ae Eden, Italians in Full Accord on New Alliance British Seek to Replace | _ EDC With Five-Nation | Union Inside NATO | ROME (#— British For-| eign Secretary etc te rte ener Anthony | os Eden and ttatian Foreign) | Minister Attilio Piccioni | reached “full agreement” on the European defense) 7 Mi situation in a three-hour! ~— conference today, a spokes- | .. man Said. They discussed the new | British plan for extending the five-nation Brussels al-| liance to include West Ger- | many and Italy. This is the substitute Prime Minister Churchill's government is prepesing for the pow dead Euro- pean Defense Community. It would allow West Germany to re- arm within the North Atlantic al- liance. a | Similar agreement to Eden's . fe. after his earlier visits to the West German capital of Bonn yt and the Beigian capital, Brus- sels, | * . So successful were the talks this RESORT TO USING OLD PUMP—Mrs. Robert) | morning that the spokesman said Goode and her daughter Brenda, 13, of the) there would be no further conyer- Assinippi section, Norwell, Mass., fill water jugs i sations : , ’ ! Eden will pay a call:on Premier : Mario Scetba, but this is purely a | courtesy call, he said. Eden will | leave tomorrow morning. Two days é ; Continued Cool, Rainy Weather. Forecast Here Continued oceasional rain for the of conferences in Paris are on his schedule Official sources in London dis- closed last night the new scheme ] to rearm West Germany under Pontiac area tonight and Wednes the Brussels pact to, fill the de- day morning is forecast by the U.S fense gap left by France's kit. | Weather Bureau. lig of the EDT. Yesterday's rainfal) here mees- 9 1 en! Gilicidlis weld the «new ured .19 of an inch and wet pave ments caused at least six injury plan has a better chance of win- ni e ti ¥ accidents in the county aie rench approval than EDC Cool weather ix expected to com ause tirhue here tomorrow, but the wea- 1. The ties would be looser than | therman in a five day forecast under the old unified army plan. . says that there will be a slight The Brussels treaty binds each: warming tremt by Sunday. Pre-* Another Red member to go gutomatcially to the cipitation verage ol f inch | aid of its partners in case of an {oun sonia ree pndicnd Results of the Chinyu* . attack, but each country is allowed | for Friday and Sunday. Tempera-| 00OMbardment were not im-- its own national army. tures for the next five days are Mediately announced Mrs. Small Filoe | , 2, Additional safeguards pro expected to hit an average high There was an apparent) posed by Britain would Keep a lid of 71 and a low of 33. slackening of Nationalist : } on German rearmament. NATO A low of 3 to 4 is expected gir force action against the Di x would be empowered to set a ceil-| here tonight with a high of 3! Rede ivorce ction : ing on the size of national armies | to 56 tomorrow A Nationalist communique said | and inspect their forces. A Euro-| Yesterday's downtown tempera- tp i price scieal pean or Atlantic arms poo] would | tures ranged from 57 to 62. At — Husband Was Released be formed, with an international 8 a.m. today the mereury regis--"ssance — — } board of commissioners limiting tered 55 degrees, rising to 58 by sean’ _ apparently on a From Hospital After ’ ee »>m reauced scaie ) aireriesy and carrying out in - F a bi Earlier unofficial reports from Being Ruled Sane 3. Britain would be committed PQuemoy—said that_the—Nationalist/ DiTROIT w — Mrs.: Kdith 8.{ to share equally in the defense Typhoon Calms Down planes were limited to reconnais Small has filed for divorce from After Killing 4) in Japan sance missions in contradiction of TOKYO (UP) — The Asiatic the official bulletin Jatest typhoon, diminished | The communique alse reported French lto the strength of a mere tropical gat three seealled “water storm blew north-northeast across ghosts"— Red junks carrying 1: oe vanes ee a ce a filtrations—tried te land on ating sweep i a cas heavily-defended Qu sland ; 11 persons and injured 66 on the _e mney tote * Japanese islands of Kyushu and pen nes See Sing Loud, Fellas r - | YANCOUVER, B. C. (UP)—The | The bodies-af25 dead have been Chines® and American “Brass” Grosvenor Singers placed a notice | located. and 16 persons are offi-| Quemoy Monday | in a local newspaper Monday stat-icially listed as. missing. Salvage Maj. Gen. William C. Chase, of the to EDC chief was that Britain stood