The Weather © T ITI '
U8. Weather cia Ferecast. O C \p
Cloudy, Showers, ~
« _ Wetalls Page 2) -
116th YEAR | kkkeke ; PONTIAC, MICHIGAN; SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1958 =" PAGES
Death Claims Driver in Classic.
Traffic Deaths
Total 5 So Far
in Michigan
Michigan’s highway fatality count was surprisingly
low as the long Memorial Day weekend neared the half-
way point.
Thus far over the 78-hour holiday only five traffic
deaths were reported despite crowded highways.
In addition three persons drowned and two persons
died in miscellaneous accidents.
Racing Cars Scatter Over Track in Fatal Accident
Pat O'Connor
Killed as Auto
Flips, Burns
Veteran Racer Elisian
Suspended for Causing
Fatal 15-Car Pileup
INDIANAPOLIS ®
—Death rode the Indian-
terday. and claimed the life
f one of the country’s most However, dead on the nation’s highways piled up on o ular auto nea kines
schedule today and brought 29-year-old Pat O’Connor of renewed pleas from safety North Vernon, Ind. officials as the three-day ’ >
Break Deadlock Memorial Day weekend O’Connor, the 48th to
- UAW Hoping Chrysler, Ford, Union
Refusing to Budge as
“Time Slips Away
DETROIT & — The United Auto
moved toward the half-way
mark.
As the first day of the 78-hour
weekend ended, safety experts
a cautiously optimistic that the
first long holiday of the summer
might take a slightly lesser toll
than the 350 predicted.
National Holiday Toll
apolis Speedway again yes-
-. Auto Club today for the pileup. tions with Ford as Duane Carter, a former race = ee while complet- arett ssS00000n0 ‘ = ~ ~ ate i nos ae
a Miscellaneous 1... 23 + HEADING FOR DEATH — Pat O'Connor, AP Wuephete ¢ fer USAC sansunced: —o- aa Hoosier race driver, swerves into fatal skid at wall, spins around Paul Goldsmith's car, near- “1 am suspending Elisian
\oners wth Gp Qo cme in en | Total “ (Crash Iniuri mond frm Ie in per 0p ber etale ing ne tanen Caceres wanret. [DO saa taal eg os Miecoananas te oe epee veers second from left in upper group near outside ing into flames. Goldsmith was {
128 company plants Monday. rasn injuries 2 3 GIN TO FAVOT | car cempetor
Da management wd 228] However, Ned H. Dear ape Vas | | ee » N fety He'll not race again until he tiations deadlocked and each-ac-|President of the National Sa (| V | b/ t OK D G I| B ft P| y can, cused the other of refusing to Council, noted today the figure was alm Viciim Assem Y O e@ Uaquile ener Fiayers appeal to the USAC's board of di-
i slightly higher than earlier est) Ws First Traffic Death| _ ° Western Open Tourney alisrlan Fengler, chiet steward of
lance | ze tt ance w te pace | in County on Memorial as New Premier | OMOLTOW) = Red Run Goes Into] % BE es. lt “Ere Auto-Labor at a Glance | iit ended up ax a record for Day Period in 3 Years Third Round ils, 19 : DETROIT @ — Auto-labor | a three-day Memorial Day week- - Race Deta Page |
contract negotiations at a | end in 1965 when 369 died in trat- ikula. 21, of 7282|,PARIS (UPI)—Gen. Charles dejsignaled the go-ahead for De| probably former President Vin- | .. ae cmeties si
glance: the pile ups. George E. Pikula, 21, of 72% Gaulle will take over tomorrow as|Gaulle’s investiture by formally ac-| cent Auriol and heads of key po- seeing ed ta Lon ree 3 General Motors — Contract Warm temperatures in Michigan| Rutherford St., Detroit, died in Wil- lthne 26th premier of the French/cepting the resignation of Premier! litical parties. to favor the better players As TE) 1, 0 the tact that Elisien was
terminated, workers will com- |.ont thousands flocking to state liam Beaumont Hospital early to-)Republic, it was announced today.|Pierre Pflimlin’s outgoing = —Another 10 ministers picked third round of Western Open start- driving too fast and caused the ac- :
tinue on jobs, Negotiations re- | arks beaches. and resorts. jday of injuries suffered in a traffic With a strong majority vote al-|¢t- can : reii.{f0m leading members of Parlia-jed this morning at Red Run Coum-jcident by spinning into Dick Rath- |
cessed until Menday. Trafic across the new ac gy accident on Northwestern highway,|ready assured, the 67-year-old for- ae meee ce t apparently n in ment. Included would be se ven|try Club, . mann.”
Fond Meter Go, — Bargains ary Se tae: eesen in Farmington Township, abou t/mer Free French leader wiii go blmind a government of two parts: ——— he adlyoorw: represen-| Home pro Frank Metsger said |RATHMAN TALKS resumes today. of ferry TAS fore an extraordinary session of ives unions. AMONE) the greens would\be slower and | athmann, who had topped Ell. : Workers President Walter Rew- the straits over the Memorial Day| the General Assembly tomorrow} —An tuner cabinet or “politi- |the technicians would be Wilfred) distance of balls should be cut |.ian's speed in the first dev of time : ther expected to sit im on {holiday last year. It was the first Oakland County morning to be invested with sweep-| cal council” of five members — | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) | gown. “The course just wet |triais May 17 to claim the pole , talks. Contract expires at Sun- Bridge officials estimated 10,. |traffic death on a Memorial Day|ing powers to reform the constitu- : enough to slow down the greens, | nosition issued his own statement day midnight. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Period in three years. tion and restore stability at home the approach shots hold |about the disastrous mixup :
comes tehig: Camas aigires = ~*. * jane in Noe ane Begin Working Monday thn ime \ “Blisian hed the lead in the sec-
fenday midnight Administrative Aide | common Temas xcaming, PLANS REFORMS Tommy Jacobs, the curent eud-lond’ Ceouthessty" conser, eae 21, of 16631 Men- When the Assembly meets—now St t P lic > B ildi er, with 135, and many of\ the! passed him on the backstretch
Contracts at ‘Ford and Chrysler Resigns at Hospital High was admitted to|Pontiac time)—it will be virtually tv tee off after the noon hour. \ he show.
expire Sunday midnight. The con-. IZNWAY | the. hospital with |to vote itself out of power for from Among the early starters this\P@St the cross (the traditional slow-
tract at GM expired Thursday mid-| ee pene Toll ja concussion and six months to a year. De Gaulle Construction will begin Monday on a new, $60,000| morning, Rudy Horvath turned in/tewe aoe the northeast Fi nother c’ } ” Itiple = anded free nine. - , normally.
“. * *®* * tration of the Pontiac General Hos- in °58 sions. we a "eorteratee tes intl his re- Pontiac Stale Police Post, according to Sgt. Charles = Oe ? went around me on pital comes with the announced
resignation of Administrative As- Zo Mulick. He has not re- " RENE HOLE SCORES ADDED;
gained conscious- The GM extension would have forms. 736 a tri-level affair at 1295 N. eee eee ee ee ee
included built-in wage increases
totaling 16 cents an hour — a
John Pott
and a 7 - cent productivity im- /against Dr. Neil Sullenberger and|Wenys tree the con men ETE! hotel. It should be ready by* i Wena oo coscsaccctecssasscss
ard emt tnt ts slr atta nae ON] St | oe cnt b ealy fall replacing teagan to Receive (EEE ee i” . a °
000 non-union employes would get} Miss Dovre, who worked with| The auto was going south on oo oo converted home in Drayton |[¥j|C igan 0 eceive ont
both the immediate increases. It/Flath, said her resignation,, ef-|Northwestern just north of Ink- Plains that has served as
also said salaried personnel would sistant Shirley Dovre.
The hospital's director, Carl
* |Flath, was fired less than two
weeks ago. He was the hospital's
main spokesman in the fight
fective June 20, was not connected
with Fiath’s firing.
ness and is in
critical condition; according to a
hospital report.
Police have not determined who
ster Rd., when it ran off the high-
way and overturned, they said. Roger Duchet, secretary gen-
eral of the Independent (conserv-
ative) Party made the formal an-
nouncement after a conference
with De Gaulle at the latter’s
SIGNALS GO-AHEAD
Earlier, President Rene Coty had get the equivalent.
_ Wreath Placed at Civil War Monument
with the ——_ across the |trial, after turning him into a kind) Church News............... 3-9 | in for the DSC.)
Q _jof leg-man for INS. Comics ....... Roboonoododscor 18) And of Jimmy Young rotting in a
poll is also a (reference -to| ANd Inez Robb in North Aftica,| Eaitorials .....:............. 4 |sapanese prison, and Alfred Tyre ~—— “splash - and . dash | journalism.” and some years later in Texas Home | BON cccsces. .. 13-16 |auer dumped into|one of Hitler’s
That's about all. City, being knocked flat by an| Markets),............+....., 19 death cells in Vienna for cours Deaties Press Photo explosion, and getting ~ off hang Obituari¢g ,......66..000.. -+ 3 |ageously writing the truth about :
! ) , ground to get her story in to INS.| Sports ............. . 17 and 19 (that monster. iy THESE HONORED EAD -— Spanish-American War roe The wreath-laying, followed a parade up Saginaw street by civic, Trage Up or Down at the And Davis J. Walsh who Raped Theaters... 10-11 eh [*
Edward C. Tanner, of Blaine St., places a wreath at ‘the
Pontiac’s Civil War Monument during
Pay. An honor guard from allfour servi pemonies on M¢ Zh
stands at attention. “ ‘ concerning bs neophyte
‘many in the Journalieti fraternity. 1 The new building will be
of the 22-member Pontiac
Pontiac headquarters the
past 5% years.
- Signing of contracts by the State
Administrative Board Wednesday
means that a long-standing need
never had its own headquarters.
It had been located above the
Keego Harbor fire station before
moving to 2905 Dixie Highway, Telegraph road, just north and west of the Oakland
County Service Center, said Mulick, officer in charge|?,
post. Rudy Horvath
Don Pairfieid
Jimmy Clark
Prank Phillips ..
‘om Nieporte ..
*Bob Whitin:
Billy Maxwe'
Big U. S. Contracts
WASHINGTON UPI) — Michi-
gan was to receive work totaling
more than $6,000,000 in govern-
the Army Corps of Engineers
ranged from $1,399,000 for harbor
work at Harrisville to $44,965 for
Eisenhower Runnerup .
for Girl’s. Affection
WASHINGTON (# — Among
other mail, President Eisenhower
recently received a letter from a
anyone in the whole world, ex-
cept, of course, for Perry Como.”
Robert K. Gray, White House
area tonight and Sunday With little
change in temperature.
low will be around 58 to 62.’
in this area will be filled. Although) ment contracts announced yester- | 9. year-old girl. Rpodaa pra : mec pagan
the Pontiac post is one of the day. “Dear Mr. President,” she will diminish ae hour
most active in the state, it has} s1.. construction contracts by | wrote. “I love you more than | Sunday's high is expected to
reach near 8&3
high predicted of around 75,
& Dex construction at Emery. Other secretary to the Cabinet, told | The lowest temperature in down- in yton, areas included work at Shelby, about the letter yesterday in a |tow Pontiac eae a.m. was General contractor is Schwanz| Selfridge Air Force Base and speech to wives of Medal of |60 degrees, ‘The mercury rose to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) jbridge work near Battle Creek. Honor winners. 75 at 1 p.m.
Columnist Bob Considine Angry
Editor's Note: Bob Considine is not fn
heweomer to the profession of journal-
ism. He has been considered in the past.
end today, one of the top flight re-
porters in. country. His coniments
yte reporter howd ge |
xpress the sentim
By BOB CONSIDINE
NEW. YORK — This is an open
letter to the young man —
anonymous as a shady story —
who wrote the obituary of Interna-
tional News Service in the Press’
section of the current Time Maga-
zine:
You poor guy:
of the ceremony, and the INS
(sometimes) for an interview.
patriotic and veterans groups. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, school super-
interident, later delivered a speech at ceremonies in Perry Mount
_ Park Cemetery.
L)
ae 3
Hot Lotf The Bright Spot. FE 840482.
our silenced news rooms and read)
|that farewell nose-thumbing felt
ng more than anger. Many of them
were seasoned at their trade when
you, in all probability, were mak-
ing you first little jabs at a type-
writer.
Their anger was tempered by a
pity for you; a pity born of the
sadness that one feels in the face
lof flippant ignorance.
For one, I thought of Floyd
Gibbons going down on one of
the first ships torpedoed in World
down Samuel Insull in Greece and
practically bringing him back to
make sports writing a profession. wartime beats on the capture and
execution of the Nazi submarine-
landed saboteurs, and the decision
to retain Hirohito on his throne.
IN. THE JUNGLES
I also thought. of Richard Tre-,
gaskis, Jack
Brumby, on Guadalcanal; of Pat
Robinson in the New Guinea jung-
les; of Lee Van Atta, flying on so
|many bombing and strafing mis-
sions that MacArthur himself or-)
dered him grounded. And of the in-
eT ee
TV & Radio Programs ven u Trade Up er Down (at the
‘Moti Lot, The Bright Spot. F@ 8-0488, | I thought of Bill Hutchinson driv-
ing the oppbsition nuts at the Wilson, Fart: asenoe i!
Women's Pages eetae
~ 4} Mahon and Bob’
Answers Insults Thrown at INS The men and women who sat in|Scopes trial and getting the great|comparable H. R. Knickerbocker
and irrepresible Sammy Schulman,
The memory of Pete Huss, Frank
Conniff, Larry Newman, Graham
Hovey, Joe Smith, Bill Hearst, Lee
Carson, Joe Willicombe and the
others who went with the troops
from the beaches to Berlin filled
the cranial room where proud
thoughts are stored.
And of Mike Chinigo, crawling
to a dead German sentry’s phone
on the beach in Sicily, making
contact with the German com-
Y ‘ mander whose artillery was You write, “On a coronation 6
story, editors could rely on the, whole ae ma ae Write & | cunmmmmmnomengsceemmoecsgeenge| Shelling our landing troops, and
AP for the dimensions of the ’ id aad ate ’ (in perfect German) ordering cathedral, the UP for the mood | And of Jimmy Kilgallen tracking I n Today Ss P TESS | him to cease — “.. . We have
driven the enemy back inte the
Sea.” (Gen, Truscott put Mike
WERE WITH TOJO
And of Clark Lee, who | —
¢1 h (Coens en PETE.
( i degrees. Showers
are probable again Monday with a . e
8
\
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. MAY 81, 1958
Local law enforcement authori-
ties are now awaiting the expected
* * * .
“The traffic going north on
U.S. 10 and Telegraph Rd. was
as heavy as I've ever seen it
Thursday evening,” reported Sgt. | '
Assembly Agrees
fo Name De Gaulle Sunday Evening" Traffic
\Expected to Be Heavy —
Charles Mulick, commander at :
the Pontiac State Police Post,
“After noon Memorial Day the
traffic, while still heavy changed
to a more general nature rather
than mainly northbound,” said
Corporal Eino Maki of the Redford
Post.
. * * *
A slight pickup in southbound
traffic was reported last night, but
the concentrated flow is not ex-
pected until Sunday when thou-
sands of families begin returning
home from the three-day weekend. —+$—-
The Day in Birmingham
EDWIN TOMLINSON Injured in Ca
third of the holiday weekend.
Simpeon, 25 a mem-
ber of force for three months,
is in St. Jeseph Mercy Hospital
Pontiac, being treated for a brain
concussion and other possible in-
juries.
Police Chief Norman Dehnke
said his condition this morning is
fair. _
Simpson, 8 Peggy St., Pontiac,
was injured in a police car as he
entered Telegraph road from St.,
charged with breaking and enter-
ing after he was found hiding un-
der a coffee urn. Police said he
admitted taking the money and
cigarettes found in his pockets. Bloomfield Policeman- .
r. Accident
homeward rush Sunday evening af-| O¢ticers at the Redford Post re- BIRMINGHAM — An accident ship, Police Sgt. Newton Tubbs ba ee a eeanuares ported heavy traffic on Grand yesterday afternoon which hospi- and Officer Henry Juntunen noticed
meureday ni a nail bees Day|River Ave. and Northwestern high- talized a Bloomfield Township po-|a cut window sc n and saw some-
sande € Memorial Day!yay from noon Thursday to noon lice officer-was.the.qnly mishap|one moving building.
: morning. Memorial Day. reported in this -area the first They called for assistance in
er, Dooris Head to unlock the
J. W. Stith 26, of 577% Going Pontiac _was arrested and
Members of the Birmingham
ee
ms
(Continued From Page One) Lions Club are busy these days
working as telephone solicitors.
