Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 144, Decatur, Adams County, 19 June 1963 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr. President John G. Heller __ Vice President Chas. E. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates By Mail, in Adams and Adjoining Counties: On? year, $10.00; Six months, $5.50; 3 months, $3.00. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $11.25; 6 months, $6.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents.
GREATER TOTAL SAVINGS REMEMBER... IT'S TOTAL SAVINGS THAT COUNTSTANDARD GIVES YOU GREATER TOTAL SAVINGS WITH WEEK-END SPECIALS PLUS REALLY J 11 I Y LOW PRICES ON ALL YOUR FOOD NEEDS EVERYDAY! -ts ■jl IIT *I * J PURE SEALED FRESH Oh C ■MkMh S 3 Ban if- 3-1 W i ■■■LK A ‘ M I Op EN I ■Hi H H Iwk Bit Imonday thru Thursday I tHKStFOOB 2-59/ FRUIT COCKTAIL I I ORCHARD FRESH HALVES IN HEAVY SYRUP £ 'JL AA IL I YELLOW CLING PEACHES 4M* ** J GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ...3^T M Cj£ j TOMATO JUICE .....4-1 00 wUNtfll ™ “you just can’t beat that Meat from Standard” SALTINE CRACKERS . ..... .‘"25/ FULLY COOKED HICKORY SMOKED ■ft LOOK WHAT 10 CENTS WILL BUYI flMlfEh IMNIFC mpw...-10/ Scorn -10/ wIVHMEV nblllliwLß.ftvt ■■ -—————**■■<s nirkii/~c suceonwo- Jacksons special 30 <>f/h American beauty NO i«/h WWfWTFTmSsiM ked picnics ..... v , “ 33x «*« »s» ““10/ tomato soup -10/ iiWfTnlli PORK CUTLETS *79* . ”““10/ QUIK RICE... -10/ I 4^. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ 1 SLICED 8AC0N..;49/ WINSSO,OOO CASH! S KSAUSAGE •“•••• 3 w 1 Looked sausage... ' 3 9/ get y Wr GOLDEN in “Ei. ■* 1* PORK HOCKS “• 29/ RING BOLOGNA 11 49/ ENVELOPE July / FRESH .HYGRADE'S CORNED , AVAILABLE AT STANDARD! yW / [7|TJy stuffed sausage ... u 49/ beef brisket u 69/ st,u oniy »* MB COFY 'YOUNG BROAD BREASTED BELTSVILLE TURKEYS...H... u . f THIGHS C "° «4Q/ A K * IIH ™’ s COUPON AND AU«CHAS» OF WITH THIS COUFON AND HITCHASE OF WITH THIS COUFON ANO TUHCHASE OF DRUMSTICKS 5 n£ t canned ham 1 PKG. luncheon meats S- COUPON ■ COUPON GOOD THRU WNt 23RD COUPON GOOD THRU JUNE 23RD COUPON GOOD THRU JUNE 33RD i———— TH(| COWOH ANB A WAO M hq,! _ MORTON'S ALL VARIETIES \ wicmm ... FROZEN DINNERS 39/ I SHORTENING 3*39/ I METRES...., ■... .5-1 00 LEMONADE.... .=“.... 6““‘69/ J y° u J us t can't find Fresher •• . finer Produce” _ El CRISCO SHORTENINC ....... 3 - 75< fll Mil' A DFLUFFO SHORTENING 3-75/ wBRITfIuIIIPES $A MMT INSTANT COFFEE. . u .°r.T.“: N .T.. ■ IIBWVFbW EA. ■« n ZEST BEAUTY BAR 2-”39/ nfl D M ZEST BEAUTY BAR 2- 29/ - HOT HOUSE TOMATOES l . b DREFT DETERGENT »°* 77/ CALIFORNIA seedless mg\ 25 ■n mild liquid ivory SUNKIST ORANGES ?°. z .59' Ki LIQUID JOY ”'° ! 37/ P] OXYOOL DETERGENT .' i.' .'.'.' - 77/ WATERMELONS • • "... . k 69/ “ DRY STARDUST BLEACH - 39/ PASCAL CELERY ...... & 29/ □ DETERGENT TIDE 32/ ««« CORN... ... 5 - 39/ SA, fresh peaches ’hxi’K COUPON GOOD THRU JUNE 23RD COUPON GOOD THRU JUNE ZJRD ■ jJ' ... . .. ■ „J . a ' ■ „ , ||lß»r REAL KILL AEROSOL ImMml ip rlu UQUID PERSONAL SIZE MILD BREAST-O-CHICKEN BUG KILLER.. .“99/ O 69- 5:3 ™6 7 . TUNA FISH’=3 : “B9/ nSEDBKHKIBKm
•• w Boy Bitten By Dog Tuesday Morning Irene Tope, 806 Washington St., reported to< the city police at 10:43 a.m. Tuesday that her son, Dick Dye, had been bitten by a dog. The 10-year-old youngster was bitten by the unidentified animal a short time before it was reported to the city police, in the area of 12th street and Dayton Ave. He was bitten on the left leg.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Youth For Christ Rally On Saturday The monthly Decatur areg Youth For Christ rally will be held Saturday at 8 p. m. at the Decatur Church of God. The program will feature the showing of the film “The Tony Fontane Story.” This beautiful, feature length, color motion picture, is the first dramatic
