Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 255, Decatur, Adams County, 28 October 1938 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
JASPER COUNTY FARMER CHAMP Middle Aired Farmer W ins State Corn Husking Title Kentland. Ind , Oct 2S U.P ' mlddlt-aued father of four children wiw sever before had competed ir a state contest today held the hi Milana corn husking championship Vilas Jack of Jasper county Before a throng of «n.ooo yes terday afternoon on the Mike Mur ically peeled the cornstalks fore young Benton county farmer who was a preliminary favorite. Puet» husked 24.12 bushels. The winner's total was far be low the state record, but offl< in - vious years. Lightness of the ears was given as the reason for the low total bushels. al the national corn husking con test next month at Sioux 1 alls. S D. and Puetz probably will enter I
— - Colonial Case-i Known as ( hick's Place Largest Assortment In Town Wine — Brandy — Whisky . . . best quality and aged Whiskey $1.35 qt. — Wine 15c (known brands) LOWEST PRICES — SAME PRICE EVERY DAY Try us for good home-cooked Food and Sandwiches. Soft Drinks — Best Coffee Albert Aeschliman, Prop. ■■■—llllT|iril-.Xr~TTTTI -r--— — Phones 106~107 Free Delivery I LARI). Pure 2 lbs. 25c I SMOKED JOWLSIb. 15c I SMOKED LOIN ROLLS, all meat | 1 to 2 pound pieceslb. 35c I This week-end — LAMB. | RING BOLOGNA, poundloc I Good Bulk SAUER KR \UT. pound 5c I BACON, our own fancy, rined and < sliced (Saturday only) pound 29c I SWEET POTATOES. 10 pounds2sc | Fancy Sunkist ORANGES, dozen 15c I Jonathan or Grimes Golden Apples * 4 lbs.l9c | Montpelier BREAD (Racers) 3 1% f pound loaves (Saturday only) 25c I MARSHMALLOWS pound pkg. 15c I Meatv Neck Bones. 3 lbs. 25c I LONGHORN CHEESE, lb. I Boiling Beef PlaU IQc NA AS SUPREME PORK and BEANS or RED BEANS, full pound cans, each 5c MORNINC. BRACER, a good coffee, lb. 18c GOOD MEATY SOUSE, pound 20c ICEBERG HEAD LETTUCE, head 10c WINNER FLOUR 12 lb. bag—3sc PUMPERNICKEL BREAD, loaf 15c Plenty of Good Fresh Bulk Oysters. NICE CRISP CELERY, bunch 5c KRAFT BRICK or AMERICAN CHEESE—. 2 lbs. 15c FRESH GROUND H AMBURGER lb. 15c FRESH PORK or SHEEP BRAINS lb. 10c LARGE SLICING BOLOGNAIb—ISc PURE PORK SMOKED SAUSAGE, pound 25c FOODCRAFT OLEO, pound —lO c LIBERTY BELL SODA CRACKERS.—2 lb. box..
