Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 192, Decatur, Adams County, 15 August 1958 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Four Victims Had Indiana Connection Four Were Aboard 111-Fated Airliner United Press International Tour persons with Indiana conrtctions were aboard the ill-fated Dutch KLM airliner which crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near Shannon, Ireland, Thursday, killing all 99 aboard. a The four were identified as Snider, 25, his wife, JOyce, 22, Gaeln Stinebaugh, and his wife,
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Ruth. Srfider was president of the 1958 graduating class at Manchester College at North Manchester. His wife, also a spring graduate of Manchester, was 1957 May Queen at the school. Mrs. Snider, the former Joyce Rust, was a teacher at Silver Lake in Kosciusko County. _ . Snider was a native of Bradford Ohio, and his wife of West Manchester, Ohio. He was teaching at Dayton, Ohio, at the time of his death. Mrs. Stinebaugh, the former Ruth Whitmore, was a native Lancaster. Ind. She married her husband there in 1943 and was a graduate of Manchester Coll^ e ;_ Stinebaugh, a member of the music staff at Bridgewater, Va., College, was the son of the Walter Stinebaugh, Church of the Brethren pastor at Markle. IndA brother, Vernon, is conductor of the Manchester College symphony orchestra and other relatives live at South Whitley. Stinebaugh s uncle. Virgil, is a former superintendent of Indianapolis schools and now is principal of School 76 there. If vou have something to sell oi rooms for rent, irv ■ Democrat Want Ad - They bring rer »ta.
Berne Minister To Head Association Missionary Church Selects Habegger A Berne minister will take office as president of the Missionary church association September 1, with a Decatur minister and layman working with him in work for i that denomination. The Rev. Tillman Habegger, Berne, was elected president of the Missionary church association at its general conference at Beulah Beach, O. Rev. Habegger succeeds the Rev. Jared Gerig, Fort Wayne, for the four year term, as Rev. Gerig retired from the presidency to become president of Fort Wayne Bible College. Officers from Decatur who will be working with him are the Rev. Gerald Gerig, of the Missionary church at the corner of Tenth and Dayton streets; and Noah Rich. 229 Limberlost trail. Rev. Gerig will be general secretary of the church association. Rich was renamed to the Reusser Memorial controlling board. The new president has been working with the president’s office for the last two years as home secretary. He and his family have lived in the Reusser memorial home, Berne, where he has been the director. Before this, he was superintendent of the western district of the M. C. A. and a pastor in Bucklin, Kan., Detroit, Mich., Cleveland, i 6., Van Nuys, Calif., and Phoenix, Ariz. These area residents . were also named to general work of the Church through the Beulah Grove conference: Loren Heller, Berne, i a member of the 16-member general council; the Rev. J. J. Klopfenstein, Berne, and the Rev. Truman Gottschalk, near Berne, members Henry Amstutz, Celina, 0., and of the foreign missionary board; Forrest Balsiger. Berne, members of the Bible. College governing board; and C. H. Muselman. Berne, member of the group and hospitalization committee. District Water Works Meeting Here Sept. 4 The northeastern Indiana district of the American water works association will meet in Decatur Thursday, Sept. 4 .for a business meeting and a tour of the sewage disposal and water plants here. The meeting will start at 9 a m.. Mayor Robert D. Cole said. At noon, a dinner will be served at the Youth and Community Center, whede the morning meeting' will also be held. In the afternoon the group, will make a field trip to the water softener plant and the sewage disposal unit. Ohio Man Is Killed As Train Hits Auto INDIANAPOLIS (UPD— Hobart' Hartenstein, 30. Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, was killed, and Thomas Wilson, 30, same town, was injured critically today when their car was struck by a train here. Police said both men were salesmen for an industrial firm located near the crash scene. PARTS (Continued from Page one) 27 inches with a one-half per cent fall every 100 feet, and drains 60 acres. Runoff water figured at 30% would amount to 15,300 gallons per minute, and the sewer only carries 10,000 gallons per minute. At Fourth street, the Jefferson street sewer is a 30 inch pipe, same fall, and drains 74 acres. This amounts to 19,000 gallons per minute, while the sewer's capacity is only 14,000 gallons per minute. At Second street the same size pipe now drains 88 acres, and the rainfall is amounting to 22,500 gallons per minute, but the capacity still is 14,000 gallons per minute. At First street the same size pipe is draining 95 acres, with a 24,300 gallon per minute flow, and only a 14,000 gallon per minute capacity. This means that the water is backing up at the rate of 10,300 gallons per minute in the Jefferrcn street sewer at First street when 1.2 inches of rain falls within 40 minutes. The Monroe street sewer drains about 91 Acres, more or less. Running from 10th street to the river, the pipe varies in size from 15 inches to 27 inches. At 30% runoff of rainfall, 23,000 gallons are falling each minute into the sewer, which is carrying off only 10,000 gallons per minute, backing up water at the rate bf 13,000 gallons per minute. Observation of the intercepting chamber near the- river shows that the high water mark in the chamber is about one foot above the crown of the sewer. This would indicate that the sewage is getting from the chamber into the river very quickly with very little buildup in the chamber. The Stratton Place addition sewer is a 24 inch pipe with a .3% grade draining about 25 acres. In the same rain period at 1.2 inches, with 30% runoff, 6,150 gallons per minute ran into the sewer, which has a capacity of only 5,500 gallons per minute.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Political Comeback Staged By Molotov Partial Political Comeback Reported LONDON (UPD—Soviet affairs experts said today Vyacheslav M. Molotov has been in close contact recently with Red Chinese leader Mao Tze - tung and may have staged a partial political comeback. Molotov, former foreign minister and one-time premier, was banished to Outer Mongolia as ambassador last summer when Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev cracked down on the “Molotov trio.” The Soviet affairs experts said Molotov’s heavy hand may lie behind some of the latest Soviet policy changes, despite his purge and exile. Authoritative reports from behind the Iron Curtain said Molotov visited Peiping shortly before Khrushchev made his surprise trip to Mao two weeks ago, a move that led to a hardening of Soviet policy. Molotov also was reported back in Moscow on a visit earlier this month. The Soviet experts said these comings -and - goings were considered a “highly significant development” despite the mystery attached to the moves. Molotov fell into disgrace with former Premier Georgi Malenkov and Vice Premier Lazar Kaganovich, but the Soviet experts said the moves indicated Molotov has not altogether been removed from the political scenes. ■- k> _ AIRLINE (Continued from page one) how the government of the United States should surrender this country to its enemies.” Russell insisted his proposal was deigned to “reassure” the nation —and the world—that Congress “would never tolerate” the suggestion of a U. S. surrender to Godless Communism. All such rumors should be spiked, he said. But other senators, including Sen. John Sherman Cooper (RKy.) said the amendment implied such a defeat was possible and reflected on congressional confidence in the administration. Senate Democratic leader Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex.) said he felt senators should stand and ■be counted. But he conceded he "was probably in the minority. He sent his colleagues home to bed at 11:01 p.m., e.d.t., and moved back the meeting hour today from ;40 a.m. to noon. Dirksen Asks Secrecy Kennedy told the Senate a lag in U. S. missiles development might give Russia a "new shortcut to world domination.” He said the disparity in missive strengths would confront this country with “a peril more deadly than any wartime danger we have ever known.” This caused Capehart to declare that speeches such as Kennedy’s should not be made publicly. Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill.) later moved that the doors be closed as the debate raged on. Capehart seconded the motion. At that point, the presiding officer, Sen. Allan Bible (D-Nev.) ordered the galleries cleared of newsmen and spectators. But the motion was withdrawn. Bible subsequently ruled the Senate had th right to take such action. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (DN. defended Kennedy’s speech. Anderson said he and other senators had advised President Eisenhower in June, 1955, that the Russians had an intermediate ballistic missile and the ability to produce an intercontinental rocket.
