Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 242, Decatur, Adams County, 14 October 1953 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
WEEK? ■j2J»jW§a in Where But At A&P Will You Find Such Value In Picnics *3 9 e FULLY DREfTH), TRAY-PACKED ALL GOOD, CENTER-CUT Fresh Fryers 49 6 Sliced Bacon- --•• •• - c Smoked Homs sSSktSrton .....»>. 4?c Slab Bacon w? piece \...... .». 63c Lamb Roast ...... it 4»c Pork Loin Roast ~»m n® ..... . n>. 49c Vea, Roast Pork Sausage 555 pack ~8 49c Blue Pike Fillet fresh caught 49c BURSTING WITH JUICE . < {wpOranges -- - ■ - 2- 59 c
ApphS CRISP. JONATHAN •••»•• 5 cello 49c Pascal Celery ju ca&fornia “ • • • • st * lk Potatoes . *SO b S Spanish Onions sweet • • * • • • 8 iu. 19c Tokay Grapes red. ripe • • •I • •»• a. FAW brand J 59c Sweet Giaer no preservative * 7W ■MHnBHMHHMMHmn ' _ X l J. ■ ‘T •*. *' l /r MILD CHEDDAR V/y Cheese • ••• • 49’ Ice Cream pages, banana • • • * • 1 «** Velveeta SS£¥ pimiento .... 2 & 85c Sunnybrook Eggs MEDIUM *IZE • • •_- * dOI 1 Silverbrook Butter FULL H 9(?SCORE • • • roU 69 C Sunrae Bleach ••• • * 29* Borax • <*» 19* Old Butch Cleanser * • 2 ««25* Dial Soap ....... 2 - 37* 4Palmolive ... > 23* Cashmere Bouuet T °o£ 3 Z 23* Cat Food P S ....2-29* Hermel’s Spam ......' - 45* Peanut Butter w? .... 39* Beef Stew ..... 2 tT 49* Spaghetti DI S E . Green Giant Peas •• 2 - 39* Niblet Corn 2 - 35* Margarine 29* Heinz Ketchup ♦ ••. 2 45*
Fresh Cranberries FRESH PACKED • ♦ • ce/lo 29c Popcorn or" YELLOW** ••••••• 2 pkg. 29c Yellow Onions as. no. i gram • •\. 10 bag 29c Salted Peanuts REGALO BRAND • • • • pkg.* 45c Braiil Nuts •• Libby’s Peas SLICED OR HALVES lona Cling Peaches •• 2 49* Salad Dressing sultana brand • • • • qt. 37c Stuffed Olives S small lA . . . 49c Rolled Oats *REG. • • ... 5 bag 39c Pancake Flour SUNNYTIELD BRAND • • 5 bag 39c dexo Shortening VEGETABLE 1 • • • • 3 can 75c Oleo Margarine SURE GOOD ... • 2 ctns." 39c lona Sweet Peas DO^EN J sl3s • • • 3 35c lona Golden Corn lona Tomatoes DOZEN gl^S^ o^ 1 • •• 3 ctn«" 35c Tomato Soup .. 4 37* Ketchup ann page 2 t>lt£ z " 35c Dressing FRENCH GE . £ bottle 27c Sparkle Gelatin FLAVORS ..... 3 pkg>. I7c Sauerkraut E BRA^D E . ° r . • • • • 2 SS? 31c Apple Sauce . .y . . . , 2 Sff- 33c Chocolates WORTHMORE • • • • • • box 59C lona Apricots unpeeled halves ... 2 can," 49c Red Sour Cherries -45 c . Cranberry Sauce ocean spray . • 2 caiu* 45c Fruit Cocktail sultana brand • • • • can 35c Crushed PineappleA&p brand ... 2 *«■«» 49c MflrchmMllAiaac CLOWN BRAND 10-oz. ■ mar snmaiiows white or colored • * 4 pkgs. <"C JANE PARKER Jelly Donuts 25° Strawberry Pie 49c Angel Food Cake JAN LARat KER ..... 49c Orange Cocoanut Coffee Cake . . e > 25c White Bread 20-oz. LOAF • • • • • • ■ Only I7e prices in this ad effective through Sat. Ocf. 17th. r— - TRI GRIAT AHANTIC A PACIFIt T<A COMPANY
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
F 1 . J ' x3aH^. I 1 ( Bm 1 \ v-m sM iflH James C. Ryan (left). Federal Narcotics bureau district supervisor. and James H. Page, customs official, display seised sacks of heroin and the two fire extinguishers in which ths dope was found.
