Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 204, Decatur, Adams County, 29 August 1963 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Hi-Way Trailer Court News Mrs. George Willis and son David. 41 Star Lane, returned home Sunday from a week’s visit with her parents, Mr. and Herman Preston in Peoria, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eversole. 62 Bella Casa, spent the. weekend

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with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Eversole at Middle Point, Ohio. Mrs. Lucy Adams of Convoy, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. W. E. DeCamp and daughter Edna of Van Wert. Ohio, were guests of Rev. and Mrs. James R. Meadows 24 Krick St., Thursday afternoon of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gumm and daughter Lisa, 60 Bella Casa, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Max Milholland and daughter Cynthia in Ossian. Vernon Wallace, 38 Star Lane, has been confined to his home with illness for the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Durbin and family, 49 Vindale Trail, and Jane Smith and Dennis Rash attended the county fair at Celina, Ohio, recently. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bell, Sr., of South Milford, were weekend guests of their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bell, Jr., 59 Bella Casa. Mr. and Mrs. Thaniel Risinger of Hartford City, were Sunday guests of their sister-in-law, Mrs. Mary Risinger, 17 Krick St. -Dr. and Mrs. Harold V. DeVor returned Monday evening from a two- days’ camping trip at the Ely state park in Allegan, Mich. They made the trip in their travel trailer and accompaning them were Greg and Stacy Boroff of Knoxville, Tenn., and Dan Highlen, 42 Star Lane. While there they also visited his brother, Frank DeVor and family. Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Reinhart, 58 Bella Casa, were supper guests at a family gathering last Sunday at his brother's home, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reinhart in Bluffton. Miss Diana Reed and mother, Mrs. Donna Timmons of Kokoma, and Jim Dyer and Larry Davis spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Davis, Jr., 28 Star Lane. Jim

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Dyer has-just returned home from army service, being stationed at Fort Lee, Va, * Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stearly of LaPorte, were Sunday guests of their son, Darrell Stearley and family, 48 Vindale Trail. They brought home Lori and Mike, who had been with their grandparents for the past week, but Mike went back with them as he had hay fever. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Wallace 38 Star Lane, observed their 53rd wedding anniversary last Thursday. Among those present were their grandsons, Lewis Wallace and family of Wabash, and Charles Wallace of Muncie; also her sister, Mrs. Walter Johnson and husband of Silver Lake, arid a former neighbor, Larry Givine of. Fort Wayne. Charles Wallace is on the teaching staff at the Ball State Teachers College for the coming semester. Rev. and Mrs. F. W. Battenberg, pastor of Faith in God chapel in Fort Wayne, arid Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wm. Browning, leader of the Victory Prayer Band, were callers at the home of Rev. and Mrs. James R. Meadows, 24 Krick St., Monday evening. Mrs. Billie Jo Moulton, 73 West St. Ext., has been added to the staff of teachers at the Celina, 0., high school, in charge of the English class, which will be in the WOEF building while the new high school building is under construction. She will attend the breakfast given Thursday morning for the new teachers after which they will take part in a general meeting. School opens Sept. 3. Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Bfly, 11 Krick St., returned Tuesday evening from a trip through northern Michgian. They visited Mackinaw City and other interesting places. George and Mike Bair of Fort Wayne, are spending this week with their grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Harold V. DeVor, while their parents are vacationing at French Lick. Mrs. William Wooters of Geneva, spent Sunday with her niece, Mrs. Lester Thatcher and family, 22 Krick St. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Earl Jones and family, 57 Vindale Trail, have returned home from a trip through the West. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Western Europe Extends March Vast Coverage LONDON (UPI) — Western European news media gave massive and sympathetic coverage today to the Washington civil rights march but the Soviet news agency called it a demonstration of the ’’sores of American society.” Tens of millions of persdns on both sides of the Iron Curtain watched a four-minute portion of the protest march on live television beamed through an intricate system of relays linked to the Telstar satellite. Americans living abroad presented petitions at U.S. embassies and consulates from Oslo to Madrid in support of the Washington demonstration. In many, places they were joined by citizens of the countries. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, said the march “vividly demonstrated for the whole world to see the sores of American society, the repulsive picture of racial oppression and exploitation of 20 million American Negroes.”“This date marks the birth of the national mass movement of the Negroes which can no longer be ignored by the United States rulers,” Tass correspondents Vladimir Vashedchenko and Mikhail Sagatelyan reported from Washington. Telstar and West Europe’s Eurcvjsion network brought the march into homes throughout Western Europe and to stations in Communist East Germany, Hungary, Poland. Russia and Czechoslovakia. The Communist New China News Agency, in a Peking broadcast heard in Tokyo, said the demonstrators converged on the capital “unintimidated by a force of 10,000 troops and police mobilized by the Kennedy administration to control the march.” London Daily Mirror columnist William Connor, who writes under the name Cassandra, said the gathering of 200,000 Negroes and whites was “moving in its softness, its gentleness, and in contrast with the brutal roaring sounds that crowds degenerating into mobs usually emit.”

