Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 195, Decatur, Adams County, 19 August 1953 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
COMPARE QUALITY AND WCE! SEE FOR YOURSELF THAT N<\ STORE OFFERS MORE FINE FOODS at BIG SAVINGS! C i oft \ Any day yoU shop •• ; to an y department you stop .. v you’re bound to find good \ * p/xiir ■ u values in good things to eat at A&P. Because there axe so many of them all through \ \AJF* - - the store — thanks to A&P's famous policy of keeping prices as low as possible on '' J 4 item after item, day after day. Come See! Come Save! ' •• > ~ ; ' ' ! < ■ : "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY, BLADE CUT \ 1 1 I OgfeChuck Roast 39 c Every “Super-Right” chuck roast is deliciously juicy and flavorfull For every one is cut from corn-fed beef. ' I ' 1 | : . L , ' "Super-Right’’—4 to 8 Lb. Average 11 Gut-Up, Ready to Cook Smoked Picnics - • »j 43 c Fresh Fryers ■- - v 49' Sliced Bacon C^TS<SL T 69c Ground Beef iiKSW' 0 ." 1 : - »J 39c Dried Beef SLICED • pk£ 29c Beef Liver sucro • » 39c Leg-O-Lamb Cooked Hams ’ff&.ni'Wk .. . . 7%c Fish Sticks i£&"XSS‘A T 'Kt, 49c Boiling Beef PLATE MEAT • ••••••». ISc Haddock Fillet cajugu'. i ..:. .. L. 49c ; • i .. A • i L--I - A BIG BARGAINS IN NATURE’S BEST! from where they grow to where you buy, freshness For money-savers with marvelous flavor, pick your and flavor have been protected. Naturally, you 11 en-farm-fresh varieties at A&P! Every step of the way, °' goodneSS ’’ ’ * nd “* bUdget - ■ - Elberta Freestone — 2 Inch — 4 lbs. 35c ®P PEACHES -■■■ S 3 59 Watermelons red-ripe s L " B . each 99c Cucumbers LONG GREEN 1 4 for I9c Seedless Grapes lb. 19c Potatoes gradS cobblers 15 bac 49c Cantaloupe jumbo m b sizk | tor 49c California Oranges SIZE FOR EATING 3 doz. 67c Sweet Corn %’S ¥sl™ doz. 49c Frozen Peas J4Vnd m ¥ nt . ..... 2 !££ 25c Orange Juice ‘ ■ i Ivory Soap ...... 3 “. d » Ivory Snow, •• •. .. 62' 27' Velveeta , 2 -CT Ivory Soso 4 »£’ 19 c lce Cream •«- 69c A 7 p r A bath AG Medium Eggs s o 'ffiW? K . a ... 68c vOIBSy uOOP zS« ZI B Fresh Butter .69c Lava Soap 2 c Oastile Soap hardwater • 3 21 c CHERRY Joy 67'... 29' ?•£ 39* Spic & Span . X 75*' 'X 23* ' u ■ Itinl Ca/ih 0 1, ” , ' 97c ' Coffee Cake «it'v »S2v“s. 29c Dial ooap £ ‘he dr Pound Cake 29c Lux Flakes 27' Swift’s Prem .. •' ™ 43* Lifebuoy Soap 3 25' ‘.r. G..a M.r,vin. tttttßas**. t a?. I iiy Rnan ' 9 ,e9 ' 99c Pi " ea PP^«TA R N , i s, lL?c& B 2 'X’ 45c LUA dUdp ••••••• O «h. £U j. unch Meat ' . .Ms 45c Northern Towels • • 2 =h 39° Northern Tissue ..« < 25* orange Juice 29c Peanut Butter .... "■£ 39* <£wiffnin9 forpib cakes 9*• &cc I AMAH 1..:.A SUNK.ST ft SK-JftJL WHHing ANDFRYNG ..J h ? Lemon Juice pure ... 2 (25* a „„ u . KRAFT'S Hh Aft Sour Cherries s?w SJI 2U 2? 45c urange case gold ... z MW jr DUI Pickles < ?3c Lemonade •.... 2 - 31* Swwt , -. ' 1 ■ AN prices in this ad effective thru Saturday, August | • Colored And Quartered bommoct food retauar .. . tmci liit Keyko Margarine ... 28* Spreads Smoothly When Ice Box Cold
THB DBOATWB DAILY anCATUB, DOMANA
Corn Crop Forecast k Second Largest [ Wheat Yield Is [ Expected Large LAiFAYETTC, Ipd. — IndUnals corn production is forecast \l‘. 167,000 busheli — the second largest crop in the history ot the dta|te -► report Purdue University agricultural statisticians. i in spite of some drouth conditions in the southwestern part of Indiana, corn yield prospects rose fwb bushels during July to- an average predk£ed yield of a3 buhhels per acre. /wheat production in Indiana is now estimated at .44,055,000 with an indicated record ot 27.5 bushels per afcre. The quality ot the 1053 wheat Crop was exceptionally good as is usually the: case when high yields are obtained. ’ production of oats is estimated at 45,864,000 bushels for this year. The crop did not yield as well as | expected earlier and ttye indicated yield per acre of 36 bushels is down a bushel from tlr ■ July estimate. This year’s <trop is nine per cent less than last year's, bbl is only one per cent 'below thd 19'42-51 average crop. \ . Indiana soybean production is expected to reach 39,629,000 bushels during 1953. The indicated average yield of 23 bushels per acre has been exceeded only la 1949 and 19&2. *’A total hay crop of 2,469;()00 tqris is in Indiana this year. The ( crop is two per cent lower than last year and thrfee per <eijt below the ten year average crop. ‘Pasture condition at' 79 is aHve last year by six points, but ia nine points below the average. •j!ilk production reinair ed at high levels during- July with farmers feeding liberal amounts of grain. July milk production was 3621000,000 ponnds, 7,000,000 pounds abqve last year but slightly be10ut the ten year average. production of eggs in July, was estimated at 195.000.000 eggs; four pep cent above last year. Rhee Asks Loyally Os Returned POW's Free The North Is Indicated SKOI’L. Korea (UP)—President Syngman Rhee, in a message to returned South Korean war prisoners. said today he was confident of their support when “we march nqro.