Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 219, Decatur, Adams County, 17 September 1958 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Widespread Rainfall Sweeps Over Stale Torrential Rainfall Hits Some Sections United Press International Torrential rains hit. sections of Indiana for the second day in a

ft Al Will Buy At Kroger! jnfc Go Krogering Because 88c Sure Buys A Lot. Everything From Soup To Fruit. I lr -? t|K<{ Have a Fine Time Saving With All The Modern Conveniences | jjKgJM All Purpose White—They Only Have Eyes For You—Plus Top Value Stamps For Extra Savings '* o. Mb.Hng Mg L wPotatoesSU o<r w _ -7TT1 FRBH CANTALOUPE •” 4 - 88‘ I ■ J Get Lettuce So Fresh It I Eatmore for economy . » ■ sffiHBIRS Almost Smiles At You! ajkZTMlf Margarine siu 88c It Visit Krogers lettuce Gw - I . | & Beans ... 7 SSc Tomatoes 8 88c 1/ „ner Can Offer You Such j M ~ Instant and regular 1 * Packers Label Yellow On J replete Variety of Fr esh | Kroger Pudings 11 pkgs. 88c Com Style™ 8 ca’ns° 3 88c I Lettuce From Every Growing > Mary Lon p rocessed & K oS h er packers Label cut Co Krogering end enjoy ! Are a Os The Nation. ! A Dill PfckleS 3 Qrrerte 88t 6nM BHW 8 88c bn»""Fr..7«r’ing, .eif- 1 Hed LettUCC 2... 29= Q SPAGHETTI ""X 6 i 88* •enrire, poyroll eh.el. SXr”’‘.n23cl refers Label Krorer aenr , ltl ed coahed, friendly folk, to i RMMfaS 1* 23t ert „, for | < 6«SaP»<B 8 N ’a“ 88C lMCh«riM 4 88c Kroger where you Live 1 lettuce Lb. 23c k yMhJp Spinach 8 88c Applesauce 3 No ba« 88c Better For Less." I Crisp Tender-Bibb ?“|| uce lb 23C i I lettuce Plus Top Value Stamps For Extra Savings — K* Campbells T W?° 2 88* California Sliced Facial Soft „ Avondale for economy I / Freestone Peaches 3 N con. 88* Swanee Tissue 4 = 88 c Whole Apricots 3 "c.- 2 . 1 88* I .</ SECT. 3 NOW ON SALE SECTS. 1 A 2 STILL AVAILABLE ~ WEBSTER'SgSDICTIONARY IS assemble it yourself - IsROGER TENDERAY BEEF SALE! Round Steak «S?>^l25 < 79 c \ IHRHr / . ■ — I .r Kroger Tenderay Beef buy A section A week _ Choice Center Cuts p.™na lS u.d i. WMII d L m „mi»c For Swiss or Frying Pound Ivory 4 29* Ivory Snow 79c Tide tr 33* * _ Kroger Tenderay Delicious Broiled Get Free Gifts Like These Sirloin Steak - 88* With Top Value Stamps From Kroger Kroger Tenderay. No more than 3 inch tails , a T-Bone Steak *• 88‘ PT jP'T W‘ ! ;" '‘W?®. lIWBMBsIt Fork Tender Sirloin Tip Lean blade cut |Sj ea * < Lb Chuck Roast u 49c I B First 5 Riba —7 Inch Cut Lean Tender Plate w Rib Roast u. 69c Boiling Beef u. 29c We reserve the right to limit quantitiea. Prices effective thru September 20 in Decatur.

row, adding more than an inch of precipitation to areas which recorded the heaviest rain in several months only Tuesday. The widespread rhlrt swept across the state, from the Ohio River to Lake Michigan and from Richmond to Terre Haute. It was part of a huge storm center surging across the nation’s central section. The heaviest rain in the 244»0ur period ending at 7 a.m. fell at

' Vincennes apd Richmond where i official measurement was 1.76 inches. Shelbyville had 1.69 and Rushville 1.65. Other areas recording more than an inch of rain included Elwood, Edwardsport, Seymour, Bedford, Scottsburg, Shoals. West Baden, Filliams and Columbus. Most other areas reported, a half to an inch of rain. But ttie storms fell short of Tuesday s cloudbursts which poured 3 to 6 inches on a narrow

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

band running through Monticello, Warsaw and Rochester. The showers began late Monday and continued Tuesday and today in most areas. The weatherman said the rain would end in all areas late today or early this evening and no showers were predicted until at least Saturday. Highs today were stateu iu range from near 65 in the north to near 76 in the south. Lows tonight will range from 48 to 55 and highs

Thursday from 70 to 75. Thursday will be “partly cloudy and a little, warmer” and the outlook for Friday is “fair with little change in temperature.” The long-range forecast for the next five days carried a promise of warmer temperatures. The weatherman said temperatures will average 3 to 4 degrees above normal highs of 71 north and 81 south and normal lows of 51 to 59.

