Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 209, Decatur, Adams County, 5 September 1963 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Fire Preceded Air Crash Killing 80 ZURICH, Switzerland (UPI) - Fire aboard a Swissair jetliner pidbably caused panic to break out seconds before the plane crashed Wednesday killing all 80 occupants, authorities said today. Airline spokesmen said the fire apparently forced the twin-jet Caravelle out of control and made it plunge into a field near the village of Duerrenaesch, 20 miles west of Zurich. Lt. Fritz Meier, deputy chief of the Aargau district police and in charge of police forces at the crash site, said “the aircraft was
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flaming in the rear section, both inside and outside before the crash." “Panic most probably broke out because passengers without doubt saw the flames,” he said. One American Aboard The Caravelle was carrying 6 ' crew members and 74 passen- * gers, including one American and e one-fourth the population of one 0 Swiss hamlet. It was en route to '■ Rome via Geneva. e About 200 federal investigators, >t policemen and soldiers waded d through knee - deep mud this r morning in search of clues to the 0 cause of the mishap, the worst in Swissair’s 32-year history. if The airline spokesman said an n automatic extinguisher system e aboard all- Caravelles usually is s capable of putting out fires in
either jet engine, which are attached to the fuselage at the rear of the plane, but th6 flames Wednesday somehow caused the pilot to lose control. Swissair spokesmen said sabotage is always a possibility in any plane crash, but in this case it is “practically out of the question.” “ ~ Shattering Explosion There was a shattering explosion as the big jet dug 50 feet into the ground. Half the aircraft simply disintegrated. Slivers of metal from the remainder rained over an area a mile square. Eyewitnesses said flames gushed from the Caravelle’s port engine as it plummeted toward earth. But there were indications the pilot’s last words—“no more, no more" — would remain an enigma. ■ Col. Carl Hoegger, head of the Swiss Air Bureau’s accident investigation department, said the cause of the crash probably will remain a mystery. He also said identification of the bodies would be impossible because of the tremendous impact. Authorities called in bulldozers to help dig out parts of the jetliner and bodies imbedded with it.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
NFO Launches Holding Action • - 1J On Feed Grains CORNING, lowa (UPI) —The i militant National Farmers Organ--1 ization (NFO), which last sums mer staged a fiye-week market I rebellion on livestock, today launched a holding action designed to keep feed grains off the ’ market. 1 'fhe action was ordered Wednes- > day by NFO president Oten Lee , Staley, who said it was aimed at i ‘ cutting off the lifeline” of grain, livestock and dairy processors. Effects of the new boycott were : not expected to be felt immedi- ’ ately. : The NFO will concentrate first ' on soybeans, and move to other crops as they are ready for harf vesL—————-—- > The plan calls for members of - the 19-state farm organization to withhold soybeans, corn and > grain sorghum from market until ■ the NFO signs contracts for highi er prices with processors. Along with the withholding ac-
tion, members were being asked to sign grain sales agreements which would give NFO leaders virtual control of the marketing of soybeans. The agreements authorize NFL officials to sell members’ soybeans “at not less than $2.75 a biishel,” Staley said. That is about 11 cents above the nominal quotation Wednesday on the Chicago cash grain market. “Shut the granary door,” Staley said. “If the market wants the grain it can bring the crowbar—a fair price to farmers. < Harvesting of soybeans begins next week in some parts of the NFO membership area. Old crop grains already in storage are included in the “store and hold” program. A successful boycott, Staley said, “will siphon from normal market channels a sufficient Percentage of the soybean crop to leave the NFO the only volume seller of soybeans by spring or early summer 1964.” Outlines Goals Staley said the immediate goal is a signup of agreements covering 50 million bushels of soybeans within the next two weeks. The ultimate goal is 200 million bushels signed up by the time harvest is completed. Withholding grain, Staley said, “can be more forceful in the market place than holding actions on livestock and milk, and in the end can be the controlling factor in getting contracts on all commodities.” He said the NFO would continue to press for higher prices in the dairy and livestock industries. Prayer Band Rally Sunday Afternoon A Victory Prayer Band rally will be held at the Adams county holiness association's camp grounds in Monroe Sunday at 2:30 p. m The Rev. F. W. Battenberg, pastor of the Faith in God chapel, Fort Wayne, will speak on “The Great Sin of Our Day.” Carl Wm. Browning will conduct the meeting, with Homer Gause as the song leader. Special songs and music will be provided by the Marion Gospel sextet, the Faithful Gospel Singers of Fort Wayne, and others.