“ i > RHee’s message blamed the Gqnimunists ami the Soviet UnipiJ for ithe misery and hardships endured by the South Korean people, fl, am confident that, when we 'mgrch north to save our compain the north we will, share your unfailing loyalty and intense patriotism.” Rhee said. “The sacrifices paid by the free people of Korea have greatly servfed to strengthen Korea’s military ? power, which vfill be an important factor in carrying out the unfinished task of Unifying the nation, north and south, as soon as circumstance* permit.” hje said. litfgnity Plea Answer Ordered By Saturday IWLA.VA.POUS UP — trudge SUUI 1. Rabb has ottered the Marjbn VCounty prosecutor’s office to answer by Saturday an insanity pjeli by fireman U- James P. Pupu. charged in a triple slaying. • Pope. 49. appeared in Criminal Coui*t Tuesday and pleaded not guilty to charges of first degree murder in the death of his 28-year-pld wile and manslaughter in the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. James Rader. : claimed he was i insane temporarily when the slayings m;currgd last June 25 following a dinper party at the Rader home. Rabb appointed Urs. Ruben A. Solomon and ’Murray A. Dearinom'l to give Pope a psychiatric examination. ‘ I .1 .j- ... . More than $9,06’0,000,000 j»as spent- on television sets in the I nitad States J between 1946 and 1952.
«rtv V\ v\ i I cl I k v \JU < C k 'JB^' * IQWt" \xPSL iO3r \T ROM AH 1 \ ■ W)' f S \? / (3QQ3 | —Er Use Roman Cleanser Bhach ttf make children's undies snowy-white and sanitary. To remove stubborn stains, easy directions on label. Wj'Hl! W JJi-J \u '"■JikS 1 f
Ex-Soldier Killed In Professional Scrap MIAjSTI BEACH. Fla. UP — A young hero of the Korean war who becamh a “butter and eggs” preliminary fighter to provide u better home for his wife and children was fatally Injured Tuesday night in a bout wlljh another novice. The victim. 24-year old Robert L. Lee, was making his fifth start as a piofessiohal in a scheduled four-rounder with Kenneth Yates, 19, of Hialeah, Wi. The bout lasted only a minute and 11 seconds; Ringsiders Yates, who had fought, professionally only twjce, landed a light right hand under Lee’s heart. 1; ; ‘ —4—|— i-*——■ . i .1/ Battery Powder i May Get Approval PQ Department To Remove Ban j ' ■ eWASHINGTON UP — iManufac- ’ turer J-ess M. Ritchie said today he expects' the/Post Office Department to dnnounee soon that it has cancelled a sefen-months-ol<l mail fraud order against his controversial battery pfep powder. J |M>X2. A spokesman for the department confirmed that: “we are going to Issue something on AD-X 2 in the next three or tour days.” He refused to elaborate on that statement. *■ Ritchie said he; has "‘reason td sbelieve” the department will officially vacate, , the fraud order, which has' been “iuspeiided” since March 2. He said he regards the impending action as a i ’vindication” of his . product, wlijch has bben labeled iyorthless by : thei National Bureau of Standards. The fraud older, which forbade Ritchie’to usd .the mails to sell or advertise AD-X 2, was issued last January on the'jbasis of the Bureau of Standards’ finding that the, powr d.er would not old storage batteries as Ritchie claimeif. Secretary oft Commerce Sine-lab-Weeks and'the.Senate Small Busi ness Committee went to bat for Ritchie, a former bulldozer operator from Oakland, qalit. and the post office suipeniled the fraud order March 2 pending further tests. ' | ' ' Weeks then ffired Dr. AHen V. Astin as director of the Bureau of •Standards, on the grounds the bu i reau had not given AD-X 2 a fair test. | I — Woman Changes Mind When She Hits Water NEW YORK VP — Eleanor Harrison. 2s, said she was “fed up with it all” when she jumped fully clothed* into the, East River Tuesday night. b ■ Onbe jin the water she Changed her nirnd, however, and swam >hrough the murky water , to Long Inland City on the opposite bank. She was sent to a hospital for observation after a factory guard pulled her out ot the river.
