, halves or sliced in heavy cana—pi./a syrup. Can 18c — 2 Cans 35c Q Our Own — fresh or AAm 03usage smoked — casing. lb.__ AjV Butter Cream . —- O O Thuringer /»■> |H ery, fresh, 2 lb. *3 bummer Sausage chunk n 27c lii Please order We win Jr Jr g ggg t ygg Jg gg gg * open and early for M w rr make dellven K 9 g ''IM FJy c _ ies Labor Day Service. g gs . g>t'T'J until 10 a - rn - Phone* Freettetiwiy )
Clark's Chapel M. E. Church Sunday School, 9:30 a. tn. W. C. Beard, superintendent. Worship service, 7:30 p. m. Sermon subject, "The Fulness of the Gospel." Lloyd W. Bowers, pastor. Prayer service, Tuesday, 7 p. m. Bible Study club, Friday, 8 p. m. o Decatur M. E. Circuit J. W. Reynolds, pastor Mt. Pleasant Morning worship, 9:30 a. m. Church School, 10:20 a. m. Beulah Chapel Church School, 9:30 a. m. Preaching, 10:30 a. m. Pleasant Valley Church School, 9:30 a. m. o Calvary Evangelical church George S. Lozier, Minister 9:30 a. m. —Sunday School. Mr. Roland Miller, superintendent. 10:30 a. m.—Prayer and Praise Service. 7:30 p. m., Thursday — Worship service and sermon. Antioch M. B. C. Church O. L. Flesher, Pasto Sunday School 9:00. Mrs. Ges.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1937.
Bright Superintendent. Morning sermon 10:16. By the pastor. Prayer Meeting Wed. 7:30. Mrs. John Arnold class leader. Quarterly Meeting September 12. “Ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls." (Jer. 6:16) o NATIONS PLAN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) fleet. Turkey, Greence, Jugoslavia and Egypt would contribute, and the Baltic nations might join. It was evident that Italy and Germany were not wanted. Dispatches from Rome were interpreted here as meaning that Italy was somewhat anxious over the situation, and would be glad to attend a conference. But she is I boycotting the league of nations and could not send delegates to the league capital. Hints were thrown out in Rome that it would be well to hold the submarine conference somewhere else. The powers, however .seemed to have foreseen this when they decided that
To Sing Here s - ■ ■ Miss Constance Orozco of PasaI dena. Calif., will sing at the Church of the Nazarene Saturday evening at 7:30. The Church of the Nazarene of the Northern Indiana district is going to launch the greatest “Personal Evangelism Campaign" in its history. The Rev. J W. Montgomery will speak from the subject of "Personal Evangelism" Saturday evening. The goal of this campaign is to reach personally, 100,000 people. Geneva was the place to hold the meeting. Coincidently with the Mediterranean conference the league | council —and possibly the assembly at which all member nations are represented—will be conslder- | ing Spanish loyalist charges that , it is Italy who is providing submarines for the nationalists, to wage indiscriminate war on peaceI ful commerce. Istanbul. Turkey, Sept. 3—(U.R) —A mysterious submarine with only the conning tower visible was sighted one mile off the Turkish Black Sea fort of Ineboli today. It submerged when sighted by the Turkish freighter Vatan, o Driver Os Auto Is Blamed For Tragedy Goshen, Ind., Sept. 3—(UP)—ln a verdict returned today by Elkhart county coroner Karl M. Veti ter, Allieon Bishopric ci Cincinnati was held responsible for the bus crash near here Tuesday in which five (persons, including Bishropric. wew kffled and 27 injured. Vetter said that investigation revealed that Bishopric, wealthy Cincinnati manufacturer, failed to observe a stop sign at the intersections of Highways 15 and 20 five miles north of here, and slammed into the huge transcontinental Greyhound bus at an excessive rate of speed.
