Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 30, Decatur, Adams County, 5 February 1963 — Page 8

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A- • . i ■*< xifc&wfi•.■■■a.'.'. • , hl«*' • m" Sw-iw S** i. .< NAVY MAKES MISSILE HISTORY—Guided missile cruiser USS Albany simultaneously fires three surface-to-air missiles off the Virginia Capes. Two Talos and one Tartar test missiles were fired in the first such launching by any navy in the world.

Preble Driver Hurt In Ohio Accident Billy Dean Tumbleson, 24, of Preble, escaped serious injuries about 3:30 a. m. in a one-car accident on U. S. route 224 about two miles west of Van Wert, O. Tumbleson, whose car landed in Maddox creek, sustained cuts and bruises on his body. He was treated at the Van Wert county hospital and released. Ohio patrolmen said that Tumbleson was driving west in a 1959 Ford coach when he lost control on a curve. The car veered off the south side of the highway, struck a mail box belonging to Gerald Wyandt after hitting a guard rail, mashed down a farm fence belonging to Mrs. Walter Thompson and finally wound up in the creek. From where the car left the pavement to where it stopped, the distance was 993 feet. In traveling over a plowed field, the car was 420 feet off the highway. The hood, front section and left side of the automobile were; smashed. Tumbleson was cited for driving too fast for road, weather and traffic conditions.

Jii T* . . WIN « s IM PLAY STANDARD’S "INSTANT BUCKS" SPECIAL PRICE GOOD I WEDNESDAY ONLY I LARGE ERESH I IPAIARM I EGQS I riHfe. I ■B I GRADE P*W» Os M& I I “A” MMLwbMHI I I dol I Special Price Good Wed., Feb. 6th Only-Quantity Rights Reserved. ' . . ■ ««/,—

Message At Glance WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Kennedy’s mental health message at a glance: WHAT HE WANTS Provide hundreds of millions of dollars to the states for research : into mental health and build hun- : dreds of comprehensive community mental health centers. THE PRESENT SITUATION Kennedy said taxpayers now pay about $2.4 billion yearly for mental health projects, but “state institutions are badly underfinanced, understaffed and overcrowded.” Many are fire and health hazards, and the standard of care is usually “grossly deficient. ..” WHAT HIS PLAN WOULD DO Try to “seek out the causes of mental illness and of mental retardation and eradicate them” ant. "strengthen and improve the programs and facilities serving the mentally ill and the mentally retarded." Foot Care The feet become thin or fat as their owner expands or contracts. If our shoes are feeling unusually tight, the best reducing treatment is a foot bath in epsom salts. The formula is: Four tablespoonfuls of, the salt, two quarts of water, I Soak your tootsies in this for I about 30 minutes. 1

.. . .. ..... ..... - WEM' - ? WMWfe* wlil * VI i.~. BROADWAY IMPORT—Hollywood’s powerful magnet has drawn handsome Robert Goulet into its movie complex, and, even before screen tests, talent scouts tagged him a comer. Goulet’s good looks, his great singihg voice and stellar performances in Broadway’s “Camelot” made him a natural for film offers.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

Governor And Wife Host Legislators By HORTENSE MYERS United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Indiana’s Frist Lady was a lone lady when it came to being hostess Monday night for the first of two biennial receptions for members of the Legislature. Governor Welsh, who is chairman of a 14-state Interstate Oil Compact Commission, had to preside at a meeting in Oklahoma City and did not return until the first reception for state senators was nearly over. However, his wife, Virginia, advised the senators of her husband’s delay in return, and many of them arrived late and stayed beyond the scheduled end of the event to see him. Kiser, Christy in Line Tonight's reception is in honor of members of the House of Representatives and will find both "the governor and his First Lady in the reception line, along with Reps. Robert L. Rock. House minority floor leader, and Charles W. Kirk, Jr., minority caucus leader, and Mrs. Rock and Mrs. Kirk. *#” The governor-less reception line Monday night included in addition to Mrs. Welsh, Sens. Marshall’F. Kizer, minority floor leader, and William Christ v, minority caucus chairman, and Mrs. Kizer and Mrs. Christy Thd bienr.'al reception for the legislators was the first major social event 'of Mrs. Welsh’s FirstLady life two years ago. “This will not be so chaotic,” Mrs. Welsh commented. "Two years ago, we had just come back from the Kennedy inaugural and we scarcely had unpacked, so the confusion created some problems.” The menu for both nights was to be the same — hot hors’ d’oeuvres, French pastries, coffee and tea. The non-alcoholic menu featured chicken livers wrapped in bacon which Mrs. Welsh said “is an hors’ d’oeuvre which seems to be popular with the men—and I like it, too.” Silver Displayed Nine other of the snack - type finger foods were on the menu, including shrimp and cheese puffs. Centerpiece for the main dining room table was a flower-filled silver trumpet given td the Welshes as a 25th wedding anniversary gift

