Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 267, Decatur, Adams County, 12 November 1962 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
13 Persons Killed In Indiana Traffic
By United Press International At least 13 persons were killed in Indiana traffic during the weekend, including a young couple and their infant son. The deaths raised the state’s 1962 toll to at least 1,022 compared with 909 this time last year. A four-fatality accident killed Joseph Clyde Bryan Jr., 21, his wife, Carolyn, 21, and their 4-month-old son Joseph Carl Bryan, Carmel. They were killed when their car crashed head-on early Sunday into a car which had swerved out of control. James Woliver, 41, Noblesville, driver of the other car, also was killed. The only survivor of the accident near Noblesville was James Weesner, 16, a neighbor of the Bryans. He escaped with minor injuries. 1 Dead. 7 Hurt Eugene Jordan, 21, Guilford, was killed and seven other persons were hurt late Sunday night when a car containing Jordan and six passengers crashed through a guard rail and overturned at the bottom of an embankment, two miles northeast of Guilford in Dearborn County. Authorities said Jordan tried to pass another car, struck it and swerved out of control. The injured included two sisters and a brother of Jordan. Roy Maynard Haynie, 21, Fort Wayne, was injured fatally early Sunday when his car crashed into a tree after it went out of control when he aoparently fell asleep at the wheel in Fort Wayne. An autopsy was being performed on Ethan Clark, 85, Fort Wayne, who died Sunday in a hospital after being struck by a car Friday night. It was not 'known if death was due to traffic injuries, and his name was not added to the fatality toll pending the autopsy. Ed Caudell, 28, Columbus, was killed late Saturday night when his car spun after crossing a railroad track and crashed uuo a tree south of Hope. Pulaski Fatality Edith A. Klenn, 58, R.R. 7, Valparaiso, was killed Saturday when her car went off U.S. 421 in
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Pulaski County, swung back onto I the road and crashed into another c vLauretta Bowling, 18, Connersville, was killed Saturday when she drove her car into the side of an embankment after apparently being startled by an approaching train near New Lisbon. August Mowery, 42, Daleville, was kiled Saturday when a New York Central train hit his car at a crossing near Yoi'ktown. Everett Davis, 81, Alden, Mich., was killed in a two-car crash Saturday at the intersection of U.S. 24 and Indiana 101 near New Haven. Louis William Seidholz, 51, Louisville, Ky„ was killed when he fell asleep at the wheel and his car crashed into a house on U.S. 421 near Versailles early Saturday. Frank Chisolm, 76, Indianapolis, was killed when struck by a car at Indianapolis early Saturday. Indiana U. To Build Research Facilities BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPD— Indiana University will build research facilities at its biologcal 1 station on Crocked Lake north of i Columbia City under a $126,500 1 grant from the National Science Foundation. The grant will finance the construction of a two-story 40 by 60 foot concrete block structure and a 23 by 36 foot frame boat house. They will be used for teaching of aquatic science to graduate students and for research activities. The university also announced today a $125,000 grant from Lilly Endowment Inc. to the history department to extend a program to improve teaching of American history in Indiana high schools. Lilly originally gave $156,000 for the program. The new grant wll extend the program to the summer of 196S V the university said. Costelid Promoted, By Allied Mills Thomas E. Costello, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Costello of Decatur, has been promoted to the i post of assistant director of advertising and sales promotion for Allied Mills, Inc., at Fort Wayne. Costello, . graduate of Decatur Catholic high school and Notre Dame University, has been with Allied Mills for five years. Announcement was also made that E Watson Maddox, of 618 Washington, Decatur, has been named regional advertising manager for the western area of Allied Mills, composed of lowa, Minnesota, the Dakotas, Nebraska and Missouri. Maddox is a graduate of Illinois Technical College. Trade in a podT town — Decatu T
IP 9 BF « PRINCESS FAlß—Princess Margaret wore a chic new Grecian-style coiffure arriving for a ball at London’s Savoy hotel.
