Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 157, Decatur, Adams County, 5 July 1963 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Accident Victims Taken To Parkview Two Jamesville. N. Y.. residents, injured* in a one-car accident in Adams county . Wednesday have' beeh transferred to the Parkview hositpal in Fort Wayne. . / £ ' il; uP Norman David Henderson, one and one-half years of afee. is listed in fair condition at - the Fort Wayne hospital, after undergoing surgery. The boy was reported to have suffered a fractured skull. ’ Patricia Ann Henderson, eleven and one-half years of age, is also in the Parkviw hospital in good
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condition. The young girl is believed to have suffered fractured ribs in the-accident. ? ■/ The two youngsters were riding in an automobile with their mother, Mrs. Theresa E. Henderson. when the auto went out bf control on U. S. 27, a mile and a half north of Decatur at 1 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Mrs./Henderson lost control of the ayito and it crossed the road and an embankment, flipping over at least twice. The mother received multiple bruises and/ was released from the hospital after trdatnient. If you haire something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — thiy get BIG results. C 5
Kennedy Relaxing Al Hyannis Pori HYANNIS PORT, Mass. ,(UPI) —President Kennedy settled into the easy pace of a holiday weekend today and planned on a cruise aboard his> yacht for the first timp in several months if the good weather which greeted his arrival here held upThe President. landed at Otis Air Force Base, Mass., ,shortly after ,s.p.ni. EDT Thursday. K< -inedy . was suj-rdunded by relatives except fpr t hree. H.is brotiier, Atty! Gjeh. Robert Kennedy and Ethel, were in Boston where/'their eighth child
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
was born late Thursday. The' baby and mother were reported; in excellent condition and Robert Kennedy, who had been very nervous prior to the boy’s birth, was in good humor when he later talked with newsmen. The President's sister-in-law, Joan, who is the wife of Sen. Edward (Ted) Kennedy, D-Msrss., was in a Hyannis hospital where she underwent surgicdl treatment of a throat abscess. The blessed event was big and happy news for the President, for the many Kennedp uncles, aunts and cousins assembled at the family's usual summer locale for the weekend. Kennedy’s wife Jacqueline, is expecting their third child late next month. The First Lady arrived here Tuesday and was wait-!
ing with five-year-old Caroline and two-year-old John Jr. to embrace the Chief Executive when his helicopter fro 'mOtis AFB arrived at the Kennedy “compound” homes here. •The President’s 92-foot White House yahct Honey’ Fitz was available here for Kennedy’s use after having undergone a recent overhaul. He last had an opportunity to cruise aboard the vessel in the spring at Palm Beach, Fla. Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said he expected no major developments from the weekend White House and indicated that the President planned on a relaxed weekend before flying back to Washington Monday morning. Kennedy arrived back at the Capital early Wednesday morning from a strenuous ten-day visit to Europe-
Draft-Goldwater Move Taking Off
By LYLE C. WILSON United Press International The draft-Goldwater movement has taken off, and the stop-Gold-water movement is revving up to fly. Thursday night at the National Guard Armory in Washington, D. D., took place the National Draft Goldwater Independence Day Rally (NDGIDR). This was a flamboyant notice to Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., that the nucleus of a political organization Relations Os Russia And Red China Strained MOSCOW (UPD— The Chinese delegates to the Sino-Soviet ideological talks arrived here today in an atmosphere charged with hostility by a last - minute exchange of bitter charges. The Chinese negotiating team flew in by special plane from Peking. The visitors were met by Soviet delegation leader Mikhail Suslov, senior Kremlin ideologist. Relations between the two Communist giants were strained to the breaking point just hours before the opening session of the showdown talks that will determine the course of international communism. Red China announced a bitter new protest against the Soviet Union earlier in the day, and the Russians printed a front-page editorial in the Communist party newspaper declaring they would not back down in the discussions. ■ The n egotiations were called originally to restore peace to the Communist world, but the flurry of last-minute vitriolic charges and counter-charges between Moscow and Peking cast strong doubt that any progress would be made. Western observers felt there was a possibility of an historic split of the Communist camp. The Chinese Red delegation got a chilly reception. Soviet and Eastern European