Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 207, Decatur, Adams County, 2 September 1953 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

S ■nwiTTr’g f" Jbß ■ ■■''?v'> ’ fifl Ki■ $ .HB / IWI W*ni i KAkb j7i tXXBUinKI 111 k \ ‘ BrWW ill IrBKUUVirl r BKUUVir i A* B B.KwnwWR" T \ I ; * * wHHN ■flrWl-' - |£t»>) Big Value OR I Smoked UAMC “Super-Right” nfUVM

Come See,Come Save at A&P SAVE WORK — SAVE MONEY WITH THESE BRANDS ‘ ;\ .' I I . ■ ' ; V -i S Apricots■« 2-45 c Peaches «^ c h“z« 2 — 49 c Fruit Cocktail BRAND NA Crushed Pineapple BRAND .. vPink Salmon COLDSTREAM cen 45c Chum Salmon STRIKE O7 Stuffed Olives SPAhUSK ,o% £ 49c Beverages 3 ■- 29® vH' ' ? A * ! ’■ ■ i-‘ . Evaporated Milk WHITEHOUSE .. 4c«ns 49c Marshmallows BRAND pkfl. 19c Sweet Pickles Paper Cups cquTdrinks .....I 39c Paper Plates COLORS . 5T5 39c Pickles wttc" iP , JCandy Bars VARIETIES 2 "r 49c : Tootsie Pops SUCKERS pk iT2lc ■' ' I -L -Y ./1 1 ■ ' ■ -■'' _J ■'■ '' Cracker Jack EVERY PACKAGE .... 6 pkgs. 29c Cone SugGi* frost ............... 10 bog 97c Mason Jars QUART $ S IZE ddx. $1.05 Jar Rubbers 7 •' ’ ~ 1 J -.7 j ,77 ■ _■ ■ Corned Beef Hash* - 25' Redi-Meat broadcasi . Broadcast Chili s?. Lunch Tongue BROADCAST 35* Potted Meat ,roadcast 2 ««29® Marshmallows 33®; Sunkist u^ a « . 2« >icANs 31 c I Sunkist ORANGEADE B 2 «5Z- CANS Liquid Lux detergent . .39® Palmolive TOILET SOAP . 3 REG SlZ£ 23* - Spry PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING 3 CAN 85® Toilet Soap ■ ■ ' ' 1 i . L - : '■ 1 . ■ .

Hot or ebld, sliced or in sandwiches . . . smoked ham from A&P is sure to win plenty of praise at picnics, parties, or any time you serve it! ’ i ■' i H TO 16 LB.® •■' hams * UTT V 4;; 3 I SHANK portion W 1 "■■73 c ff uu ib. ■: I 7 ’ ■ 7 i'i ALL GOOD CENTER CUT SUPER RIGHT QUALITY I Sliced Bacon - 69 c Ground Beef - 43 c H ■ 'f “• \ » ‘i/’ I? I Pork Loin Roost 0 ,8 lb 49c Lunch Meat | Z 69c I Beef Rib Steak CHCHCE*7“ C CUT .. Ib. 79c Canned Hams $7.39 I Beef Rib Roast IST I Skinless Franks ALL F ME/vf i b . 49c Cooked Hams WHOLE 2 . . lb. 73c 1 Fresh Fryers READY-TCLCOOK ... ... ib. 55c v Frosted Steaks DUCHESS . |... VkJ 59c I Large Bologna 49c Ocean Perch ...j m. 29c f | Natures Freshest Buys! I MCMIfiAM OR OHIO ELBERTA 2 . h W Peaches 5 39' 1 ■ _|i 1 I■ 1 ' I ; ' ■' Grapes- Oranges - 2 49' Dm., Dm fcloas S” 19c CouliHow.. KSft!.., : _ 29c President Plums Jwht ... 2 lta . 35c ' Cucumbers ««n ...k 3” r 25c Yellew Onions --■ 1 -IQ 39c Grass Seed w s b £ $179 Bartlett Pears now bu. $3.89 Roasted Peanuts “£?«&.....£» 35c KORIDAGOLD FROZEN J LIBBY'S FROZEN L Orange Juice 2» 33' French Fries 5- 79' Lemonade FRonS? vs . .... 2™ 35c Green Beans mo’en . j j k . n - ■ ■ i 11 i v ' * : *>’ ■■ VAL-A-MONT FROZEN 7 10-ox. JE- LIBBY'S 9 10-ox. 3Q_ . reaS STOCK UP AND SAVE ...... A pkgs. APC Vllt VOrn FROZEN A pkgs. Broccoli FROZEN . 'Jjj2sc\ Strawberries FIU3ZEN 4 49c t.--.d. ! 7 17 . ' r k . .. , ■ 7777_—

