Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 248, Decatur, Adams County, 21 October 1963 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Home Seeks Delay For Parliament
LONDON (UPD Prime Minister Lord Home, first peer to head a British government since 1902. sought today to delay the opening of Parliament until he can move from the House of Lords to Commons. Home spent the weekend attempting to patch the split in the Conservative party caused by the battle to succeed ailing Harold Macmillan, who retired Friday, selecting Home as his replacement. Home won all but two of his opponents for the cabinet, including former Deputy Premier R. A. Butler, who had been considered the favorite to succeed Macmillan. Those who refused to serve were lain MacLeod, co-chair-man of the Conservative party and leader of the House of Commons, and Enoch Powell, former health minister. Both led the revplt against the selection of. Home, but neither gave a reason for not joining his cabinet. “I am sorry they did not feel they could accept office,” Home
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() ii ( VOTE DEMOCRATIC TUES. NOV. sth. with snow removal, weed cutting, street cleaning other important duties? THESE CANDIDATES EARNESTLY SOLICIT YOUR SUPPORT Flart fADI h TFDDED !■ I* 4 johnb.stults , lstI)Bt lICCI vf\KL lr« UEKdEK k City Judge CHALMER H. DEBOLT, Councilman — 2nd Dist. . . t ATTPA RACCI7 HAROLD B. MILLER, Councilman 3rd Dist. Democratic Candidate For Mayor K .gWR LAURA BOSSE CLYDE E. DRAKE, Councilman 4th Dist. COURTEOUS - EFFICIENT - PROGRESSIVE LAWRENCE E. KOHNE, Councilman - At - Large
said Sunday. ‘Ht does not mean the party is split. I have no doubt they will give me the most loyal support.” Home was reported considering asking Queen Elizabeth to delay the resumption of Parliament until after Nov. 7, when he will run for election in the House of Commons. Labor has opposed such a delay — Parliament now is set to reconvene Oct. 29 — but the Queen has the right to set the date. Labor leader Harold Wilson said -such a request would be “an impertinence.” Home, a 60-year old Scottish peer, could remain in the House of Lords and still serve as-pre- - mier, but he would not be able to function effectively. Peers cannot appear in Commons and it is in the lower house that the policy debating and decision-' making takes place. Home said Saturday he would resign his earldom —a title more than three centuries old —and contest a byelection in Kinross, Scotland, to get in Commons. The Conservative candidate withdrew in Home’s
Two Minor Wrecks In City Saturday Two minor accidents occurred Saturday in Decatur, with only two of four vehicles involved being damaged., At 10:23 a. m. Saturday, autos driven by Robert Lee McMillen, 16, route 6, Decatur, and Jess Winfield Plasterer, 60, 1008 Patterson St., collided on Jefferson St., near the Second St. intersection. McMillen was westbound and his car 1 suffered S4O damages, while the Plasterer car, which was eastbound, was not damaged. The cars were moved from the scene when the, city police investigated. A car driven by Kathryn Ann Walter. 16, of 939 N. 13th St., hn a parked car owned by Jose Libas, route 1, Monroe, at 4:02 p. m. Saturday. The girl was pulling into a diagonal parking space on Madison St., and struck the left rear of the Libas car, which was not damaged. Damage to the Walter car was just $5. favor. The seat is considered a safe one — the Conservatives won the last election there by mope than 12,000 votes.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Decatur Minister To Be Guest Missioner The Rev. Richard C. Ludwig, pastor of Zion Luthern church, will serve this week as guest missioner at a spiritual life mission of the Southern Illinois district of the Luthern church-Missouri synod. He has been assigned to Our Redeemer Lutheran church at Greenville, 111. The mission begins Tuesday and will continue through Sunday. It is somewhat similar to the preaching, teaching, reaching mission held several years ago by the Decatur circuit. As the guest missioner, Rev. Ludwig serves as a resource person to help the congregation reevaluate its purpose, its mission, and its organizational structure. .He will meet with all of the congregation's organizations, its boards, and major committees to discuss aims and objectives. Special services are scheduled for Wednesday and Friday nights and Sunday morning and afternoon. A youth rally is for Saturday night. Regular services will be held at Zion Luthern church here next Sunday at 8 and 10:30 a.m., with Professor Jack Nierman of