Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 229, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1960 — Page 5
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1960
• STORE HOURS • I MONDAY through THURSDAY A. M. to 6:00 P. M. FRIDAY and SATURDAY I 8:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. J . 1 ’ I | Y . 1 , 1 . W. ■ CLOSED SUNDAY ft 4 lk I’7 lkl jS)' I CRVC I I We Reserve M The to mh Quantities I SAVE! EVERY WEEK MORE AND MORE ■ I DECATUR HOMEMAKERS ARE M W gs SHOPPING FOR ALL THEIR ®* FOOD NEEDS AT STANDARD. WARM ■■ A JUST LOOK AT THESE EVERY- W DAY LOW PRICES AND THESE ARE ONLY A FEW OF THE OVER FIVE THOUSAND EVERYDAY LOW, LOW FOOD PRICES YOU’LL FIND AT YOUR FRIENDLY STANDARD FOOD STORE. I BUTTER T ro "r" Y X*:s9c SPAGHETTI RED !°“ 2 P 7 k “l9c| TEA BALLS Vs9c WESSON OIL X’sscl I IIY TOILET SOAP Of* DUNCAN HINES LUA Colors Reg. Bar 9** PA KF MIYFQ White, Yellow 19 oz. I PINFAPPI F DEL MONTE Large <• Of* VMAL IvIIAIO Choc. Mint Pkg. I IHLIirriBL SLICED No. 21/ 2 can AAAAB HERSHEY'S X. PFADC No 21/ * 2Of* VVvUR 1 Ib. Can O9<* I DEL MONTE Can 39 MATPHFQ BOOK 50 TOMATO SAUCE HUNIS 2JX 19c "ATONES 2 pk 9„ 35c I POTATOES 555? 29c STARCH NI 2X“ 29c| KRHIIT RUTTED -* "-*«« BABY CEBEALS “ - 16 c I ■UHNUI DUI ILK or Crunchy Jar CIIARD Powdered and Ib. I PAPA ft PFAMft HEINZ 3 ,601 '90/* wUUflll Brown-Colonial A Box *9* I rUnn tt DEANd A Cans *9* AATftllD DEL MONTE 14 «• ft I CAI BIAM ALASKA Tall X Of* VHIDUr Btl. A/Vl OALMUR Solid Pack Can 49<» U|| K CARNATION 3 Q’ Yftr TUMA STAR KIST Flat 3.ftf* InILA INSTANT Size Z9<* I BEEF STEW ‘X.e ...Jt" 47c DOG FOOD SOUPS LTZ? 16c DOG FOOD VEre Scl SPEC. K KEJJ3 ..... ... 28c DOG BISCUITS 35c I RICE KRISPIES ““X X~3l® DOG FOOD .. 5 69c I SUGAR CRISP P0 .T....;.. Xr 23c TOWELS 29c I CATSUP ~21“ 35c WAX PAPER f,E ~..... Roll 25c I SPAGHETTI DINNER XeeX. 43 c Kleenex or Scotties 'SoXbw. 23c I ■EHBOBKEI I F4U* j F *l. |» J •1; i»■ with this coupon st AND A $5.00 or MORE a JRK* A| WK. |6 FOOD PURCHASE vLlr Allfl FRESH HOMOGENIZED MILK «29- I "® JF I » COUPON GOOD THRU OCT. Ist <1 YES, MA’AM THESE EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ARE JUST A FEW OF I THE THOUSANDS YOU WILL FIND AT STANDARD .... REMEMBER, THESE ARE NOT WEEKEND SPECIAL PRICES.. a. YOU CAN SAVE REAL CASH ON ALL YOUR FOOD PURCHASES AT STANDARD. I CHECK AND COMPARE — AND YOU WILL KNOW TOO — HOW I MUCH YOU CAN SAVE WHEN YOU SHOP AT YOUR STANDARD FOOD STORE. — _ . >. —— —_±— 9 THE BIG EXTRA AT STANDARD I
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Skelton Laughs Way
Into Iron Curtain
NEW YORK (UPD — Red Skelton waved his floppy brown hat. shook hands with a few hundred United Nations delegates and officials, and laughed his way through the Iron Curtain. The rubber - faced comedian opened his 1960-61 CBS television series Tuesday night with a wordless pantomime show before an invitation-only audience of about 1600 persons, most of them U.N. delegates or secretariat personnel. He shook hands with every one of them as they left the theater. “I spoke to people from Russia, the Danish delegation, quite a few Indians, Pakistan, the Philippines, South America and a Cuban woman. She didn't have a beard,” Skelton said. “I think they enjoyed it. They laughed in the right spots.” From 39 Nations No heads of government led their delegations to Skelton’s assembly session, but 39 nations, including the United States, Russia and Cuba, said they were being represented by ambassadors ‘or