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Wednesday, Feb. 1, 1967 Griffin Duly Newt
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PHILADELPHIA
CHICAGO' EW
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2 m st.louisV'VTZ? ,4$ ASHINGTON
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RSE / — CRIME
- INFORMATION
FBI COMPUTER NETWORK H COMPUTER
i NEW CENTER
• OTY POLICE (DIRECT LINE)--—\ HEHr ORLEANS
171 STATE POUCE (DIRECT UNE)—— 2$ >
D s
STATE POUCE (FEEDER UNE)
CRIME NETWORK— Here is the beginning of the Crime Information Computer Center net
work being operated by the FBI and police over the nation as of Jan. 27. It will be ex
panded later. Designing and developing the network cost the FBI $97,000. High speed
transmission of information is expected to Increase efficiency. Initial quarry: Wanted
felons, stolen cars, other stolen property. Other crimes can come later.
NABISCO COUNTRY SMOKED - MIXED
f*f/A > CHOC
m ■ ■>/ 5 i \ 7 I * < PEANUT 47c BARS SAUSAGE * 49c
/ iSi BAG
7k HOME MADE PURE PORK
Jm m PAN
M v\ l SAUSAGE
ARCHER'S H Wm i/t> iMi J AW j A / -7 Lb. 49c
It’s true—if you don’t save on the TOTAL, you don’t TMOMAS BON TON
save at all. And right there—right in the LOWER
TOTAL COST is proof positive you SAVE MORE 49c
* m STOREWIDE SPECIALS CASH at ARCHER’S! enable LOW PRICES Why is and this weekly so? Because SUPER our WIENERS*
Vi £0 you to fill your cart for LESS!
m Prove it to your satisfaction — start a brand new
SAVINGS PLAN today—at ARCHER’S—the market MEATY
that gives you MORE of everything —— including LOW
M m I PRICESI SPARE RIBS
VtIL. hi *4 m •A V
MU r/v*cg VERI-tender
4 d W» V > ■ ' ^ ^ r " #' * SHOULDER CLOD Lb. 39c
jm
BABY j y r J»» ROAST HyGrode's Valley Brook Processed
BEEF SALE! 45c CHEESE 2 Lb. Box 69c
VERI-tender
CHUCK ROAST 37c LB.
Lb. FRESH YOUNG
VERI-tender VERI-tender Full Cut BRISKET BEEF LIVER
RIB STEAKS ROUND STEAK SOUP MEAT Lb. 19c
LB. 69c LB. 77c • FREE! Cubed LB. 19c Grade A Ga.
FOOD KING MARGARET HOLMES LINDY sr EGGS
PORK & BEANS HELD PEAS EARLY PEAS irr MEDIUM
V
No. 2 Vi Cans No. 303 Can 2»-39c Doz. 39c
Food Kink - Navy, Pinto Northern ALL FLAVORS BREMNER'S
BEANS JELL-0 CHOC. PIES PRODUCE SPECIALS
Chiquita U.S. No. 1 Green
300 Can 10c o_ Box Of 12 # % M BANANAS 10c CABBAGE
NEW PATTY DURKEE'S SWEETENED u. 5c
PRINCESS SOAP COCONUT U.S. POTATOES No. 1 White COCONUTS Fresh
Pkg. Bath Size Bars 2 6 Oz. 19c 7 Oz. Twin Packs iou,59c Each 19c
SOFLIN PAPER HUNT'S HICKORY FLAVORED
NAPKINS CATSUP ARCHERS Prices Effective
Thru Feb. 4th
•
m 2*“»«“25c
14 Oz. Bottle 19c ' / r~\ A \ AFFILIATED WITH N
Collard SUNSHINE Greens CHOPPED JIM DANDY-Regular GRITS or Quick FOOD STORE m!B
FOOD STORES
30 3Can 10c 2oz. 25c 1003 W. TAYLOR ST.
Pkgs.
»
14
THE DOCTOR SAYS
Most People Don’t
4 Get Enough Water
By Wayne G. Brandstadt, M.D.
Q —Can a person drink too
much water? I was told to drink
six to eight glasses of water a
day while taking a prescription
for sinus trouble. I did this and
never felt better in my whole 27
years. My acne has cleared up,
too.
A — A person can drink too
much water. One man, who dr
ank a glass of water every five
minutes in the belief that this
would cure his constipation, had
symptoms of water intoxica
tion — agitated irrational beha
vior and convulsions — after two
hours and had to be hospitaliz
ed. Most people, however, don’t
drink enough water. Six to eight
glasses a day is considered a
bare minimal Intake.
I’m glad your acne has clear-
ed up but I can’t be sure all the
credit should go to the water.
Since it clears up in most per
sons in their early 20s, in your
case this relief was overdue.
