Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 239, Decatur, Adams County, 10 October 1951 — Page 7

Wednesday, October io, ism

Canadian Capital Welcomes Princess 7 Elizabeth Greeted In Ottawa Today Ottawa, Oct. 10.—(BUP)—Princess Elizabeth andtheDuke of Edinburgh arrived in the nation's capital today for a two-day state visit here. The Princess stepped down from the 10-car royal train at 9:01 d.m. CST to be greeted by governor-gen-eral and Lady Alexander. The Ottawa! visit is-expected to f be the occasion v \of the first major speech by the Princess. 5 The royal visitors stepped from their special train into bright sunshjne at the Island Park driveway station in West Ottawa. Prime minister and Mrs. Louis S. Laurent and Dr. Charlotte Whitton, Otta-. wa’s mayor, also wepe in the party greeting the Princess and- Prince. Nearly 10.000 .persons lined the suburban station platform. Royal Canadian artillerymen fired a 21gun royal salute as 4 he couple stepped from their red and green coach. ■ r Nearly 20,000' persons lined' the streets near the station and cheered hoarsely as the royal party drove on Park, first stop on the toute to government house. ■ The Princess and the Duke of Edinburgh arrived aboard a special 10-car train that will .bei their royal- household for a greater part of their month-long.Lcoastrto coast tour- of the dominion. They were scheduled to slay in the capital as guests of Governor pen. Viscount Alexander until Shortly after midnight Friday, giving them enough time to visit everything Ottawa has to offer/ Just like ordinary tourists, the You read about them in r- ———--4 — \ A kr \ washable fl \\ A Cloth FREE! Don’t miss getting your pair of these easy-on-the-feet scuffs’. , And to think you make them ; yourself... in only 15 minutes’. Worth at least $1.25! Come to the Domestic Sew-it-yourself Corner today. Take, home your blotter boots! STOP IH FOR YOURS Habegger , Hardware dST, ||f ■ T

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Princes* and her sailor husband anticipated Ha trip through the spired, greystone parliament building and a bopt ride on the Ottawa river. The Princess, who Jook 11 major engagements in 11 hours in stride at Quebec City yesterday, prepar ed for an even busier time here today; Jotted down in her royal date book were formal wtelconiing ceremonies at the IslancLPark drive station, a meeting with school children, a visit to the - national war fnemorlal, a private lunch with prime .minister |Louis St. Laurent, a stath;dinner, a chat with cabinet ministers and lesser appointments. Mack On Third Leg Os Peace Flight Leaves Washington Early This Morning Washington, Oct. 10.—(UP) — Rep. Peter F. Mack, 34-yeaPbld flying congressman. put a couple of spare shirts and a stock'of goodwill scrolls in his plane today and took off bn the third' leg of his round-the-wotild "peace” flight. - The weather outlook for the (fight to Argentina, Newfoundland, was- generaly favorable, j - He expected to arrive there about 3 or .4V p:m. CST. In his single engine Beechcraft. Bonanza plane. ’ He- gunned the red-and-silver i plane Off the runway at the National airport at 6:50 a.m. CST. The’ one-time flying insttuctor, whose district includes Abraham Lincoln's Springfield; 111., i home, planned to spread the word at 45 atops around the world that the "Abraham Lincoln area” wants international understanding, harmony, and peace. At each city he visits. Mack said, he'Wants to avoid the bigshots and talk to the common people. H k e will look up the mayor and giVe Mi'll a scroll from the people of hie Illinois district expressing the hope that the people’of the world may live in peace with one another. - Then, w’ith the 1 aid of an Interpreter,, he’ll; set out to develop friendly relations with the themselves, he said. | That goes for Moscow, too, he indicated. He applied at the Soviet embassy here 45 days ago 1 for a visa and landing permit for Oct. 2S._ The Russians haven’t answered yes or ■. T ’ i *1 NORGE NEW AUTOMATIC WASHER \ DEMONSTRATIONS BRING IN YOUR CLOTHES WE WILL WASH THEM FOR YOU. ' I I ! ~ ‘ MAZELIN’S HEATING SERVICE 288 Decatur, N. 2nd St. Indiana

F (Th • ! A* A ft J I Q 4 41 bJkI Bh f 1 H • 1 I l i| » WMMB^BBjMMB|BMB 7. Jy fciO'-y -V 1 *wi BBWiBMg x ■ BJBMkJEUICMr BBBHHHHHHMBBBBHBBBHBBBBBIIMBHHBI ... U7 J/ 7Clt! ■ BL * t-ariAi UT- ♦ , ■ME- 'a. j / aJi i. ■1 ■ 1 DIGNITARIES SALUTE as members of the 43rd Infantry Division march past the reviewing stand at Camp Pickett, Virginie. The men are leaving for Europe to bolster General Eisenhower's Atlantic Pact forces. In the reviewing stand (1. to r.) are: Gov. Dennis J. Roberts, of Rhode Island; Sen. Ralph E. Flanders (R-Vt); Gen. Mark W. Clark, Chief of the U.S. Army Field Forces; Maj. Gen. KSnneth F. Cramer, 43rd Division Commander; Gov. John D. Lodge, of Connecticut; Lt Gen. Edward H. Brooles, Commanding General of the Second Amy: Sen. Brien McMahon (D-Conn.). and Gov. Lee E. Emerson, of Vermont {lnternational)

