Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 48, Number 10, Decatur, Adams County, 13 January 1950 — Page 1

Vol. XLVIII. No. 10.

61 DIE WHEN BRITISH SUBMARINE SINKS - ■ — - -■ ’

MMwesinooa Areas Drenched By Steady Rain Moustisg Stroams face AMittesol ; Htmtfrods Evacuot# cmowo. jaa:' ii. <vr>Staady ralwa drwaehed mldweatarn naafractoM today and rlalng rtv**e• . vrw buvvcm* mmrhmm Irom tbeir Immum la aoutbera lilt '' uol* - / Raia or snow Ml ov«r Meh of the nation Light *aow toll from the Pacific northwest eastward acrore the northern Rockies aad Plata* Froaclas rata Mt la a hull from aarth-eaatral Kansas to north mnMara Wisconsin Kain extended from the middle MlaalaalpH Valley through the lower Great Lake* region all th* way . to southern New Rayland, and an''taker rain belt covered porta of tbe south Went Temperature* varied from hot to cold. Indianapolis reported a new all-time high for tbe third time thia month when the mercVuy < limbed «* «4 dogtmm. highest there for any Jan. 11 on record. < Fog aad rain plagued Chicago and for a tlma grounded planes at ... airporta. The rain flooded under POWOOM Bud SBMflwd frame. Despite tbe rain, expert* fore •au no widespread flood emer geactoa. They believed. howeyjtr. that rain* in the Wabash abd’ White River Valley la Indiana aouM keep ike rivers at their present high levels ad prolong tbe hardship of tawland runMaat* taned Jram their dwellings rial tig at AivuVnern IHtaoi, me towns and began spilltag over Into lowlands The Ohfo'a muddy floodwaters were forcing bottomland dwellers from their homes from historic Shswnretown. 111. all the »ay across the southern boundary of the stale to Cairo. 111., where the t thio Joins the Mississippi "7 The danger ions Oh,the Wabash shtftsd southward from Jbe .Terre . Haute Vim *nnes, Ihd area to the ih . I - lower reache, m-s Hon with the Ohio. Mount Vernon. Ind . in the notch "Where Mie' t-worivers meet.- as* alerted to receive Up to Hwr refugee families today I' S army troops and ducks" stood ready to exatm ate families in rural ureas today, and the national guard unit was on an alert ordered by Gov. Henry Schrlcker The town Itself was "high and dry/;..hut Thousands of acre* of suffounding farmland In the Wabash and tihlo bottoms were flo<ai ed as the two streams rolled Into one IMicb. national guardsmen and Red Cross prepared to care for evacuees tn the city coliseum I'pstreani the Wabash at Mount Carmel. 111., had reached Its predicted crust of 27 feet early today and was still rising Authorities said that. In view of continuing rains, they could not say how high the river might go. Itefore It crests Lincoln PTA Meets Thursday Evening.. An Interesting discussion on the "High price of growing up." was ureeented at the monthly meeting of the Uncoln school parent teach era lesslslHe Thursday evening by Miss Umlse Brumbaugh. pay . hologirt of tbe Fort Wayne city schools - Mies Brumbaugh deplored tbe hdfty-up stage of childhood, with parents urging their children on at too taat a pace, and also di*- , ensued many other phases-of training the child Mrs Paul Hancher. president, conducted the meeting, aad Mrs Randolph Brandy berry introduced the speaker. The PTA went on record aa favoring full support of the annual March of Dimes, which will open next week. WEATHER - Rain tenight: strong shifting winds and Turning much colder late tenight: Saturday partly sioudy. windy and much colder . with enow flurries north per.tied. Low tonight near 12 northwest 40 ooufheart. •lowly falling temperatures during Saturday.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

