Newspaper Page Text
rwe care
guess Who Cite Boss
Is .It llihi r. 1A I’
It's you!
Think about it. It rnakWsense. \
All of us from the President on down work for you.
I I •■
Frankly, where would we be without you and the many people like you?
’/\ / /
We know. We’d still be in that little store on Vesey Street
where we started more than 100 years ago.
That’s why you’re important. That’s why we care so much
/ /
about how we serve you.. \ about being fair, honest and dependable.
Is this kind of attitude a good reason for shopping A&P?
It’s one of many. ' I
COPYRIGHT <P HBB, THE CHEAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA CO., INC.
PUREX BLEACH
".i"™-"’*- 31c Sweet Potatoes
ANN PAGE VALUES j| fl
PURE HONEY 3 - 95< Speclds " l - 2 ” • 4VC
APPLE JELLY — 23c f
GROUND 69c A&P Grape Juice
MAYONNAISE —79 c on,
DRESSING «-• ‘ 35<
WHITE HOUSE — —
Evaporated Milk 3 Fl oz Cans 49c r—
MILD ANO MELLOW COFFEE PaClilC JlllM
Eight O'Clock 65c „ >c - 1 zr
SPECIAL SALE KI" U \ T * Cans ft S f
Our Own Tea Bags *• 45c J
COMET CAKEAnd
«"*« FR <2aßs®
z 2 •■. 35 c *" 10c
Spic & Span Cleaner GARBAGE CAN
4c OFF 31c Ga|vwtad 21
|M ■ ■ ■■F Can J 1
Top Job p - -’•/□c __
AIP 100% COLUMBIAN
COFFEE
Ilb Cm 89c
SUNSHINE
Vanilla Wafers
12-oz. Size 35c
NABISCO
CHIPS AHOY M'/zoi.
PECAN SHORTBREAD 14 oz.
APPLE STRUDEL
Your Choice 45c
SUPEROSE
SWEETENER
B-ot Bottle 69c
STOKELY'S
CUT GREEN BEANS Uw-oz. c.n 23c
SAUERKRAUT 1 Lb. C.n 21c
FORDHOOK LIMA BEANS 1 Lb. Can 31c
PARTY PEAS 1 Lb. Can 31c
KRAFT DRESSINGS
THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING 33c
ITALIAN DRESSING Boz. 37 c
FRENCH DRESSING 37c
ROQUEFORT DRESSING 8-oz. 49c
BAKING HENS
U.S.D.A. Inspected
Large Fancy PolI „ d JU(
Fatted
"SUPER-RIGHT” HICKORY SMOKED
SUGAR CURED HAMS
Shenk Butt Whole mh
Portion ” ■ Portion "J or Half
u>. c c ib. igf c
CENTER SLICED HAM *• 89c
"SUPER-RIGHT" FRESHLY ... LB. 43c
GROUND BEEF 3 ■ $1.25
"SUPER-RIGHT" SKINLESS ... 1 LB. PKG. 55c
ALLMEAT FRANKS 43c
ALLGOOD BRAND NO. 1 THIN ... 2 LB. PKG. $1.15
SLICED BACON 59c
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FRYER
BREAST QUARTERS 39c
LEG QUARTERS 33c
OSCAR MAYER
0 ALL MEAT BOLOGNA your AA.
• ALL BEEF BOLOGNA CHO,CE _<H C
e CHUB BRAUNSCHWEIGER VV
OSCAR MAYER
• COTTO SALAMI your MA-
O PICNIC LOAF CHO,CE £IWC
• BARBECUE LOAF -*•
JANE PARKER DUTCH APPLE PIE > 39c
JANE PARKER POUND CAKESV— 55C
JANE PARKER CAKE DONUTS 2 °»4sc
JANE PARKER DINNER ROLLS —l5 c
JANE PARKER WHEAT BREAD;,S—99c
FLORIDA LARGE RED RIPE
WATERMELONS -99 c
Half Melon 59c Quarter Melon 30c
JUMBO 36 SIZE VINE
RIPE CANTALOUPES < 49c
FLORIDA ORANGES OR
GRAPEFRUIT B ik »«49c
SELECTED ALL PURPOSE RUSSETT
POTATOES 20 “99c
WASHINGTON RED
WINESAP APPLES 3- 49c
FRESH
HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLES -49 c
NESTEA
2-or Jar 89C
Heinx Baby Food
Jan Strained 55c
An Junior 43c
Lucky Whip
DESSERT TOPPING
3- Can* 89c
PARKAY
MARGARINE
>c OFF
1 Lb. Carton 27c
DOW
HANDI-WRAP
3c OFF
100 Foot 25c
KLEENEX
WHITE OR PASTELS
4 Pkg of 200 2 Ply 99c
Griffin Daily News
Wednesday, April 26, 1967
US Government
Having Trouble
In Okefenokee
By CHARLES S. ALDINGER
United Press International
WAYCROSS, Ga. (UPD—The
Okefenokee swamp, it stinks
it sweats vapors, its waters
have the cast of dried blood, its
trees have things hanging down
and most of what’s alive in it
slithers and creeps. But people
here around would skin you the
slow way if you thought about
changing it.
