Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 214, Decatur, Adams County, 11 September 1963 — Page 9
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Buckeye Joy Gleaming FREE TX“i£7\ spfe m Swiss Chalet V. ’1 00 off i Dinnerware/ Start Your Setting This Week! i / PPMSI«|. Save sss Plus Top Value Stamps / 1 m **r+zztr~ | Country Club b " tr °° m e 2E« you 5 **? Hi '.Al^j&l I I■ ■ A JL a-u Ww»x Tissue 3 JJS 89c ' < A WNfciJA -V* Jk, teZxAlti PIIITWr Tomato Juke 4 S 89c H V Because we buy so big, we buy for less - the savings from these I p* : mfr volume purchases are passed on to you in low prices like these . Top Value Stamps, too. Pork Loins I Fresh Seedless —ss n ?' m 1 I WrJII JUVIIIWM LUNCHEON MEATS ■ JH MSh v ' BB FREE! 25 EXTRA TV STAMPS ■ Rjk Cut W ■■ LUin BBm ■■■ H Purchase. fut HH B aiABO AJO Rolled - boneless pork loin ■ ROOSt JBarlMß ' ■ ■Milllg Pork Roust ft . 69c I KW|% tel MlffiM I ■ Wllil»wit Pork Cutlets 79c I 2° urown ■ lb. il mh EtWKtJr AH B-lkSausage „ 4 9c S cSSTjSF ,b * ■ H lie aw" I Center Cut Chops 69; I Canned Hams 5 S i ze $4.99 ■ B JBBB m m mibH M» JL Pounds H 18 1 ■ Jr ■ flK&j Sauerkraut Qt 29c ■ U■ ■■ ■■ ■ ■ ■JH I Potatoes 25 £B9‘ I v%%e I Hygrade seml-boneless Krnnor I Fresh Jonathan Apples 4, b 59c W. Virginia Ham , b 69c nii !* || k California Cantaloup* 3 F „ $1 I 100% P„'re I Country Club - Save 20c JflBH H ke Cream: 4$ I— ■ rr ! pp ss£S Bn 'assrip jpgri[ L 5 I\ 50 ’MS* 50 T “/u™” 150 T Zlt'\ ' 50 T °ttZ' 1 r Mory lou Cucumber SUc„ |j f j pu,t^* _ * l2 W | with purffniM dl Hh. or jj wM. PWCK.U .f , Mb. with purch«. of a froton with purchoM of Volomo 5 | Warsaw Dills Joraont Lotion Tr °lf n" 1 Mr, Sml*h‘. of rh. OoW.n ho*. OB d 1 Good thru Sopt. 14. J M s i° '°" I *J C « I ®"'°" Ywllow Onion* * Cream Pie Hl,h School 1 LmifIHBHHHHU LJ-i-r ~p JJ LijT I_ p . . L rr f! od „ ,h,u Up ' 14 _° ood | _ °°q<> u._ J
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUB. INDIANA
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1963
Praises Mexican Doctor For Surgery By HORTENSE MYERS United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)—A Mexican jarmy doctor with a gruff bedside manner may be astonished to know that an Indianapolis mother considers him an answer to her prayers. “Os course, I was reany praying that my son wouldn’t have to have an operation,” Mrs. Osma Spurlock explained. “But he did have to have one. So I feel my prayers were answered in that it was a good doctor who answered our call.” The nightmarish experience of having her only son become critically ill while the family was on a vacation trip in Acapulco is one that Mrs. Spurlock never will forget. 11l At Smorgasbord Mrs. Spurlock, deputy director of the Indiana Civil Rights Commission, and her husband, Albert, Sr., and their 16-year-old son, Albert, Jr., and daughter, Anita, 12, had driven to the Mexican resort and were having a wonderful time. “You know how boys are. Albert, Jr. had gone scuba diving, surfboarding and then swimming again. That night we had a smorgasbord dinner and he was eating a molded fish dish. He suddenly gulped and whispered to me that there were little fish inside the big fish.” — Mrs. Spurlock thought the unusual fish dish or the exercise had upset her son, so she dismissed his moans of pain later in the night with an aspirin. "But in the morning, I could see he really was in terrible pain,” she recalled. “We didn’t know anyone. We called the hotel and this doctor came. His name was Eduardo Varella. He thought at first it was food poisoning and gave him a shot that made Albert sleep for eight hours.” Undergoes Appendectomy But the pain was still there in spite of the shot and his mother's prayers. “Dr. Varella said to me, I will have to operate," Mrs. Spurlock recalled. “He took us down a dark street to a hospital that was on a second floor of a building, no elevator, no screens, and no one except the doctor spoke English.” Mrs. Spurlock soon found out that Mexican hospitals expect the nursing care of patients to be done by relatives. She stood by while an appendectomy proceeded on a makeshift table and chair and then remained to feed and care for her son. Thu fkyt thing they gave him was cantaloupe Juice,” Mrs. Spurlock recalled. “But it must work. Albert was up the next day, and we were able to start the drive home in four days. Stiffening Dollies There are several good ways to stiffen those lifeless crocheted doilies. One mixture calls for a tablespoon of flour, tablespoon of cornstarch, two-thirds cup of salt, and a cup of water. Put this on ' ,U*e StdVe ana aur until ii comes” to a boil. When cool, dip your doilies into it. Easier solutions for the dipping are epson salts, (saturated), melted paraffin, laundry starch, or a thick sugar syrup. Fragile Glassware Glassware will sometimes crack if put into hot water bottom first. Even very hot water will not hurt the most fragile or clelicate glassware if you slip it in sideways or edgewise slowly. Drying Sweaters If you’re in a big rush to use the sweater you’ve just washed, place it in a Turkish towel and press out the excess moisture with a rolling pin. ”f I * Si JD Wr&- / H,,..- W 1 ' wmmmzi!' hi mm ' Hj ■ k BEAUTY AMID BEAUTY— Surrounded by flowers blooming on a mountainside near La Paz, Maria Teresa, wife of Bolivian President Victor Paz Estenssoro, .smiles with the natural charm that has caused her to be named one of the 10 most beautiful first world, i
