Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 139, Decatur, Adams County, 13 June 1963 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Hi-Way Trailer Court News Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Cole of Greenville. Ohio, called on Mrs. i Agnes Wright. 6 Krick St., Thuns- I day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eversole, 62 Bella Casa, spent Saturday mornTHIS WEEK CLASSICAL LPs 99c with purchase of one at regular price 138 N, 2nd Decatur, Ind.
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ing with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Eversole, in Middle Point, Ohio: "George Bair i’.II and Mike Bair or Fort Wavne. sftent Saturday and Sunday with tbeir grandparents Dr. and Mrs. Harold V. DeVor. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bell, Jr., and family, 59 Bella Casa, spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Beil, Sr., in South Milford and With Mrs. Vera Petrie ix» Avilla. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Willis and family are the new residents at 41 Star Lane. Rev. James R. Meadows. 24 Krick St., observed his 80th birthday Wednesday, June J 2, and received greetings from itiany of his friends. Charles Wallace, who spent Sunday and Monday with has graphparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Wallace, 58 Star Lane, returned Tuesday to Muncie, where he begins the summer semester at the Ball State Teachers College, which _ began Wednesday/ Mrs. Arthur Eversole, 62 Bella
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Casa, spent Saturday afternoon With her parents, Mr. and Mrs. August Friemoth, in Delphos, Ohio. Rev. and Mrs. Fred W. Battenberg and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wm. Browning, of Fort Wayne, were Thursday evening callers on Rev. and Mrs. James R:' Krick St. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Davis of Jacksonville, Fla., were Monday guests of Mr. and Mrs. ' Vernon Wallace, 58 Star Lane. Olga (Lucyi Jones, -daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold« Earl Jones, 57 Vindale Trail, observed her 12th birthday June 9, while visiting in Berkley, W, Va. Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs. Eversole were at Mr. and Mrs. Gary Staup’s in Delphos, Ohio. Mrs. Agnes Wright had as her guests for dinner Monday, Mr. and Mrs. George Smith of Columbus, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kelly, 114 Porter Vista, Decatur. Mr, and Mrs. Howard Earl Jones and family, 57 Vindale Trail, and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Schaffer
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
and daughter of Monroe, motored to Detroit, Mich., early Sunday morning where the visited Jones’ brother and famijy, Who joined them in a sight seeing tour into Canada, going over the bridge and returning through the tunnel underneath the Detroit river, arriving back home late Sunday night. Arthur C. Meyers, 4 Skyline! Drive, returned recently from a trip to Portland, Ore., via. jet airline. • . We welcome a new resident to the court, a 7 pound, 10 ounce daughter, born Monday to Mr. and Mrs, Stanley Allison, 44 Vindale Trail. The June monthly meeting of the Welcome Wagon was held Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the mobile home of Mrs. Donna Wilson, 74 West St. Ext. Those present from the court were: Mrs. Sarah Stearley, 48 Vindale Trail; Mrs. Judy Reynolds, 75 West St. Ext.; Mrs. • Beverly Kruckeberg, 72 West St. i Ext., and the hostesses, Mrs. Donna Wilson and Mrs. Billie Jo Moulton. Refreshments were served. A business session was held and plans made for a picnic to be held on July 9 at Hanna-Nuttman park. Several enjoyed a swim at the pool here, where they were joined by Mrs. Vivian DeVor.