They are making hundreds of calls Miner property damage and personal injury accidents took a Square Lake read while en route
president of the to investigate anéliier accident. Baumgartner,
Insurance Field
. }public,
It began with the revolt of the | Today’s announcement was a cli-
max to 18 days of the worst crisis
in the history of the Fourth re-
Burial of 2 Unknowns | Reporter's Jabs according to officials.
Sheriff's Deputies reported traf-
fic around area parks especially
(heavy yesterday. -
Dodge State Park No. 4; on Cass
Lake, reported a Memorial Day
crowd of 28,000. The record is
32,000.
Pontiac Lake Recreation Area
Accidentally Shot Leader Dies Edwin A. Tomlinson
Succumbs to Ailment
in Royal Oak Hospital
Swarthmore College in 1916, En- listing in the U.S, Army in 1917, he | pital. he heard the siren but did not stop
because he did not see Simpson’s
car approaching. Cipriani escaped |-
injuries. His wife Joan, 41, and
daughter, Christine 12, were treat-
ed for minor cuts and then re-
leased from Pontiac General Hos-
Fire of unknown origin de-
‘Death Claims Driver Bank of France. | sudden upsurge, especially along =e
| ‘Telegraph road’ during the rush Jacob F. Cipriani, 43 of 2540\taking orders for their fourth an-
CLIMAX TO CRISIS | to cottages and vacation areas, Campbell St., Detroit told police/nual ice cream sale. Delivery and
collection are scheduled for June
11 between 3 and 8 p.m.
Proceeds of the sale will further
the club’s work with the blind and
Leader Dog program.
Mrs. Clyde H. Wood
Services for Mrs. Clyde H.
(Mary) Wood, 77 ef 230 E. Wisner
St., Alpena, formerly of Birming- : AP ‘Wiveghote : and Highland Recreation Area re-| Eqwin A. Tomlinson, of 1056 . _ A NATION’S FINAL TRIBUTE — Shadows over the caskets suspended above their graves. | precedented demand that the as- jported large crowds. While beach Stratford Lane, Bloomfield Hills,| “we oe ee doe and caus’ (ham, will be at 1 p.m. Monday
,. " Wefe longIn Arlington Cemetery yesterday as President Eisenhower stands ‘behind the World | sembly accept De Gaulle as the and picnic areas were nearly filled /iong one of the best known figures| home of Marley Bric = age (*t the Manley Bailey Funeral
high officials and plain people saluted the Un- War II Unknown at right. Vice President Nixon only man who could save France (to capacity, there was no conges-jin the field of group insurance, Pligrim Ra. Ae ae bac Gad ne: om will be at White
known Dead of Korea and World War Il, united stands behind the Korean Unknown. This picture | om ® military dictatorship er 9 tion. = - passed away Friday at William| gts'tev cuarch onid tho blaze (Cee cemetery:
in hallowed ground with the Unknown Soldier of (by AP photographer Tom Freeman) was made Commuaniatied “Fopuier Frent. A tee . * all Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. He poser was reported by a Poor ig a freon = eae
World War I. Servicemen held American flags from top of the amphitheater. Boag ee vrece was cn the! — i poor goto leave for = — for only - week with a cit-| neighbor. aa < in x
. > e 0 . . tings ailment. - came Birmingham
| * * * home with time to spare. Born in Salem, O., in 1892, of tx a. rouline check of the few 1908 from Detroit and moved to
F C idi A On May 15, De Gaulle had rn nse ee ard Johnson’s Restaurant, 6450 ae oan ae Pk ~~ So *
Silent Crowd Watches |LNsidine Answers jsrses scar ot stence wy er Southtield Boy [Btcts Couny, Pa, and trom|"e@ anh Ra. Bloomfeld Tow) iS"Gyarch here and was 8 pes . ars 7 ollege matron of Birmingham OES Chapter 220.
[ene
LON
ROE
RAL
a
ge RENE
es
RONDE ee
ington area, but_many of the 4,000)
persons who later filled the gleam-
ing “marble amphitheater had
come considerable distances
* * *
For example, Mr. and Mrs, J.
L. McIntyre of Houston, Tex., who
have no children of their own,
were outside the amphitheater
hours before the interment rites.
Mrs. Mcintyre sat on a wooden
box,
* * *
The hot sun beat down an the |
crowds, Before the day was done| busted helmet in his hand, the on a murder trial, or covering an
execution, or describing the burn-
ing of the Morro Castle.
* * *-
| I thought of the brave lads like)
Howard Handleman and Lowell
Bennett, who wag shot down over
Berlin and not only escaped three
of Germany — INS stories; my poor
friend.
And of Tregaskis, who never
could get close enough, walking
dewn a mountain in Haly, his times but got the only stories out) eign Minister Georges Bidault,
who probably would be foreign
minister, former Premier An-
toine Pinay and Pierre-Henri
Teitgen, a ‘leading member of
the Popular Republican Party.
The program he was expected to
outline to the deputies tomorrow
would include revision of the con-
stitution vastly increasing exect-
tive powers; a new program of
equality. for Algeria; full powers
for De Gaulle to run the country
for six months or a year without
parliamentary interference; for- been missing since Tuesday. The
bedy was found in a clearing
near his home with: a .22 cali-
ber pistol. lying beneath his arm.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Victor Evans,
The mother, who said the pistol
belonged to her and had a sensi-
tive trigger, claimed it was used
to kill rats around the home,
x * *
She theorized the boy was car-
rying the gun across the. clearing
when he stumbled or slipped on Motors group insurance,
He served for many years as &
member of the executive board of
Boy Scouts of America. He was
chairman of the public health com-
mittee of the Detroit Board of Com-
merce and a trustee of the Greater
Detroit Hospital Fund.
* * * :
Mr, Tomlinson was one of the
leading organizers of the William
Beaumont Hospital and served as
president and chairman of the
Board of Trustees, which positions the Detroit Area Council of the|me
“I haven't been notified that I
have been suspended, and as far
as I’m concerned, ‘I’m not. I don’t most honorable guy in racing.’
ELISIAN TALKS ~
" Elisian said,
know why I lost it (the car), “The newspaper guys are killing
“I had driven through that cor-
ner faster. I have had these hot
dogs (race drivers) spin in front
of me and run me through the wall
on other tracks, It sure wasn't in-
tentional. I liked O’Connor as well
as anybody.” ° was discharged as a first Tieuten- ; ie
(Continued From Page One) |RECEIVES VISITORS Himself to Death |am. 7 , peta ptigae bi ee wap ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — Two) mind. They sat erect on stone slab _ De Gaulle received a stream of x *& Ff ota! , vid H. Raup of Birmingham; Mrs
_ sisters, both in their 60s, came at|seats, waiting quietly, ithe war with the AP on Bataan|visitors during the morning, pre-| SOUTHFIELD—The death of a) From 1927 until 1932, Mr, Tom- in Classic 500 Race John C. Stratton Jr. of Riverside, noon and sat in the hot sun to be| One was Mrs. Estelle Hughes, ®"d. ended it with INS in Toyko|sumably outlining to them a strin-|15-year-old Southfield boy found/linson served as service represent-| — Conn.; and eight grandchildren. —
sure of seats for the burial cere- 67, who said she was the widow of “!th the capture of Tokyo and with| gent five-point reform program for| yesterday with a bullet hole in his|ative of. Metropolitan Life Insur- (Continued From Page One) ,
mony. of the Unknowns of World|a World War I soldier. The other ‘h¢ capture of Tokyo Rose. He and)the nation, and working on his|head was ruled accidental by po-jance Co, in Europe, with head-| . G Pri Ww
‘War 11 and Korea. was Mrs. Virginia Gormley, 63,/4try Brundage of Cosmopolitan|cabinet list lice today. quarters in London, go through that corner. He made |Gas Price War Comes
They arrived at Arlington Na-|who said she has a son who's a “ere the only reporters present! qa. tist was expected to in- ~*~ ® *. In 1937, he took charge of the | ° effort to back off. — to Temporary Halt
a = some|Colonel in the Marine Corps, | Whe" Tojo tried to kill himself. | crude former President Vincent | The youth, George Evans, who | Detroit group office of the com- | “I'll never forgive Eliisian for) — Sune heuis* . but they didn't! Both women live in the Wash-| | thought, of course, of Runyon) Agriel, former Premier and For- | apparently shot himself, had | pany and supervised the General what he did. Pat O’Connor was the} DETROIT (UPI) —- The gas
4¢-\price battle waging in the Detroit
jarea has halted temporarily while
independent dealers wait for the
major firms to ‘‘stabilize their
prices.”
To date, the rounds of cuts have
brought normal prices down to 25.9
cents per gallon for regular and
28.9 cents for premium. A spokes-
man for Amro_Inc., said he didn't
think prices could go much lower,
Start Work Monday
wet grass, fell and the pistol dis-
charged.
Onion Sets Scarce, on State Police-Post
(Continued From Page One)
Builders, of Birmingham. Howard
H. Stanton has the mechanical top of his head left somewhere
up the hill.
And of Larry Meier, wounded,
whole covering the Dieppe raid.
Justice 'He never recovered. eign policy based on continued
membership in NATO, and restora-
ition of civil liberties.
* * ee
| "A majority of the Socialist more than 400 persons were treat-
ed for heat prostration or faint-
ness.
One of those: felled by the heat
was Supreme Court he held at the time of his death.
He is survived by his wife,
Kathryn; two sisters, Mrs, Mar-
tin Parkinson of Wynnewood,
Pa., Mrs. Mary T. Dow, of Sa- * Fengler said he is inestigating
circumstances of the ragged race
start, in which the entire front
row got ahead of the pace car.
ragged race start was pro-
Boyce Phillips Draper, 2,
Flint, and R. A. Ball, 23, of Flint,
drowned of
Rapids, died Friday in a come t Charles E, Whittaker. .
doctor examined him and sent him NO BARMAID THERE
home. |
An Army!
* * +
Among the throng in the amphi-|
theater were Girl Scouts and Boy {barmaid the day the Japanese ‘today and later told newsmen:
Seouts, their merit badges as.
bright as the decorations worn by|
the military men around them.
.|There were Gold Star a)
‘dressed in white.
idren who didn't realize it wasn't finished INS story Jack was writ-
The crowd for the most part |
|was quiet, except for some chil-
a picnic in .the park. One child's
cry broke the stillness as the as-|
semblage stood for two minutes in|
.|honor of the dead.
There were few tears, no uncon-
trollable outbursts. | man of INS was killed in action. I still don’t think a wonderful
ifriend I had named Jack Singer
iwas getting an interview with the
'killed him. Death came to him in|
the ward room of the carrier
eee. torpedoed into a funeral)
eve
*« *
A poung navy pilot who survived,
the sinking brought along the un-|
ing, and finished it for him.
There weren't any barmaids
on Okinawa the day John Cash-
| John had lost an arm as a serv:
| somept & catll tho mensest sen |Party, last real stumbling block
‘to his investiture, swung behind
‘De Gaulle and assured him that
he could take office.
Pflimlin also called on De Gaulle
“When I presented my resig-
Se ee ee ‘the presl
ut replied that he would not
it appeared —— to form a
new government.
“Since such a possibility is ap-
pearing today, the president has
just informed me that he has ac-
cepted my resignation.
“As is the custom, he has asked
me to handle current matters.”
+ ® * Prices Go Zooming
The people who were among the
many who bought onion sets from
earlier this year should “really ap-
preciate them,” he said today. _
* * *
Campanaro, owner of the pro-
duce department at the Lakeside
Super Market, said he had. to
purchase the “‘scarce’’ seed onions
for 59 cents a pound this morning
at the Eastern Market in Detroit.
His customers, several months
ago paid 10 cents a pound when he
sold five tons of them,
* * *
bids
Ernest Campanaro of Walled Lake lem, 0.; and two brothers, Wil-
liam W, Tomlinson, vice presi-
dent of Temple University; and
‘C. F. Tomlinson, of Camp Hill,
Pa,
He was a member of Bloomfield
Hills Country Club, of which he
—was- presidentin-1950, and a mem-
ber of the recess club,
x * *
The body will remain at the Bell
Chapel of the William Hamilton
Funeral Home, Bi am, until
funeral services at the First Pres-
byterian Church, W. Maple, Bir-
miingham, on Tuesday at 3 p.m.
Chapel Cemetery, Memorial contri-
butions may be sent to, the Wil-
Interment will be in the White The
tested officially by Pat Clancy,
Memphis race car owner, but Fen-
gler overruled the protest.
The mishap followed the worst
start in the peak history of the
race.
-Aris;, migeed-the pileup by inches
and went on to win the race th
a Belond Special at an average
speed of 133.791 miles an hour.
Only driver hurt besides 0’Con-
nor was rookie Jerry Unser of
Long Beach, Calif., who suffered
a dislocated shoulder when his car
flipped over the retaining wall in
the mass smashup.
The big wreck, worst since a 7-
car smashup in 1930, eliminated the eontract and Fred W.
electrical. The latter are Pontiae
contractors. Moote the
The building will follow a new
design currently used for all new
State Police posts, Mulick said.
Constructed of brick with wood —
siding, it will house administra. -
tive offices, car wash, furnace
room and storage areas on the
first, or gronnd floor. Below
that will be a lower level with
squad room, lockers and more
storage space, and on the top
floor will be living quarters for
unmarried officers.
On the 30,000 square feet site
will be located a 16,000 square
; _feeman, hooked on with our : - According to Campanaro, at -
= . | sports department, went back to | De Gaulle moved into the Lap- went sky high this morning when|liam Beaumont Hospital. two fastest cars of the time trials— = SS Geum vai den Fak
James D. Clearhout, 12, of Oak | Forty-eight American flags the wars asa correspondent and ¢touse Hotel on the Seine’s Left/a farmer came to the market with driven by Dick Rathmann and Ed anid J
Park, was electrocuted Friday ae gently ie ed breeze | died. ‘Bank last night. With him was his/five. 32-pound bags of. the scarce e " a ion Elisian. F ° k * A
while helping install a television huge marble columns aroun . ; ~ ‘wife and enough baggage for a|sets. Campanaro won the bid for , Elisian spun trying to get around —
serial on a summer cottage near the circular amphitheater. Color- dar first reporter killed in Kore@ jong stay. Members of the De/$15 a bag compared to > the norm Rathmann and the bunched field Pigs land ~~ — ia
Newberry. . | ful wreaths, carried in eight mili- hav ay Richards, INS, who might Gaulle party were the only guests. price of $4.40. - H a Bill : Graham piled -_— tragedy Speedway of- eat neatick ead ong - erm
Mrs, Jessie Kuhl, 40, of Sepe.|'#"¥ Vans from the Capitol, were have bees home with his grand |——a. Cal DIY Scam et eee SS Funds for the building were ibanked in front of the domed C™/eren. Four other men were 2 a = ; waing, was killed Friday when her killed there ¢ Only- 14 cars finished the race, appropriated by the Legislature car left a road 3% miles southwest 138" of the hep grt iid and on 1 ~. 00, é ‘ Wind Destroys Two Dakota Farms SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Evan- one of the highest elimination fone ears ago. but not oeeant
of Bay Port and struck a tree. \dier u : ah 7 bain nsnown 0 Someday, son, venture ‘out of, gelist iso Gr re one vont Fates since only 8 were running |}, the State “Building Division -
Stanley Wolski, 73, of Detroit, | pried doors and ask a couple of good) "i 7 week tonight with attendance) a¢ the end of the 1951 race. until this year. was) atteck and killed by a Ge An electronic carillon of English : Pp g alns weep ] e reas pushing the half-million mark. :
Saturday while crossin . Detr | chimes and Flemish bells played men like Frank Bartholomew and The tally is 477,100 in the 16,500-| Only one of seven Michigan cars
wet sf tahes 12 ga Olt solemn notes during the cere- Alan Gould what kind of a time seat Cow Palace. ‘Decisions for|entered in the 500-mile race at In- Khrushchev in Bulgaria
.. ‘ monies. ‘they used to have when they had) By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (Upper Great Lakes region where Christ” total 17,254. dianapolis finishd th long grind g
_Ceoree E. ee ak 4 Dept ek « ‘even an undermanned team of INS, Warm and humid eir produced) Madison, Wis., reported an over- x «et «| LONDON @ — Soviet Premier
‘as njured A Mer) | an zs ‘ ‘ " Sovi
hig sports car en palpi il Hy After the ceremonies were eae ora satine abey aa Ore ike satore eal night accumulation of 1.39. He told a crowd of 15,000 last} A Novi ox driven by = Nikita Khrushchev went to Sofia, -
on Northwestern Highway in Farm.| |the thousands filed slowly out of ; re . country today and triggered. thun- Elsewhere in North Central sec-| night his six-week crusade will be Sree iso an cochay pes Bulgaria, today to attend the
ington and flipped over several’ (he cemetery, passing rows of| BR Ke derstorms and heavy rains a tions, rainfall amounts wére most-|extended for at least one week, to| ished Seventh Congress of the Bul-
oa gravestones marked by ti.y Amer-. Someday, son, if you improve, anheci Comrallctates cross ly light. June 15, and possibly another. of 129.149. The Special lined up garian Communist party, Radio
~ * ican flags and the red poppies tra- you'll be good enough to ¢hange|""¢ “® ae Ea Humidity readings. over the! Speaking on Memorial Day, the/last in the 33-car field. Moscow reported.