Marvelous Buys for The Holidays! • JANf PARKER 'WB. ‘ Appte Pies 39‘ Layer Cake r.*. 65c Raisin Bread £2$ MBK " & 15c Potato Chips & & 59c vj White Bread *&..' Sandwich Bread «**»» 19c ' ' - Sandwich or Hot Dog Rolls ’tT 25c Oatmeal Cookies PARKER iu- 25c • /. ■ . ■ ■ . \ | All prices in this ad effective through Sat., Sept. sth. "■ ; ■ * '■' > /, '■ j S~ ' ; ' i . ' . . ; 'IJ' i

DBCATXTR DAILY DBMOCKAT, DDCATUB, INDIANA

Dollar-Stretchiag Dairy Values TOP GRADE STRICTLY FRESH SMALL SUNNYBROOK Eggs 49' v Small Ems are your best MS buy today '|| • V t «j L ' Swiss Cheese BRAItD NSIM . WA pL -55 c Ice Cream CHOCOLATE . V..... 69c Sliced Cheese American or < pkg. 29c Silverbrook Butter “nUkhm .Viti 69c Ched-O-Bit ?5£ SB j 79c ■ J . r —' A '~\ • ; AMtWCA’S FOttMOST POOP EFTAItEE . .~?iWWC» 1»W W YKM '• * -F : >••. '

Heat Wave In 9th Day; 100 Deaths Result No Early Relief For Midwest And Eastern Seaboard ' Ily UNITED PRESS The nation's worst heat wave of the year burned’through its ninth day today and health authorities said it’ had killed at least 1.00 persons 'in the eastern two-thirds of the country. The weather said a cold air mass had surged down from Canada ijnto Montana and the Dakota but they doubted It would pxtend eastward far enough to relieve the heat in the baking midwest and eastDoctors warned dwellers in the heat belt to “take it easy” during the hot shell to avoid heart attacks and heat prostration. Some Chicago offices,! including several branches of the police department, closed before noon to get workers opt of stuffy offices. “Even the criminals are laying low in this heat,” a police official said. "The crooks apparently have found cool spots and are staying j there. We haven’t ha<f a major 1 s’ickup since Friday." U. S. District Judge Win G. Knoch offered to breach tradition and jet lawyers remove thdir coats in his Chicago courtroom. None did. T.wo thousand, workers at a Philadelphia clothing plant refused to go to work because of the; heat and two other firms let their 900 employes go home Philadelphia alone reported 05 deaths- du& to the extreme \temperatures. ' | Two men died of»heat-induced heart attacks Tuesday at St. Paul, . Minn., and many others were hospitalized by heart stroke. . At Toronto. Ont., the heat melted materials on the roof of the ‘ Graphic Arts Building at the Canai diah National Exhibition Tuesday [and caused it to sag 15 feet. ? _ Scores of spectators fled when it i appeared the entire building would . eave Ip. At Chicago Heights. 111., truckloads of newly-harvested tomatoes burst their skins as'the heat expanded the pulp and juice as they were carted to canneries. With a somewhat disjointed I sense of timing, the U.S. civil service hoard advertised for extra post--1 office help to handle the Christinas rush. At Milwaukee. Marquette Uni- ■ versity football tackle Frank Scaffidi sweated off 10 pounds, dropping from ;212 to 232. during a two- ' hour practice session. One hundred Bell Telephone company employes returned to work today' when the company promised to install air conditioning in the Sandusky. Ohio, exchange: The workers walked out Tuesday when the mercury climbed to 100 in their workrooms. The Electric Institute reported at New York that so many people used electric fans and air conditioners overtime last week that the nation's utilities had to put out a record production of 8,539,557,000 kilowatt hours of power. Hundreds of Chicagoans who dragged cots to Lake Michigan beaches in search of a cool night's sleep were disappointed. Police carried out : a standing curfew order and foi-cecl them to leave but let them sleep in nearby parks. | " _r Ifvynu htpe someibing to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results. j