no, although they are reported- to have questioned the state department about trip in some bewilderment. Mack is flying the Beechcraft Bonanza in which the late Bill Odom set a light plane 'distance record from Honolulu to Teterboro, N.J., in 1949. Odom's flight was 5,273 miles but Mack’s longest hop will be the 2,480 miles from Honolulu to San Francisco about Jan. 8. He has rechristened the plane the “Friendship Flaine.”\ v ? Probe Government Moral Standards Study Approved By Senate Committee Washington; Oct. 10 r-|\ (UP) —AA handful of deteriydaed senators, worried over “the governnroht’s good name," stepped up efforts today for approval of a “commission on ethics in government.” They were bolstered by the senate labor committee's approval yesterday' of a resolution for a two-year study of moral standards in government; by a 15-member commission. The commission would, have a of riongovernrhent members. The resolution was proposed b’iginaliy by Sen. J. Wi liam Fulbright, l>.. Ark., as an outgrowth of his banking subcommittee’s RFC investigation. it was backed up by a brief report from a “ subcommittee on ethics beaded by Sen. Paul H. Douglas. 1) . 111. i The Douglas group planned to reinforce itp case for passage before congress quits a full report within a few' days bn its recent hearings on the Fulbright resolution, yv- j . ■ i The Fulbright resolution., also sponsored by eight other senators, provides for the 15-member commission. In recommending the qommis sion. the labor ‘group 'said the study is needed "to recommend constructive measures, to increase public understanding of the problem and to avoid the exaggeration and distortion whirly tend to ocuf‘ in the absence of an authoritative appraisal.” \ ; Tarpon sometimes attain a length 4f 6 fectand weigh more than 100 pounds.

■ ' ' -- ' .■■■,.. : ■ ..fii.i ; W^h"L. VL..IIL^L'Atf ''"‘ I : g 81 d&flkteu * fcq gjfc .. HaOlr i iWFiwMF x KF ■ ▼ z-kJRi r jFRkJr ■ ■ 'kJ k Sf v. 9Bk. “"xNm Sk. im myK. Bk ■ —lni gWr Hr x _,. ... * IN A HOSPITAL at Hanford, Calif., Mrs. Beatrice A viler, 24, poses with her new-hprn 5-pound 14-ounce daughter, whose cries were heard seven weeks before birth. The infant stopped crying as soon as she was born. The young mother said: “Sometimes she cried so much that I began to believe I heard her about 24 hours a day.” (International)

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA : ' ' ‘ \

Four Garrett Nuns / Killed In Accident Nuns And Chauffeur J Auto Crash Victims Sheridan, 111., Oct. 10—l(UP)-4 Four Qatholic nuns and their chauffeur, all from Garrett, Ind;, were killed yesterday when their automobile spun off an Illinois highway and smashed into a tree. The dead, were Sister M, Kunlguhda. Sister Superior of) Sacred Heart hospital at Garrett;! Sisters M. Delores, M. Henrica. and M. Emilie, members of Sacred Heart staff, and Ludwig Schwaiger, 59, stationary engineer at the hospital, who was driving the car. Sister Emilie was first assistant to Sister Kunigunda in operating the hospital and had been attached to the institution for 30 years. Sis-i ter Henrica was Sister Superior of a convent conducted in connection with the hospital. Authorities said their car was enroute from La Salle, 111., to Garrett when a tire apparently blew but; The car swerved off the highway, sped 300 feet along the shoulder, and plowed into a big oak tree., „ - A priest happened by just after a passing motorists discovered the 'wrecked car. The Rev. Gervase Brinkman stopped and administered l\ut rites. , . I Sister Kunigunda was still alive, but died later in a Morris,> 111., hos-‘ ’pital. The otheis apparently were killed outright. The nuns had been in La Salle to pick up Sister Delores, who had been stationed at St. Mary’s hospi-i tai for 19 years. She was to have beet assigned to the Garrett hospital. ’• —yRidgeville Girl Wins Top Awards Indianapolis, Oct. 10.— (UP)— “Laddie’s Diana.’’ a cow shown by; 15-year-old Wanda Burton of Ridgeville, Jnd., ? held, tw'o top awards today in the International dairy exposition. The cow which won grand {champion honors last Saturday in the junior class, took similar hon ors yesterday in open class competition for the Red’Poll breed in the senior division. “Dottie.” exhibited by Roy L. Mueller ol j Arlington. Minn., was Red Poll re . [serve grad champion.