ditional to Memorial Day. the ribbon on their beat- “up mills. * * * Great Lakes area were higher|evangelist said “The liberties we The Novi was one of two sleek
The Weather : ann aid, “Gampennd a bor erteating ante _Fecurted ia the pe0-lenjoy wary perchased Ty the lOelt 0) Smmany, ie int Pel OS. Keather Beress Repent N t U d P tc it e ifrom the Pacific Northwest into ee Novi, driven by Paul Russo of Web-| Roast Beef
(PONTIAC AND VICINITY) — Clovdy 4VO nder Fresen onsti ution \the Gulf states ster Groves, Mo., dropped out after
with shower, teday, tenight and temor- . a ; “
Tau, Wigh today 80-s. High tomorrow Fair skies in New England were 39744 miles because of mechanical
nightly mostly ch eheedy) eh acai mes ‘an exception to the soggy, cloudy trouble, omorgasD rd
| C qu e Un ho picture elsewhere east of the TR said Wis trouble :
Teday in Pontiac W‘ Rockies. Skies were clear_ and from the pile-up.. (All Yeu Can Eat)
— temperature p:ecediz temperatures hot over the South- & «&-* | TONIGHT
wat 8 am: Wind veloc PARIS (UPI) — Thé real boggy,int France is the eiereural. tin- west. Three other entries ||
ie ete as iaross at 8.01 5 edictabie 595-member National Assembly. : Thunderstorms over the north- were eliminated by the crackup. 5:30 to 10:30 P.M. -
Gee seta Onaay mt ssc ae The 1946 eonstitution gave the asse mbly sovereign powers. But, ern tier of states produced = os ina _MANNY’S Moon rises Saturday at 6 48 po with Gen Charles De Gaulle in power, he will take them away and “inds which destroyed two farms Paul Goldsmith of St. Clair Shores
Downtown T Tem peratares ithe premier — for the first time in 12 years — will run the show. . and partially damaged another at and Len Sutton, who was driving
Semi iam Hore is how the division of powers slacks up under the present 5°. N. D.. about 8&5 miles north- the Jim Robbins Special from Roy-)
sam. Ai otor 60 ain ee r i gt _ . 1 sad intil : - ae 5 UP ‘ pi east of Bismarck. The U. S.) Oak, :
9 om., ) eu1S) mn — unl nd until De Gaulle changes it: ‘weather bureau termed it @ pos-
a + RESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC: He is elected by a joint ‘sible tornado. = PI € § TEOCTE by € th
the eee aca eee nt session of both houses of pe ae ament for seven years with a maximum | - * * *
Highest eens inne 84 ul two ierms. He presides over full cabinet meetings, signs treaties | A storm near Crawford in, horth-| —
Mean temperature Oe and laws and designates prime ministers during a government crisis. western Nebraska tore down tele-}
eather—Partiy Clouc Otherwise his nee tions are ornamental phone lines and pelted the area
Stighaest “secant: Sts tm Fentise PREMIER: He is designated by the president dnd names his with hailstones 7 to-11 inches in
a ens teeseeeess 7 58 | OWN Ci ibinet alte being invested by a majority vote of the National arenes ; tr the Gull
Westher Partly clouds °° Assembly. He has no specific constitutional authority except as | arm moist air from u
= Mighest one ate atin me oe ret of the cabinet or council of ministers Meotar a kept pape ye ANOTHER BIG FOOD TOWN }
A egrees during n Sano | Gen ie CABINET: The cabinet is appointed by the premier after his north as Kansas City while 70 and z= ~~ MARKET iS OPEN to Serve
: Zetey’s Temperatere Chen investiture by the National Assembly, The minister's have collective ‘80-degree readings were the rule . :
Alpena 63 arquette §2 42 responsibility to the National Assembly of the cabinet’s general from Texas eastward to the At- ‘
niece : = ‘» Memphis 2 be policy. They are equally responsible to it individually for their per- llantic, It was 10 to 20 degrees You Better and Save You More
Srewneritie * od eshte me sonal acts. The cabinet must give the go-ahead before the premier [warmer than 24 hours earlier .
"8 13 New Orleans 99 73, may call for an assembly confidence vote. from the Mississippi Valley east- ~— ©2135 | Di ‘Hi h :
6 Fae —
Seats $e Omen” gs & NATIONAL ASSEMBLY: The constitution gives the National |Ward through the Ohio Valley and ixie ig way
See Pree 18s ff) Assembly sovereign rights except for those exercised by the nation je Atlantic Seaboard a Dehk .
Dewwete “ “ Pittebureh 7 So ay a whole through a popular referendum. The assembly has the cee ana 4 : 2 STROKES BEHIND. — Bob Rosburg, of Palo Alto, “calif. at Telegraph: Rd. ho
, Fort Worth 95 7) 8 Francisco ee , right to declare war, study and pass laws and vote the national | fall amounts were light in most | blasts out of a trap at the 5th hole at Red Run in the second round
ol ieee SS EE MET SF itt” Tepper baw the Coe tne Repco eae la’ ot tne Westen Open yestrda), He i bed wth four gern fo PLENTY OF FREE PARKING emer e He Weetingion 8). 01. has only advisory and delaying, powers bit can not overrule an as- + * | strokes éff the leader, Tommy Jacobs, who has 135. (Tourney de-
: > Los Angeles %" ‘Tempe » igsembly decision Heaviest rainfall occurred in the, tails on page7), — / - 4 .
J 5 j 5 \ f \ , . 1 4 | f yj ' . , . 4 f \
THE PONTIAC PRESS. . President and Publisher
SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1958 -
It Seems to Me oe
Measures Must Be Taken at
Once to Avoid Air Collisions
Collisions in the air are altogether for the plane to respond to ta con-
too frequent. Furthermore pilots tell trols. It isn’t all instantaneous.
you confidentially that the number of
“near misses” is even more alarming. x * *
Now let’s complicate the picture
Accidents like this aren’t anything the way it has been compounded
new. Your scrivener remembers a lately. Let’s toss in a jet fighter such
collision in the air in 1918, when two as I rode a month ago. Let’s assume
army pilots crashed into each other the jet is doing 960 miles an hour
in training.
That’s 40 years ago.
| * * *
Also, Vernon Caste, of The Royal plane, it would cover two miles in which is 16 miles a minute or A MILE
IN LESS THAN FOUR SECONDS. If
the jet were aimed at the passenger
Flying Corps, gave his life to avoid less than eight seconds.. é
hitting a student in the air at a
Texas field.
x *« *
I attribute the current epidemic
to two obvious things: speed and
the increasing number of planes.
It isn’t negligence or ineptitude.
The collision of the two trans-
continental liners at The Grand
Canyon is so purely circumstan-
tial that we'll rule that out. But
the others demand immediate
study and corrective measures.
x * *
Let’s sit quietly on the edge of a
runway and do a few computations
on speed, sight and physical reac-
tions. Two big passenger planes are
flying toward each other. Each is
going 350 miles an hour or about six Diego in a Na e and a kind!
miles a minute—a mile in ten sec- A saa y
- onds. If they're headed toward each
other, and one passes Birmingham feet. Three times
and the other Pontiac, eight miles ‘ and of course the other airplane is
approaching also. Let your own im-
agination handle it from here on.
Suppose they were TWO miles apart
when they first saw each other.
x * *
I haven't the heart to conjure
this picture at one mile. And a
mile is quite a piece of space as
space goes.
You say, “Let the jets travel at
30 or 40 thousand feet and keep
the transports beneath.” That is
an avowed objective, but even
then the jets have to climb to
their higher levels and return
again right through the trans-
port lanes.
x *« *
Once I was returning from San
major let me take the controls for
160 miles. He told me to fly at 10,000
the major said:
“Hey, you're at 11,000 feet,” and three
apart, each will travel half way in 40 tines 1 slid hastily back bit
seconds. Really, that isn’t very long, ’ 7
is it?
x * *
Something no bigger than an
airplane isn’t particularly no-
ticeable at a distance of éight
miles. Remember, these planes
‘are flying toward each other
and neither gets the more con-
Now let's suppose that it’s just
_ & wee bit mirky, and let’s intro-
duce those fleecy, intermittent
clouds that look so. soft and
beautiful and yet which are just
as deadly as the drabbest fog.
Each airplane can be con-
cealed.
Or, suppose just one is hidden.
The collision could be just as
swift and just as devastating.
x *« *
Suppose the one that’s concealed
seconds. - fleetingly breaks into the open at
- four miles? At this distance with per-
- fect visibility, each of the pilots will
cover his half of the distance in 20
So, two big, fine planes, four miles
apart, can crash into each other
head-on in twenty seconds.
x * *
Pilots do have distractions.
| ‘They must check their instru-
ments. They must communicate
with the field. They must talk to
the ground and listen. They must
hear route beams. They have to
watch right and left as well as
head-on. Those big, hurtling sha- |
dows can come from any angle
«eeseceses. OF from above.....
eee OF below.
zk «* wf
~
AT FOUR MILES DISTANCE they
must move swiftly to avoid an ac-
cident. Human reactions take a little
time and then it takes SOME time
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Trade Mark Dativ Gxeept Sunday
” Beeewtive Vice , =. mee
Ms = - a. aa Jorman,
z SLR AR ve
et are 6 my .e gehen mis the fig in
et Paro Be, teese ca gla athe "saree
) abashed. If he had explained that
east-west and north-south traffic use
odd or even-numbered thousands of
feet, I would have been more atten-
tive.
we & *&. Bad weather conditions around
airports need even more atten-
tion. When the big transports
“stack up” and visibility on the
ground is poor, we have real
danger. They dispatch some to
other airports, but even so, it’s a
hazardous situation.
This whole problem needs
study immediately. It needs rules
that no one can break. We must
work out safety for many times
the planes we have today — for
just think what’s ahead in ten
years. .
Next fall will be several
erashes too late!
And in Conclusion Lp eecees
Jottings from the well- thumbed
notebook of your peripatetic re-
porter:
Overheard in the Press Sports De-
partment: “The Yanks are in a
slump. They’ve lost one in a row.”
eoeseess. Magazines are running
into some foul weather. Some of the
lesser fry have checked out for good
and news stand sales are off as high
as 40 per cent on some of the others
soeeeeeess NeW York handed out over
a thousand summonses the second
day of their anti-litter bug campaign
soecesees A secret operative tells me
we'll fire another satellite in June
(Navy). and the Army will whisk one
aloft in the early fall.
x * *
One of those Wayne County
bistros bore this sign (I’m told):
‘closed on account of altercations.”
e+eess.s. Railroad red caps get
35 cents a bag now. Maybe that’s
why so many people are carrying
their own.......... London’s
crime commissioner, Sir John
Nott-Bower blames the big up-
swing of crime in England to TV
which features crime 24 hours a
day .......... Records that
used to sell a million are lucky
now if they pass 300,000. Parents
are more cautions with that teen-
‘ age spending money.
* & &
- Overheard in thetall: “He not
only lied about the size of his yacht,
he Made me row the last half mile.”
See nse .... The other day I met lucky .
- EvrzaseTs' NewMan at-GMC Truck
who won « Cadillac plus $1,750 in
fl
oe tee
at x =¥ tre
4 : . *
£ The POWER of FAITH -
ROME, ITALY—The Colosseum still reflects the brutal might of ancient Rome. Here 50,000
spectators watched gladiators fight to the death. Two emperors tried to stop the bloody amuse-
ments without success. But one simple monk succeeded.
Telemachus, a Syrian, who came to Rome-on this sacred mission, went into the arena, tried to
separate the gladiators, and pleaded in the na ne of humanity, to the patrons. He was stoned
to death. Yet, his act resulted in an edict abol ishing the games forever.
Days of All Faiths
June Bride Legends Are Ancient
By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER
The idea of marrying in June
goes back to the Romans, who
thought it was a lucky month for
weddings, especially at the time
of the full moon.
* * *
You sometimes hear that June is
the marriage month because it was
named for and dedicated to Juno,
the goddess who was especially in-
terested in young women,
It is much more likely that the
month was named in honor of
the Juniores, the lower branch of
the Roman legislature. May was
named for the Majores, the up-
per house,
The term “honeymoon” comes
from a marriage custom of the an-
cient Teutons, who drank a honey |
wine for a month (or moon) after
the wedding. They say Attila the
Hun drank so much of this wine
following his marriage that he
died, :
x « *
It is also possible that the honey-
Moon, -as a time away from the
former home and the old family
ties, symbolizes the period when
the groom hid his newly captured
bride from her kinsmen while he
bargained with them to gain their
consent, He was in a good bargain-
ing position if he was already in
possession of the “property” for
which he was negotiating.
It is bad luck for the bride .
to step over the threshold the
first time she enters her new
home. She must be carried over.
This may go back to the time
when Romulus, who needed
wives for his soldiers, solved the
problem by turing the Sabine
male population out of their vil-
lages while his men went in
and carried off the Sabine wom-
en.
Or it may refer to the cave man
days when a man in search of a
bride: just hit her over the head
ang carried her home, Why it
should have anything to do with
good or bad luck is not clear.
In some placeg it is the custom
to hand the bride a poker, a shov-
el and a pair of fire tongs when
she-comes into her new home. This
is not an invitation for her to get
to work, but a ceremonial way of
cash in the big GM contest.
She’s a very personable gal
and she must have a lot on
the ball. She whipped
285,000 competitors
:. Brides, here’s a new
one. Cook your steak with
a blow torch. It’s 40 times
as fast and is cheaper. The -
France idea came from.
Unless the. gov- opeeueoee
ernment comes up with
some aid for the railroads,
there will be a few bank-
ruptcies in the days ahead.
Our own Grand Trunk’s
loss is creeping up toward
a million dollars a month.
HaROLp A. FITzGeRALp ‘ giving her authority over the
house,
When the bride comes to the
church, if she will leap over a
rope at the church gate she will
leave all her bad traits and ill-
humor behind her,
Don’t: go in one door of the
church and out another. That
brings bad luck,
Whichever one of the bridal cou-
ple steps out of the church door
first after the wedding will be the
master in the household.
The bride must weep on her
wedding day. It’s bad luck: if she
doesn’t,
She must not make—or even help
make—her wedding cake,
The real reason for wearing
the ring on the fourth finger is
that this finger cannot be straight- ened out except in company with
the rest of ‘the hand, It is not
easy for the ring to fall off a
crooked finger. There is no rea-
son why it should be worn on the
' left hand rather than the right.
It is especially lucky to be mar-
ried in old shoes..
The complete wedding dress
should not be tried on until the
wedding day. One way to be sure
you are complying with this super-
stition is to save one final stitch
unti] the moment the bride leaves
for the church.
* * *
- Tt is bad luck for the bride ‘to
look into the mirror after she is
fully dressed in her wedding gown.
The way to avoid breaking this
rule is to leave one glove off until
after you take the last look.
(Copyright 1958)
Dr. William Brady Says: -
High Calcium Diet Best
in Case of. Shaking Palsy
To the best of my recollection I
-hever saw a case of Parkinsonism,
Parkinson's disease, shaking palsy,
paralysis agitans, in the 400-bed
charity hospital. where I interned
for two years. But
I had seen and
studied a case
when I began the
study of medicine.
The case of
Parkinsonism I
had studied inten-
sively was a lulu!
The lady victim
had everything —
the mask face,
twinkling eye,
pill- rolling trem-. DR. BRADY
or, rigidity, slow studied move-
ments, body inclined forward, neck
extended and rigid, elbows flexed
and slightly abducted so that the
trembling fingers were at hip level.
She walked with reluctant, short-
ening steps as though she might
totter at any. moment, but never
fell. She kept her eyes wide épen
and seemed never to wink, When
she changed the direction of her
vision her eyes remained fixed
while her whole head and body
turned. .
The unsophisticated observer
may infer from such a patient’s
attitude, mask - like expression,
and taciturnity that he has lost
his marbles, From intimate ac-
quaintance with the patient and
other Parkinsonians, I can as-
The Country Parson
heWe fight evils as a farmer
fights weeds—not alone for the
, damage they do but to keep
| them from wrveding. oon sure you any such inference is
In practice, I have found Parkin-
sonians generally a cut above the
“common $level of intelligence.
In recent years several. new
_drugs or modifications of old drugs
have been exploited as superior to
the older drugs in the treatment
of Parkinson’s tremor. Ag you
‘might’ expect, I doubt that the
new, and of course more expen- .
sive, drugs do any more for the
Parkinsonian than the older drugs
did.
