Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 255, Decatur, Adams County, 29 October 1958 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
FOR ADEQUATE PROTECTION You should have adequate Insurance AGAINST Any Kind of Possible Loss. COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS JIM COWENS 209 Court St. Phone 3-3601 Decatur, Ind.
iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!ii:i:!i!i..uiiniiiiiiHiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiniiii!iiiiiiiiuiiiiiii>i::u!::aiiiiii!iiiiHiiuiiiHiuiiiiiiiniiinnniiminiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!ii!UiiiiiintiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNininiiiiiiiiiinnnniniiniiiiiniiniiiiiiinmiiinHiuniiiiiiiii Sr Salft 75 Silver Dollars Given Each Week I Your Decatur Kroger Supermarket is giving away 3 prizes of 25 Silver Dollars | M Wj WK each week during the Krogerodeo. Nothing to buy, just sign up at Kroger. Children under 16, Kroger employees and their families not eligible. I Übhußl 1 Weeks Vacation In Sun Valley, Idaho d rearn vacation for 2in one of America's fSun Valley and stay in the finest suite at the w • 6, K | ■■■■■■■■■■BHHBiHHhHHMHlV * nest resorts - The iwnning couple will fly to Lodge. They will be given $750 for food anjj B 144 ELZEy B SB spending money. It's easy to win. Just sign up at Kroger. jVi . l^s=—” 8t -> Decatur K I With The Purchase of 2 No. ~^ ===s3g s ags J iGreen Giant Ji . = — Italian Seasoning, Leaf Ore- ■ l ' ' Buy 2 12-oz. Cans S I XAt 29c and get one can of \ W Ag ’'m Io Mnir r — one can er I / Al H Ift I \ Kroger Gelatin I I | Kroger Tea Bags for— a box for only | | M M M 1 Buy Mary Lou i -- ■ I LPivSSiny for 59c— : = I Whole Kernel Yellow I Tam**!.*#. Ea»L» With the purchase of 2, 10-oz. bogs 1 lOuSliny rvIKS of marshmallows for 19c each — Only 1 B vfl : <XX I/izlmaui D mmm . Joan of Arc with the purchase of 4 No. SI % JF H4HA vl_ IKKinSy DCuIIS 303cansfor66c—Get 1 can for only . J? \ W A' -* ' - t M 9 IVI z e With the purchase of 3 pkgs, at 13c ■■ I *’* ** 5 —get one package for only I I I>am4..ma P..M4 With the purchase of 3 pkgs, for 10c 12~0Z» IrCIITynG vUItl —get one package for only fnn Diamond with the purchase of 2 boxes lOOthpiCKS for 15c — get one box for only XNr la HvimLimm With the purchase of 3 pkgs, for 10c ynilKiny JTiUWS each—get one package for only I Visit The Kroger g uy a f or 25 C Lettuce Garden |M| wiomatocs ■■i g jF Head California Buy 2 for only 29c jet | A Lettuce H««d 25c Carrots’^’,7l.£:u’*’"”/lc Acorn Squash on tF o. 1c I E I I Buy one bae for 10c get Buy 2 pots for 29c eet Lettuce pound 29c Radishes o ne Bag lc Potted Ivy oneF Or lc L et Kroger Buy one bar for 39c Kei Buy one pot for 23c < et Jr | •'=«»''# Potatoes 50 "’,99' Spinach 0n. 8 . g lc Pot of Chives 0.. F., lc f a. Your sama ciau,, | | Completely cleaned - local grown _ f Get Christmas Gifts \ | I ■■■■ ■ V ’ tree With Top Value 1 I Whole Fryers -2rAS f & ) j Lson Troy Pocked... Kmgon s Stewßeef r.„. d 59c Chuck RoUSt P .„ a 49 t RXk HHfe X I Sliced Bacon -59’ at >„» K"si..k _.«. »» E We Reserve the right to limit quantities. Priced effective thru Saturday November 1 in Decatur limn
POPE (Continued from page one) Peace is the tranquility of the Lord, and from St. Thomas: “Between peace and slavery there is a great difference. Peace is tranquil freedom.” Speaks of “Silent Church” He spoke then of the "silent church" behind the Iron Curtain and said: “Our thoughts go out in a particular way to the bishops, priests and faithful who live
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
where the church’s sacred rights are trampled on with daring. . . where pastors are impeded to the point that they cannot carry out their task. “We share in their sorrows.” Such restrictions against church liberty are “completely repugnant” to civilized life, he said. He prayed for divine enlightenment of the minds of the persecutors to bring about “freedom for all.” He referred to the Eastern and Western rites of the Catholic