This swamp is without time
its mud is primeval and its
people love it. But they have
an in-born suspicion for any
thing federal. And that’s why
the federal government is hav
ing trouble trying to save this
Place for the people who want
it saved.
There was a meeting down
at the Ware County courthouse
Friday. The federal government
wanted some testimony because
the Fish and Wildlife Service is
trying to have the swamp nut
under the Wilderness Act pass
ed by Congress in 1964, The act
gives the government more con
trol over what goes o n in wild
life refuges, including the right
to keep interstate highways out
of such areas.
The people inside the court
house were polite enough but
outside Clarence Mclntosh was
remembering old Oliver Trift
Xu Up in the federal p- “i
TrZ U r- ne . Ver f ° rget 01(3 01iver
irift. Got sentenced about ten
maybe twelve years ago for
shooting two federal men to
death in the swamp. They Just
put more stock in their bears
than in Oliver’s cattle and he
killed them with a shotgun.”
Trift ran cattle. Some bears
came up out of the swamp and
started eating at his herd. So
Trift took a shotgun to them.
The wildlife officers tried to
stop him and he took his shot
gun to them, too.
“I have lived around those
swamp people,” Mclntosh said.
"If somebody goes in there and
starts pushing them around
someone is going to get hurt.”
The federal government now
controls 340,800 acres of the
swamp. About 75,000 acres are
“private.”
The Department of the In
terior says the quiet swamp,
which pours itself into the Su
wannee River, will be ruined by
civilization if congress isn’t giv
en Jurisdiction over it.
People are sneaking into the
swamp at night with flashlights
to blind the alligators, then
bury an axe into their heads.
Skins are worth about $7 a foot.
Others are draining the canal
and polluting it.
But the locals feel if the gov
ernment gets any more rights
in the swamp it will condemn
the 75,000 private acres. The
wildlife officers say that’s ridic
ulous, that the government
could do that now if It wanted
to.
Some of the wood that grows
in the swamp is sold to a paper
company and the local economy
is sensitive about that. A law
yer against the move pointed
out that losing the acreage
would also cut down on the
bond-issuing ability of Ware,
Clinch and Charlton Counties.
No matter what they do or
don’t do the swamp will re
main, says Liston Elkins.
“Fortunately, here men have
always failed. The Okefenokee
whipped everything they tried
to do.”
Food Shopping
Guide
The following guide to the
nation’s food buys for the
weekend was prepared by the
Departments of Agriculture and
Interior for United Press
International.
WASHINGTON (UPD—A gol
den array of good-for-you fruits,
vegetables, meats and poultry
continues to be plentiful in area
markets.
Vegetable bins are brimming
with plentiful potatoes and
onions.
Flowing to fruit stands are
apples, oranges, watermelons
and grapefruit.
At meat counters, watch for
economical beef buys in roasts
and steaks. Ham, eggs and
bacon are almost bountiful
buys. In your poultry depart
ment, broiler-fryers and turkeys
are winging their way to
market in sizable supplies.
Fish tipping the scales often
and abundantly this week are
fish fillets and canned salmon.
MIDDLEWEIGHTS DRAW
NOTTINGHAM, England
(UPD—Unbeaten British mid
dleweight champion Johnny
Pritchett was held to an
unimpressive 10-round draw by
Milo Calhoun of New York
Monday night.
Pritchett, who has gone
unbeaten through his 25-fight
career, was sharp in early
rounds but slowly lost the
initiative to the hard-punching
Calhoun.
18