Mercury Hits 64 At Indianooolis Today IndiagrapoU*. Jan 11. —<UP>The mnreury climbed today to M degree* to set a third new alltime dally record tor IHO. Tha hottest Jan. 11 previously waa la IPS! whoa the temperature reached ’•1 degretu. ' - --i* Other maximum records were broken jbla year -en Jam ». and Jaj,>. Gas Explosion Fatal To Five At Vincennes I — - Two Mothers, Three > Children Are Kilted In Housing Project Vincennes. Ind . Jan IS—-(UPI.-j- • Sewer gas compressed by'""tarkt walers from the flooding Wabash river may have caused a housing I project explosion that killed i mothers and their three children. I officials said 'oday Indiana stale tire marshal Alex I Hoagland came here Io direct per sooally aa Investigation Io defer-j , mine the cause of the Mast « The explosion wrecked, a two- . family anil In the project just two blocks from where adldiers I . were fighting* to hold a levee against raging flood waters lapping tK'TnclTO~’’Trnm the top «\The ftnil’- concrete block wails • tumbled like dominoes as the blaaf ' rocked the entire town,--Witnesses said the -we* 1 1 knocked "flat av-e TST.I. top" A rtdrlnrentor ww.« Mown iJcnm .a at reef and crashed a parked ear I A ■Mtoeeaa was thrown a <-lfy* r As. fire broke oil! .in-the debris, about IS® of the troops ra< ed to ald • police and firemen ill the search 1 for dead and injured ‘ The explosion ripped the units ot the Howman Terrace housing' pro 1 Jitci shortly before I p m yesterday, 1 i In the ruins, workers : found ' the bodie- .>t M>- Wumia ‘ll'.H.per. 23 and lor two eSOdren. Rowe ovrrffit and* her daughter, i i Vick If June. 18 jmmihM to > of tbe ♦ vplosjiin was not kitown : k Mrs. Overft Il s. hn«b:tnd William told .police hr ha<i '•me I led nas v for weeks In his home. , Eire department officials said the units were heated by coal stove« and that the building had no I basement eicept fol a shallow area i-vwea T» rasa <U*> Suit For Possession I And Damages Filed Suit Is Aftermath Os Real Estate Deal ‘ Cturl H, Mins and Martha Mim through their attorney. I) Burdette 1 i'uater today filed a suit for dam j ages and poMcsxion against John A. Trout. Lewis L Smith. Clark W Hmkk and Peter l> Schwartx The new suit Is similar to one re cegtly riismissed ' without preju db-e" Ry Judge ,Myles F ■ Parrish in Adams circuit 1 Demand for immediate posses--1 sion of The <7 acres known as The, I Trout farm on V S road 27. atiufh of Itecatur. and damages in the : amount of |2«.omt are asked in the ■ new suit. . ' The complaint, which is in seven paragraphs and carries numerous > exhibits to substantiate the allega; I dons, is the result of a real estate i deaf in which defendant John Trout . Is alleged to have given authority . to Peter D Schwarts to sell the eg-, tire Trout farm, and then is alleged to have sold 17 acres of the land - to Clark and Lewis fc Smith The complaint further states I that the defendants have taken j possession <>t the IT acres of the land. Plaintiffs stale that they had planned Io build a residence on the part of the land now pox sexxed by defendants Plaintiffs further -ask that permission be granted to strike.from the deed the “ cTiiiw "gntmor lx allowed to live In the boase now on the premises ax long as he Hves" and plaintiffs be placed In exclusive possession ’ Attorney Custer stated, on filing the new suit, that his action was In lien of comply lag _wlth_ a previous Ctwaw Te Page Five,

THE PAY-OFF, GIJHy Eflfl TREASURY SECBCTARY John Snyder. PuMmaster General Jenna nomMaoa. and Veteeaas’ Admlnto ' Irator Cart H. fjray. Jr. (I. to r ) help Washington postman Paul Baaala load tha first hatch of aopie |2.fnMi.ogg.aaa-worth of National Service Use Insurance dividend checks Into a track. .Rome IT.dUO.aoe ill Joexi of World War II will find the eteecka In their mail-boxes aoua.