Four Names Omitted From Contributors . Chamber of Commerce retail division president Kenneth Shannon provided four more names of those who contributed to the 4-H recognition dinner Monday night but were „ unintentionally | omitted. They follow': Wertzberger’a; Haflich and Morrisey; Petrie Oil;' Zwick’s Furniture. —r- — ~ Indiana Farmers To Present Views Congressional Group At Capital Monday INDIANAPOLIS. UP — Indiana farmers will have an opportunity to tell congressmen what kind of a farm program they want when the house agriculture\ committee holds a public hearing at the statehouse next Monday. Abotit two dozen witnesses, including representatives of the Indiana Fann Bureau. Grange and Farmers Union, Dean Harry J. Reed of Purdue University, and 12 representatives of Indiana agriculture were invited by Lt. Gov. Harold Handley jto give their views on price supports. f The hearing at 9 a.m. is one of a Series the 20 committee members, including ’Rep. Ralph Harvey (R-Ind.), will hold in' the midwest to determine farm sentiment toward the present support program which expires next year. Congress will consider some program in January. At hearings eatlier this week in Minnesota and South Dakota, dairy and wheat farmers told the congressmen they wanted as much or more government aid, rather than less as advocated by secretary of agriculture Ezra Taft Benson. South Dakota farmers told the committee they were “definitely in a price squeeze” and “looking for help.” Handley, who arranged the meeting here, emphasized it was open to the public and asked ail interested farmers to appear. Some observers believed Indiana might oppose continued high support prices since Indiana’s hog industry appeared to be in good condition.
Trade in a good Town — De.catu: II | ■ ' ‘I ! ■■ FILM Left Today Ready Tomorrow at 8:00 Closed AH D«y Thursday EDWARDS STUDIO Open 8:30 g. m, to p:QO p. m-
REMEMBER Your Community Chest GIVE . Full Support WELCOME WAGON -3196 og 3-3966.
Five Million Dollar Divorce Settlement Report Rockefellers Agreed On Amo lint CKIOAOo up — A Chicago attorney said today that “Cinderella bride” Barbara Bobo Rockefeller and her estranged husband, Winthrop Rockefeller, have agreed to a record-breaking divorce settlement of more than $5,500,000. The who said he was an “adviser" to iMrs. Rockefeller, said reports that the couple had finally reached a settlement, of their drawn-out marital difficulties were “substantially correct.” The $5,500,000 figure would make the settlement the largest on ord, attorneys said. Meanwhile Fat Bronte, a friend of the blonde Bobo said here the settlement may be officially announced \in New York Thursday Formal settlement ’‘apers were being drawn up in New York by Mrs. Rockefeller’s attorney, Louis Nizer, Miss Bronte said. However, Alias Bronte added that Mrs. Rockefeller, who is in New York, not. definitely agreed to any settlement by early today. ,) \ "She was offered $5,500,000 last November and turned |t down,” Miss Bronte said. The attorney, who asked that his name not be revealed, said terms of the “settlement” were substantially as follows. 1. Mrs. Rockefeller will receive $2,000,000 in cash and securities. 2. There will be a $1,000,000 trust fund established for her, guaranteeing an income of $20,000 a year. . Another $5,500,00 trust fund will be established for the Rockefellers’ son. Winthrop Paul, 5. 4. The boy will stay in his mother’s custody, buk Rockefeller will have ample visiting rights. The attorney said he could not verify a report that Mrs. Rockefeller would be paid $70,000 a ye«r in alimony until she re-marries or Rockefeller dips. Bobo, the daughter of a Pennsylvania coal miner, married Standard Oil heir Winthrop Rockefeller on St. Valentine’s Day, 1945. They separated a year later and waged a legal battle ever since. Pobo, nqw 36, 'took her son to live al her parent’s modest farm home near Lowell, h.d., after the separation. Then, in a dramatic moVe last June, she gained e'- 4 trance