HITE’S Grocery PHONE EARLY PLEASE FOR SERVICE Phones 31 or 204 POTATOES MEDIUM SIZE WHITE COBBLERS 1 Bushel._s9c; 100 lb. bag—9sc; PECK JLj|V LARGE SIZE WHITE COBBLERS, peck 25c PILLSBURY FLOUR ™9Bc MACARONI 15c APPLES FA^nS?° KlNfi -- 25c ONION S Golden Glow New Crop Fruit Bowl, only A w 10 lb. bag with the purchase of one 25c 20c pkg. of Super Suds. | SPAGHETTI pound box . 15c 4 cakes Palmolive Soap 25 C 1 complexion cloth Free ROLLED DATs 10c (Beautiful piece of Glassware in each package) CANNED GOODS SPECIAL TOMATO AND VEGETABLE SOUP, can 5c VANCAMP'S KIDNEY BEANS, can 7c EVERGREEN SWEET CORN, can 10c GOLDEN BANTAM SWEET CORN, can 10c EARLY JUNE PEAS, can l°c PINEAPPLE Tedbeans” 8 PEA™& CABOTS Syrap! dozen ’ VEGETABLES SX’75 5C ean
CITY OFFICIALS /CONTINUED Fhom PAGE ONE) were experimenting on 6,000 school children with a new zinc sulphate nasal spray considered a possible and partial preventive. One child, her lungs paralyzed by the disease, died in Denver yesterday after an “iron lung’’ had been rushed from Chicago to her aid. Another, who previously shared Denver’s only respirator with her, may recover. An airplane rushed serum from Milwaukee to St. Paul, where physicians fought to save three boys and a man stricken by the disease. Chicago had 128 cases—l 2 reported in the last 24 hours. New York hospitals are treating 65 victims. Milwaukee 26. New York state had 64 cases last week, Massachusetts 51, Ohio i 50, Illinois 46. California 44. Texas 34. Michigan 31. In Ontario. Can., i there were 491 cases. The epidemic appeared to cent-i er in the south central states and the middle west, the U. S. public I health service reported. It is spreading northeastward toward Pennsylvania, New York and New England. The U. S. public health service reported 4,053 cases in the first 34 weeks this year, compared to 1,618 in the corresponding period of 1936. Isolation of stricken persons was ordered. Chicago authorities ordered a three-week isolation for any I person known to have been exposed to an infantile paralysis vic- j tim. I ■ 0 AMERICANS ARE 1 J CONTINUE! FROM ONE) inents are bending every effort to , halt or minimize the conflict, the I United Press was Informed today by an unusually reliable source. Two large American banking I corporations, it was revealed, have ! j extended credits to the Japanese government. They are continuing Ito do so, despite the fact that American government funds have been allocated as secured credits 1 for the Chinese government. This - ; arrangement was made recently • I by the treasury department and i Chinese finance Minister Kung s Thus, it was stated. American i dollars are helping to finance the , slaughter on both sides of the i controversy, just as md products ■ of certain munitions manufactur- • ers were found to be spouting i death simultaneously from guns of - ' opposing armies during the World » war. 1 Until recently the British pound 1 sterling was in a similar position. » British banks were extending credits to the .Japanese govern-
ment while Japanese guns and aerial bombs were spreading death and destruction in Britishowned commercial establishments at Shanghai. The credits to the Japanese government were secured by Jap-anese-owned gold, on deposit here or in England or in transit and by Japanese government obligations. On Aug. 25 or 26. the British banks gave notice that they would no longer grant credits on Japanese gold. The two American banks, however, signified their intention of continuing their financial trail-, sactions, United Press was Informed. granting credits on both ' gold and Japanese government paper. — -o SAFETY PROGRAM — (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) : ered and will be placed along ' Ninth street as a warning to drivj ers this week. Dangers of drivers failing to ob- ; serve the over head traffic light at the five point intersection on North Second street were mentioned by I Tom Smith and George Thomas of I the McMillen plants. City officials pointed out that a sign, warning of the overhead light, is to be