Church and said, “we embrace the Eastern Western churches with fatherly charity.” Asks Protestants Return » And “to those are are separated ftom the Holy See (non-Cath-olic Christians) we open our most loving soul,” he said. “. . .we advocate their return to the father’s home. “So may it come, that all, freely and willingly, may enter into what is not a strange .home but their own home.” He began his 12-minute speech
with these words? “In this hour of trepidation in which the heavy burden of the pontificate, imposed on us by the mysterious design of God after the death of our predecessor Pius XII of venerated memory, overwhelms and almost crushes our soul, . . .we pray to God to enlighten our mind and strengthen our will.” Speaks of Cardinals He spoke with sympathy of the plight of Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty of Hungary and Aloysius
Cardinal Stepinac of Yugoslavia where the Communist governments refused to allow them to attend the conclave. He called them those “whose sufferings touch us so strongly.” Pope John said his thoughts also went out to “those who work in the vineyards of the Lord everywhere in the world” — all priests and especially missionarin all lands.” He also gave his embrace to the Catholic action movement, to all those who in any way help
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1958
the church hierarchy in its task, and “all the children we have in Christ.” He particularly turned his thoughts to the faithful of “the region where we have carried out our pastoral task” and said, "we are always present to them through the charity of Jesus Christ, and will always be.” At this point came the reference to the persecuted church behind the Iron Curtain. The Pontiff ended his 12 - minute speech with an apostolic blessing. Then the locked and , bricked up doors and corridors of the conclave area were opened or broken through. ATOMIC (Continued from page ona) did not disclose any secrets about American weapons. But he said that U.S. scientists came away from the meeting convinced that “the other side did not have the deegree of sophistication that our side had” in weapons developmeent. The Russians, in their discussions with Western scientists, might well have drawn the inference that they were technically beehind in the nuclear arm race, McCone said. McCone described the current Soviet test program, in which 14 devices have been exploded since Sept. 30, as “the most intensive anyone has had.” But that he meant the Russians were firing off tests at the fastest rate in atomic history. McCone would not say, however, that the Soviet program has been greater in magnitude than some — of the more extended U.S. tests have been. He and Atomic Commissioner Willard F. Libby agreed that while there is no evidence the Russians are deliberately making "dirtier than normal” weapons—weapons with great radioactivity—there also is no evidence they are trying to make cleaner weapons. MINE (Con tin ued from p*K« one) Wilson listed gas ignition as the cause of the explosion. Harrison Carter, 51, one of those who escaped, said "when we felt the air reverse after the blast we ran out and didn’t even pick up our lunch buckets.” Among the dead were Mine Superintendent Olin C. Gates, and his assistant, Edward Stephenson. OGDENSBURG. N. Y. (UPD — — Mrs. George Brossoie recently received an unsigned letter containing $22. The letter began: “I found your purse some time ago. . . ”
STOP Mgrass BEFORE IT STARTS SCOTT’S HALTS HALTS — DESTROYS UP TO 95% OF NEXT YEAR’S CRABGRASS — KILLS THE SEED AS IT GERMINATES. ALSO GRUB-PROOFS THE SOIL— FORESTALLS POSSIBLE DAMAGE BY SOIL INSECTS. APPLY HALTS JUST ONCE EARLY WINTER IS A GOOD TIME. EASILY APPLIED WITH THE ACCURATE SCOTTS SPREADER. 1,000 SQ. FT. 8AG..4.95 2.5C8 SQ. FT. BAG. .9.95