Christian musical ever produced. Tony Fontaine Is a former recording. television, radio and stage star, who gave up a lucrative career to dedicate his life and talents for full time Christian service. Tony’s wife, the former Kerry Vaughn, was a professional actress and night club entertainer. Both Tony and Kerry portray themselves in the film. Produced in Hollywood, “The Tony Fontane Story” combines music, the language of the soul,
with one of the most thrilling testomonies of this century. While the rally is especially planned for teams, adults are also invited to this rally. New York Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T„ 122%; Central Soya, 28; Du Pont, 250; Ford, 54%; General Electric, 80%; General Motors, 70%; Gulf Oil 44%; Standard Oil Ind., 60%; Standard Oil N.J., 66%; U.S. Steel 49.
Starvation Tactics Charged In Guiana
UPI Foreign News Analyst In Georgetown, capital and port of British Guiana, the Soviet freighter Kirovsic finished the loading of 30,000 bags of rice and pulled out for a destination unannounced but believed to be Cuba. Behind, it left angry and hungry demonstrators who charged the government with deliberately trying to starve them out in order to end a general strike. Almost unnoticed in the press of other world events, Georgetown has been in the grip of a general strike for nearly two months? ..... — It was called by the Guiana Trades Union Council in protest against legislation which the council charges would give the government Communist-style control over labor uniops. It was not a new situation for Prime Minister Cheddi B. Jagan, the American-educated dentist of East Indian extraction who used to call himself a Marxist but now declares that he is a Socialist. Duplicates Earlier Strike ' It was almost a duplication of another general strike which Witnesses Plan To Attend Convention Members of the Decatur Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses are making final travel arrangements before leaving to attend one of the 24 sessions of the “Around-the-world international assembly cf Jehovah’s Witnesses for 1963.” The majority of the Witnesses in this area will attend the eight-day session of the globe-encircling convention scheduled to be held at the county stadium in Milwaukee, Wis., starting June 30. Clyde D. Steele of Willshire, Ohio, local presiding minister, will lead a sizeable delegation from here to the assembly, which is expected to attract upwards of 50,000 persons from 48 states and several other countries, including Puerto Rico, Ecuador, Uruguay, Guatemala, Canada, Finland, the Virgin Islands, Japan and Peru. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Brodbeck of Rt. 3, Decatur, plan to attend the Milwaukee assembly along with tbeir five children, Jill, Catherine, Philip, John and Timothy. Brodbeck, who has a position of oversight in the Decatur congregation, believes that his children will derive great benefit from the series nt Bible talks, especially since the program is designed to appeal to persons of all ages. Steele has volunteered his services to the convention’s installation department which is one of 22 departments organized to operate the big convention. All conventions of Jehovah’s Witnesses are operated by volunteer, unpaid ministers. '</*' ■■ n ■ WRlr ; - 4 -> W--’/ c , * /■ 1. LACKLAND AFB, Tex.— Airman William R. Lehman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey F. Lehman of R. R. 2, Geneva, Ind., is being reassigned to Lowry AFB, Colo., for technical training as a United States AuForce missile electronics mechanic. Airman Lehman, who enlisted in the Air Force a short time ago, has completed his initial basic military training here. The airman is a 1958 graduate of Geneva high sfchool.