If this comment is brought to
the attention: of the leading medi-
_cal merchants of your community
(They seldom see one of my pieces
unless some one ‘‘brings it to their
attention”) he wil] probably be too |
busy to bother with it or he'll mar-
vel at my nerve offering my two-
bit opinion against the “accepted”
opinion of *‘ medical au-
thorities.” Nevertheless it is my
belief that the treatment of Parkin-
soniam today is not notably dif-
ferent in effect from the treatment
generally used in the past.
Now I hesitate, though I feel
in conselerice bound to add that
a high calcium diet is advisable
for most Parkinsonians, If for
any reason such diet is not satis-
factory, then the Parkinsonian
should supplement the ordinary
diet with a suitable daily ration
of calclum and vitamin D.
x *. *
letters, not-more than one page
sie ou will be Dr Wiiliam Brady, if « — self.
addressed eny is sent
tlac: Press, Pow’ Mi¢h:
(Copyright 1958)
the project."
| ot
. Voice of the People
‘Stop ‘Crying
We M ust M ove Forward”
Over Trees;
~ Here we go. ‘Hang on %0.your bet. The bleeding, blubbering sisters oe
that want to ‘ ‘Spare the Tree’ are in full cry. The Voice of the People***
carried a letter, weeping over - trees we're cutting down on Perry
. street.
* * *
Let's stop all progress and refuse to cut down a silly tree. Let's
take down the Pontiac Motor plant, brick by brick, and grow back
the forest that once stood there. Let's level New York City and put
back the dear, lovely trees that once graced Manhattan Isle. Let's
blast away all our churches, as every one required the elimination of
some darling, defenseless trees. Let's quit building schools and water
the trees that stand where the schools should be. Let’s rip up all the
Peg ee) Rae ee eee
forest.”
Let's quit breaking into tears over trees that stop progress. Let's go
forward. Let’s cut down trees as rapidly as our ancestors did and build
a nation. Let’s follow God's commands and move forward and went :
Let's be adults instead of weepy, weak-kneéd babes. j
* : * *
The writer of that letter says ‘‘I-hate to see my town ruined for the
purpose of living.’ What greater purpose is there than living? That's
the LaW of the Lord. Live and progress. If living doesn’t come ahead of
- trees, let's all die now,
* Whoops, my dear.
Readers ‘Comment
on Rock ’n’ Roll
I see Jerry Lee Lewis was prac-
tically thrown out of England with
his 13-year-old bride. Is it abso-
lutely nécessary to allow him to
enter the U. S.? Can't we deport
him to Cuba or Korea? What scum
we do spawn in this great natior
on some occasions,
: Le
Auburn Heights
————
An old theory is exploded.-Jerry
Lee Lewis says it was all right
for him to marry wife number
three before he was divorced from
wife number two as he really mar-
ried wife number two before he
was divorced from number one.
Thus for the first time in the an-
nals: of man, two wrongs make a
right.
* * *
This Hollywood cattle seems able
‘ to; sink to lower and lower levels,
something we once thought impos-
sible,
Tolly *
———
Quotes Emerson
Regarding Work
The words of Emerson are the
same now as long ago. ‘‘Mer talk
of victory as of something fortu-
nate. Work is victory. Wherever
work is done victory is obtained.”
Pontiac had better start on the
trail again of sales or else there is
no victory and no. work. .
Vauxall Hard Hearted Hand
‘Even Christians
Make Mistakes’
49 person. Take a person fT F
2 j
i ) i
if Hk 3
is BE
1 i s
ii
i
a
ny
Hie
aul for Voice of the People must contain the name and ¢ddress
of the writer. This totermaigne wa
be withheld upon the letter is mS —— nature. ——
must under ’ Pontiac Press cae aa’ aan to
edit gil letters.
State Poitical Enemies Sometimes Cooperate =—s_—y
LANSING (UPI) — Members of
Michigan‘s two major political par-
ties are not always the bitter per-
sonal enemies their public state-
ments make them appear tobe...
Often, quietly and behind the
scenes, members of the Democret-
‘ic and Republican parties actually
cooperate to further their main mu-
tual interest—greater public par-
ticipation in politics.
x .* *
Democratic Secretary of State
James M. Hare gave a splendid
example of this undercover co-
operation.
woman for work in the Republi.
can Party.
‘She has retired from the Detroit
school system: and | think you will
get a fine worker for your party,”
Hare told Lindemer.
* * ®-:
He explained he had talked to
the woman, a long-time acquaint-
ance, and she said she was inter-
ésted in working for the Republican
Party but didn’t know whom she
should contact. Hare volunteered to
contact Lindemer for her and did.
would love to have you join us.”*
® wf *
Hare seid he wes m erely inter-
ested in seeing a person interested
in politics take an vouiee part it.
State Highway
John C. Mackie and his wife have
probably the most am pregeerlvopee '
of any member of the state's of-
ficial family-——
Mackie lives on a farm south 1
of Lansing and in his spare time
(which Mrs. Mackie says is not
much) he works on the farm.
Most of the farm operations are
seeking the Democratic nomination
for U.S. senator.
Warns A-Power | Plant
Would Endanger Lives
WASHINGTON w — The Atomic
Energy Commission (AEC) was
told today it would be playing
with the lives of millions if. it
permits construction of a nuclear
power plant near Monroe, Mich.
Ben Sigal, counsel for protesting
labor unions, said the AEC’s is-
suance of a temporary construc-
tion permit in August, 1956, was
partially the result of ‘‘tremen-
dous pressire’’ by business
groups,
* * *
Sigal voiced his views as the
commission heard‘ ‘arguments, at
its Germantown, Md., headquar-
ters near here, on the union’s
_ fight to halt construction of the
‘fast breeder reactor planned by
Power Reactor Development Co.
(PRDC).
“The commission ought not to
play with the safety of millions
Of people,” Sigal told the com-
“This is part of an all out effort
to get the commission to stop
* *
Sigal denied the unions wanted
the 73% million dollar ‘weonet
\ _— temporary construction ft.
The commission, he ‘ail hed r a |
The AEC staff and the State
of Michigan were to present
their arguments iater,
Clayton opened the arguments
by contending it is not necessary
to prove as high a degree of safe-
ty when applying for a construc-
tion permit as is needed when
operation is to begin,
xk kk &
In developmental projects such
as the proposed reactor, he said,
issuance of a construction permit
does not mean the AEC has ap ~.
proved final operation of the nu- 4
clear power plant.
The PRDC counsel denied the
unions’ contentions that the com-
bination of privately owned atili-
ties does not have sufficient fi-
nancial reserves to finance the
Project.
Sigal contended the AEC had
disregarded the law in issuing the
piamiaaty es
to fhe Detroit and 2 Toes ‘metro
politan areas,
‘4 ;
as
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Bryan. Wins Crash-Ridden Indianapolis Speedway 500° Classic z Press Photographer Tells cme i ee oy | Only ft Racers
at Finish Line
After Pileups Champ’‘s Victory Dinner
Saddened by Death of
Pat O’Connor (Tom Gerls, Pontiac Press Photographer, was on hand for hig Sth straight
Indianapolis 600-Mile classic yesterday, and was eye-witness to one of fe
most horrendous starts in history of the event).
By TOM GERLS
Pontiac Press Photographer
INDIANAPOLIS—It was one of the most disorganized
F starts in history of the Memorial Day 500-Mile Indian-
apolis Classic. *
Without doubt, even most of the drivers were caught
by surprise and many out of position when the starter |
| gave the signal by dropping the green flag.
The three front row cars’- : f O'Connor, who was moving up,
| had just passed the rest of Seal oe glneet0 a) kdl cot balphame
the field to take up their as his car hit Bob Veith and then
positions when the flagitippea over the car driven by INDIANAPOLIs #—Jimmy Bry-
an, who now has won everything
available in championship closed
course auto racing, tonight will
pick up a check for about $100,000
at a 500-mile race victory dinner
saddened by the death of Pat dro '
Oo” epee int the starter possibl O'Connor died in his burning car aa ae 5 8 could have avoided much of the O'Connor apparently was fatally
confusion by giving the signal for|injured as he came down on his
worst start in the 47-year history another lap so that the ficld could|head after the flip. His car burst
| ; ; - om ; .
of the race. ten |into flames. Last year the cabs hurried helter- oper Sos acest Lod a ow & skelter out of the pits, under their up their nase. + . eae own power and tried to line KILLED — Young ’ moment Unse:
back of the pace car on a pasede nor amped aged Nod But, when the green signal was; a McKay Special hurtled the re-
lap. Two collided and never| Vernon. Ind. sat helplessly in given, every car made a mad dash) taining wall and suffered a frac- cates’ Sins Paces to Seu
reached the starting lineup : he Paes another to the first corner and there were| tured shoulder, while other cars [ ~ JUST BEFORE CRASH — Pat O'Connor in the Sumar Special. Geris
* «ef oll —_ pera the first |°5 many as eight cars abreast.) sereeched and screamed to avoid = and Jimmy Bryan, winner of the Indianapolis Speedway Classic which killed O’Connor Fifteen cars piled up on the first lap and
A supposed improvement yester-| lap of the 500-mile Indianapolis | re Sa the — F ~ , yesterday, ride side by side on eee: just betas crash only 14 finished the race. — __
day was a single file lineup of| Speedway race yesterday. A bad | This is where the jam started. . &
the cars in their starting order,| start caused‘a jam and 15 cars | Ed Elisian went into a spin and | It was one of the most horrifying, :
with engines running, in the pits.| were involved in the crash, Two | Dick Rathmann and Jimmy (starts I had ever witnessed and the 8
They were to be driven into the| ’ able to get back into the | Reece became tangled in the [question is, could it have been 2
traditional three-car lines as the| race. closely bunched corner. avoided?
pace = pulled away for the pa
rade p. . 7 } ;
track before anybody else, in- By BILL CORNWELL ‘a two-stroke lead at the ho'fway)The field was cut to 74 at the 36-: Frid.y with a seven-under-par 65,
cluding Hanks with the pace car, ‘point with a score of 135, nine hole mark and all four needed the day’s best individual effort,
got — o His — in the Memorial Day was = of spec- strokes below par. igreat scores to stay alive. | for a 36-hole total of 140.
front » Ed Elisian Jimmy tacular recoveries a isasirous; _ ar | Bill Casper Jr., one of the bright = . |
oe failures for the ‘‘big name’ play- = arly apie diss se \stars of the younger set, and ex- Wininger's rally was perbepe the
= | provided by four veteran profes- stars of young him and all three were running ers in the 55th Western Open golf : _ US. O winner Ed Furgol fur-'8*¢atest of the bunch. After shoot- sionals of the tournament trail pen : ;
half a lap ahead of the field championship at Red Run. detending champ D Ford, Bo nished the tragic aspects to yester- ing a first round 73, the sturdy
Rathman was ahead going into SAT — a Wo. : Young bgeseald i Wininger, Lioyd Mangrum and | day's action by failing to survive|Texan rebounded for a sparkling
the first turn. Elisian tried to pass; —~ = ; 2 oe Sh ae eer | helene Open king Dick Mayer. the cut, which used 147 as a divid-/66 to stand even with par at 144.
him on the third turn and lost . “, : ee ng Whittier, Calif., who paced the field) © ing line. His 66 was one of two fired yester- control. In an instant, that north- : ‘ j wea at the end of Thursday's first round| Each golfer staged a remarkable h day, Gene Littler coming through
east corner of the track looked * hab. Be with a phenomenal 64, cooled off|¢omeback to escape elimination Ford, | who wie ne with the other. like a race car junk yard. - eo to a 71 yesterday, but still retained/after disappointing opening rounds.| dismal 75, bounced back strong A
»-_ *« Sy tia ati 4 sone é ee , — Mangrum came back from his
O'Connor, a 29-year-old racing See. ’ ne oo _¥ ; ‘initial 75 to post a 68, featuring
veteran from North Vernon, Ind., Sms Ss saline 4 . : seven birdies, for a total of 143,
ran over the rear of the. auto while Mayer carded a 69 to go
driven by Reece, a native Okla- with his opening 76 for 145.
homan now living in Indianapolis. aeieiemiaeiin stitute aan A Atl Si Gp S | Ford's round of 65 included 29
O’Connor’s car overturned and ; ? . she a |putts, three on the 6th green for a ; Meee, ah, . we bogey, four straight birdies start- burst into flames. The bedy was eS oe pe < at No, 7 and eight “birds unrecognizable. ing
5 : om ys overall, and a canned chip shot for
_A car driven by Jerry Unser, a ia ; ; , | & a a a birdie on the 15th hole. Wininger’s
cat. ra gomghiaaye care gpa W a 3 >| |66 was Re pines by seven
+ Fan over cars : : , |*birds” and nine one-putt greens.
plunged over the retaining wall eS er n pen cor CS = ! ; Littler, tied with four otliérs but he escaped with a dislocated °
| . | for and place at 137, had the
* * wie ee 2a hottest putter during his six-
Of the 15 cars in the mixup, te bane Dene nee rt Joe ‘zaarian o.oo sane under-par spree as he one-putted
oi ‘© Es seecoas eae ease 1
eight were knocked out of the elf oetael ~~ Cat 2 oro 19 greens. He also birdied seven
race. Three kept on running. Four Bon wait... 1] gacesctat Pat’ Senwad .
got back in the race after repairs. Prank Stranahan .~ oT 138 Art wall Jr. For the first time in 15 tourna-
Feng Matte “scaenek - - are in Bruce Comptes . ments, Casper failed to survive the
sald first reports indicated Eii- Arnold Palmer .. 66-13—139 | Jimmy Johnson midway slash. After a first round
sian was responsible for the |Dees Fore Yelasciee|Ea Otter 10-73—143}- _}T1, he soared to an 8 for a score
wreck. mee pares + WT 140 Tommy Bolt oe eena et) andes 13-7014 ‘ of 151 and disqualification.
: . -1— nic a Th
O'Connor's death was the 48th} , —& Al Belding caveat ape yp aes 1$-68—143 » a — arg came on the
in the spesdway's history. includ 7 © ee ——— 3 Cary Middlecott pean | ph ty Sass © took an eight after needing only .a ee == . . Eugene Bone. =«sss—i(‘(‘iésOW NAL [George Bayer .............. s three-foot putt for a par four. He
" ° 1 DEATH CRASH — Pat O'Connor, car number the 500-mile classic. O’Connor’s car then turned [Bert Weever ......... 30-Ti--441 | is Bute en missed the putt, then carelessly
. * * 4, sits helpless as his car flips over the top of the over, caught fire and burned as he was killed. Don January .............. 70-Ti—-141/Bob Goalby .............. _jreached out and tapped. the ball
in Taly’ last year andthe United| ctf Aiven by Jimmy Reece in the first turn of : Se eee foward the cup. 1 struck hs fot = sna nneneseinson sina abc i eee eae a ity he
States auto club champion the last “ ae dack Fleck ........ saBosous finally got down in eight.
two years, started in seventh po- ; gel neeeeaness
sition in the Belond Special driven oe ® |Teo Biagetti .. sbaend oe Casper went seven over par or
to victory in the Memorial Day } , \D ues the last four holes and the lapse classic last year by Sam Hanks | ers Um e . YW] (So = LaClair ........., was fatal. Ed Furgol, whose good ( John Dalrymple ............ right arm has not fully recuperat- The husky cigar-chewing Bry- a ten a ed from recent surgery, added an missed skidding and spinning _ oO [Dick Mayer sl. 78 to Thursday's 79 for 157, which
pay af : rea age a DETROIT w—Manager Al Lopez, The Tigers were guilty of poor| Jim Bunning, who has com- Sari g poe met ye Prank Phillips SABER ESAT dropped him from the ranks.