apart from ac- | Coast's tual membership, The i feared that without Britain along- side, they would be at the mercy of their old German foes, arrangements. One “FTN Shjections on ing that the “first practice of the crews are searching the ruins of head of the American advisory’) season’’ would be held in the ‘Hard flood-swept villages for additional | mission to the Chiang Kai shek | of Hearing Club Hail.” government, flew to the tiny island bodies, a jreturn to Taipeh conferred with | Nationalist officials | Others who inspected the Island” included Nationalist Vice Presi- dent Chen. Cheng, Defense Minister \David Yu, and Air Force Comman- BULLETIN ~ _ ‘7 DETROIT (INS)—Robert Althouse, 49, who pro- moted a million dollar swindle of the National Dis- count Company, today was sentenced to nine years | AS der-in-chief General Wang Shu- imprisonment and ordered to pay the maximum — ming | $11,000 fine. | _}t was rumored —without—official | | confirmation that Chiang Kai- Fred Holzbaugh, who like Althouse was a former auto dealer, was sentenced to six years and ordered ; 1 ahek himsell! might make a quick 7 to pay a $8,500 fine." visit to Quemoy to study the mili- tary situation at rst mend Experisents Showing a By THOMAS J. FOLEY the high oii of heart disease in | definite answer will not be forth: Poon “WASHINGTON” TINS) == Three + thie COURTFY. ‘ [coming for ~another—two~to—five ~ Chicago doctors said today they! — The dangerous fat foods, which *°*"* ; are getting “‘promising’’ results| they sald are. typical in the They got the idea that her- i from experiments using female | American diet; tave-been found... ones might work from the ob- to trigger the processes leading | *¢TVation that women in their preductive years are remark- a sex{ hormones to fight heart dis-| 1 ¥ ates Ths a | ts the most common Cause of In texts prepa for delivery | death in heart or blood diseases. to the World Con of Cardi- | The doctors reported that in-. ology, they said the hormones, | | Jection of the hormones in animals | known as estrogens, aie How be’ 'eaused fatty deposits tn the arter- | ing used in tests with cer to. disappear. Hardening of | ay In Today's Ss Press aliér achiévirig great success the arteries had-been produced ex. | experiments using animals. perimentally in the animals. t The Doctors are Ruth Pick,.| -Recently, they said, extensive Jeremiah Stamler and Louis N. | teats have. begun with humans Katz of Michael Reese Hospital. | suffering from heart disease. Dr.. aa ae “ Altough the re-. of the rich-lood American diet on | sults to date are promising, &| Womens Pigts .0-..-- 7: ERE Yes 0 3 - j rep a ame! me af ce eee PON TIAC, since hurricane Carol on Aug_ | 7 | operated home pumps and the municipal at the town pump yesterday, due to loss of electricity | were crippled by electrical shut-off Nationalist Ships Blasting TAIPEH-_+{INS}—Chinese Nationalist warships steam up to the very mouth of Communist big guns today to blast a Red-held island on the China coast The Nationalist navy took the lead in the 12-day old | ¢#e happened to him. military action against-fted China's coastal bases bombarded Chinyu Atoll Which lies just south of A Island, the big Communist base which has been battered ground and would handle things.” mercilessly from the air and from the sea. —— | for an-inspectiontour..and. on.-his_| ¢ .near the damaged area. MICHIGAN, Ar Wirepheote Both electrically supply al. China sland ed. Keating had taken care of him in Dr. Kenneth Small recently acquitted in the murder of Jules Lack her husabnd, the Detroit News said today. The newspaper said Mrs. Small filed the suit last Thursday, the day after her dentist-hushand was freed from lonia State Hospital had de clared him sane. Mrs, Small, 30, is reported out | of town visiting friends, Her #- year-old husband is living at his | home in Detroit with the couple's three young sons, Dr, Ionia State Hospital after a jury FU ESD. Aa; Mather ‘sand and gravel company * Be te | Small was committed to the $13,000 Paid to Dan Keating Farmington Man Tells Jury Money Purchased ‘Harmony’ for Firm DETROIT told a Recorder's Court jury | today that he made payoffs to an AFL Teamsters Union! ! ' official as “calculated risks” intended to influence the official's interpretation of a contract The witness was Edgar S. Jr., a Farmington manager. He was the first of 42 prosecution witnesses to be