Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 131, Decatur, Adams County, 3 June 1964 — Page 9
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3,1904
R '■* "I _ ■■III. ■ I! ll—■ ....I II ■■■ I I. —— — I— . HW.II y I JI 1 — 'll,ll —■miiwwi Kroget Buys W rafafe <f Beef IlJijXl* [rj 0; To Cut The Cost of Summer Cookouts! V 888 Kroger bought in large quantities for this sale — because we ‘ buy so big, we buy for less - we pass the savings from these F big volume purchases on to you through low prices like these ! ~ P' us Top Value Stamps for free gifts. ~..<... Humes Su9 °' 'h O lb 1*39 Ij| Ecß Qfl io Lte . 89c J b °° * w ... ■ vfr-. f umMMMT/ Good thru Juno 6 I | By |W Limit on., plrasa. EkW flh ! .. t„ /, 4> ’ ' | | u ‘, • ’E / — " \ Colonial Pure Cane f ® u 9® r Bl |H lb. t topvalueTe! Kb Bag H stamps IVB with pnr<-h»>ir 2 rfyl VKKVBEXj ■ v M wieners lj Good thru June 6 y?a pfS Wl,h C ° UpOn Kroger Tenderay brand - Always Tender Rib or [Sy Sifloin Stedk ».W 1 °f e C fop Fresh Mushrooms, 16. 49c ■—«? Kroger Tenderay brand — Choice Center Cut . ’ (Strawberries! q j HW \ fc o. 45 £ j4l z Hound Monk aj® ..^.S^^.«...r raj Kroger Tenderay brand — Top Quality Porterhouse or 25 T s P tam l ! s Ue ”fl LSJf Dinners A I "BOHO StOOk. KF Variehes J/ Kroger Tenderay brand - King of Roasts D2l® 7 SiMK 0 Cal,, Oranges' , ‘ ,a E KM B MlB ■ Southern Pride Kro9 * T * nder °y Brand Boneless Kw<ck Krisp Top Quality 2 lb. pkg. SI.W Pockwi label Mandarin J El* I ' Boston R °H «> 69c s * sced Bacon ,b - 59c Oranges 4 S9c |i BE I Wk MmtyFlavorfulSwv, with Noodlw Country Club Chunk Bmo 3 lb,. $1.9» ~j jijr iKrdPPIC 0 H Boiling Beef n, 10c Braunschweiger fc . 49c Coffee L? 69c )fe| Ml B B _ H| Tend.ray Brand-Round Bon, or English Cut Country Style Smoked Allswwt MB J| 9 Shoulder Roast lb 49c Sausage fc 69c Margarine 4u. SI.OO . M Ift. 303 Kroger Tenderay Brand - lean Our Own Bulk Kroger #■ Canl Cubed Steak n, 89c Pork Sausage », 49c Peanut Buttor 69c w' I *." fP6 g ump Roosf k 79c Wieners 1 5,c Toothpaste Z 44, PricM good «E Top Value p *3- Stamps Saturday. I g Gillette Super ~ J 2 J°f X\ Tenderay Brand J Winesap Apples H £f No. 303 Kraut, Spinach, . >Km B El ■A Q « g Good thru Jun. * g El I 'EI fl I w W Beets, Avondale Peas, Green wk Ofl f Blue Blades I r - i p nu y •■77 < y k4 c - “t^X. B, “ I > a B ,4/ I OroT/Erf H Bl Good thru Jun. • fed _ Ooo<l **’"' J “"* * . ..1 Z" HO coupon QsaJ EMBCovpo< P coupon ([ G4 J| coupon y GVS J f 9 U .?.<?.*» \ G ‘V V yl lAA Top Value rft Top Value mT f?A Top Value Kfl R CA Top Value © CA Top Value fqKT CA Top Value I 1 - IvV Stamps ’ f' 3" Stamps WH *v Stamps | r Stamps | Stamps OM Stamps j U 4 with purchaM of £? r wi, lt purthoe. <A f 'l'kiJ with pnrrhane of SI Id fTI with purchase of- C-; £ll with purchaM of any |H|“T| with purchaM of on. 48 km k! a si ri an * can oJ of J tro “ rr “ W any 2, pkgt. of a" C? -|| pkg. Country Ov.n Ct. box of I Garden Hose SI.BB g g Raid k |t ? H Frosen Vegetables ! Sandwich Buns 1 Baked Goods ('"Dj Modess 1 Good thru Jun. 6 Good thru Jun. 6 ' Good thru Jun. 6 Q Good thru Jun. 6 B] Good t*' ru *»"• 6 G°« d t *' ru Jun « * g| LJiLMZEZSZSLj
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
PAGE ONE-A
v 30QTH YEAR—A commemorative postage stamp will be issued on June 15, honoring the 300th anniversary of English colonization of New Jersey. Douglas Allen, of Metuchen, N.J., designed the blue on white vertical 5center. Soft Approach To Indonesia Failure By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst The United States, hav in g 5-ied the velvet glove in its ealings with Indonesian President Sukarno, now seems ready to wiSld the big stick. The velvet glove approach came in Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy’s visit last winter to Southeast Asia in an attempt to soften the rambunctious Sukarno’s announced determination to “crush” the new federation of Malaysia. It was part of a broader scale US. campaign to encourage Asian leaders to settle their disputes by peaceful means and it did result in a shaky cease-fire and a momentary lull in the verbal insults exchanged between the two disputants. The calm lasted less than a month. Issues Action Command Early this month Sukarno, in a speech in his capital of Jakarta, issued an “action command” to “21 million volunteers” into the fight to crush Malaysia which Sukarno regards as an extension of British colonialism. To observers in Jakarta it seemed to moan he planned to step up the guerrilla war in North Borneo where Indonesia is pledged to aid the “independence movement” against the Kuala Lumpur government of Malaysia. Into this worsening situation stepped Assistant U.S. Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs William P. Bundy. Bunday warned that further interference in North Borneo could result in a final cut-off of already reduced US. aid to Indonesia. Withdraws Aid Plan U.S. economi aid to Indonesia has totaled around $1 billion. Last fall in the' mounting Indonesian-Malaysian crisis, the United States withdrew from a plan which would have set up a SSOO million credit for Indonesian long-term development and halted shipments of weapons and ammunition. It continued technical assistance programs amounting to about sll million and surplus food shipments of up to $35 million. Sukarno’s dreams of empire take little account of the sufferings of Indonesia’s 65 million population, an estimated one-third of whom suffer from malnutrition. To the Malaysian people who demand rice and detest a corn substitute Be says: "I say let us eat corn to crush Malaysia.” And to U.S. Ambassador Howard P. Jones, he already has said: “To hell with your aid.” Last September, as part ot his policy of .confrontation against Malaysia, Sukarno cut off all economic relations with the new nation despite the fact it meant cutting off nearly half the markets for Indonesia’s export trade and placing new burdens on an already staggering econoißy. The United States has helped Sukarno in the past on the theory that only massive economic aid would enable him to stand against Indonesia’s powerful Communist party. It now appears that the end of U.S. patience is nearing. But on the basis of the record, Sukarno is not likely to change his course.
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