Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 61, Decatur, Adams County, 13 March 1963 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
Chicago Produce CHICAGO (UPD—Produce: Live poultry barred rock fryers special fed White Rock fryers 20-21; roasters 25%26. Cheese processed loaf 39-43; brick 3943%; Swiss Grade A SO--55; B 48-53. Butter steady; 93 score 57%; 92 score 57%; 90 score 56%; 89 score 55%. Eggs steady; white large extras 37; mixed large extras 37; mediums 36; standards 35%.
F A I k ILJ 1 1 * i ”"" FOR everyone SiM^<£L' ri iuotamt Diinifd TSgjjUBB COUPON SPECIALS wK x. THURS., • FRI., • SAT., • SUN., • MARCH 14TH THRU MARCH 17TH " I— | M V DOUBLE YOUR CHANCE TO stamm stamm (\ £*\ "INSTANT BUCKS" TICKETS EACH ?..g„ MnWTRH nillliFlK KfPErW" pRRT- MH 5 -n \ TIME YOU VISIT YOUR STANDARD I ■S.!!!!»Z"*" tla | L_=™X— l 1 „fIF PM A‘ \ FOOD STORE THURS., FRI., SAT. OR ■rastnnnn grama \ r Efflux j'SppjKj sunday, (march mthrumarch tn A(ffW]> so' 1 < Sfc> so *jm?fe> so \ XIISbmP — *** FREE STAMPS FREE STAMPS -.•^ FREE STAMM ■ ■ ITU THIS UUTOH *MO THE TUKHASE OF WITH THU COUFOH AHI THE FUICHAIE Os WITH THU COUFOH AMO THE FUHCHAFE Os ■ Ij ’ J 11 1 J I | L'| M| ■''l|W|l 4|’[i | | L'•, 1’ I I IW| ] 4»or MEAT PIES FROHN* 4 I I ’.OX SNOWY BLEACH I BJiDOEFOOD'”’o"'“ I V* I f AHINVjR JiDllhl WH*TMMM COUPON COOO THAU MAH IHH COUPON 0000 THRU MAH. ITTH COUPON 0000 THOU I ITU |IKIfIIL IH'l ’ 1 R k F jlflL AIIkIk Ili F ■ so - so tree stamps free stamps I free stamm m. __ WITH THU COUPON AHO ME FOTCMIC If WITH THU COUFM AHI TM PHKUAE Os I WITH THU IWM MO TM PURCHASE Os K o pros unnrcc A LB nnc tnnn I GT -nrirocriiT EASY congratulation to congratulation to ZofiiMODESS 3 BAG DOG HJDD champ I BOX UtltKGtNl LIFE MRS. RUBY W. SHIRLEY *T MRS. CARL GERDT *“”ZZjt7j LLZZZZTz. F 7- ~1 iAC |tP ° T e M^SZZ^y s' ( as : ,J I S’ f ff gy.cjucuj ra ARk wj»J' • STAMPS I FREE STAMM I I FREE STAMM I - — ■■WFjrJHk ’:® with nn coupon in the puichase of I with this coupon ano the purchase of I I with this coupon aho the purchase or I Ms MrT TW 4F ■ l,a ”f ~ lli™ Rif \o O t iFWi/Bi nascmEsi BBkkßd S w e * »" n?m»K mt®Mm *^^u > ,„^j MPS L- S J a, L S WITH THIS COUPON ANO THE PURCHASE Os I giro THIS COUPON AMO THE PURCHASE Os WITH HU COUPON ANO THE PURCHASE Os SHOWN WITH RUFUS SEARCY (P SHOWN WITH DON CLARK '»OK MACARONI D£ |LIBO NICO I I PKG.' WAFERS D SUGAR REAT I I 2 PKGS. POTATOES msTANT I . MORI MANAGER 5 COUPON COH THRU MAR. UTH | COUPON 0000 TRW MAR. T7TN COUPON COOO THRU MAR. ITTH SHIP AHOY A« j i ~ ft You just can’t beat that meat from Standard” ALASKA SALMON. J® 49' CHEESE SPREAD 2-49' DAAftT =* JF-*b B LB. Bl Kldney’Beans 2 a 33' . PORK N cirflETS h^T (HOK U U S X fI f>eaS ' G Z. B G.L F®SSySr\T I ..™ “ 79/ 20 . |IS’<WK ..79/f mSw I * WPIARTR I PORK HOCKS . u 29/ WA f CUT GRUN BRANS '■ 1 , TMIGNS J"vOOP < 1 FRESHir GROUND f I AM. *nl. **49/ f MRXKORN 1 * < t?MCt S 1 PORK SAUSACE ....