KENYON PRESIDENT CITES VALUE OF COLLEGE By DR. GORDON KKITH CHALMERS President of Kenyon College rpHE modern world needs trained men. but more, it needs men JL who are educated as well as trained. Training gives you skill in a job; education tells you what to do with the skill; in fact, it guides your off hours as well as your working hours. Its purpose is to fill your life with enduring satisfaction, with the ideas and memories and measurements of the world which are worth thinking about and using anywhere, in a crowded city or on a t ( j| desert island. Training comes second; your opportunity ■ lira k* a ccdle « e ot liberal arts science* is education. To be able to find in earth, air. i fire, and water the laws describing their order « t 0 be abl e to see accurately in a painting or a piece of music, in a play, a novel, or HW a bl °S ra P h y what man has made of man. to ■a be at home some periods of history and P crceive in them, the motives of some telling decisions made by men or nations—this is to EBBHHHHI seize the fruits of the four rich college years. Dr. Chaimart Education deals with a single skill--skill in thinking. You may think with mathematics, colon, chemical symbols, or words; in college there is a chance tn work out and enlarge your thoughts by all of these mean*. Collaborating with you in the laboratory, the classroom, the seminar, library, or studio are masters of these ways of thinking, instructors who themselves are busy with thought and values and know how to help the beginner exploit his abilities. And not only is college instruction intellectual, it is social, moral, and religious as well. College life In the dormitories and in the Commons, the services cf the chapel, the numerous discussions formal and informal, the games, lectures, and concerts bring these important matters out of the printed boon and into talk, activity, experience. . ,

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 1953

Fishing Good, Ike Delays His Return Lands Big Rainbow, To Stay Extra Day FRASER, Colo.. UP ■Eisenhower planned to return to his summer White House in Den-r ver today-unless another big trout influences him. The President was ready to drive ■hack to Denver Tuesday but he landed a big rainbow trout he had been trying to catch for days and decided to stay here an additional 24 hours. 1 ! Members of his staff reasoned there were other large trout in the stream that conceivably could lead to another change ra travel plans. _ k Press secretary James C. Hagerty said he felt virtually certain the President would motor to Denyer late today “■But,” said Hagerty, “it is plea- . sant here and the trout are bitting |we'll just have to wait ajjd see.” Late Tuesday the White House disclosed from Fraser the President had sent another note of en*Couragenient .to Sran, this time promising that the United States would give “sympathetic consideration" to an Iran request for iinmediate financial asistance. This was .the first ‘governmental news to develop at this small mountain town since the President’s arrival. Disclosure of the correspondence between the President and General Fazollah Zahedi of Iran threw the .tiny railroad depot into a clattering whirl of a ■-' tivity. The press room for reporI ters is in the depot and thousands |hf words on the international jgituaI tion poured out of Fraser Tuesday ; night. ' ; i.Mr. Eisenhower came here last Thursday for complete rest and i relaxation b& the Byers Peak ranch of Aksel Nielsen and Carl A. Nojgrert. both of Denver. For t?ie first few days, a shre elbow discouraged the I’residnu: 1 from casting but he strclled fre- : quently along the creek running ; through the ranch and spotted a . large pool inhabitated by one particularly lafge and inviting trout He started fishing for’i:his partrout Saturday. Tuesday, after a morning of careful casting with a nine-foot fly iod, tie President finally scored. He caught a one and one-quarter p6und rainbow trout measuring 15 3-8 inches, the prize of the mountain trip as far as his party was concerned. |

MT DK3L a JkisfcXßi JL L MOTHER of eight children, Mrs. Stella Petrowicz, 52, smiles as she leaves Immigration and Naturalization office in Philadelphia, facing deportation on charges of being a member of the Communist party and Young Communist league. (International)