Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 182, Decatur, Adams County, 3 August 1960 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Cooler Weather Is Forecast In State ■United Press International Moderate to heavy rain tempered Indiana’s sultry August weather today, but despite overcost skies forecasters clung doggedly to a prediction that temperatures in and near the 90s
I Kroger Brand For Quality ‘ B Kroger Brand Extra Thin - I Pineapple Juice n OSH Milk Saltines 4“» $ 1 00 lIX-hed jdiil 00 4’- 1 -" s l° o I I Sweet Potatoes 4 $1 Cocoonot I Archway Fruit Mix Kroger Bartlett Pears 4 * 3 $1 . T_ If I f i Welehade o 1 Avondale Purple Plums 4sl Top ValllJß StkllipS übby Tomflfo 3s] I MM gsjk SKi 'fiEf nn ((Si laSl nB //S iiK wv JiiL S II Bl _9fl9 9J I I JEoBI mhl ■II vKw J^S 5 Tenderay Brand Beef s" i C Dr " ,k 3 “f sl l I . ~ , , Kreger Lemonade 10c£ $] | I / N ° ° ther Beef So Fresh Can Be So Tender! IL, - , K^.t 23<1 | lll^Br' s ftEDBV f Only Tenderay Brand Beef spends just 44 hours in a special “ rwl * •* BWBHS Brand O Cane |l V Wpk-BW If E KA ■ I temperature controlled room developing all its natural E M 4*Ma»A MraNMaawtraA L I tenderness and flavor. This fresh juicy beef is rushed to W margarine 0 Ibo. >1 y° ur Kroger where it's trimmed the Kroger way to »«*• you more meat for your money. JKp* - Yftu , I Krogw TMHforay Brand . only drain. Mntar «t, a MA WM ®**i s•* **•*«■ 1 I Round Steak s > » S F-L ; S« I T» derar B*«"d • or Kroger Tenderay Brand - always tender w|CI I T-Bone Steak . 99- Rib Steak » 89' c.,« sk«s 52: ~„ $i I I Rump Roast - 89- Rib Roast - 79* •* M I,w * •' ! $I I I Civlaim C«AraL IQc , -J’ J 13111011131HK — Ow I Bublrss Beef “■ 79* Fish Sticks 39* ’• iw> JU Hyyad*'* Circle K Hygrade's JHHHBHMHHHHHC JHMMHBMHMBHHO VI | Sliced Bacon - 69* All Meat Wieners rm—Aniffii _ I Kroger Tenderay Brand - only choice center cuts £ ■ Free 50 Top Value Stamps Free 50 Top Value Stamps ■ ■ '* si j e! rLn.?. r *• purchoM *■ ■ “ u, ~" 03 *•****•» ■n l| ABA Jk’. l * ; Ground Beef Lb. English Walnuts ■ rntc This coupon good <rt Kroger thra Toot- W M Thh aoupon good at Kroger thru Tuot- fl I CUTS ||l day, Augurt 9, 1960. Limit on., p| M .o. M M day, A«gu.t 9. 1960. limit an., p1.a,.. » » I wEIUwK IWCHI Pound lMmiimblj ummmmcl Indiana .-, .IB I Watermelon cefc n«- ”« Muekeni«”3 $1 Pototoes I I ’’■gj*’ Sweet Corn 6 f „.39c fredi'K«liej4ius9c ' — I Jumbo head, of d.wy fre.h and crisp Iceberg w . II | I Head Lettuce 2 W |
would be recorded again this afternoon. Logansport got 2.40 inches bt rain in about three hours this morning, and showers of varying ' size occurred over most of the northern half of the state, including 1.74 inches at Kokomo, 1.60 at Rochester, 1.00 at South Bend. .90 at Peru, .72 at Warsaw, .65 at Marion, .64 at Hartford City, .69 at Columbia City, .76 at Wabash, ; .50 at Lafayette and .36 at Fort
Wayne. The showers spread southward to Indianapolis a little later. The mercury crept up to the 90s all around the state Tuesday, ranging to a high of 95 at Evansville. But although Chicago recorded 93, South Bend 90, and Lafayettp 91, Indianapolis once again failed to make the grade. It was 89 in Indianapolis, tying the highest temperature recorded in the capital city this season. Hie season's warmest night at
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
many state points found the mercury dropping no lower than 76 at Evansville, 74 at Indianapolis, 73 at Cincinnati and 72 at Louisville. Highs today will range from 87 to 94. lows tonight from 62 to 73, and highs Thursday from 81 to 94. It will turn cooler in the northern third of the state tonight and the outlook is for the cooler trend to spread southward Friday. The five-day outlook indicated temperatures will generally aver-
age' about normal to’a little below normal northwest. There will' be some ups and downs in temperatures, including warmer about Saturday and turning cooler again late Sunday or Monday. Precipitation will total one-half to an inch. Over 2.6C0 Pally Tamocrats arx sold and delivered in Decatur each day.