Concordia Senior College at Fort Wayne as speaker. Holy communion will be celebrated at both services. » ’ Man Fined Here On Intoxication Charge Wesley Copeland, 33, who gave a Decatur post office box number as his address, was fined in city court this morning, the only case to come before Judge John B. Stults today. Copeland was fined $1 and costs, amounting to s2l, On a charge of public intoxication, to which he entered a plea of guilty. He was arrested in the. alley betwen Second and Third streets and Madison and Monroe streets where he was found by the city police at 1:45 a.m. Sunday. Wrap-Tie Wonder Printed Pattern / f jobber fl / 1 r7 x ; ■ J 1 / ■ 9088 ||lU SIZES 12-20; 40 I I \ ’ ln| UTaai 'lltkhTfcM Cinch to sew—just 3 main pattern parts to cut out, stitch up. No fitting worries—wrap ’n’ tie. Make another version as a cobbler apron. ..... Printed Pattern 9088: Misses’ Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Size 16 takes 5 yards 35-incH* fabric. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin. Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept.. 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. , CLIP COUPON FOR 50c FREE PATTERN in big. new Fall-Win-ter Pattern Catalog, just out! 354 design ideas. Send 50c for Catalog.
HURRICANE (Continued from Page 1) flooding at time .of high tides, the Weather Bureau said. Rough heavy pounding surf along the outer coast will continue to cause beach erosion. Storm-wise residents of this battered island strip which is situated in “hurricane alley” remained calm today. Most decided to wait and see what course the hurricane — seventh of the season — would take before moving out. But Coast Guard and other military agencies in North Carolina and Virginia went on an alert basis. One squadron in the sth Naval .District at Norfolk put all aircraft in hangars and pilots stood by to fly other aircraft out if the storm worsens. Tides ranging up to three feet above normal flooded lowlands in the Pamlico Sound area in North Carolina and Norfolk and other Virginia ports had tides ranging up to a foot above normal. Storm Is Erratic “If the hurricane starts moving to the northeast as forecast the tides should not rise much higher,” the weather bureau said but it warned residents of the outer banks and Pamlico Sound area to remain alert since movement of the storm is “rather erratic.” The weather bureau said highest winds of 90 m.p.h. were near the storm’s center and hurricane force winds extended about 60 miles in all directions. Gale winds extended 250 miles to the northeast and 200 miles to the southwest. Hurricane warnings were displayed for the vicinity of Cape Hatteras and gale warnings and a hurricane watch extended from Nags Head toCape Lookout. Gale warnings extended from the Chesapeake Bay to Myrtle Beach, S.C. Driver's License Ordered Suspended Hilbert William Hockemeyer, route 3, Deactur, has had his driver’s license suspended for* a period of thrbe months, according to the latest driver suspension list issued by the state bureau of motor vehicles. The suspension was due to a conviction on a reckless driving charge in the local justice of the peace court, and runs from Septs. 17 to December 16 of this year. Reports Hub Caps Stolen From Auto Ralph Sauer, 328 S. Fifth St., reported a theft of two hub caps to the city police Sunday afternoon. < Sauer reported that a car owned by Zintsmaster Motors was parked at the corner of Jackson and First streets Saturday when two spinner hub caps, valued at $32.40, were stolen from the car. Monmouth School Honor Roll Listed Honor students for the first grading period of the 1963-64 school year at the Monmouth school have been announced by John E. McConaha, principal. Connie Fox is listed with high honor. The balance of the honor roll follows: Seniors — Mary Burley, Kathy Buuck, Andrea Kuck, Dianne Miller, Kathy Rafert, Donna Reinking, Perry Schroeder, Gloria Thieme, Nellie Campbell. Juniors — Cynthia Boerger, Maxine Bulmahn, Suzann Buuck, Nancy Krueckeberg, Connie Reinking, Sandra Teeple. Sophomores — Don Bixler, Sheryl Boerger, LaDonna Braun, Duane Buuck, Shelia Caston, Bill Hildebrand, Helen Hockemeyer, Roberta Kunkel, Janice Miller, Kathy Schieferstein, Joyce Strouse, Margaret Witte. Freshmen — Kayleen Aumaqn, William Bleeke, Angela Boerger, Dennis Berger, Cynthia Fuelling, Dianna Fuhrman, Sandy Heckman, Rosella Koenemann, Ann Kruetzman. David Matthews, Ronald Reinking, Linda Sauer, Mary Thieme. Eighth grade — Beverly Geyer, Jerry Hakes, Karen Kunkel. Seventh grade — Connie Durr, Margaret Fritzinger. . Geraldine Lewton.
