Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 64, Decatur, Adams County, 17 March 1954 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
—Vi ; ' I —*7 Tn j BUDGET You serve as many as 21 meals a week! /1 , L. v > / ♦/ *****! j, / *I A ~~* /a Y° U re^u * re a m ’ n ' rnum °f 3 items per meal! // \ffl ik / —L— A A /a W • /XT [Jk /A g You buy (depending on the size of your family and the sort "7 *** *!r IvX °f t°k* e y° u Q t l eas t 63 items a week! ASP’S MANY LOW PRICES SAVE YOU MORE MONEY THAN JUST A FEW OCCASIONAL SPECIALS! jA SWEET JUICY FLORIDA Because it takes many different foods to provide the 21 meals you serve each week, it takes many low ' 4% prices to cut the cost of those meals substantially. And A&P has what it takes ... not just a handful of low fIMIMfUAC L ? r f. e no? prices now and then, but scores and scores of them every day ... not just on items you use only once in a 126 Sue u .gg while, but pn those yod'.need time and time again. Result? You can really reduce your food bills at . ’ A&P. Come see... come save! Grapefruit sXl%* »■ i fresh ia« $9 70 "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY _ Pineapple "EH ... .. 39c.... 5 2.79 Pascal Celery -25 c (||UCK KOCSSt Green Peppers E CE 4<~He dmsssd Fryers mnseady YeHow Onions J&FHSir 310 c Torkeps 59e Ug-O-Lamb ». 69c Maine Potatoes BUY A LAB6i 0099 c Veal Roast cur ULD1 * ie. 09c Sliced Bacon center cut it. 15c - . wh,te A or AN °* V * 2 29c Broi,er TBrk# y» "oTlVavg. it. 59c Dressed Ducks Si‘n » 55c Roasting Chickens m. 69c Lamb Roast shoulder’cut Ih . 49c Ivnrv 25 c Vml Breas, * 23e Gr0BI " , Beef »“ OHT " - We ivuiy uuap . . U Beef Rib Roast ; s % u ?o"?rß7. .. .»69c Frosted Steaks SSS„ ’£ 63c Camay Soap .. 2 25 e Beef Rib Steaks ..........b. 75c Skinless Franks <b. 490_ OQ« Vml Ck °P* shoulder’cut .. ib. 69c Halibut Steaks OR Y, BAKE ,L Ib. 39c Sprite “‘a-™ »■«•<* zr Breasl iu 19c Dressed SnwH t> 27e Sunrae Bleach . 29 s STOKELY GOLDEN CREAM STYLE Dial soap.. 2—27- Cream Style Corn... 2 Di/ll Stum 2 bathsize 37 C ANN page strawberry whole kernel Cfah.. A v P Qnen o 97« Serves ... 2—59 c Stokely Corn . 2 »33‘ LlfebllOy SOap . Z? M ilk 4X47c lona Sweet Peas 3 Lux Toilet Soap 2 25‘ Cora Cilmaw lhs»t 9ft« Golden Corn ?IEJ Lr ’ ....™ 10c Reliable Peas Iww" 26c Silver DUSt ■ ■ , *<»"® JU Pamke Flour 6»lt 39c . m , n -„ Many Low Prices on LENTEN FOODS / , " FL or, d ; » £ Lux Detergent ™ 37 c Biea >™««- 2 -29 C Gmpefr«t juice s . Super Suds . . »•»*«• 29 e Toma, o So«P ?«■.. 4 ,0 1.536 c Gra|ie f rn it Sections Xio 2’££29c Ual —no ,SOZ PKG 29’ PBan,l, BUHW MC T °" a, ° J “ iM «*» 19C VBI — Spaghe|ti ANNPACE 2 25c p O|K!Ofll .80-WH.TE J 25c Fab "•««»• ,80Z 29 Egg Hoodies :.. » 29c Woman’s Day 1« Dreft ON * giant° SIZE GIANT SIZE 67 c Chum Salmon STRIKE T ..... 3 H.OO 8 O’clock Coffee MELLOW D IS 99c Linton’s Too Boss ° 57 c ® una <*mps 2 49c Tea Bags ? N u refriger p ator d jar 0 ?% 49c Lipton', Soup -r 3-38' ™“ Bt Large Eggs ._. . . ||g - Noodle Soup 5 3« 38 c Morton’S Pies»/'«”. ’’Mi 29c t Onion Soup — 2^33 c Swanson ’ sMPies ~- N VIIIVII VVM|4 MW WW T p. CHICKENOF- O 8-ox. $1 luna IIS THE-SEA V piss I‘UU n „M. READY Pkg. M ftH4c rilnil uLCUotS TO BAKE of 10 IVw Karo Syrup zr 3^36c Cheez Whiz« Mazola Oil «’ 73 C Cauli,lowc r « X 21C SnnnyfieW Butter » 73c Star-Kist Tuna - 37' “ ** “*">«' *•«■ * Viol "111wl I UIIO CTYLE CAN V I All prices in this od effective thru Sot., March 20 Blackberry PIC parker •*" 39® CCH.OUD ANO quartered Breakfast Rolls j c“n e amon ke " 25c Keyko Margarine c n 29 c M&M7-&1 1 J Banana Bar Cike PARKER ..29c Spreads Smoothly Even When Ice Cold I Fresh Pies OR P PUMPkFn RY ...