called’in the trial of five teamster union officials charged with extortion, bribery and conspiracy Mather said the payoffs totaling more than $13,000 went to Daniel J. Keating, then president of Pontiac Local 614 of the Team sters Union. Keating is one of The five on trial The trial opened a week ago but so far only Mather has been Ta Witness. Tle was recalled today for cross-examination Mather testified yesterday that “peridds of harmony” existed between his company and Keating's union as long as pay- offs continued. He testified Keating once avked him: ‘What are you worrted about? I've taken care ef you in the past, haven't It" Mather said he. had expressed anxiety about what he termed ‘dangerous stickers’: in his con- tract with the union SEPTE MBE R 1h A witness The witness sald he agreed contract interpretations, but want- ed to know what would happer if he (Keating) died or something Mather then said: who knew In cross-examination, the back- d “He said not and | ta worry, that there were other MOY | officials Mather — admitted his company recently | had paid nere than $9,000 in | “settling’’ with the secretary of state for weight vielations in connection with vehicte licenses. tecord's Judge Joseph Gillis required Mather to tell yesterday under pain of a contempt citation whether he gave certain testimony fo a one-man gran@g jury which | indicted the five Teamster Union officials. Mather said Keating agreed to interpret the coritract, handle complaints and ‘do other things'’ tafter payoffs Judge Gillis asked whether he talked about the “other things"’ before the grand jury, and Mather replied “That testimony was secret.” “Well.” Judge Gillis responded, “the grand jury cannot sterilize this court. And when I ask you for an answer. you know you must answer or you can be cited for contempt." Mather then explained he had talked about the “other things” with attaches of the grand jury, but could not recall having specifically testified about them. It was then he told of his con- Hed—him—in-the—Miay-29-mear versation with. Keating about | | persons are aise being investi _ School, Student Is Injured | in Train-Car Crash “1054 —28 PAGES CELEBRATE ViCTORY—Fdmund S. Muskie with their children Stephen, 5, a home in Waterville, Me and Democratic committeeman. sc Burton M Republican — Probe Threat onHowe'slife Cross Birmingham Police Get. New Lead in Shooting | of Station Attendant | Birmingham Police today are in- | vestigating a reported threat on the life of Doyle Howe, 24-year-old | gas station attendant who was killed in a holdup of the station last Sunday morning. Raiph W. Moxley, Birmingham chief of police, said he received the information on the threat from a friend of Howe's who witnessed the incident in the station about @ month ago, According to Maxiey, three youths who had been drinking drove inté the station at Wood. ward and Chapin and asked Howe for directions. The youths, claiming that Howe was misdirecting them, threatened to kill him but Howe forced them from the station with a tire iron, Moxley said, Meanwhile, police are still arek ing information -on'a 1937-38 black Chevrolet sedan believed to have been at the scene when the slay ing occurred Statements of a dosen other gated;” Moxiey sald, Potite thoerized that Howe was shot in the back of the head with | a 12-gauge shotgun while kneeling , on the floor of the station's wash. | room, The bandits took about $60) in the holdup Patricia Sears, 16, an eleventh grade student at St. Michael High received possible head in | juries this morning when she was | der of Jules Lack, 45, of New “dangerous stickers” York. He was freed by a court and his. worriés order after a hearing in Ionia Rules of procedure barred new information unless it had become * ‘ . available to the, prosectition only | They Didn't Obey Signs since Mather gave his direct tes- MEMPHIS +P+ — Autherities . Lumony. investigating g collision Monday | at the corner of Lookout and Sig nal decided the drivers apparently Miles N | sitting as a one-man grand juror. failed to do either ably free from hardening of the | +éf the-graft does not’ “take,” the* arteries. Another main topic at today’s session was heart surgery. In his | Pratt of New Yor® said signifi- | ‘cant new advances have been | made in the field of vein grafts. | In a text prepared for delivery, | | Dr. Pratt said the veins are taken from the patient's