Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 220, Decatur, Adams County, 18 September 1957 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
nrr __ wpk mmf mbf mb A Bpnpnd nn lUPValiw klHYifilTUlw l/v|JvllU Vll JljL 1 lUlUvul L- ■ i L &&B1; && * - "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY asHfcPORK LOIN ROAST ■~{#T*| End 39 C Loin End “Super-Right” is fully I NO ?L«ow«® ps ib ' K e matured grain-fed beef CAP'N JOHN S Canned Hams . 6« n 54.99 not baby beef, or budget beef N SUPRR*RIGHT" SHOULDKR-CUT OR RANGE BEEF FISH PARADE Veal Chops ib.s9c A&P's beef is selected for superb I "SUPER-RIGHT" SHOULDIR-CUT t<JSte an ® t enc l erness CAP'N JOHN FROSTED Lfimll PflflCt >L sOe I ONE HISH QUALITY.. NO CONFUSION Haddock Fillets £ 39c - « r CAP'N JOHN FROSTED Oven Ready Ducks ib. 49c I Ground Beer » 49c I ; O <Or "SUPER-RIGHT" LEAN, BONELESS F vysicr aiVW A cans nJ7V "SUPER-RIGHT" ALL MEAT SKINLESS I Beef Stew u 69c LAKE ERIE FRESH EDAlillfCk LB "SUPER-RIGHT" PLATE MEAT Perch Fillets ib.49c FKAHII3 • • X p «° >w Boilina Beef u l9c WITH A FREE 6-OZ. JAR OF ANN PAGE MUSTARD UVEIIIiy WCGI E>V ■ «| I —■■■■■■ ■■■■■■! - 1 " . FANCY, RED-RIPE FROZEN FOODS TOKAY GRAPES . . 2 25 c poFpTes : a %79* PIARGE, SNOWY WHITE HEADS VINE-RIPENED 27 SIZE A4P BRAND CONCENTRATED Fresh Cauliflower .. .... 29c Jumbo Cantaloupes 3 98c Orange Juice 6 U.S. NO. 1 GRADE SWEET EATIN, JUMBO • SIZE HEAT IN TOASTER Yellow Onions . 10b. b , 39c Honey Dew Melons .. 49c Nifty Waffles X' 10c I; g CHICKEN-OF-THE-SEA NEW LOW PRICES ™" aPi “ 4SWc ■gl On A&P Premium Quality Coffee Mild & Mallow dijßk Rich& Vigorous 1-LB. BAG Full-Bodied | T ASP'S OWN SUNNYFIELD 'IWS 73' B 79- B 83' QUICK OATS I 3 * Lb - Ba ° s2 * l3 34k Bag $2.31 34k Bag $2.43 1 ■■ "NEW PACK" GOLDEN WHOLE KERNEL "NEW PACK" LARGE, SWEET GREEN Pkg. Niblet Corn 2 35' Giant Peas Mixed Vegetables ' S cott p £ounty 1 ™ 10e Read's Potato Salad ...man »tyl« ’tS 29c Pancake Flour **m own sunnyfielo . .. . 5 39c Corned Beef Hash 4K?& ’ ™ 27c Farmington Bars %SS!« X 35c . Grapefruit Sections «, „* ND 4 69c Knob) Soup *nn «« 5 49c Whole Kernel Corn U1 ND 2 25c Shedd's Corn Muffin Mix ‘X Wc * JANE PARKER ORANGE Surf special fc off i,.. 25C WISCONSIN CHEDDAR MEDIUM CHIFFON CAKE Breeze™..™ S'‘l.29 SHARP CHEESE AQ C Rinso Blue DE ERGENT Iga. 3c AQc EACH f&Q lb “ V WISK SPECIAL 10c OFF qt 5/C * BLACKBERRY OR DUTCH APPLE ~ r AAP'S OWN FINE QUALITY Fruit Pies .£ 49c L ux LlQUld DETERGENT qt. 95 C I Silverbrook Butter b'k. 67c JANE PARKER DATE FILLED “ CHEESE SPREAD .. Coffee Cake 29c Lux Soup 3 "»• 29c Kraft'S Velveeta 2 P k 9 .79 c FOUR FLAVORS SANDWICH ■ CRESTMONT Creme Cookies ... 19c Lifebuoy Soup 2«• 21C Orange Sherbet w,.i. 59c JANE PARKER ENRICHED * ■ SUNNYBROOK GRADE "A" E White Bread 2 37c Detergent condensed all . X 5 2.49 Large Eggs p™. SVc o^o— M —■——«•—■■—Mm All prices in this ad effective thru Sat., Sept. 21tt SPRAY DEODORIZER BANDED 2 REG. 23c SPECIAL 15c OFF SPECIAL 5c OFF Florient Ajax Cleanser Fab Liquid Vel s ci:- 79c 2 Jn 9 :.d 31c X $ 1.14 ' X 32c vll r I WiO M|Mi i ~ ™ THE GREAT ATLANTIC • rACIFIC TEA CQM/ANT