Ist. ANNIVERSARY of the Quality Food Market under the present ownership We wish io thank the public for their splendid patronage given us during the past year and hope we may continue to be of service to you. we will g ° w Peanut Butter, Little Elf, Ib.jar 15c oz * J um b° J ar 29c ’ *"" Campfire Marshmallows Ibpkg 19c Little Elf Mustard, pint jar 9c PORK and BEANS 4 25c J SALAD DRESSING 32c Whole Apricots lyc CRACKER JACK 3 pkgs. 10c Elf Prepared Spaghetti 2 tall cans._l9c zx z, rp Burco Coffee, freshly roastedTh...2oc Iv v‘ V 1 Q I> I? V Elf Evaporated Milk 3 tall cans__22c RRFR O I IV 1 Elf Fancy Cake Flours tb. bag.-29c IXEjIJIV Elf Pure Vanilla Extract bottle._9c Ri . , .. „„„ Burco Icing Sugarl tb. pkg...loc G.nger Ale. Lime R>c- 1 fft. can Domestic Sardines 2 cans..llc ke >- Len ] o " Little Elf Wheat Puffs 5 oz. pkg...9c Orange and Sparkling Kellogg's Corn Flakes or Water. Post Toastieslrg. pkg.__loc LITTLE ELF ’ Diamond Wax Paper . . 125 ft. roll.. 19c | arge Economy Paper Napkins, 80 count pkg.__9c 2 Maxwell House Coffee tb. 29c t Can Sunshine Krispy Crackers, 8 oz. pkg.__loc < no bottle charge) Elf Fresh Salted Peanuts 2 tb5...25c - ivory SOAP «a c Big «o G Jels Rite Liquid Pectin 8 oz. btl.__lsc Medium bars. 3 for " Bar “ (makes the jelly jell) I> I) INSECT SPRAY XV Shinola White Shoe Polish bottle._9c * • 01 IV.X 1 Rlnso or Oxydollrg. b0x..22c 12 ° z - can Bananas perfect fruit 5 lbs 25c Sweet POTATOES j Oranges. Calif.. Irg. and sweet, doz 43c — —— Onions, Mich, vellows, 10 lb. bag 25c IDE,AL FOR PICNIC LI NCHES , , ’ 4 CREAM CHEESE, No. 1 Wisconsinlb...2lc >. Peaches, 111. Elbertas, 5 lbs. 25c star potted meats 3 cans..i3c Cooking Apples. Duchesss lbs. 17c star Vienna sausage can..ioc , , „ „ STAR CORN BEEF HASH .16 oz. can..lsc Grapes, fancy red 2 Ids. 1“C s tar A SS t. Sandwich Spread 2 cans__23c Butter. Homestores. 90 score, lb. 36c QUALITY MEATS Absolutely Guaranteed—at Most Reasonable Prices. Presenting—Frank Brown—Master Meat Cutter, formerly of Huntington, Ind. He is assuring you quality meats at most reasonable prices. Give him a trial to prove his merit. FISH lb. Tender Boil, lb. 18c, 2 Boneless Perch. Haddock.. lbs. HAMS, for Labor Day. LARD Compound 2 Shankless Picnics lb, ths. BEEF lb. 25c VEAL PATTIES ’ b -25c Fancy Chuck. Fancy Arm Veal Roast, Veal Steak FoodfMarket NOTICE We have our own personal Free Delivery and can assure you of the quickest and most satisfactory service possible. Call Early for Best Service. Phone 192.
erected. The danger to pedestrians walk-' ing to the McMillen plants on the highway at the end of North Second street was pointed out. It was recommended that the sidewalk be continued to McMillen plants. The matter of through routes to the south part of the city from the 1 factories in the north was discuss ed as well as means of eliminating the danger of congestion and speedin to adults and school children. 1 Mayor Holthouse stated that at > the recommendation of a civic ‘ committee, called this summer, he ’ had forwarded papers to Lidianapi oils approving the present routing of state highways through the I city. These will be taken over by the state highway department, I which will maintain them and enforce traffic regulations. Mayor Holthouse also discussed the danger at the Five Points intersection and stated that two-face bulbs have been ordered in order that drivers who drive past the lights may see the change of colors and ’that pedstrians may tell when to cross the streets. The lights are to be timed again by I traffic engineers. o Mayor Marries Many ; Ogden, Utah. — (U.R) —Mayor Hi--1 ram Perry believes himself to be
PAGE SEVEN
the "marryingest” mayor tn the ! United States. During the first six months of 1937 he united 75 couples in wedlock. The city gives a free home building permit to eVery couple married by the mayor. Softball Not So Soft Sweetwater, Tex (U.R) — Ed Strobel, umpire for a softball game i here, Is ready to stick to the easier sports. During a recent game, a I player Inadvertently ran into Stroi bel and knocked him down. Strobel finished the game, but three weeks later he went to a hospital, where X-rays showed he had suffered a fractured leg 1 . death] your grocer OR DRUGGIST,. SPRAY GUN F'tirTi Coffer/ fc /U/l J 1
