Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1960 — Page 5
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21, i 960
10JTPMB iwrowi YOU’LL FIND SHELF AFTER SHELF OF ITEMS PRICED LOW EVERYDAY AT STANDARD. YOU CAN SAVE REAL CASH EACH AND EVERY TIME YOU SHOP. CHECK AND COMPARE - SEE FOR YOURSELF HOW LOW STANDARD’S FOOD PRICES REALLY ARE! ■ j OVER 5,000 EVERYDAY I i LOW PRICES AT YOUR I H STANDARD FOOD STORE I VAAEEEE NESCAFE 2 oz. Smooth or Crunchy I 39 P “"“ T BOTTC " -35 c ■ ■h TEA BALLS p ka 59c csimaii mask* I 3 u. nv . u « SALMON Ta „ Ca „ 49c DmiKS ;Z” X.-15C SMGHEniI9« I Pmi " GS "«=*:■. 9c I g POTATOES „.. 29c WESSON OIL 55c I RFANQ he"" «>6 01. — M SPAM, POEM, TREET-; 41 ““ " ,X ” 33c I □ DRESSING S£, “.7 35c MCM """" "’ -35 c I D Pillsbury MAYONNAISE KRAFT ’*? 36c CAKE MIX “»• 47c I gRICE KRISPIES ,rX’ k9 lsc W NE ™ S .«. Pkß . 43c I SUGAR CRISP pkp . 13c WAX PAPER F^ p „ n 25c I POST TOASTIES £ 28c p HREX or CLOROX “■ 51 c I g KOTEX 2 lJpkß . 77c STARCH CTA 39c I BUTTER 5© g MORE FOOD PURCHASE YOU MAY BUY g ■ ■ ICE CREAM - 39' ■ I COUPON GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 24th ■ M r : J ■ fl I (t-l Rh I *7J ;WITH THIS COUPON* AND A $5.00 OR " j MORE FOOD PURCHASE YOU MAY BUY g ■ !COCA-COLA 6 ,ls "19* I ■ ■ ■ Hi 24th | ■ PLUS " I HOLDEN I RED STAMPS LO g I WITH EACH 10 CENT F quantity FOOD PUROIASET SHOP .nd SAVEAT YOUr" 40 ■ I STANDARD FOOD STORE EVERY DAY I M A Good Neighbor In Your Neighborhood
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
'Know' Candidates Meeting Thursday The program for the Adams county Farm Bureau sponsored "Know Your Candidates” meeting was announced today. The meeting ’will be held in the Adams Central gym Thursday, at 8 p.m., and will feature E. Ross Adair and Byron McCammon, candidates from the fourth district for the United States house of representatives. ; The "Star Spangled banner,” presented by the music department of Adams Central, will open the meeting, and Roger Habegger of the Adams county rural youth will lead all present in the pledge of allegiance. Miss Carolyn Moore, also of the rural youth, will lead the group in singing “God Bless America,” and a prayer for guidance will be asked by the Rev. John D. Mishler, pastor of Pleasant Dale Church of the Brethren. Ervin Fuelling, chairman of the Adams county Farm Bureau, will make a short talk of welcome .before turning the meeting over to Byron Bunker, principal of Hartford Center high school. Both Adair and McCammon will speak on "Our party’s platform.” Following their talks, Burl Johnson‘•and Floyd Acker, candidates for joint state representative from Adams and Wells counties, will make some remarks. -•« , q y, estion a nd answer period will follow, in which those present may ask questions concerning the remarks of the candidates. All county candidates present will then be introduced to the crowd, and both county chairmen. Dr. Harry Hebble and John Doan, will be introduced and make some comments. Miss Moore will lead the group m the singing of “America,” and Rev. Mishler will invoke the closing prayer. The meeting, while sponsored for the benefit of farmers, is open to the general public, and anyone interested in knowing their candidates is welcome to attend. Decatur High Band Plans Activities According to Clint Reed, director of the Decatur high school band, the band has many activities planned for the year, one of the first of which is Thursday night. The band will travel to Bluffton Thursday to participate in some of the activities of the Bluffton S”’ eet fan*, which opened Tuesday. They will lead the parade of Junior Mi ss Indiana candidates during the afternoon and will also march in the evening parade. Saturday, the band will travel to Purdue University for that school’s nign school band day. About 6 000 are expected to participate with the majorettes of the bands performing before the football game. All the bands present will then perform at half-time, fransportation for the bands will be furnished by the Music Boosters club. Rded announced that he is now m the process of organizing a twirling corps. Anyone interested in twirling is invited to join and those who are interested are requested to contact Reed. V - I'luji Fjaggll F ! JOE’S BACK—Jbaebh P Ken? nedy returns to Boston from two months in Europe. His .comment on son Jacks politiIcH setivttwa: x*No cQmmnnLT
