Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 119, Decatur, Adams County, 20 May 1953 — Page 2

• \ r k • ■ -'ti • x ‘ ' ■ WIKrtMK N ° HEADS - FHT o« BCC«S WASTE WITH A*F» Flyers - 49 e Evaporated Milk Weighed and sold without heads, feet and excess _ waste, these plump, tender ready-to-cook fryers HOMOGENIZED cans 49* to buy «>d e W to ax.€oms

.-. \' ; \ ■' IJr » - ' Pork & Beans .... 2 ”*5 35c Sweet Pickles ££?....*. 25c Olives tSE Grape Jam ft". 2 ft 49c Salad Dressing *,"£ .. „. 43c Marshmallows .. Cracker Jack .... 6 pk „. 25e Chicken ?X, Bn Lunch Meat LX™ . 45c Chum Salmon 39c Peanut Butter 59c Soft Drinks cm** 3 *£29c Prune Plums S’

— ’ T - • . IT -T- — V —' • y I .; ' " '. p ", . ■■ I-, i ‘ ... \ .. ' ' ' p !' ■' ■/ . GIGANTIC SOAP VALUES at AtPI < Giant 61cGiant 66c Duz .. , 25‘Cheer H27‘ Giant 49c ■« L L-| ' Giant 66c Rinso ..“«»25‘ Oxydol 27‘ Giant 66c . Giant 66c '* |P J Tide .. 27 c Fab .. 27 c ■ Giant 66c Giant 54c Vel. . c Surf .. 7 c ; GET TH,S OUTSTANDING BUY IN Golden Rip. I Bananas L“ Aw ■ Tomatoes Medium ib. 39c Watermelons Lb. rß lvg.! $1.49 : Head Lettuce s«>• 2 wd*. 33c Broccoli California bunch 19c Sweet Carn Golden 5 ear* 39c Peanuts Excel Virginia ... cello 35c ’ Green Peppers cm. 4 f#t 19c Strawberries r!££ .’JS 29c Navel Oranges Size ~ doz. 49c Lemonade Mix . 2 epns 29c Pineapple u™ $2.98 Orange Juice ssi2j3 25c Fresh Carrots ... 2J.U. 25c Frozen Peas SX 2^29c ♦ ■ || '■ ; | ' 1 ) rarhor Cocoonut-Oronge " - I x|l|b| Layer Cake 6,2 ,nch 49 c White Bread 17c Potato Chips Ji'S., .U k . 59c Relish™" .f’,-25e Cookies 'p’SSSc J Pie Meringue inch 45c Sandwich Rolls ... .fTl9c cl. * - ‘ I ; i ’i I • • J ■ 1 -I « ’ I i ' ' ' ■ ■‘9 \ i / tour Food Bills With A&P's . pSWdfßairy Buys P : V J £ * delicious dairy foods are dandy dollar-stretcher* Serve them often and save! Sliced Cheese m*:. pS: 25c Large Eggs 62c Ice Cream SftlffTJSßße Swiss Cheese 57c Butter S'tSr- 69c Butter m 5.... Ib . 73c - 9 i r AMtIICA’S lOMMOST fOOD ttWltt ... SINGS ISSS Ji in thia Ad * a J > kJ L 1 - IH lOs D- J eJecUee Maj jm WBAI AllAnaiC |b FACIFIG TEA GQMPANI • I

Cling Peaches t?X 27c Pineapple SgT 2% 45c Grapefruit Sections ~ 2 ’.tS 29c Fruit Cocktail 33c Lima Beans fcL 10c Vegetables ’t? 10c Cream Corn Golden ••!•»• ’t?loc Red Beans 5X .........'t? 10c Sweet Peas iKLi ... 3 35c Tea Bags fti Margarine ... 2 <J£ 43c dexo Shortening .{3 t ? n 77c Red Circle Coffee ...’2; 82c

