Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 259, Decatur, Adams County, 3 November 1954 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

I r7‘H I CMSP * RED ‘ RIPE CORTLAND Apples — 5 2.69 I These bright red beauties have a tangy, refreshing flavor. Uso them J for sd ‘°° l hoi lunches .. .or to add a goy touch to jr’r fruit bowL 'I - . I SWEET JUICY FRESH RED-RIPE I Florida Oranges ••. 8 £ 49® Cranberries «•**»*. '.-.. £ 19 c I Fresh Cabbage SttE D HE^S UM . •*. . . ib. 5c Emperor Grapes REI£IUPE V ° R •• • 2 ibi. 25c I Fresh Carrots .... 2 » 29c Florida Oranges r ? OT « .. 2 dOfc 49c I Grapefruit £Sh II BAG tPnT 5 .... 8 b«< 59c Bananas I GOLOEN J I Fresh Mushrooms WHITE .... • P °box 49c Brussel Sprouts GREEN • " ..... lb. 29c I I all good graoe * a * |||||P Sliced Bacon 49 c I LEGS. THIGHS or BREASTS — "SUPER-RIGHT* SHANK PORTION I Fryer Parts 59® Fresh Ham ... a. 39® I Bott Chuck Roost SA M . . .... 49c Sliced Fresh Hom SK™. ... . * 79c I Ground Beef qUKUT? 1 *?* 11 ” •.. . . ib. 39c Smoked Homs PORTION ...... .»> 49c I I Sliced Bacon ••superSight" ••. . . ib. 59c Fantail Shrimp FROSTED** I *. .... *£k£ 49c I I Beef Plate Meat BOILING ... .. . ib. 15c Halibut Steaks BROIL*. • • .... ib 39c I I Roll Sausage PORK • • ... • • roll 39c Perch Fillets F LAKE ERIE* ... . • ib. 45c I I AAr ‘ OWN PURE VEGETABLE IB dexo Shortening 3 75 c \OR j|LV \ dexo ... the digestible all-purpose shortening 1 Mlwio . . . is ideal for cakes, fries and perfect pies! I EQUAL TO THE IEST-YET COSTS YOU LESS! WISCONSIN LONGHORN STYLE ANN PAGE PURE STRAWBERRY f l Cheddar ChM “ Preserves 2 - 59’ I “ ■ Woman’s Day .7® I Large Eggs ........ 49c lona Tomatoes 3 it? 37c I Silverbrook Better •• .. JiS 43c A&p Sauerkraut J’X- lOc | Cheese Food .• • 2 73c lona Sweet Peas ... 3S? 35c I Page's Ice Cream KS^ 01 . .. J 6»c lol, a Green Beans ??,?“. .. .~ ! S 10c ,ona Cream Corn ♦?£“*. . . . . 16 c ™ 10c A ,ONA "NEW-PACK" HALVES I 7 '“T - Bartlett Pears .... oR»» .i . o Pumpkin tozen r cans only *1.54 2-cX z 27c liW 4 * > Ado . Sfluce A&P BRAND j I NttG fiittd. JAMBPABKBR 20, Applt 5<,UCe DOZE *» 188 ••• • 2 cnn. 33C I BVVT King DATE-FILLED ... ... . • • X7C AAP CHUNK STYLE O 20-ot 40E rineappie DOZEN A cans I RmhJ jane *O-°r- r — I wniTe oreaa tin only i/c cuLa. sealight « I .. . . iuno riaxes white meat ... z can s JVC ■ Layer VOKO vanilla-white • . • save lOc nVC angel soft I Gold Bar Cake S^ACKM) 1 WHEAT • • en. 29c Fgnigl Ticciiao 0 QQc I ■ Sandwich RoMs SS? I *^. .< . . Stt 19c ™Ciai I IbSUCS •• • Zof4oo 03 I Feanet Cookies n 9 Peaches l3^g J^ R M . w .2 c 49c Isl - A ' 3 MED 25c Al aw Grapefruit Juice . 2 39c I Ivory So<ip 4 P»s. 23c •• 2 blZi 27 s Lemonade Base 2 ®.IS 35c I p| i large Cfb'' Orangeade Base gold .... 2 c 6 .ns 33c I iVOrV 1 12K6S tte •• • • gant v}j .Cranberry Sauce OCEAN 2 39c I Aomov QftOß A Oleo Margarine COLORW° D ... 2 itns. 39c I iMllray vUap •• • • • y »:e pastry Flour BRAND riE^ D • • ■ ■. 5 £ 33c I ■ Tide m" G - ..... -- .1 G9 3 AII SwM » Margarine 29c mr - Graham Crackers SoSIy co ... 2 pf,. 59c I DllZ 29c RGE . .. • » uK' Haman's Saltines .... 25c ■ large O Clock Coffee mellow* 0 . •.. Vm 95c I UXyOOI 24c • • • ’ All price* in thij ad effective through Saturday. Novembar 6th I LARGE », Z^A^X-^^S^2J° MMOtT *OO MTAMR...SMCI 1839 joy .... W"wiM — mg miAT