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Prisoner Says He Was 'Brain Washed' ] Briton Returns From Jail Cell Austria UP ■— British liUsinessihah Edgar Sanders said he was thoroughly “brain-yashed” while serving time in a Hungarian Communist jail on trumped-up spy charges, ?■ He was unaware that (EMzabetii II was hib country’s queen ior that Joseph Stalin was dead, he said. The silver-haired Sanders, tired but cheerful, crossed the border to freedoiu Tuesday morning after serving 3 1-2 of a jl3-year sentence for espionage and itold of Communist grilling that dumbed tile mind. ' 1 Asked Vy newsmen why he confessed to. the Hungarian Reds in 1950 that he was an Angloj-Ameri-can spy.’ he replied: ■ "Before;.you know where you arejj you sign statements.” “If you are interrogated for 35 h juts without interruptioa, you 1 make mental somersaults confess everything they want I from you.” he said. Sanders was arrested in 1919 along with Robert Vogeli-r, his American superior in the electric firm for which they worked. Both were convicted and imprisoned Vogeler was released in ’1951. ganders said he kftiew i Vbelelhad been 'released .nily because the sound of; his feqtstej s vanished from a neighboring cell. Other thau that, he sdid, he knew nothing and was told less But, almost from the day of his arrest, hq said the Reds began “preparing” him for the show trial at wtiiich he was convicted. To Fly Flynn's Body Back To New York DUBLIN. Ireland UP •+-- The body of Edward J. Flynn. I Demooiratic ijational commjdeeman from*New York and Bronx |County header, will leave Shannon Airport by plane Joday for a funeral in lhe Bronx. I i | .. Flynn, who died Tuesday morning at St. Vincent’s Private Nursing Home in Dublin, was! taken to the tiny University ‘Roman Catholic ejrarch Tuesday night before starting the 200-mile journey to the airport. A frieird disclosed Flynn’j) body will- reach New York “sometime j Wednesday night.”
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'EDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1952
Honey Os An Excuse NIAGAfRA FALLS, Ont., UP — Baseball, games have been called on account of darkness or because of; inclement weather, bqt the umpire at a recent gdme at StDavid’s public scbopl here caine up .with “game called On account of bees.'' When thie school's second baseman raced to scoop up a ball, he gathered up a partially constructed beehive instead.
FASTEST KNOWN RELIEF FOR GAS ON STOMACH THANK HEAVENS' Most attacks are acid indigestion. When it strikes take Bell-ans tablets. They contain the fastest-acting medicines known t$ doctors far the relief of heartburn and gas* SOS refunded if noV satisfled. Send empty carton to ,Bell-ans. Orangeburg. N. Y. Get Beil-ans today. 2W. QUALITY Photo - Finishing All work left before noon Thursday ready next day, Friday, 10:00 a.m. Holthouse Drug Co. ! J Vi I'"! -R! I ! 'j Patronize Local Business :■. ■ ■' r.q SHOP at HOME 1 • s. zv + 3s h; \ ; ■ j ; J ;I.■ ”H '■ WELCOME i •'• "'i- c v ‘ \ ‘I - ilf 1 L’s / ’ i WAGON PHONE 3-3196 or 3-3966