« 39/ I «OPS „ sq\ f ~ NIBUTS CORN I Sz 1 toptas, £ «no . nj I I I Liver Sausage “ 49/ J PATTIES Z f — —. I Vb” .M? Braunschweiger...... - 49/ I 3«« <>9/ t ctctww - - u —— —- 1 top taste wafer - no t lb a f *You just can’t find Fresher • .• finer Produce” SLICED BACON ..:.. . 49 fresh «.«» wh ,te CORNED BEEF ROUND??’. ■ 59/ £AIIUHOWER " Btf LENTEN SEAFOOD SKOALS WRFIWRF ■■ F M*W Lake Perch 45/ Breaded°Shrimp.. -69/ , PASCAL CELERY..;.. 19' FRESH CARROTS 2-19/ BOOTH FROZEN 74>Z. C A BOOTH FROZEN 1-U. AA LARGE FLORIDA A O . SOLIOSELECT A 4A A Breaded Oysters.. " 6 - 5Jr Breaded Shrimp.. "*■ 99< Mango Peppers BRBSSKZ3ZQE3SHI ■aSSSOEZCIXsffiI us - NO - 1 size a ... n ., Dn< , cc ■■ <<k.^, s POTATOES Roi=E WIENERS LAKE PERCHII I’TWFWI coupoft coot thru Mir. uro CPUPRH coro thru MpR. mH WASHINGTON STATE ■■■RwwO Reward Dry Bleach 39< RED DELICIOUS APPLES ««««!« "“««« Airwick Room Deodorizer S!6-OZ.in.®s9/ 3 BAG 59/ COUPON I I | COUPON QOOD THRU MARCH 171 H J LUX LUX SPRY PRAISE PRAISE soap -2-25/ 3-31/ 3-79/ 2-39/ ™69 z 2 -43/ 2 - 29/ 2 - 33/
20 Years Today March 13, 1043 — More than 20 persons escaped injury and possible death when an ABC bus was almost completely destroyed by fire three miles south of Coppess Corners. Decatur Girl Scouts celebrated the 31st anniversary <xt the founding of the organlzatiMk by Juliette Low.
Mrs. Nellie Fisher has returned to her home here after spending the winter months in Fort Wayne. J. P. Morgan, one of the world’s greatest financiers, died at Boca Grande, Fla., after a lengthy illness. More than 150 women attended the annual World Day of Prayer services here last night. Tfee Krupp arms works in Essen, Germany, was virtually leveled by British bombers in one of the heaviest aerial assaults of the war.
MdATtm &AILY XHBMOCRAT, DHCATIrtI, ntttAHA
Modern Etiquette By Roberta Lee Q. Please suggest a thank-you note for a bride to write for a wedding gift received. A. “Dear Shirley: It was more than sweet of you to send us such a lovely (and be sure to name the gift). Thank you very much, and I know that Bob and I are going to get a lot of enjoyment out of it. Hoping that we shall soon be see-
ing you, Sincerely, Karen.” Q. is it proper, when setting the dinner table, to put the butter on one plate and pass it around, or to put It on individual bread-and-butter plates? A. This is more a matter of convenience than propriety. Usually it is more convenient to serve the butter on Individual plates than to have your guests pass it around. Q. I realize that husbands and wives are not usually seated together around a dinner table. Does this likewise apply to engaged
New York Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAT PRICES A. T. & T., 122; Central Soya, 30%; DuPont, 240%; Ford, 44; General Electric, 74%; General Motors, 63; Gulf OU, 42%; Standard OU Ind.. 52%; Standard Oil N. J., 62%; U. S. Steel, 45%. couples? A. Usually, yes.