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Hi-Way Trailer Court News Mr. and Mrs. George Smith of Columbus, Ohio, spent Labor Day with her mother, Mrs. Wright, 6 Krick Street, who returned home with them on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eversole, 62 Bella Casa, are attending the Van Wert fair this week. They have a horse entered, which he keeps on his parents’ farm at Middle Point, Ohio. Chas. Lose is the new resident at 27 Star Lane. Mr. and Mrs. Emery Jones and family of Detroit, Mich., spent Sunday and Labor Day with his brother, Howard Earl Jones and family, 57 Vindale Trail. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hawley, Jr., and daughter Lolly, 26, Star Lane, spent from Friday until Monday in Nashville, Tenn., attending the “Grand Ole Opera.” Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Stearley and son Lori, 48 Vindale Trail, were at Winona Lake Sunday where they were joined by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stearley, who arrived from LaPorte with Mike, and together they enjoyed a picnic dinner. Mike, who had spent another week vacationing grandparents, returned with his parents to Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Clark of Bluffton, were Friday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Thatcher * and family, 22 Krick St. They reported that Mrs. Maude Clark of Geneva, who is a patient in the Southside nursing home in Blqffton, is still suffering from kidney infection. Keith Cooper of Crawfordsville spent Labor- Day with Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Zimmerman and daughter Donna, 70 Bella Casa. Dawn Gerig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerig, 519 S. 13th St., celebrated her third birthday Sept. 3. Mr. and Mrs. Don Boroff and family left for Knoxville, Tenn., Sunday morning after vacationing in Indiana and visiting with Dr. and Mrs. Harold V. DeVor. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bell, Jr., and family, 59 Bella Casa, spent the Labor Day weekend with her mother, Mrs. Vera Petrie, in Avilla. Tuesday of last week Mrs. Donna Reed of Memphis, Tenn.,
visited her brother, Sam Bell, Jr., and family. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Gerig and family attended the Niswander, reunion at Pandora, Ohio Labor Day, where their 90-year-old grandmother was preserit. Miss Elda Amstutz and Mrs. Max Heller of Swanston, Ohio, spent Labor Day with their sister-in-law, Mrs. Rilla Amstutz, 13 Krick St. ? ■ Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Zimmerman and daughter, Donna, 70 Bella Casa, attended the Landis reunion at Greenville, Ohio, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Gumm and family, 63 Bella Casa, spent Friday and Saturday in Louisville, Ky., and Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Violet Ogden, and her grandmother, Mrs. May Bunch, at Glasgow, Ky., While there they alsb visited their farm and cannery near Canmer, Ky. On their way home they stopped at Hodgeville, Ky., and brought home some Souvenirs of Abraham Lincoln. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Carlson and family and Mrs. Beverly Camp, 16 Krick St., were in Marion and Lafayette last Sunday visiting her parents at Pennington Gap. Va. Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Fuelling and family, 55 Vindale Trail, spent Sunday at Crooked Lake near
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Angola with Mrs. Fuelling’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Brunnegraff. Also there were Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bogner and family of Muncie, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Eyanson and family of Monroe, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bnirihegraff and family of Fort Wayne, and Mr. and Mrs. Hal Sumner of Dayton, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Henkle, 10 Detroiter Ave., spent the Labor Day weekend at Pleasant Lake, near Coldwater, Mich. Mr .and Mrs. Brooks Arnold and son Tony, 54 Vindale Trail, and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Trouner and daughter Lori had a cookout Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Arnold. Monday afternoon they all traveled to the Van Wert fair.-
Hospital Admitted Mrs. Mary Jane Saylors, Mrs. David Mazlin, Dwight Schaefer, Mrs. Howard Raver, Lawrence Morgan, Vergil Fleming, Decatur; Mrs, Lillian Bond, Berne. Dismissed Mrs, Francis Noack, Decatur.