U.N. delegates. Fifty policemen were stationed outside the theater on West 54th St. » Theme of Skelton’s U.N. tribute was “Laughter — The Universal Language.” Skelton dodged the language barrier by not saying a word in six of his seven routines. Alone On Stage , All alone on a bare stage, wearing a tuxedo and his pliable hat, Skelton played a fool who over and over again blows a feather into the air and watches it float to the ground (he finally inhales it by mistakel; a slow - motion tennis player (who keeps missing the ball); an old man playing golf (who also keeps missing the ball); a sloppy chef mixing a salad (and sneezing); an American tourist in Paris whose wife insists that they take the stairs to the top of the Eiffel Tower (1,222 steps) to save the elevaor fare (he wife “falls” off); and an old man watching a parade, seeing his life pass before him. When the show was over, and the TV audience estimated by the network at 27 million persons had gone on to other things, Skelton walked back out dn stage. “By the way, I have Mrs. Skelton with me, and we’re celebrityconscious,” he told his U.N. audI ience. “Would you think us Imposing on you If we shook hands with you on your way out?” Nobody felt imposed upon.
W fp , w ** ** ' Announcing the 1961 Ford... ' !| ujp Beautifully proportioned to the | , ■;* b401 f = - i[ 'r s ■ CLASSIC ■ J|X | u MHP 0 h ? / ! i An honor to be proud of. thi* it the ■ * medal presented by the international I fashion authority, Centro per L'Alta “ Uk— ZX— 'lX. f T Mod* Italian*, to the 1961 Ford A 5 ■' 4 lunamoefrexpression of tUak • ' - tjW i > w ; r--- it • ka,aj - ft JMli ■htfikEA. k '4 yfll SMM > wffWBF 77.uwmi *****TSE^2SSSS-H^^Sk s n The 1961 Ford Galaxie \«l <**>- , r--ij / / Club Victoria-beautifully g. ir , ' ' ~ built to take care of people BEAUTIFULLYLBUILT TO TAKE CARE OF ITSELF Ik 1961 Ford introduces a whole new concept of what a car can I 1 do fix you... <Mk/ for itself! * HERE'S HOW THE '6l FORD TAKES CARE OF ITSELF f it lubricates itself. New nylon bearings and a newly developed lvbricatk itself. You'll normally go 30,000 miles widiout a fabricant keep the’6l Ford freshly greased fbr 30,000 miles. Good- <1 i v>n a ■. t L -I , Tvn. > ■ . T- !■ CLEANS ITS OWN OIL. You 11 go 4,000 miles between oil chantM bye grease racks! What smore.it deans its own oiL The 1961 Fords with Ford's Full How oil filter. w Full-Flow oil filler lets you go 4,000 miles between oil changes. adjusts its own Brakes? New Truck Size brake* adjust themIt adjusts its own brakes. A "mechanical brain - ’ keeps brakes roX“X!nwwu« r-J « *J- . JC. a..rr -£.k r ■ - r . -,. . . GUARDS ITS OWN MLFFLER. Ford mufflers are double wrapped and adjusted KX the lite Ot the lining. alumimzcd—normally will last thtce times a* long as ordinary Rust? Ford’s body is specially processed to resist corrosion, even . .... . IO galvanuteg body taaeblxnea* door,. . “ Ford takes care of itself on the turnpike, too, with a new 390- pinds bcneartl doors - cu, in. Thunderbird Special V-8 that has all the punch you'll ever ° F ° WN F ™ BH New Dia(nonJ Lustte Finish “*« need. The 352 Thunderbird Special V-8 and 292 Thunderbird V-8 thrive on regular gas. And, far top economy, you can choose the ’6l Mileage Maker Six. •“ Vgifflp This is the 1961 Ford... beautifully proportioned to the Classic ■ I r~l Jlx I 1 •■» Ford Look...beautifully built to take care of itself. X.'| | \./|\l J SCHWARTZ FORD CO., INC. 1410 NUTTMAN AVENUE DECATUR, IND.