GERBER’S MEAT MARKET PHONE 97 FREE DELIVERY GET EVERY PENNY’S WORTH! No. 1, BUYING MEAT. - BEEF - - LAMB - - VEAL - - PORK - - Smoked Meats - Roast2sc Loin Roast24c Ham Shanks Isc Roast 22c Stew loc Sfeak 39c Pork Hocks 12 i/ 2C j owe ] Bacon 2 lbs 27c T Bone Steak 25c Roast 23c (from Round) Fresh Ham27c Chunk Bacon2lc Beef Boil 12V 2 c Leg 29c Chops 25c Shoulder Steak 23c Canadian Swiss Steak 25c Chops33c Ground Veal 25c Sausage2oc nS Ground Beef 15c Ground Lamb 18c A cal Shanks l»>c Pure Pork c licit i unics „•>< Rival Dog Food - Genuine Home Minced Meat Bulk Kraut Home Made Souse ~ 3cans ZSC Made Noodles 2 lbs. 3lbs. 2 lbs. AO V
ihr un alternate. Peutz had the best county record of over 40, bushels. George Ade. fumed Indiana hum- | orlst, fired the bombs us official I starter, and in the huge crowd i there were many notables, political and otherwise, headed by Gov. M Clifford Townsend and Janice Williamson, who recently was < hosen as Indiana's com queen. Others who placed in the husk* ng contests and their total were , Leslie Taylor of Newton county, hiitl. 23 '•?. Fou st Nogle of Vat million county, fourth. 23.6; Orie Uenold of Porte county, fifth. 23.35; Herman Ellenson of Lake ; county, sixth, 23.35; George Wing* •r, Tippecanoe county, seventh. ' 23.17; Albert' Hensler of Howard . ounty. who was the state champon last year, eighth, 23.04; Dale Wiley of Huntington county, ninth. ■ 21.67. and Dick Pettigrew, Madi* I ' -on county, tenth. 21.64. GERMANY AND fOONTINI EP FROM PAGE ONE) rod y for ■ xptllsion to Poland h? without warning In some cities. Cologne and • Isewhere. men. wo* In Beilin, only the men were ' ~',.,1 possessions behind. They
food. It was estimated 55,000 Polish Jews are in Germany. Including Austria. Many thousands are being deported, but the exact number cannot be estimated because many have allowed their Polish citizenship Io lapse and Poland could refuse to admit them The deportations were ordered undei the new Polish law providing that all Poles living abroad in the United States and all other countries as well ns Germany must present their passports to consulates for a special stamp or risk losing their citizenship. In that case the countries where they are living could not deport them. Geiman authorities said that sinet the deadline for such registration had been set by Poland for tomorrow and many Polish Jews had not complied. Germany took the step to avoid having thousands of Poles made a permanent burden. They set midnight tonight as the deadline for the enforced exodus. In <'ologne. the entire Jewish colony comprising 400 to 600 Jew ish men. women and children were gathered in police head quarters Some obeyed the order to report and others were tak< n in poiic, wagons In Beilin, several hundred were an <ied during the night and taken to the Alexander barracks mar police headquarters or to other points, including a slaught , r hotisr Those who were not arrested were ordered to report to (he foreigners' bureau early itn the morning. They were taken in vanloads' to the east freight station to be toa led on trains for Poland. REV. PRUGH IS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) great power where he is looked upon by the German people as an idol, replacing religion in the hearts of many of the citizens. Moose steaks, furnished by H. p Schmitt, a member of the club, who recently returned from a hunting trip to Canada were served during the dinner. J. Fred Fruchte was chairman of the program. UNITED STATES (CONTINUED'FROM PAGE ONE) be stopped. No answer to the note has bee a r-" "ived. but reports from Tokio indicated it would be forthcoming Hull's protest echoed the vulner- | ability of international pledges. The not was a continuous record of violations of the "open door" policy in China, which Japan repeatedly had pledged itself to observe, and of infringements upon the rights of Am- • rican citizens and their businesses i i China, which Japan had given the most solemn assurances would be free from molestation or hind-
New Buildings at Indiana State tr-w* # wU s » i K ww ■ : "I JI I WdmStMff.RSlMl! .. fc. —X — ~~ A/ZTS 'wo ConrmEieCß Terre Haute, Ind . Oct. 26. —; nounced that construction will be-, crease in enrollment at the College Above are shown architect’s draw-: gin immediately. The buildings i thlß ogether they constitute i : an SBOO,OOO improvement, and the ings for the new Student Union will be models of their type of second ]argest individual i mprO veBuilding and the new Fine Arts ' collegiate construction, and they | jnent in the 69-year history of the and Commerce Builuing on which! will relieve crowded conditions i College. They will be ready for • ' President Ralph N. They has an- ■ brought about by a 16 per cent in- 1 use a year from January.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1938.