own tissue and are used to by-pass death-dealing | | blood clots. | The doctor pointed out that ma- | |place are usually open at a point tions on the heart all over the | the intersection of M 55 and U. S Inserting | world at the international meeting. |More than 2,000 heart doctors and ithe vein, he said, means thatthe question of whether it hadn't been Sex Hormones May Cut Heart Disease Dr. Pratt pointed out that even The defense raised the | X.cay treatment in contract® thrown from her father’s car fol-: lowing a train-auto accident at Howard street near Stockwell street Pontiae,General Hospital author- ities said ‘Patricia will undergo i Pontiac Patrolmen “Robert w Vgiven long ago to Circuit Judge’ Verhine and John W. Justice quot-| Culehan while he was ed the girl's father, Francis C 49 of 2800 Woodbine Dr., as saying | his vision was obscured by a truck patient has not been made any | worse. -Geraid--H.-+~ ‘The- advantages of--the-opera-— tien, he sald, are that it does not interfere with the patient's necessary blood supply, it is readily available, when he attempted to pass over | the unguarded Grand Trunk rail | road crossing. Police said the diesel, pulling nine care at slow speed, hit Sears’ aute and pushed it into another car waiting on the op- posite side of the tracks, second auto was driven by Mrs. r. ¥. Vautager, 90, or tr. Ratgers St. this morning after a TTED PRESS TONAL NEWS SERVICE Wins Maine Governorshi a Water Supply Crippled Since Hurricane Witness fairs ‘Maine’ s New First Family I? mund Muskie Beats Incumbent ‘ AY Wirephote and his wife, Jane, are shown at their the 40-year-old lawyer ‘ored an upset victory over ng re-election, mi Ellen, 3 (ov . Margoret Chase Smith Is Re-elected - Senator for Second Term PORTLAND, Maine (# — A Democrat is governor- elect of rock-ribbed Repub- lican Maine today—the first of his party to win any major office here in 20 years, Edmund 8S. Muskie, 39 year-old Democratic na- tional committeeman, de- feated Gov. Burton M. Cross, 51, in yesterday's first state election of 1954, In modern times, no oth- er GOP governor has ever been denied a second erm, The—GOP sent Margaret Chase Smith back to the Senate for a second term and kept its three representatives in their seats. Their margina were far from the “greater than ever" majori- tien asked by Vice President Nixon te “set « standard for the Muskie, an attorney, in his first | try for state office, polled almost 5 per cent of more than 248,000 ‘voles, That's about what the late Louis J, Brann (D) did ia Caw, winning a second term in 19K. Brann was governar from 1933 {to 1937, during which time Repub- licang sat in the U.S, Senate, But there were two Maine Demiograts., im the House during Brann's first term and one in his second, Communications in some of the B still } la fourth rammed into the rear o jear No, 3, MARGARET CHASE SMITH | Maine voters Monday Margaret Chase Smith to the Unit- ted States Senate ‘turns (601 out. of 626_ precincts) | gave her 143,292 votes as against} | 101.842 for Prof, Paul A. Fullam, Colby College history | her Democratic opponent 4-Car Pileup code by Golfer's Inaccuracy returned | professor, | ; turn for the better im the per- | sonal fortunes of the 39-year-eld Muskie. Only last year he suf- fered a fractured back while Incomplete re} werking en bis cow heme. A stair railing gave way plunging him from the attic te a lower fleer, He was uncenscions for several days and hospitalised _| for twe months. The victory also represented a turn for the better in the personal fortunes of the 39-year-old Mus- . — . . kie. Only last year he suffered a WASHINGTON (INS) Police |. . ‘ said today that an unidentified | jractured back while = = golier's inaccuracy with a golf) " me, A stair railing gave (batt resulted in a four-car pileup It all started when (he golf bail | whizzed over a car cruising past the White Flint Golf Course. The ball hit a: rock the ca rwindow of Mrs. Fred Go ings of Washington and forced her to brake to q hurried stop. Two other cars behind Mrs. Go ings also stopped suddenly but which resulted in the | bounced through | | way plunging 48m ‘from the attic to.a lower floor. tte -wad_uncon- seious.for- several days and hos: pitalized for tw months. , Muskie and the former Jane Gray of Waterville were married in 1948. They have two children, Stephen 5% and Ellen, 3%. Muskies mother and