Lutheran Conference In Decatur Friday Over 300 laymen and pastors from the 22 congregations of the Lutheran church-Missouri synod in the Decatur and Northwestern Ohio areas have been invited to attend the fall fiscal conference to be held at Zion Lutheran church in Decatur Friday. Registration will begin at 1:30 p. m., with adjournment scheduled at 8:45 p. m. Each congregation has been asked to send its leaders to learn more about synodical and district activities. Circuit financial goals will be discussed and accepted by the congregations. Following a short opening devotion at 2:15 p. m., the topic “The Stewardship Life of God's People,” will be discussed. Representatives of the central district office at Fort Wayne will be pres-! ent to give an overview of synod-! ical work. Christian education, with special | emphasis on the needs and prob-. lems involved in supplying adequate pastors and teachers for the. church, will be included in the; agenda. A light evening meal will be served to the guests by the ladies of the host congregation at 5:30 p. m. The budget needs for 1961 will be presented during the evening; session. Delegates will be brief-. ed on how to present the work and needs of synod to their home, congregations. This conference is one of several to be held in various areas; within the central district which! includes Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky,! and West Virginia. Various charts'; and displays, along with visual | aids such as movies and slide, presentations, have been prepared J to bring as much information as! possible down to the “grass roots”; level. Dr. W. C. Birkner. secretary of the Lutheran church-Missouri synod, will represent both synod and the central district office. The Rev. H. Behning, of Ossian, is counselor for the Decatur circuit and the Rev. C. H. Matthias, of Van Wert, holds a comparable position in the Ohio circuit. The Rev. Richard Ludwig, pastor of the host congregation, will conduct the opening devotion.
Boy Seoul Troop 64 Enjoys Dunes Outing Members of Boy Scout troop 64 and their leaders attended a weekend outing at the Dunes state park. This was termed a fun program for the boys, with the adult leaders preparing the meals and doing the cleanup work. The scouts made the five and one-half mile hike over the Dunes and beach area, also hiked to the peak of Mt. Tom, highest point in the area. The scouts and the leaders slept in their tents and ate out in the open. Boy Scouts attending were Joe Rousseau, Steve Teeple, Jim Heimann, Dan Hess, Don Carr, Dave Braun, Dan Braun. Bill Hain, Lawrence Heimann, Mike Eyanson, Dick Miller, Bob Miller, Jim Miller, Tom Miller, John Gerber, John Heimann, George Gordon,
PRE-HUNG ALUMINUM COMBINATION STORM DOORS I ’ I Install II Yourself nr .. ..J in just a » ■ // 2’B”x6’B” S AMAZINGLY LOW, hl 7 LOW PRICE OF W// $0795 - Left Hand or Right Hand 0 IbMBWW Avoilabl.. 11 itteiaaSgS —fiKli Include, mi Hardwara mi ' 'i —J and Automatic Door ___________ I Closer. Arnold Lumber Co., Im. "Your Complete Builders Supply Department Store* Winchester Street at Erie R. R. Crossing
PAGE FIVE
Bill Schooler. Ronald Andrews. Adult leaders attending were scoutmaster G. Medford Smith, assistant Jim Roop, and Carl Braun, Ted Eyanson, Joe Rousseau and Jack Gordon. COURT NEWS Piv<H*CC CM4M In the divorce case of Kathryn Maxine Grim vs Robert Edwin Grim, the defendant was found to be SBO in arrears on payments for the plaintiff's attorney fees. He was ordered by the court to pay the sum of, $lO per week into the clerk's office until paid in full, with the first payment due October 1. The divorcecase of Sylvia Affolder vs Bert E. Affolder found both parties in agreement that the support payments should be reduced. The court ordered the defendant to pay sls per week until further order, with the first payment due October 1.