Killer's Diary Tells ! Os Domestic Troubles Drove Young Husband To Slaying Os Five 1 ■ Hammond. Ind., Jan. |W.-— (tTPi A raoibHDK diary urrawled in purple-red iak today told of the ’ dmnaiAlr hattiea whfrh drova a . ouggjaaaMaAot to kill kin eatrWK r* hi id fa. their two children and a newlywed couple and then ihuicMe. •yTtewdteap waaT&ftd in a ' ludni room <mxw>M by Felix Sam as. 27. since he nepaiMted from hi* wife. a toiler «nar I i ff! over hi* «UMptt*tonn that Mhe'tiad i had an affair* with another man 1 Samas yesterday shot and kilhto j r hi» wife, itheir children Felix. Jr. 4." and I’bvlhs. is months, and Mr. and Mra Hi* hard Norman. Ih ah» ntahljed Mfn Norman six times Then aa police re* tmstrw. ted JbUarir >pree <»f viufeme. Samas I.set lire to the huiu'akiw and shirf ' lih-side his body lai a blood stained knife and rifle NrarM *.<• j ifTeTetdroti ‘-'hiwirTipeTr nr • oTj funeral holm s . . Firemen, anawerlHg a routine ;» • hirfin. discovensl the whole*.d* mutder Huh id<- They put out lire Beiore it t a ised ibajor da .-tout- , The diary? said, indfr atvd that Samas believed, his wife had , ibeen inteiest»d tn a sailor while Im wai* in. service -S.amas wrote- Hie d<M Ument ft hat. he brhevwl |ki* wife, who was suing him for div«»r* e. wan an »in fit mot her ” He indicated be wanted custody <»t his won; but not of hi* daughter. Saftiiis w rbTe to tW diary that - wife 'bellei »«d he was •'violent, ’’ lull . j that he could show “that my wife to the violent one.” F Ueemsfra Speaks Io Decatur Rotarians Salesmanship Topic Os Talk Last Night i Members of the Rotary club werr • given a 45-minute course in Kales munship lasd evening by Sinton . l*Si - Hekmatra. director of the i sales training school at Central i Soya company A film on ihe proper approach • that a salesman should make was shown. The positive approach Isj followed by the siirceswfttl salesman. the Ttkn depicted i I , Mr. Heemstra related personal I experiences he encountered from time to time in stores and eating 1 .places, telling of the difference be-i i twevn the surcemrfut and unsuc • cessful clerk or waitress Salesmen should know that they i • must serve their customer and have a product that will help that ‘ customer Mr Heemstra stated * that Central Soya’s training school • was belng~ expanded to the point r where Ref<T _ actor and dl i rectoT of the Fort Wayne Civic i tbelter, would assist the local staff iin training salesman "Speaking l properly is fundamental to good i salesmanship.” he *-ald i Club members observed a minute H -TuuT.rtv.Ui)