newsmen apparently boycotted coverage of the arrival. Not . a single ; Russian or Eastern European newsman could be seen at the airport. Neither Moscow Radio nor the official Tass news .agency reported their arrival immediately. Robert Kennedy! Have Sih Child BOSTON (UPD — Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, wife of Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, and their eighth child, a 6-pound 14-ounce . boy, were in “good" condition today at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. The child, the couple’s fifth son, was delivered at 6 : 48 p.m. Thursday by Caesarean" section by Dr. Roy J. Heffernan. The “baby was about " a week, ahead ~of schedule and was born 88 minutes after a frantic helicopter flight from Cape Cod. The newest arrival is President Kennedy’s 13th nephew. He also has six nieces. It was not known immediately whether the President, who arrived at his summer home on Squaw Island Thursday only a few minutes after Ethel had left,, would visit the hospital. . The attorney general, who showed the red-eyed and weary signs of most expectant fathers, jokingly announced to newsmen, "They tell me he was the best looking child ever born at St. Elizabeth’s.’* Among the first he called was his .father, former Ambassador Joseph >P. Kennedy, at the Kennedy i compound kt Hyannis Port. "I told m y father he looked just like him. “He’s got a strong face, just like his grandfather—a lot of character He’s a very good looking baby. And, oh, he’s got black hair,” Kennedy said. ™ No name or godparents have been chose, he said. Kennedy said his 35-year.old wife was “feeling fine. She’s very pleased that it’s a boy. The rest of the children wanted a boy.” Holiday births are nd new experience for Ethel. Her oldest daughter. Kathleen. 11, also was born on the Fourth of July and Mary Kerry, 3, was delivered on Labor Day. Their other children are Joseph 10, Robert 9, David 7, Mary Courtney 6 and Michael 4. Heffernan said that Mrs. Kennedy was conscious throughout the delivery. '’She was given a spinal anesthetic,” he said, adding that Mrs. Kennedy apparently had been in labor since shortly before noon Thdrsday. — New York Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAY PRICES Central Soya, 28%; DuPont, 246%; Ford, 53%; - General Electric. 80%; General Motors, 70%: Gulf Oil, 46%; Standard Oil Ind.. 60;‘'Standard Oil N. J. 69%; US. Steel, z -J.• I
is developing to obtain his nomination for president. The stop - Goldwater movement is less evident. It is in the works, however. It is a rule of politics, that wjien one individual becomes a front runner, all others gang up on him Another well known fact of politics is that you cannot beat somebody with nobody. That is to say, if you want to withhold the convention delegation of Pennsylvania, for example, from Aspirant (A), then you should offer some other individual to whom the delegation may be committed, if only for a short time. Thus it was that Pennsylvania’s Gov. William W. Scranton said last month that he may be his state’s favorite son candidate for the 1964 Republican presidential nomination. A favorite.son gives, convention delegates a temporary place to roost and a strong point from which to bargain before committing themselves to a major candidate for the presidential nomination. Four Possibilities Scranton cannot be brushed off, however, as a minor candidate. Republican National Chairman William E. Miller recently listed Scranton, Goldwater, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York and Michigan’s Gov. George Romney as the four men among whom his party will find its 1964 presidential nominee. It follows that Romney and Rockefeller- ■ will be pressured openly to join thg. stop-Goldwater movement. Rockefeller already is in and running on his own account, although not publicly committed. Romney is coy but is likely, at the least, to be Michigan’s favorite son candidate next year. The stoppers will need others. They will look among states with Republican governors or U.S. senators, but not among all of those states. Recently from Denver it was reported that Colorado Republicans were organizing a western bloc of convention delegates around the favorite son candidacy of Sen. Gordon L. Allott R-Colo. This was interpreted as a maneuver to consolidate Goldwater’s Mountain States strength. The ..stoppers, in turn, undoubtedly will seek to enlist California. The governor there is a Democrat, but one senator . Thomas ’H. Kuchel, is a Republican. Kuchel probably would feel at home in a stop-Goldwater operation. Gains In Polls Polls indicate that Rockefeller’s remarriage to a divorced woman flipped Goldwater ahead There have been various polls in recent weeks, all of them reflecting an upsurge of Goldwater strength. Sentiment at recent Republican gatherings seemed to concede Goldwater’s, steadily increasing prestige. The Republican National Committee met recently in Denver. Some headlines over the Denver story: Washington, D.C. Post:’ GOP strategists see Goldwater far ahead. New York Times: Goldwater stock rising among GOP leaders. Scripps - Howard Washington < D.C. > News: Goldwater holds lead over Rocky. The equally well-edited National Observer thereafter canvassed the Goldwater situation and« reported: Goldwater boom rocks the rqnks but pros are cautious. Goldwater him Self wants to know more about the boom and draft in his behalf before committing himself to run. Mrs. Ted Kennedy Undergoes Surgery HYANNIS, Mass. (UPD—Mrs. Joan Kennedy, wife of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy] D-Mass., had a sore throat today, but otherwise was in good condition following surgery for an abscess. S?