THB DDCATUR DAHT DKMOORAT, DUCATtm, nnUANA

Young Man Is Key figure In Sheppard Case Sordid Experience With Juror Brought To Light iy Mon (Copyright, 1954, by 1.N.8.) CLEVELAND (INS) — A bisarre twist of fate today made a young man whose mother was murdered by his father the key figure in the murder trial of Dr. Sam Sheppard. , Patrick O’Neil, 26 year-old at-torney-to-be, identified himself as the mystery man who put the finger on juror No. 6, James R. Manning, as having been convicted of a aex offense against him 11 years ago. His tough decision to bring his own sordid experience to light resulted in the legal hassle which brought the wife-murder trial to a dead stop which could end today either in a mistrial or the ouster of the juror. The new principal involved in the trial of the society osteopath added still another chapter to the fantastic stranger-than-fiction tragedies which are being exposed as the case unfolds. O'Neill said his father, Joseph, shot to death his mother, Mary Catherine O'Neill, on Christmas eve. 1937, while they were struggling over his attempt to get a gun at the height of an argument over attending midnight mass. O’Neill, who was 15 when he was made the victim of a moral offense by the juror, now the father of three children, said he decided to open old wounds and hold himself up to possible ridicule because "it was my duty as a responsible citizen.” The law student revealed that he had an unexpected and dramatic tace-to-face meeting Friday afternoon with Manning inside the courthouse stairs while he was seeking someone to tell his story to. • "He stopped cold when he saw me," O'Neill related. "He recognised me and I most certainly recognised him.” Describing their first meeting in 11 years, the man from suburban Parma declared: "He stared at me for a second. His face changed colors but he said nothing. Then he continued pp the steps'* *i6 H £ke courtroom.” *T had no feeling of revenge toward this man." O'Neill told International News Service. *My only thought was that those with better judgment than my own should know about the juror and judge whether he should be allowed to sit. "I felt sorry for Manning. I feel he paid for his mistake in the past but the life of another man is at stake and I wanted to make sure he got a fair trial.” O'Neill’s attractive wife. Nadine, eat by his side in their neat, fourroom garden apartment. as the clerk in the law department of the Cadillac Tank Plant spoke. “I feel he did the right thing," she said. The petite mother of a two-year-old son. Duffy, declared firmly "He had to do it. Otherwise, his conscience would have bothered him. We believe our feelings should be subordinate when it means the life or death of an individual.” O’Neill was subpoened Tuesday to appear as a witness for the state as it attempts to "prove" its case against the new "defendant." — Manning — in its endeavor to oust him without a mistrial. O'Neill said he met with failure when he attempted to see assistant prosecutor Johp J. Mahon at the common pleas courthouse Friday “Every time I tried to see one of the prosecutors,” he related. •<hey kept telling me everybody warns To see them, and hustled me off.” d'Neill t-aid he thftn talked to sheriff Joseph M. Sweeney, who told him “don’t get in anyone's way.” The bond law student said the tragedy in his own family which occurred in Jeffersonville, Ind., when he was nine years old and left him without parents, filled him with sympathy for Manning. "I know what he must be feel ing," said the good-looking Navy veteran of World War II and Korea. He added: “I didn’t condemn my father and 1 feci the same about Manning.” O'Neill’s father served a long prison sentence in Michigan City. Ind., and young O'Neill went to live with an aunt in Cleveland in 1911. - - O’Neill was working a:i a stock boy in a Sears. Roebuck department store, he related, when Manning offered to take him home and then made an indecent proposal which resulted in the arrest of Manning, then 25. The clerk, who attends Cleve&xid Marshall law school at night and expects to’lie graduated in February, said he finally got some-i one cu the dulcusc aide io listen

