Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 128, Decatur, Adams County, 1 June 1953 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Two Persons Badly Hurt In Train Wreck Streamliner Jumps Tracks In Montana SUPERIOR, Mont. UP —Two persons injured tn a wreck of the Milwaukee Road electric streamliner Olympia Hiawatha were re-
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ported to be io serious condition today. At least 16 pther persons were treated for injuries suffered in the accident Sunday and a total of 50 persons were checked for injuries. The Tacoma-to-Chicago electric streamliner jumped the track and' caught fire in a shower of sparks from downed power lines. • Os the 100 passengers, 75 were > reported to be servicemen and 25 civilians. Most of them were sleep- - ing at the time of the derailment.
Two persons reported as cases” by the Missoula, Jdont., sheriff’s office were Edna Dewey, Tacoma, Wash., and Miltdn Hays, Chicago, 111. Injuries of the other 16 persons treated were reported not serious. The wreck was attributed by sheriff’s officers to a broken switch. FlVe Pullman cars overturned as they left the rails. Two other cars left the rails but remained upright. Three cars and the engine on the rails.
: :p I : -I . -• : « ■ THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DDOATtm, INDIANA i
Only One Accident Is Reported Here Autoist Fined For Reckless Driving Accidents In Adams county and Decatur during the Memorial Day weekend were kept at a welcome minimum. The only mishap was investigated by local police and involved three cars, two of them parked, and minor injuries to a young girl. L A car driven by William Ditto, 16, of 345 Stevenson, heading south on Third near Marshall Sunday afternoon, said police, rammed a car parked at the curb belonging to the Smith Insurance agency, knocking' it into a city light post and the car ahead of it owned by Jack Gaffer, of 329 North Third. One of Ditto’s passengers, Marjene Snyder, 16, of 610 Washington, received scratches and bruises of a minor nature, and after a checkup at the Adams county memorial hospital, went home. Damages to the three cars and the light post were estimated at slightly over SI,OOO. Ditto; later pleaded guily to reckless driving in justice of the peace court and was fined $5 and costs by JP Floyd Hunter. A Rockford, 0., youth, Vern Bollinger, 18, was arrested Saturday and later pleaded guilty in J.P. court to a charge of driving 50 miles an hour in a 30-mile zone and was fined $1 and costs. Sheriff Bob Shraluka reported Adams county went along with most of the nation over this weekend keeping the accident and death toll down. The sheriff said he made a few routine investigations and no car wrecks. To Print Brief In Witnesses' Case Charles Whitted of the firm of Voglewede, Anderson and Whitted. went to Chicago today to have the brief printed that will be used by city attorney Robert Anderson in the Jehovah's Witnesses case that will probably come before the appellate court, for hearing next fall. Anderson announced. The brief ' must be filed no later than June ‘ 1L A 30-day period is then given for the attorneys for |he Witnesses to file, their reply briefs. Their attorneys are Custer & Smith, local firm, and Hayden C. Covington. a Brooklyn. N. Y., lawyer, under permanent retainer by the religious group. 4-H Rabbit Club Members To Meet f ; A meeting for 4-H rabbit club members is being called in the Morrison Fann Store. Decatur fpr 8. p in. Thursday. The adult committee wishes to explain babbit classes, tell of the changes Jin judging plans, and show how to make carying cases for the rabbits. In division I, a member may show ; two junior rabbits, one may be a (buck. In division 11. a mfcmber may I show two rabbits in i each class. / D<k—junior. 6 to 8 months, qld: senior, above 8 months; buck, junior—6 to 8 above 8 months. Each member must handle his or her rabbit in the show ring. Boy Scout Troop 63 i u Will Meet Tuesday •!. \ • i / H ' s Niland Ochsenrider. scoutmaster of troop asks that al Iscbuts i planning to attend the camporee. must be at the meeting Tuesday at
Summer Term will begin June, t Degr** Court** In IProfettlonal Accounting, Erecutlv* Socratarial, Busin**! Administration and Finane* Approved for Votoran Training ' , International College “School of Commerce" Fort Wayne 2, Indiana ' ;
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Coronation Is I '■ 4 i Essentially A Religious Rite Thousand Year Old i Ceremony Sacred To Great Britain LONDON, UP—Queen Eiitabeth . will dedicate her life to he* people i Tuesday and she will be solemnly ’ anointed for her task. ;■; V , 1 The doronetton is essentially a I religious service, though fit is • bringing London its gayest celebration in. many a year. ,; I It is completely hoh-pblitical. • Prime Minister Winston Churchill 1 and. the members of his Cabinet will be in Westminster as 1 guests ohly—the service has noth1 ing to do with them. The 1,000 year old ceremony has become sacred to British religious instincts. The sovereign IS head pf the established Church <jf England—correspondent to the Prot--1 estant Episcopal Church in the ’ United States. f i \ 1 By her the ' queen becomes for the people ‘‘God’s 1 anointed.” The