Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 24, Decatur, Adams County, 29 January 1958 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
i Am / WHY SHOP “ HO|>? • / A I * \ vs. \Jf \ * .. s — . YOU’LL GO FOR THESE VALUESJW "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY /f J™|FTV\ LOINS t«Ut 7 ; R i b QRC L °i" AEc En * □□ End l £|y iamb sale 'W3F' M “SUPER RIGHT" OVEN UfADY FRYER PARTS 5,.0J1.45 $ 1.59 Le a °' Lamb 69e ■ ■*■ ■ "SUPER-RIGHT" SHOULDER CUT OVEN-READY "SUPER-RIGHT" BY-THE-PIECE IftFrtk PrtflCt * ZLQf Turkeys Mlbs »49c Braunschweiger ib 39c ■ VI IXVJ.» 10 u» '"SUPER-RIGHT" SHOULDER CUT "SUPER-RIGHT" CENTER CUT LEAN ECONOMICAL BY-THE-PIECE I Porkchops 79c Salt Pork n>.29c K Lam » Chops ib 59c ■ "SUPER-RIGHT" FOR STEWING "SUPER-RIGHT" LEAN, BONELESS LAKE ERIE PERCH OR FRESH ’ S . 3* Beef Stew Meat » 75c Haddock Fillets :: »,59c Breasts ». 19c Florida Duncan X A »Ti——»s: sa CRAPEFRUIT SWEET PI AS . " 10‘ 8 Ji A C IONA CLING PEACHES 4”-99c AAP BRAND OUR FINEST HUNT S ■ W Apple Sauce .4™ 55c Tomato Paste 3 c 6 X29c A4P BRAND SECTIONS SILVERTOWN& Potatoes i,. s . No .jMrcHiGAN.... -...J.25 489 c Grapefruit 4^'69c- Fig Bars ...'pkg.' 29c Yellow Onions U.S. NO. I GRADE .10 bag 49c DAILY KOSHER PROCESSED " Z BEVERAGES Novel Oronjes California large 88 size doz. 69c Dill Pickles qt. 29c Yukon dub 3 bots. 29c Pascal Celery California large-24 size T7 RAND ... Oor. Jonathan Apples fine all i< se 439 c Tomato Catsup 2 bots 35c Cake Mix varieties pkg 10c Froch RrArrnli 99c HUNT'S ANN page 2^™./is 4 59c Tomato Sauce 3 29c Prep. Spaghetti 3 Fresh Turnips CELlo tacked 2,429 c STOKELY’S FINEST FOODS ' CANNED FOODS VALUES FROZEN FOOD VALUES stokely^f^est honey Po? TURKEY PEAS •• • 2 CANS 39' PEARS »«"« 3 CANS R9* POT PIES • • BOZ PIES I9 < Stokely's Lima Beans 4- 2 ±'29c Sauerkraut AIP brand our finest 4." 10c D .*!>•_ AQ r Stokely s Cut Wax Beans 2 10 47 c Sliced Beets a&p brand our finest l can 10c BanqUeT Dinners BEEF. CHICKEN OR TURKEY . ea. ‘t'C C* A L fl |u> c WHOLE KERNEL a 164-oz. 01- C-U- M A 16-oz. jjrn . p«. * 24 M. AQ r JWKeiy S M>rn OR CREAM STYLE A cans JIC UOiaen lorn IONA BRAND CREAM STYLE . . cans < »3C €acll Stokely's Harvard Beets 39c Whole Beets A&P brand our flnest FOR FREE LIBBEY TI MBLER ■ , h i mini i ' "FRESH .ks= SPANISH BAR Colgate deodorant soap 3 £ BUTTER 67* CAKE — 33* ■ | i Sunnybrook Eggs grade *• a-large size . <iw. 53c Pumpkin Pie jane parkbrb inch size ........... 45c Liauid Vel . I Mn 39c Velveeta Cheese Spread 2,4. 79c Fresh Cookies i™ f - or k Sanut pkg ,™ . sj , Sharp Geese tS™SnEDDAR .' .'. n>. 59c Danish Whirls S k 4'29c Ad Deterqent ? 75c 3 51/ YOU MAY-WIN ONE OF THE ( your chance to win a ) s'XZT" I 700 FREE FREE HAM .-— ‘SUPER-RIGHT” SEMI-BONELESS Lame ) n WITH FREE 38-oz. wf) 1 ( BrefiZC CANNON TOWEL ../pkg. /VC U „ JADDRESS / - MW SB Mm ■"Si gM M M 1 F' ll in an d deposit this ticket, or'a facsimile in the special J Q Dliia J WO J box at your nearby A&P store ... Thru Saturday, February 1,1 lUnSO DlUb giant //C .... \ A&P employees and their families not eligible to win. 1 « .... TO BE GIVEN ASVAY AT A&P STORES J Drawing will be held at each store on Saturday, February Ist. f Ilf I Est- IN THE TOLEDO UNIT! \ You need not be present to win! . J lAllClf di he i innm riEtcnrcMT T’fr ff i hereby certify that i did not purchase any 1 fV DR BLUE LIQUID DETERGENT qt. J7 V Northern Ohio, Southern Michigan 1 Northeastern Indiana \ merchandise Xs a condition of thi» chance 1 Tickets Also Available at Your A&P Lux Liquid special n c off ... q t. 86c heres all you d ° •• • _ 4 Nothing to buy . . . just fill in the ticket ot right . All ’ oz ' QQa or a facsimile, and deposit in the special box ot i B MH CONDENSED DETERGENT pkg. Q/ V your nearby A&P store. Deposit as many tickets ■IW I 1 I| I ag I kT I■ L you wish, thru Saturday, February Ist A&P C 0 QE empi :-.res and their families are not to ipry VEGETABLE SHORTENING . 0 can 7jQ win. Winners will be notified.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