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Report Cold Front Moving Across U. S. By United Press International A cold front moved across the nation from the northwestern plains Tuesday night pushing some high winds and rain ahead of it. Glasgow, Mont., reported wind gusts up to 40 m.p.h. and thunderstorm activity was reported as far south as Dallas, Tex. Ardmore, Okla., picked up 1.6 inches of rain in a six hour period and Enid, Okla., recorded .77 inches. Fog dotted the area from Upper Michigan southward to Central Illinois and East to the Atlantic Coast. Elsewhere, light showers were reported at Salt Lake City, Utah, Southern Montana, and Duluth, Minn. Temperatures behind the cold front in the Northern Rockies were in the 30’s and 40’s. The Southern and Central Rockies had readings in the 50’s and 60’s. Temperatures across the remainder of the nation were generally in the 55 to 65 degree range, except for the Pacific Northwest where readings in the 40’s were recorded. Thunderstorms were forecast for Thursday along the cold front from the Upper Mississippi Valley to the Lower Plains and Southern Rockies. A few showers also were predicted in Southern Florida. Clear skies were looked for in other parts of the nation. Cooler weather was forecast from the Northern Rockies and Northern Plains southward into lowa and the Central Plains and Plateau areas. Warmer weather was indicated from Wisconsin and Illinois eastward to the Appalachians Mountains. Childish, Pefulanl Legislation Scored MICHIGAN CITY. Ind. (UPD— Matthew Welsh. Democratic candidate for governor, said in a speech Tuesday night that Indiana’s long-sought port on Lake Michigan will not be realized unless the 1961 Indiana General Assembly does away with some “childish and petulant” legislation. The former Indiana state senator, speaking in Michigan City, lashed out at an anti-federal government resolution adopted during the 1947 assembly which he said was written in “insulting terms and informed our national government that Indiana wanted nothig to do with the plans and programs of the federal government. “The port will not be constructed until the childish, petulant resolution condemning programs and funds of the United States is removed from the statute books,” Welsh said. “Men who have labored long in congress to create and expand progrms for flood control, improvement of navigable rivers and construction of adequate port facilities, regard the Indiana resolution as a personal insult to their integrity and as an affront to the United States government.” The one-time U.S. district attorney said two of these men are Congressmen Mike Kerwin and Clarence Cannon, who head the two committees through which any appropriation for the port of Indiana must come. “I have been reliably informed that as long as there is on the Indiana statute books a statement of state policy repudiating any participating with the federal government in such programs, that their committees will honor that policy,” Welsh declared. Welsh told the LaPorte County Democrats that “as governor, I will request the Indiana General Assembly to pass a resolution stating that Indiana, while fulfilling its own responsibilities to its own people, Will cooperate wth the United States government in programs designed to build, a greater and stronger America.” White Kid Gloves White ktd —gloves — sometimes have a tendency to turn yellowish after a few cleanings. Avoid this by adding a teaspoon of powdered borax to your cleaning fluid.