J Antiques Go at \an Sale *k'i U? ' vi f.£. _ H ■ wk It V J. W. Toe looks at Dickens’ volume Many cherished and costly antiques went the way of the auctioneer s ' hammer at a sale of $2,000,000 in furnishings of the late Van Sweringens, Cleveland rail and real estate tycoons, at their Daisy Hill farm r.c r Cleveland. Among the nianv antiques put up for sale was this volume of Aristophanes, which contains secret compartment and two liquor bottles. The book was published in ISIO and is being perused by J. W. Poe. auctioneer.
rance. Hull drew Japan's attention fore,b;iy to the contrast between treatment accorded American business; and American Nationals in Japanese controlled areas of China, andeven in Japan proper, and the treat-1 ment accorded Japanese nationals and their businesses in the United jstates. Diplomatic observers believed 1 ' this to be a direct warning that retaliatory economic and trade res- ’ frictions might be applied to Japan unless the discriminations in the far east cease. , —o | — DEMOCRATS TO (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ’ and on an Armistice Day program ; ' November 11. 1933. Senator Minton is one of the i headliners from the state Demo--1 cratic speakers' bureau in Indlan- - apolis and one of the outstanding ■ orators in the U. S. senate, s Committees in charge of the 1 program tonight are; 1 Reception committee: John H. I- Heller, chairman, all of the candi-
! dates and their wives. • Decorations committee: Edwin Kauffman, chairman, members of the Young Democratic club. JAPS PROTEST (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Yunnan province in China. If the Indo-China line were serv id. China would have to depenc for any foreign materials on th( overland routes from British Burma into Yunnan and the long route from Soviet Russia through lemott j Sinkiang province. o PREDICTS BOOM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ctalic party has given the peopb old age pensions, blind pensions dependent children's pensions reduced property taxes, kept th( schools open and paid the teach ers. given unemployment insur ance, security of bank deposits •collective bargaining for labor loans for home owners, rura electrification, soil conservatiot
and ninny other measures. • \Ve want to continue to merit your friendship by going forward to even greater security for nil the people” ii .... i i O " . 'I j* - Adam* County Memorial Hospital I Dismissed today: Klchanl, Bar- ' bara and Patsy, children of *Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dieth, Monroeville; Bryce Burger. Decatur route five; I Melchor Gomez. Dal'as, Texas. REDUC TION IN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) glnl.i, 17-90; Wash. 17-67. Col. 17-50; Georgia. 16 1'1: Ark. 16-43: South Carolina. 16-57;; Kan., 14-50; Calif.. 13 279; Vermont. 12 S; Oregon. 10-27: Idaho. 10-14; Ala . 9-39; Ariz . 9-14 _— o — - Says Management Must Have Guarantee Washington. Oct. 28 —(UP) — Management must have guarantees against continuous labor war if there is to be any permanent ecoromlc security in this country. Donald R. Richberg. former NRA adi ndnistrator. said today after a con-
Bbtutt i*i xUi A* 1 st™ |\R 11 I I ill j lllli R - If »..| ' : I i wM Ik ■i y®, * Bv / - ill • ' I If w I \ Kenneth looked bn \ *T his salary uas IJ K \ a week. Should Margaret bretkbe || , engagement to this ■ M boy, who had asked her to miir) ■ him before her father lost his k ■* tune? Could they live on If .nonth-and did they W<Ttoini M love in a garret? Often / I Bridesmaid!! THE GREATEST SERIAL ||i HAZEL LIVINGSTON EVER ARO ■ Here is the vibrant, daring story of a nlo '^ r ■' H the crossroads of love—a serial (liar m '' l B read with absorbing, personal interest . • • 1 I so human and compelling that }ou 11 1 I from the start! BEGINS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, l x 11 ' I Decatur Daily Democrat.
ference with President Roosevelt.! Relations between labor and capl-l tai must not be a one sided affair, I Rlchberg said. He said the Wag-’ ner labor relations act should be] {amended "to bring in more mediation and conciliation and less conflict.” ——- Veteran Film Star Is Fatally Stricken Hollywood. Oct. 28-r-(UP) Fred Kohler. 59. veteran “heavy ' of th,, films, dropped dead of a heart at-' tack at his home here today as he was preparing to leave for the stuI uio. Kohler, a native o* Kansas City, lias been in pictures for nearly 30 i years. He was working at the RKO studio. General Motors Head Sees Business Upturn New York. Oct. 28—(UP)- Alfred P. Sloan. Jr., chairman of General Motors corporation, told Stockholders in his quarterly report today that current indications pointed to "an upward trend” in the company's business. "Reflection from all parts of the U. S." he said, "Indicate a consum- ■ er interest considerably in excess
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