preg sarag tog end asked left fielder Al Smith if he|base running and poor fielding as) pleted only one of his eight |paricioss $090 P. Bolling 2 5-12 0/PU Meme Joining Littler two strokes in ar- — » - wanted to come out of. the ball/the White Sox made it eight victo-| starts, took the most of the first [Tor 2ton im $335 Martinss $22°lpon Pairfield rears of Jacobs were Bob Rosburg, The lead changed 17 times be-|game to rest his injured leg. But|ries in their last~nine starts. game punishment as he was bat- 0-Dropo, ot 5 oo Eatinget ser 0/cay Maree -.- ss ES Doug Sanders, Don Whitt and
‘fore the Arizona cowboy pulled into|Smith insisted in staying in the * * &* ted out in the fourth inning. BM! Hollere | 51 33 DeMaris, 1 10 0 o|Jack Lumpkin spun scoannnen 35-71—148 steady Dow Finsterwald. Sam
the victory circle for the winner’s|lineup while the Detroit Tigers bat-| The White Sox had 25 hits in; Hoeft was tagged with the de- cre oo ay wine” $08 SlGay Brewer Jr. gaeTB— aT Snead, Frank Stranahan and Mike kiss from movie star Shirley Mac-/ted in the last of the ninth. the doubleheader and they included feat. rreoetdf A 6 F-skies | 1 6 1/6) seueey Pet ee Souchak were three shots behind
Laine. St a pair of home runs by ex-Tiger| Hank Aguirre started the night-|Phillips3> 4120 Morgan, 000 0|Ray Maguire. ||... 12.%8—447 the leader at 138. _* *& * Because of Smith's decision, and/s:ar) Torgeson and one by Sherm|cap and was driven out in the sixth|SAn@sc!) 4011 A-Zernial 100 0/Toney Penne 1, T3147 « k& &
George Amick, a 3i-yearcld/inadequate pitching by Tiger Lollar. All three home runs came/when the White Sox iced the con- Piacher p 2000 Vint nt p ooeo] ( Masters champion Arnold Palm- — veteran Sapp ae eager Pigeons Pehal in the first game, but it was a ninth|test with two runs that wiped outicuex->. 1 £999 GBoone 1000 NOG CUAL SE TING SCONES er and youthful Tony Lema came
seconds behind Bryan.________ | first game of yesterday's holiday inning a. by frcoage that brought noel iri lead. say Fo Totals 416156 Totais 355 115 Wes mine gr ITIL teases Pentise Press Photo |Next with 139’s while Dave Ragan,
Johnny Boyd of Fresno, Calif.,)doubleheader. =—_—- ane and Kall Tess ted 1 - struck out, for Haale int teh. Ce noptedlcnick Ratan en 222 Tew—Mg] | SHUCKS — Tommy Jacobs of |iim Ferree, Al Baling and Paul finished 42 seconds back of Amick.| kt oe * _ wom was Wilson's pug gut for, Staley in etn; Dain leds for SDick Norton o-.00.0........ HTetas| Whittier, — = deject- Te were in Ford = oe : : - Still it tac t - : r Dropo Tom ington .......5..+6. TS ed as one iis putts hu on ve Among those
The winning speed, 138.701, | Southpaw Billy Pierce, whe |by smith to close out the contest |aline’s fourth. fled ‘out tet valentine wen otke: [solemn dohmean : HU—108| toe ‘lip of the cup at Western [bracket were Dr. Cary Middlecotf, was the second-fastest in the his- | seldom has performed up to par |with pinch-hitter Lou Skizas on The same teams meet tonight at/Shicago ................... 202-100 001—8| Bob Wylie ...............-.. 15-74—149| Open at Red Run yesterday. Ja- |Ken Venturi and Pontiac’s Gene tory of the race, in spite of the | against the team that traded him | first and on|Briggs Stadiurn with Paul Foytack| ‘E—Nons.”" FO-A—Chicag 0%), tout) Bem, Brith TT aacaaage| CRED BG yes eld after (Bone. big wreck and numerous spins. | a six-hitter that sto and one man out, Frank Boll- (4-4) opposing Early W (5-2), |*rolt 27-13. DP—smith, Fox and’ Jack- Tommy Shannon ............ 72-78—150| CODS stil] leads lel r
. my pyr Tbe: |ine, hit a towering drive to lett.lrhe series will wind up with a sin.|"°sd--Sere SMF? abe eet" pone, [Bou Pretnea =. taepecise| SUPPing to a 71 following his | South African Gary Player, Only 14 cars were running at the| p> Tor ® #2 nightcap vietory be- ismith leaped high against the| oie game Sunday ae the Tigerg| soe. &—Kaline, EO 2 Lele.) Gorgon Jones |... 44-fe—is0| Sparkling 64 Thursday. A total of | Mike Diets of Indianwood and finish. 1 fans. screen and pulled it down and the end thelr corrent. — sed aa gers Denpvan ...........5" RER BB 60 argent nose Pete ceneweees a tasaes 73 golfers made the cutoff point. | amateur Tom Draper from host
* & + All this added up to a disappoint-|telay back to first was in plenty a me wea ae a 13 George Spencer ...........: T1S—188] Red Run were among 13 golfers : moa ag: $20,850 in lap prizes|ing end to the Tigers’ five-game/% time to double Skizas. Keegan 2.2.2. i 180 0 OltRandall Ahern... | T4-76—180 Farl [ d H Ids: deadlocked at 142. After a double
—$150 a lap for each he led. Amick|winning streak and meant that et ek Ok More Sports pomng gb 6 8S ecommerce 11-80—181 y ea 010s; bogey on No. 2 and a bogey on won $3,900 in lap prizes, fourth-|they failed to pick up vital ground| Detroit used four pitchers in the Morgan «1 ---s--: te 1 8 6 8 Shame" pestin 1. ae : the srd hele, Player weat four place Tony Bettenhausen of Tinley|while the New York Yankees were|opener and four more in the on Page 19 Valentinett GR GE Gg Bfegene woodera 200000. 0 0! 17-14—881 below par the rest of the way
Park, Mll., $2,700 and Boyd $2,500.|losing a twin-bill. nightcap g xPaced 3 baiters tn’ aia? © © °%lMane Merrett. 7) -8-76—181 DIONCS CAGE ITS for a 71. The crowd was estimated over : a _ ar, UO — ochick, Soar, Ernie Boros ........ +20 14-78 152
150,000 niet bar = -= = ps NOlinn, ee KALAMAZOO 7 Max Evans, former-assistant pro ne
") eo sea ALAMA (> — Western ; ‘ : . ; DETROIT CHICAGO Bernard Pitney... ... 78-7$—153|_ -_:_4 |at Rochester, was in the 143 group : : BR useeee oe 88- tl whi]
Suggs Sets Pace inna if WG” tts ewe gti tse macs, EERERS/(' te NCAA national champion-{kem, wore Taree nd, Wally Bur x *Dic piwhoe oF -i— ; . { ul .
gg J. UPEN Sectional Uuaiifiers Mon CY (sees Hi een bu aR oo SESE ae Oman, sane 3. tee i be os Boone re malig) Ea : The Broncos won the district With 2 U nder 71 . ss . = ; Zermial if 3010 Phil ps 3» 4008 “Larry *Bianco | 44cm I84 championship yesterday aceatca aly tree seatecee—-Chmck, Bat: It's National Open season again|ship is scheduled June 12-14 at] PGA champion Lionel Hebert| Greif, 999° Rranconart ¢110/Ben Lula... |... \.... 7670—185|Notre Dame 54 |Sis, Bob Whiting and Draper—sur- GATLINBURG, Tenn. W# —jand 159 golfers, including virtually|Southern Hills Country Club injand amateur champ Hillman Rob-|Hegsne 2000 Batteyc $0. 2.0/ White tote ee ek vived the cut. Kocsis had 145 and Louise Suggs, veteran campaigner|all of the star-studded field now|Tulsa, Okla bins complete the list of qualifying|Maenn’ 3.9.99 Aparicioss 3.12 1|*chick Hendrickson... Te-10188| Ny if Whiting 146. : on the lady cireuit, mixed|competing in the W. , playe: | - Aguirrep Soe reteeP 386 Cleceorge Linklater... ..”. re-77—-185|, Notre Dame advanced to the| . : pro ; jcompe estern Open at| One player has already qualified] exemptions desde eee i d superb drives with deft’ putting|Red Run, will seek 29 berths in|for th I clai Ss. Suscep 9000 Larry Pentiuk ............., 78-71—188/final round game earlier by acobs encountered trouble on
‘5 Salt None nual classic, Ted Maka-| Under regulations adopted by |3-M B'ing 1909 ae 79-71—186|dropping Valparaiso from the| the backynine after making the Friday for a 2-under par 71, and|Monday's 36-hole sectional quali-jlena made the grade last Mond. — Shawp = 0 006 Mogae batededendd HOES sccsesss FETD= 308
a 3-stroke, first-round lead in the fiers. He faly. sh <= awh the USGA last year, only the last —___|BiN Maloney -....... ...... 19-77=156|double-elimination district tourna-| tm in 33 with the help of four
$5,000 Gatlinburg Women's Open} Req Run and Pium Hol ay. ating 72-75-41 to} tive National Open winners are ASR, inte Totes pine, Beet ean Seward nL, Frteaee [ment 10-4. race three i a row. He hed Golf Tournament. . -rur Hollow are 5 : . exempt. move forces five |7th; B—fouled out for Susce in 6th; C—|Ed Purgol .... ............ 19-78—187 | taree bogies and a “bird” com.
imme - | the sites for the Michigan see-| A total of 17 golfers will be | ©X-champs* to qualify Monday— Chicago ener = O10 O21 90041 Ty Damon ya...” Spcpige| Western Michigan .. 103 000 1ox—8 112] IE home for 38 and his one-un-
= =< ‘ as F 7 ying, five of 7 y _Manere, Oe amin, Martin. Shahn Oe ee es ‘pal adacadunian 2 Sos Hannan, Bretting (7) and Wojcik: oe ot “Ry «2. tying program Monday which will |-them previous winners, Exempt ‘Sam Parks Jr., Lew Worsham |14. Detroit’ 27-9. DP--Phillips, Pox andlisrael solomon... 81-7189 |Rumhor, Kaufman. (7), Morrisey (7),| Veteran Toney Penna, who qual. ste an ee oem entry of | champions include defender Dick | = Licyd Mangrum, It will be |D'op.. Martin and Boone. LOb—Chicago gutter Chartand .......... “Ree ae | "e—atervioay. L--Bretting. ified for today’s 18-hole session, had 2,150 players 144 places | Mayer, Cary Middlecoff, Ed Fur- final year of exemption for | ith, Kuenn, Boone. HR—Kaline|©7 JOMCS «- esse eres TOBE 100 . . to leavi
St 28 locations throughout the | gol, Jack Fleck and Ben Hogan. | Hogan. Piece: Oromo. Be en wa eof Leste ooo €3-M—i00| Valparaiso ......., 010 002 000 ¢ stheete *restean, hematite country, ———— : | errr ‘anis aes ad a
poms Ss ae The 10 players who finished clos-| Mangrum, now playing at Red Kperve te te 22202. Sua9 2 $$ S/R Martin - Chick Harbert, who would i1:75|, Michigan's huge field, divided|est to Mayer last year at Inverness|Run, will seek his position here,ente ° 700000070000" 173 3 $2 Slone saete 2 go | Wolete Ce STITORN at nae peen & qualifier, was forced pjinto two groups, will start leaving|in Toledo are others not required|along with most of the others in|_ U—Soer, Umont, Summers, Honochick.|Gene Kunes Jr). ).)|) 94-77—161 , _ 7 jout of action yesterday after six
g-90| (Ne Ist tee at Red Run and Plum|to qualify. These iticlude Julius|the Western field. Nias aia sibcniom Tony Oucleste” 0 Rascies | PRIDAY’s FIGHTS holes by an ailing back,
j|Hollow simultaneously ‘at 6 a.m.|Boros, Jimmy Demaret, Ken Ven- + & of ‘| For the fitst tire sinte 1946 the! 20, Zimmerman... 30-87—-168 Br eee a ee ee : B-44/Each group plays 18 holes at each|turi, Fred Hawkins, Sam Snead,| Frank Stranahan was medalist|National Football league has sanc-Tommy sstiier |” pecteccisa eh, iam too ny See Red Run this morning at 9:45 with | : ; course, is | , [Robert Vicenzo Billy Max- + cA ” Bob Coianee - . 9g-92~185 HAMBURG, Germany—Willie Hoepner, the last threesome the Ist :
| x a ee o De PnZO, y Max-/in last year’s*sectional qualifiers|tioned trophy awards to players,! Chick Harbert 91, with 174, Germany. awarded decision over|tee wat 1:4 ‘ :
than Berry (0 7 - * ' |well, Wally, Burkemo, Chick Har-'at Oakland Hills and Frankl , ious tillard ¥ eee no erg Artennto Calzavara, 174%. aly. caine. /(0e at 1:45 p.m. Today's fleld will ew Bs a The US. golf champion-|bert and amateur Billy Joe Patt ‘Hil s inthéreby reversing a previous | teerry hans Ne ye pad pent | sare, Gegualified for dytting m six ibe reduced to the 50 plus ties 4
. a —. ' yeere | .. ruling. ! | *Denotes amateur. — / lheavyweight tite). . eres, bo for Sunday's final youndi. ¢
i Z ‘ + e 1 > %
} : \
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; ft ee : ; =, en i
| | | THE’ PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1958 | sg csr tlc me ye
“\
,t
in Future Better Care Pontiac’s Civil War hero (you'll '
ped Off Casey's Face! ne ron
i)
t ih
f\ AN
|
}.!
1% fi i
Pontiac residents can be proud of
ole ipa Gt SR _ ; corner avenue o >
. ‘By CHUCK ABAIR , |)Saginaw street) is going to get | American Legion Cook-Nelson post, |
be ae : more loving care than ever. which was happy to accept Ewalt’s .
: . Our nameless hero and the small | offer to. maintain it. :
. Yanks Shocked || With only one more week remaining in the spring ee ee a = e . \%
sports season, the Michigan High School Athletic Asso-|der auspices of the Pontiac Parks| Baccalaureate Rite ta
as Nats Take i \ciation has issued warnings concerning the starting of & studied a case giving her authority over the
house,
When the bride comes to the
chureh, if she will leap over a
rope at the church gate she will
leave all her bad traits and Iill-
humof behind her,
Don't go in one door of the
church and .out another. That
brings bad luck.
Whichever one of the bridal cou-
ple steps out of the church door
first after the wedding will be the
master in the household.
The bride must weep on her
wedding day. It's bad luck if she
doesn’t.
She must not make—or even help
make—her wedding cake.
The -real reason for wearing
the ring on the fourth finger is
that this finger cannot be straight.
ened out except in company with
the rest of the hand, It is not
easy for the ring to fall off a
crooked finger. There is no rea-
son why it should be worn on the
left hand rather than the right.
It is especially lucky to be mar-
should not be tried on until the’
wedding day. One-way to be sure
you are complying with this super-
stition ig to save one final stitch
until the moment the bride leaves
for the church.
* * *
It is bad luck for the bride to
look into-the mirror after she is —
fully dressed in her wedding gown.
The way to avoid breaking this
rule is to leave one glove off until
after you take the last look.
(Copyright 1958)
Dr. William Brady Says:
Hig h Calcium Diet Best
in "Case of Shaking Palsy
To. the best of my recollection I
never saw a case of Parkinsonism,
Parkinson's disease, shaking palsy,
paralysis agitans, in the 400-bed
charity hospital where I interned
for two years. But
I had seen and
when I began the
study of medicine.
The case of
Parkinsonism ~1
had studied inten-
sively was a lulu!
The lady victim
had everything —
the mask face,
twinkling eye,
pill- rolling trem- DR. BRADY
or, rigidity, slow studied move-
ments, body inclined forward, neck
extended and rigid, elbows flexed °
and slightly abducted so that the
trembling fingers were at hip level.
She walked with reluctant, short-
ening steps as though she might
totter at any moment, but never
fell. She kept her eyes wide open
and seemed never to wink, When
she changed the direction of her
vision her eyes remained fixed
while her whole head and body
turned.
The unsophisticated observer
may infer from such a patient’s
attitude, mask - like expression,
and taciturnity that he has lost
his marbles, From intimate ac-
quaintance with the patient and
other Parkinsonians, I can as-
The Country Paeean
“We fight evils as a farmer
hts weeds—not alone for the -
image they do but to keep /
m from spreading.” sure you any such inference ts
wrong
In practice, I have found Parkin-
sonians generally a cut above the
common level of intelligence.
In recent years several new
drugs or modifications of old drugs
have been exploited as superior to
the older drugs in the treatment
of Parkinson's tremor. Ag you
might expect, I doubt that the
new, and of course more expen-
sive, drugs do any more for the
Parkinsonian than the older drugs
did,
If this comment is brought to
the attention of the leading medi-
cal merchants of your community
(They seldom see one of my pieces
unless some one ‘‘brings it to their
attention’) he will probably be too
busy to bother with it or he’ll mar-
vel at my nerve offering my two-
bit opinion against the ‘‘accepted”’
opinion of ‘‘recognized medical au-
thorities."’ Nevertheless it is my
belief that the treatment of Parkin-
soniam today is not notably dif-
ferent in effect from the treatment
generally used in the past.
Now I hesitate, though I feel
in conscience bound to add that
a high calcium diet is advisable
* for most Parkinsonians, If for
any reason such diet is not satis-
factory, then the Parkinsonian
should supplement the ordinary
diet with a suitable daily ration
of calcium and vitamin D..