Farmers Need Freer International Trade FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPD— Herschel D. Newsom, Master of the National Grange, told the opening session of the farm group’s 95th annual meeting today it must redouble its drive to promote freer international trade. At the same time, Newsom a aid, the Grange must continue J its campaign to promote its “do-' mestic parity” theory for federal farm programs, and must demand , ( government action to protect U.S. 1 farm exports to the European ' Common Market. For commodities which go to both domestic and foreign mar- j kets, the “domestic parity” idea ! involves relatively high prices for ( domestic sales and lower world- , market levels on export sales. ' Newsom maintained that rela- . tively high domestic prices are necessary to keep the farm econ- : omy in step wMAmerican wage I 1 levels. “To assume that prices and wages in America must be ' brought down, either in agricul- i ture or out of agriculture, toward levels that world commerce would determine would be rank error,” i I he said in his prepared address. ! Grange policy, he said, was aimed at matching the economic devices < which keep U.S. industrial prices ! above world levels. Newsom added, however, that it would be “rank isolationism” to maintain a once-price structure for farm commodities because of the food needs of the people of underdeveloped nations. Turning to international trade problems, Newsom told the Grange meeting that “our collective well-being requires a freer trade movement among the free nations of the world.” Foreign markets for American agriculture are an “economic ne-| cessity,” he said, especially in the European Common Market. The farm leader said in any future negotiations with the Common-Mar-ket, the government must insist that expanded sales of U.S. farm products be considered. Newsom made no specific proposals for new farm legislation. He said the Grange has always been ready to compromise on methods or mechanics of farm bills without dropping its basic principles. This year, the Grange offered general support to most of the Administration’s farm pro-1
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
I posals. The 1962 farm bill adopted by Congress included a wheat program based in part on the Grange domestic parity idea. Suggest Filed Date For Easter VATICAN CITY (UPD — Ecumenical Council fathers today suggested negotiations with nonCatholic Christian churches to agree on a fixed date for Easter each year. It was the first time during the historic conclave that a responsible Catholic voice had mentioned such negotiations on a religious matter of joint interest. The suggestion was made during the current debate on liturgy —the form of public worship, including the mass. A communique from the council’s press office did not say how many speakers made the suggestion or who they were. Both Catholics and Protestants now observe Easter on the first Sunday after the first full moqn of spring. This date varies from I year to year between March 22 | and April 25. Eastern Orthodox churches celebrate Easter on different dates, following the rule that it must j follow the Jewish Passover. In addition, some follow obsolete calendars and the result is that i the dates o f Easter in those I churches do not coincide either I among themselves or with the Western churches.Meanwhile, council officials announced that the second session of the Catholic church’s conclave ; would start next May 12 and end i on June 29. The present session opened Oct. =ll and is scheduled to close on Dec. 8. A third session is tentatively scheduled for next fall,- and further sessions may be scheduled if necessary. In the interval between the first 1 and second sessions, the council’s ; 10 commissions will continue work, the announcement by Secretary General Msgr. Pericle Felici said. Medicine Stains To remove" medicine stains on sheets or linens, apply a paste of fuller’s earth and ammonia to the spots. Leave on until dry, then wash the stains out of the material with cold water. After the cold water treatment, wash in the reg- | ular manner.
$1 Million In Pearls Stolen At Hotel Room FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPD — Every available man on the 65-of-ficer Fort Worth police detective bureau searched today for clues to the identity of a mysterious burglar who jimmied a hotel door lock and walked away with 70 pounds of pearls valued at $1 million. Chief of Detectives Andy Fournier said an all-points bulletin is out for the thief who entered the room of a Japanese pearl exporter Saturday nght through a valet door. Fournier said Cecil Sanders, a hotel doorman, reported seeing a man leaving about midnight with a bag similar to that containing the pearls. The pearls taken included a golden yellow pearl, one of the largest and rarest of its kind. It was valued at SIO,OOO. Hikoji Sakata of Tckyo said he left the pearls in his room at the Hotel Texas for about three hours Saturday night. Sakata, who exhibited the collection at a Montgomery Ward department store Saturday, said he had planned to return to his ninth-floor room after a brief coffee break. But, Sakata said, he met an employe of the Montgomery Ward gem department, and made a tour of several night spots with the man and his wife. Fournier said his department had not even heard of the pearl collector until the theft was announced. He theorized the thief might be someone who had followed Sakata throughout the country, waiting for his chance. Sakta, a partner with his four brothers in the Sakata Pearl Co. Limited of Tokyo, said the collection included 57,000 pearls. There were 759 strands of pearls in all, he said, and 200 jewelry pieces featuring pearl settings. Fournier said Sakata told him he had put the pearls in the hotel safe on Tuesday night but had had them either on exhibit or in his room since that time. Sa'kata changed rooms each night he had the pearls with him, Fournier said. Educators Invited To Seminar Nov. 19 Teachers and school administrators from Adams county have been invited to an Indiana University seminar on “The Law and the Teacher” at 7:30 p. m. Monday, Nov. 19, at Lakeside junior high school, Fort Wayne. The program by four school of education faculty members is the regular fall area meeting of the I. U. school of education alumni association. Conducting the program will be Lorin Burt, K. Forbis Jordan and Robert J. Garvue, all assistant professors of education, and Maurice E. Stapley, director of the division of administration, field service and educational placement and professor of education.
J s ' ' Az '' ' 4 t WwttP fc- - • . • • ' M * '' t WU j "fife. X# . ifcx , WBkwOMMSyE ./ ” i » W«- ’4mi A “CLOTHESLINE” REACHING ’ROUND THE WORLD is the aim of the annual Catholic Bishops’ Thanksgiving Clothing Collection. Pictured is a portion of this global line of charity. Atop a barren plateau in Ecuador, needy boys are proudly holding up shirts just received from Catholic Relief Services. These shirts were part of a clothing shipment sent to Ecuador' this year and valued at over half a million dollars. Your contribution of wearable used clothing, shoes, blankets, etc. to the 1962 collection, November 18 to 25th, will help keep this line taut and full and stretch it to the farthermost corners of the world.