mu ibbbbb t:. A fii ■ ■;> , • " SB ’ ~'’ A W Vfi '4 —*-« •■■ PVK :- '^r*Ww. ' * W WK - ecß BL, 'SI Mm ■ Iwi Ipfe ■ H^^B i»! BEATS THE WEEVIL PROBLEM—Ready for field testing this summer, experimental vacuum-beater, above, picks up larvae-infested cotton flower buds that have fallen to the ground, pulverizes them with a flailing mechanism, and blows the debris back on the ground. Its use would eliminate the hand-gathering used at present to clear infested fields. Machine’s designer, Eddie C. Burt, Agricultural Research Service engineer, readies the machine for tests at 801 l Weevil Research Laboratory, State College, Miss. »• ■ '
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1963
erupted against the Jagan government in February, 1962. In that strike, 40,000 workers quit their jobs. Before it was over six persons Were killed, scores injured and nearly S3O million damage suffered by property in mob looting and burning. The immediate cause was a new government budget including new taxes which the unions charged would be borne mostly by the But behind it also was resentment among the unions against government attacks on the unions and against union leaders and racial differences which color all Guiana affairs. These differences are between the East Indians who work on the plantations in the countryside and Negroes who labor in the city. Gets Plantation Support Jagan draws his support from the plantation workers. In the city, the unions are anti-Jagan, antiCommunist and fearful of the results if Jagan ever heads up a Guiana totally independent of >1- . • . ’ Britain. The unions are demanding Jagan’s resignation. Jagan made several visits to Cuba and has expressed admiration for both Castro and Nikita Khrushchev. It is perhaps accidental that in his present extremity he also has received aid from Cuba. The government’s import-export corporation announced last week that a Cuban ship, the Maria Theresa, had arrived with essential food and fuel supplies. The ImportExport Corporation is the agent for all Cuban and Russian ships. As for the United States attitude toward Jagan, it is in a position of being damned if it does and damned if it doesn’t. It fears that Jagan might give the Reds their first solid foothold on the continent of South America. It has been wary of too much aid to Jagan but on the other hand would like to believe him when he says he believes in democracy. As the present strike follows its course of violence, one conclusion seems certain. It is not likely to convince Britain or the United States that Guiana is ready for the total independence Jagan seeks. Tour Os Germany Will Begin Sunday WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Kennedy's controversial European trip shaped up today as a sentimental pilgrimage to the Old Sod sandwiched between critical cold war talks with troubled Allies. New political uncertainties in Italy appeared to strengthen rather tha n diminish the President’s deterrfiination to go through with the 12-day odyssey, despite advice at home and abroad that the trip was illstarred and should be postponed. Highlights of his tour of Germany, which begins Sunday, include visits to two points on the Communist-built wall dividing Berlin and an address to 15,000 American combat troops massed at a U.S. base 15 mHes east of Frankfurt. Kennedy’s major address during four days in Germany will be made in Frankfurt at the Paulskirche (St. Paul’s Church), were the first all-German parliament was convened in 1848. He will talk with a number of German officials, including outgoing Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and Socialist Mayor Willy Brandt of Berlin. After Germany, the President has scheduled three days in Ireland for trips to the ancestral home at Dunganstown and other points reputed to be connected with the Kennedys who came to America. Kennedy is expected to address the Irish Parliament, an honor never before accorded a foreigner.