« ?■’ r . - Decatur Teacher At Guidance Workshop' Deane T. Dor win, well-known Decatur high school teacher, started a workshop course in advanced guidance at Ball State Teachers College Monday. Dorwin will be at the workshop for a two-week duration, with the course ending August 12. 1
Ike To Conclude Vacation Sunday
NEWPORT, R.I. (UPD-Presi-dent Eisenhower decided today to wind up his vacation and return to Washington Sunday. White House Press Sedrettary
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 3. 1960
James C. Hagerty said it was a resonable assumption that the President would remain in Washington for the duration of the reconvening session of Congress. The Senate starts its session Monday. The House returns Aug. 15. Their deliberations are expected to continue for several weeks. With six days out for a side trip to Chicago and Denver, the President has been combining golf and work here since July 7. For their- last few days at - this swank summer resort the President and Mrs. Eisenhower will have as their guests Mrs. Barbara Eisenhower, wife ot their son John, and the younger Eisenhowers’ four children. The grandchildren and their mother were flying to Newport from Washington today aboard the regular White House courier plane. The President played golf under threatening skies today after an early morning work session with his staff. Fog that enveloped the area overnight had blown out but skies were leaden and rain was forecast. In the afternoon he was to see, among others, Gen. Lauris Norstad, commander of Allied forces in Europe. Hagerty said this session had nothing to do with reports from Bonn that German and French leaders are proposing reorganization of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. According to Hagerty, Norstad was here to discuss U.S. activities in NATO. 13-Year-Old Admits # Slaying Os Girl CHICAGO (UPD —“I got mad because she threw apples at me and made fun of me. Then she hit me and I hit her back.” This was the way a 13-year-old runaway boy described the killing of a 5-year-old girl he met by chance after escaping from a suburban Jail. Harold Dalibozak calmly made the confession Tuesday when he was taken to the weed covered field where Betsy Benham’s body was found Saturday. The slight, brown-haired boy admitted he strangled the girl and buried her in a scooped-out grave during a two hour and 25 minute escape from the Wheeling village jail last Friday. Harold, who came to Chicago from West Berlin with his parents five years ago, was booked on a charge of murder and taken to the Cook County jail. Sheriff Frank Sain said the boy would be held in the jail’s hospital ward and would attend classes while awaiting trial or disposition of his case. Harold, a chronic runaway, was first picked up by police Friday in connection with an SB2 theft from a car. While left alone briefly, he slipped out of an office of the Wheeling jail about 5 p.m. In an outline Asst. State’s Atty. Lawrence Genesen gave of the confession. Harold walked from the jail and a few blocks away came upon a group of children playing in a backyard. The children, among them Betsy, asked him to climb a tree and get them some apples. After he was in the tree, Betsy made fun of him and began throwing apples at him. o He said he jumped out of the tree and headed for' a hole in a fence behind the house, with Betsy following him. •. ■ * Young North Korean Defects From Reds • ■ i SEOUL, South Korea (UPD— A young Communist North Korean air cadet who was "yehrning for freedom” gunned his Sovietbuilt MIG4S Jet across the Bamboo Curtain to South Korea today. The defection was accomplished in a matter of minutes. Anti-air-craft batteries on either side of the demilitarized zone did not fire a single shot at the speeding fighter. Its pilot was 2nd Lt. Chung Nak Hyun, 24, of the North Korean air force. " He left North Korea’s Wonsan Airfield on a training flight shortly before noon, circled the city a few minutes and then streaked southward to a rarely used ROK army air strip at Taepori, about 35 miles below the 38th Parallel. The strip was poorly paved but the landing was made without mishap. Chung, rushed to Seoul for interrogation, was reluctant to talk to newsmen about his adventure because he said he was worried about his family still in North Korea. But when asked why he had defected, the slim, young officer broke into a grin and replied: “Because I was yearning for freedom.” He wds dressed in g khaki cotton flying suit and was equipped with service revolver, a parachute and binoculars when he 1 landed, »