father—the latter a retired tailor, live in the ; little paper mill town of Rumford, where Ed was born The victory alse represented a ‘or Quigg Newton for. the) | four-car pileup Muskie was a Pht Béta Kappa Score: Damage to four cara eat). at Bates College in’ Lewiston when mated at $1,000; cuts ‘hind Bruises! be graduated in 1936, Three years (Continued on ‘Page 2, Col. 3) a to the four drives Primaries in Nine States Will Shed Light on Nov. 2-— By International News Service Primary elections will be held in nine states today with ‘balloting in at least four expected to shed more light on how the two major political parties stack up for the ' Nov. 2 elections. The _principal-_eontests today arein- Colorado, Minne- sota, Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Voting in Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin and New York are rated as less sigatticans nationally, In Colorado, the race is? between former Rep. John|_ in Minnesota, Sen,—tubert Tf. A. Carroll and Denver may- | Humphrey and GOP State Treas i urer Val Bjornson are virtually un- for the Democratic and 2 | Democratic nomination to) | succeed retiring Sen. Edwin |C. Johnson, who is running \for_the governorship. __ | Unopposed for the GOP guber- | natorial nomination is Lieut, Gov. | The diesel was operated by Les- | Gordon Allott. ter_G. Carpenter. 64 of 111.N. Rose- | lawn Dr. who was quoted by police | as saying he was unable to stop jin time when the Sears car at- j tempted to cross, and is more | likely. to be successtut since the Killed as Auto: Skids gratt ts from the patient's own | tissue. MANISTEE W® — Marvin Pier- son, 27, of East Lake was fataity The Congress received reports | injured Monday—when—a- car = jor vessels that are stopped at one |of hundreds of successful opera- | which he was riding skidded a’ | damaged: part does not have to | | research specialists from 49 coun- | be removed. | tries are attending the congress. 4 31 in Manistee and crashed into) a. tree. Spurs ‘Setv@esek 6 nee-Beey} evening 4) 0, \ \ ¥ In Massachusetts, State Treas- | arer Foster Furcolo seems likely to get the Democratic nod over his three opponents, The noml- nee will run Sen, Lever- Senate Armed Services Commit. tee, whe is unopposed ia to- day's Gor primary, For the governorship, Demo- \eratic State House Leader Robert iw Murphy js favored over. State haw GOP Gov, yet oy! od "Mn November. 7) hes. ett Saltonstall, chairman of the _ Republican nominations for the Senate GOP Gov. C. Elmer Anderson | Democratic contest is between Or- ville L, Freemand and Paul A, i . | ————— f dh a - 4 a daily newspaper It quoted the council of the City of Lathrup Village as © firing an opening barrage against the cost at the Evergreen interveptor sewer in an effort to trim the city's share of the $27 million project ” poeceneenannccording...to.the fepert.. She... council. said Lathrup'’s allocation of capital costs, $179,000," was not equitable.” aa hcachaeaeeGicens od [ th me f A _Fail to Deliver g r0dS Ld rup 0 ACT American Trio | : f | HONG KONG (INS)—American on nl ercep Of ewer ssue today for the Chinese Communists to return three Americans held : at 2 p.m._tomorrow at the Bird : Donald C. Egbert said today he- asian dence of Mrs. William announced Stinday they would re- | -_was—"concerned’ about an article SS - same hour will be Missionary B | a ai a, Company correspondent Richard ee es ee Applegate of Medford. Ore, and be the Nellie Clizbe and Eastmin ster and Westminster Guilds. The possibility remains that | oo the trio will be expelled from a A \ Day in ‘Chinese Reds | | officials walted patientty but im vain for the second straight day From Our Birmingham Bureau —. Church, pong pie Raper prisoner for more than 17 months | BIRMINGHAM — City Manager ®r¥ 4 group of the chureh meets ry6 men whom the Communists Morriser, snd) Sout 9 i ee N - jee correspondent Don Dixon. of that appeared Sep in a nearby feeting at the church at the New York. National Broadcasting gram presented by Mrs. Willam . Hohmeyer, violinist. Guests will Merchant sea captain Ben Krasner ot New . York Police LA. Henry Timm will | China by some other route al- be the gues of the Lions Chub h the exit inte Hong Kong munity Heuse tomorrow. He will | display the trophy which the | : club has donated to be used in (Reds on March 21,1955 connection with the school safety | they started a varation cruise