* m Lean, Flavor-Rich "Super-Right" I Smoked Hams -- »59* I Ground Beef 2X W ’ M ".. ; ib. 39c | Chuck Roast ».43c II Steaks Porterhouse or T*Bono lb. 89c || Pork Roast LT Ik . 49c H Boiling Beef M‘.T..... * 15c I Rib Roast XTSX, 7 .k 59c I Veal Chops I Ducklings EX H Grand OucheM i 5 I Frosted Steaks «591 | Broiler Turkeys ?r&k ib. 69c B Sliced Bacon ib. 59c i Ring Bologna SSIUd ib. 49s I Steaks 227*%* mb. 79c I Skinless Franks & ». 45c Canadian Bacon ?£."•' 49c Lunch Meat cello 59c Haddock Fillet /. 29c Dressed Whiting . 2 lbt 25c Hekman's i Saltines e 4in 1 Fgck \ rig. BOX 25* Pure Vegetable cmsco 3 ’ 89c Swift's Prem • I t •”ro!Kc T AKIO II can 4 5 Chicken of the Sea Tuna BITE SIZE # # e 6-OZ. CAN 33 Sunshine * Cheez-its 9 9 X 401. PKGS. 33 Swift's Swiffning . . . Pure Vegetable ' L ! 1 id SMN —3 S9c Twice-Soft Northern Tissue 3 ROLLS Js* Mokes Dishes Sparkle Sprite , . 84OZ-53* Staley's Cream Corn Starch ; , . . 15V Sta-F|o ♦ Liquid Starch • • ,/2 39’1 Falmolive Toilet Soap . . 3«@ «»23 c > Medium Size Ivory Soap . . 3 25’ Personal Size Ivory Soap . . 4 Mild Gentle Ivory Snow Giant 61c LARGE Camay Toilet Soap . Cashmere Bouquet v Toilet Soap . > 3uc«»23 c luqyid Detergent Joy . . . ■.«•*•»« iA«Gt 33* For Wall, fr WnodWortt ; Spic ik Span s *^- 75 * 23 ,; i Foaming Action J. ? , ai - Ajax Cleanser . 2 CANS 2SI

PAGE TWO

uaring Polish Pilot Ries To Freedom Jet Plane Landed Un Panish Island ‘ ROENN®, Bornhojrh Island, UP —A daring Polish pilot crashlanded his Russian-made MIG-15 jet plane in a clump ot trees on this strategic Danish island today in a flight to freedom from Cpmmuxjism. Had the landed In South Korep, the pilot would have collected 1140,000. Gen. Mark Clark, Far Eastern United Nations commander, has offered 450,000 to any Red pilot Who hands over an undamaged MfG to the Allies in Khfoa and a |40,000 bonus to the first one to do so. I The £2-year-old lieutenant, second Poliph airman to land a MIG on Bornhplm in two months, broke away from a fprtnation of jet planes oyer the Baltic Sea in making hit dramatic escaj&. Hg circled (he island for 75 minutes before picking out what he thought was a sate place to land. The pilot set the heavily-armed jet plane down pn a rocky field. The MIG bounced craaily, hopped across a road and crashed into a grove. He did not suite duplicate the feat of Lt. Franciszek Jarecki, another Polish lieutenant, who landed an Undamaged MIG-15 on Bornholm last March 5. Instead he lost his right wing in the crash-landing. Danish air force officers from nearby Camp Almegaard asid they believed the pilot would have been killed had not the trees broken the forward motion ot the plane. The pilot pulled himself uninjured from the cockpit and immediately asked troops from. Almegaard Who ringed the area to grant him political asylum. He spoke in Polish, the only language he knew. Military authorities took the flier into custody and awaited the arrival :of Danish air force Col. Erjk Rasmussen and interpreters from £ppenhagen. Troops guarded the valuable jet and refused to permit it to be photographed. The flight aws expected to bring new protests from Communist Poland. The Polish foreign office seat three angry protest notes to Denmark witbin a three-day period after Jarecki fled to Bornholm. Churchill Invites Eisenhower Visit Invites President To Visit Britain LONDON UiP — PrknU Minister Winston Churchill inv'ited President Dwight D. <Eiscnhow«r today to visit Great Britain some time during his term in the White House. A questioner asked Churchill in the house of commons about inviting the President here to help reconcile Anglo-American differences. "Few things would give more pleasure to her majesty's, govern- . meat and the British people than I that President Eisenhowbr should , visit us in these islands, as he so , often did during the war,” Churchj ill said. I "And I earnestly hope that this | great event may occur during his tenure ‘of the presidency of the Vnited GJta-tes.” Chprchill (paused and continued: "If I thought there was gny chapce of his being able to detach himself ...” At this ipoipt he was interrupted ■by a about of “(McCarthy!” from a labor member, referring to Sen. Jo t seph R. iMdCarthy of Wisconsin. ■Churchill hesitated, seeming not to understand iwhat had been said Then, amid cheers, he said: "1 did not drag him, IMcCarthy, in. 'I think it is a great mistake to mix up the -head of the great American Republic aith a politician or a member of congress in that country. I think separation should ‘bo observed, in view of the entirely different character of the offices held by the parties concerned.” Then he got back to his invitation. "’Jf fl thought that there was any chance of his being able to detach fiimself in the near future from the great responsibilities which he lias so recently assumed, I should ; certainly make the necessary subjnission to the Queen so that an •Invitation could be sent from one head of state to another,” Churchill said. “I certainly -do no; feel that Uiyferences of view or emphasis * *' I*f*®nt time would, in any >ay. request or jusify a .procedure -0f such magnitude.” .The foreign office issped a foK mal denial, before Churchill spoke, pf a report that be has made any approach to Soviet ; Russia on a Big Three, or a personal meeting with Soviet premier Georgi M. Mgienkov. - Trude in a Good T^w ll- Decatur

