Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 24 May 1961 — Page 9

WEDNESDAY. MAY 14, Ila

I W MME YOUR HOLIDAY COMPLETE and THINGS EASIER FOR YOU-SHOP A&P EARLY FOR... §i¥lNGS and GOOD THINGSIO “UfTx ii—i" - i m B Im f "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY ||W I ¥d hM WHAMSrIg! 1 >un portion »-* I resh Fryers / L 49 c -39/a 3 :.-M —Breast, »* zUs "SUPER-RIGHT’ FULLY COOKED /* .- _A , Semi-Boneless E! WR COOK-OUr4HEK UAMQ '■lf Sirloins,e<,ks "" II AMO ik A/ I ?;rte7hou« UT ”».’i° 9 CHUNK BOLOGNA meat 39c ib4s« CANNED HAMS KSS 8 i ss* JANE PARKER TWIN-PAK - x Pfltzltn ’ fl - R U.S. NO. 1 NEW WHITE SEBAGO > A cZ 59 , Potatoes 10;49 c I TAiMMUae HOTHOUSE 3Q- ® f J •LD II SLICED, ROUND pkg. ■■ I ■ OUIQIOeS MEDIUM SIZE lb. g SfIMWICII KOHS or hot dog • of 12 JJC I iaj—bmalamp large, OOe I ■ta ■ ■*• JANE QA ® ■■ Qlwl mCIOnS RED-RIPE ••• • • each # r r| Pineapple Pte packer .. . s 39c | _ _ , janbparki® a t-ib. «r : j OWeeT VOrn large, golden •» » O ■ Ry© Brood PLAIN or SEEDED • L loaves J3C gl jB SUNNYBROOK GRADE "A” H . . .a I ■ { j Fresh Cucumbers long green • ..ch IO C | ® o V ® Green Peppers LARGE SWEET •• 4 fO , 29c J KINGSFORD BRICKETS Charcoal s 69 e 20s s 1 19 Mild Cheese style 53c d* J MEL-O-BIT A U-oz. ia SALAD DRESSING PAGE ••.. .. „ 43c Sliced Cheese processed • 2 pkgs. 49c VACUUM PACKED Silverbrook Butter .... 67c A&P Coffee . . 67c yukon club Charcoal Lighter b™. * 39c SOFT— I FROZEN FOODS r openpit ae-oz. jo HDlkllfC eon mwn Barbecue Sauce iB-0z.b0t.39c bot. 49c Ctifnnf Cheeri-Aid drinks . . 6 P k gs 19c Q 2 4-o I .O*C|C PeaS U p*9’- U U Pork & Beans “.zb “729 c —J Custard Pie .. . T 29c J ,arshfflal, Tv.s B :X D ’/ !!* «» «■««¥ Strawberries X, ... 3 $1 Ver " 9 “ 7 TXJ X,, DICTIONARY urange urinK to serve • can J&C 'AsseniHt4f.Yovrsdrfdrfioii XB X■■ J .... n• I Hi C - ready 46 OZ. a 4 15 SECTIONS Mid 2-Part Binder Open Next Monday ’hl 9 p.m. Grape Drink to serve . . can 32c — lona Sweet Peas . . . ca n 10c Z9*l79£, CLAPPS strained wq c | on a Wax Beans . . .“£T' 10c Baby Foods IU < ars iu ... Prices effective FINE GRANULATED g" _| b thru Saturday, MiWQB Pure Sugar bag ■ w May 27. SCOTT PAPER f | SCOTTIES LUNCH NAPKINS SCOTT FAMILY IT WHIPS Towels Tissues Scotkins Nakpins MILNOT 2 43c A27« 2 35c 2 & 29c 3&33C

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Summer Silhouettes in Chiffon

(H . Jly— r-r ...... ..—, w „ - .- UM U*w < '< w 'tSF WTw lir " 4mK Jr *SLgg 1 MT v Ab* Bt-jt. $ ...^.. J™ i AC T®Shw > ■-• m v » I $ iLx Bf ' W * jT;"x X B Al » ! fOKSAnTrf ■F £ ® M gy 'jag ■ K jgLiW \y BK . jhhi jMh -i I? jr r . .1 M>~ K B* MMMMMb % * ■‘JrWbkißk & - ™ Fl 1 •** <• XkW ; . itr

Chiffon for summer rates two entirely different treatments. Evening gown (left) in smudgeprinted silk chiffon has floating skirt and wide self-sash. Slim dinner dress (right) is jewel < tinted chiffon over • crene underslio- Both designs are from Herbert Sondheim.

