Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 278, Decatur, Adams County, 27 November 1961 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
18 Traffic Deaths Recorded In State
By United Frew Internstional A 7-week-old Ohio baby was killed in a car-truck collision near Plymouth today, a few hours after Indiana closed out the 102-hour Thanksgiving holiday weekend with 18 traffic fatalities. The death of Bruce Anthony Fanning in a crash on U.S. 30 six mftes west of Plymouth raised the state’s toll for the year to at least 956, compared with 999 this time last year. The boys parents, Ronald H. Fanning. 26. and Mrs. Jennie V. Famuag. ». Celina, Ohio, were taken unconscious to Parkview Hospital in Plymouth. Marshall County Sheriff Jerry D. Greenlee said the Fanning car veered over the center line and struck the rear wheel of a truck driven by Alfred J. ONeil, 38, Bluffton. O’Nadl suffered cuts and bruises when his truck turned over several times before landing in a ditch. The Fannings were pinned in the wreckage of their car for 20 minutes before they could be pried loose. Mrs. Nora Bohard. 41, and her
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mother, Mrs. Kate Alinikoff, 65, Indianapolis, were killed on U.S. 52 about 13 miles south 1 of Lafayette when a car lost a wheel, went out of control and rolled over. The women were thrown out of the vehicle and crushed beneath it, police said. The driver was Mrs.Bohard's son, Howard, 20, a Purdue University student. He suffered multiple fractures and was rushed to a Lafayette hospital. 2 Die This Morning Two men died this morning from injuries suffered in accidents Sunday. Edgar Harvey, 62, Pendleton, died in St. John’s Hoypital at Anderson from injuries suffered when his car went out of control in Anderson and rammed a railroad embankment. Russel Gene Osbourne, 24, Otterbein. died in St. Elizabeth's Hospital at Lafayette from injuries suffered when his car crashed into the rear of a big truck on the U.S. 52 bypass in Tippecanoe County. Roger Worak, 26. Hobart, died in a Gary hospital early Sunday about an hour after he was hurt when his car went out of control on a Gary street and struck several parked vehicles. Police said the car was drag racing. Rickey Leon Osborn, 10. Canaan, was struck and killed by a car Sunday as he darted across Indiana 250 near Bennington. The driver was Robert Lee Miller, 27, New Palestine. Crash Hidden in Ditch Herschel Fletcher, 49, Griffin, died Sunday afternoon in an Evansville hospital from injuries suffered Wednesday night. His car crashed into a ditch after he was blinded by headlights from another car on Indiana 65 near Cynthiana. Fletcher and Earl Straw, 34, Griffin, lay badly injured in the wreckage for 12 hours before passersby found them. Charles E. John, 18, Rushville, was killed Saturday afternoon when a car in which he rode collided headon with another on Indiana 44 near Manila. Obie Kenneth Wright. 45, R.R. 3, Veedersburg, was killed Saturday when his car was struck by a freight train at a crossing on Indiana 341 at Mellott. Four traffic deaths were recorded Friday four Thursday and one Wednesday night. I Missionary Meetings Will Open Wednesday Special ..missionary meetings will open at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at the St. Paul Missionary church, south of Decatur on the county farm road, with services nightly except Saturday, and morning and evening Sunday. A different mission field will be represented in each service. Wednesday, the Rev. Abe Shierling, Dominican Republic, will speak. The Rev. Arthur Hall will represent Jamaica Thursday, and the Rev. Wilbur Wanner will represent Sierra Leona, Africa, Friday. Mrs. Silvan I Hausser will speak at 9:15 a. m. Sunday on Ecuador, and Rev. Hall will speak Sunday evening.
Sharp Temperature Drop For Hoosiers By United Press International Mild weekend temperatures faded away in Indiana today with sub-freezing readings due within a matter of hours. Highs Sunday ranged from 55 at South Bend to 61 at Evansville—not quite as warm as forecasters had predicted. They fell steadily this morning toward expected lows in the 20s tonight. The Weather Bureau forecast a cold week with temperatures averaging 3 degrees below normal north and 3 to 6 degrees below normal central and south. Except for a slight warming Wednesday or Thursday, the week will feature high temperatures in the 30s and 40s and lows in the 20s. Very little precipitation was expected this week. Light rain or drizzle today—maybe snow flurries in the north—will be followed by two days of fair weather. Scattered showers or snow flurries may occur about Thursday or Friday, but they wil amount to no more than one-tenth of an inch north and two-tenths of an inch elsewhere. Highs Tuesday will range from 34 to 42. Driver Fined For Reckless Driving Larry Rollan Hirschy, 16, route 2, Convoy. 0., paid a fine of $1 and costs in justice of the peace court this weekend. Hirschy was arrested for reck-1 less driving Nov. 19 at Monroe and 13th streets.