Q— Is it all right to arms wa
ter at meal times? When you
recommend, so many glasses
of water, do you mean six-ounce
or eight-ounce glasses?
A — Since water leaves the
stomach quickly there is no rea
son not to drink it at meal time.
Much of the fluid a person tak
es at meal time may, however,
be consumed as tea or some oth
er beverage. A glass of water
should be about eight ounces.
Q — I have heard that it is not
good to drink soft water or use
it in cooking. What harmful ef
fect would it have? Does bath
ing in soft water remove too
much vitamin B and oil trom
the skin?
A —The idea that drinking
soft water is harmful has been
disproved. Bathing will not re
move any vitamins from the skin
and the oils are removed by hot
water and soap, not by the am
ount of mineral in the water.
Q — If a person drank distill
ed water all the time would it
be harmful? Is distilled water
preferred for persons who have
kidney trouble?
A —Distilled water would
draw essential minerals, chief
ly salt, from the tissues. It is
not recommended for any kind
of kidney disease even when the
intake of salt in the diet must be
restricted.
Q — I read recently that the
BHA added to some foods is poi
son. Is this true?
A — Everything is poison if ta
ken in sufficient quantity. But
ylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) is
an antioxidant that is added to
foods that contain fat to delay
rancidity. The Pood and Drug
Administration permits the addi
tion of not over 0.02 per cent
by weight to such foods. This Is
well within safe limits.
Quirks
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) —
Officials of the St. Louis dog
pound billed Robert Stelze $7—
(5 for “letting the dog loose”
and $2 for sheltering it one day.
County Supervisor Lawrence
Roos Monday ordered the
money refunded after Stelze
said his dog, Winston, was
blown out of Stelzle’s house by
a tornado which smashed 200
homes last week.
CHICAGO (UPI) —Owners of
about 1,000 cars stranded on the
Calumet expressway during the
snowstorm were told Monday
police had towed them away so
snow removal could be accom
plished.
Police said owners could pick
up their cars at the city
garbage dump.
FLINT, Mich (UPI) —Sign
seen atop a 10-foot snowbank
alongside a road north of here
Monday:
•‘A red Corvair is buried
here.”
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PERLIE GOCHENAUR was is
high good humor when ha
put up this mailbox in Rich
land Center, Wis. Actually,
AIR MAIL is a bird feeder.
Daily Flights
To Orbit Seen
Within 20 Years
By AL ROSSITER JR.
United Press International
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) —
A committee of space experts
predicts that in the next 20 years
or so daily rocket flights to orbit
and back will be commonplace.
The group also predicts that
future countdowns will be no
complicated than the pre
flight checks on present-day jet
and that the cost2of reach
ing orbit will be only about
four times the price of the fuel
used.
The key to this advanced
stage of space development, the
committee, said, is to reduce
the high cost of space trans
portation.
The group said this can only be
done by developing a new gen
eration of launchers and space
craft that can be recovered and
over again like the air
of today.
The arguments for making at
a concerted effort to re
solve some of the technical ques
surrounding such re-usable
were made in a report
to the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics
(AIAA) by its launch vehicle
missile committee.
The panel, headed by Brig.
Joseph S. Bleymaier, com
mander of the Air Force western
range, said it is not too
early to examine what the char
acteristics of the next genera
tion of boosters should be.
Cost Cited
The group pointed out that the
average cost per flight of a
typical long-range jetliner today
is about $1,500. The cost per
of a Titan 3 or Saturn 1
is about $20 million.
The committee said there are
two outstanding reasons for this
difference. One is that
rockets need enormous amounts
propellant and therefore are
very large in proportion to the
payload they carry. The second
is that each present-day launch
er is brand new and is used
only once.
The cost of the fuel itself is
significant, the report said.
“The second difference, expen
dability vs. re-usability, would
to be the major area in
which improvments could
make the greatest difference in
the cost of getting payload to
orbit.”
“Without recovery and re-use,
we see no possibility for such
(cost) reductions,” Bleymaier
said in the . 'port. "Further we
see no possibility for significant
increases in space activity with
out a sizeable decrease in space
transportation cost per launch.”
Recent Meeting
He told a recent AIAA meet
that some studies on the
number of space launches need
in the future do not strongly
support the utility of a reusable
rocket.
“Yet how many of us sitting
here today would have predict
ed in 1956 thrt the following 10
years would see over 350 space
launches. I’ll venture to say
that not one of us actually did.”
Bleymaier said the committee
has not taken a stand on what
kind of launcher or recovery
system would be the most ef
fective, but “the committee has
taken the position that consider
ation must be given to reusable
launch vehicle concepts in any
future launch vehicle develop
ment decision.
"Man would never have
reached the horse and buggy
stage of transportation if he had
always seen fit to expend the
horse. Similarly, space flight
will never proceed past the
point of tentative probing aa
long as we expend our ve
hides.”