on yacht. Kert, from Costa in the project have beet: apportioned on the basis of ulti “al iy Woes TaRONROR AT Tis Com], frequent Ge In such-cases. | The three were captured by the 4 ‘THE. PONTIAC PRESS, TURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1954 Police Continue Safety Program Urge Drivers to Keep On Alert for School | Children _ Pontiac Police Chief Herbert =| Straley today urged motorists to le International Ne zy . : = + lease are News Serv: | continue thetr cooperation. with the | city's current traffic campaign to | avert any mishaps involving chil- | dren returning to school during’ September, The program is being held in connection with the Michigan Safety Commission's annual “Watch Out for Kids'' month Straley said that each year motorists need to be reminded a spec need to watch owt for them— turned from carefree vacations mate population. Sharing In the a pega Gees: a to the Portuguese col- rs at 068) themselves to project are Birmingham Ricom His current safety program. will onv of Macao on the mainland i schools in ¢ a to and from field Hills, Lathrup Village, and also be reviewed by Timm They were acheduled to be set raffic. ; Southfield, Bloomfiélid~ and Troy ‘ - * > , “d ‘ ta fecy) tian | According to Chief Straley, over Townships Mrs. Fred Jeffers, a former ‘ined yesterday, bu | 3,000 children ranging up to age model and instructor in good waited in vain for any sign of the | 14 were struck down by autos on All but Troy were cited for pol lution of the Upper Rouge Valley by the Michigan Water Resources Commussion, We have checked with the legal and financial consultants for the | project. tobe. sure the allocation was fair im their case,"" Egbert said. “The consultants pointed: out that the lot-ratio per acre in Lath- : rup Village is higher than. in other areas.” grooming will discuss that subject Americans lwhen the Junior Woman's Club | meets at 8 tonight at the home of Mrs. James Tobias, J Cedar ie Editor Warns Under its new system of unit) meetings, the first evening meet. | : ing has been planned by the Ig Osis | League of Women Voters for to night from 8 to 10. Unit Four will | . . meet at the home of its secretary. | Hills Points to Trend Mrs Robert Brandon, of Pine Hill Toward Fewer Papers; jroad. Chairman of the unlit is U Joi t Effort rges Join Mrk. Robert Stacy exempt properties,” he added. Members are invited to attend ; : wise dak pagiee taken 2 of the six aa wrens Dis-| MIAMI BEACH. Fla. cae ‘ _ ‘Lstheup's cussio" topte—this month will- be | Hilts, executive editor of. the Mi- sans ‘ ‘ aie the other based on a study of recreation | ami Herald and Detroit Free Press, municipalities Any further reduc- facilities for children and young sai today publishers and unions tion in their percentage of the | == a costs could pot be justified said ee lor the city commis. 72? the Parish will follow tonight's | Hills pointed out that newspapers ae Eyiert cold “We map’ meeting of the Sodality of Our are “becoming fewer and bigger | Lady ‘of St. Columban Catholic , ' . k rup Village should definitely be a | with many of the big ones shrin /Church. The business meeting will ing. The casualty rate is too high part of the project, but we cannot | . ‘start at 8 p.m. at the Community |) 44, year 22 dailies died wait for indecision on their part We agreed that the project shoutd + House. Chairman of the party i8| merged, leaving 82 per cent of al Mrs, Emmett Young proceed without them, unless a decision is reached immediately.’ | owe wat aoe ey 6 Draft Report haul ne can't handle the sewage problem committee has attempted to work | plans and all the security clauses any Other way. But the advisory with them for several months, so on McCarthy ln the world are worthires Wf 0 they can't say We're rushing company goes broke.” The Lathrup Council will meet | them." . . Hills told the ‘donight, for further discussion, Committee May Ignore Heaviest contributor to the proj Senator's Criticism of ect would be Southfield Township . ect would be Southfield Townshin.. Legal Staff — Ge cost split:up By JACK BELL a ple he understood ten: | WASHINGTON «A six-mem: _— a) bad been given ber committee tackles today the ‘“Lathrup has fe parks or school or church sites, or other Lee , should work together to turn out = A card party for all members | better newspapers | towns and cities having newspapers lwith only one