These Coats for Stormy Gray Days ✓ wF vi JI - >Ol SMB IWOkfl, i Q ii fl HU MM E i ' I HHVHHf I nnwVafflKr t 858 [I H lw>|wtllnMw4 ~ illS * IM-’' ■ Siilf h ■■ *■ ♦.»- * * o t \\ xi -: "Fi.ll I> . ; .-Xviii k - ' ; &.vi. . .w.W>- -z'fc-i. --/2 , M.. Storm coats that provide both warmth and lightweight belong in every woman’s wardrobe. Seven-eighths coat (left) in wool knit is coordinated with checked wool skirt and solid knit sweater blouse with check trim. Coat has foam, interlining and is water-repellent. Great coat with foam lining (right) is brushed nylon knit that’s both soft and light.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. t INDIANA
Sen. Bridges Dies Sunday
CONCORD, N.H. (UPD-Tribute from the nation’s leaders poured in today for Sea. Styles Bridges, dean of U.S. Senate Republicans and model of New England conservatism. Bridges. 63, died peacefuly in his sleep Sunday. President Kennedy and former Presidents Eisenhower ana Truman were among those who expressed sorrow at Bridges’ death. Kennedy described the senior Republican member of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee and the Armed Services Committee, as a “great patriot who devoted his life to the continuing strength of our country.” The President telephoned Bridges’ widow here from the weekend White House in Hyannis Port, Mass., to express his sympathy. Suffers Heart Attack Bridges’ death came as a shock to many of the senator’s intimates who had noted his apparent recovery in recent weeks from a severe heart attack suffered last Sept. 21. He died at his home of complications arising from the seizure. Bridges, chairman of the 14member Republican Policy Committee, was described by former Vice President Richard M. Nixon as “one of the most effective po- ; litical leaders ever by | the Republican party.” Bridges’ body will lie in state in I the Hall of Flags of the State
House here beginning at 2 p.m., EST Tuesday until 11 a.m. Wednesday. A public service will be conducted at the State House Wednesday noon. > Friends and constituents will file past Bridges' bier in the same building where, at the age of 36, he served as the youngest governor in the country and the only Republican governor elected in 1934. In Fifth Term Bridges serving his fifth Senate term since his first election in 1936, was born on a farm in West Pembroke, Maine, Sept. 9, 1898. He was called Henry Styles Bridges but later in life dropped his first name. Bridges and his first wife, who died in 1938, had three sons, all of whom survive. Following his election in 1936, which occurred despite a heavy Roosevelt Democratic landslide, Bridges built up his reputation as a true Yankee conservative. One of his major concerns in Washington was keeping control of the government out of the hands of the “liberals.” There ’was only one type of real Republicanism in his political dictionary—-a fighting, old fashioned conservatism. Bridges was a vigorous antiCommunist who only last, week said he planned to introduce legislation which would cut the amount of Communist literature being shipped into the United States. Such material would have to be
PRELUDE TO DISASTER— This photo, made May 30, 1937, in San Francisco, shows aviatrix Amelia Earhart discussing preparations for her ill-fated world flight, with her navigator, Fred Noonan, center, and her husband, George Palmer Putnam, as they stand on the wing of her plane. Now, 24 years later, Saipan Island has yielded remains of what maye be the bodies of Miss Earhart and Noonan.