13 Refugees Escape From East Berlin BERLIN (UPD—Thirteen refugees who dug a 60-yard tunnel to escape to West Berlin said today the hours they spent in it was like “eternity in a coffin." The East Germans spent two hours huddled at the Western end of the tunnel, only eight yards from Eastern border police, afraid to leave it until Western police arrived. The refugees included a blind woman who was guided through by her sister, a 70-year-old grandmother who was pulled along unconscious by a rope tied to her legs and two boys who were told to pretend they were playing groundhog. The refugees came to West Berlin Sunday at 2 a.m. in a tunnel it took five months to build. They told their story today at West Berlin’s Marienfelde refugee camp. All the work on the tunnel was done with a spade by a 42-year-old handyman, who can not work regularly because of poor health, and a 20-year-old medical student. “The last five yards we dug with our hands because we were afraid Communist police above us would hear our spade,” the handyman, 42-year-old Hans V., said. The refugees still were shaken by their experience and were still in fear of the Communists. They refused to disclose their last names for that reason although it was obvious the Communists knew who was missing. The tunnel was built from a one-family house without a cellar owned by Niels Martin A., 45, who worked in West Berlin before the anti-refugee wall was built Aug. 13, 1961. It ran from the house in the East German district of Glienicke under three rows of barbed wire to a garden behind a shop in a suburban district of the French sector borough of Reinickendorf. The tunnel was only 20 inches high. Getting through it was a problem for all, especially for the blind woman and the grandmother. The 38-year-old blind woman was led through by her 36-year-old sister. The one sister crawled backwards through the tunnel pulling her blind sister, who faced forward, by the hand. Informed sources said that so far this year Communist police have located nine escape tunnels Under the Berlin wall similar to the one in which this group of refugees escaped. None of the diggers is known to have been captured. Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Livestock: Hogs 6,500; bar rows and gilts weak to mostly 25 lower; 190-225 lb 14.00-14.25, few 14.50; 190-240 lb 1350-14.00; some down to 13.35; 240-270 lb 13.00J3.50; 270-330 lb 12.50- sows weak to 50 lower, 300400 lb 12.00-13.00; 400-6 lb 11.0-12.00. Cattle 1,30; calves 75; steers not fully established, few early sales about steady; heifers fully steady on limited supply; choice steers 22.75; good to low choice 20.50- choice heifers 21.5022.00; few good and choice 20.0021.50; cows steady to weak; utility and commercial 15.00-16.50; canners and cutters 13.50-15.00; few heavy cutters 1525-15.50; bulls steady; utility and commercial 18.00-19.50; cutter 16.00-18.00; vealers mostly 2.00 lower; good and choice 27.00-34.00; few choice 3650; standard 20.00-27.00. Shep 200; receipts included one deck lambs bought late Tuesday; not enough on offer to test market; good and choice wooled lambs 15.00-18.50.
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1963
Montezuma Building Wrecked By Blast MONTEZUMA, Ind. (UPD—The latest in a series of gas explosions in this area wrecked the interior of a building under construction Tuesday and injured 17 men, one of them critically. Eleven of the 17 wre hospitalized and the others were released after treatment. Ted Wickens, 46, Houston, Tex., chief resident engineer with the Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co., was injured critically. The building was being conconstructed for the Panhandle firm and was to have heused a pumping engine in connection with the operation of an adjoining booster station. It was being built by the Harbert Construction Co., Birmingham, Ala. Authorities said gas apparently leaked into the uncompleted building, but it was not known what touched off the explosion. Seven of the injured worked for the gas company, nine were from the construction firm and another man was with the Ingersoll Rand Co., the firm installing the pumping engine in the barn-sized structure. Most of the injured suffered burns. All, except Wickens, were in fair condition. The blast area was about 20 miles north of Terre Haute which has been rocked by three gas explosions killing 17 persons and injuring nearly 75 so far this year. The worst explosion occurred Jan. 2, demolished the Home Packing Co. and killed 16 employes outright. The 17th victim died Feb. 19. The blast also injured more than 50 other workers. Two other blasts occurred early in February in widely separated parts of the city and damaged or destroyed small business buildings and homes. C. C. Harting, an assistant superintendent for Panhandle, was one of those who escaped injury in Tuesday’s blast. Harting said he had walked into the building to check an instrument panel when the gas exploded. “There was a big orange flash and men started running for the door,” he said. "I ducked and ran out of the door but had the back of my hand and the back of my suede jacket singed.” Harting said he was about 25 feet from the center of the explosion but did not feel much heat. v Strangling Suspect Is Held In Boston BOSTON (UPD — -A scar-faced Negro handyman with a long police record today was charged with murder in the garroting of a suburban housewife—the ninth woman strangled in the greater Boston area in as many month./.' Belmont police Chief Donald E. Robinson said Roy Smith, a 35-year-oldXufifter, would be arraigned today in Cambridge for the Xylem stocking strangling of Mr/ Bessie Goldberg, 62, of Belmont. Smith did not confess to the slaying, Robinson said. “His story remained essentially unchanged” during the 10 hours of uninterrupted. questioning by detectives, Robinson said. No motive was given. Smith admitted he was at Mrs. Goldberg’s 930,000 home shortly before she was found dead Monday by her husband. Israel. Robinson said Smith's possible connection with any of the other unsolved stranglings was not developed during questioning, Rut Boston police plan to requestion him. Earlier police said Smith had been ruled out as a suspect in the other eight slayings. Cambridge police said Smith was in jail from April to September of last year. The first six stranglings occurred in June, July and August. The other two occurred in December and were not believed connected with the previous ones.