||«V' orai. hi w i . ' 111 - aHH KAI. vV -sBF " S’" V? ,* C tit. •• > JtPwt •* W 7 .-J II *Y- * • ! • ■ r MM MItS.*UNEST HEMINOWAY shows mors pleasure than her" author husband as they listen to reporters who brought word of Hemingways winning the Nobel Prize for literature. They are shown at "La VUrta," the Hemingway home near Havana. (International)

to him. The defense claims Judge Edward Blythin has no authority to oust Manning from the jury without declaring a mistrial. Republicans Win In Massachusetts Sen. Saltonstall, Gov. Herter Win BOSTON (INS) — Republican standard bearers. Senator Leverett Saltonstall and Governor Christian A. Herter, today emerged victorious in their battles for re-elec-tion. The senior Bay State senator, chairman of the powerful armed services committee, was sent back to Washington for a third- term. — However his victory came only after a night-long battle which see-sawed down the home stretch, and ultimately saw the defeat oft Democrat Foster Furcolo, the present state treasurer and former congressman. Editions of & Boston paper credited Furcolo with victory, but Saltonstall remained at his Dover home and refused-to concede. In the gubernatorial contest. Herter won a second term by turning back the challenge of Democrat Robert F. Murphy, the , Democratic floor leader of the State House of Representatives. | Complete unofficial returns gave: Senator: Saltonstall 796,785; j Furcolo 722,296. Governor: Herter 863,125; Murphy 767.315. AIM K.HTiSKMEAT KOH Hill* Stal'd blds will Ih- n-reived by the lb,a rd i>C School Trustees the t'l-.aku. Jb-Juuil kH-.poralluw-ou the general conetru-,tton, seating and ventilating,'plumbing aid rMwi-rage and ele trte work re. inlred tor tie <on,->trn<-tii>n “t a new elemeiiiary ncnool bul.hng uif.il I ,l'U o < l«„ k p. M. Central H'an.iard Tine. 2:9# P. M <"eii- , al . a.' H»nt rime, on Ist da;. <»t December, IS’, t tn Uic present high school t>ullding <l>e<atur J in,o,•Senior Unfit Sc.lnwl IJuildlnKi in i>e at ir, Indiana «.t w ni-n time and place «H bids will be opened l>ul>li<l> and read aloud. Any bida received after the above d»s.>«iKted time will be returned uiorpenvu. tufjihined bids jnay l>e -no.iiii.tvd ■but, if <M,nii>inatlon bld* i ai e given, separa-te bld xm e« -h < las-. sifi<iM.<>n. including hearing and, plumbing, shall also toe wuhmltted. inpirs of tub contract documents,: im Hiding plans and ape, Iftcati sna, 1 ,i;ll.. be obtained from the offi< e 1 >1 the ar. hWoul, Leltoy limdley’,Ill'. S Clinton St , Kort Wajne 3,1 li 'I ii..i. lor a deposit of I.’ .."" whb-h will be refunded to iwh, a*’,tual ‘bi ide< w-|,o returns the do-; ■ utnenta in g<-od condition within I 10 days after rhe opening of blds. [ l‘r-»pot<alß .-ilia 11 be properly <auid I completely executed on proposal ;■ I’ortn OH with n. >n-<-o!luslon atil-, da> H required f>y the statut. s of| Indiana, and mum be a< .-ompanied i •>> Qu. s ionimire Form 90A, State I itoard of A<-x->un'.», for all bids ot >j.i'OO.oO or more. Ha .lt prop.mal «hall be ata-ompan-i ■ad by an a< '-e.pta.ble certified or • ashlerh> check made payable to the ; .Schotil City of pe.alur, Indiana, or an a.-< eptnf-le bidder's bond, for an I amount of not less tlian five percent of maximum hid or bids submitted and ciMidtltoned that. If awarded a nuntniiil for any portion of th'S wnork. tie shall within five, lajs outer Into h contract for said work and furnish bond <t* lie* winafter set oiH. — lai' ll ,-.ui-< < ssful coiiiraetor ehall fasiHsh ape bond lit an aloount ei| ik,l .to ope. btindred -per- I . 1-11.1 (10<i"; > of till- i-ont-mct sum ' w'th on approci-d siirnty company, ' aald twuwi. to comply, with the ata-I (utes of Indiana governing contract* let hy municipal corporations. Wage rstes on this work shall lonol less than the |>rtS“-rll>ed s alof »|tp-5 as determim-'l purwutn.it to the provisions of <'lia|>t<r 31b of the Acta of th,. General Assembl» of Indiana of f!>';3. No hi,T* shall be withdrawn (or a period of fifteen davs afivr tlu-j date set for Hie opening of blds.] "I he it..ord of s -li<».l Trustees does not obligate Hselr to iw-eem the loivcst nor any other hid: maj award | <>.iitrn'ls on separate blds: and mny waive any Informant les In bidding Hoard of* S Ikmil Trustei-'k ' of the I'eciKtlil' City School Corporation. i;\ Kiti-rrr <i. hi'tker. Secretary- \ iMil.int HUK #t ANDERSON", l-aw-