|ie was reported “resting comfortably” at Cape Cod Hospital, though suffering f rom a sore throat, the after-effect of the surgery. The 30-minute operation on her throat was performed Thursday by Dr. Frank Lathrop, chief of the eye, ear, nose and throat section of Boston’s famed Lahey Clinic, assisted by Dr. Robert C. Watt of Hyannis. It was expected that the 26-year-old mother of two, who suffered a miscarriage May 16, would be confined to the hospital for about three days. Authorities said the surgery was for relief of >a paritonsilay abscess. They emphasized that the ailment was not connected with the miscarriage. Mrs. .Kennedy was admitted to the hospital Tuesday from her summer home tat Squaw Island, Hyannis Port. She was visited by her husband and his sister, Mrs. Eunice Shriver, before undergoing the operation. Mrs. Kennedy's illness forced cancellation of her husband’s extensive Fourth of July speaking schedule. A spokesman for the senator said Kennedy had to return to Washington next week but that he might delay Ms return if she were not out of the hospital by that time.
FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1963 (
12 Killed In Stale Traffic Over Holiday By United Press International A rash of accidents Thursday night and this morning killed at least five persons to push Indiana’s Fourth of July holiday traffic toll to 12 and threaten to exceed the prediction of 18 for the 102-hour period. Three persons were killed in separate accidents in Indianapolis and two more were killed near Fort Wayne and Columbia City, increasing the 1963 highway toll to 585 compared with 549 a year ago. Chris Fields, 58, Roanoke, was killed in a two-car wreck at a county road intersection west of Fort Wayne today. His wife, Bessie, 60, was seriously injured. ’ Authorities arrested Donald Frisby, 22, Fort Wayne, the second driver, on charges of failure to yield the right-of-way- . Two big trucks collided at the intersection of Indiana 9 and U.S. 30 north of Columbia City this morning, killing Leonard Lamparek, 36, Swisher, lowa. Police said his truck rammed the rear of another which had stopped for a traffic signal. Both drivers were pinned in their cabs. Lyle Boldon, 35, Hillsboro, Wis., was hospitalized in “good” condition. William J. Temple, 25, Indianapolis, died this morning of injuries sustained Thursday night when his car went off an embankment at the city’s sanitation plant. John Cahill, 71, Indianapolis, died in a hospital shortly after he was struck by a car driven by John Wood, 41, Danville, at a city street intersection. Mrs. Mildred Foster, 46, Indian- - apolis, was killed when she drove her car into the path of a New York Central Railroad passenger train at a city crossing—the same • crossing where Charles Woods, 55, Indianapolis, was critically injured in a similar accident Thursday. Authorities said flasher warning signals were working at the crossing. Safety experts predicted 18 traffic deaths in the Hoosier between 6 p.m. Wednesday and midnight Sunday. Two crashes, one near Seymour Wednesday night and another near Frankfort Thursday night, killed two persons each. Killed in a two-car crash at the intersection of two Clinton County roads southwest of Frankfort were Dennis Young, 17, and Mrs. Lee Moore, both of rural Frankfort. Mrs Moore’s husband, Melvin, 60, and the couple’s daughter, Jane, 17, were seriously injured.’ Fred Milbern Tibbs, 43, Fowler, was also killed Thursday night when his car was rammed by a New York Central Railroad train near his home. Earlier Thursday, Kenneth Ferris, 7, Westport, was killed when he fell from the back of a farm tractor "he was riding near Whitestown and was crushed beneath its wheels. Also killed Thursday was Charles McKinney, 30, Evansville. A car he was riding in hit -a bridge on U.S. 460 about 10 miles west of Evansville. The. driver, Robert Eli, 1 23, also of Evansville, was hospitalized in critical condition. The other double-fatality wreck Wednesday night occurred on Interstate 65 in Jackson County, killing Lowell Hall and Billy Elliot, both 26 and of Bloomington. The truck driver, Raymond Addington. 45, Elizabethtown, Ky., was injured—
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