to Rockefeller’s luxurious New York apartment and announ - ed she would stay there. Rockefelle|r, meanwhile, movea to Arkansas, apparently intending to obtain a divorce there. $16,000 Cash Taken From Liquor Store INDIANA HARBOR, Ind., UP — Two armed men and a woman up he Evanston liquor store early today and escaped with $16,000. Police said the bandits, all Negroes, entered the store at 6:35 a.m., a short time after it opened. They escaped in a light green Pontiac car bearing Illinois license platea, police said. The store had a large sum of money on hand to cgsh pay checks of workers in the district, police said. \ : Jj. • • ' " Portland Man Heads Poultry Association LAFAYETTE, Ind.. UP — Max Shufelt. Portland, today succeeded Harold H*nlin, Alexandria, as president of the Indiana state poultry association. Also elected at a 35th annual nieeting at Purdue University were Stanley Barker, Thorntown, first vice-president, and M. G. Whitehead, Goshen, second vicepresident. R. L. Hogue, Purdue poultry specialist, was re-elected retarding secretary. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.
Dulles' London Trip Suggests ■ Crisis Looms Evidence Is Seen Os International h Crisis For Meet WASHINGTON UP —There was evidence of international crisis foday—despite state department denials—in secretary John Foster Dulles’ plans to fly to London for a Big Three conference. iA Dulles leaves at 8:30 p.m. e s.t. to meet Friday with British foreign secretary Anthony Eden and French foreign minister Georges Bldaqlt. He will return Monday. The state department insisted the ponference had no hurry-up angles. But men on the lower departmental desks who normally 'would know of such plans weeks in advance got\ the word only a short time before public announcement of the London huddle. \ It was learned that the transAtlantic exchange of messages which set up the meeting began only a few days ago. Best judgment here was that the Trieste situation suddenly demanded more urgent and personal attention than had been expected, although other matters of greater long-range importance are sure to be discussed in London. Decision to permit Italy to occupy a portion of the Trieste area, disputed with Yugoslavia and maintained since the war as neutral ground by An-glo-American occupation troops, involved what is called a calculated r|sk. ISuch sometimes go wrong. Marshal Tito’s protests and were expected. But neither London nor Washington may have been prepared for the chance that Tito might actually begin to move his armies if the Italians moved iq. British prime minister Winston Churchill plugged again last week for a Big Four meeting ofy heads of state —himself. President Eisenhower, French Premier Joseph Laniel and the Soviet’s Georgi M. Malenkov. Churchill or Eden is likely to raise that again with Dulles, but the Eisenhower administration still is not convinced it would be good'international politics. The mpre immediate problem, however, appeared to be No. 1 on the London schedule. Yugoslavia has proposed that Trieste be considered by a four-nation conference, the United State. Great Britain; Italy and Yugoslavia. Yugoslav foreign minister Koca Popovic had a private talk with Dulles Tuesday and told reporters afterwards that the secretary of state had promised to give “urgent attention” to the bid for a four-power conference. Popovic called the Trieste tion “extremely dangerous” and said his country will “resist with all means” any arbitrary attempt to settle the future of the disputed territory.
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1963
GIRL SCOUT Brownie troop 19 met Monday after school. The following officers were eleced by the troop: president, Cynthia Collier; secre-tary-treasurer, Colleen Kelly; and scribe, Alice Schroeder. After a business meeting, refreshments were served. The group then sang a song and played games. The meeting Closed with the friendship circle.
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