Mr * BL B I,

Rev. D. W. Matter

Four Bible prophecy services will be conducted at the Pleasant Valley Wesleyan church, sponsored by the Adams county holiness association. The services will be at 7:30 p. m. Saturday, and at 10:30 a. m„ and 2 and 7:30 p. m. Sunday. Rev. Matter, of Fort Wayne, will be the speaker on such topics as "Will Russia rule the world?” “Russia’s greatest enemy, who is it?” “The coming world ruler, who is it?” “The mark of the beast,” “The battle of Armageddon and the end of the world,” and “Where will World War 111 be fought?” Miss Matter, soloist and pianist, will present special songs in her unique southern style at each of the services. Saturday night, she will have on display and for sale gospel records, sheet music, song books and tracts. The public is invited to attend these services.

Thousands Os Jobs In W S. Going Begging ~ CHICAGO (UPI) — Despite high unemployment, thousands of jobs were going begging across the nation today. The jobs were good ones. But there weren’t enough men who had the education or skills to fill them. A check of key cities by United Press International showed there were jobs for the asking in almost every part of the country suffering from high unemployment—providing the right man did the asking. In the metropolitan Los Angeles area, for example, there were 8,300 unfilled openings at the end of April, according to the California Department of Employment. Most of the jobs called for skilled or technically trained people. The Chicago office of the Illinois Employment Service cannot fill calls for 143 stenographers from its rolls of some 195,000 jobless. In the Pittsburgh area, where the percentage of unemployed is nearly twice the national average, openings exist not only for skilled persons, but such diverse jobs as cooks, housekeepers and social workers. Similar reports came from state and private employment agencies. Labor Department officials and personnel managers of large firms across the country. “It is a paradox in away,” said Dudley Cameron, assistant manager of the California state agency’s San Francisco branch. “There may be a terrible amount of unemployment but, at the same time, a moderate number of jobs do exist.” This apparent disparity led Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg last week to urge an “intensive

* I

Miss Naomi Matter

nationwide drive” by U.S. employment service offices and private firms to match openings with the unemployed. A look at who made up the 4,962,000 Americans out of work in mid-April, the latest figure available, points up the problem. Nearly 17 per cent of the unemployed were farm and other laborers, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Another 26 per cent were factory workers, 10 per cent clerical, 14 per cent craftsmen and 10 per cent service personnel. Almost 10 per cent had no previous working experience. A large number was pampered by lack of a high school education. Cameron summed up comments made by employment people across the nation: “We have an over-abundance of applicants for unskilled jobs. But there's a shortage of qualified people all along the line for the technical, scientific,. engineering and even stenographic fields.” L ; - • Proposes Change In Parcel Post Rates The first readjustment of international air parcel post rates since 1948 for mail from the United States to 156 foreign destinations has been proposed by postmaster general J. Edward Day. The new rates, proposed to take effect July 1, would result in increased postage for lighter weight parcels, in many cases, and decreases in postage for heavier weight parcels. These changes are generally necessitated by increased piece handling costs and by reductions in transportation costs to many parts of the world. For example: Postage for a two pound package to Australia at present is $10.51 but, under the proposed change, postage on the same parcel would be only $6.98. On the other hand, postage for the same package bound for Mexico is now $1.90 and will be increased to $2.66. Hie volume of international air parcel post has jumped from %

PAGE ONE-A

million pounds in 1949, the first year of operation, to more than 2¥t million pounds today. These rate changes were published in the Federal Register, and the public is invited to address their comments to the post office department within 30 days. The adjustment can be put into effect by postmaster general Day under his existing administrative authority. New legislation is not needed. Drugs Get Better WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association reports that new medicines become outdated so quickly by even better ones that | nearly two-thirds of the 6,200 prescription items introduced since 1940 have been withdrawn. 4 The oldest known specimen of California Indian basketry has been discovered by a University of California anthropologist in a » Paris museum.

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