Fifth Union Is On Strike In Cleveland By WESLEY G. PIPPERT United Press International A fifth union was on strike against Cleveland’s long - idled newspapers today and railway clerks pessimistically agreed to another peace effort by federal mediators in their year-old dispute with the Southern Pacific Railway. Mayor Robert F. Wagner called for joint negotiations between New York publishers and striking printers and the strike - bound Florida East Coast Railway attempted to resume limited freight service with supervisory personnel. Philadelphia, just over a transit strike, faced a threatened transportation strike in its suburbs. The Virginia Transit Co. said it would seek fare increases in Richmond and Norfolk to meet a wage increase approved Monday. Across the nation by industry: Railroads: Chairman James Weather of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks’ Southern Pacific unit agreed to meet with federal mediators Wednesday but said the meeting “won’t amount to much.” The 11,000-member brotherhood threatened strikes in January, 1962, and again in August, but both times the government mediation efforts forestalled a tieup. A strike would idle 5,000 Southern Pacific employes and shut down operations from Oregon to Texas. The dispute arose over automation and job displacement. The 11 off-train brotherhoods by Vincennes friends. Some of the silver given to Indiana from the S.S. Indiana before it was deactivated also was on display at the reception. Mrs. Welsh has twice visited the Legislature since it opened and hopes to make another visit this week. “But I have a coffee and a tea this week at the mansion in addition to the legislative receptions, so I’m not sure I can find time,” she said. “But I am tremendously interested in the legislative process.”

IB QADDE S» L UfIUIIL iiM. mimtMiiß VB price of a LeSabre by \l7>/ll I 111 n Buick—why not own one? ? h^s ttn g 5 X n C S, d \ l/f/11 I II "r i^,^ c ;' n fur g^ dc T # u \ W* /AT ■ I I I I Drive ' ♦ Substantial Buick rida \ /'NUy * ■ Pk ■ ■ ■■ "‘‘., L ,*tT; - .y; ♦ front and rear floor "moun\<W M I ■ I I ■#K M»<n \'K ■ l/l I I I I ***** ,I><l |iWiwl'**' ltl "" ri ** *** 'oplerui a Üba caM nSUTTTTTUT BeEm ■ M K IM I 1/ M 11 p S p I Isl I 111 11 I If fl I I stretch tire life e Hnned alumi11 A 1 A 111 11 A M A 11 A num front brakes—linings last > kJIL » a, «r- ■■■■ I ■ ■■■■ e°^"’.rtn g B^ C t k s S up h i 8 e h ep Mi BRINBI sWB W BNi < Long-life aluminized muffler. k - _l -—’- Buick resale RECOBD NUMBERS SHARING BUICK SUCCESS! value flying high YOUR CAR IS WORTH MORE NOW IN TRADE THAN IT EVER WILL BE AGAIN. f j I day than did a comjSrable° ’958 DON'T DELAY! BE MONEY AHEAD! TRADE NOW! quality Mays ’Saaua: N*M WM Ma. Hw. Ml I* 1 AM ****.**•** W full-sin LtSabre models: Wagons, CoewftiNe, 2- and 4-door Hardtops and Sedans :■■• g jgi M W ■>_ Edg* f. ZA <■■'A Extra values in Double used cars, too! See your authorized quality Buick Dealer today F--—

RENO FLOOD—Workers stack sandbags around buildings as floodwaters of the Truckee River swirl through a 30-square-block area of downtown Reno, Nev.

continued to picket the Florida East Coast Railway. The unions have been striking the railway 12 days with demands for a 10.28 cent wage increase. The railway claims its business was hurt by the Cuban crisis. Newspapers: Wagner, after separate meetings Monday with the two sides in the New York newspaper dispute said the joint talks would consider "collateral issues that need clarification.” He did not identify the issues. In Cleveland, the machinists joined picket lines Monday against the Press and Plain Dealer, struck since Thanksgiving. Negotiating sessions were 'held with the pressmen, who are not on strike, and the striking printers. Transportation: The Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen and the Transport Workers Union continued work under an indefinite extension of a contract which expired Friday with the Philadelphia Suburban Transportation Co. The company, which operates the Red Arrow Lines in three counties, offered 15 cent pay increase. The trainmen’s chief negotiator said he hoped the firm would put “some more pennies on the tqble.” Trade in a good town — Decatur

Socialite Artist Air Crash Victim OCALA, Fla. (UPI) — Authorities said Monday a faulty altimeter may have caused the crash of a private plane in which a socialite artist, Mrs. Patricia Widener, and her personal pilot were killed. There was speculation the device, which measures altitude, possibly misled pilot Robert G. Staab, 40, into flying closer to the ground than realized. The twin-engine Aero Commander crashed about 15 miles southeast of here during a rainstorm Sunday night. It appeared to have snagged a high tree sticking out of dense scrub underbrush and slammed into the ground only eight miles from the airport where it was to land. The bodies of Mrs. Widener, 35, some of whose paintings are in the collection of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, and Staab were found late Monday afternoon. Both had been thrown clear of the plane, which apparently burned after it crashed. Mrs. Widener’s husband, millionaire sportsman and politician Peter A. B. Widener 111, learned at his 500-acre Live Oak plantation near here that his wife had

Tuesday, February, s, 1963

been found dead. Earlier, he had taken part in a big air-land search. Rush County G.O.P Chairman Dies Monday RUSHVILLE, Ind. (UPI) —Richard Phillips, 53, Rush County Republican chairman, died Monday at his home following a two-year illness. Phillips, director of the State Employment Security Division in the administration of former Gov. Harold W. Handley, bad been Rush County chairman nine years. Roanoke Man Dies As Home Destroyed ROANOKE, Ind. (UPI) — The body of Carl Ranschen, 84, R. R. 2, Roanoke, was found in the ruins of his home Monday hours after it burned. Firemen believed the house was empty until a search of the debris 10 hours after the fire led to discovery of Ranschen’s body. Tighter Handle A loose push-broom handle can be repaired by wrapping the worn threads with some heavy cord before reinsterting it into the broom head.