• I ' l l I • ■ ’ X ONLY OAILY NCWBPAPM IW«»AM« MUMYV

Decatur, Indiana, Friday January 13, IMO

ißuuck Funeral Rites On Sunday Afternoon l . . Funeral uervleex for Mrs. Louise Biiuck. who died Thursday morning.' will to- held at 1 3i> p.m Sunday al ths home to Preble township and at X o'clock at tha Friedhelm Lutheran chureh. The Rev. K. T Schmidike will officiate, with burial in the chureh cemetery. The body will he removed from the TCwiek funeral home to the realdence. where friends may call after? o’clock this evening. Two Sisters Drown In Fnmily Bnlhtab Placed In Tub As Home Catches Fire Murray; Utah. Jan 13—LUPI— ; Two little nlsterw drowned in the bat-b- Hrir Wherp their pawtc-aTHck-; eu mother put them when a small: fli»--damaged their home. «-ortu>er J said Today f | that The fire broke but in 'the rug directlj Under the cri.b whvre liei "if aught e r<. . 1» r TTrnnt m*. and IJnda Antt._3. were asleep Pol it-ei .chief Lloyde beland said the fire apparently was caused by a ml* laid ( igaret In her rxch» wnithkl grabb»d the children and placed them in the tub which had been filled with water ib-tuusk The family w »-h 7Then she dashed to the kitchen and filled a pot. with water Flames and smoke drove her back from the bedroom, however and the water spilled over her thin dres»s an she ran to a «hed off the kit» hi n and tried to batter her way through comp* »s it ion walla into the bathroom When that failed, she jumped out The shed window, carrying the en tire Rias* with her and tearing off her bedroom slipper*Running barefoot through ait Iriehe* of mnow.and with her dreus freeiing to her body. Mrs,. Wrathgl t ran to a neighbor * home and, h* reamed i "The houfte la on fire My hab|«*< are trapped ” T At* the neighbor. C. K calh d firemen, Mrs. Wrathal re-‘ ? iurned to the burning h*»Ufte Using a rlaw hammer. *he broke , a foobsquare hole in the compos! lion wall but fainted before idle could get through to the girl*. Firemen from this Salt I*ake City MUburb arrived in a few minute*, extinguished the flatne* burning the rug and floor, then pulled the <Twirw Te Paai Wev-rw» I ' - Canales Child Dies Thursday Evening Ruth Canale*, infant daughter of- Rafael and Angeltta Expinova Capalex. died at 7:*» p.m. Thur, day at the home xoutheaxt of Deca tur after an illnex, of t<mr day* The infant wa* born on Chrlatmax day. Surviving ara the parent*, a brother. Rafael, Jr., and a •later. lAreaUa. ■ | Funeral service* will ba held at 10 a m Saturday at the Black funeral home tha Rav. Luax Ser ado of Chicago officiating Burial win be In the Ih?eatni< cemetery Friend, may call at the funeral 1 home after * ».a. today.

To Arraign Mental Confessed Setting Heepitol Fire r- Davenport, la.. Jan. 11. — IVPIA paychialrM laid today he wa* rtanvlpced a pretty young mental ward patient waa teltlng the truth when xhe coateaaed touching off tbh Mm-y hoapltal tire in which I 4tjWomen died. > Ur* dlaura Rpperly. W M Hack lalaa4.U . told aalMrtMa uat ahe üßßati'llMne to Mr rtMw Ja Mvwwlth a cigarette lighter ahe had Jtlanired to give lor huaband for Chrlatma* Ax the flamea spread through the H year rild mental ward, turning it -into a death trap for_*creatiiii>g pa tienta. Mr*. I'epperly saved herae'f | by climbing through a transom I'xHHtly attorney <'lark Fllset h Ji' > d a first degree murder charge a [gniiort Mrs Epperly. Hr rdUd she - wax a voluntary paio-ni, .I>nil riot ’ iSdr r- Jima »tWrr w>.« • jibe quextton of in&ttoiiy wag "*»m,lot adjudication by a court or ‘ pm. ini'•sion I>i .htiin \l:i! ki-r. p- \ t ’li.r rI ♦ who questioiii'd Air** Mail be wan • satistied" her story true The doctor said Mrs Apperiv was mentally -"incompetent at if he ’line of the fire and whs now hop* ; lessly incurable.” ——— Th*» petite brunette *»ntorod th-* hospitaljupon a doctor s recoinmendation She had b*4*n there a month and watf to he released, Satur day morning _ _ - "1 thought my husband was dead." she was quoted by Filseth. ‘ He net.gr came to see me I was going cruy with fear and -thoughtcouhl escape if the building bun: ed dowu.” - Later, she said, she teamed that tTwrw T» Pwae Bias Government Rests Case In Bank Fraud FBI Agents Testify In Fort Wayne Court Fori Wayne. Ind . Jan. 1J — il'l’i Defemu* wltnenxe* today began their textimony In the {136.000 mail fraud trial of Clyde C Rectenwall. CS-year-oM hank cashier and Roy I'. Chaney. 2* year old uxed. cir dealer. The government yeaterday com ' pleted it* evidence againat Rectenwall and Chaney. ac<-u*ed of a i'beck kiting neheme that wa* ou-< <>t a numlter ot alleged *peculatlonx which forced cloning of.the Speacerville' bank whore Re< tenwall worked. Fill agent* tewrlfled yenterday that both defendant* signed atate ment* about the fraud when thev were arrested Rectenwall admitted he kne*. of the acheme and *ald l> ( •shed Chaney * fraudulent check* by withholding deposit* from other. l-ank patryn*. agent Pardb •aid. Chaney admitted to agent - Donald R Jobaaoe of Fort Wayne that he wrote check* on one Imnk Id cover a ahortage la another, and -■ rew*w Te rt*« may