$e *« *
Signed letters, not more than one page
or 100 words long pertaining to personal
health and hygiene, not - disease, diag-
nosis or treatment, will be answered
Dr Wilttam. Brady, Se man — ed ~<
addresse* SS *
tac Press,
ve fe 2 ee ee . the oa Voied of the oobi
‘Stop Crying
We Must Move Forward:
Over Trees: :
Here we go. Hang on to your hat. 7, idsetag: tanita ae
that want to “Spare the Tree” are in full cry. eg ecmagegs Bowe
carried a letter weeping over the trees we're ae See Perry
neat fo = er
forest.”
o
ES + Es =
3
+
Fs
Let’s be adults instead of weepy, weak-kneed babes. __
* * *
The writer of that letter says “I hate to see my town ruined for the
purpose of living.’’ What greater purpose is there than living? That's
the Law of the Lord. Live and progress. If living doesn’t come ahead of
trees, let's all die now.
Whoops, my dear.
Readers ‘Comment
on Rock ’n’ Roll
I see Jerry Lee Lewis was prac-
tically thrown out of England with
his 13-year-old bride. Is it abso-
lutely necessary to allow him to
enter the U. S.? Can't we deport
him to Cuba or Korea? What scum
we do spawn in this great nation
on some occasions,
Auburn Heights
—
An old theery is “exploded. Jerry
Lee Lewis says. it was all right
for him to marry wife number
three before he was di from
wife number two as he really mar-
ried wife number two before he
was divorced from number one.
Thus for the first time in the an-
nals of man, two wrongs make a
right.
* * *
This Hollywood cattle seems able
to sink to lower and lower levels,
something we once on impos-
sible.
Tolly
ee
‘Quotes Emerson -
Regarding Work
same now a8 long ago. “‘Men talk
of victory as of something fortu-
nate, Work is victory. Wherever |
work is dorie victory is obtained.”
Pontiac had better start on the
trail again of sales or else there is
no victory and no work.
Vauxall ———
‘Even Christians -
Make Mistakes’
make mistakes.
* th
. AEE i
aa Hig: bettity bLECTEL \ So it is with Christians. We
perfect and don’t pretend to be
* a *
When we make a mistake
forgiveness from above
Him to strengthen us so
make the same mistake.
Clarkston se
‘How Do They
Get Elected?
¥ 3
E 4
Z i Hit z
<
Es
ag
i ie i 8
|e bs?
State Poitical Enemies
Sometimes Cooperate
LANSING (UPI) — Members of
Michigan's two major ‘political par-
-ties are not always the bitter per-
sonal enemies their public state-
ments make them appear to be.
_ Often, quietly and behind the
scenes, members of the Democrat- -
ic and Republican parties actually
cooperate to further their main mu-
tual interest—greater public par-
ticipation in politics.
x * *
Democratic Secretary of State
James M. Hare gave a splendid
example of this undercover co-
operation. 7
_ “She has retired from the Detroit
School system and | think you will
get a fine worker for your party, “
Hare told Lindemer.
* * a
He explained he had talked to
the woman, a long-time acquaint-
ance, and she said she was inter-
ested in working for the Republican
Party but didn't know whom she
should contact. Hare volunteered to
contact Lindemer for her and did.
Warns A-Power Plant
Would Endanger Lives
_- WASHINGTON w — The Atomic
Energy Commission (AEC) was
told today it would be playing
with the lives of millions if it
permits construction of a nuclear
power plant near Monroe, Mich.
Ben Sigal, counsel for protesting
labor unions, said the AEC’s is-
suance of a temporary construc-
tion permit in August, 1956, was
partially the result of ‘‘tremen-
dous pressure’ by business
groups.
* *
Sigal voiced his views as the
commission heard arguments, at
its Germantown, Md., headquar-
ters near ‘here, on the union's
fight to halt construction of the
fast ‘breeder reactor planned by
Power Reactor Development Co.
(PRDC).
“The commission ought not to
play with the safety of millions -
of people,” Sigal told the com
missioners. .
W. Graham Clayton Jr., PRDC
counsel, disputed the unions’
. Claim of danger and said;
“This is part of an all out effort
‘to gef the commission to stop
the project."’ ~
* * *
Sigal denied the unions ‘wanted
73% million dollar -project
dropped. ‘ The AEC staff and the State
of Michigan were to present
their arguments later.
Clayton opened the arguments
by contending it is not necessary ~
to prove as high a degree of safe-
operation is to begin.
* * *
In developmental projects such
as the proposed reactor, he said,
issuance of a construction permit
does not. mean the AEC has ap-
proved final operation of the nu
clear power plant. -
The PRDC counsel denied the
unions’ contentions that.the com-
bination of privately owned ufill-
ties does not have sufficient fi-
nancial reserves -to finance the -
project.
Sigal contended the AEC had
disregarded the law in issuing the
temporary construction permit,
The commission, he said, had ~~~
wittwnoem,
project would be safe. .
e 2
. The union counsel indicated his
principal objection was-the close
proximity of the proposed reactor
to the Detroft and Toledo mietro~
politan areas, ‘
\
i a sees pare AVER PARES Ze . OTHE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY; MAY 81, 1958.
Ample Parking Only a Few Steps
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_______#. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1958,
ash-Ridden Indianapol | Press Photographer Tells a
of 900-Classic Disaster ~— Only 14 Racers
at Finish Line . i ae caren Bagrert wiser oad "was copetaes . sao a the
By TOM GERLS er | e ups Pontiae Press Photographer “
INDIANAPOLIS—It was one of the most disorganized (Tom Gerls, Pontiac Press
starts in history of the Memorial Day 500-Mile Indian-
apolis Classic. _
Without doubt, even most of the drivers were caught
by surprise and many out’ of position when the starter
_ Gave the signal by dropping the green flag.
\ The three front row cars?
| had just-passed the rest of
the field to take up their
positions when the flag
dropped. Champ’s Victory Dinner
Saddened by Death of
Pat O’Connor
INDIANAPOLIS #—Jimmy Bry-
O'Connor, who was moving up,
had no place to go and sat helpless
as his car hit Bob Veith and then
flipped over the car driven by
Reece.
O'Connor. the of : ;
_ O'Connor died in bis burning car tps agai pepe per kok * | on the first lap of the Memorial co ve avoided muc the} O'Connor apparently was fatally >>) Day c after the confusion by giving the signal for injured as he came down on his
worst start in the 47-year history another lap so that the ficld could|head after the flip. His car burst of the race close and st into flames. Last year the cars hurried helter- up ang enn straighten Ce «
pment Laws to line up -_ * * A moment later Jerry Unser in back of the pace car on a parade nor. 29- racer » North But, when the green signal was; a McKay Special hurtled the re- - . =: » collided and » B-year-old from given, every car made a mad dash} taining wall and suffered a ftrac- < ; Pontine Prese Photes by Tom Gert lap. Two never) Vernon, Ind., sat helplessly in JUST BEFORE CRASH — Pat O'Connor in the Sumar Special to the first corner and there were) tured shoulder, while other cars . ; led the Gest lee und reached the starting lineup. car as he ‘spun over another as many as eight cars abreast.| screeched and screamed te avoid § and Jimmy Bryan, winner of the Indianapolis Speedway Classic — which killed O'Connor. Fifteen cars piled up on t lap _& * racer and met death on the first “ the pileups. , ' yesterday, ride side by side on the straighaway just before crash only 14 finished the race. : A supposed improvement yester-| lap of the 500-mile Indiafiapolis ~*~ * * Roa wn . ; = toed Sy preeiee bed Se _ spain day was a single file lineup of| Speedway race yesterday. A bad This is where the jam started. = _ the cars in their starting order,| start caused a jam and 15 cars a ees cet es eee It was one of the most horrifying ; .
with engines running, in the pits.| were involved in the crash, Two Rathmann and Jimmy |starts I had ever witnessed and the Py - They were to be driven into the| were able to get back into the | Reece became tangled im the |question is, could it have’ been| | I traditional three-car lines as the) race. | elosely bunched corner. avoided? | pace car pulled away for the pa | i : ON, e
Dick Rathman, in the No, 1 rs | : . ; : starting position, got away = > : was halfway around * a - . ack hess anybody else, in-| > By BILL CORNWELL a two-stroke lead at the halfway)The field was cut to 74 at the 36-; Friday with a seven-under-par 65, cluding Hanks with the pace car, t = [point with a score of 135, nine hole mark and all four needed the day’s best individual effort, got started. His mates in the | = / Memorial Day was a day of spec: strokes below par. great scores to stay alive. for a 36-hole total of 140. front line, Ed Elisian and Jimmy | ) ja recoveries oe ee. But the top news Friday was fon one —— “ Vee Wininger's rally was perhaps the Reece, finally caught with *| de E fes-. |stal rset, a - ; _
him and all three were running ¢ ers in the 55th Western Open golf) ee et che tanemnck te, U-S--Open winner Ed Furgol fur-|S*eatest of thie bunch, After shoot: half a jap ahead ef the field. t championship at Red Run. defending champ Doug Ford, Bo jnished the tragic aspects to yester-|ing a first round 78, the sturdy . Young Tommy Jacobs, the for- Wininger, Lioyd Mangrum and (day's action by failing to survive|Texan rebounded for a sparkling Rathman was' ahead going into "jmer USGA Junior champion from) yo onal ose king Dick Mayer. [the cut, which used 147 as a divid-/66 to stand even with par at 144. the first turn. Elisian tried to pass Whittier, Calif., who paced the field —s ing line. His 66 was one of two fired yester- -_ sly ke ee ee ee at the end of Thursday's first round| Each golfer staged a remarkable)!" U6 =| 0 tt ing through control. In an instant, that north- with a phenomenal 64, cooled officomeback to escape elimination - ope beat ‘with the other. . = corner of ral track looked to a Ti yesterday, but still retainedlafter disappointing opening rounds.| dismal 75, bounced — 5 &¢ «+ *&
vee Syeteat rain! — Nceavan etre) eee = = t to a : O'Conner, a 29-year-old racing
a birdies, for a total of 143, veteran from North Vernon, Ind., J OL while Mayer carded a 69 to go ran over the rear of the auto | with -his opening 76 for 145.
oman now living in Indanapola & 2° GP He & sts, tees og tos Gb men te homan now living in Indianapolis. ~ ; ; - . . putts, three on the 6th green for a O’Conner’s car overturned and ? ie . ; = = bogey, four straight birdies start- burst into flames. The body was & : . ; te eicenel daar unrecognizable. q - : : , and a canned sh g A car driven by Jerry Unser, a e || i | __ first-time starter from Long Beach, |
| SrSoeere Western Open | | but he escaped with a dislocated / houlder. :
2 oe i Tommy Jacobs .............. @4,;71—135 Mike Petchick .............. 69-T3—142
, 4 son ~10—131|Joe Zakarian .,....-...-..--- 12-T0—142 Of the 15 care in the mimw,| Bow Pinaterwald 0000000 cout (Bh Cnn 200000000000 ag <. Three kept on ie Few Gene utter wea seeeaesnanen 11-60—131 Gary FAI nnn eeerees os: ;
got back in the race after repairs. prank ursnahen 00000 SET LM/AR Wall Jr ‘ects, Cooper en oot Chief steward Harian Fengier am Sn ve ceeeeves aeesee 10-68--138/*Tom Draper ................
, Aeneid’ Poles 2.2.20, getetas [aimmy Jose midway slash. After a first round said first reports indicated Eti- Tony ‘Lema 11-40-19 Eras _ vooter meena Tl, he soared to an $0 fora score sian was responsible for the Dave ma 8.11140 Tommy Bont pea and disqualification. - | m Ferree : -11—~140 | Bill Ezinicki ................ . eoahe
Al Balding ........ an 70-70——140|Lioyd Mangrum turning point O’Connor’s death was the 48th WOOT ose coc sc cuws 10-70—140|Lionel Hebert .............. 362-yard 16th hole where Casper in Ao paeieias history, includ-| ~ Cary Middiecott ¥a-00-— 361 | Dees Oye took an eight after needing only a : : . ‘Ken Venturi ................ 71-70—-141 | Julius Boros ................ : 3 ing. two years of races prior to 2 Dugene BOM ooo 6eeciess ie. Ligh beer) bevong, timated ad ee three-foot putt for a par four. He ihe Sret 00 te tt. DEATH CRASH — Pat O'Connor, car number the 500-mile classic. O'Connor's car then turned [Bef Weaver. @0000000..00000. 70-7114 prpreeeeesenseee missed the putt, then carelessly * * 4, sits helpless as his car flips over the top of the over, caught fire and burned as he was killed. | Don January . 0-1-1461 Lope we eS reached nd tapped
Lae ppd in = ger car driven by Jimmy Reece in the first turn of Howie Johnson... 1, .. 13-6044 Walker Inman Jr o...040. Bee eke pee sod in Italy last year and the United = a States auto club champion the last —_ finally got down in eight: . two years, started in seventh po-| ©@ Casper went seven over par on sition in the Belond Special driven eo : 8 . wan the last four holes and the lapse to victory in the Memorial Day} cn ok was fatal. Ed Furgol, whose good classic last year by Sam Hanks Id S John Dalrymple .......... right arm has not fully recuperat- ' i Jerry Magee ................ ed from recent surgery, a The husky cigar-chewing Bry- . -- MOONE. 5. 5 ccciewcsnes : > added an missed skidding and spinaing | } | [ay manent 00 nes pcletcsg- ry file ct cp cars by inches and found himeelf |) errorr @—Manager Al Lopez, The Tigers were guilty of poor| Jim Bunning, who has com- Ome RH RBI meAD ei RBI rank see ietsayee ce. 12-14—146 | Pict mape Ep in first place at the end of the | oied left fielder Al Smith if he|base running and poor fielding as) pleted only one of his eight Aparicio se S990 F. Bolling 2b 3 20 enereneeneeeen Joining Littler. two strokes in ar- tragic. first lap. wanted to come out of the ball/the White Sox made it eight victo-| starts, took the most of the first Toreson ib 4223 Ramee «32° Fie ee esa ea tans rears of Jacobs were Bob Rosburg, The lead changed 17 times be-jgame to rest his injured leg. But/ries in their last nine starts. ‘game punishment as he was bat. Porat bebe mee 2S} Sicno white 2 Dou g- Sanders, Don Whitt and fore the Arizona cowboy pulled into/Smith insisted in staying in the x * ted out in the fourth inning. Bill Loliar ¢ ; 5 H 22 B-Harris lb 1000 oe teeta erento ee steady Dow Finsterwald. Sam the victory circle for the winner’s/lineup while the Detroit Tigers bat-| the White Sox had 25 hits in| Hoeft was tagged with the de- ciegin'y 95 36 Bertola 3b 40.0 0) dummy Clerk Snead, Frank Stranahan and Mike kiss from movie. star Shirley Mac-|ted in the last of the ninth. the doubleheader and they included| ‘°**- gmntth $030 Daisey Looe meay Hacein “eager rat sia shots behind Laine * * * — ir of ho ms by ex-Tiger| Hank Aguirre started the night-|Phillips3> 4120 Morganp 000 0|Ray Maguire geen
* * * Because of Smith's decision, and Earl Torgeson ‘sna ye io Shem cap and was driven out in the-sigth|bonevan pfs ajo a ise SO ti * * & George Amick, a 33-year-cldjinadequate pitching by Tiger Loliar. All three home runs came|when the White Sox iced:the on- ste , HA ¢ vin nip HH ° 0 N Seernralacuene Masters champion Arnold Palm- speed veteran making his first 500|moundsmen, the Chicago White|;, the first game, but it was a ninth|test with two runs that wiped out|¢-seh: if 1000 °°" _— ae ae ere er and youthful Tony Lema came start, finished only a little over 26/Sox edged the Tigers 65 in thelinning single by Lollar that brought|an early Detroit lead, Red Wilson] a... «arg Totals 360 11 6|Wes Bite or. 0 Yates Pentise Press Photo (next with 139's while Dave Ragan, seconds -behind Bryan. first game of yesterday's holiday), ross the winning run. homered for the Tigers in‘the first] A-gtruck out for Morgan in 4th: B—|Roger Rubendall |... 13-1148} SHUCKS — Tommy Jacobs-of |Jim Ferree, Al Baling and Paul Johnny Boyd of Fresno, Calif.,/doubleheader. * « & game and Kaline connected in the| ou for ataley “into Sih, C—bepped| Chick Rutan ........ 14 Whittier, California, looks deject- were in Ford's company finished 42 seconds back of Amick. * * second. It was Wilson’s first and|Tergeson in th; E—ran for Dropo in|Tom Talkington 0... ed as one of his putts hung on |8t 140. Among those in the 141 Still it took a spectacular catch , sth: F—singled tor Wilson in 9th; G—|*Gienn Johnson |.......... bracket Dr Midd The winning speed, 133.791, | Southpaw Billy Pierce, who |hy smith to close out the contest.|>aine’s fourth. _ tonight atlCmizese’. 22%, Valentinetts in, oth.” Itommy Watrous <2 2.2.2) the lip of the cup at Western | a Alita a Pee iddlecoff, was the second-fastest in the his- | seldom has performed up to par |with pinch-hitter Lou Skizas onl pare eee = ay | Detrot ves iceeuecst.., 103 000 100—6| pen “Bmith Open at Red Run yesterday. Ja- ac’s Gene tory of the race, ia spite of the | against the team that traded him (first and one man out, Frank Boll-|>"8** = atid FP oyte cK ee att, EteChisego 21-13, | De-|zeemmy ghannen 2.0200., cobs still. leads the field after |Bone. big wreck and numerous spins. | away, spun a six-hitter that stood Jing hit a dri lett |(44) opposing Early Wynn (5-2).}son. vop—chicage & Detect ro 2**-|Jonn Cleaty slipping to a 71 following his | South Afriean Gary Player ig ie . ng hit a towering drive to left.jr. series will wind up with a sin-| 28—Hasie, H¥—Torgeson 2° Lottar,| BOD Pretend oo. sparkling 64 Thursday. A total of | Mike Dietz of Indiany : Only 14 cars running at the| “? for & 4-2 nightcap victory be- |smith leaped high against the a Wilson, 8—Kaline, Gordon Jones 0. total idianwood and 4 vee fore 30,411 fans. gle game Sunday as: the Tigers IP HR ER BB 8O|Emerick Kocsis .. ........... 13-77—~180) 73 golfers made the cutoff point. | amateur Tom Draper trom host finish. screen and pulled it down and the|ona their current homestand Donovan ............ 6 4 ¢ © oO Bill Markham * e : Picker 0.2... ah I H 1 3/George Spencer - Red Run were among 13 golfers x 4 All this added up to a disappoint-|relay back to first was in plenty Staley (W. 1-3) °°. "1183 1 0° @ @ 2/Joe Thacker deadlocked Bryan won $20,850 in lap prizes|ing end to the Tigers’ five-game|°f time to double Skizas. Keegan .0.....0.00 00. % 1 0 © @ 0|*Randall Ahern Early lead Holds: . i 142. — a double $150 a lap for each he led.-Amick|winning streak and meant that kok ot More Sports Bunning “1.122.002 133 8 Smee be a. ’ Paget piaia) pase tee ce won $3,900 in lap prizes, fourth-|they failed to pick up vital ground| Detroit used four pitchers in the Hoeft 3-8) 22a § 8 8 8 Blesim Punston $1 . Slew) ues oe fees ae place “fony Bettenhausen of Tinley|while the New York Yankees were|opener and four more in the on Page 19 Valentinetti oe ts 1 8 0 8 Olen whore Broncs Edge lr ish -Sear Umpnt, @ s Wensehiek.|Gene Kynes Jv. so “ holes by. ae after six 18. A—J30,411, n a \ f to- . These include Julius|the Western field. I Tony Ouelette 83-82—165/ FRIDAY’S FIGHTS an ailing beck. : qualify Se The : ‘hob Sigekermen _ 19-47—166) MIAMI BEACH. Fis — Spider Webb, T3-man field started touririg -|Boros, Jimmy Demaret, Ken Ven- ~_ + *t | For the first time since 1946 the! prank Metzger 84-85—169 |16% Chicago, outpointed Jimmy Beecham. Red Run this 9:45 with turi, Fred Hawkins, Sam Snead.|. Frank Stranahan was medalist National Football leagne has sanc- Tommy Muller, See Neuro, Poermany- wilte Hepner. ‘the last threesome leaving the ist \ Roberto De Vicenzo,. Billy Max-jin last year's sectional qualifiers'tioned. trophy awards to players. chick Harbert. 11, withdrew, injury | 17) oan... one ree io ell tee at 1:45 p.m, Today's field & - \* ‘well, Wally Burkemo, Chick Har-'at Oakland Hills and Franklin thereby reversing a previous oe Peceah i= card fare, disqualified for butting in sixtibe reduced to the low 50 plus The U. §. Open golf champion- bert and amateur Billy Joe Patton. Hills ‘ruling. epeneies astlerer ie ee, ite for Sunday's final 1Phole : vy weight
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#1, 1958 ~ ry
sbi ds
fil War Hero to Get _ Better Care in Future THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY
ped Off Casey's Face
j
&
/ Prep Front 4
Pontiae’s Civil War hero (you'll residents can be proud of find him‘ perpetually on guard at|it,” said Ewalt.; .