Would Give Indiana Third Federal Judge Washington, Oct. lb.—(UP) — The senate passed by' voice vote yesterday a bill giving Indiana a thifd federal judgeship in ap effort to ease case loads. |j The bill which now goes to the house, would create three additional circuit and 16 district judgeships throughout the country. , ' The third Indiana judge would handle case overflow's and backlogs from Judge William E. Stecklefi’s southern Indiana district and Luther M. Swygert’s northern district. { Triads in a Good Town —Decatur HEART ATTACK OR INDIGESTION? THANK HKAVENBI Mos t • t tacks are just add Indigestion. When it strikes, take Bell-ana tablets. They contain the fastest-acting medicines known to doctors for the relief oC heartburn, gas and similar distress. 25<.

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Disavows Leiter On Memorial Fund j White House Denies Knowledge Os Letter Washington, Oct. 10. —(UP)*-® The White House- disavowed a letter written by Seu. Clinton P. Anderson, Ij>.. N.M., which solicited funds tor a Harry S, Truman memorial library and noted that such money otherwise would be pdid in Income taxes. White House press secretary Joseph quoted President Truman as saying “I didn't know anything the letter and if I had known about it, 1 would have stop* ped it from being sent.” Anderson’s letter urged a number of high bracket taxpayers tb contribute to a >1,000,000 fund for a library in Mr. Truman’s home town of Grandview, Mo. I The St. Louis Post-Dispatch dis* closed yesterday that a Washington resident provided a cbpy of the letter “urging Corporations and businessmen to take advantage of the tax laws” and contribute to the fund. Anderson is chairman of the fin ance committee of the Harry S Truman Library, Ipc., a fund-rate-ihg group for a memorial library Also on the committee are White House intimate George E. Alleu treasurer; Missouri supreme court justice Ernest M. Tipton, president, and* Tom L. Evans, Kansas City, secretary. Anderson was in Albuquerque, N.M., where he is recuperating from an illness. Allen was in New York, Evans and Tipton both denied any connection with the letter. \| Evans said in Kansas City that Anderson wrote the letter "on his own hook.” The committee has betn in existence for several years; Its purpose is to build a librarymemorial to Mr. Truman so that the president’s papers and personal; effects may be Recruiting Station To Opened Here A recruiting substation for the U.S. >rmy and air force will be opened in Dejcatur Oct. 22. according to the Fort Wayne recruiting office. The substation will be located at 610 West Monroe street. M/Sgt. Allen 'Page, who lives in this city, will be in charge of the A veteran of 16 years army Page served >a‘s a plaiobn leader with the 96th Combat engineers in the South Pacific) during World War 11, and was with the occupation troops in Aus trih from 1946 to 194&

Adams County Is Again Leader In Merit Herd Awards Adams county will once again lead all in Indiana for medal of merit herd awards, with a total of eight gold medals; four silver medals; three bronie medals; one certificate of production; and 'one gold medal herd sire, award. The eight gold medal winners are: Edwin Nussbaum; Paul Liechty A Sons; Rolandes Liechty; Vilas Habegger & Son; Edison Lehman; Martin Habegger, Orval Gerber; and Ben Gerkq. Thje four silver medal; winners are: Sol Mosser; Eugene Caffee; Stanley Arnold; and Homer}Arnold &, Son. The three bronie medal winners are: Albert Lehman. Mdry Briggs, and Adrian Lortie. The one certificate of productibn (awarded to herds of less than 10 cows) will he given to David D. Habegger; and Paul Liechty & Sons will receive the Gold medal herd site award. The eight gold medal winners above make a totalAof 20 to be won by the Adams county Dil I.A; the last three years, apd represents apprdxtfnately 4*o percent of a|l in Indiana which includes about 80 associations.

X 1 Ww 1/1 1 Wo How to Porty " P Line Traffic Jams For better party-line service, use your telephone sharingly. When you do have a lot of calls to make, remember I to space them. When your call is finished, hang up the t , receiver carefully. This kind of cooperation is the keynote of good partyline service. Try it on your party line. You’ll enjoy the smoothly running service it helps to create. Citizens Telephone Co.

PAGE SEVEN

Youth Killed When Train Strikes Auto Columbus. Ind., Oct. 10— Charles R. Snyder, Jr., 18, wa» kilted last night when his ear was struck at a crossing by a Penit sylvania railroad freight train. John R. SchwaptzkopL 18, driver of the'car, was| injured. I■ E I I = ffe DtN'T HESITATE TO APPLY TO OS WHEN YOU NEED A LOAN We Will make a $25 loan just aa quirky as we will a larger one. Your , I signature and income are the chief | security requirements. A Imai I part of your income each month will repay a loan. Special tetms are available to farmers or other persons with seasonable income. Loans quickly and privately made usually on same day you apply. Let us; tell you more about it—no obli-,. gation. Call, phone or write— LOCAL LOAN company , Graund Fleer mN. Seeoug St., Brock Bldg. Phone S-2013 Deaatur, I»d.