New Effort To Reunite Farm Bloc Underway Farm Congressmen Seek United Stand For Farm Program WASHINGTON (UP)—Farm law writers buried the hatchet today and assembled in an atmosphere of sweetness and light. Their avowed purpose: To concot a “catch-all” farm bill containing new benefits for every major ■ farming area. The farm congressmen didn't know yet what would be in the bill. They Weren’t even sure they cobld agree on an all-inclusive measure. But they were determined to avoid the bitter sectional and partisan wrangling that torpedoed legislation last year to help both the Democratic cbtton-producing South and Republican corq-pro ducing Midwest. The new .effort to reunite the once-potent farm bloc got under way in hearings today before a House Agriculture subcommittee headed by Rep. W.R. Poage <DTex.». It planned to spend several days studying proposals frotn farm groups, for legislation dealing with corn and other feed grains Next Wednesday another subcommittee headed by Rep. Thomas G. Abernethy (D-Miss.) will launch hearings on legislation to cancel the April 1 cut in dairy supports scheduled by Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson. Still later other subcommittees will seek to work out new legislation for cotton and other commodities. Then Chairman Harold D. Cooley iD-N.C.’ will call together the full committee in hopes of combining the separate recommendations in a bill that will attract enough votes from each farm region to pass the House. Rep. Charles B. Hoeven (lowa>. senior Republican on the feed grain subcommittee, told a reporter Cooley's plan is “the only way we are going to get any major farm legislation this year He said farm congressmen "are not as potent in Congress as we used to be.” Poage said ,he doesn’t plan to question Benson on the administration proposal to lower the price support floor on corn and other basic commodities from 5 to 60 per cent of parity. The administration plan would scrap acreage controls for corn. • Benson can’t tell us anything new," Poage declared. He would only throw us into discord ’ Postal Inspectors Join Theft Probe FORT WAYNE — IIP — Federal postal inspectors joined Fort Wayne police today in an investigation of the robbery of a camera shop which served as a post office sub-division. Thieves broke into Howard’s Camera and Gift Shop Tuesday and took $1,200 worth of camera equipment. They also carted off a locked safe containing $306 "worth of stamps and $47 cash. The safe also held 170 blank money orders which would be worth $1,700 if cashed for the maximum amount.
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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY to,
More Snow Flurries Hit Indiana Today Indiana's Weather Pattern Unchanged By UNITED PRESS Moderately cold temperatures and more snow flurries marked the weather in Indiana today, and forecasters indicated the recent trend along those lines would continue. ( The weather was in a rut, with r daily snow and temperatures , varying only a few degrees at > levels slightly below freezing. Snow was falling this morning i in the South Bend, Goshen, Fort ; Wayne, Cincinnati, Chicago and • Indianapolis areas. At South Bend the depth of the new and previous t unmelted snows ranged up to six ■ inches. Goshen had four inches r and Fort Wayne and Lafayette j one each, about the same as the depths Tuesday morning. > Light snow or snow flurries was - due in the north today, tonight I and Thursday. In the central pori tion, it will be iq, the form of ■ light snow and freezing drizzle or light rain, and in the south in the form of rain or snow.- ■ The five-day outlook called for precipitation averaging near twoi tenths of an inch in light snow or ! snow flurries possibly mixed with - rain extreme south, occurring I throughout most of the period i from Thursday through next Moni cis v Temperatures during the five- ■ day period will average near nor- ■ mal in the north and about 5 del grees. below normal in the south. > Normal highs are 28 to 33 north, • ‘4O to 46 south, and, normal lows ' 12 to 17 north, 25 to 30 south. “Only minor day to day changes : expected,’ the forecast indicated. • High readings Tuesday ranged ■ from 28 at Lafayette to 33 at Evansville Overnight lows ranged from 23 at South Bend to 28 at [. Evansville. Today's highs will range from 28 to 32, tonight s •lows in the upper 20s, and Thursi day's highs from 32 to the upper 30s. The outlook for Friday was “light snow and continued cold." I —— —- Dies Os Meningitis After Day's Illness NEW CASTLE IW — Six hours after he was involved in a traffic accident while enroute to a dbc- ' tor's " office, Larry Halphin, 16, Springport, died in Henry County Hospital. But doctors said he was unhurt in the accident? He died of meningitis, with which he had been ill only a day. • d ' Trade in a good town — Decatur QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING All Work Left Before Noon on ThursdayReady the Next Day, Friday, at HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.