Change In Hotels Planned By Castro
NEW YORK (UPD — Cuban Premier Fidel Castro was the picture of contentment today in his new role as darling of the communist world but his problems iwere far from over. Al) settled down in his rooms at Harlem’s Theresa Hotel, Castro was paying twice as much — cash in advance — as what he paid at Manhattan’s Shelburne, from which he stormed in fury Monday night. But he and his party of 80 bearded followers were said to be happy with their new accommodations at “The Waldorf Astoria of Harlem.” Manager Love B. Wood said he was pleased too — so much so that he may even take 'Castro’s check in lieu of cash for the remainder of the stay. It was at the Theresa that Castro had a surprise visitor Tuesday— none other than the big daddy of the communist world with which Cuba has been flirting, Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. Following a half-hour meeting, the tall, bearded Castro and the short, balk Khrushchev came out to the barricades surrounding the hotel and smiled and hugged for the 2,000 persons crowding around. At the United Nations less than an hour later, Khrushchev again sought out his new buddy. He walked all the way down an aisle in the General Assembly to smother Castro in great Russian bear hugs, for scores of U.N. delegates and all the world to see. It appeared today that Castro actually planned his sudden walkout from the Shelburne and shift to the Harlem hotel as part of a program to court support of U.S. Negroes. Wood, manager of the Theresa, in the heavily Negro Harlem area, revealed Castro had made arrangements to stay there as early as last Saturday, the day before he arrived from Havana and checked in at the Shelburne. Alexandria Woman Dies Os Injuries ANDERSON, Ind. (UPD — Mrs. Matilda Fraundorfer, 39, Alexandria, died Monday night in St. John’s Hospital from injuries received at the junction of Indiana 9 and Indiana 67 south of here when her car crashed into a tree.
|... Bx' Like any other organization, the School Safety Patrol must depend upon the conjuration of others in order to fulfill its task. “Help Your Safety Patrol” is the message of the October school poster, distributed by the Chicago Motor Club to some 45,000 schools in Illinois and Indiana. It has been estimated that the School Safety Patrol has saved literally thousands of lives since it was originated by the motor chib in 1920. In order to continue this impressive record, the Patrol needs your cooperation. Patrol members have beeij trained to keep people safe. Do your part to help theml . ... . -
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Frauhiger Fund Now Open For Donations The Harry Frauhiger family fund is now open for donations, with the first donation being preI sented Monday from the Decatur I high school class of 1935, of which Frauhiger’s wife, Bernice, was a member. Frauhiger was seriously injured in a fall from a 12-foot shed last month and is now in the Parkview hospital in Fort Wayne, paralyzed i from the waist down. At first he was paralyzed from the shoulders down, but is now regaining the use of both arms. Doctors say, though, that his spinal cord was 1 badly damaged and that Frauhiger ’ will probably be in a wheel chair or on crutches the rest of his life. AU hope is not lost, however, as ' he said he has felt a few pains ' in his legs and with the modern ■ miracles that are performed by ; doctors every day the family is not giving up hope. Meanwhile though, Frauhiger has a wife and 11 children, nine , of whom are at home, to worry , about. Mrs. Frauhiger’s classk mates have taken over and start- , ed a fund for the family. A memher of the class presented a SIOO check to Bob Shraluka at the , Democrat office Monday. The class is now hoping that other community members and friends will take over and keep the drive going. Donations will be taken at the Decatur Daily Democrat office by Bob Shraluka. Checks should be made out to the Harry Frauhiger fund. Suggestion Awards Are Made By G. E. A total of six suggestions were adopted by the plant suggestion committee at the General Electric plant in Decatur and awards amounting to slls were presented to the six suggestors. Frank Bohnke, tool room employe. received the top award of SSO, with another tool room employe, Arthur Bieberich, receiving 1 $25 for his suggestion. Other i award winners were. Gene Myers, Sls: Richard Hess,' $10; Curtis Baxter. $7.50 and Rosemary Miller, $7.50.
