Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 143, Decatur, Adams County, 18 June 1958 — Page 9

Thursday, juke 19, 1958

Apartment Units CHICAGO -Wl — The United States Savings and Loan League estimated that more than 100,000 private apartment units were started in 1957. Figures for the —.» :

Have Your Auto And Fire Insurance Rates Gone Up With No Increase In Coverage? It Will Pay You To Check Here Before Making Your Next Payment. BURKE INSURANCE SERVICE 239 N. Eleventh St. Phone 3-3050

InHIB tender bargains to stretch your budget! .-- IHM CHUCK ROASTS -43' OwSmBSB Kroger Top Quality, U. S. Inspected Lean Blade Cuts. SWISS STEAK lb. 59c tHUNK BOLMNA li. 5Sc Lean Shoulder Cut for a tender family-pleasin’ dish. Thrifty way to treat the family to a delicious meal. ' SLICED BACON lb. 69c GROUND CHUCK lb. 69c Kroger Kwick Krisp for rich country-breakfast flavor. Extra lean ’n Kroger-fresh for a budget-happy meal. 15 ■' .»■’*• ; • e . . 1 beef up your budget! maK m X '♦. .cJdSj&S Avondale’s taste treat No. 303. -> YELLOW CORN 4-49 c wBBHIH Avondale’s cream style. No. 303 WWI - A Bl JrW AVONDALE PEAS 449 c / 1 IM! ptl VUW Extra tender, garden-fresh. No. 303 1 (OPKr•vK ofe ) BlrfF -S- — IRISH POTATOES 2-25 c \B B' I.J KJ? Bi ' -I I If (t h eßh a ppyMw ay to shop) PEAC ™L cl ,„ i No 2 « 4 ' sl IwBBHwMMWIm BISCUIT MIX 29c IKS' Jiffy’s thrifty shortcut. 40-oz. box bBmREMESBL and fill your basket W w! A ™L r .„. w ia J 9c 1 L Jj IK TElSfflKrtfefXl -*7 7 SUNSWEET PRUNES 2Sc \\ untn bargains Plump, meaty and delicious lb. box. BREAKFAST ROLLS' 19* W From family pleasin’ Kroger meats to budget pleasin’ Kroger Kroger-baked Crunch, Almond or Coconut. Pkg. brands, you’ll find aisles and aisles of thrifty buys—all yours for fl/CCT _..J the choosing! So shop the happy way for budget-stretching bar- |jr|M7 l/ETf"LII ID D Tit- rtOICNtD gains. Set your table with Kroger values and see how easy it is HtINZ Kt I CHUr Z-45C to live better for less! Tasty flavor to spice up 'most everything. 14-oz. btL "* l * r ' J PEANUT BUTTER 69c KELLOGG K 99r KROGER BREAD 2-37* 1 IxELLvvV l\ Z./V Save now on over-fresh goodness in giant 1y« lb. loaves IVORY SOAP Get high-protein flakes toasted for goodness. 14-oz. - T < . . . .. In J ust one week you can have that GRAPFFRIIIT TEA BAGS 48-49 c Ivor y phonal ?• '' >* UIXHI LllvUi I X**U«JU Kroger’s flavor-filled bags for quick refreshment. DAI AAAI 11/C DATU CAAH ''* < --x * Tasty sections just brimming with juice. No. 303’s rALIVIULIVt BA I n jUAr *fjr ’ - OmmMk Kaai/\iiv>w> i*(tikirnA Gets the deep-down hidden dirt that BANQUET DINNERS GO. 49c other soapsmus MUd ' \ '~3SJ Complete meal on the double! Beef, chicken, turkey. | pA|J\/|Q[jyE SOAP s* l/»r rnrili I A gentle, mild soap yet it cleanses «» HgLi*®, ICE CREAM QQI 99c so thoroughly. Regular 3/29c. F wWMMBMEw iML. MMh SPnTnfiHT SPOTLIGHT COFFEE lb. 73c \ COfFH / VEL LIQUID Made milder especially for the things j juicy savings! ' vel detergent 47 J O No detergent bum to hands with thia ‘ sunny specials' pork & beans 2-29 c z cans — y ORANGE JU|CE 3 SIOO jrf AD DETERGENT ikifTALIT rr>/vril/MIT Just one of Kroger’s sunny flavors at this low price. sparkling clean washes. 50-oz. 79c. AlHTlIAIint j| ftr INSTANT SPOTLIGHT $1.19 krogep pineapple juice ...3 -$1 I ® ■■ JF There’s a delicious discovery Ln store for you! 8-oz. jar KROGER GRAPEFRUIT JUICE* * * 3 * Luscious, vine-ripened melons for the sweetest eatin’ ever! 27 Size. | * DOLE PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT .•3 - ” BANQUET PASCAL CELERY 29c SAVE TWICE! WHOLE Big, beautiful bunches from California Fresh ’n cracklin-crisp. GRANULATED I-"-' TOMATOES 39c I SUGAR 10 w 89c g iNfife w “* , CHICKEN Hot House, firm, red-ripe and ready to brighten up your salad. § With this coupon and any purchase at jl l Stamps plus I F l°**"*° . ,CE COLD WATERMELON AND CANTALOUPE WR SALEI g Tun. n. f Kroger beU buy j *’™' >11? SHOP IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT. Jillf'tX Tander Pieces B We U,. ri«ht » tat q „„ ate . , *-• *-> *- “ -

first eight months of the year showed that starts were made 'on 80,200 units, 50 per cent more than in the corresponding period of 1956. Trade in a good town — Decatur