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Presdent “Horrified” Russell's amendment came in the midst of a furor that raged from the White House to Congress after it was disclosed some kind of “surrender study”—or studies—had been prepared at the Pentagon’s request. The White House said Presidnt Eisenhower considered the study “ridiculous” if it actually did discuss the conditions under which this country might give up. 'Hie President demanded an immediate report on the incident. The study was brought to Eisenhower’s attention by Sen. Styles Bridges (R-N.H.) at a White House legislative conference Tuenday. One GOP lawmaker who wan present described the President as “horrified” and “madder than I have seen him in all his years in the White House.” RUSSIA (Continued from page one) Arab nations en establishment of a do-it-yourself economic program and strengthening of independent nations against outside subversion. x There also was a possibility he would consult with Jordan on broadening U. N. activity there where only Thursday Jordan! authorities in Amman disclosed another plot against King Hussein had been broken up. A similar plot was reported on June 27. nearly (Continued from Pag» on.) Cecil Harvey farm, during thundershowers which hit hardest from 9 p.m. Thursday until 2 a.m. today, and continuing through the forenoon. Power service was back in order after the Wednesday afternoon storm, which damaged several transformers' north and east of Decatur and damaged a pump motor on the Harvey farm. In Union township, on the Erwin Fuelling farm, .4 inch of rain fell. In Kirkland township, on the Peter J. Spangler farm, 1.1 inches had fallen by 7 a.m. today. In Washington township, government weather observer Louis Landrum reported .73 inch of rain, and the river rising to 12:58 feet by this morning at 7 o'clock. In St. Mary’s township, at the Nimrod McCullough farm, .9 inch of rain was reported. In French township, Harold Moser reported an inch of rain this morning. From the Ben Mazelin farm, in Monroe township, one inch was reported this morning. A few acres of oats are reported still unharvested in the fields there. One inch also fell in Blue Creek township, at the Austin Merriman farm, where a severe electrical storm struck about 11:30 p.m. Thursday, with a bolt of lightning setting fire to a barn. By around 7 a.m. today, 1.1 inches of rain had fallen at the Ivan Huser farm in Hartford township. In Geneva, according to Jack Hurst an inch fell. In Jefferson township, at the Harley J. Reef farm, .7 inch fell by 8 a.m. today. Trade in a g' od town — Decatur
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Local Man Critically Injured Last Night Charles R. Tolan, 26, of 306 North Tenth street suffered multiple fractures of the left leg and foot and a fractured right leg in a motorcycle-car collision near Fort Wayne Thursday night. Admitted to the Parkview memorial hospital, Fort Wayne, he was reported in critical condition last night. James S, Perrin, 22, Fort Wayne, driver of the car involved, suffered possible internal Injuries. Hie accident occurred at 9:35 pan. on U. S. 24 one mile wqst of Jfew Hayeft. perri4 traveling ■west on the federal road, had stopped to turn into a drive-in, according to investigating authorities. He collided with the motorcycle when he started to turn into the driveway. - - -- SENATE (Continued from Pare One) heard from was cruising at 16,000 feet. Investigators theorized it might have been crippled by a lightning bolt — there were thunderstorms in the area about the time of the crash — or an internal explosion. So far as is known, no evidence supporting either theory has been uncovered. KLM officials discounted the possibility of sabotage, although the line’s manager here conceded “something must have happened vry quickly.” May Have Turned Back The KLM Super-Constellation which crashed Thursday was an “economy (third) class” flight headed for New York carrying 53 Americans, 38 passengers of other nationalities and a crew of eight. I It left the “jump-off” airport here at 11:05 p.m., e.d.t., Wednesday, and was last heard from 35 minutes later at a point some 200 miles west of Shannon. A British search plane sighted the wreckage of the plane at 9:45 a.m., e.d.t, 130 miles west of the Irish coast. The fact the wreckage was '7O miles nearer Ireland than the plane had been at the time of its last report suggests it may have turned back after suffering crippling damage of some sort. Only two air accidents in history have taken a heavier toll in life than the KLM tragedy—the crash of a giant U.S. Air Force transport, in which 129 Gl’s were killed, and the collision of two airliners over the Grand Canyon, which killed 128 persons. FOOD f». ontlaue'i from page one) Value Stores, Inc., warehouses 10 days ago. Workers at Red Owl Stores/ Inc., and National Tea Co. stores, walked out in sympathy. Members of Local 503, St. Paul, announced Thursday they also would refuse to work until the issues were settled. More than 1,000 truck drivers and warehousemen and nearly 4,000 clerks, supervisory workers, meat cutters and other food re-
tail workers have been idled. The dispute is over the union’s demand for an escalator clause in addition to a company offer of a 35 per cent wage increase over a three-year period. Present wage scales average $2.25 per hour for trhck drivers and $2.15 for warehousemen. Threats of violence and angry charges failed to panic housewives into hoarding. A survey of independent stores ope rating Thursday night showed only modest sales increases. Trade in a good town — Decatur.
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1958
British Princess Observes Birthday LONDON (UPD— Princess Anne, the bright-eyed blond-haired daughter of Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, celebrated her eighth birthday today at a royal party aboard the yacht Britannia. Hie party on the royal yacht, now cruising off the west coast of Scotland, .is strictly a family affair. Anna's “guests” will include her mother and father and her "Big” brother. Prince Charles, who will be 10 in November. ■
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