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Peress Case Nearly Lost In Confusion Senator McCarthy Plans To Continue Probe Os Dentist WASHINGTON UP — The case of the "Fifth Amendment" dentist whose army service started the current McCarthy fireworks has been nearly lost in the subsequent noise, smoke and confusion. The dentist was Major Irving Peress, a New Yorker who escaped overseas service and was given an honorable discharge over the objections of Sen. Joseph R. McCar* thy R-Wia. Peress also was promoted from captain to major, despite questionable loyalty. McCarthy told the United Press today that he would insist the army honor his demand and its promise to reveal the names of officers responsible for Peress" promotion and honorable discharge. The army department informed the United Press that secretary Robert T. Stevens’ promise to give McCarthy the names would be honored. But the army inspector general's investigation of the Peress case is not complete. It probably will be concluded in the last week of March after which a report will have to be drafted and approved before the Peress investigation can be resumed. It appears now’ that the Peress case is on ice for three weeks or more pending the report of the inspector general’s office to Stevens and its transmission to McCarthy. There is no reason to believe, however, that the investigation will be other than complete regardless of what may be made public about it. Defense secretary Charles E. Wilson was not pleased by the army’s handling of Peress. The man called a fifth amendment Communist by McCarthy was in the army four months before any btflcial noticewas taken of the fact that he had refused to sign a loyalty paper. It took 10 months thereafter to get him out of the army and the exit was by honorable discharge on Feb. 2, 1954. McCarthy sought to prevent Peress’ honorable discharge because the major previously had invoked the fifth amendment in sponse to the senator’s questions as a senate investigator. Pereas’ appearance before McCarthy after his discharge led to the questioning of Brig. Gen. Ralph H. Zwicker, Camp Kilmer, N. J., commanding general) and the rough handling by McCarthy which brought Stevens’ charge that Zwicker had been shamefully abused. McCarthy said his first question to Zwicker was about Peress, a question Peress himself had refused to answer. McCarthy said Zwicker replied: “I do not know hnd if I did I would not tell you." From there onward it was an angry session. Stevens,, in protest, ordered officers to reject McCarthy subpenas. But in a showdown with Republican members of the McCarthy subcommittee, Stevens agreed to recall that order and to give the subcommittee the names of all officers involved in the Pereas case. That line of inquiry was tidetracked, however, in dispute over alleged efforts of McCarthy committee counsel Roy M. Cohn, to bulldoze the army into giving preferred treatment to his former associate counsel, Pvt,. G. David Sehine. The army published a voluminous report in support of this charge and McCarthy replied with charges that the army department had sought to blackmail him with threats to make the report public. The bluebonnet is Texas’ state flower. I , ... —
gaHMwt x «s?H££2fi&r‘' lw sMBsOf WffiHSSaffi 18wM > - , y.-.:' B ^" i 'SI - v'^ 1 > - ' ■ \ * ■r ' \,£jSwoy LYIMA CANOY CLARK it shown at moment ot hurling a filled cocktail glass at a dodging sheriff's vice squad officer in tne AlaUbu Beach dUtfict Qf the Loa Angelea area. She is one ol six arrested in the raid. (International Soundphoto)
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1954
CAPT. R. I. GRIFFIN of American airlines checks his watch at Midway airport, Chicago, after Betting a new Los Angeles-to-Chi-cago flight record of four hours, <0 minutes. He flew a new DC-7 passenger transport on a regular flight, reaching speeds of 520 mph. Old mark was four hours, 49 H minutes. (International)
1,091 Are Aided At Warm Springs World's Largest Center For Polio | WARM SPRINGS, |Ga,— Tlje world's largest polio treatment center. using its facilities to capacity, cared for 1,091 patients in the year ended Sept. 30, 1953, according to the annual report of the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation, issu*d« today. The report reflects the great expansion of treatment methods in the years since the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt personally taught a few fellow-convalescents to exercise in an outdoor pool here. Last year more than 50 different kinds of orthopedic surgery were performed in a total of 649 operations- In many instances muscles were transplanted for more essential use. The Warm Springs school, with a library of 2.000 volumes, is staffed by a director and seven instructors. Fully approved by the Georgia department of education, it enables patients to continue educational programs as far as their physical condition allows. ‘When possible, textbooks and curriculum jf the horiid school are used. In many instances, according to the .eport, patients have been able to return home to be graduated with their regular classes. Last year the Katherine Tuck ,und, which helps support the school, established a >1,500 fouryear scholarship for a male patient or a Recently discharged male patient. As the most important aspect of treatment, there were 94.955 applications of physical therapy, including muscle testing and re-edu-cation, underwater therapy and gait training. The Warm Springs brace shop completed 21.198 jobs during the year on new appliances, repairs and alterations. Patients came from 43 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and 19 foreign countries. March of Dimes funds provided for more than 70 per cent of the 59,225 days of care they received. Warm Springs exists independently of jtyq supporting National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. Basil O’Conner is president of both Foundations. Two-thirds of patients admitted in the report period had had polio for more than a year. One-third were over 20 years of age. Os the total of 1,091, there were 318 with paralysis in neck, trunk, two arms and two legs. The average stay of hew patients was 93 days. Former patients returning for surgery stayed an average of 45 days.