British Sub Is Rammed By Swedish Tanker In Thames Estuary; Save 15

hveul Attempts To | Wreck Two Trains ( Deliberate Attempt Mode Near Chicago < CMca<o Jan IS— (UFl— North Weetern railroad official* reported today that a deliberate attempt wax made to wreck two taat paaaeaner tralna aa they entered Chicago. The Twin Citlee 400. en route from Minneapolis, and the Valley -MO. bound here from Green Bay, Wl». plowed Into piles of heavy I •witch bar*, piece* of rail, angle i Iren* and other maintenance equip I meat on Chicago'* north aide. Both 'trains remained on the i tracks and none of-tbe paseenger* I wa* injured The Twin Cities train had SMI , passengers aboard The Valley 400 wM carrying 170 passenger*. Tbe trains ground to auch quick : stops that they skidded, flattening more than a score of wheels. Air , reservoirs under one diesel locomo , live were punctured The Green Ray-Chicago . train. , running about 30 minute, late, was first to strike the obstruction* ■ - ; About a half hour later before trainmen had time to check the other track*, the Twin Cities train i hit a similar pile of metal I Railroad agents and police investigating the derailment attempt. ( Mrid the track mater!*! wa* taken , trim »a. padt»'«*ad ~m*tolMiMH'* I shanty alongside the track* and placed deliberately on the rail* V Tbey Mild It wax a ■'miracle" that neither train was derailed Trains offih are derailed by a single heavy bar. tiny said Investigators sought 10 determine whether the plot was wofk Os Irresponsible hoodlums or.| -e(i(‘(ls saboteur* —il t. Trainmen skid the culprits ap | patently had some knowledge of t rallr<(a(jiijg. They placed each r ■■ xe ■ *SM '-<»*«- w tout'll both rails If the bar- had touched both ■ <il« -imditatK on -ly rheTTJtrnatf:' Jtu.li i »plained, the contac t autoKahcaFfj w««Hd have sit'’l>lo('k' sig" J ■mis watninc rhe trains to stop li F Koepp: night chief dispatch-i er. said that wheh the first mi* I h*p occurred, trains due to depart i Irom tin- downtown North Western I station were ordered held, 1' He -aid the Twin Cities-Um was J.' (Twrw Ta Face Sill Adams County Home Is Sell Sustaining Profit Shown For ( Year's Operations The Adams county home; opCrat- i ed by Mx...and Mrs., Frank Kitson. is one of the few in the uiiddlewest I which was *elf->uxl*iniii|| and show ed a pfofir itrjbfS. the annual report. filed wtlh the county com mlssioner*. reveal, Cash income tor the year Jn«t ended was 121.013 OH and disbursement, were .*tf».M»>37. An actual cash profit i, ibown < of *h2 72. but if the more than |3.<mm> spent tor equipment and capital Improvement had been amotorixed over tbe usual period of years, as is usually the buxines-1 custom, the profit would have beep - considerably larger Kitaon’, report showed receipt, from resident* who pay their own board a, (2.255. and receipt* from the It tgwjmhtp jrutHee* who pay for those unable to pay their ownway a, »U.W» »5 The average population for tbe year wi* 35 residents including 124 men and 11 women Additional income totalling $« 72S 14 Wa, derived from the sale ot cattle, bog* milk and grain Several major Improvement* in building and equipment were made during t bi- year and paid tor out of the 1!»4* earnings They Installation of bottle gas hot watrt heater tastatlatton of * new tm proved septic tank The*e two ’ itemL cost 11.33 S A pick up hay I 'taller, costing f2.tHHi, also was pur (Twrw Te Page KMM)