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Committees Named By Holiness Group Will Serve During The 1957-58 Year The executive committee of the Adams County Holiness Association met in special session and appointed the following committees to serve during the 1957**58 year: Finance: Albert Zurcher, Virgil Sprunger, Amos Moser, Thurman Rayl, Louis Hartman, and John Poorman. x'** Entertainment: Mrs. Vernon Riley, Mrs. Homer Winteregg, Mrs. Flossie Brandyberry and Mrs. Laura McKean. Missionary: Mrs. Homer Habegger, Mrs. Wm. Zurcher, Mrs. C. H. Musselman, and Mrs. Ransome Barkley. Publicity: Rev. J, R. Meadows, Frank Dellinger, J. A. Sproul, Don Miller and Homer Brubaker. Membership: Mrs. J. A. Sproul, Ezra Wanner, Frank Huey, Raymond Harrison and Homer Habegger. Platform: Rev. Vernon Riley and Rev. Willis Gierhart. The executive committee consists of Rev. Vernon Riley, Rev. Willis Gierhart, Albert Zurcher, Virgil Sprunger, Mrs. Lewis Hartman and Mrs. Elmer Ehrsam. House Subpena Is Served On Returnee First Os Americans Back From Red China SAN FRANCISCO (UP) — The first to return of 42 Americans who visited Communist China against the wishes of the U.S- government said' today he will be “glad" to appear before the House UnAmerican Activities Committee. Earl Richard Williamson, 28, Berkeley, Calif,, was served with a subpena Tuesday as he left a Pan American plane that flew him here from Hong Kong. The former high school chemistry teacher, who worked in the University of California's radiation laboratory last summer, was good natured about the subpena. “It looks as though I'm going to be a guest of the United States government,’’ he said, showing newsmen the document ordering him to appear in Washington on Sept. 26. “I am under the impression I did nothing illegal in going to Red China. I went because I was very curious to see what it looked like. “I think thousands of other young Americans are equally curious It is a very important place in the world today and the American people should have a chance to know about it." Williamson was one of 100 young Americans who attended the Moscow Youth Festigal last July on the invitation of the Soviet government. Forty-two of the Americans then accepted an invitation to tour Red China , „, - Bicyclist Killed By Father's Auto GOSHEN (IP) — John Ray Yoder, 13, New Paris, was killed Tuesday night when his bicycle was struck by an automobile driven by his father, Glenn, on a road a mile from the family home. The boy was Elkhart County’s fourth traffic fatality in four days and the 22nd this year compared with 25 a year ago. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (UP)—Livestock: Hogs 8,000; mostly 25 lower on early, later trade closed 25-50 lower: No 1-3, 200-225 lbs 18.00-19.25; 230-260 lbs scarce at 18.85-1915. Cattle 17,000; calves 200; steers weak to 501ower, only about 50 per ceht of run sold; heifers weak to 25 lower; vealers steady to strong; most choice and prime steers good to average choice 20.00-24.50; few standards steers down to 17.50; high choice and prime heifers 23.50-25.00: good to average choice 19.00-23.00; good and choice vealers 22.00-2600.. _ Sheep 1.000: very slow: not enough sales early to establish trend; few sales choice spring lambs weak at 24.00-25 00. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK INDIANAPOLIS (UP) — Livestock : Hogs 8,000; steady to 25 lower; 190-250 lb 18.50-19.00, some to 19.15; heavier scarce; 170-190 lb 17.5018.50; 130-160 lb 16.00-17.00; some down to 15.75Cattle 1,500; calves 200; about steady; good and choice steers and heifers 20.00-24.00; vealers steady to strong; good and choice 21 00-25.00, few 25.50-26.00. Sheep 1,000;. steady to weak; good and choice spring lambs 18.00-22.00. ’ ' BACKACHE /baking Knoßy 1-aOe HlMmor •cha Md pala attatka prana*«y rdland hi aaia■tM with Spatial Pr»v# Tabists. with aatipyrttic attioh and Vitamin C so necassary to health and elasticity ol conneetina tissue in joints end body. Results fueianteed No harmful drufti. $1 50; ,2.75; *4.00 silts. Get PRUVO IMay at dratlist's lot mote comfortable livina. SMITH DRUG 00.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1957
Charges Atom Commission Dragging Feet California Solon Says Nuclear Power Plant Pacts Near WASHINGTON (UP) — Rep Chet Holifield (D-Calif.) said today the Atomic Energy Commission never really wanted to make nuclear power plant contracts with public power groups and has “dragged out the negotiations Interminably.” Holifield, chairman of the legislation subcommittee of the SenateHouse Atomic Energy Committee, made the statement after the group apparently cleared the way for the formal signing of the first such contract. After a subcommittee hearing Tuesday, approval by the full Atomic Energy Cominittee is expected by telephone poll to an AEC request that the congressional group waive its right to a 45-day look at the proposed contract with Consumers Public Power District of Columbus, Neb. Holifield said he will vote to approve the waiver and a similar request involving Northern States Power Co., Minneapolis. So did full Committee Chairman Carl T Durham (D-N.C.). The waiver requests are necessary under a law passed by Congress this year requiring terms of any such plans to be before the committee for 45 days while Congress is in session. Holifield cited testimony on spiraling costs for other proposed public power developments to back his argument that cooperative groups, many of them with limited resources, should not be required to finance such developments. He said that is why Congress voted at the last session to have the government build those plants and sell steam for power generation to the public power grouphs involved- Prior negotiations, aimed at contracts between the cooperative groups and suppliers, never were “on a factual basis," he said. Testimony Tuesday indicated cost increases at the 11th hour have torpedoed, temporarily at least, plans for an AEC contract with an Elk iver, Minn., cooperative group. Trial Jury In Second Day Os Deliberation HOLLYWOOD (UP) — The Confidential trial jury began its second day of deliberation today to determine if the scandal magazine and the people who supplied it with information are guilty of conspiring to commit criminal libel and to publish obscenity. The six-man, six-woman panel Tuesday elected retired railroad man Fred McCulley jury foremart shortly before the noon recess. The balance of the day, according to bailiff Don Emmer, was spent reading Judge Herbert V. Walker’s instructions. FILMS Developed at Edwards 24-HOUR SERVICE Kuhne Drug Store Get More Comfort [LI I and Safety! I 4 (■■l t r.y.] .1 -Jr -A I i i I’l ’ j i v -W“- I I " Ig I I '/J J modernwfcMw iaJ ▼ ma^es the safest ■ heater you ® can buy! I For real heating comfort and ‘mm I ««fety. buy a Moore’s heater, in f Get modern cast iron in 18l I vital safely areas. Get mor* EBj I economy, too. | Guornn!’ed42Y®? to burn outl UH 100 Gal. L. I*. Gas y FREE! MB W FURNITURE STORE JH| 239 N. 2nd St.