coronation service centers in tWo of the holiest sacraments 1 of the Church of England, the communion service end the Anointing of the queen with hply\t>il. The enthronement and the ac1 tual crowning are solemn and impressive. But they are i largely ‘ symbolic, and to some extent in- ' cidental to the anointing of the queen by the archbishop oi* i Canterbury. With the anointing, every British sovereign becomes "something more than a mere mortal in stature. * The coronation service 4s get in the framework thje service for the administration of Italy communion. , ; Authorities differ as to whM. exactly, the service confers upon the sovereign. ; Under the traditionwhfc-|i has grown up over a span of than 1,000 years of croitniirgiu, the coronation does not exactly confer upon the sovereign the qji’ality of priesthood. But it confers something more than a purely secular quality. ? , M Prelates of the ChUrbh of. England hold the service is ahb expression of the Unique quality of the monarchy as an office which, while it is not entirely spiritual, is not wholly secular# - . f The service, they say. will; confirm the queen as having supreme power of temporal jurisdiction in all causes which arise sron> her combined roles of head of the state of the The first sacrament ill Tues- , day’s service will come w'hen the archbishop of Canterbury anoints the qneen with specially consecrated holy oil in the palms of both hands, on her breast and on? the crown of her head, and gives' her a special blessing. She will already have been'formally ’’recognized” as thk sovereign. She will have taken her Oath of office. She will have knelt and sworn to perform and keep Ithe oath. It is not until then, when she has made the promises, that she can be consecrated. After the anointing, the queen will have become the consecrated head of the Commonwealth, And she can then be invested with 3 the royal insignia and crowmed. Hir peers will pay homage to her. The rest of the communion service follows. In keeping yviUi ;an ancient rite, the queen will after bread and wine to the archbishop with her own hands, and |te yill 'take them to the altar for consecration. She will make a personal pblation or offering of ap ingot of solid gold. The priests will make thbjr communion inside the sanctuary. The queen and her husband will advance .and. kneeling outside the sanctuary rail, receive thqir communion. There will be prayers ahd ate deum, and the ceremony 'wilb be at an end. / - . r Sale Os Blackstone Case Is Announced I Sale of the Blackstone I North Second street, was apnouheI ed today by the attorneys for punhaser, Custer & Smjthi of Decatur. < \ ? The buyer 13 Melvin Walchle. the former owner of Mel’s Plaice fn Berne, who completed transaction tpday with the ow'ifer of the Blackstone since 1949, Hubert A. Ralston. Walchle has moved from Berne to this city and hks announced his temporary* ‘ realdem o at 222 North Fourth I street. The sale is subject to tjie approval of the alcoholic beverage commission, according to Walchle’s attorneys. . ' the regular meeting place and A 1 the usual time. All are asked to bring their registration fee fir ncit year at this time.
Monthly Report By Police Department ; 34 Accic&nts Are Reported In Month A report of accidents during the month of May, made by the Decatur police department places the tally in the average slot and counts 34 accidents investigated by city police, including two injuring and resulting in 15 arrests. Again the 26-34, age group fails heir to the Inoet accidents, 18 out of the total number, with the over 55 age £roup taking next “honors” with 10 accidents. The favorite day for smashups was Saturday wfth nine, the next following close with being Friday. ... In one instance did the report ve#r from the usual, that of the time most of the accidents happened. Last month the leader in the “hit” parade was 7 p. m., with, mishaps. For months now the most dangerous time of day was 4 o’clock in the afternoon, but daylight time appears to have pushed It up. The police car rolled Up 5.205 miles, about the average, and was diepatched 196 times. Patrolmen tacked 11 warnings on to indiscreet drivers in the city and 460 calls were received at < the desk. The local police radio transmitted 76 point-toq?oint messages. ■ F teeple MOVING & TRUCKING Local and Long Distance PtIONE 3-2607 DUAFIEX I ' $ 22 5 0 HOLTHOVSE DRUG CO
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Preble Firemen To Meet This Evening A regular meeting of the Preble volunteer firefighters association will be held tonight at 7:30 o’clock at the Preble firehouse, it was announced today by David Macklin, secretary. WOMAN TALKED (Cowtlßwad From Page Owe) toward her. A spokesman at the. McDiJl said arrangements were worked put in short order to get a plane cleared for the 269-mile flight to Miami. The woman’s perch was precariously located on a wall which several men prisoners have scaled in
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recent successful breaks from! the jail. No one seemed to know how long the woman had stood there. Bherriff’s deputies said che - was fjrst spotted at aoout 5:25 a.m. dis.t. I’ " ■ ■'i Notice I will be out j ot my office -| May 28th to I June 3rd I Dr. John B. Spaulding —’ —lfe"-