DdaysAclion On Complaints Os Coal Heads President ignores Clamor In Congress For Coal Action WMblngton, Jan. » - (CPI — Robert N Itonhaia. general ,-oun •el for the national labor relation* board, haa post pound until next week at leant act Ida in coal Industry complaint* that John L Lewis I* violating the Taft-Hartley act. I’sually wetl-informed officials said Denham would not deride before Tuesday whether (q, agak a court order to pul 4gG.Se* soft coal miners back on a five-day week The miners have been working on Monday*. Tuesday, and Wednesday* since Dec S. It wa* tbe second piece of bad new* for the industry In two day* President Truman Ignored a con greaaional clamor for action yewterday and; ref used once again to use the Taft Hartley arl to" restore full coal production He told hl* news conference there waa an *m*rg,ary aad that he would not Intervene until Me •rtme _ . ; j Industry oihclala were bttter to their comment* on the president x stand and turned hopefully to Den bam for quick action on their ( barges against Irf-wt*. But sour (■ex i-lpfir to Denham said he was having' a hard time" building a ■ ase against l*-wis Th- y noted the operator* have agreed In past .contracts; that the miners should work on I v when "willing and aidMr Truman's (Iqim that there Is no emergency had been expect try and to > <»iigre*ft that Hipre is coat ab«»%F ground how than at uny'titn*' in I • yearn — In th**, past the Whit** ll<hi».» has • ••< ♦•1 v.t! several '• |x from th<‘ interior depart m**nt‘* bureau of mineft todlvatiiiK tbMt eonauhierft still are ■ *t*l <d" against a short age. Ittfreau offi< ials cpn< eded that retail deal, prs have little roal on hft.nd/ bill s.ii.i this r»'sul’< Trt>?n ,fa» t that they are selling their jroal as last ,as -they it -- The eh&mber of commere, of the United States disagreed It said reports from "io- principal tdtamtoons roal using states" indicated ‘ ’ widespread • snW^r4n g and .hard ship is only a matter of hours T* Bt«> River Level Lower But Again On Rise Colder Weather Is Forecast Tonight >No additional road, have been tl,r<-d a, underwater, according tar a check made today by Phil Sauer, county highway xuperintendem. although thoxe tn the xouthern part of the county which have been in Utidated tor mmn at thi* week «re "hot getting any better" The St Mary', river receded (till furtherAlwday. down to 17.5* feet from Thursday', S o'clock reading ,>f tk.55 However. "Hi" Meyer state* that though the reading fs lower today, the river I* again ri*in* He added that *4 of an Inch ot rain tell,in th» P*»< 74 how* ending at S o'eWck ltd* morning The weather bereaa according to the I'hited Pre** ha* foreca«t •older weather foe tonight no rath wapjjßcluded.7 . f The three bridge, the Lewton. Pleaaant Mill* and Adhrna-ATlen counrt Uwe. are *tlll underwater, according to Sauer State high wa* 124 according to report* received by city police. I* underwater in place* between Mon roe aad Bluffton All V JS 'high way* are clear In Adam, county, it ha, been reported Part* of Bellmont park are flood (Tara Ta Pane Fivet