labelled as propaganda under the senator’s bil. East Germans' UlbrichtDims Berlin Hopes BERLIN jUPD—Tough talk by East German Communist boss Walter Ulbricht has dampened hopes that the Soviet Union might be willing to negotiate a reasonable settlement of the Berlin crisis. —-TT--The Communist newspaper Neues Deutschland published Sunday a speech in which Ulbricht told his party central committee the Allies do not have “rights” of access to West Berlin across East German territory. - Ulbricht declared that the East would not consider de facto recognition of his regime by the West as a bargaining point on the part of the Allies. He said the only subject for negotiations would be the finding of some way to cut down Allied Berlin garrisons while still allowing the West to “save face.” Since .Ulbricht has spent much of his time in recent weeks in Moscow, it was assumed his words echoed the sentiments of Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. Khrushchev has remained studiously vague about just what portion of the Soviet position on Berlin is “negotiable.” According to 1 Ulbricht’s speech, it’s not very much. Ulbricht reasserted East German claims to sovereignty and control of all access routes to and from Berlin, whether by water, * land or air. The Allies claim access rights under agreement by the four occupation powers after World War 11. Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPD—Livestock: . Hogs 12,500: fairly active: barrows and gilts 50 to mostly 75
MISSIONARY CONVENTION NOVEMBER 29 ■ DECEMBER 3 SCHEDULE OF SERVICES HEAR THESE OUTSTANDING SPEAKERS WEDNESDAY Rev. Wilbur Wanner-Africa 3:30 P. M.—Children's Meeting 6:00 P. M.—Men's Luncheon Rev - Abe Sch.erhng - 7:30 P. M.—Missionary Rally Dom.mcan Republic THURSDAY Mrs. Silvan Hausser—Ecuador I' J* eetin9 Arthur Hall-Jamaica 6:00 P. M.—Youth Luncheon 7:30 P. M.—Missionary Rally Rev. Timothy Warner-Head of the com av missions department of Fort ™ V M -Lodi.,' T.a 3:30 P. M.—Children's Meeting • .... —-— 7:30 P. M.—Missionary Rally - ™ere will be missionary posters made ' ' by our children. SUNDAY—DECEMBER 3 Prizes will be given to the winners on 9:00 A. M.—Sunday School the closing night. 10:00 A. M.—Rev. Arthur Hall Missionary pledges will be totaled 7:00 P. M.—Closing Rally the closing night. Each night a missionary will be telling of his or her most thrilling experience on the mission field. DON'T MISS THIS CONVENTION! Decatur Missionary Church Cor. Tenth & Dayton Sts. Gerald I. Gerig, minister
lower; good shipping demand, mostly mixed U.S. No 1-2 190-225 lb butchers 16.50-16.75; around 70 head 210 lb 16.85; bulk mixed No 1- 190-240 lb 16.00-16.50: mostly No 2-3 240-260 lb 15.75-16.00; No 2- And 3 260-290 lb 15.25-15.75. Cattle 19,000, calves 100; slaughter steers slow, steady to 50 lower; heifers steady to weak; bulsl fully steady; vealers steady; no sales stockers and feeder ss;everal loads prime 1200 -1325 lb steers 27.50-27.75; four loads 27.75; bulk choice and prime 950-1400 lb 25.00-27.25; load choice with prime end 1425 lb 26.25; loadlots mixed good and choice 1050-1150 lb 25.00I
mSMb! p M ( What’s Your Postal 1.Q.? ■ .tj rr ri~ rr~ ~~ iV *^^** a * f r ******* , ■;ENPLESS CHAIN SCHEMES n VIOLATE POSTAL LOTTERY " ANR FRAUP LAWS NO u I (THESE ARE I—! \ ILL66AL,vOujWSj, . , ) kuow { r-y l |i I &ws 1. YES.—Endkss chain schemas for obtaining money, saving* bonds, or other thing* of value violate th* Postal Lottery and Fraud Law*; 18 U.S.C 1302, 1341. Those who participate in such activities may be subject to criminal prosecution. It malt** no, difference whether the list* are circulated through the mail or passed. from hand to hand; a* long as the money, bonds, or receipts are) mailed, there is a violation of the law. The above statute doe* not apply to any fishing contest not conducted for profit wherein prizes are awarded for th* species, l size, weight, or quality of fish caught by contestant* in any bona fide fishing or recreational event.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER ts, 19« i
25.50; most good 900-1300 lb 23.5024.75; four loads mixed choice and prime 950- 1025 lb heifers 25.50; several loads choice with prime end 25.25; bulk choice 24.00-25.00; good largely 23.00-23.75; standard and good vealers 19.00-25.00. Sheep 4,000; fairly active; slaughter lambs fully steady; around four loads fed western wooled lambs 94-97 lb 17.75; choice and prime native wooled slaughter lambs 17.00-17.50; good and choice 15.00-17.00; cull to good 8.00-14.50; load choice and prime 105 lb fall shorn fed lambs 17.25; two loads choice and prime 95-109 lb No 1 pelts 16.75. I