Locals Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Davis are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Gage. They recently returned from Africa -after serving as missionaries in the Belgin Congo 42 years. Larry Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill, 1018 Adams, has been promoted to 2C Engineerman aboard YO 225, stationed at Charleston, S. C. Jerry Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floy Jackson, is serving with the U. S. Air Force at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex. His address is AB Jerrel W. Jones, AF 16776374, Box 1504, Flight 1364, Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio. Tex. Charles Krueckeberg is now stationed with the U. S. Air Force at Stephenville, Newfoundland. His address is A/2c Charles Krueckeberg, AF 16672889, 4081 Cmbt. Spt. Gp. A. P. O. 864, New York, New York. Mr. and Mrs. Clem Kortenber returned home Saturday after visiting with their daughter and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Underwood and daughter Joyce in East Alton, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Vogle- ; wede and his mother, Mrs. Anna Voglewede, of Mexico City, Mexico, while enroute home from a tour of Europe, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Voglewede of Decatur. During their European tour they had a personal audience with Pope Poul VI. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Voglewede of Hampton, Va., also spent the weekend here and will return to their home tomorrow.
- JI ’ o ■ ■ wsgsF W'- T I w. WnR k SB THROUGH EYES OF EAGLES— Cleveland'Browns head coach Blanton Collier, left, runs filmed plays of previous games for running back Jim Brown, in Cleveland, as the team prepares for its grid battle with Philadelphia Eagles.
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Council Hears Eloquent Plea From African VATICAN CITY (DPl)—Ecumenical Council fathers today heard an eloquent plea from a native African bishop against colonialism under the guise of religion. Archbishop Raymond Tchidimbo of Conakry, Guinea, told the fathers, “We want only one thing, the pure Gospel. We do not w.ant to be colonials of anyone but Christ.” The African archbishop protested religious colonialism during a debate on the place of the layman in the Catholic Church. He indicated that international Catholic organizations often feel the necessity to try to dominate the native laymen working for the church in missionary lands. The debate followed the first of a series of votes on reforms of the breviary, the book from which priests say their required daily prayers. < The fathers approved the first oi two amendments to the document on the breviary, which is the fourth chapter of a liturgy draft debated during the council’s opening session last fall. Today’s two amendments, overwhelmingly approved, dealt with insertions in the text saying that the priestly work of the church is reflected in daily prayers and stressing the similarity between tthe priests’
MONDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1963
prayers and those of Christ. A liturgy commission member, Bishop Joseph Martin of Nicolet, Canada, reported on the 13 amendments before the voting and explained the commision’s efforts “to arrive at some workable proposal to bring about reforms in the Divine Office.” Voting will continue Tuesday on the Divine Office, which is the technical name for the prayers in the breviary, when amendments come up for letting priests say the prayers in their own language instead of Latin and for a general shortening of thg breviary. Archbishop Tchidimbo spoke forcefully about the colonial problem, which he said was not so much political today as religious in some areas. He urged Catholic organizations not to develop “dominating attitudes” in directing and helping the apostolate of a country. The African bishop said times have changed and native bishops have taken over the whole responsibility for the church in many areas. They do not welcome organizations which, under the guise of bringing help, try to superimpose their own plans. Eliminates Early Boiler Explodes At School In Portland PORTLAND, Ind. (UPI) — A gas-powered boiler exploded in Portland Junior High School today, but no injuries were reported. Authorities said further damage apparently was prevented when Earl Pusey, a boler room attendant, quickly shut off valves and pulled fuses. Officials said it was not necessary to evacuate the 600 students.
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