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

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*AU THWJUGH ti|e years he kept telling anyone who would listen that he was a natural-boni pilot,” Mrs. Pearl McConnell, wife of Capt. Joseph McConnell, Jr., the J6-kill jet ace in Korea, says in their home in Apple Valley, Calif., as she looks at press clippings of hta feats. She's holding Joseph McConnell. 111. (International)

Error In Account Os Sunday's Mixup On Power Shutoff The Daily Democrat erred in Monday’s account oyer who was to blame over -Sunday^' power shutdown mixup that resulted from new equipment of the wrong specifications. L. C. Pettibone said a simple mi» understanding during an interview caused the blame to be put on the Moorehead Electrical Co. when ( actually the blame lay with the General Electric plant at Philadelphia, Pa., builders of the switchboard equipment installed Sunday. Said Pettibone: "I have nothing but the highest praise for the workers of Moorehead , Electrical} Co?j and commend them in the way they carried out fheir part during the unfortunate situation Sunday.” Pettibone said tho switchboard General Electric built was to be revised to operate With the switchboard of an older type at the city’s power plant and there evidently was a “slip-up on the dimensions.” Reassure Residents Near Proving Ground j 1 Radioactivity In Cloud Not Harmful LAS VEGAS. Ney. UP —Residents near the Nevada-Utah border were reassured today that there 'was no harmful radioactivity in ( a “fallout” cloud that drifted over that area after an unusually powerful atomic blast. A few hours after Tuesday’s dawn atomic blast on,the southern .NeVada desert, radioactivity was detected along border highways and forced residents of one Utah town' to rush indoors. VJi The blast, set ott apßiYuecasFiat proving ground, rocked portions of three states. Its radioactive cloud virtually closed the. town of St. George, Utah, for nearly three hours. However, the atomic energy commission said its monitors did pot register any radioactivity in the border area strong enough to harm human beings. The “fallout" tyas detected along a narrow strip of highways in the vinicity of Mesquite, Nev., and St. George. ' Sherman C. Latnb, St. George chief of poljce, said few of the 5,000 residents of his town were frightened by the precautionary request that they remain from. 9 a m. until noon. Lamb Said radioactive eJewiA from the Nevada proving grburtdSj 100 miles west of St. jGeorge, "always drift over our town.” but added, "this was the first time tire radiation level was so |iigh.” If you have something to or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results. ! ,

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1953

Five Indiana Clubs Put On Probation Warning Issued By State Cammission INDIANAPOLIS t’P — The Indiana alcoholic beverage commission priced five more liquor permit holders ph probation late Tuesday, wgrping that the minor penalty did not mean a slackening of enforce ment of gaming regulations. The five V’ere among the first of a seriegtof clubs and taverns cited for alleged Fourteen of 16 other cases heard Tuesday were awarded probation* rajther than suspension of permits. One; exception io the deferred judgment was the Edinburg Moose lodge.. Its. case was continued for ‘ a later decision. The five placed on probation included a Moose lodge at Richmond, and the Indiana Democratic club,* Indian Lake Country club pird .the Independent Pleasure grid Benefit club, all of Indianapolis. a • The' ABC said it deferred judg-’ ipent in cases where excise officers found paraphernalia which “might be, used for gambling,” and no testimony of actual gambling was introduced. } < .... i \ i TEEPLE MOVING & TRUCKING i Local and Long Distance . PHONE 3-2607 11 - — V j 1 .■ -r j.WMMbjU : .:. A Patronize Local 4 Business 'i - S; i ’ ■ ■ .. p| j - _ '■ • . SHOP at HOME ■' ■ ; J | i WELCOME WAGON Phon* 3.5196 ait 3-3056.