Pros Xtests

rivoqicai revac, i*hrp All Ham A LamM M Cmb* A A London Jan. 13 —(<7Pi— A naval 'frogman*' *wam Into the amaaked Brttich rebmartae TrWcaieat on the bottom as tbe Ttam** Kafnarp late today aad fatal the entire craft fhx«ded Hi* diaeovery daubed tbe lant flickering hope* for the 52 mi*xtng men believed trapped in the submarine when It »ank nearly 24 bow* earlier — Thh> brought tbe death toil to <1 of the 71 men who were aboard the . LttotMori ..patrol submarine when the Swedish tanker IHvina rammed and rank It lam night about 17 mile* northweac of Margate Fifteen men either on the* deck or the bridge of *ta submarine at“ tbe t«rt ar the httab WvW warted •way and rescued Three bodies were recovered soon afterward, and six more today. . The royal navy called out it* “frogmen" aftei deep *ea diver* who found the wrecked mibmarine 55 to »« feet below the surface fail rd Io get any response to their tap, against tbe hull with signa! ’ hammer* ' Clad-in.a rubber suit and equip ped With special oxygen apparatus » "frogman" Jame* Hodge* swam I through the open coonia* tower r into the eagine two* and found J t|e entire aubmXrlue flooded " Th* submarine apparently flood- > ed Withlti "minutes Of"the coll Mon I The Dtrina had torn a bole in tpe holt forward of the gun lurraat. and j the vessel evidently sank before the conning tower*could, be closed. The British Trigate SSret recov l'' cred the six bodies found today at ’ Bartow lieep. mdru than six mile* , from the crash acene : Lt C i‘ Thiwrr*. (-onitnattder of—the Truculent was among the 15 su.rvivutv rescued last -night. Hi i ing to rhv to aid the* '<•!» w«* nit iinri.t-ilinrr. hretkM down im lujW niaaj jJ tfe» < and I** »I<m kvard Bert- (toad or into* tng and n»»w i many had - survived Tin- <h*ck workrit* had At<rrtr“ along for'a trial cruise the subma Naval "truKitito/ to tlwr’icy water - a«ato*t *wiP rurreuiw and tides fought their way hull of the 1 ofhkton Truru tom shortly aftrr no*»u and began tap} ing on’its -id»« with hammet* . They got no rFftponiew ■ It was b» h» v«-’d That in in tt.rwurd r.inipaTfno u? w» re ; drowned That < i»mpartno n r was stove in by th? prow of 'th* tanker Five other deaths attribut rd indirectly to the sinking The victims were crew of a royal arr force isam-awfer botwber crawhedrtn flames at Kiatoas Si*ot land, today while flying io Lewchars •»» qsfles south of Dundee to pick up a team of deep sea div uig experts t<> help to the resewe More than whip*, ranging frwtu lifeboats to the aircraft carrier i Ripon. wer£ clustered anmnd the r norrteee buoy riieased bVThe Tmcu . lent after it sank to the bottom laxt (Tara Ta Paw* OU» Gill Docket First Three Days Os G>urt Judge Mylre F P»rri»h noHficd Adam, cdunty attorney* >«>d*y that , the docket will be called during th* fir*t three dgy* of the next term ot ((Htrt. F*l>. S through 3 Monday, the judge raid, all guar diah and criminal caae* will je diapered of and tbe othef two gar*. *ll the re*t. Including estate* t: i neeenary ’’ ' ~ * The action i« l>einc taken in acordance with the rule* of. the i court which were adopted January 1. The firm paragraph of tbe rule* state that ’ The firwt three day* - ea- >» term will be devoted to (tie * call of the docket* for appearance*, formation of twue, routine mitri-a. <tl»po*al of ea*e* on default, genet ' a! probate bo»tneei. setting ot caw* e* for trial and arrangement p; work of the term "