Boss Os Moon Flight Project Quits Position WASHINGTON <UPI) — The boss of America’s S2O billion Apollo project to land two men on the i moon before 1970 is quitting his job. He told United Press InternaI tional he believed the Apollo program was firmly enough established that it could be carried out on schedule, the country and Congress willing. But D. Brainerd Holmes, 42, who on Nov. 1, 1961, . became director of the Office of Manned : Space Flight in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration I i NASA I, wants out of the project. The frustrations, poor pay, politics, and budgetary haggling which are a part of government service have proved to be more than he can stomach. Will Help In Transition He will stick around as long as NASA needs him to help make the transition between the now liquidated Mercury program of one-man space flights and the forthcoming two-man Geinini project. In the meantime, for “personal, financial, and family reasons,” he will be looking for a job in private industry that will pay him more than the $21,000-a-year he draws from NASA. Before he went to NASA he was drawing more than $50,000. 1 Holmes denies it, but some of his friends figure he is leaving the government in a mood bordering on disgust, NASA said there had been an understanding when he took on the manned flight job that his “obligation for government service” would end in two years. Limit Unannounced That was news. NASA had said nothing about the two-year limit when Holmes went to work. However, in a private letter to NASA Administrator James E. Webb, Holmes had said he would take stock after a couple of years and see whether he wanted to stay on the Apollo job. Last year he openly disagreed with Webb when the NASA administrator decided not to ask Congress for a S4OO million supplemental appropriation Holmes felt was vital to the manned flight program. This year it developed that Congress plans -to cut perhaps that much out of the NASA budget for the 12 months starting July 1. : 1 IT you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
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Truck Runs Wild, One Girl Killed DULUTH, Minn. (UPD — Max Hites, 18, maneuvered his loaded grain truck down the steep Piedmont Street hill Wednesday toward a busy intersection two blocks below, and discovered he had no brakes. The ’truck gained speed and bore down on unsuspecting motorists at the bottom of the grade. Two police officers in a squad car winced and followed the runaway truck. Hites attempted to turn a corner at the bottom of the hill, but smacked into a car, sending it through the air to land on its top. Afro-Asian Group Threatens Delay UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPD —The powerful Afro-Asian group today threatened a long delay in the drive to end the U.N. financial crisis. Informed sources said the 56nation group, which controls a majority in the 111-nation General Assembly, wants to reopen negotiations with other powers on a financial formula for peace-keeping operations. The Afro-Asian aim runs counter to the stand taken by the Western powers, and the sources said it may be the end of the month before any solution is reached. The current special assembly session on the financial crisis already is in its fifth week, longer than originally anticipated. The session was called to devise ways to recoup a SIOO million deficit meet future peace-keeping costs. Informed sources said the AfroAsian group wanted to reassemble the negotiating teams of five rich and five poor countries that worked out a series of resolutions designed to end the money emergency. The group also seeks to add two additional members from Asia and Africa. The group appeared intent upon seeking a provision that would have an “aggressor” country bear the burden of expenses for a U. N. operation necessitated by the country’s actions. Under the provision, the victim of aggression would be spared the financial load. Automobile Window Is Reported Broken Jay Sharp, a' resident of 1134 Madison St., reported to the city police at 7 a.m. today, that between 11:30 p.m. Wednesday and 6 a.m. today, the window on the left door of his 1950 model car was broken. « The damage was done to the car while it was parked in front of Sharp’s home. The city police are investigating the vandalism.
■> ■ ‘ ■■ When the chain reaction was complete, a 6-year-old girl fras dead, 16 persons were injured, seven cars were damaged, and the truck had crashed through a house before ending up against a brick building. The dead girl was Ann Vomastek, Aurora, Minn. She had been riding with her mother and two brothers, who were treated and released after receiving minor minor cuts and bruises. Hites was in serious condition, Laurin McChesney, 42, Cornell, Wis., also was in serious condition, having been placed under “intensive care.” Three other persons remained hospitalized with lesser injuries. The others were treated for cuts and bruises and released. The officers following the truck down the grade said the scene was “fantastic.” Cars flipped around, hitting other cars, and finally the truck ripped into an old, frame, twostory house, coming to a stop against the wall of the building next door. In the intersection, a car motor lay 50 feet from the body. Another car was pushed together like an accordian. An hour after the accident a fire department rescue squad freed Me Chesney from his flattened car. Another car also was squashed to the pavement
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THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1963
Fire Protection Agreement Signed , City officials of Berne and the trustees of the sjx southern townships have reached a fire protection agreement for the southern half of the county. According to the terms of the contract which the officials signed, each township will pay to Berne a certain amount for fire protection in the rural areas. Trucks and equipment will then be maintained by Berne.
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