Thurmond Elected In South Carolina Thurmond Elected By 'Write-in' Vote COLUMBIA. S. C. (INS) — Pen and pencils never played sUch an important role in a U. S. senate election than Tuesday when South Carolina chose J. Strom Thurmond. a States' Rights Democrat, to succeed the late Sen. Burnett R. Maybank. Thurmond was elected by the “write-in” route over State Sen. Edgar Brown, hand-picked "official" candidate of the Democratic party. Tabulations showed Thurmond leading with. 140.169 votes to 81,784 for Brown with 1,635 of the 1.573 precincts counted. Thurmond, former governor Jind, 1948 States’ Rights candidate, hi the ‘first aenator in histroy chosen on the bawls of write-in ballots. He announced his candidacy only after Brown was selected by the; state Democratic executive jjfrffimittee following the death of Sen. Maybank. Brown is chairman of the committee. He got 31 votes of committeemen to carry the

Bfc-V ■' ' i ■' 1 "... end <rf course all the streets wm be bdnentTe" ' Y> » ~> ' I ,\< 111 Ts r ~- '"~ i,r-" | u • *“ ir 'I -' 1 -t.l'-mn-- ;.i-.|ij; ■» \ _ "You will pay for the street in front of your house, so naturally you want the best possible pavement, value. "That’s why we’ve specified concrete streets for this new neighborhood. They’re moderate in first cost, re? quire less maintenance and last longer than other types of pavement. They cost you less per year. You also save on street lighting costs. Concrete streets reflect up to four times more light than dark-colored pavements so they require less illumination. — "But that isn't all. Concrete streets arc safer too! Cars can stop faster, without skidding, on concrete s gritty surface. That's an extra measure of protection for the neighborhood children. "And mothers appreciate this advantage: There’s no sticky {residue for the family to track into the house.” Yes, iow-annual-cost, safe concrete streets are your best possible pavement investment. Insist on them. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION Sil Merchant* Bank Building, iXdianapolic 4, Ind. A notional organization to improve and extend the uwi of Portland cement and concrete through scientific research and engineering field work

NOVEMBER 3, 1954

party banner. He explained there was no time for either a party convention or another primary. Thurmond declared, his victory was a triumph of “unorganized, good citizens over an organized political machine.” He had the support, however, ot Gov. James F. Byrnes. The governor parlier had appointed a Greenville industrialist, Charles E; Daniel, to' fill the position until Maybank’s successor was elected. Reports in Columbia today indicate that Thurmond, in addition to his epoch-making victory, will become the senior to any other national lawmaker taking office as a result of Tuesday’s elections. Daniel is expected to resign as soon as he is sworn in, turning the office over with Gov. Byrnes’ blessing to Thurmond before the other newly-elected senators and congressmen assume their duties Jan. 1. The leathery Thurmond, a purple heart winner and World War II colonel, told International News Service he intends to champion the cause of States’ 'Rights when he gets to Washington. He said: "It was a shame that the States’ Rights ticket was not elected Six years ago.” Quebec —Canada contains more lakes and inland waters than any other country, not counting the Great Lakes. FILMS Developed by Edwards 24-HbUR SERVICE Kohne Drug Store Gifts & Greetings for You —through WELCOME WAGON J from Your Fricndty Business Neighbors end Civic and Social Welfare jCeMddH J / The Birth of a Baby' Sixteenth Birthdays Engagement Announcement* ~ Change of residence Arrival* of Newcomen te City Phone 3-3196 or 3-3479