No Short Shorts ATHENS, Ohio - OB — A cam--1 pus rule at Ohio University here says girls’ Bermuda, Shorts must not be shorter than two inches , above the knee.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

- ■ - ■ Most Food Buying Done By Homemaker Marketing Reports Issued By Purdue LAFAYETTE, Ind. UPD—The average American homemaker does up to 91 per cent of the family’s food marketing. She generally shops on Friday or Saturday,

often without knowing what her next meal will be. These points; and others vital to all who hope to attract some 1 of the more than 81 billion dollars spent annually in the food stores of the nation, are contained in a series of reports prepared by Purr due University. The reports are based in part on original research, bulwarked , by cullings from other surveys made on food consumptions. ' The studies show from 75 to 91 per cent of the time Mrs. Home—a

■ maker does the grocery buying alone—at least without the counsel I of her husband. Junior, riding in i the superstructure of the shop- ; ping cart, doesn’t count. Friend husband buys the hami burger as well as earning it from ■ 6 to 14 per-cent of the time. From 1 to 9 per cent of the grocery . trips are joint ventures. Impulse Buying Big Thirty-one to 54 per cent of the major buying trips are on Fri- ■ day, with Saturday the other big a I——

- - ■ .... -11MM—shopping day. But one of the surveys notes a trend away from Saturday* toward the first part of the week. , Women who buy their milk from a store shop for other food more often than those who have home deliveries. The modern merchandising method of gearing food displays to impulse buying is heading down dollar lane. Most women go to the grocery without a future meal plan, the surveys show.

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—— .. ■ ..i.,. ii— no Term Drunk Driving Laws As Too Lenient | Scientists Report On Experimenting By DELOS SMITH UP! Science Edior NEW YORK (UPD—Two scientists put liquor into people experimentally and found that two stiff drinks within an hour were enough to make it unsafe for a man to drive a car. That’s a drastic reduction in number of drinks usually permitted under driving laws in many states. In effect, these laws say it takes about six stiff drinks within an hour to justify the accusation that someone has been driving while drunk. Legally the question of whether you’re under the influence depends upon how much alcohol if in the blood. If it comes up tc 0.15 per cent, you’re too drunk It drive. Lessens Ability But Drs. T. A. Loomis and T. C. West of the University of Washington, in Seattle, say they have shown experimentally that one third that amount <0.05 per cent) is enough to lessen a man’s ability to keep his car on the road and to respond promptly to changing traffic lights. Therefore, two drinks have made him drunk for driving purposes and present laws are “too lenient,” they concluded. They argued that it takes eight to 10 ounces of 100-proof liquor consumed within an hour to produce a blood level of 0,15 per cent. If you figure that one and a half ounces of 100 proof liquor makes a stiff drink, then six such drinks add up to nine pUnces. If that is so, only two stiff drinks will produce a blood alcohol level of 0.05 per cent, they say. Their experiments showed also that the first few drinks do not bestow a “quick tolerance” which make the next few less effective in kicking up the blood alcohol level. Their people were tested over five-hour periods and thfe drinks of the fifth hour were just as intoxicating as those of the first. Ten Persons Tested They experimented with 10 men and a set of standard car controls (steering wheel and accelerator and brake pedals) which controlled a miniature automobile suspended over a moving belt which represented the road. The man at the wheel could move the car to left or right or “speed” it or ’stop” it by controlling the belt wih accelerator or brake. First, the men were trained into expertness in operating this apparatus. Then the wire put to operating it with increasing amounts of alcohol in their blood put there by martinis, manhattans, and bourbons.) The requirements were to keep the car evenly on the “road” and to respond promptly to the green, red or amber of a miniature traffic ight. “As the subjects showed some impairment of function at blood alcohol concentration of 0.05 per cent,” they reported to the Yale University Center of Alcohol Studies. Trade in a good town — Decatur BW WALL | PAPER- | Buy One Roll I 1 at t&c I Regular Price J ( Pay Only 1c I I tic 1 I Second Roll ■-. . * ■ For instance you can now ■ * buy 2 rolls of 27c paper > ■ for 28c or 2 rolls of 33c ■ ■ paper for 34c .. . Don’t I ■ miss this great sale! Take 1 ■ advantage of these tre- ■ | mendous saving*. / eJIT 158 S. 2nd St. PHONE MOM "" ’