“Warmer Thursday and Friday with little Change Saturday through Monday" was the prediction. Rainfall will average around one inch in showers about Friday and again Sunday and Monday. Temperatures Tuesday generally ranged in the mid 70s, except at Evansville where the mercury climbed to a high of 87. Lows during the night ranged from 70 at Evansville to 59 at South Bend.

McDonald Foes To Plead Case Today Intra-Union Feud Among Steelworkers ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) - Union opponents of David J. McDonald, president of the United

WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1958

Steel Workers of America, planned to plead their case today before a convention which previously heard them branded as “scabs” and “stooges.” Donald C. Rarick, leader of the rebel faction, said he would address the 3,500 delegates in what may be the showdown battle of the smoldering intra-union feud. In other convention action, USWA spokesmen made it clear that the 1,250,000-member union would make a strong bid for a sizeable wage increase next June when the current three-year contract expires. Former President Truman was scheduled to address the delegates to the five-day session later today. Rarick, 38, a Mckeesport, Pa., millhand, accepted a challenge from McDonald Tuesday to thrash the matter out on the convention floor. “We’re going to go after some of the unfair and lousy accusations that were made against us,” Rarick said. McDonald claimed the insurgents are out to “destroy the union" and was enthusiastically cheered when he keynoted- the convention Monday with a call to “rid this cancer out of your bowles.” On the issue of a new contract, union counsel Arthur J. Goldberg - put the steel industry on notice that the giant union would fight for “a substantial” wage increase. “While the steel workers believe in the right to strike, they are not a strike-happy union,” he said. However, Goldberg said, the union was concerned about the fact that 289.000 steel workers were fully unemployed and 118,000 partially unemployed. “The steelworkers don’t want unemployment compensation — they want employment and decent work under good conditions,” Goldberg said, J Nearly Inch Os Rain Reported In Decatur Louis Landrum, government weather observer, reported today that Decatur received .65 inches of tain up to 7 o’clock today. An additional .26 of an inch was reported to have fallen since that time until 1 o'clock this afternoon. Erwin Fuelling of Union township reported that .7 of rain fell during the night in the northeastern part of the county. Kirkland township gave .4 of an inch, recorded by Rosemary Spangler. South Bend Man Is Held For Slaying SOUTH BEND, Ind. <UPI) — Police held Oliver Johnson, 30, South Bend, today in the slaying ot his uncle late Tuesday. Police said Huston Phillips. 55, South Bend, died from wounds sustained in a fight with Johnson. Officers were told Phillips was cutting weeds in Johnson’s yard when the fight started Johnson said Phillips threatened him with a sickle and he fired in self-defense.' Police said Phillips had been drinking before the argument. AUTO WORKERS (Continued from page one) line, workers at the 86 Ford plants and parts depots across the nation began walking out, first in the East and spreading across the country. Stellato told newsmen of the new company offer, “the company, has agreed to make the "contract retroactive to July 1, to increase pensions from $2.25 per month for each year of service to $2.35 and to continue the annual wage improvement factor <2% per cent or 6 cents an hour, whichever is higher). “Considering everything, this company offer generally is good,” Stellato said. “The biggest unsolved problem is plantwide seniority,” he said. Stellato said the union was going to tell its members that they Would stay off the job until that issue is settled. It was the second time in three years that a strike deadline expired at Ford without a contract settlement. JUDGE DELAYS (Continued from page one) Ministers Beny Charge Gov. Orval Faubus, who closed four Little Rock schools to stave off integration, moved up the date of a special integration vote from Oct. 7, to Sept. 27, which could reduce parent-pupil pressure on that front. But in Charlottesville, Va., parents conferred into the morning hours today, trying for a method of educating their children. Two schools in that city were to have opened on a desegregated basis Monday, but state officials have ordered that they remain closed as long as die federal integration order is in effect. In another development at Little Rock, fifty Presbyterian ministers and elders issued an angry denial of Faubus’ inference that the local Presbytery had been influenced by "leftwingers, communists and integrationists.” The church group also adopted a resolution asking Faubus to remand his school closing order and refrain from closing any other Arkansas schools.