Two Girls Bound Together, Slain > United Press International NEW YORK (UPI) — Two young career girls, one the niece of author Philip Wylie, were found Wednesday night Stabbed to death and tied together in their apartment on Manhattan's swank East Side. The victims, found in the bedroom of the flat, were Janice Wylie, 21, an employe of Newsweek magazine who hoped to become an actress, and’ Emily Hoffert, 23, daughter of a prominent Minneapolis surgeon, who had planned to start teaching school next month. The bodies were removed from the third-floor apartment shortly after midnight and taken, still bound together, to the morgue at Bellevue Hospital where autopsies will be performed later to-

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day. : ««. Police virtually ruled out burglary as a motive in the slayings. Dr. Milton Helpern, the city's chief medical examiner, said it did not appear that the women had Been sexually molested. Have No Leads Lawrence McKearney, an assistant chief of detectives, said police had “no suspects’’ and “no leads.” Os the killings, he said: “This is really sadistic.” “We’re reaching for anyone,” McKearney said, when asked if he thought police would solve the case soon. “It’s a tough one.” The bodies were discovered by the two girls’ roommate, Patricia Tolles, 23, and Miss Wylie’s father, Max Wylie, an advertising firm executive and also an author. Miss Tolles, who has a job with Time Book, Inc., said she last saw her roommates alive when she left the four-room, $250-a-month apartment at 9:30 a.m., EDT, Wednesday for work. Returns In Evening When she returned at 6:40 p.m., she said, she found ,the apartment in disarray and, frightened, telephoned Max Wylie, who lives just two blocks away. It was Wylie who pushed open the bedroom door and found the girls, who had been bound hand and foot and then tied together back-to-back with sheets. Miss Wylie was nude, and Miss Hoffert was fully clothed, police said. The bodies were wedged into a narrow space between one of the beds in the room and a wall. Next to the bodies, police said, were two bloody carving knives. A third knife was found on a sink in one of the apartment’s two bathrooms where the killer, or killers, apparently had gone to wash off blood before fleeing. The knife blades were between 10 and 12 inches long. McKearney said the girls were attacked in their bedroom and slashed repeatedly in the neck and abdomen. They were “very severely stabbed,” Helpern said. State Traffic Toll Continues To Mount By United Press International Two accidents in Porter County near Valparaiso killed three persons Wednesday night and raised Indiana’s 1963 traffic fatality toll to 823 compared with 840 a year ago. Jack Davis, 67, Valparaiso, and his passenger, Fredrick Crumpacker, 63, Valparaiso, were killed and 10 persons were injured, three critically. Michael Gratton, 16, Valparaiso, was killed in another accident five miles west of Valparaiso when his compact convertible hit a bump along a county road, swerved out of control and hit a tree. Mrs. Peggy Sue Campbell, 21, Clio, Mich., was killed in a twocar collision in Indiana 327 near Angola in an earlier accident Wednesday. Her -year -old daughter, Deanna, and her 19-year-old sister-in-law, Ann Campbell, were injured seriously. Injured in the double-fatality Valparaiso wreck were Clifford

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808 WHITE, 16-year-old Dayton, 0., speech contest winner, is pictured above with Tom Sefton, president of the Decatur Optimist Club, following his speech here Thursday. White spoke on the world power of Communism and freedom. . • J

Jones, 25, Lansing, Mich., driver of a car sideswiped by the Davis car; his wife, Pamela, 24; their daughter, Tammie, 3;i Jones’ parents, Cletus Jones, 55, Kennett, Miss., and his wife, Winnie, 56, and their son Lannie 11; Donald Farrington, 18, Clarendon Hill, 111., his brother, Roger, 19; Richard Holz, 18, Hinsdale, 111., and Robert Alenander, 18 Chicago. The Davies car, after sideswiping the Jones car, smasher! headon into the Farrington car. The injured were taken to Valparaiso Memorial Hospital where Clifford Jones, Lannie Jones and Donald Farrington were listed as critical. Word was received at Franklin Wednesday of the death in Kannapolis, N. C., Tuesday of Mrs. Lula Burr, 96, from injuries suffered in an accident south of Franklin July 28. Critical since the wreck, caused by a tire blowout, Mrs. Burr was flown to Kan-

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 29. 1963

Spare Wheel, Tire Stolen From Auto Charles Hessim, Ossian, reported Wednesday night to city police that the spare wheel and tire were stolen from the trunk of his car while it was parked at the Villa Lanes bowling alley between 8 p.m. and midnight Tuesday night. Hessim and city police were unable to determine how the tire was stolen as the trunk was locked and showed no sign of forced entry. Efficient Lighting A single 100-watt lamp bulb produces at least 50 per cent more light than four 25-watt bulbs — and is more economical, too. napolis from Johnson County Hospital last week by a Franklin pilot.