daily. Nearty 8&0 newspapers have disappeared in | the last 25 years Sist annual con typers and Electrotypers Union that both management and labor | and equipment to produce more with the same amount of effort. “if ¥ of 5 Tip © by Southfield, and he anticipated task of drafting a report on the | oo. approval at a meeting (© | citicial conduct of Sen, McCarthy | with every sign it will ignore his : mae for she rs trio. tac on frase Yea wat PRIM, of prope, prose ‘will be The report, which may be criti tion.” he aaid , he cal of some of the Wisconsin sen “It would be a forward step ator's activities, is fo act 45 ® away from such seli-defeating | guide to the Senate when i Te | ideas as made-work, featherbed- turns later this year to consider! ding and restrictions on better George Green. | whether —_ McCarthy's conduct equipment, machinery, methods The three-act play about an ad- merits ¢ oF and controls venture Of MAPS Was Written by! Whether the commitice wilt” ——_—— member Mrs. Walter Patton and wake specific recommendations De { FI ted will be presented for school chil-| fer action, or will content iteetf mocra ec dren on Oct, 15. Director of the |. with factual findings, has not | . play, Mrs. Gilbert Gove, will be | been determined. 60 f M assisted by Mrs | As the public censure hearings vernor 0 aine . | wound up late yesterday, Chair-/ (Continued From Page One) Women's Fellowship of the Con- | rian Watkins (R-Utah) said that mi Wallace Chadwick. the com. | ater he got his law degree from Tina fall meeting at § tonight |... = = Sa a + corned; . mittee counsel and Guy G, de Fu-; ——— Following the [ria his assistant, had “‘tried their | ~ ‘During World War Uf, he pregram will | ievel best to be fair” in presenting | served as a lieutenant aboard a | destroyer in the Pacific. rg, leveled atMcCarthy. Muskie served as minority leader : arthy and his lawyer. | i the Maine House of Representa- Edward Bennett Williams, con- | tives in 1949 and later headed the a ee and on FU-| Office of Price Stabilization in | tha nm acting as prosecutors. | yaine bine pegernin| poe Blache ys | Although the adage ‘as Maine jo Ww torne ‘S\ goes so goes the nation’ long jn errs Ml — that ca one | since has been outmoded by events, grades three through six | bounds ['emocrats Were jubilant over * * *« per PS the principal counts | their gubernatorial victory. The > “Through a mix-up the program { ‘last time they carried the gov- scheduled for last week's Kiwanis And McCarthy said he was ernorship in Maine was in 194 Chub meeting will be given tonight, “still disturbed by a statement ms when Kiwanians meet at the Com. | of Sen, Watkins that the jury | qutaen son soceelnnd. For unity House for a 6:30 dinner. doesn't have to be impartial.” inst Sen. Castecn R-K Jack Sterling will sp eatiteee-eiece | ee eee 7s Serting will. tothe —and-MeCarthy’ said he Was “Still) would only say: “I don't believe ig Brother’ move- | disturbed by a statement of Sen.’ | ment. ae | Watkins that the jury doesn't have | Maine election at this time.” “A Mis: ; to be impartial.” Nixon, who flies West tomorrow Vane cn oC ee for | This was a reference to Watkins’ | iy campaign Rev. Robert W. Gi : y the previous statement that many | tours aimed at retaining Republi- tier te youth : Gibson Jr., min- | members of the Senate have taken ister to youth at the First Presby- sides for pr_against McCarthy, and ~ |that they canpot for that reason | vote would provide “the first } The Weather ro ae frora agp when | statewide test of the Eisenhower's INTIAC AND VICINITY — Ovcasion- jenue. — , acministration program ue Soe an saa Weeneny.s Continecd cool eith es | Dak ania tere ogee, = James Booth Rites Former Advertising Man Set for Thursday William H. Moore Dies a + |“ esmcHAN = on ae Te |Moore, 73, of 18136 Buckingham, service a Scripps Booth | _ on. will be held af 1) ama, Tharpiny| eee oP. 2 former odver *Y | tising sales director of the Detroit from the Bell Chapel of the Wil- | wu died of a heart attack Sun- Teday tn Pontiac Lowest temperature preceeding 8 2 m ss + -h— Wing Velocity $13 WH p hr gets Tuesday ai 644 po Tiees Wednesday at € 12 a m sete Wednesday at 843 2 Tiees Tuesday at 723 pm beste 1 am s7 liam R. Hamilton Co., with cre- | ; Oo we... 8 : iday night while vacationing at mg ‘Be mation-in_White Chapel. Memorial 2 Sosstsenik Maine — : | Cemetery, —_- The noted artist, engineer, au-|