~ . “+ a | the corner of Oakland avenue and|' The property belongs to the
By CHUCK ABAIR- . Saginaw street) is going to get| American Legion Cook-Nelson post;
Y > more loving care than ever, which was happy to accept Ewalt's
an ¢\X ed | oe Our nameless hero and the smail|offer to maintain it.
With only one more week remaining in the spring Giangular plot that surrounds his statue have come unofficially un-|
Nat | k sports season, the Michigan High School Athletic Asso-|der auspices of the Pontiac Parks|Raccalaureate Rite
as als a e | ciation has issued warnings concerning the starting of |* Recreation Department.
| NATIONAL LEAGUE football and basketball play in 1958 x * Su .
| UB BATTING ’ The first big change: New flow- n at a ette
cLY i .
ar . 185 9 he “ Pa "3 A , no ere allowed to begin football practice |er beds colorfully detorating the y a
e a er si. ‘Louk isis ise eo B is 413 (Be Ag RH WR RBID efore Sept. 1. edules must be arranged in order to monument for this memoria | week- MARLETTE—The 5‘ Senee
' , ae EL Gee i See NATIONAL League | jenable teams to have three full weeks of workouts be- paar Pray ee poe Aliaureate service for the Marlette
Cardinals Also Jolt f!*4: zs is 34 38 148 7 Chicago | 1a8) S152. 39 14 252 Clad. Capactin, Dates. tosy wet, /fore Playing a game. Friday of the 3rd week is the usual |the grass that city crews plan to ape ry — Seles 1396 10 398 41 163 243 Kansas’ Cy - 1201 lpt 204 34 151 245 Milwaukee 43.768 17 342.3986 378.907 starting date for th rit will be held in the high school au-
, Giants to C L i Baltimore 1186 108 279 26 104 235/ Pittsburgh 34.249 18 344,128 260,018 g or the majority. keep carefully trimmed, ‘ditorium tomorrow at 8:30
7 an ut ead NATIONAL LEAGUE sweawce |San Pranciseo 23.48 20 04287 382.28; That would make the’ Parks & Recreation Director « * . a
-- = lav DE MERICAN LEAGUE | | BA. i ) :
in NL Race cee GPO ALE DE re yp CLUB FIELDING © Er Nous» 900 15 s.eo7 jon soe @ATliest playing dates Sept. a os Paap garg high) The Rev. Robert Kyser, pastor
ilwaukee 39 1070 505 27 53 963 | Kansas City 37 907 414 21 41 9a | Cmetmnati 29.584 17 188,284 274.458 ’ me a ready aBency | or the
P pata 39 1068 388 27 31 982|New York 35 933 371 23 42 9¢3| Totals ~ 2.548.682 2.001.317 19 and 20 for teams begin- gave the little park daily care. of the Marlette First Preshyterian
United Prove international [Pca HU it Mt Faigicaee ye 2 SM pcos AMEMIEAN LEAGKES “eauining practice sessl ODES VVINS dia tat ¥ wt oe en oe Casey ‘Stengel’s moaning but the $8" ,Francece 43 118 483 4 4 Ha| Beltimer $1 ee fee fe 7k Kansas City 30.611 24 255.364 315.768 & P ons cn ; He remembers that it took (topic will be “Serve the Lord with
Lewis 99 1035 435 40 44 974 | Detroit 41 1069 448 36 46 977, New York 67.000 14 212.297 285.359/the 1st or 2nd. volunteer soldiers’ from the |Gladness."
other managers are laughing today 45 1208 521 48 4 .973 hingt # 1080 442 35 | 7" Baltimore 47.778 13 208,987 04 The invocation will be
insane = ot ane Cleveland 42 1151 44 @ S7a| Becton 3asi9 17 1sa.n08 see) Prior to a school’s Ist sched- : Auburn Heights Nike base to |given by the Rev. D. H. Severance
+ there will be a pennant race in NATIONAL LEAGUE awemican Leacur | ycieveland 73.500 19 164.993 246.266| led game there may not be more 0 f n Sete pawl pen magery |p Hoag tangy care
the American League this year aft INDIVIDUAL BATTING INDIVIDUAL BATTING vend (S506 less beesithan one practice or ago; the Wa po- jand the Rev. E. Jr.,
—-* Ce | at more ot bat amra, fan League Total 4.234.751 3,889.405 session which involves other than| ,.. . lice to find the statue’s stolen of the Marlette Bethel Church will
3 2 1 s 36 4a Martyn, K.c. “e i 4 2 8 Blane toe cr claro re figures students of that school exclusively. Fireball’ Hits Record gun last year; and the Pontiac read the scripture and give the
Hw 3 3s Si oe, SER RM ——_—_—- Lower Peninsula schools ° ; . | dunior Chamber of Commerce te | benediction,
a 8 et Boe ee Bt es fet co ce Fateah leap ae tae Ok Time in Trenton’s Big} give the dui! bronze a good ao
iy 4 "i 3A . i i .
I Ho 1 18 S/MeDwa Wy. 12 2) D5 mh Belnos anges ee chiemge .. srmibasketball games of the 195659/ Stock Car Event feanins Se yous. Detroit ‘Cancer’ Docto
$B f ft ysikveun et as? 2 33 in Susan Prantucy af Oe Eoute -.-., meyisengom during the week of Nov. “We've got the equipment and/Dies of Heart Attack
SIRT RSENS Gb asd SSeS RE ERS meer ho Oe moo x2 arcu ee eS Be 3 ig #4 Db mse) ‘sou, Balt. 29 12 41 3 it beg a aE 74 Sp Ming at hehe Roberts ‘i spruced up and pretty, so that) DETROIT cae oa agin ;
M9 21 47) $ «31 31s|Kubek, NY 92 9 ow 8 7 306 ee Shot 4 , Fla., lived up P Donnelly, charged selling
BS SRC hee ad Sf ReSSiee ase OY oo Beto the anmual warning concerning mete ad whizzed home in, record ene ee SP MG ag alae’ ey" a gM) rpelengne tnat 86h User their participation in to win the Northern soomileiHundreds Watch _isimins.,'t was 2 cancer, cure,
woe K 17 gon Rlevers, Wasn, ly 17 39 7 33 ant Twelsague total 1857 | orts SUMMET | stock car race. died Memorial Day while visiting
SEE] GReTL 2 ii 8) “spore ramus men winst odes andar | se re ne 107 commu ROCHester Parade [ot MY. 7 16 4 14 386 ICAN LEAGUE ~ | He his 1957 ietlR h P de 17] 34 2 ‘uchin, Wash. 102 15 29 4 9 284 Won Lost Pet, Beh noth : Donnell struck gown in? 4 Br'cons, | Chi. 2 = . Bening | copt ing in -the way of lover the Trenton Speedway course| —
is 4 i i 8 = slave, Cle. wee : i } : ES Karan‘ * H 3 i riba ape or payment |yesterday in 5 hours, 55 Baars ROCHESTER — Hundreds lined by a naan shack. te Was pre-
Boe R$ BGM RC ot fe ae mieten ar re See ene hee oe 15 seconds to earn the $6,500 first] Main street Friday to watch the| S0useed well after a physical
a single game, 1 wa me eg tia A PRE RRR EB | inarten have been commaled |e traditional Memorial Day parade| examination only last Wodnee- oe ea aes % i ot i ete wot 1 4 2 )Baltimere 15 21 «417 10% | The acceptance of anything other | His time was 12 5 been ee eee Se en day.
Senators. : } Jackson, Chi. 74 10 20 5 14 (270 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS than a trophy or similar award 60-piece band under direction} Donnelly, born in Cadillac, had
‘ 2 , ; sevetand 7. Kanees t . :
ome were rong oo © a BS ig agieeemee bee ag BS fH Bleach SPSL eases valued ato or more could canse lcourse, ily average speed. was| yg been expelled from the Wayne Tou, BP. tip de 3 3 13 gen Kalnc. Det. 198 18 57 4 13 ugiChichgo & Detroit 5, fra a student to be declared ineligi- | 94 * * * County Medical Society for unethi-
Yankee team that won 18 traight Cin. e7 u ie filiass, Bos. 116 21 31 6 20 28 \Chicago 4, Detroit ol pel ble for further rash bap hie The parade of 25 military andjcal practices and had hi
games and then lest pine straight aL 8 8 1 4 Harrell. ‘Cle. 99 20 24 4 7 ‘367| Washington 13, New York 8, first game yeep iy. Junior Johnson of Ronda, N. C., civic groups uded he Avondale ad ay Michiga ig ved
— now maybe somebody will lis- Binet Ist: I 2S 3 8 Bitte Ss 8 ey S| Wechingten, 7, New York 3. second ume) | Yow peer ot boys making such|wag second in a '5? Ford and Lee|sceropolitan Club’ vd segeaes lvearyiny Aol Saguearsies ia oe i riney, Wash ; every summer, In most ud's peace in
tes to him, ae) hivern cu fe Oe toe an *sODAY'S GAMES of the cases it is due to ignorance = = en yprnd N. C., W8Sitheir fire department. _.. _ 14938.
The panic isn't on yet, of course % i } Senitn re fe 8 8 3 ieinew yor om Bes » Larsen | Of the rules. Tc puany cael te a. State representative Farrell Rob- * * *
* , ton, 1 p.m. . “
because the Yankees still lead by Re 3 6 3° 2 guns Bek 8S Be lwedntte bee os “**| minimum of one semester of ineli- ae erts was the guest speaker on) He was arrested on the cancer
6% games but it was stunning to se boH JRitee, Re. 1s 4 8 30D: Cicotie (02) vs O'Dell 44). > \gibility dating from the time Thirty-five cars, all late models, | peace. _ cure charge. in April during
see the Senators outslug the Yank- Hi, i x S 3 bikes ge i non 3 $3 B2|cucaeore Soir” ss bin —Wwrea the valuation’ It can be made a/St@rte4, It the race but only 15 health lecture .
ees. Roy Sievers smashed three wi ah | 0 brows, Cie. te 10 19 4 St 399| Cleveland at Kansas City, 9 p.m. ent|lot longer, er ry inns een |W Idb H
homers in the twin bill and Jim Rodan. ma 8 : x SR fee oat oS 43 S| > souteeowy cuter” | A good plan followed at several |nywever and dhene wore sven Ouldbe FI€TO judge Rules Peron Lemon 8 BoM 8 Db Oe - LS i 3 3 19 245|New York at , 1 p.m. r, and there were no in-
ee a oe err ce “™ "Rescued From still a Criminal The Senators blew a six-run lead|Cimoll, "La." us . Det ; so inform Sa
eg pee Meo nenre ee eB YB MB SB Ble wren ene Oe nove of the Avetes vod Watery Death BUENOS AIRES (AP) — A fed-
came back to win when Sievers|? ¢ ; 4 neue cle. is 6 56 3 iy dae] Only “gemec scheduled. FS pm _ “es * e an ham eral judge has ruled ousted
and Ken Aspromonte each clouted “i H : Ses, i 3 3 qe — ; : ‘ NESKOWIN, Ore. (AP)—A low-|Dictator Juan Peron is not en-
a three-run homer in the eighth(® Pi 8 fibern NY Mis fe 3 8 xamioxaL teacce | |Protest Made at ‘500’ in TV. Ten-Rounder flying airplane yesterday dropped|titied to a pardon under the am-
But they led all the way in| Ease) Pad. ve . ley, Wash. 67 ¢ 13 4 8 204 $8 Francisco 2 8 INDIANAPOLIS a life raft to a Berkeley, Calit.,|@sy Jaw. recently passed by Ar-
Forgas eee cane 8 Bs ‘ : m, Ball. 130 BO» $B) eutboret 2 3b 3 4 maser ade cane cas ae toe MIAMI BEACH Fla. (AP) student being washed out to sea|Smune’s Congress. ;
mon homered in inning. | Neal ¥. Se Louis “ois aes ans after trying to go to the aid of =!