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Veterans Day Is Observed Sunday WASHINGTON (UPD- Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns Sunday to mark Veterans Day observances throughout the nation, represented President Kennedy in a ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery. The secretary, in a brief address, said that the nation must be prepared to risk thermonuclear war to preserve freedom. Outlining the lessons of past conflicts, McNamara said they were the ingredients "which we have tried to apply over the past few weeks” during the Cuban crisis. “We know that a nuclear holocaust would be a disaster of unimaginable proportions, but we know also that unless we are prepared to place everything at risk, we cannot hope to save anything from disaster,” he said. In cities and towns across the land, a minute of silence was observed at 11 a m. in memory of the men who died defending freedom in past wars — and in the cold war. Parades, cemetery ceremonies and. other observances were held l in all parts of the nation—as well as overseas by Americans and their Allies who fought side by side in the cause of liberty. In Paris Americans joined in an an- ' nual ceremony at whch President Charles de Gaulle placed a wreath at the tomb of France’s unknown soldier. President Kennedy spent the day at the first family’s northern Virginia retreat. In a Veterans Day message, he expressed hope that “there will be no veterans of any future war—not because all have perished 1 , but because all shall have learned to live in peace.” Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower issued a statement saying all Americans should “review in our hearts the determination to use all our energy, patience and understanding in the search for peace with justice.” Severin Schurger On I. U .Debate Team Severin Schurger of Decatur is ■ among 28 Indiana University students chosen for the vanity and novice debate teams which began the 1962-63 season this month. The debate teams are supervised by the department of speech and theater. The make-up of the various units changes from tourament to tournament. Schurger is a member of the novice team. Three Men Are Killed In Air Force Crash: ' MACDILL AFB, Fla. (UPI) — A six-jet Air Force R 847 reconnaissance plane crashed and exploded on takeoff here Sunday, killing the pilot and two crewmembers. Dead were Capt. W. 43. Hyatt, 32, Lyons, Kan., the aircraft commander; pilot W. C. Maxwell, 27, Hialeah, Fla., and navigator Ronald M. Rial, a 29-year-old first lieutenant from Tulsa, Okla.
-THE HOG j 8 .{Million Hwd) A Hr 100 Lk.- 22 A 7 • ~ U I • fc' SLAUGHTER 8 tmthtitl uiSmu tt inlum.uilllttlltLtiihM.lJ 1951, 1959 1960 1961 1962 PORK CHOP, HAM OUTLOOK—For two years hog production i»as held relatively steady. Prices have crept slowly upward and now are near their peak for 1962. Newschart shows how prices react to increases or decreases in production. Forecast is that pork and its related hog will cost about the same during 1963 as they did this year.
Hiss’ Appearance On TV Protested
NEW YORK (UPD—The American Broadcasting Co. received hundreds of protests Sunday night for allowing Alger Hiss to give his views on Richard M. Nixon to a nationwide television audience. Hiss, the former State Department official convicted of perjury in 1950 after a relentless congressional investigation led bj Nixon, appeared on a half-hour filmed show called the "Political Obituary of Richard Nixon.” ABC was deluged with telephone calls and telegrams, most of them against the network for interviewing Hiss on his feelings toward the former vice president. Hiss said he believed hs prosecuton by Nixon, then a congressman from California, was politically motivated. “I think that he was politically carried along,” Hiss declared. “Whether the initial motivation was political, I certainly don’t think that he was unaware of the political boost, the political soaring up into outer space that the hearings and subsequent trial provided for him.” Aslo appearing on the program were Jerry Voorhls, five-term congressman from California whom Nixon defeated in 1946, Los Angeles attorney Murray Chotiner, who managed Nixon’s first campaign; and Rep. Gerald Ford, R-Mich., a longtime friend of Nixon. ABC Vice President in Charge of News James C. Hagerty said most of the protests came from
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California and the New York City area. He personally handled a number of calls and said he told those objecting: "Won t you please do me the favor of reserving your criticism until after you’ve seen the program?” Hagerty said the network at no time considered cancelling the program. “The American people owe a great deal to Dick Nixon for his dedication to finding out all of the possible facts that ...the committee could find out about the Alger Hiss case and its ramifications,” Ford said after Hiss spoke. Walter H. Annenberg, president of Triangle Publications, Inc., ordered his organization’s two ABC affiliates in New Haven, Conn., and Philadelphia not to carry the program. He said he did not feel a convicted man should “comment about a distinguished American.” About a half dozen pickets paraded Sunday in front of ABC’s Los Angeles outlet. A spokesman said, “The switchboard has been going rather well, both pro and con. I have no idea how many calls.” The show was aired on Hiss’ 58th birthday. Hiss, now a New York salesman, was convicted and jailed on perjury charges in connection with his association with the late Whittaker Chambers, who at one time was a Soviet spy courier. Hiss has said since the charges were first lodged, that he is innocent.