Chuck Stobbs won the opener in ie % koma He “4 ao |Cieimna ae a1 4627 | ing company owner, today pro- |Spider Webb and Jimmy Bee- ‘e The ruling yesterday by Judge
relief while Pedro Ramos went the spay Be Ot Bd Ss Sete BS at. | peeeondy's in |cham, two rather learned prize.|'™" Persons in lhe str. :
in other A. L. holiday guimes, ¢ | 2 i te Bop Bak ta 1 ite STRSTERDAY'S nen | Cone ae ee on eS rere -~ _Tee- ei said. Geine sheritt's|Charees Against Peron stil stood
Whe Sexton aa wane a 8 = oF 8 3 8 3 $e) Puiibares 1. Miwaee &. tecond” game started ahead of the pace car. ord, match wits and wallope 1 \aetice sald the raft was dropped|tat, . os or
r Det. 75 st. I San Franc 4 ; : : turn to exile
Wt Sinpem'ty Somgperets aid meee gE E | Be ert mt re) cy mmc ce [mee Set ye Oe areng bee oe arena eat a t ey. WN. * , ; i ui ‘-
Baltimore its eighth straight de- uo 334 8 | Bismeete g i chicas Tes, Atte, Seatl"pame| Protest againet cars driven. by Webb, sixth - ranked middle.(Cranie then paddled 130 yards|{N0-00 Sete nome eu ar
- feat, 20, before the Orioles took Cin, 1 8 8 OS a a sd ; Dick Rathmann, Ed Elisian and | weight, wa back to shore. ‘ ’
slam bemere—Mave Pran- | Landis, 2 1 3 6 (is wkee at Pi 12:30 p.m.— , Was expected to weigh in *
the nightcap by the same score; nd Boyer, wt.|Moran. Cle, 6 15 OS atl (7-1) vs. Kline (6-3). Jimmy Reece. at 159, fi nds heavier _Mrs. Drury Spuriock of Lafay- s f
, ‘ Bos. 31 8 8 © 2 157\Cimcinnati at Phil 1:085-- p.m.— , five pounds than J
a 31 Miss Boden| Peron also is charged with
a aan ag aggre to} ay SHE) Eman terngrs — Sersen. tagt|__ Seber 100). ana} ve NBC T. July 11 Beecham, who has a reputation en thie Calif goon that |"UMerous common crimes He
losing wall LEAGUE jand, and Williams. Boston, Ber. 880 Pranciseo at St. Louis, 1:30 p.m= ourney July for beating ranked opponents. Ase, " ft ORE
the opener, 7-1. i ‘Srrcnixc , ss House, Kansee iy ‘enj|. Monzant (4-3) ve. McDaniel (34). they experienced some difficulty wds ousted by a revolutionary
Cre H BB SO WL ERA. ° Los eles at Chicago, 1:3 p.m.— WICHITA. Ka: w— : in swimming in the surf They |Tegime in 1955.
In other N. L. games, the Cubs co SEU Bet ie =F BITOMORROW'S GAMES. Seg pte erent | Vp th Ni aid t ;
rallied twice in the ninth inning - = x i} Hy 4 AMER ON LEAeuE Milwaukee at Pitt 12:30 p gan tournament of the National Milford Youth Dies ee ae cae
: ps ios : sues nee ae aaaee Gaines Cincinnati st Philadelphia. 2, 12:35 p.m. | Baseball - will open in Kruger, both of Salem, all made .
te bent ies Angeles, 32 00d 106; foram tr. Boe hi} { tsiteee ce i BG 80% Uae lle Angnne at colcage, ie pm: [Grand Rapids on July 11. Games : . [tale way -eately “Wh chore under beat Pittsburgh, 7-4, 1 i 8a 5.2 3-39 ts MONDAYS GAMES. their own powe
im the opener and then lost, 12-6; Smit ba in prearrere, aut. Sb 39 ae 31 3 2 1an/Pisabergh, a Gmcimal, 130 pm. lwesyen de ved Om four consecutive of Accident njury The ck. bots WHE .
Gans t dees gute, 20 SS ees} tela Be TRIE A Mitford youth, one of a tamiiy |@e™- sad’ Crane swam. toward Lies / ~ $3 11 7 0 3 3.09|feumenn, 40.3717 42:2 248 . 4 hoe LS them to give aid but that the ~~ PRUITs
Frank Sullivan of the Red Sox BR BS 2 28ers eee eS . of 13 children died Friday at ,
36 35 3 0 3ig (Harshman, Balt. 61 44 28 39 5-3 251 d F l] P k Hurley H Flint, of heavy tide carried him away from | Appies, Northern Spy, bu. .......... $5.58
bldg the Ores on PEEL ERS 22321: Sports Crowds Pill Parks |rimea'cty' went es(™ a To ty htewes “PS STE - infield singles by A) Pilar. 61 58 22 25 4 4 3h4|MeLish. Cle = 44 39 15 13: 2-1 2.86] Major Le: baseball Ak-Sar-Ben .o......... 18504 the cai- in which he was riding * we, hs) O08. 5 .-o0e--0e0e 113
cik — tn thelr ft game os Frank SRR ELE Heise poe 8g Hg 2 4 35) Malor League baseball and welastcioy occ: HAR sBlsderviped a qruck on Fenton Ra.|Loke Orion DeMolay — eiw, fj SSS %
Dperyarn pipes oe caleing ba oar re a SiiGerman kc. i is Ht | }ay\the turnstiles clocking across the whine gc. "Sime 3) Genesee snoop “iffe Denice [Slates ‘Buddie Nite’ Geka Woche} donc. c0ccc..ivviics gi
two-run homer. Big Arnie 2% 3a : 4 $ 395 /country with ideal weather pre-| Teal... 308.90 sis.s0e-tas eputies. | oem oy Ag FE ieee
Portocarrero sna the Orioles’ : SF. 6 «4 24 72 |Geakn. a “47 3 3% 31 307 1987 totals (13 track ——, * * * ; ; = Potatoes, , 80-id. sccacce &
Pertocarere uoped Ge Crikey SSR aii igiona £88 si} inven Mnsedmnee ase” sumet _ | glAKE ORION — The Lake Orlon| Rita, fe7una Sot csc
a foursut job, hig third win overiSee, Co RNB St UBlediren tm SHH Hf | 3) | Baseball drow 209.007 tans for eral ne received fatal bead {"Buddie Nite” at 7: Rhubere, suegeor ocbe) doe... 19 Boston this year. |Monaant, SF. @ 62 18 84 {Siro mi, 2 7 BMS 2 24/ seven doubleheaders and a sin- Savitt Trails arly nor davai recelved fatal head ierarG: teem neue Man- | chess “Soke sb at) 308
. | Erekine, : 20 3 2 424 /Esscual, . 1 23 3.46 accident which : § ° * 8
-«~ « &. (Rabe, Le a 9 03 Sige Gat 2B 18 2 2 336| Sle game and at 12 thoroughbred | E | took place near Cook Rd., Members,’ who are ed
Sanford, i i ie u about request to i
. Ray Narleski’s six-hit hurling Burdette. Mi 66 73 43 foe|Mant, NY a6 44 TS th on] Tects 8 ttl of See fe ° seven miles south of Flint bring a guest, will see two films,
gave the Indians their opening winked ga GRRE Rises” Se} 1d el Cel wean Then Stops Vickery {=> ee ne [cies Bont wh Se Compton”
as Rocky Colavito and Larry Doby [Mpfet sit. 8s 3g delPerce Ch MST we 8 3 4 4m ~ ee tee Eee
homered in mupprt, Bob Cov kzemeyge” SER BLL imigrcte gree FSG BE} iS) Lox year 27 sat in Mabe! munca, oka un — topacded8, of 10 Woodruff St, Milo , our runs in the nightcap Drott, ‘chi. Ot Fer, Wash. . ague parks while 13 d ; oot Te Gases : “» ;
© Hewes oe ithe memeey See, EERE TREN erin 2 SB | fig tznce mrt whe 1 ces dey ain fey Yoni bmn om heb OPOM House After Parade 2 homer, but Mickey Vernon's threelcrme Sree’ i SL EE REI Nerieat cie. 62 50 36 2 6 4 tes| Hollywood Park had 60,659 and hind 2-4, then won 10 straight sets|yesterday. Deputies said the truck! NORTH BRANCH—Followi ek Oe oe “4
run homer in the ninth forced Brpeaake ha ie 33 oes 1-3 6.13 Putte Bos. ae ¥ er 3; 4.66/a handle of $3,515,312. , = Friday for a 6-4, 6-0 quarter-final driver, Francis Seldon, 40, pr) Maio Da Seda anne peeeeee eee ate nd
‘ Duke Maas to appear in relief to Neem: CAL Mom Toe aso Be eH Be $3 a8 . victory over Clift Vickery of Hous-|Swartz Creek, near Flint, was|at the Roll 1 Honor stand yester-
a the wi ; Fischer, Chi. 27 23 8 14 2 1 5.00 Attendance — Betting ton University in the Tulsa Tennis uninjured ° . deel
| save win for the A's. . aw, Det 27 32 13 15 1 2 §69|Hollywood Park . 60.659 $3,515,312. ' - s . day Americ Legi Lodge Calendar
° Urban, K.C 43 37 2 2% 3 2 5§.02)Belmont Park 49.508 3.815.122 Club’s invitational tournament McDermott's body h be — om meee
> * loll Wr igley Thinks Stobbs, Wash. 30 45 10 11 2 4 §.19/Garden State ........ 43.649 3.291.1 ° : . (ae en jand families held open house at the
The Giants lost th Py la Bunning. Det. 40 41 19 19 2 4 $.18/Suffolk Downs ......... 38.256 1.916.001! Vickery, Missouri Vall taken to the Richardson-Bird je 1 communication, Pontiac
opener th St eae ae “es saw NL Will B 10 Sturdivant, NY. 19 3 10 $ 1 2 See/Balmoral 0... at 7 tgs! ference champion, it cy Con: Funeral Home, in Milford. The Gon Bale aye Sree: ge No. 21, Saturday,
ing when Ray recs wild atch Cl b L be eee ee ee gt 2 SBN TS Ga S879] ewe college players 2st fo son of Mr. and Mrs. James Me- H f [funeral se 5 for” her ‘Ben:
« enabled Dick Schofield to ramp Club Loop in ‘59 a sttt ‘battce ‘betore, going? dome, |Dermott, he had nine brothers and! — Bysiness Notes = =, Gas Eee
home from third base. Jim Bros- p | RR cee ESE Gwe eee g | In defeat, three sisters. ~ _ p.m, L. Moors,
nan’ sackled the Giants on nine) CHICAGO (AP)—Own 2 =| Ham Richardson, seedd No Edwi a Aa.
hits in the second game, missing a K. Wri ; er Philip)” * Gli or » § No. 2 . nm L. McNamara, of Pontiac, Special meeting, Areme
) i 4K. Wrigley of the Chicago Cubs|* 7 ; ' 4 |in the men's singles, scored a 6-3,,No Changes in ABC a representative of the Aetna Life|No. 503, Order of the Fastern tar,
=. peorseandl of Naa Re nmnas | says he wouldn't be surprised if) © octorin Your Golf - 5/63 victory over Jim Schmidt, ng Insurance Company, has been 22 State St. Members to attend Fu-
: Cards in the - ae d padre; Rcd expanded|« . ee en Peruee hee Tech shea cad (AP)—There|awarded a certificate upon com-| Rice Sunday * at the
a ated her wet ieee 4 e champion. were no ¢ in the standings|pleting the Aetna Life career|Sparks-Griffin " Home
Ex-Dodgers Walt (Moose) | 50M. |e : ; : » Rise two other quarter-final|of the American Bowling Congfess|training course for life insurance |P-™- , 8
mare was the Ca hero ip their | te + By DR. CARY MIDDLECOFF [besbiege hagpaesr = Dallas,|championships yesterday as the|underwriters, Ferne Crawley,
over . Hie ti ‘tis ; A . 3, defeate , through 62nd gradua ayne Secretary
double was the only extra-base Mla fe tissers way wid vat 2 Patient's Complaint: Good with Woods and Bad c Ft. Bliss, 6-3, 6-3, aukoat a aainnse ateier oat dou- oro poled le is ano. . ner.
blow in the three-run rally the (night in discussing a report of a a with Irons (or vice versa). - e Gimmalva, Houston, defeated|bles and three team squads in/|ated with’ the F. E. McMahon Regular meeting, Areme Chapter
Cubs staged in the ninth inning move toward a return of the na-|; Diagnosis: There's a Difference in Swings. @|Grant Golden, Chicago, 36, 6-2,|action, — General Agency at Detroit. Pests Stead Hoosevelt Masonic.
to-win their opener, And he blast- {tion's biggest city to the league.) : 6-3. Golden was seeded No. 4. . Sey ine wom lg —-=.
“a Sree ane in the nightcap, | ‘New York had three teams|; Treatment: Some golfers tend to be much better with | , ’ Ferne Crawley,
‘luding a two-run clout in the | and didn’ » woods than with the irons. Others are tt # | 4 so
ninth inning to win the game. about “baseball” Wtigiey said \) players and poor wood : _ Pretty good tren a onson Defends Title Huge Craft Taken * Maiden Flight es
Milwaukee came from. behing “Now they’re blasting the Dodg-|* players. Then there. are ‘| GATLINBURG, Tenn, (AP)— e ein ot aoe it po ring a
with four runs in the ninth to win eontioe going out to Los Angeles.|~ players who hit the woods | field of 34, acai @ dozen wma J , , ore al Bea ton aes
their opener at Pittsburgh, with) Wrigley based his hunch that > good one day and the > teurs and a dozen top money win- e | r | ner r aise ii a het ae ae
the help of loose pla irg the league might expand next sea-| > ; 4 ; Michigan, y given chat
oose play by third pa la ood h ners in the professional H —,
besa Fr FB eon te ne “vere ave) | peepee gt eh 4100 Gi wi" be eed ts] owe mac, ca on Sees Pee our homers in t ' |impetu a” A 4 » ww ; . Y ; . ® — “Far and a the finest fligh . ur ($) years
Sree se cee reno ee fet he te tone | Gan” omens "OF er mate may te foe eT a Eee tack, ‘MSU Wallops Titans i What's needed here is {| Beverly Hanson of Indio, Calif., That was how the pilot felt about the maiden flight of the Douglas gm. to 6:60 p.m.
; AH 4 to understand that there's S!was favored to successfully de- DC8 Jetliner, capable of carrying 176 persons across the United t Year Terme. fi June
Bryan s Father er Early Knot 4 a small but important *|fend her title in the $5,000, 54- States in 444 hours. 30, 1962.
; . onpaxcye ne Gitsigan difference in the character ‘J hole medal play event. oe = = ;
Hop es He 1] Qui t One cs ee pera i of the wood swing and 4| The four-engine DC8 flew 2 hours and 5 minutes yesterday. It
ee fifth inning breaking a 55 tie { nl iron ae bear ind . , Webb Batters Beechman oe oe ae here, cruised over the ocean and
ENIX, Ariz. (P—“Now 1 |and defeated Detroit 11-5 in a s, you snow n mo & - r Force Base, Calif. my.
hope he'll retire,” said R. L. non-conterence bessball ening yee: } of sweeping the ball away. we =mOm> g-é ‘ . MIAMI BEACH, Fila. — Elis- , After the flight, pilot A. G. Heimerdinger, 48, said: 5
Bryan, switching off the radio |terday. "With the trons, the swing is DOWN-and THROUGH. =| worth. “‘Spider”” Webb stood off a Of all the Dougias transports I have flown, the DC8 is the |D—
: after hearing his son, Jimmy won | The Spartans picked up their > Remembe 5 . steady, battering attack by Miami) greatest. The plane handled so well we were able to accomplish
: ladidnapolis 500-mile race. (fifth inning runs on singles by _ mber, now, that the difference is slight. Only ___ | Jimmy Beecham last night to get) much more than we had originally programmed.”
: “Simmy halfway promised me Ron Marlatt, Dick Schiesel and.4 the driver, in fact, calls for the perfect sweep. The back on the ig “path in his xk *« *&.
f gouple of years age that he'd. (John Hence and a double by / eving With the ether woods: i slighty, down ané _|fampaign for a middleweight (ite) The first DC8 represents a quarter of a’ billion-dollar investment
' * ate : desea on Asaied said | Jerry Stifler. F hrough. But not as much so as the iron swing. 5 Webb, gon Chicngs. sow bs 14h over a three-year period by its ' er, Co.
: “Pm not a superstitious man, 2y''°!! -.. 000 320 000-586, _ Take note of this difference—wjthout overdoing it... ed No. 6 in his division, He was Douglas plans to start*delivering the Jetliners to airlines the
Sut F've wetioed that In@anapets Steve ..,, 130 133 11121 Tt will help you become a more cénsistent golfer _'a 3-1 favorite over Beecham, but an sit op It has 700 million dollars worth of orders from
winners ever since 1911 have had | pi-roun, is) sod Maney. Jacobs 0!) (Cc 058 /he faced rugged going all the way nes for 138 DC8s. .
ord of running into trouble ines Prcessel (@ Raden he cae Conssisté ie 66, John F. Dille Co.) ‘before winning a split decision inj The DC8 has a top-rated speed of 600 m.p.h. It flew about 350
L 4 i
Heridee, Kirk 9) e- .the 10-round battle in Miami Beach) m.p.h. yesterday. At has a maximum range of 3,900 miles. Its , 4
May 31, Jume 2,
kept \on racing.” i eee W—Radalz L—O Donnel!
1 ego i, De
\ + Pe
: | Auditorium
wingspan is 139 feet 9 inches, length 150" feet and tail height 42 feet. .
y #